March 02, 2026
Morning Announcements - Monday, March 2, 2026
The cafeteria will be serving chicken tenders with a roll, or Daily Grab & Go, broccoli with cheese sauce, fruit choice and milk for lunch today.
The weather report for today is partly cloudy with a high of 39.
Today’s trivia question is: What famous children’s author was born on March 2, 1904?
Congratulations to Kasen Proctor who won the State Championship in Oral Interpretation at the State Middle School Speech and Debate tournament in Pickerington, Ohio on Saturday. Kase now qualifies for the National Tournament to be held in Richmond, Virginia in June.
Also making it to the final round and qualifying to the National Tournament in Interpretation was Skye Wieber.
Other team members who qualified to and competed at the State Tournament were Natalie Mees, Natalie Salmons and Elizabeth Wheeler in Interpretation, Millie Daniel and Gabe Matter in Congressional Debate and Riley Hackney in Extemporaneous Speaking. Congratulations Kasen, Skye and the entire EMS speech and debate team on a tremendously successful year so far!
The Spring Book Fair starts today and runs through Friday. The hours are 7:50 am – 2:30 pm. This is the perfect time to purchase your books for summer reading.
Mrs. Bishop would like these yearbook committee members to meet her upstairs in room 200 at 8:00 am. today so that she can take a picture for the yearbook. They are Jacoby Schnittker, Kayla Tulik, Emma Biemler, Addi McFarland, Kavery Mesenberg, Marley Schaechterle, Jessica Rockwell, Hunter Jacobs, Kaili Marchari, Maddie Moon, and Carly Tulik.
Any 7th grader who has not handed in their Washington, D.C. paperwork, should do so today. Make sure that Mr. LaCivita or Mrs. Bishop gets it.
Tomorrow, March 3 is the deadline for handing in your yearbook cover designs to Mrs. Bishop or the main office.
The trivia answer is that Dr. Seuss who is a famous children’s author was born on March 2, 1904.
We would like to close with this quote from Dr. Seuss: “A person’s a person, no matter how small.”