The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 21 February 1966 — Page 3

Reelsville School News

Hm initial meeting of tha baytf 4-H group, Reelsville Plow Boys, was held January 28. Vincent Green, adult leader, was fa eliazga of the meeting, and t fee was sssisted fey Robert England, volunteer agent Jerry Williams, county youth agent, was also present 59 boys attended this meeting.

officers were

The following

. elected:

* President, Inrry Gibbs. -Vice President Joe Williams.

- Secretary, Jeff Raab. Treasurer, Donald Irwin.

- Recreation Leaders, Ronnie

Basel, Nick Aubrey.

News Reporter, Ricki Raab. ’ Song Leaders, Donald Bain

and Bob Blue.

. Health and Safety, Mask

' Cooper.

. All membership cards are to be filled out and returned by Friday, February 4. Jeff Raab was selected to attend the junior leader conference to be held at Van Buren in the near

future.

- The Solo mid Ensemble music .contest was held at Indiana State University on January 29. Pam Mathews, Doris Hartman, and David Callahan entered a comet brio. Joyce Haltom entered a clarinet solo. Both groups received second placings. The Vocal and Piano contest -was held at Indiana State University on February 5. Vocal -solos were taken by Wanda Rigney, Cindy Fox, Sharon Bain, and David Callahan. Wanda received a second rating while David received a first rating. Cindy received a first in Class A which entities her to go . to the state contest in Indianapolis. Sharon also received a secend rating on her solo. A sextet composed of Caro- - lyn Toung, Bonnie Brown, -'- Karen Hutcheson, Doris Hart -nan, Linda Callahan, and Peg- * gy Montgomery received a first --rating. Another sextet with Judy Mace, Pam Mathews, Helen Jackson, Linda Smiley, Cindy Vox, and Wanda Rigney received a first which entities them to go to the state contest in Indianapolis. A double sextet s composed of both sextet groups received a second rating, t A vocal trio composed of Pam * Matin n s Sharon Bain, and r Daria Hsrtmsii received a first place. A vocal trip with Wanda Rigney, Cindy Fox, and Judy Mace received a second rating. Kenny Hutcheson got a first —♦frwg on a piano solo. Another piano solo was. entered by Sandra Bain who received a second. ; < The school would like to congratulate these students. I*. - Reetsvifle High School stu- . depts keep pace with the world MBnough tiis pages of the High ^School library’s newspapers and

fe *

The school was sorry to lose one of it’s students, Gayle Fisher, a sixth grade student, who moved to Greencastle. She last attended school here Friday, January 28. That afternoon a party was given in her honor. Three other birthdays were honored, Charles Hurt, 8th grade, January 25; Ricky Crawley, 6th grade, January 28 and Billy Leonard, 5th grade, January 27. The honor roll for 3rd i weeks (A and B) are: 5th grade: Randy Albright, Stephanie Ewing, Terri Hart saw, Rebecca BirdselL 6th grade: Sharia Grimes, James S&msel. The semester honor roll follows: 5th grade: Randy Albright, Stephanie Ewing, Terri Hartsaw, Rebecca Birdsell, Deborah Perrine. 8th grade: Gayle Fisher, Sharia Grimes, James Samsel.

From tiie largest city in the • United States comes the New tVork Times. Other readers keep - Up with the latest in farming ■ methods by reading the Farm

' jounial.

" At the present time the libr;ary fa the Reelsville School i prides itself on the five different sets of encyclopedias, two .sets with recent publication

date*

and Its collection and Lagaxines. A number

of .daily papers from nearby 'anas are also accessible Plana an underway to increase the number of books in the school library. Meanwhile the students’ reading is supplemented through^ the Putnam County 'Book Mobile which comes to the school every two weeks. Among the services available to the students in the library is tbs Readers’ Guide, which aids students in finding articles In magazines which they may «n to their mterence and term papers. Also included on the shelves are foreign language “ dictionaries, modem atlases, 2oSeg» handbooks and catalogs, Jgareer books, biographies, fiction and sovarai books of non

2 Rfo thoroughly enjoyed the taught to us by Dr. Robert Thomas from University. We aporeeiate Dr. Thomas taking %am cut from Us busy schedy# m visit us and to tali and Otoflw ua o» much about folk

Saucing. ■

Wr arc happy to have our cook. Mm. Berry, back With us Sftar ter recent stay to tte

hospital.

- Our B Honor Ron tor tte

weeks included; Susan

~ RUky Lee Kelly, Rick*

Stiptesde Bfedeefe.-

ftudents are on roBrJaoqns-

t Susan Ewing,

Vicki

■m ii “*■ tertnfc Itieky Lac teme^nad Stfptea

We hear the majorettes are working on a real jazzy routine to the number “Platter Party.” Is it time that there’s a contest for the gym floor fifth period between the boys and the twirl ers? Mr. Bailey is pretty nice about letting the girls have the floor.

Some students weren’t happy to receive their report cards. Isn’t it hard to convince some teachers that one really studies? ? ? ?

The senior class Is glad to know that the diplomas are in. Too bad they’re not signed! ! ! The word around the seniors is “Cupid-A-Go-Go.” the theme of their dance February 12.

The seniors have completed their annual—actually on time. Isn’t that remarkable? ? ?

fmmm, §M Stephanie Bird-

The newly organized G. A. A. at RedsviHe la doing quite well. The group consists of approximately 30 girls. Each Thursday night the group participates in the allaround sport of bowling at the Greencastle Varsity Lanes. Then each Monday night there is a regular meeting and the girls are taught the mrt of gymnastics.

The entire student body wishes to welcome Wayne HitffmMi, originally from Fremont, Ohio, who is doing his student teaching at Reelsville. Mir. Huffman Is an American History major at DePauw University; he teaches one class each of government and geography and two classes of American History.

February 15, members of the speech class attended the evening performance of the Pulitzer Prize winning comedy “The Subject Was Roses” at Clowes Hall in Indianapolis. The stum of this play are Martha Scott, Martin Sheen, and Jack Albertson. Mary Collins and Jeff Raab were Reelsville’s representatives to the Government Leadership Conference. They and the two speech classes helped provide the program for the PTO meeting, on Tuesday evening, Feb. 8. “Meeting representatives of our government who possessed such great qualities made me feel more at ease to know our government is headed by such competent men and women,” asserted Jeff Raab. Mary Collins added, “I was greatly impressed by the speakers’ willingness to take time from their busy schedules to speak to a group of teenagers.”

famed Hoosler Pugilist Pies LAFAYETTE UPI— Manson H. (Jimmy) Sayre,'in., Indiana's “Bantamweight, Battier” who fought three timee for the world title, died Saturday at Home Hospital here of cancer. He had been ill for seven months. Sayre fought Earl Mastro in 1927, Bud Taylor in 1922 and Phil Goldstein in 1929, but faded to wrest the bantamweight world’s title from them. Sayre won 95 per cent of his 808 professkmal fights and 80 per cent of those were by knockouts. He was never knocked out Bom at Badger Grave, Ind., July 21, 1904, Sayre Is afrrytvfed by his widow and seven children. He will be buried Tuesday to Battleground.

Filipino Rioters Assail Yankees MANILA UPI—An estimated 2,000 torch bearing Filipino demonstrators, brandishing anti. American placards and ch*n«n g ''Yankees , . . monkeys go home,” marched in front of the U.S. Embassy tonight and prevented Ambassador William McCormick Blair from leaving the embassy compound. The demonstrators, mostly students and workers, staged the protest march in front of the embassy just a few hours before the scheduled arrival of Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey. The demonstrators found the embassy gates locked. All lights in the embassy building itself were blacked out while more than 60 uniformed policemen stood guard at the entrance. Before marching to the U.S. embassy, some of the demon-

presidential Malacanang Palace and tte Philippine Congress. The carried placards denouncing “American imperialism” and protesting a proposal to send Filipino engineers and security troops to South Viet Nam.

12 KILLED—Firemen move through fire-gutted Interior of the Jewish Community Center in Yonkers, N.Y n after fighting a blaze that killed nine children and three adults.

Veep Is Opposed To Including Viet Cong

EN ROUTE WITH HUMPHREY UPI — Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey said today inclusion of the Communist Viet Cong in a South Vietnamese coalition government would be “like having a fox in the chicken coop” or “an arsonist in the fire department.” Humphrey, who was flying from Wellington, New Zealand, to Manila dismissed a proposal by Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, DN. Y., that a coalition government—including Communists— could bring an end to the Viet Nam hostilities. 'T do not believe we should write a prescription for Viet Nam which includes a dose of arsenic,” the vice president told an impromptu news conference before departing New Zealand. Humphrey has visited more than half a dozen Pacific and Asian nations, including South Viet Nam, on his tour but he showed few signs of fatigue as he embarked for the Philippines, a staunch U. S. ally in the fight against Asian communism. Anti-Viet Nam war pickets marred Humphrey’s visit to Wellington during the weekend but only a tow were on hand as he departed. “We in America believe in the right of dissent, too,” Humphrey declared in a speech Sun-

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day night carried over New Zealand radio. He said the United States was in Viet Nam to see that “the rule of reason prevails rather than the rule of the jungle.”

Green Light By Weatherman by United Press International Indiana high school basketball fans got a green light from the weatherman today for the sectional tournament this week, Often plagued by cold temperatures and occasionally harassed by session-delaying snowstorms, tiie tourneys apparently win suffer no crippling problems from the weather this time. The five-day outlook called for temperatures averaging only 3 to 6 degrees below normal highs of 36 and 49 and normal lows of 20 to 30 with a moderating trend through midweek. But the best news was ‘Tittle or no precipitation,” although the forecasters saw a “chance of a little rain or snow late in the week.” Last year, one of the two worst snowstorms of the season hit during the sectional and forced postponement of many games. Over a period of years, the period Feb. 21-26 has produced many deep snows. The forecasts for this week came after a cold weekend during which the temperatures hovered well below freezing and touched near zero three mornings in a row.

Fmd Couple Dead ” i SOUTH WHITLEY,—UPI — Neighbors curious because the barn lights were burning in the daytime at the Earl Shaffer farm Saturday found the bodies of Shaffer, 73, and his wife, Goldie, 65, and authorities ruled they died of natural causes within a period of half an hour Coroner John Wilson believed Shaffer fell dead in the doorway of the barn and Mrs. Shaffer found his body, ran to the house to call for help and collapsed and died in the kitchen before she could get aid.

Thb Dally Bamtar, Oraancastla, Indiana Monday, February 21, 1966

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