Tryon Daily Bulletin, Tues., Jan. 22, 1980
Henderson Named
Piedmont Council
President
Rance Henderson
Charles L. (Rance) Henderson
of Morganton has been named as
President of the Piedmont
Council of the Boy Scouts of
America for 1980. Henderson is
Director of the North Carolina
School for the Deaf, while also
serving as Superintendent of the
North Carolina School For The
Deaf in Morganton. In addition,
he is an instructor in the Teacher-
Training Program Area of the
Deaf at Lenoir-Rhyne College.
Henderson received his B.S.
and M. S. from Oregon College of
Education, his M. A. from San
Fernando Valley State College,
and his L.H.D. from Gardner-
Webb College.
The new president has been a
Scouting leader for several years
and has held the position of
Chairman of the Tablerock
District Scout Camp Develop
ment Fund Drive, Chairman of
the Tablerock District Associa
tion of Baptists for Scouting,
Tablerock District Chairman,
and Piedmont Council Sustaining
Membership Enrollment Chair
man, Pacesetter Division.
Henderson is active in his
community and is on the Board of
Advisors at Gardner-Webb Col
lege. He is affiliated with the
National Association of the Deaf,
North Carolina Association of the
Deaf, North Carolina Council for
the Hearing Impaired and the
Convention of American Instruc
tors of the Deaf.
A good, useful, anytime gift is a
meat thermometer, especially if
you like beef cooked rare. Beef is
considered rare when roasted to
140, medium at 160 and well done
at 170. These are internal
temperatures taken in the center
of the roast.
Senior Citizens
Meet Monday
The Polk County Senior
Citizens will meet Monday at 5:30
p.m. at the Meeting Place in
Tryon. Leonard Bohner of
Landrum will give an illustrated
lecture entitled, “Interesting
things God-made and man-made
Around the World.” Mr. Bohner
has travelled to more than 80
countries in his more than 40
years of missionary and admini
strative service.
A supper will be served at 5:30,
followed by a business meeting
and program.
Betty Is 80
Mrs. Stanislas Czetwertynski
became an octogenerian on
January 17th and there was a
great gathering of the clan in
celebration of her birthday.
Present were Mr. and Mrs.
Marquette de Bary of New York
City, the Morris and Barnes
families from Birmingham,
Alabama; Bill Woodall from
Taos, New Mexico; Woodalls and
Rumfelts from Atlanta and the
Ardens from Charlotte. All
together there were forty with
twenty members of the family
not able to come.
Comply
Polk County and Tryon School
Districts are among the 51 out of
144 schools districts in North
Carolina which have reached 100
percent immunization comli-
ance, according to the Health
Services Division of the Depart
ment of Human Resources.
State law requires that all
students, regardless of age, be
protected against polio, measles,
rubella (German measles), dip-
theria, whooping cough, and
tetanus, or be expelled until proof
of immunization is supplied to
school officials.
DUPLICATE BRIDGE
Results of the Tryon Duplicate
Bridge Thursday night were as
follows: North-South: 1st. Fred
erick Chevalier and Dr. Jules Le
Grande; 2nd. Mrs. Oliver 0.
Paulsell and Mrs. Stanislas
Czetwertynski; 3rd. Mrs. Bert
Anderson and Mrs. Earl Carter.
East-West: 1st. Mrs. Charles
Dodd and Mrs. David Z. Porter;
2nd. Mrs. 'ohn Martin and
Andrew Leslie; 3rd. (tie) Mrs.
Miles White and Stanislas
Czetwertynski with Mr. and Mrs.
H. C. Olson.
Free Film Tonight
The free film presentation of
the Polk County Public Library
tonight at 7:30 is “Quality
Street.” The cast is Katharine
Hepburn, Franchot Tone, Eric
Blore, Fay Bainter. Yearning for
vengenance, a spinster of 1805
England poses as her own flighty
niece to charm and chastise a
man who had disappointed her
ten years earlier by going off to
the Napoleonic wars instead of
proposing marriage.
On Dean’s List
The following Polk County
students were named to the
Dean’s List at Isothermal
Community College: Emily J.
Brewer, Rt. 1, Tryon; Ann
Gentry, Tryon; Dottie Jane Holt,
Rt. 1, Columbus; Ruth Ida
Jackson, Rt. 2, Mill Spring; Sara
Wilkins, Tryon; Sheila A. Wilson,
Rt. 2, Mill Spring.
TRYON SCHOOL
LUNCH MENU
Tuesday: cheese-sausage piz
za, buttered mixed vegetables,
chilled applesauce, milk.
Wednesday: chili and beans,
buttered mashed potatoes, gold
en yellow corn, homemade
cornbread, milk.
Thursday: braised beef tips
over rice, green garden peans,
homemade rolls w-butter, peanut
butter bar, milk.
Friday: shaved ham on
homemade bun, mustard and
mayonnaise, candied yams
Hawaiian, fried breaded okra,
milk.
TRYON SCHOOL
BREAKFAST MENU
Tuesday: choice of juice,
homemade peanut butter-oat
meal cake, milk.
Wednesday: choice of juice,
homemade sausage roll, milk.
Thursday: choice of juice,
warm apple danish, milk.
Friday: choice of juice, Day.
sausage and buttered grits, milk.
New Shipment Ladies Spring Dresses $9.98 and up g
Ladies Cheeno’s Pants $7.98
New Shipment Blouses $3.98 and up
Come in and lay-a-way for Easter
Open Wed. afternoons §
and each evening until 6 p.m. S
Toney’s Discount Clothing
Landrum,S.C. g
“Top Spin”
Is Honored
NEW YORK, Jan. 17 — Ms. Val
Haynes of Tryon and Ron
Tetterton of Camden, S. C. are
the owners of “Top Spin” which
has placed sixth in the Second
Year Green Working Hunter
Division of the American Horse
Shows Association-Insilco Zone
Horse-of-the-Year Award compe
tition held during 1979 in the
Association’s Zone 3.
Winners will be presented with
their trophies and ribbons at an
Awards Luncheon to be held
January 27, 1980, at the Remada
Inn in Charlottesville, Va.
The annual competition, spon
sored by the Insilco Corporation,
recognizes outstanding achieve
ment among AHSA competitors
within their respective zones.
On Dean’s List
Two local students named to
the Dean’s List at Wofford
College for the fall semester were
Barry Lee Neal, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harold E. Neal, Sr., of
Columbus, a sophomore business
major and Joyce Ann Payne of
Tryon, a senior economics major.
Bayard Going
To Washington
Andrew Ray Bayard, son of Dr.
and Mrs. Walter Bayard of Tryon
has been selected to attend a
Presidential Classroom in Wash
ington, D. C. during March 1 —
March 8. The curriculum will
focus on power and the Federal
institutions and decision-making
processes that form national
policies. He and over 400 other
outstanding high school students
will study government and
politics through direct contact
with national leaders and
Washington analysts.
Andy is a senior at Spartanburg