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Kingsport TN Dobyns Bennett High School Indian Tribune Newspaper Feb 27 1959 For Sale


Kingsport TN Dobyns Bennett High School Indian Tribune Newspaper Feb 27 1959
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Kingsport TN Dobyns Bennett High School Indian Tribune Newspaper Feb 27 1959:
$20.35

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Kingsport TN Dobyns Bennett High School Indian Tribune Newspaper Feb 27 1959
Condition: Good; 4 Pages
Sophs Lead Semester Honor List:Seniors a nd J uniors Drop BehindSeniors Fill Posts for CityI ber, Sandra Holtzclaw, LandonI Kenny, Bill Kibler, Linda Leach,i Jimmy MacNaughton, Sue McCoy,■ Sally McCrary, Linda Sanders,Johnny Sprinkle, Julia Stone, DaleVolberg, Janice White.I JUNIORSFirst honor roll: Gipsie Bush,Vicki Carico, Fred Churchill,Kenneth Dockery, Tommy Doub,Sara Gearhart, Pat Thetford,Phyllis Wallen.Second honor roll: Emily Alex-ander, Onalee Arnold. Freddie! Begley, Frank Binkley, Joyce Car-ter, Wesley Coover, Georgia Dun-can, Richard Forrester, PeggyGaylor, Jane Grills, GeorgeHaynes, Margaret Ketron, PhilLewis, Katherine Looney, Bill Mc-Alpine, Judy Neff, Barbara New-some, Jane Poston, Jon Quarries,John Rankin,\" Robert Reynolds,Betty Roberts, Sue Shaulis, KarenSlagle, Norma Smith, GloriaSproles, Libby Strong, Katie Tag-gart, Dorthea Theile, Janet Wall,Ann Wallace, Martha Ward, Caro-lyn Wilder, Diane Woodard.SOPHOMORESFirst honor roll: Sally Blackard,Kathy Gutherie, Beth Little, JoAnne Royall, Russell Trimble,Frank Volberg.Second honor roll: Betsy Ader-holt, Mike Ainslie, Steve Arm-strong, Betty Barker, Iris Camp,Eugene Case, Eddie Chase, MarthaClemmer, Nic Clemmer, LindaDow, Thomas Duckwall, RuthFannon, Steve Fritschle, HelenGift, Louise Gillenwater, JoanGlass, Betsy Griffith, Ellen JaneGruver, Toby Hale, Paul Harmon,C. E. Horne, Bill Hutchins, Lynne--, -r.. TZilrrnvo \"Rnrhara,Sophomores led the honor rollfor the first semester with 27.The Seniors had 18 on the honorlist, followed closely by the Juniorswith 17.Semester Honor RollSENIORSFirst honor roll: Joe Blackburn,Sara Goode, Oneda Mays, JudyWimberly.Second honor roll: Pat Adkins,Howard Britton, Mitch Clark,Terry Cloud, Dan Cross, DeannaDoty, Sandra Fleenor, SandraHoltzclaw, Landon Kenny, BillKibler, Sue McCoy, Julia Stone,Dale Volberg, Janice White.JUNIORSFirst honor roll: Kenneth Dock-ery, Tommy Doub, Sara Gearhart.Second honor roll: Emily Alex-ander, Joyce Carter, Richard For-rester, George Haynes, Phil Lewis,Katherine Looney, Bill McAlpine,Jane Poston, Jon Quarries, RobertReynolds, Katie Taggart, PatThetford, Ann Wallace, MarthaWard.SOPHOMORESFirst honor roll: Sally Blackard,Beth Little.Second honor roll: Steve Arm-strong, Betty Barker, Iris Camp,Eddie Chase, Martha Clemmer,Linda Dow, Thomas Duckwall,Ruth Fannon, Helen Gift, JoanGlass, Betsy Griffith, Toby Hale,Paul Harmon, Bill Hutchins, LynnHutton, Jon Moore, -Ann Regen,Jo Anne Royall, Thomas Scott,Pat Si vert, Linda Tittsworth, MaryTokarz, Russell Trimble, FrankVolberg,,Judy Worley.Six Weeks Honor RollSENIORSCity Manager Charles K. Marsh discusses annexationproblem with student officials Bill Hammond, Dan Cross,Allen Gaines, and Charles McLellan.Students Foresee City GrowthThe Student Board of Mayor andAidermen discussed thoroughly onCity Day a few of Kingsport’smost outstanding problems. Amongthe topics considered were theannexation of suburbs, enlarge-ment of the City Council, a site forthe new City Hall, and parkingproblems.In view of the fact that a greaterpopulation would increase stateappropriations for Kingsport andwould also attract new industriesinto the area, the Student Boardsuggested that the outlying su-Dan Cross ChosenStudent MayorDobyns-Bennett students hadan opportunity to play a real partin the operation of city govern-ment on City Day, February 20.Headed by student mayor DanCross, high school representativestook over the various jobs of Cityemployees. A list of problemswhich face the Board of Mayorand Aidermen was presented tothe students for suggestions.Topics were chosen for modelordinances from those suggestedby the homerooms, prizes going tothe homerooms with the best sug-gestions.The City Day program consistedof attendance at city court withthe student judge, student attor-ney, and student chief of policeparticipating; a model meeting ofthe Board of Mayor and Aider-men; luncheon at the LegionHome; and student participationin the duties of various offices.Each Senior homeroom selectedtwo students to take part in CityDay. These representatives electedDan Cross as mayor; Allen Gainesburbs, with the consent of the resi-dents, should be annexed.After a great deal of discussionand deliberation, student officialsunanimously decided that the CityCouncil should be enlarged. Theyrecommended a seven-man Coun-cil, adding two aidermen to thepresent organization. They alsosuggested that aidermen be addedaccording to population increase! in the future.Other decisions were (1) thatthe new City Hall should be builtwhere the old one now stands andand Bill Hammond, aidermen.Other students and their officeswere Charles McLellan, city mana-ger; Tom Carson, police chief;Sidney Herbert, waterworks engi-neer; Mitch Clark, fire chief;Glenda Simonds, city judge; BettyKenner, director of public works;Hilde Wright, juvenile counselor;Terry Parsley, city attorney.Larry Garber, superintendent ofschools; Sandra Boyer, city treas-urer-recorder; Lynda Ray, build-ing official; Charles Fannon, di-rector of safety; Sue McCoy, city11/01. IlAJICUI / LZM- . V UC XJUlVft. UlU 11,Mitch Clark, Sara Goode, OnedaMays, Judy Wimberly.Second honor roll: Pat Adkins,Ruth Anderson, Ellen Ball, Bar-bara Beverly, Frank Bridwell,Howard Britton, Rogers Chase,Terry Cloud, Dan Cross, BettyDeVault, Deanna Doty, SandraFleenor, Allen Gaines, Larry Gar-HUUl/UH, uuuy IKllgUlC, UtllUiXlCLKlutinis, Joyce Livesay, Jon Moore,Karen Olson, Anne Regen, JeanneRoberson, Mary Roper, ThomasI Scott, Diane Shull, Pat Sivert,i Andy Slemp, Suzanne Smith,I Lynne Sorrell, Jerry Thomas,Linda Tittsworth, Mary Tokarz,Mary Ward, Leslie Wilson, JudyWorley, Brenda Durham.Merit Scholarship semi-finalists Joe Blackburn, LowellConverse, Judy Wimberly, Landon Kenny, Dale Volberg,Howard Britton, and Jimmy MacNaughton look overscholarship papers.\\Seven D-B’ers Qualify lor Merit HonorsSeven Dobyns-Bennett studentsare semi-finalists in the NationalMerit Scholarship Contest, andseven others are runners-up. Thisis D-B’s best record on the merittests to date.Semi-finalists are Howard Brit-ton, Jimmy MacNaughton, LowellConverse, Dale Volberg, Joe Black-bum, Judy Wimberly, and LandonKenny. They have also completedthe second test, but the scoreshave not yet been received.Seven other students are run-ners-up. These people lacked justa few points to qualify as semi-finalists. They are David Wil-liams, Virginia Galbreath, BillKibler, Jane McAmis, Dan Cross,Eddie Coward, and GlendaSimonds. The students received aCertificate of Merit from the headof the National Merit Organiza-tion.All of these people are withinthe top one percent of all theseniors in the United Statesscholastically.Staff Increased;One ReplacementMrs. Mary Southern Crumleyand Mr. Billy S. Bums have joinedthe Dobyns-Bennett faculty thissemester.Mrs. Mary Southern Crumley,sophomore, senior, and businessEnglish teacher, joined theDobyns-Bennett faculty at thebeginning of the second semester.This is not a replacement, butgives the English Department anadditional staff member becauseof increasing enrollments.A native of Rogersville, Mrs.Crumley graduated from FurmanUniversity, where she received herB.A. degree, majoring in Frenchand English. After attending Pea-body College for training in libraryscience, she taught French andEnglish and was librarian atChurch Hill High School.Mrs. Crumley resides with herhusband and two daughters at 721Yadkin Street.If she finds any leisure time, sheenjoys cooking, sewing, and col-lecting stamps. Mrs. Crumley alsoplays the piano and the organ.She prefers classical music butlistens to all kinds.Mr. Burns, biology teacher andKey Club sponsor, replaces Mr.Joseph McCoy, who resigned be-cause of illness.Mr. Burns graduated fromDrexel High School in Drexel,North Carolina, and received hisB. S. degree from AppalachianState Teachers College. He hasalso spent four years in the Navy.His wife is a teacher in Drexel,North Carolina. On week ends,either Mr. Burns goes to Drexel,or his wife and two-year-old soncome to Kingsport.Water sports—swimming, boat-ing, and fishing—are his favoritehobbies.(2) that the city parking lotsshould be improved and a park-ing garage be considered in thenear future.Terry Parsley and Charles Mc-Lellan were the D-B students withthe best discussi9ns of City prob-lems. Their homerooms will receivecash prizes.Four D-B StudentsQualify in TestsDobyns-Bennett had four stu-I dents who passed the NationalI Honor Scholarship test given onOctober 21, 1958. These studentsi were Joe Blackburn, Howard Brit-! ton, Dale Volberg and Judy Wim-| berly.Dobyns-Bennett students of the■ National Honor Society havei qualified among the highest inthe country. Only 2,513 studentsout of 45,548 contestants made ai score of 142 or higher. These willnow take a general aptitude testto be given on March 10, 1959.Scholarships will be offered to47 students picked by the Scholar-ship Board after both qualifyingtests have been passed.Deanna Doty WinsHomemaker AwardDeanna Doty has earned thehighest D-B rating in the 1959Search for the American Home-maker of Tomorrow, sponsored byGeneral Mills. She will receive ahomemaking pin which representsthe slogan “Home Is Where theHeart Is.”Deanna competed with otherD-B senior girls in a 50-minutewritten examination. Her paperwill be entered in competition withthose of other winners throughoutthe state for the title of stateBetty Crocker Homemaker of To-morrow.engineer; Carol Hagey, librarian;and Linda Steadman, director ofrecreation. Ginny Galbreath andDenver Horton were selected asalternates.Classes TakeSpecial TestsD-B seniors, juniors, and sopho-mores were given either aptitudeor achievement tests during theweek of February 9-13.Seniors took the Essential HighSchool Content Battery Test,which measures achievement inEnglish, social studies, mathe-matics, and science. Test resultswill indicate how individual stu-dents and the Senior Class as awhole compare with Tennessee andnational norms.D-B juniors were given the Dif-ferential Aptitude Tests this yearfor the first time. These are basedon language usage, clerical speedand accuracy, vocal reasoning,numerical ability, abstract reason-ing, space relations, and mechani-cal reasoning. Scores will be usedto identify students’ natural tal-ents and abilities, thus aiding theindividual in choosing an occu-pation.A complete Diagnostic ReadingTest was scheduled for sopho-mores. The three phases of thetest will show reading rate, thelevel of vocabulary development,and the degree of comprehensionof study-type materials.Answer sheets for these threetests will be checked be specialI.B.M. machines at the Universityof Tennessee. Results will beentered in homeroom records, anda complete file will be placed inthe office so that the principaland the guidance counselor mayuse them in individual conferenceswith students.1 ribe Moves1 o District ISemifinalsBy outclassing Unaka 60 - 36,Dobyns-Bennett moved into thesemifinals of the District I basket-ball tournament. Frank Bridwellwas top scorer with 12 points.Tonight the Tribe meets HolstonValley, victor over Hampton.Sullivan clashes with Elizabethtonin the other contest.Paced by Larry Garber’s 26-pointeffort, the Tribe had opened itsoffer for the District crown with an83-64 win over Bluff City. Holdingonly a one-point lead at the half,the Indians broke loose in thesecond half to take the victory.Whitney LeadsGirls Intra inuralsWith the completion of indi-vidual bowling, ping-pong, andvolleyball competition, Mrs. Whit-ney\'s juniors lead in girls’ intra-mural standings with a total of1380. Campbell’s seniors are insecond place with 1300 points, andthe Sophomore Class is led byButcher’s homeroom.First place in individual bowlingcompetition was captured byLinda Hultin, a sophomore fromMcMillan’s room. Jane Grills, ajunior, took second place; BrendaGantt, one of Miss Campbell’sseniors, third place.Patsy Light, a senior, was thechampion in ping-pong competi-tion. Pat Thetford, a junior, andRuth Fannon, a sophomore, tooksecond and third places.The volleyball championship waswon by Miss Rule’s senior girls.The all-intr^mural volleyball teamconsists of (seniors Sally McCrary,Mary Donn Heck, and GloriaTrent; juniors Suzanne Edwardsand Zollie Harrison; and sopho-mores Margaret Edens and BethMaiden.Indians Capture 5th Straight Big 7 CrownNotches 300th Win at D-BSenior basketball players are: back row, left to right,Ronald Kidd, Bobby Ross, Frank Bridwell, Charles Fannon;front row, left to right, Clark Bryan, Rogers Chase, LarryGarber.SPORTS SPECTATORBy Joe BlackbumSeven seniors—Frank Bridwell,Clark Bryan, Larry Garber,Charles Fannon, Ronald Kidd,Bobby Ross, and Rogers Chase—closed out a sparkling regular sea-son and began tournament playthis week.Heading the list are co-captainsFrank Bridwell and Clark Bryan.These two starting forwards wereselected on the Invitational Tour-ney “dream team” and the AllEast Tennessee squad. Bryan hasearned the title of East Tennes-see’s top rebounder from theKnoxville News-Sentinel.Senior guard Larry Garber, the. . -xr-x nlcn r»Q!T)Pd t.OCrawfordThe Indians brought their regu-Ilar season to an exciting climax!by defeating Elizabethton 65-47.By this victory the Indians iclinched their fifth straight con- !ference championship, marked ICoach Crawford’s 300th win as a |Fribe Takes 3rdInvitationalThe D-B Indians establishedthemselves as one of the top con-tenders for the state basketballcrown by overcoming stiff opposi-I tion to capture their own invita-tional tournament for the thirdtime in four years.The Tribe took the title by de-feating the Hampton Bulldogs inI the championship game 65-52.Leading the Indians were ClarkByran and Frank Bridwell with 20and 15 points respectively.The consolation contest was won. by the Sullivan Pirates in a 47-45: thriller over Lenoir City.In first round action, Hamptoni edged Knoxville West 59-58.D-B shot with amazing accuracyto defeat Big-Seven Conferencerival Elizabethton 74-59.Scoring honors were capturedby Frank Bridwell with 20 points;he was followed by Larry Garberwith 15.Third-seeded Sullivan defeatedthe Blountville Tigers 67-61, anddefending state champion LenoirCity romped over Boones Creek73-49 to complete the first round.Probably the most exciting gameof the tournament was providedin the second round when top-seeded D-B met undefeated Lenoirrecord and captured its own Invi-tational Tournament. Since thetournament, D-B has been unde-feated in regular season play. Weare hoping the Indians can con-tinue this record through the Dis-trict, Regional, and State tourna-ments.© © QCoach Guy B. Crawford’s 300thvictory, which was achieved bydefeating Elizabethton for the BigSeven title, was certainly an out-standing achievement. After thegame the team presented him aplaque to commemorate the oc-casion. In his twelve years atD-B, Coach Crawford has com-piled the exceptional record ofCity.D-B coach, extended their winningstreak to 19 games, and recordedtheir 36th consecutive Big SevenConference win.Leading the Indians over Eliza-bethton were Larry Garber andFrank Bridwell with 20 and 15points respectively.After the Invitational Tourneythe Tribe notched wins overRogersville and Ketron\'before, tak-■ ing its second Big 7 win by defeat-ing Bristol 84-31. D-B tookanother win from Bristol later inthe season after overcoming theVikings’ slow-down tactics.The Indians met Roanoke intheir next encounter and defeatedthem 70-55. In their second meet-ing D-B pulled away in the final. minutes to take a hard-fought62-53 victory. Senior guard LarryGarber led in both games with 16j and 14 points.Against the Erwin Blue Devilsthe Tribe rolled to an easy 90-36i win. D-B set a conference recordof 38 field goals in this game. Intheir second meeting the Indians,i led by Frank Bridwell’s 26 points,trounced Erwin 97-40.Paced by Ron Kidd’s 14 pointeffort, Coach Crawford’s men out-lasted Elizabethton 61-50.The Indians took two wins fromthe Johnson City Hilltoppers byscores of 64-58 and 56-42. Brid-well led in both games with 22 and13 points.Big Seven rival Greeneville fell87-42, and crosstown rival LynnView was defeated by an 86-55score.Trailing most of the game, D-Bcame alive in the third quarterto defeat Blountville 55-51. Brid-well tallied 16 points and collected15 rebounds.The Tribe, behind five points atthe half, fought back to take aUsing underclassmen the entireme nan, lougnv duck varxc -----.------74-61 decision to meet Hampton J last half, the Tribe gained an easyvictor over Sullivan, in the finals, victory over Holston Institute.I Senior Larry Garber led the 1 Sophomore Mike Ainshe led withI Tribe with 20 points. \' 15 points.16082


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