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Saturday, May 11, 2013
Spring has finally arrived in Exeter
Spring has finally arrived in Exeter and the park downtown next to Generations Bank is displaying the wonders of nature. We thought it might never come but it has. Next week's temp may spike to the 90's. I think it really might stick around this time. Enjoy the sunshine and the warmth.
Friday, May 10, 2013
Exeter-Milligan Update: Biology II Students
Lorie Sliefert's Biology II students at Exeter-Milligan have
recently been studying the Nervous System. They dissected sheep brains to
learn the major parts of the brain. Pictured are Toni Bossaller and Erica
Yound performing their disection.
Tuesday, May 7, 2013
Exeter-Milligan Second Graders Experience Pioneer School Day
– Exeter-Milligan and Friend
students watch as Eric Stehlik sheers a sheep.
2013 pioneer school day
-Exeter-Milligan second grade students invited their pen pals, the Friend
second grade class to come and enjoy a Pioneer School Day together on April 25th
at Saline County Museum. They are pictured in front of the one room schoolhouse
front row from the left: Emily Brahstedt, Cece Murphy, Morgan White, Colby
Martin, Gabe Jindra, Taylor Weber, Abby Gilmore, Shelby Steyer, Braden
Benjamin, and Miss Baumert. Second row from the left Leah Rummery Mrs. Weber,
Shelby Lawver, Jack Baptista, Chase Vnoucek, Chase Svehla, Timothy Weber,
Olivea Swanson Zoe Brogman, Austin Banks, Cade Kresak, Connor Troyer, and
Marcus Krupicka.
It felt like time turned backwards at the Saline County
Historical Society Museum in Dorchester as their one room schoolhouse was full
of students on Thursday, April 25th.
Exeter-Milligan second graders decided to invite their
Friend second grade pen pals to their pioneer school day event this year. The
seven Exeter-Milligan students were joined by 16 Friend students and their
teacher Miss Baumert.
The students, teachers and helpers dressed up in pioneer
clothing and started their day in the one room school house.
Exeter-Milligan second grade teacher Marla Weber explained “small groups of
students did reading lessons at the recitation bench while others practiced
handwriting on slates and memorizing poems.”
Weber, has held the event for a number of years using the
grounds at the museum as her setting. Museum board members have begun to
add more experiences to the day to help the children understand their
forefathers’ lifestyles more completely.
Prior to the event the students studied the pioneer life and
learned what it would have been like for children growing up in the frontier.
Each student was given a pioneer name which was used as they
were called forward to recite. They also learned to stand when they asked a
question along with the protocol for entering and leaving the classroom.
For recess they played some of the games that were played in
the days of the one room schoolhouse such as drop the three-legged race and the
wheelbarrow race. When it was time for lunch the students along with teachers
and helpers brought out their baskets and lunch pails to each lunches that were
similar to those eaten by children long ago. They brought bread, cheese
and fruit or cookies to eat with lemonade to drink out of pint glass jars.
Throughout the day the children had the opportunity to
explore the museum grounds, seeing some of the special exhibits including an
original log cabin home as well as an entire building of farm machinery and
equipment.
Students also had the opportunity to make a jump rope with
Les Vilda of Wilber who also spoke to the students about his experiences living
and traveling like an early pioneer.
In the afternoon students were divided into groups and
experienced different pioneer life sustaining essentials like washing clothes
by hand, sewing with a foot pump machine, making butter, carving soap hanging
clothes on the line and beating a rug.
In the machinery building the students learned how to use a
corn sheller and then took the corn and planted in using a hand planter.
They also got to run the siren on an old fire engine and explore the other
pieces of machinery in the building.
Eric Stehlik stopped by the museum and showed them how to
sheer sheep and taught them about how the wool was used in pioneer days.
Volunteers with the Saline County Historical Society were
board members Judy and Roger Rada, Gene and Mary Ann Placek, and Eric
Placek. Helpers with the students were Dianna Krupicka and Krista
Hitchcock.
Weber thanked the Saline County Historical Society Board,
"The Saline County Historical Society Board has been very supported of our
annual Pioneer Day and have helped make the event successful."
Monday, May 6, 2013
Death Notice: Wilma Murphy
Funeral services for WIlma Murphy
(August 5, 1916 - May 4, 2013)
will be held at 10:30 a.m., Tuesday at the St. Stephen's Catholic
Church in Exeter. Rosary services Monday, at 7:30 p.m. at the Farmer
Funeral Home in Exeter,NE. Visitation Monday, from 1 p.m. until rosary
at the Farmer Funeral Home in Exeter. Memorials are in care of the
family. Interment will be in the Exeter Cemetery.
Exeter-Milligan Alum Active in York College Theatre
Jameson Trauger as George Little, the younger brother of Stuart Little in the York College Children's Theatre
Exeter-Milligan
2011 graduate Jameson Trauger has definitely made his presence known in the
York College Theatre Department.
Just a
sophomore this year, Trauger has already participated in four York College
productions along with a production at the Yorkshire playhouse.
One of his
gigs, the Children’s Theatre brought him back to familiar territory this week
for a performance at the Exeter-Milligan gym on Tuesday, April 30th.
Trauger
participated in theatre at Exeter-Milligan; he recalled “doing theatre at
Exeter-Milligan helped me come out of my bubble. I was able to get out
there and try different things, experimenting with different voices. Mrs.
Tauriella was pretty good about letting me have free range creating crazy
characters.”
His favorite
character at Exeter-Milligan was “the Professor. I got to make him an
eccentric guy. I also got to do crazy walking things I picked up from
“Monty Python.”
The history
education major at York College is thinking about doing a minor in theatre
along with a coaching endorsement before heading out to look for a job teaching
at the high school level.
Last year
Trauger participated in three of the four York College shows including, “Send
Me No Flowers,” the One Act plays with emerging directors, “Dinner with the
McGuffins,” and the spring drama, “Anatomy of Gray.”
This year
Trauger has performed in “Inspector General,” the One Act, “Check Please, Take
Two,” the drama, “Wit,” and the Children’s Theatre performance of “Stuart
Little.” He is also in the current Yorkshire Playhouse production of “Bus
Stop.”
Trauger
finds the Children’s theatre production a challenge, “Children’s theatre
requires quick changes, scrambling to remember everything in addition to
loading and unloading the set on Tuesday and Thursday morning. Travelling
around makes it a little stressful, too.”
In “Stuart
Little” Trauger plays four characters, George Little who is Stuart’s older
brother, Mr. Clydesdale, Angie the gangster cat and the school child with a
dunce cap.
So far
Trauger has found “everything in the theatre department fun. We all have
a great time in the theatre department, we have a lot of fun and put on great
shows.”
He has also
enjoyed his time at York College, “It’s nice to be close enough to home to get
laundry done but far enough away to do my own thing. Mostly I have
enjoyed that York College is a pretty small campus made up of very diverse
people from all walks of life and all over the place. Everybody is really
close and they care about each other. When going through tough times,
everyone rallies around.”
In the
Children’s Theatre production Trauger has also been joined by other local
students including Patrick Clark and John Baker from York and Bethany Miller
from Milford.