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HERSHEY NEWS Vol. 10 HERSHEY, PENNSYLVANIA, SEPTEMBER 27, 1962 No. 19 FAREWELL TO HILKE Ehlert of Hamburg, Germany was voiced by members of the Hershey Rotary Club at a recent meeting held in her honor. Hilke has been in this country and in the homes of many of our Rotarians since mid-July as a participant in Rotary International's Experiment in International Living. Also attending the meeting was Aysegul CiIli of Istanbul, Turkey, a friend of Ike and a guest of the LaSalle, Ill., Rotary Club (front). Standing next to Miss Cilli is Bill Kishpaugh and next to him is HiIke. In the rear, left to right are William E. Dearden, president of Hershey Rotary and Henry Guettel, production manager for "The Sound of Music," who was the principal speaker. H. G. Ehlert, German Exchange Student Bids Farewell To Hershey Rotarians Miss HiIke G. Ehlert of Hamburg, Germany, said goodby to members of the Hershey Rotary Club at a recent luncheon, following a two-month stay in Hershey as a par-ticipant in Rotary International's Ex-periment in International Living. At her farewell apper ranee. Ifilke was presented with a scrapbook of activities in the area and an inscrib-ed plaque which said "Presented to .Hilke G. Ehlert, German visitor of the Hershey Rotary Club, Hershey, Pennsylvania, U. S. A., on Septem-ber 17, 1962." It was mounted on mahogany with the Rotary seal en-graved upon it and presented to her by William E. Dearden, president of the Hershey Rotary Club. The scrap-book was assembled and presented to Hilke by W. Allen Hammond. Miss Ehlert is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Ehlert. Her fa-ther is a professor of English in the schools of Germany. She is a grad. uate of the University of Hamburg Law School and became an appren-tice lawyer assisting the judge and serving with the prosecuting attorn-ey during the past year. The homes of Hershey Rotarians were opened warm-heartedly to the pert little German visitor and she was a guest in the homes of Mr. and Mrs. William Kishpaugh, Mr. and Mrs, Landis Garman, Dr. and Mrs. John O. Hershey, Dr. and Mrs. Edwin F. Weaver, Mr. and Mrs. John Krell, Mr. and Mrs. Wil-liam E. Dearden, and Rev. and Mrs. Thomas Guinivan. Included in Hilke's last comments to Hershey Rotarians were the fol-lowing: "I have the feeling I belong to you. I know that just in the mo-ment I leave you, I change from a German student ambassador in Her-shey to a Hershey-ambassador in Germany. I want to express my deepest gratitude to Rotary and I assure you I have two home towns now: one in Germany and one in the U. S. A. I'm not only bilingual now but 'biheartecl.' And I think this is international understanding a n d love." Community United Fund Drive Will Start In Hershey October 1st The community-wide door-to-door phase of the 1962 United Welfare campaign is being prepared here, with plans being completed to start the canvass on Monday, October 1, it was announced by Ivan L. Mease, community canvass chairman. The business-industrial drive of the united effort began the beginning of this week on September 24, with let-ters from Samuel F. Hinkle, presi-dent of the Hershey Chocolate Cor-poration: Arthur Whiteman, presi-dent of the Hershey Estates; and James E. Bobb, chairman of the Board of Managers of the Milton Hershey School, all emphasizing the Rugby Will Be Played In Hershey Stadium, Oct. 6; Proceeds To United Fund Central Pennsylvanians and Her-sheyites, will get a chance to view one of the lesser known sports in the immediate area when the Balti-more and New York Rugby Football Clubs commence competition on Oc-tober 6 in a championship charity game at the Hershey stadium. The sport, originating in England in 1839, is a cross between soccer and football. The game has no time-cuts, no stilAitutions, n1 pads, no helmets,, no forward passing, no blocking, no deception and no stud-ied techniques. However, there is plenty of tackling, running and kick-ing. The teams who will play on October 6 are both made up of numerous foreign players from Ireland, Eng-land. South Africa, Scotland and Ar-gentina. One amazing characteristic of both clubs is that the talent comes from such outstanding professional ranks as surgeons, dentists, business executives, book publishers and medical students. Proceeds of the game are ear-marked for use by the Tii-County United Fund. General admission seats are $1 and reserved seats are $2. CONGRATULATING Arthur Whittemore and Jack Lowe (front) on their fine performance at the thirteenth annual observance of M. S. Hershey Day, are Arthur Whiteman (left), chairman of the M. S, Hershey Day Committee and William M. Kishpaugh, who gave the 'memorial tribute to Mr. Hershey. During the tribute to Mr. Hershey, Mr. Kishpaugh introduced several foreign students brought here by Rotary on the "Experiment in International Living." The piano-duo team of Whittemore and Lowe charmed the capacity crowd with their excellent performance and their personalities. They received many encores. importance of the drive and urg-ing the support of their employes to the united effort, either by pay-roll deduction system or by cash contribution. Held in conjunction with the Tr - County United Campaign, the com-munity- wide drive is chairmaned by Barney Schmidt, Tri-Ccunty Suburb-an area; Mac Aichele, Dauphin County Suburban area; Brent Han-cock; Derry Township: Al Reiding-er, Lower Dauphin; Ivan Mease. Hershey; and Mrs. Gladys Swift Sei-bert, Union Deposit. The community canvass campaign is designed to contact Derry Town-- ship residents who have not already given to the 1962 Derry Township Welfare Board United Fund drive. Community canvassers will not so-licit homes which display the Unit-ed Fund stickers. • Community Canvass Chairman Mease this week announced the names of the team captains for this phase of the fund campaign. The captains are contacting civic-mind-ed citizens to recruit help in conduct-ing the canvass. The team captains are: Mrs. Arlo D. Albright, Mrs. Donald J. Rippon, Mrs. Charles E. Muench, Miss Margaret Guyer. Mrs. Witman Gingrich, Ernest M. Roset-ty, Edward C. Tancredi. Mrs. Leon F. Wrona, Mrs. Edwin K. Zechman, Roy L. Long, Mrs. Jchn H. Det-weiler, Jr., Carl E. Stump, William E. Schiller, Mrs. Charles W. Boll. Mrs. Levi Filepas and Mrs. Robert Schock. It's Up To YOU In '61 dents of Hershey of the convenience of the unified plan for charitable giving, which eliminates separate fund drives by the many benefiting agencies. Contributors are urged to give as generously as possible when con tacted by the volunteer workers. Tito campaign is vitally important to thc many charitable and service-giving Attention was called to the resi- agencies it supports. TALKING OVER STUDENT ACTIVITIES with Professor Dennis Castelli (right) are Mr. and Mrs. James G. Bates of Oberlin Gar-dens, Steelton, at the annual Hershey Junior College Parents Night sponsored by the Student Senate of the college. Mr. and Mrs. Bates are the parents of Isobel Bates, a freshman student at the college. Mr. Bates is employed in the Traffic Dept. of the Hershey Chocolate Corp. Edward F. Romano, president of the Student Senate welcomed the 175 parents present at the affair and Dr. Varnum II. Fenster-macher, dean of the college, spoke on the Importance of Academic Achievement. A social hour followed. Hershey News Comm. Bldg. Hershey, Pa. BULK RATE PAID U. S. POSTAGE HERSHEY, PA. Permit No. 3
Object Description
Title | Hershey News 1962-09-27 |
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 | 1962-09-27 |
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 1962-09-27 |
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 | 1962-09-27 |
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. 10 HERSHEY, PENNSYLVANIA, SEPTEMBER 27, 1962 No. 19 FAREWELL TO HILKE Ehlert of Hamburg, Germany was voiced by members of the Hershey Rotary Club at a recent meeting held in her honor. Hilke has been in this country and in the homes of many of our Rotarians since mid-July as a participant in Rotary International's Experiment in International Living. Also attending the meeting was Aysegul CiIli of Istanbul, Turkey, a friend of Ike and a guest of the LaSalle, Ill., Rotary Club (front). Standing next to Miss Cilli is Bill Kishpaugh and next to him is HiIke. In the rear, left to right are William E. Dearden, president of Hershey Rotary and Henry Guettel, production manager for "The Sound of Music," who was the principal speaker. H. G. Ehlert, German Exchange Student Bids Farewell To Hershey Rotarians Miss HiIke G. Ehlert of Hamburg, Germany, said goodby to members of the Hershey Rotary Club at a recent luncheon, following a two-month stay in Hershey as a par-ticipant in Rotary International's Ex-periment in International Living. At her farewell apper ranee. Ifilke was presented with a scrapbook of activities in the area and an inscrib-ed plaque which said "Presented to .Hilke G. Ehlert, German visitor of the Hershey Rotary Club, Hershey, Pennsylvania, U. S. A., on Septem-ber 17, 1962." It was mounted on mahogany with the Rotary seal en-graved upon it and presented to her by William E. Dearden, president of the Hershey Rotary Club. The scrap-book was assembled and presented to Hilke by W. Allen Hammond. Miss Ehlert is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Ehlert. Her fa-ther is a professor of English in the schools of Germany. She is a grad. uate of the University of Hamburg Law School and became an appren-tice lawyer assisting the judge and serving with the prosecuting attorn-ey during the past year. The homes of Hershey Rotarians were opened warm-heartedly to the pert little German visitor and she was a guest in the homes of Mr. and Mrs. William Kishpaugh, Mr. and Mrs, Landis Garman, Dr. and Mrs. John O. Hershey, Dr. and Mrs. Edwin F. Weaver, Mr. and Mrs. John Krell, Mr. and Mrs. Wil-liam E. Dearden, and Rev. and Mrs. Thomas Guinivan. Included in Hilke's last comments to Hershey Rotarians were the fol-lowing: "I have the feeling I belong to you. I know that just in the mo-ment I leave you, I change from a German student ambassador in Her-shey to a Hershey-ambassador in Germany. I want to express my deepest gratitude to Rotary and I assure you I have two home towns now: one in Germany and one in the U. S. A. I'm not only bilingual now but 'biheartecl.' And I think this is international understanding a n d love." Community United Fund Drive Will Start In Hershey October 1st The community-wide door-to-door phase of the 1962 United Welfare campaign is being prepared here, with plans being completed to start the canvass on Monday, October 1, it was announced by Ivan L. Mease, community canvass chairman. The business-industrial drive of the united effort began the beginning of this week on September 24, with let-ters from Samuel F. Hinkle, presi-dent of the Hershey Chocolate Cor-poration: Arthur Whiteman, presi-dent of the Hershey Estates; and James E. Bobb, chairman of the Board of Managers of the Milton Hershey School, all emphasizing the Rugby Will Be Played In Hershey Stadium, Oct. 6; Proceeds To United Fund Central Pennsylvanians and Her-sheyites, will get a chance to view one of the lesser known sports in the immediate area when the Balti-more and New York Rugby Football Clubs commence competition on Oc-tober 6 in a championship charity game at the Hershey stadium. The sport, originating in England in 1839, is a cross between soccer and football. The game has no time-cuts, no stilAitutions, n1 pads, no helmets,, no forward passing, no blocking, no deception and no stud-ied techniques. However, there is plenty of tackling, running and kick-ing. The teams who will play on October 6 are both made up of numerous foreign players from Ireland, Eng-land. South Africa, Scotland and Ar-gentina. One amazing characteristic of both clubs is that the talent comes from such outstanding professional ranks as surgeons, dentists, business executives, book publishers and medical students. Proceeds of the game are ear-marked for use by the Tii-County United Fund. General admission seats are $1 and reserved seats are $2. CONGRATULATING Arthur Whittemore and Jack Lowe (front) on their fine performance at the thirteenth annual observance of M. S. Hershey Day, are Arthur Whiteman (left), chairman of the M. S, Hershey Day Committee and William M. Kishpaugh, who gave the 'memorial tribute to Mr. Hershey. During the tribute to Mr. Hershey, Mr. Kishpaugh introduced several foreign students brought here by Rotary on the "Experiment in International Living." The piano-duo team of Whittemore and Lowe charmed the capacity crowd with their excellent performance and their personalities. They received many encores. importance of the drive and urg-ing the support of their employes to the united effort, either by pay-roll deduction system or by cash contribution. Held in conjunction with the Tr - County United Campaign, the com-munity- wide drive is chairmaned by Barney Schmidt, Tri-Ccunty Suburb-an area; Mac Aichele, Dauphin County Suburban area; Brent Han-cock; Derry Township: Al Reiding-er, Lower Dauphin; Ivan Mease. Hershey; and Mrs. Gladys Swift Sei-bert, Union Deposit. The community canvass campaign is designed to contact Derry Town-- ship residents who have not already given to the 1962 Derry Township Welfare Board United Fund drive. Community canvassers will not so-licit homes which display the Unit-ed Fund stickers. • Community Canvass Chairman Mease this week announced the names of the team captains for this phase of the fund campaign. The captains are contacting civic-mind-ed citizens to recruit help in conduct-ing the canvass. The team captains are: Mrs. Arlo D. Albright, Mrs. Donald J. Rippon, Mrs. Charles E. Muench, Miss Margaret Guyer. Mrs. Witman Gingrich, Ernest M. Roset-ty, Edward C. Tancredi. Mrs. Leon F. Wrona, Mrs. Edwin K. Zechman, Roy L. Long, Mrs. Jchn H. Det-weiler, Jr., Carl E. Stump, William E. Schiller, Mrs. Charles W. Boll. Mrs. Levi Filepas and Mrs. Robert Schock. It's Up To YOU In '61 dents of Hershey of the convenience of the unified plan for charitable giving, which eliminates separate fund drives by the many benefiting agencies. Contributors are urged to give as generously as possible when con tacted by the volunteer workers. Tito campaign is vitally important to thc many charitable and service-giving Attention was called to the resi- agencies it supports. TALKING OVER STUDENT ACTIVITIES with Professor Dennis Castelli (right) are Mr. and Mrs. James G. Bates of Oberlin Gar-dens, Steelton, at the annual Hershey Junior College Parents Night sponsored by the Student Senate of the college. Mr. and Mrs. Bates are the parents of Isobel Bates, a freshman student at the college. Mr. Bates is employed in the Traffic Dept. of the Hershey Chocolate Corp. Edward F. Romano, president of the Student Senate welcomed the 175 parents present at the affair and Dr. Varnum II. Fenster-macher, dean of the college, spoke on the Importance of Academic Achievement. A social hour followed. Hershey News Comm. Bldg. Hershey, Pa. BULK RATE PAID U. S. POSTAGE HERSHEY, PA. Permit No. 3 |
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