ON COLLEGE TIMES 7 LOCK HAVEN State Teachers College, Lock Haven, Penna. Vol. 14. WEDNESDAY, OCT. 21, 1936 No. 3. Theme for This Issue , . "HERE AND THERE' Parents' Day To Dramatic Club Launches O n Novel Artists Will Qive Be Held Oct, 31 Plan of Permanent Reorganization Second Program Initial Appearance Scheduled Placed U p o n A Competitive Basis Reserve October 29 for "The for Campus "Open House" Miss Brong, Chi Kappa Sigma Adviser, Expounds Favorite Midsummer Night's Dream" DADS, MOTHERS GUESTS Theories Concerning Club Reorganization, Including a GRAND ENTERTAINMENT Three-Circle Flan for the Admission of Students The college is holding its first A complete production of the Parents' Day on Saturday, October Shakespearean fan'.asy, "A MidMAKE EARLY APPLICATION FOR MEMBERSHIP 31, under the combined direction summer Night's Dream," will be of faculty and student committees. in the auditorium of the The Dramatic Club under the j Miss Brong has also planned a \ pvesented Although this program is an inLock Haven State Teachers Col' permanent organization for the novation on our campus, such ev- leadership of its adviser. Miss lege on October 29, as the second ents have been held with great sue. Brong, and President, Rita Pohl, club. The club has had a president, program of the Artists' Course. cess on other Pennsylvania State is preparing for an outstanding I vice president, secretary and treasThe company of twenty-six acdramatic season. A complete re- urer for many years. However, new Teachers College Campuses. tors will include in their presentaofficers have been chosen. They organization has already taken Tentative plans for the morning include registration of parents in place. This reorganization is based are: artists. Hart Slater, Eleanor tion the Mendelssohn musical score the reception room, visiting of reg- on three favorite theories of Miss Cupp; typists, Helen Eyerly, Car- and the fairy ballet. Special cosularly scheduled classes, and a Brong. First, the club will be large. ; milla Folmar; stage trustee, Ray tumes, scenery, and lighting effects tour of the building all under the Membership is open to all students Kniss; property mistress, Clee have been devised to project the direction of students. After lunch- who have talent in acting or in the Howe; make-up artist, Lucetta Mc. illusion. Colette Humphrey, who plays eon, which will be served in the various phases of stagecvaft. Sec- Kibben; electrician. Bill Brown; dining hall, a short program has ond, the responsible positions in wardrobe mistress, Florence Duke; the part of "Puck," and Milton been planned for the general meet- [ the club will be held by the most press representative, Helena Silag- Parsons, who portrays "Oberon," ing in the auditorium. Dr. Arm- \ able members. Third, the club will yi. A program committee and a direct this production. Both have strong will extend the greeting to i be on a competitive basis. The social committee have also been veceived their Shakespearean backall visitors after which selected competition will take place thru elected, these being filled by June .^Tound undev inspired teachers students will speak on various a three-circle plan. The new mem- Freed and Jeanne Lepley, respec- and through professional training, phases of college life including 1bers will compose the outer circle, tively. The organization has also both in this country and in Engclubs, publications, the curriculum, I or "Debs," who will be comparable been divided into three parts, act- land. In addition they have studied social life, and the lecture course. [ to a scrub athletic team. These ing, staging, and business. Each of modern methods of play producAt 2:00 P. M. the football game i people will study the technique of these phases has its special offlc- ^on on Broadway and in repertory companies throughout Europe with West Chester will be played | the drama under the supervision ers. For several weeks. Miss Brong -.nd America. on the college field. A musical pro-1 of Miss Brong, and will take part Hamilton Ward, as "Demetrius," gram will probably be arranged to | in one-act plays. Before they can has been conducting "tryouts" and fill in the time before dinner, j be admitted into the inner circle, interviewing present members to -ontinues in the tradition of the which also will be held in the col- certain activities are required of see what kind of dramatic work Booth family, of which he is a lege dining haU. Open house will them. The actors must have played they can do. The club has decided niember. He has supported such be held throughout the dormitory one lead or two minor parts. Those that "Neighbors," by Zona Gale, well-known Shakespearean actors interested in stagecraft must be will be the first of a series of prac- as Lionel Barrymore, E. H. Sothfrom 9:00 A. M. until 6:30 P. M. The Student Activities Council chairman of one committee apiece, tice plays to be presented during ern. and Julia Marlowe, and, before becoming connected with (Contiriuea on page 4) will sponsor the Hallowe'en dance or members of two. Once inside this companji, appeared in many in the evening. Arrangements for the charmed circle, the individual David Belasco productions. Miriam an orchestra and refreshments' begins to accumulate "honors" for Catheron, who plays "Titania," dehave been completed. AU students all dramatic activity. When he has signed and directed the fairy balare urged to cooperate by attend- obtained twenty-five "honors," he lets for "A Midsummer Night's may buy a pin. After accumulating ing and bringing their parents. Dream." She received her drafifty points, the member is given a o matic training with Richard BoleWATCH "The Time." for the All key to attach to his pin. He then The Education Club, under the slawski and at the Provincetown State Football Team -which will belongs to the third circle and is direction of Dr. Rude, will hold its Playhouse in New York City, and a "key" member. The "key" membe selected by State Teachers Colfirst dance on October 24, 1936. has appeared for two seasons with bers constitute the governing lege coaches through a questionThis club is primarily a scholas- Ruth St. Denis and Ted Shawn, as board of the club. naire mailed from this college. tic and not a social organization. a dancer. She also was chosen by However, it is sponsoring this Massine for a ballet with the Phildance, which is to be informal, to adelphia Orchestra. raise funds to "go national." j This company was organized by Eddie Schadt's orchestra will Miss Humphrey and Mr. Parsons To play for dancing from 8:00 until \ to realize their ambition to pro1. All these loyal campaign 1. That slippery auditorium 11:30 o'clock. | duce plays of enduring worth. floor which makes us lose our enthusiasts -with their supply Refreshments will be sold at the They assembled their company of dignity. of stickers and buttons. dance. actors of ability and experience so 2. That special dayroom rat for 2. The band's non-appearance Committees in charge are: that their performance in speaking staying out of our desks so at the Bloomsburg game. Music, Caroline Brown (chair- Shakespearean and other classic far this year. man), Alice Fredericks and Inez drama could compete favorably 3. Some of those much-used re3. Whoever so beautifully Dieffenbach; Decorations, Erling with the high standards of beauty cords in Music Appreciation painted those trees on the Hauge (chairman), James Brown, rnd naturalness of modern diaclass. mountain opposite the athLucille Glossner; Refreshments, logue. letic field especially for 4. These students persistently Mavtha Mapes (chairman), Mar-j . o Homecoming Day. muttering about the work garet Harman and Rita Pohl; Tick4. The "dinkies" of the FreshFreshman Class Officers, 1936 they have to do in Art. ets, Eleanor Wood (chairman), man boys. (Why not some B. The lovelorn who loll in the Louise McEntire, Ruth Burkett, President: Joseph Whittaker, Hoi. for girls?) Helena Silagyi, Joe McNerney, library. lidaysburg. Pa. 5. Our loudest cheerleader. Dorothy Hamberger, James Finn, \ Vice-President: Marion Arndt, 6. The girls who have begun to (The female is deadlier than Howard Underwood and Inez DiefLock Haven, Pa. take roll in chapel. the male.) fenbach. [ Secretary: Marie Kraemer, Potts6. Mr. Lehman's superlative 7. Those imitative females who ville, Pa. The club extends a hearty inhave persisted in copying a song-leading on Wednesday vitation to all! Let's help them Treasurer: Clare Antes, Juniata, certain person's hairdress. morning in chapel. make it a success! 1 Pa. EducationCl\ibTo Sponsor Dance i ORCHIDS BRICKBATS COLLEGE TIMES ^L 3Sn B 3t Third Row Reading Left to Right—Kruper, Long, Stewart, Waltman, Sterritt, Giles, Eyer, Bowes, Vogt, Nolai Second Row Reading Left to Right—Trainer Lawvence, Fuller, Hileman, Marks, Mollura, La Rosa, Young, Ko owski, Obevheim, Asst. Coach Parsons. First Row Reading Left to Right—Asst. Coach Bossert, Head Coach Fvedevicks, Esposito, McCollum, Spotts, nion, Hodvick, Bvazinski, Hochvein and W. Hopkins. COACH BOSSERT COLLEGE I . IB .• le TIMES L. H. Ties Kutz- Football's Growth Traced The College Times is published at the Lock Haven State Teachers townOnSaturdayl Primitive Rise 1 College, Lock Haven, Penna., by the Board of Editors of the College Times. Well, students, the team did not beat the Kutztown boys down A Perennial Answer to Prayers for Shin-Kiel there at the Dutch City last SatbalFs First Birthday Came in 1830; F urday afternoon, but they gained Meet in First College Mati any amount of yardage they wishBOARD OF CONTROL ed whenever they felt in the mood. Editov-in-Chief—Ruth Crowley THE FINAL RESULT A GAME C The team went into the game with Editorial Board plenty of fight, and scored in the Faculty Advisor . . . Mr. Parsons Man at his best is still an animal, even thougl four niinutes of play. Bill Student Adviser Helena Silagyi first the desire for combat, be it mental or physical. Thi Editorial G. Sarah Mertz Hopkins carried the ball down the Make-Up Ruth Simon, Clyde Huston, J. Ponuchalek field fov great gains every time he still it is there. Th^s yearning has undergone many varied ch£ Features—^Joe McNerney, Eleanor Wood, Chas. Slonaker, Alice Fred- took the apple, and when it rested on the two yard strips, he carried taken place in the great game of football. This desii ericks, Jane Seltzer Club.s—Ruth Freeman, DeRonda Weakland, Naomi Lebo, Lois Mc- it over. by having a suit of metal riveted around you after -v Millan, Betty Rothermel, Jean Dykens, Judy Sember Duving the second and thivd News A. Foor, C. Brown, J. Eastman, V. Mark, H. Greenman quavtevs Ringie Smith carried the lance through an opponent similarly clad and mountei Circulation Robert Seitzer ball on many of the plays, and been so developed into a fine art that we have footbal Men's Sports Joe Sarafinski, Dick Harvey with Bill Bvown and Abe Hoch- ball is a game where the ability to out-think and ou Women's Sports Marion Arndt Our English cousins claim that it is an Americj Typists—Sophie Gendel, DeRonda Weakland, Madolyn Miller, Marie vein, they worked the apple deep into the Hexers' tevvitory. but honorable games of Association P'ootball, Soccer, ani Kraemer, Inez Dieffenbach, Georgine Gottschall. lacked the final scoring punch. cent Ainerican clings to the theory that it is an ovif Acceptance for mailing at special rate of postage provided for in Yohe and Kruper got off a lot of however, are wrong, for it is mainly English in for Section 1103, Act of October 3, 1917, authorized June 3, 1923. very nice kicks which put the involves many changes that neither originators ever Entered as Second Class matter November 6, 1928, at the Post Maroons deep in the Kutztown terThe earliest known record of football is the diavi Office at Lock Haven, Penna., under the Act (Ti March 3, 1879. ritory. back in the good old times of 1801, in which he me" Late in the fouvth quavtev the because "sometimes the plaievs kick each othev upon WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1936 Dutchmen, in their greatest offen nionie, and with all theiv might, inflicting much dar sive dvive, carried the ball to the pended entivel.v upon the size of the field in which 1 one yavd line wheve they were although the avevage size of the field was 80 to 100 yj held for thvee downs. On the third der such conditions the game existed until 1850 when England began the ovganization of football under down, Kutztown scoved and kicked in Lon. Who Has the Right to Teach? the extva point. Johnsonis had conIn IS 30, football was gaining prominence in the The cause of ouv pvesent depvession is, pavtiall.y, our failuve to vevted the Havenite extva point, the coUeges along the Middle Atlantic seaboard. Thei adapt ouvselves mentally and socially to ouv economic and industvial so the scove was tied 7-7. With as Harvard, Princeton, and Rutgers. The only diff changes. These changes have placed on organized education a buvden three minutes to play. Captain Bill games of that period was that each eollege was playi which has pvoved it inadequate. We have changed ouv buildings and Hodrick drove the team from his pretation of the rules as played in England; some fav: our equipment, but we have not changed our method of selecting ouv own twenty yard line to the Dutch the Astociation; while still others favored methods ar teachevs. Toda.y, in ouv lavgev schools, we have too many incompetent however, they came to the conclusion that they woul teachevs. It is tvue that we have made the educational requirements 32 where the final whistle blew. ditions, and in 1830 they formulated the rules that of our teachers higher, but we still give little thought to whether that Football. By 1878, the game was firmly established or person has the spivit, ideals, and ideas which comprise the chavacter in his ideals, and is able to invite ifications to meet American originality. of that pevson having the vight to teach. The main vequivement of the player was the abili the desire to learn in others. BeA gveat number of teachevs ave teaching because they do not sides intelligence, some of his 'give." Hacking„ was the main requisite of "giving," -. „, know what else to do. A gveat number of the students in our own characteristics should be patience, different meaning from the hacking of today. Hackinj college ave here fov that veason and the.v will cavvyi an indifferent sympathy, and undevstanding. All "PPO^ent on the shins as hard, often, and viciously ( attitude into their profession. They do not recognize their responsi- these ave impovtant, but the most «