MAY 26 isi70L. XU—NO. 3 dinboro To Enter S’ Archery Tourney Mfidinboro State Teachers College been invited to participate rt an intercollegiate telegraphic e&cher meet on May 12th to May The National Archery As­ sociation sponsors the Women’s Sercollegiate Telegraphic ArchTournament, Edinboro S. T. C. listed in the Eastern District ich includes New England, New fork, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland, Delaware, and the Dis­ trict-of Columbia. {The total final score« is to be ilegraphed on May 21st; the eight ic!ntestants will shoot the Colum’ ja round, which is twenty-four (rows at each of the distances— •ity yards, forty yards and thirty ards range with the forty and »iirty following consecutively. ''Eight years ago Edinboro S. T. J competed in a similar tourna^ent with four hundred other t?lleges and came in two hundred Jnety eighth. Ruth Kingsley 'inked fourteenth place in indiviial scoring. In Clout Shooting iinboro placed seventeenth. The tournament at Edinboro ih be under the direction of ettie Mae Ruttie, Health and hysical Education Instructor. ABBI FEINBERG pEAKS AT ASSEMBLY On April 18, Rabbi Abraham H. einberg of the Jewish Chautau*la Society gave a very interest•? talk in assembly about Shinthe state religion of the ‘Panese. Rabbi Feinberg outfj the main elements of Shinjjsm. The Shintoist believes that emperor is a direct descendent I Continued on Page Three) JMY AIR FORCES $ present SHOW r n June 5, the United States [j y Air Forces will exhibit avi* equipment at Edinboro State Puhr'S C°llege)D]O11C schools and colleges are ‘av a/ hosts to the caravans which ichih-4?^ 0Ver the United States 0 their display at little or Wleg $ince the state teachers ons8!s of Pennsylvania are locatase °r exhibits, Edinboro is ict^A0^ northwestern disIia ’ Army Air Force officers in •ent expect to explain the equip- EDINBORO STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE, EDINBORO, PA. MAY 2, 1945 College President Baccalaureate, Senior Dinner, At State Sleeting Commencement Dates Set Our president, Dr. H. L. Van Houten, attended a meeting of the Budget Committee of the Board of Presidents of the State Teach­ ers Colleges on April 9th. The Board met with the Governor’s Personnel Committee, which is re­ classifying all state employees. Dr. Van Houten also attended a meeting of the presidents in Harrisburg on April 16th. The discussion concerned legislation. SELECT NEW BOOKS FOR COLLEGE LIBRARY NOTED NEWSPAPER EDITOR SPEAKS HERE Spencer D. Irwin, associate edi­ tor and foreign affairs columnist of the Cleveland Plain Dealer, was the highlight of the assembly on April 11. Mr. Irwin is the only American newspaperman to hold. the Officers Cross of the Order of the White Lion, presented by Pres­ ident Eduard Benes of Czechoslo­ vakia. The late Nicholas Titulescu of Rumania made him a Chevalier of the Order of the Star in appreciation of his understand­ ing of Balkan politics. His is a wide acquaintance with states­ men and leaders of European na­ tions. Mr. Irwin believes that Ger­ many isn’t going to be beaten as easily as many people think. The American people are apt to jump to conclusions and to look on the bright side of a situation without thinking of the other side which is (Continued on Page Two) Seven hundred seventy-five dol­ lars worth of books are to be added to the library in the near future. These will be of all types. Each teacher was asked to make out a list of the best books in his field which he would like to have in the library as reference material. From these lists, the books were ordered. All unbound magazines of the library were sent away to be bound last week. Students, of course, will be inconvenienced for a while but the reparation of hav­ PROSPECTIVE STUDENTS ing the magazines bound will be TO VISIT COLLEGE worth it. Those showing an interest in becoming students of Edinboro State Teachers College are invited DELTA PHI DELTA to visit the campus on the week­ end of May 12 and 13. The opera HOLDS ART EXHIBIT “Martha” will be presented again The Honorary Art Fraternity, at this time at 8 p. m. on Satur­ Delta Phi Delta, is holding its an­ day. Other interesting and in­ nual art exhibit in Haven Hall be­ formative activities have been ginning April 26th and continuing planned. through May 12th. The visitors' will stay in the The exhibit will consist of work dormitories. done by the college students in many medias, such as watered or, oil paint, tempera paint, and some SET HEARING FOR craft work. NEW BUS LINE The Greyhound bus line wishes The members of Delta Phi Delta wish to announce that the exhibit to put a bus on the route between will be open to the public during Warren and the state line. At a the week of May 1st, from 7 to 9 hearing in the Erie Courthouse be­ o’clock in the parlors of Haven fore the Public Utility Commission, Hall. A number of the paintings Dr. Van Houten will testify in favor of this grant. will be for sale. If the plan is carried out, future Miss Dorothy Skinner, faculty advisor to the art fraternity, is ex­ students of ESTC from Warren, hibiting a few oil paintings in Albion and other places along the Haven Hall along with the work of line will find it much more con­ the students. A complete exhibit venient to travel from home to of her work will be shown from school. For instance, students May 12th through May 24th. Vis­ coming from Warren would ride itors will be welcome between the straight from Warren to Edinboro; hours of 7 and 9 during the week those from Albion would ride straight from Albion to Edinboro. of May 14th. Baccalaureate services will be held at three o’clock on May 20, in the new Auritorium. The speaker will be the Reverend Mr. Wayne B. Firman. The annual graduation dinner will take place at twelve thirty o’clock in the Haven Hall dining room on May 26th. The Commencement services will be held at three o’clock in the New Auditorium. Mr. Miles Horst, Secretary of Agriculture in the Governor’s Cabinet, will be the speaker. COVENANT CHOIR SINGS HERE A musical service of brother­ hood through “Freedom to Wor­ ship God” was presented at eight P. M. Sunday, April 22, 1945, in the new Auditorium, by The Co­ venant Choir of The Church of the Covenant, Erie, Pennsylvania, under the direction of Dr. Federal Lee Whittlesey and with Alma Haller Way as accompanist, and Jessie Beck as assistant accom­ panist. (Continued on Page Two) YWCA DIRECTOR VISITS ESTC Miss Ione Sykes, associate direc­ tor of University Work of the Board of Christian Education of the Presbyterian Church, visited the Edinboro YWCA on April 19 and 20 to help them work out any problems they might have. She Weis lent to the Student Christian Movement of the Middle Atlantic Region to work in the 34 teachers colleges. Miss Sykes, a former student of Edinboro State Teachers College, entered Boston University where she majored in religious education, and at Yale did divinity graduate work. For the past two years Miss Sykes has been working with the voluntary student religious groups on New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania campuses. One of the important things Miss Sykes brought out was the tre­ mendous importance of the San Francisco Conference in regard to the future generations. At San Francisco, the groundwork for world peace or a third war is being laid. THE Page Two SPECTATOR noted newspaper EDITOR SPEAKS HERE i Not only are a loom (full size) (Continued from Page One) Improvements a- Fred Wolchik, Kore Funk Editors Secretary Business Manager Mikki Gies Jean Hersberger Assistant Business Managers Margaret Gillespie, Cornelia Killingsworth Reporters Joyce Weldon, Yvonne Davis, Phyllis Fogle, Emma Lee Seabrook Romaline Hall, Helen Pushchak, Tresea Malinowski, Wellma Jean Steadman, Betty Hall (Printed by the Albion News, Albion, Penn'a) EDITORIAL THIS MEANS YOU I’d be one of the last to assert that people are innately bad, yet I realize the necessity of laws and rules limiting the freedom of individuals for the good of the group. The train is a marvelous creation of man. It can transport thousands of tons of freight and thousands of passengers across the country in a matter of days—under one condition: that it stay on the track. Every wheel of every car, without exception, must stay on the track if the train is to perform its function. Likewise, in the journey through life, of a family, of a community of a nation, yes, even of a college, every individual, in order that the group be able to perform its function, must be guided by one condition—that he obey the laws and rules of the group of which he is a member. He must stay on the track. Not always, however, do these laws and rules meet with the approval of every individual in the group. It then becomes the duty of the disapproving individual to consider the rules from the viewpoint of the good of the group. If he still disapproves of the statutes, it is his privilege to attempt to effect a change, by addressing the proper authority. This failing, the most sen­ sible thing to do is to accept the laws and abide by them, or with­ draw from the group. and an air spray gun to be added to the art department, but new scientific and visual education equipment has also been ordered. Among the latter were new film slide projector and shipping cases for Yale motion picture reels. Plans are in process for the en­ tire repainting of Haven Hall, and several new chiffoniers and new chairs are ordered to be used in the girls’ rooms. It is intended that the old as­ sembly room of Normal Hall will be ready for use as a recitation center by next fall. Class rooms and study rooms will comprise it. The showcases in the exhibit room of the Art Department may be replaced in the future when shortage of materials and work­ men is not so acute. Negotiations with the highway department are underway to gain amisite sidewalks for use where students have cut across the campus in an effort to make good the old slogan, ‘the shortest dis­ tance between two points is a straight line.” Note: Do not forget the house bill 568 which provides for a raise in teachers salaries. This is of importance to all students of teach­ ers colleges and if it is passed at all in the Senate, the action will be taken before May 15. COVENANT CHOIR (Continued from Page One) The program was taken from the Jewish and Christian church liturgy. Silent Processional— Vesper Hymn—Now the Day Is Over. Invocation—Rev. Calvin—Winder. From the Jewish Synagogue— Many of our early railroad beds followed tortuous cow-paths The Shofar is Sounded Arr. through the woods. The engineer may not have approved of Dickinson—(William G. Carr, Soloist). every turn in the road that was made to by-pass a stump or a Sh’ma Yisroel Traditional boulder. But till he could effect a change in the roadbed by (Sung in Hebrew and in Eng­ addressing the proper authorities, he had to follow the winding lish). path. The train had to stay on the track, even though the road From the Eastern Orthodox went sixty miles out of the way in order to circle a mountain. Church— The years of progress of the railroad have seen stumps blasted, Hear My Prayer Kopylof rocks crushed, and mountains tunneled in the process of straight­ Salvation Is Created ening the roadbed. ............................. Tschesnokof There are still some curves in the road of which we do not From the Roman Catholic approve. Maybe with a little T.N.T. we can clear the obstacles Church— Thou All Transcendant Diety and straighten the curve. Meanwhile, why don’t we get back ..................................... Palestrina on the track and take the curves as they come. O Lord Most Holy Frank We are sorry about, the mistakes made in the last issue of the Spectator, and wish to thank you for your welcome and. constructive criticism. SUMMER SESSION DATES Pre-scssion Begins June 6th. 6 Weeks Session Begins June 25th. 3 Weeks Post-Session Begins August 6th. • Freshman May Enter on the Opening Date of Any of the Three Sessions. Negro Spiritual— Let Us Cheer the Weary Traveler Arr. Kemmer Joshua Fit the Battle of Jericho Arr. Gaul (William G. Carr, Soloist) dent of the college, spoke briefly. » 1 STANFORD’S SUPER MARKET always there. I* If this war « is to ■itlef to all all future wars’?/ all ended as end to -- w • . it must4- be because the_ xzv-yyie people are;1eba --------1tera1 fighting for the peace. The peacfTi] will not come when triumph oif m the battlefield comes. rnmne. T* It will -.□arrive arr'j l?lool ^ only when there i~ 1Ve» is religiou’' back and . . . we’re off . . . r it’s way past our ^‘mie . . . we’d write more but interesting. .*Les n°bhing„ -----------=. Ho r? • ■ • turn out the lights . . . me in . . . I’m so bored with • . I’ll be tunin’ in later 0 so ’til next time . . . remember in • while there’s still life there’s jrfDe and there are some signs t, ptfe life .... . . Love and Lipstick X. X. X., B. S. £ Gifts At— . THE village GIFT SHOP EDINBORO, PA. Page Three SPECTATOR garet Artise are now finding out just what it is like to teach. The reason for their odd looks is that they have taken their place in the line marked “Student Teach­ ers”. Lavine Albright and Marion McCracken did their stint last semester and are using this one to recuperate. Don’t you worry, little ones, your time will come, too. Some people leave home and others go home. Helen Ager is now commuting from her home in Erie and Dorothy Kingsley, who has been at Haven Hall ever since the first blizzard which closed all the roads (both ways Mary) has now returned to her home near Cambridge Springs. It has come up to the time When we must end these lines. (Somehow it just wouldn’t rhyme) Good-bye all. RABBI FEINBERG SPEAKS REPAIRS UNDERWAY ON CLOCK CHIMES Everybody has noticed that the clocks are running again. The de­ lay was in getting the master­ clock, which controls all clocks on campus, repaired. It is hoped that this week the chimes will strike once more. If it is at all possible the entire Westminster chimes of twelve notes are to be used in place of the six notes used previously. Possibly the chimes may strike the hour. Desirable ethical standards re­ quire cordial relations between teacher and pupil, home and school. zation in which Christianity will prevail. Rabbi Feinberg graduated from the University of Cincinnati in 1930 and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He was ordained rabbi at the Hebrew Union College in 1932. He is a graduate student at the University of Chicago in the field of Comparative Religion and will shortly receive his doctorate at that university. At present, he is rabbi of Rodef Sholom Temple, Youngstown, O. (The Jewish headquarters sup­ plies these speakers without charge.) (Continued from Page One) of the Sun Goddess, who in turn was the child of the Sky Father and Mother. Therefore they are a favored people, their emperor is divine, and they cannot even talk about him. In Japan, the war lords have so emphasized Shinto­ ism that it has become a state re­ ligion. Education like religion is also controlled by the state, and in this way, the people are in­ doctrinated with certain ideals. r.r. It has been assumed that the Japanese believe they are fighting a holy war. They believe that the res.t of the world is filled with barbarians and that they must be I converted to the Shinto faith. This is the mission of the Japanese sol­ dier and he is fighting to fulfill it. Shintoism is based on ‘stateCOMMERCIAL | ism” and “race-ism.” This alone is contrary to the Christian faith. Christianity sets forth the idea Modern Business that science and education have a Stationery and definite place in religion, and that Advertising Material there shall be equality among all HIE AI .BI ON NEWS men. We are fighting this war to Phone 89 - Black Albion, Pa. preserve our way of life—a civili- PtUakoA CANDY PRINTING j Trask, Prescott & Richardson Co. \ £ Department Store Erie, Pennsylvania with every item which you select in our store, goes the prized, yet unspoken word, of assurance of quality and full value. Compliments of BUCHANAN’S BUS DEPOT BAKERS 5c-$1.00 J THE Page Four SPECTATOR News of Edinboro's Former Students ENSIGN OSCAR PALMQUIST, former ESTC athlete and husband of LOIS WELSH PALMQUIST, Harborcreek, just completed a 30 day leave after a ten months tour of duty in Naval Aviation in the South Pacific. JANE VAUGHAN PEIFFER has returned to New Kensington, Pennsylvania, after being with Bill since November in Seattle and Yorktown, Virginia, where he attended Naval school. Bill will take over a YMS soon. CAPTAIN WILLIAM SCHAAF with the Ferry Division of the ATC after completing combat flying from England. With Bill in Michigan is Mary Barber Schaaf. JAMES BARBER, brother of Mary and a graduate of several years ago is still with the medics in Italy. Another “old-timer”, T/S ED­ WARD NOBLE writes from the West Pacific: “Ah, but now we are out of foxholes; we shave, now and then . . . The familiar nameplate Bucyrus-Erie makes home seem nearer than it is in the distance.” LT. DOMINIC FANANI is in the Mariannas, “an island para­ dise”. “Climate is marvelous. The sunshine is rather constant; rain­ fall is infrequent and passes over as quickly as it pounces on us. Sunsets rival those at Edinboro and nights are cool; no malaria, no poisonous reptiles or insects, very few insects pests.” Edinboro’s psychologist, LT. M. S. HISKEY, now at the Jackson­ ville, Florida, USN base will short­ ly reassigned after months in the Pacific. Mrs. Hiskey and Ma­ ry Sue are with the professor. KATHARINE B. HIPPLE has left her teaching and is now a WAC Pvt. in the Air Corps. Sometimes even Kati gets home­ sick for Edinboro and nearby points while way up there in Des Moines. ;LT. FRANK S. HOLOWACH, 01598094 Hq. 31st Regt., Camp Ellis, Ill. CPL. CLINTON E. THOMAS, 13134694 311th Fighter Squadron A.P.O. No. 74, c/o Postmaster, San Francisco, Calif. SGT. JOHNNY JOHNSON, JR, has arrived in this country from England and, for a few days, is stationed at Camp Patrick Henry Hospital at Newport News, Va. Phone calls and telegrams have indicated he is still in a cast. FLIGHT OFFICER DANIEL T. WOLCHIK T-125916 301st T.C.S.—441st T. C. Gp. A.P.O. No. 133 c/o P. M., N. Y., N. Y. Dan, a first pilot on a C-47, is stationed in France, but spends most of his time transporting gasoline to the front and flying wounded troops to hospital bases in England. He say he’s been in and out of Germany so many times, that he is about ready to take out his first citizenship papers. Sarah Kratz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Kratz, Harts­ ville, Pa., has arrived in Italy for further assignment in the Mediter­ ranean Theater of Operations as an American Red Cross secre­ tary. Until her Red Cross appoint­ ment, Miss Kratz taught at Bound iBrook, N. J., High School. She is a graduate of Upper Southampton High School and Edinboro, Pa., State Teachers College, B. S. 1940, ’and attended Taylors Business School, Philadelphia, and Colum­ bia University. FIFTY-SIX GIRLS SIGN FOR SPORTS There has been a good show­ ing in the signing up for Spring Sports in W. A. A. Fifty-six girls are out for tennis and forty-two for archery. Only a few have sign­ ed up for horseback riding. More and more students are signing up for this particular sport. Out of seventeen students that had signed up for Life Saving, seven have remained. The reason the girls have not stayed is be­ cause they felt they were not pre­ pared for the advanced swimming at the present time. PREPARATIONS MADE EDINBORO SENDS FOR OPERA MARTHfl DELEGATES TO CONFAB The Edinboro Y. W. C. A. sent two delegates, Jane Patterson and Yvonne Davis, to the Regional Student Christian Movement Con­ vention held at the Grove City College Outing Club on March 24 and 25. The main theme of the confer­ ence, “Christ in My Back Yard,” was divided into three sub-themes: “Not in the Sky” and “Looking at Me,” presented by Reverend Mr. Lindstrom of the West Minister College and “Pointing Over the Fence”, presented by Miss Polly Cuthbertson, the Regional Y. W. C. A. Representative. The Regional statement of pur­ pose: “The Student Christian Movement in the Middle Atlantic Region is a fellowship of students and faculty who, desiring to be definitely, personally, and radical­ ly Christian, are dedicated to: re­ discovering and making their own, and sharing the essentials of the Christian faith; taking responsibi­ lity for needed changes in com­ munity life; making real the pos­ sibilities inherent in the fact that the human family is one.” The conference was most bene­ ficial, yielding several valuable suggestions which will be included in the future Y. W. C. A. pro­ grams. The choirs of the College i' High School are hard at Wo^ these days in preparation for th I presentation of the Opera “MaV^ tha” to be given in the Collet Auditorium May 9 and 12 at p Much of the effectiveness of such a performance depends uponJ-D the stage settings. The Opera takesC H place during the period of Queen'F Ann at which time the architec-]La: ture was centered about curves',th< scrolls, and soft contours. The ’i ha Theater Arts Class, under the di-Jinp rection of Miss Dorothy SkinnerJph is busily engaged in designing and painting the scenery, which Th in its entirety is created in jo# whimsical manner, yet conform^ to that period. oroi The fair, with its ornate, little'jail booths supplies the background °mi for the farmers, the farmer’s0111 wives, and the gaily costumed ele‘ peasant maids. om The court ladies in their court;t3n gowns complete the picture creat­ om ed by the formal, yet fanciful set­liza ting of a garden with its foun­flei jss tain, statuary, hedges, and gardeij ath furniture. nd The home of the heroes, com­|rt, fortably furnished, is enhanced by Y decoratively draped doors ancj,)yc furniture reminiscent of our;ea colonial period. Af ROSALINE MINEO ELECTED TO FRATERNITY Miss Rosaline L. Mineo, speech major and senior, has become a member of the Alpha Psi Omega honorary dramatic fraternity. The formal initiation took place at the new auditorium on April 25. Miss Mineo lately directed the college production of ‘‘The Wom­ en”. She has appeared in the plays: “Overtones”, “Gammer Gurton’s Needle”, “The Necklace is Mine ’, “Dr. of Lonesome Folk”, and “If the Shoe Pinches”; and she has done much back-stage and make-up work. Men’s and Ladies’ Furnishings H. G. G1LLASPIE JOLLEY’S id; rni eii yc EL T1 rir in id e< DRUG STORE jrl is? ART STUDENTS ARE FETED AT DINNER Mr. and Mrs. Bates gave a rab­ bit dinner in honor of the Junior and Senior Art Students at their home April 12. This brought to­ gether two classes and the head of the Art Department as the school year nears its end. The evening was spent informally while Mr. Bates showed his fine collection of interesting stamps. Baked Goods Edinboro Home Bakery Baked Daily :-d lc h k l id BOSTON STORE ERIE, PENN’A