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Globe Sun from Salina, Kansas • 1

Publication:
Globe Suni
Location:
Salina, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

To Annex Bonnie Ridge Acts On That But City leeC ream Trucb Hang On Salina's ice cream trucks, center of a storm of protests from a group of residents who insist they are a traffic hazard and a danger to small children, are still at liberty to make their tinkling: rounds. NEWSPAPER OF SALINE COUNTY, KANSAS NUMBER 24 THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1963 Foreign Wheat' Team dinance presented last week be adopted, there was no second to his motion, and the matter rests over for further consideration, probably next week when a full commission is expected to be present. Commissioners Ralph Exline and Donald Tucker were absent Monday. Before that happened, however, there were suggestions that the ordinance presented last Paying Call On Saliroa A wheat, team from three countries, Portugal, Mozambique, and Angola, are scheduled to visit Salina this Thursday as part of a Kansas tour that began Sunday. The visitors, here to create a better climate for the sale of U.S.

wheat abroad, are to bo in the United States until July 3, visiting other wheat states as well as Kansas. Bonnie Ridge addition, however, took another step into the city at Monday's meeting of city commissioners. An ordinance annexing that area within the city, including a buffer zone along Ohio, passed on first reading. There were no protests. The two issues were high on the agenda at Monday's meet ing.

There was plenty of lalk about the ice cream trucks, but all that really happened was that Commissioner R. W. Bull moved that the strict or- Grandfather" Rule Will Force Saline School Head Out Now it's Saline county's superintendent of schools, Mrs. Ruth Fagerstrom, who will lose her job because she does not hold a master's degree. County Attorney John Weckel said this week that he received a copy of the opinion of Kansas Attorney General William Ferguson relating to the law.

The opinion relates to a law which says that superintendents must have a master's degree and a principal's or administrator's certificate issued by the state superintendent. A "grandfather" clause, which allows persons who were serving as county superintendent when the law was passed to continue in the office and seek re-election does not apply in counties of more than 30,000 population. County commissioners, who express regret that Mrs. Fagerstrom must step out of the office she's held for 22 years, will appoint a new superintendent to serve until July 1, 1965, and ready have one applicant, they jjthey said. i i The team includes four from Portugal, two from Mozambique, and two from Angola.

Team leader is James Geetersloh, Great Plains Wheat, Roma, Italy. Others in the party are From Portugal, Miguel Jar-dirni, assistant agricultural attache; Dr. Jose Manuel de Melo Arbues Moreira, chief of technical service of the Wheat Federation, Director of Grain Elevator; Jorge Dantas de Campos, deputy director of the National Bread Institute; and Dr. En- gracio ae Anarade vice president, director of the Nat- tional Millers Federation. From Mozambique, Manuel Dias da Silva, director, Mozambique Cereals Institute; and Joao dos Santos Sardinha, chief miller, Campanhia Industrial Matola.

From Angola, Jamie Oliveria Correia, assistant director of Cereals Institute; and Luis Rodriques Marcos, managing partner, Moagem de Quicolo. The visitors are in this coun try under the sponsorship of the Kansas Wheat Commission, Hutchinson, cooperating with Great Plains Wheat, which has headquarters in Garden City, Kas. After visiting Kansas the team will go to Nebraska. The inspection tour includes also Colorado and North Dakota. In Salina the visiters will inspect the Board of Trade building, arriving there in THE OFFICIAL VOLUME LXXVIII Sunlights Oscar Yancey, 136 W.

Minne apolis, left Monday for Bloom- ington where he will con tinue work toward a degree of doctor of philosophy, at the Uni versity of Indiana. He is assistant professor of music at Kan- sas wesieyan universny. It isn't Christmas yet and the tree in the lobby of the First Presbyterian church isn't a Christmas tree. It's a "sock on which children attend ing vacation Bible school there may hang a pair of socks for Navajo Indian children. They tmay ormg otner guts, too, out it's tht tree that gives emphasis to the project.

The winds blew mightily, lightning flashed, thunder roared, the rains came bringing 1.26 inches of wetness harvesters didn't want and most of Salina lay in darkness for one to four hours. And that's the story of Tuesday night in Salina. There was little damage, except for trees and limbs felled by the wind and the weariness of Kan sas Power Light Company men who worked most of the night repairing light wires. Oh yes, a wing blew off a small plane at the Municipal Airport, and a few nerves were jangled! Salina Teacher On KABIE Annual Tour One Salina teacher joined 35 others when the two-rweek Kansas Agriculture Industry Education tour for Kansas teachers began its summer tour. Starting Monday, and passing through Salina Tuesday, the tour is joined here by Mrs.

Gay Nothern, 648 S. 11th, third grade teacher at Parkview school. The tour ends June 22. The traveling classroom is an air-conditioned bus a necessary luxury since summer has come to Kansas. Accompanying the teacher-students will be No ble W.

Drake, service director, Kansas State Chamber of Commerce, tour manager, and Grace Starlin, Newton, instructor for those receiving college credits. Stops are scheduled to inspect points of scenic interest or beau- tv along the route, historical. a business, industrial, agricultural and educational places of importance. Morrison Grain Adds Six Bulls To Herd Morrison Grain Company, Salina, recently purchased six Aberdeen-Angus bulls from William Henry, Cambridge, I1L week be modified to specify "no selling on the streets from moving that provisions be made that the ice cream trucks stop midway of the block, do the selling from that point, and move on only when assured that all the small customers are safely of the street; that the whole matter be turned over to the bar association. Mayor Gaylord Spangler said the commission has received let-(Continued on Page Eight) Head Resident At Men's Hall KWU Is Football Coach Student resident advisers for Wilson Hall have been named for the fall semester at KWU.

They are Al Gilpin, Beloit; Al- jlen Largent, Concordia; Andy Deckert, Larned; Steve Scofield, Scandia; Kent Voorhies, McDonald; George Eddey, Tenafly, N. and Eddie Gorsky, Quinter. All will be seniors except Voor-'hies, who will be a junior. Men in the dormitory elected Paul Peters, Smith Center, president for the coming year. Wesley Jackson, Kansas Wes-leyan instructor in biology and assistant football coach, will be head resident for the coming year.

old war planes of two decades ago to London. Three days in London and they'll go by boat to France, spend three days in Paris and see Omaha Beach again! From there by boat to Belgium, Germany and Switzerland, and all the way, from London on, they'll be retracing the trail along which the old First Division fought its way. About 280 of the division veterans will be making the tour, traveling this time in a luxury of whicjh they barely dreamed back there in the rough going, slogging days 20 years ago. the forenoon, and will be guests at a luncheon arranged by R. L.

Kauffman, president of lhe Salina Board of Trad and member of the Smool Grain Company. At thai lime lhe visitors will meet with farm-(Continued on Page Eight) Norris D. Olson Is New City Planner The city of Salina will have an official city planner again after July 1. Norris D. Olson, now personnel director for the city of Columbia, has been hired to fill a vacancy that has existed since last fall when Dick Pres ton resigned and moved to Inde pendence, Mo.

Olson was here Monday, met city officials and went house hunting with his wife. They have two sons. The new city planner former ly taught school for five years at Spring Hill, Kas. and was mayor of that town five years. He was graduated from Kansas State University in 1944 with a degree in milling industry and last year at KU completed a one year political science course designed for city managers.

Since the resignation of Preston, Ralph Ricklefs, Salina's landscape architect, has served as city planner until a replacement could ibe found for the position. Union Pacific railroad tracks and a small stream, is included in the final project. The bridge eliminates a dangerous railroad crossing. San-Ore Construction Mc-Pherson, has the contract for the final surfacing project at for the 3.8 miles. Ernie Fulton, Ellsworth, is res ident engineer in charge of the project for the Commission.

After Twenty Years, He'll See Omaha Beach Once Mo: "1 never thought I'd go back. I knew I couldn't afford it. Now after 20 years I'm That's the reaction of Glenn A. Youngdahl, 229 N. Penn, who in August will take his family over the battleground of the First WnrlH War 2.

Work Order Issued For $146,432 Final Lap Of K-141, Kanopolis Dam A work order for bituminous mat surfacing on the third and final project on now alignment of K-141 serving Kanopolis Reservoir in Ellsworth county has been issued by the State Highway Commission, John A. Erickson, second division commissioner, an It's called the "Battlefield and is sponsored by the First Division and the U. S. government, which will pick up most of the tab. Another share of the expense will be paid from funds built up by those First Division men in the years since the close of the war.

They've paid yearly dues and the fund pKas accumulated. With Youngdahl on this trip to the old battle scenes will be his wTife and their son and daughter, Dale and Martha. They'll take the train to New York, leaving here Aug. 14, and then take a jet shades of those nounced this week. The nroiect becins aooroxi A -u-- t.

mately one-half mile east of the old K-141 and US-40 junction four miles northeast of Carneiro and extends south. New K-707 alignment eliminates seven right angle turns and reduces the distance from US-40 to K-4 from 17 to 14 miles. A new bridge, spanning the.

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About Globe Sun Archive

Pages Available:
722
Years Available:
1962-1963