Knightstown High School - Galaxy Yearbook (Knightstown, IN)

 - Class of 1958

Page 17 of 116

 

Knightstown High School - Galaxy Yearbook (Knightstown, IN) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 17 of 116
Page 17 of 116



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Page 17 text:

gzckg 4 Sad Sample llow ard Meeks supervises Jim Sw indell and Darrell Haines as they test soil. Mr. Meeks teaches vocational agriculture and biology. I-le shows movies to demonstrate many of the things they study. They use soil and milk testing equipment, soil sampling tubes, and tree pruning and farm shop tools. His classes also work with microscopes, dissecting equipment, samples of fertilizers, seeds, and grain graders, Each year he has his agriculture classes collect weed seeds, insects, and tree leaves. His students keep farm records, participate in judging activities and go on field trips to nearby farms. The FFA has a gilt chain which they tend. They also have a school dance each fall. They participate in county crops, livestock, dairy, and poultry contests. Each year the DeKalb Agriculture Aw ard, the FFA Chapter Star Farmer Aw ard, and the Judging Teams Awards are given. Mr. Meeks says the purpose of the agriculture classes is to train farm boys for the business of farming and related occupations. 2202+ :vga aa Walter Havercamp and Mariellen Ammerman watch Jack Avery work on an experiment. He teaches general science and chemistry. The departnient has sufficient apparatus for magnetism, heat, light, atmospheric pressure and the other branches of the physical sciences. A group of math and science students visited the science exhibit at Purdue in ested in helping people understand what is going on around them in this scientific age. The science department strives to develop scientific curiousity in those students who show an interest and aptitude in science and related subjects. This is particularly true since the recent foreign develop- ments such as the Sputniks. He hopes to help all students grow individually and to recognize the fact that they have a responsible membership in a democratic society and the troubled world today. 74621 '74 tie Wag 752: Done Marcus Ellis, general shop teacher, is working with the lathe as Manasseh Gillam and Tom Armstrong watch. In his general shop classes he teaches metals, electricity, woods, and plastics. The shop classes use hand tools and power tools including wood and metal lathes, a metal Shaper, and circu- lar, hand and jig saws. An industrial arts award is given to an outstanding shop student based on shop work during four years of participation. Mr. Ellis strives to acquaint the student with the tools, mater- ials, and practices of industry which may be used as a basis for a vocation of his choice. 13 demonstrating the basic principles in chemistry, electricity, November. Mr. Havercamp hoped to have some representa- tion at the spring exhibit. The science department is inter-

Page 16 text:

ffu tie 3 Pzogamna ?au'44ed? Norman Bassett is watching his students as they work. The drafting department got some new bow compasses this year. No individual awards are given except in industrial arts as awhole. The classes give the students a sample of industrial drafting. It broadens their experience so that they may take up drafting as a vocation or avocation. - f Charlotte Kney is watching Sondra Porter, Lois Brown, and Jean VanDuyn as they take an open book test. Miss Kney teaches homemaking and biology. Edithe Tipton also teaches homemaking. This year two new unit kitchens, complete with maple cabinets and two automatic ranges, were installed in the homemaking deparmnent. Each year the home ec. girls put on a style show and have a Christmas Tea for the faculty. Any senior girl may enter the Betty Crocker Homemaker of Tomorrow Contest for a scholarship. The Necchi Company gives three awards to the best seamstresses in Homemaking. The department teaches the girls to be good homemakers which includes learning to be good cooks, and seamstresses, to manage their homes and the family budget, and to care for their children. The two teachers also strive to teach them to take part in the activities of their community and to be good citizens. f ,-11 'flat Www Plan '74 Dae 7omauoca Norman Bassett is showing Doug Shores how to operate a proof press during one of his printing classes. The proof press and a paper cutter have been added to the equipment in the printing department. A larger room is being used for the two classes. The printing de- partment serves the school in many different ways. All of the absence slips, tardy slips, admittance slips, and passes are printed there. Programs, tickets, stationery, and posters are also printed for the school. The printing department strives to give first hand understanding of vocational opportunity.



Page 18 text:

1 Pmctcze77Z4+6e4 77afut Mrs. MARGARET M. SIMONS is showing Jean Ann Davis and Eldred Butcher how to run the mimeograph. She teaches typing, shorthand, and English 10. EVELYN A. WARNER is watching Sybil Bramrner as she types a business letter. Miss Warner teaches Business English, bookkeeping, commercial arithmetic, and typing. Besides using the standard typewriters the students also have access to an electric typewriter, an Ediphone, a Dictaphone, and adding machines. This year for the first time a Gregg award will be given for the highest speed and production in short- hand. Miss Warner took her bookkeeping classes to visit one of the banks. The Commercial Department prepares the students to get part-time jobs during the summer and to qualify for secretarial work after graduation. The Department introduces the office machines to the students, giving them a working knowledge of how the machines work. This gives the student the opportunity to work for the faculty, doing such things as typing tests and running them off on the machines. The student is also better prepared for college work, for almost all papers to be handed in must be typed. 9404 Egan, Eu: Mrs. HELEN GREENLAND is explaining to Rose Flower and Phyllis Jordan how a phrase in music is like a sentence in English, for Mrs. Greenland teaches not only two English classes but also grade music and directs the high school chorus. PATTY LYONS shows a group of her students, con- sisting of Rebecca Ratliff, John Dickens, Ronnie Ballenger, Kenny Gregory, and Jim Swindell, how to diagram a simple sentence. Mrs. Lyons teaches six classes of English to students in grades seven thru ten. Her seventh grade pupils wrote poetry this year and several of her students entered speech contests. Lois Simmerman illustrates verbals to one of her six English classes. Throughout the English Department bulletin boards and filmstrips are used to show the importance of English. fe- 'f . 14

Suggestions in the Knightstown High School - Galaxy Yearbook (Knightstown, IN) collection:

Knightstown High School - Galaxy Yearbook (Knightstown, IN) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 1

1955

Knightstown High School - Galaxy Yearbook (Knightstown, IN) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 1

1956

Knightstown High School - Galaxy Yearbook (Knightstown, IN) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

1957

Knightstown High School - Galaxy Yearbook (Knightstown, IN) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

1959

Knightstown High School - Galaxy Yearbook (Knightstown, IN) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965

Knightstown High School - Galaxy Yearbook (Knightstown, IN) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 1

1984


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