Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 86, Number 48, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 30 May 1963 — Page 3
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The Nappanee Church of the Brethren announces the ment of anew pastor effective September 1. He is William Kidwell. Mr. Kidwell was born in*Nacona, Texas. He graduated from McPherson College in Kansas. He taught at the Brethren Service Academy in Puerto Rico, was licensed to ministry by the McPherson Church, served as associate pastor at Lincoln, Nebraska. Mr. Kidwell graduated from Bethany Biblical Seminary in Chicago with a B.D. degree. He and his wife Sara Faye, a Pennsylvania girl, and their sons David and Phillip will move to Nappanee in September.
Five From Here To Receive Degrees At Ball State Ball State Teachers College will confer 814 bachelor’s, 547 master’s, one education specialist and two doctor’s degrees at the first of two summer commencements at 1 p m., on Sunday, June 9. This year, lor the first time, the 45-year-old state college, will have two commencement exercises. The seconu secemony will be on August 21. Dr Herman B. Wells, chancellor of Indiana University, will give the commencement address and he will receive an honorary doctor of laws degree. The honorary degree and the earned degrees will b conferred by President John R. Emens, Ball State, who will also give a brief “charge to the class of 1963.’’ Fourteen Air Force ROTC cadetwill receive their commissions as second lieutenants from President Emeris. Earlier in the day Lt. Col. Harold N. Benham, professor of air science, will present the new officers with their second lieutenant bars and assignments. Joint doctor of education degrees from Ball State and Indiana Univer sity will be conferred upon Richard Simon, administrative assistant to the president of Parsons College, Fairfield, lowa, formerly of Bloomington and to Pao Tien Tsai, Taipei, Taiwan (Free China), who plans to return to his homeland to
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teach in a university. Students from Nappanee who will receive d£grees.in- the. Sail. State ceremony in June Miriam Hoohstetler, who will receive an MA'in Education, James Bminso, Martha Hartman, and James Rassi BS in Education, and David Stoops, | BS in Industrial Arts. Dick Pletcher To ReceiveDegree From IU Next Monday, June 3, as the clock on Indiana University’s Student Building chimes 10 a.m., an academic procession with a number of local participants will march out of a tented area next to the Old Football Stadium. Thus will begin Indiana University’s 134th Commencement, the first presided over by Dr. Elvis J. Stahr, Jr., 12th president of the Hoosier state university. Richard Pletcher, receiving a BS degree in business will be among 4,956 candidates for bachelor's, master’s, and doctors degrees. All have completed work for degrees or will do so by next September and are eligible to participate, in the ceremony. By tradition the awarding of degrees will take place on the playing field of the Old Stadium, with relatives and friends seated in the horseshoe end. In event of rain, Commencement will be held in the nearby Old Fieldhouse. Sugar Situation Is Discussed The president of Sucrest Corporation, Frank C. Staples, a leading resin fr of cane sugar posted a bulletin on the present- sugar crisis which was loaned to us by Nunemaker’s Food, Shop. We quote i from it in the hopes that it will help cause better understanding of the situation. The bulletin states that the price of refined sugar was $9.80 on Jan uary 2 and $14.20 on May 16. It states that under normal conditions the old Sugar Act was able to main tain stable prices, fair to consumer and producers, and maintain higher prices than foreign prices to protect our domestic industry. However, that was before the advent of Castro. Formerly, .Cuba maintained a large reserve supply of sugar which could be shipped to the U.S. immediately in case of a shortage. The bulletin says that the new Sugar Act enacted into law last July introduced a global concept lor quotas. This tied U.S. raw sugar prices to world prices. “This was fine as long as world prices were depressed, but not good when world prices advanced and the difference, between U.S. price and world- price was reduced.” The memorandum lists many causes for the increase in world sugar prices, including the fact that the world prices were formerly greatly depressed. Then, it points out, the early and severe winter in Europe affected the beet sugar
crop, and the December freeze of crops in Louisiana and Florida further added- te> the- shontegeMr. Staple* sans, ‘‘if wish: it could! tell you* that this was % temporally whifih would! end* soon* but this does nob seom to, be tho case. Sugar is- still, a. aheap, food; and wonld demand, does not shrink greatly uniilt price* advance eon siderably. higher- Utaih they are at the present time, ••. .. We do,netsee market- mlief from this present situation, for some time.” “The present pnioe for, raw sugar is so tremendously attractive and* profitable to, sugar producers, the world oven that every known) far cility for expanding sugar production is being and will be indulged* in.” “It is perfectly reasonable fpr us to assume that in- due courses sugar production on. a world-wide basis, will equat sugar consumption and. eventually surpass it.”
Want- for, tttfc Sections from Levi Ulery’s diary, for 1868; are as follows; Jan. &-lsßac Stockmen and) h took a fox chase today. We killed: one. Jan. s—Aunt Catherine Miller died. I attended the funeral at the brick church. It was the largest funeral li ever attended, D Shively, pleached. Jan. have been on a. fox chase all day, but did not get him at last. Mar. 30r-We rigged up two boats and went fishing on Syracuse lake. We got 95 (most all pike) weighing 165 pounds. It was very calm, April 27- Two boats of us were on Syracuse lake today and we caught 82 fish, weighing, 87 mostly bass. June 2~ln the morning we went to Goshen and from there we all went to the annual meeting at Jacob Berkey’s. 3,000 people took supper there. June 15—At 6:00 o’clock this evening we had the hardest storm that ever was in this part of the country. The damage on our farm is heavy. June 16—This morning Jacob Berkey’s barn burned away by lighting. Nov. 29—There was meeting at the Brick church today and it was not fifteen minutes after old Henry Neff quit preaching until he was dead. He died at the church. - Dec. 14—We went to Mart Davenport’s to hunt. We was hunting all day but killed nothing. Dec. 15—We were out hunting today, killed two deer. We stayed all night with Mr. Fries, near Bremen, - Dec. 31 —We took four head of hogs to Elkhart and-sold them for SIIO.BO, or $10.65 per hundred. The chap who “Never made a mistake in my life’ ’usually has a wife who made one.
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Mr. and)Mr* Mt How Mid B**sr announce the engagement of ♦heir daughter, Janice *P Pfe. James L. ff*kJer,, Mr. and Mr*. Many, Fackler, lt-1, Syracuse. Miss Berger is a '6l graduate of, Nappanee high school and M)> Fackler graduated from- Hie Mux Paws school ih lftHl He is. prasanH* storing with tha Uft Army at Far* htaodi Tfemt*. A July wadding, kg being planned.
RING; AMONG TULIPS, To friend* admiring her tulips Phi s year, Mrs. Ellen- Hanvesy oonfldfid how. her husband) Mex. planted! his wedding ring along with the tulip bulb* last fall. The Henvays are publishers of ’Hie Covered* Bridge County News, a Montezuma, week ly newspaper: In hen collUDßi , “Hi, Neighbor,” Mrs. Harvey, recalled how, after she midi her- husband hgd planted the tulip bulbs, he found his gold wedding; ring missing, They went on a. trip to Chicago and while there, Harvey remembered: he had been wearing the ring while doing the planting Upon his return to Montezuma, he searched the. tul|p bed and found the rihg.
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MAY 30 Esther Kintzel Mrs. Raymond Miller Brenda Brenneman Eloise Ogle Roger E. Shively 31 Arthur Leroy Miller Wayne Harman JUNE 1 Mrs. Brent Gall Mrs. Tom McDow Junior Anderson 2 Mrs. Robert Sinclair David. Stoops Mrs. Marguerite Adams Kay Hollar Mildred Phillips David) McGrew 3 Ruth Thomas Lloyd Chupp 4 Aura Curtis Bill Kaufman Dick Kaufman Sandra George 6 Dave Miller Henry Pletcher Mrs. Vern Cripe
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Herb Fervida Mrs. Harvey Rose 7, Jack Miller Mrs. Jack Hood Beverly Culp Beth Ann Olson 8 Don Segraves Mrs. Everett C. Hollar Mike Millbern 9 Carol Brenneman Mrs. Maxine Wagner 10 Mrs. John Price Mrs. Walter Miller Darlene Kay Culp 11 Phillip Shrock Sharon Eastlund Jack Tobias Dennis. F. Miller 12 Mrs. Howard Pippenger Billie Marts v COMPLICATIONS The consol idation of high schools throughout Indiana under the school reorganization law causes some problems. An example is the consolidation of the Monon, Buffalo and Reynolds High Schools in White County, into one school to be known at NorthWhite. First off anew nickname had to be selected for the consolidated school’s athletic teams. The nicknames of Railroaders, Bisons and Rangers, used respectively by Monon, Buffalo and Reynolds, were not considered appropriate. Pupils of the three schools held an election and voted for Vikings as the nickname for the new North-White. Then, too, new colors had be to selected, Blue and White were the colors chosen by the students. ij ■ The nickel is our oldest minted coin. Read the Classifieds
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