TARGET 120912

YORK CENTER SCHOOL (1967-68) and
ALBION APOSTOLIC CAMP (present)

As it was back then
As it was back then.

NOTE TO VIEWERS: This target was chosen by Teresa Frisch for the Wednesday night free webinar * she holds on a bi-weekly basis. We at PSI use the targets she selects on this day so the viewers who participate in her Wednesday evening webinars will not wind up getting two different targets with the same set of coordinates.

Videos of all of Teresa's webinars are available on YouTube

This target was the school that Teresa attended when she was a young child. She gave this target as a way to teach a viewer how to move in time in order to detect and describe changes. The text is in Teresa's own words, describing her memories of the location.

If you looked at the tasking for this week's target, you saw that your task was the same time movement, in hopes of teaching you the same.
(If you are not working with a monitor, then you should ALWAYS look at or ask for the tasking to see what is expected of you in the remote viewing session. The tasking tells you what type of information an imaginary customer would want you to do for him/her. It is not pollution unless it tells you something about the target. If you are working with a monitor, the monitor should look at or ask for the tasking, instead.)



The side and back of the building

York Center School was a country school in York Township, Noble County, Indiana. The two story structure was made of brick, with terrazzo floors. The basement housed the kitchen, large cafeteria, janitor's room and the coal-fired boiler which circulated steam heat to throughout the building. "Clinkers" were burned coal and found outside at the base of the chimney.

Five yellow school buses delivered students daily. Grades one through eight were housed in five classrooms - two on the first floor and three on the second. The office and a small library were located on the second floor. The gymnasium was halfway between the first and second stories. The gym had a large stage flanked by wine colored velvet curtains at the west end, but did not have bleachers.

The school was situated in the middle of rural farm land. Agricultural sights, sounds and smells were common; fields being plowed in the spring and wheat, corn and oats being harvested in the fall. It was not uncommon to hear farm animals such as pigs, chicken and cattle moving about or clanging at feeders. Students didn't need the sound of the tractors to tell them when barns were cleaned and accumulated manure was spread onto the fields as fertilizer.

Dale Guthrie was our Principal for many years, entertaining us with stories of how the apple tree in his back yard produced several kinds of apples. Such was our exotic introduction to Botany and grafting. Ruth Buffenbarger, sister of Secretary of State Earl Butz taught first and second grades at York Center for many years.

MOVING TO THE PRESENT DAY

As it is today
The school is now used by the Apostolic Church as a camp.


Outbuildings have been added and repair work noted in the masonry equipment seen on the north side of the school. The original slide, swings and teeter-totters are still there. The large and popular pump-driven merry-go-round is gone. The once-small pine tree that I worried would be killed by deep snow and tried to "save" is one of the few pines still on the site, but not due to the efforts of a second grader. I still smile when I remember.

Iron Bogs historical marker
In 1840 - 1855 the area was also known for its Iron Ore Bogs.
Today, there is only a historical marker.

The bridge over the train tracks
The old bridge over the train tracks
There was a two track railroad to the north,
with a truss bridge that was still in use in 1967-68,

The new bridge
The new bridge
But that has since been replaced with a cement one.

A river bordered by bogs winds its way through the farmland a few hundred yards north of the railroad tracks.

FEEDBACK MAP

Feedback map

If you got impressions about the old school for which this feedback is insufficient, please go to the YouTube recording of the feedback, where Teresa shares other pictures and memories.

Many thanks to Teresa Frisch for this target.

The text and all images except the trestle
bridge courtesy of Teresa Frisch.