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HERSHEY NEWS Vol. 9 HERSHEY, PENNSYLVANIA, AUGUST 31, 1961 No. 18 Personnel Changes In Staffs Of Derry Township School District And Hershey Junior College For The New School Year Personnel changes in the staffs of the Derry Township School District and Hershey Junior College, have been an-nounced by L. Eugene Jacques, Superintendent; and Dean Varnum Fenstermacher. Teaching physics at Hershey High School will be Joseph B. Dietz, 429A Hockersville Road. A graduate of Owen J. Roberts High School, Bucktown; Temple Uni-versity School of Pharmacy with a B.S. from Lebanon Valley Col-lege, he did student tea'ching' last year at Hershey; and was also a laboratory assistant at Lebanon Valley College. A graduate of Hershey High School, Randolph Macon College with a B.S. from Beaver College, Mrs. Ethel Garman, wife of Eu-gene Garinan, Jr., 130 W. Caracas Ave., will teach girls physical ed-ucation. She has previous exper-ience at Enola High School, Leb-anon Valley College and taught the second semester of last year at Hershey High School. Rose Ann Hall will teach Eng-lish at Hershey High School. She resides at 1603 Wyndham Road, Camp Hill, and is a graduate of West Shore Joint High School, with a B.S. from ShiPpensburg State College. Joining the English Department is Harold E. Huber, Box 360, Man-beim, Pa., a graduate of Manheim Central High School, with a B.S. from Elizabethtown College. JoAnn ,T4inson, 460 Ilocl:ersville Road. Will teach Grade 5. She is a graduate of Hershey High School, Hershey Junior College and holds a B.S. from Shippensburg State College. Returning to the Kindergarten staff is Martha Keefer, wife of Jack Keefer, 311 Maple Avenue, a graduate of Chambersburg High School with a B.S. from Shippens-burg State College. Rejoining Mrs. Keefer in the Kindergarten is Lillian G. Kovach, wife of Andrew Kovach, 328 Maple Avenue; a graduate of Salisbury High School, Salisbury, Pa., with a B.S. from the University of Okla-homa, Norman, Oklahoma. She has also taught in the Somerset County Schools and the Myersdale Schools, HUBER JOHNSON KRAUS SCIIULE SHILDT Myersdale, Pa. Edward Steven Kraus will join the English Department at .Her-shey Junior College when the fac-ulty reports on September 6. He is a graduate of William Penn High School, York; and holds his B.A. from Franklin and Marshall College; his M.S. from Temple University. He previously taught at Northeastern High School, Man-chester, Pa. Also joining the Hershey Junior College staff is Roselinde B. Lepke, who holds at B.A. from Oberschule fur Madchen, Cologne, Germany; and also attended the University of Cologne, and the University of Marburg (Germany); and was on the staff of the University of New Hampshire. Wife of Charles Longer, 25 E. Granada Avenue, Ruth H. Longer will teach Grade One. She is a graduate of Conyngham Township High School, Hershey Junior Col-lege, Millersville State College. Russell Owens will teach Grade 5, coming to Hershey from the Lower Paxton Township Elemen-tary Schools, with an educational background at John Harris High School and Lebanon Valley Col-lege. Also joining the English Depart-ment at Hershey High School is Helen L. Schule, 150 W. Walnut St., Palmyra, with teaching experience at Pine Grove and Palmyra High Schools. She is a graduate of Pal-myra— High School, holds a B.S. from Lebanon Valley College; a M.S. from the University of Penn-sylvania. Teaching Grade 4 is Bernice M. Shertron, 145 N. Railroad St., Pal-myra, a graduate of Palmyra High School, with a B. S. from Albright College and additional work at Lebanon Valley College, and Tem-ple University. She taught at West Lebanon Township, Wiconisco, Pa. A graduate of Tyrone High LONGER 'STRAIT Music, Spoken Word For 12th M. S. Hershey Day An excellent program has been arranged for the • twelfth com-munity wide observance of M. S. Hershey Day in the Community Theatre on Sunday, September 10, at 2:00 p.m. "He Whom A Dream Hath Pos-sessed" will be the theme by Sheridan Watson Bell, D.D., minis-ter of the' Grace Methodist Church, Harrisburg. Some fifteen popular choral num-bers will be presented by the Par-ish Pressed Steel Male Chorus, of Reading, Jack Chiarelli, Director, Harold Kremser, Accompanist. Dr. Bell has been the minister of the Grace Methodist Church for the past eleven years; having also served as minister of the Williams Street Methodist Church, Delaware, Ohio, the college church of Ohio Wesleyan University. S. W. BELL, D.D. In his twenty-fifth year with the Reading school system, Director Jack Chiarelli is also Director of Music at Southern Junior High School. He has recorded three original themes; and published five original compositions for bands. His "One, Two, Three, Four" is a popular football standard. Organized in 1945, the Parish Pressed Steel Chorus makes be-tween 40 and 50 appearances year-ly at conventions, on radio and TV throughout the Reading area. The program for the M. S. Her-shey Day observance includes "Hey Look Me Over"; "Cathedral of Peace"; "Faith in God"; "I Be-lieve"; "One Little Candle"; "Sep-tember Song"; "The Halls of Ivy"; "I May Never Pass This Way Again"; "Climb Every Mountain"; "Battle Hymn of the Republic". "I Could Have Danced All Night"; "Down By The River Side"; "In the Mission of St. Augustine"; Se-lections from "The Music Man"; and a special arrangement of "Me And My Shadow". School and Paducah Junior Col-lege, Kentucky, where she also taught in the school system, Ber-nice Shildt, 405 E. Chocolate Avenue., wife of Delbert E. Shildt, will teach Grade 4. Returning .to her alma mater as School Nurse is Betty L. Snyder, R.N., 165 Governor Road; a gradu-ate of the Lancaster School of Nursing; with additional work at Pennsylvania State University. Also returning to his alma mater is Larry H. Strait, R. D. 1, Her-shey, who will teach Grade 4. He is a graduate of Hershey Junior College and Lebanon Valley Col-lege. Teaching Grade 2 will be Helen K. Evans, 118 Elm Avenue, a graduate of Palmyra High School, with an A.B. from Juniata College; and teaching experience in the South Hanover Township and Pal-myra Schools. DESPITE the rain, Governor David L. Lawrence was in a gay mood as he officially opened the 13th annual Pennsylvania Dutch Days celebration at the Sports Arena along with General Chair-man Carl S. Swarr (left); Vice Chairman Raymond F. Evans; Harold A. Swenson, Director, Vacation and Travel Development Bureau, Department Of Commerce; George H. Schroeder, Presi-dent, Pennsylvania Poultry Federation; Rufus Hollinger, Vice Chairman. Pony Races, Kiddies' Day; Park To Be Open Sundays Postponed due to a wet track, the Pony Races conducted by the Pennsylvania Pony Breeders Asso-ciation, Inc., will be held at Iler-shey Stadium North Field on Sat-urday, Sept. 2. Post time is 3:00 p.m. Hershey Park Manager, George W. Bartels, has announced that the 25th annual baby parade will high-light Kiddies' Day on Saturday, Sept. 2, in the Sports Arena. Doors will open for spectators at 1:00 pan. Admissionis free. Children who will not have reached their fifth birthday by Sept. 2 are eligible to enter the baby parade. Starting time for the parade is 2:00 p.m. Children under 12 will be eligible to- register for free ride tickets, good for an assortment of rides at the Park's enlarged Kiddieland.. Registrars will sit at the souvenir building from 11:00 a.m to ap-proximately 7:00 p. m. A portion of Hershey Park will remain open on Sundays only be-yond the official closing date of Sunday, Sept. 10. Opening time will be 1:00 p.m. MORE THAN 32,000 people visited the Hershey Chocolate Corpora tion during Dutch Days; establishing new Visitors Department tee ords: Monday, 3,180. Tuesday, 5,111. Wednesday, 6,387. Thursday 6,380. Friday, 6,340. Saturday, 3,341. Sunday, 1,521. This was Friday, shortly after two in the afternoon, a nice day in Hershey what with thunderstorms which lashed the Valley from Wednesday through Sat-urday. Sunday proved an ideal day for the finale of Dutch Days. Hershey News Comm. Bldg. Hershey, Pa. BULK RATE PAID U. S. POSTAGE HERSHEY. PA. Permit No. 3 KEEFER . KOVACH 3547 REQUESTED IF UNDELIVERABLE
Object Description
Title | Hershey News 1961-08-31 |
Subject | Hershey (Pa.)--Newspapers |
Description | Hershey News, published from 1953 until 1964, reported news and events throughout the Township of Derry, Pennsylvania (informally known as Hershey). |
Date | 1961-08-31 |
Location Covered | Hershey (Pa.) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Rights | https://rightsstatements.org/page/NoC-US/1.0/?language=en |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact Hershey Community Archives at contact@hersheyarchives.org. |
Contributing Institution | Milton Hershey School |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Description
Title | Hershey News 1961-08-31 |
Subject | Hershey (Pa.)--Newspapers |
Description | Hershey News, published from 1953 until 1964, reported news and events throughout the Township of Derry, Pennsylvania (informally known as Hershey). |
Date | 1961-08-31 |
Location Covered | Hershey (Pa.) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Rights | https://rightsstatements.org/page/NoC-US/1.0/?language=en |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact Hershey Community Archives at contact@hersheyarchives.org. |
Contributing Institution | Milton Hershey School |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Full Text | HERSHEY NEWS Vol. 9 HERSHEY, PENNSYLVANIA, AUGUST 31, 1961 No. 18 Personnel Changes In Staffs Of Derry Township School District And Hershey Junior College For The New School Year Personnel changes in the staffs of the Derry Township School District and Hershey Junior College, have been an-nounced by L. Eugene Jacques, Superintendent; and Dean Varnum Fenstermacher. Teaching physics at Hershey High School will be Joseph B. Dietz, 429A Hockersville Road. A graduate of Owen J. Roberts High School, Bucktown; Temple Uni-versity School of Pharmacy with a B.S. from Lebanon Valley Col-lege, he did student tea'ching' last year at Hershey; and was also a laboratory assistant at Lebanon Valley College. A graduate of Hershey High School, Randolph Macon College with a B.S. from Beaver College, Mrs. Ethel Garman, wife of Eu-gene Garinan, Jr., 130 W. Caracas Ave., will teach girls physical ed-ucation. She has previous exper-ience at Enola High School, Leb-anon Valley College and taught the second semester of last year at Hershey High School. Rose Ann Hall will teach Eng-lish at Hershey High School. She resides at 1603 Wyndham Road, Camp Hill, and is a graduate of West Shore Joint High School, with a B.S. from ShiPpensburg State College. Joining the English Department is Harold E. Huber, Box 360, Man-beim, Pa., a graduate of Manheim Central High School, with a B.S. from Elizabethtown College. JoAnn ,T4inson, 460 Ilocl:ersville Road. Will teach Grade 5. She is a graduate of Hershey High School, Hershey Junior College and holds a B.S. from Shippensburg State College. Returning to the Kindergarten staff is Martha Keefer, wife of Jack Keefer, 311 Maple Avenue, a graduate of Chambersburg High School with a B.S. from Shippens-burg State College. Rejoining Mrs. Keefer in the Kindergarten is Lillian G. Kovach, wife of Andrew Kovach, 328 Maple Avenue; a graduate of Salisbury High School, Salisbury, Pa., with a B.S. from the University of Okla-homa, Norman, Oklahoma. She has also taught in the Somerset County Schools and the Myersdale Schools, HUBER JOHNSON KRAUS SCIIULE SHILDT Myersdale, Pa. Edward Steven Kraus will join the English Department at .Her-shey Junior College when the fac-ulty reports on September 6. He is a graduate of William Penn High School, York; and holds his B.A. from Franklin and Marshall College; his M.S. from Temple University. He previously taught at Northeastern High School, Man-chester, Pa. Also joining the Hershey Junior College staff is Roselinde B. Lepke, who holds at B.A. from Oberschule fur Madchen, Cologne, Germany; and also attended the University of Cologne, and the University of Marburg (Germany); and was on the staff of the University of New Hampshire. Wife of Charles Longer, 25 E. Granada Avenue, Ruth H. Longer will teach Grade One. She is a graduate of Conyngham Township High School, Hershey Junior Col-lege, Millersville State College. Russell Owens will teach Grade 5, coming to Hershey from the Lower Paxton Township Elemen-tary Schools, with an educational background at John Harris High School and Lebanon Valley Col-lege. Also joining the English Depart-ment at Hershey High School is Helen L. Schule, 150 W. Walnut St., Palmyra, with teaching experience at Pine Grove and Palmyra High Schools. She is a graduate of Pal-myra— High School, holds a B.S. from Lebanon Valley College; a M.S. from the University of Penn-sylvania. Teaching Grade 4 is Bernice M. Shertron, 145 N. Railroad St., Pal-myra, a graduate of Palmyra High School, with a B. S. from Albright College and additional work at Lebanon Valley College, and Tem-ple University. She taught at West Lebanon Township, Wiconisco, Pa. A graduate of Tyrone High LONGER 'STRAIT Music, Spoken Word For 12th M. S. Hershey Day An excellent program has been arranged for the • twelfth com-munity wide observance of M. S. Hershey Day in the Community Theatre on Sunday, September 10, at 2:00 p.m. "He Whom A Dream Hath Pos-sessed" will be the theme by Sheridan Watson Bell, D.D., minis-ter of the' Grace Methodist Church, Harrisburg. Some fifteen popular choral num-bers will be presented by the Par-ish Pressed Steel Male Chorus, of Reading, Jack Chiarelli, Director, Harold Kremser, Accompanist. Dr. Bell has been the minister of the Grace Methodist Church for the past eleven years; having also served as minister of the Williams Street Methodist Church, Delaware, Ohio, the college church of Ohio Wesleyan University. S. W. BELL, D.D. In his twenty-fifth year with the Reading school system, Director Jack Chiarelli is also Director of Music at Southern Junior High School. He has recorded three original themes; and published five original compositions for bands. His "One, Two, Three, Four" is a popular football standard. Organized in 1945, the Parish Pressed Steel Chorus makes be-tween 40 and 50 appearances year-ly at conventions, on radio and TV throughout the Reading area. The program for the M. S. Her-shey Day observance includes "Hey Look Me Over"; "Cathedral of Peace"; "Faith in God"; "I Be-lieve"; "One Little Candle"; "Sep-tember Song"; "The Halls of Ivy"; "I May Never Pass This Way Again"; "Climb Every Mountain"; "Battle Hymn of the Republic". "I Could Have Danced All Night"; "Down By The River Side"; "In the Mission of St. Augustine"; Se-lections from "The Music Man"; and a special arrangement of "Me And My Shadow". School and Paducah Junior Col-lege, Kentucky, where she also taught in the school system, Ber-nice Shildt, 405 E. Chocolate Avenue., wife of Delbert E. Shildt, will teach Grade 4. Returning .to her alma mater as School Nurse is Betty L. Snyder, R.N., 165 Governor Road; a gradu-ate of the Lancaster School of Nursing; with additional work at Pennsylvania State University. Also returning to his alma mater is Larry H. Strait, R. D. 1, Her-shey, who will teach Grade 4. He is a graduate of Hershey Junior College and Lebanon Valley Col-lege. Teaching Grade 2 will be Helen K. Evans, 118 Elm Avenue, a graduate of Palmyra High School, with an A.B. from Juniata College; and teaching experience in the South Hanover Township and Pal-myra Schools. DESPITE the rain, Governor David L. Lawrence was in a gay mood as he officially opened the 13th annual Pennsylvania Dutch Days celebration at the Sports Arena along with General Chair-man Carl S. Swarr (left); Vice Chairman Raymond F. Evans; Harold A. Swenson, Director, Vacation and Travel Development Bureau, Department Of Commerce; George H. Schroeder, Presi-dent, Pennsylvania Poultry Federation; Rufus Hollinger, Vice Chairman. Pony Races, Kiddies' Day; Park To Be Open Sundays Postponed due to a wet track, the Pony Races conducted by the Pennsylvania Pony Breeders Asso-ciation, Inc., will be held at Iler-shey Stadium North Field on Sat-urday, Sept. 2. Post time is 3:00 p.m. Hershey Park Manager, George W. Bartels, has announced that the 25th annual baby parade will high-light Kiddies' Day on Saturday, Sept. 2, in the Sports Arena. Doors will open for spectators at 1:00 pan. Admissionis free. Children who will not have reached their fifth birthday by Sept. 2 are eligible to enter the baby parade. Starting time for the parade is 2:00 p.m. Children under 12 will be eligible to- register for free ride tickets, good for an assortment of rides at the Park's enlarged Kiddieland.. Registrars will sit at the souvenir building from 11:00 a.m to ap-proximately 7:00 p. m. A portion of Hershey Park will remain open on Sundays only be-yond the official closing date of Sunday, Sept. 10. Opening time will be 1:00 p.m. MORE THAN 32,000 people visited the Hershey Chocolate Corpora tion during Dutch Days; establishing new Visitors Department tee ords: Monday, 3,180. Tuesday, 5,111. Wednesday, 6,387. Thursday 6,380. Friday, 6,340. Saturday, 3,341. Sunday, 1,521. This was Friday, shortly after two in the afternoon, a nice day in Hershey what with thunderstorms which lashed the Valley from Wednesday through Sat-urday. Sunday proved an ideal day for the finale of Dutch Days. Hershey News Comm. Bldg. Hershey, Pa. BULK RATE PAID U. S. POSTAGE HERSHEY. PA. Permit No. 3 KEEFER . KOVACH 3547 REQUESTED IF UNDELIVERABLE |
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