•if j i t '‘S, ' r *^Hp' ’(iK r ^ ^ ^ 9 S-p 1976 ,X/ '., t II e r f r. \ I Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2016 https://archive.org/details/alumniquarterly100bloo_20 THE Alumni Quarterly State TeacKers Colleg,e BLDDMSBURG, PENNSYLVANIA ^ ^* *!* *«* *** *'«'* ^4* *** *1* VOL. 49 *!* *** ^1 *' * *** *1* NO. 1 IHE ALUMNI QUARTERLY NewBook THE ALUMNI I i By John Bakeless QUARTERLY t V ^ *5* T« «>T« | i | «-I« Many Bloomsburg books, “Christopher frie)ids of John Bakeless will i-ecall his Marlowe” and “Daniel Boone, Master of Wilderness.” His newest book “Lewis and Clark, Partners in Discovery,” has been published by William Morrow and Co., of New York. The new “Lewis and Clark” is just another story of the expedition, but a “double-header” biography, telling the story of two of the most interesting lives in American history, with many new adventures, both before and after the expedition, which have never hitherto appeared in book form. To get the quantities of new and unpublished material that appears in the book. Dr. Bakeless and his wife, the former Katherine Little, of Bloomsburg, traveled a total of 18,500 miles, ransacking the cellar of a county courthouse in Tennessee in their search for material, hunting up old settlers who had listened to Indian legends of Lewis and Clark in Idaho, digging through packing cases of ancient records in Oregon, persuading Kentucky and Virginia families to open treasured family papers, and searching patiently in great libraries and small and specialized historical collections from coast to coast. Twice they were stuck by blizzards. Once the snow in the Rockies got so bad they had to turn around and wait for better weather. “Lewis and Clark hit just the same sort of thing. That’s the advantage of getting on the ground to see things for yourself.” Dr. Bakeless began his new book in 1939, immediately after the publication of his life of Daniel Boone. He had already completed his first research trip, covering as far west as Nebraska, when he was ordered to active duty as a general staff n|»^ i X J. WESLEY KNORR, HOMER ENGLEHART, ’34 NOTARY PUBLIC ’ll | INSURANCE 1 t* 252 IVest Fifth Street 1821 Blootnsburg 669-R 1 1 Harrisburg 3836-0 TEXAS LUNCH HARRY FOR YOUR REFRESHMENTS Ass’t. 142 East — ’96 | INSURANCE | West Main Street 52 Street | i BARTON, REAL ESTATE Mgr. Main S. . Poletime Comuiitzis, ’44, Mgr. Athamantia Comuntzis, ’46, .j. Market Street X- rr Bloomsburg 850 Bloomsburg 529 r **• f •I- 1 1 1 ' IVAN R. SCHLAUCH, INSURANCE THE ’16 INN 1926 Mrs. Charlotte Hoch 716 East Third Street Bloomsburg 24-J i* 1 | CHAR-MUND and ANNUITIES SINCE * 1 f •> ’15 Prop. Bloomsburg, Pa. I 4* ••• 1 THE WOLF SHOP ARCUS WOMEN’S SHOP LEATHER GOODS t FOR YOUR RIDING CLOTHES Max Arcus, ’41, Mgr. X t M. Main Street Bloomsburg 356-R 50 West — REPAIRS C. Strausser, ’27, Prop. 122 East Main % | || Street j* V Bloomsburgr 528 ’?• 4* 4* t t HERVEY SMITH, ’22 ATTORNEY-AT-LAW B. MOYER BROTHERS % PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST |; SINCE 1868 f Court House Place William V. Moyer, ’07, Pres. Harold R. Moyer, ’09, Vice-Pres. .j- Bloomsburg 1115 Bloomsburg 246 *5* I* Page Forty J* •J* "J* *5* *5* *5* *2* X % *> X‘ J* «2* ^ J* ^ T HE A L U M X I QUARTER E Y College Holds Election All the dash and color of a full-scale election campaign and the excitement of election day went on parade Thursday, April 8, when students of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College voted for officers of the Community Government Association for 1948-49. In fact, veteran observers on the campus stated that no other election held at this hilltop college ever attracted tlv-e interest and enthusiasm of the College community as did this year’s exciting contest. Huge, glaring posters in brilliant color created great splashes of color in the various areas where students congregate. The walls of the newly refurnished Waller Hall gymnasium and corridors of campus buildings and dormitories bore the evidences of hard work and planning by campaign committees eager to see their candidates elected. Visitors to the campus were surprised to see several spotlighted banners hung from dormitory windows urging students to “Vote for Swiggy,’’ while cleverly-designed placards posted near the electric water fountains in dormitory lobbies advised drinkers to “Quench Your Thirst and Satisfy Your Mind with a Vote for Purcell.’’ Other humorous posters spelled the name of the candidates for student government offices with each letter standing for the candidate’s best qualities. One enterprising candidate for the office of vice-president passed out toothpicks to students passing through the cafeteria line in the College dining room, while his opponent retaliated with colorful packages of paper matches. Gifts of chewing gum and cigaretes were much in evidence as enterprising committeemen sough to sway voter opinion. More than eight hundred students went to the polls to elect their officers for the coming school year after having heard each of the candidates for office review his qualification in a special pre-election mass meeting held in the Waller Gymnasium. These campaign speeches officialy wound up an intensive campaign, and each candidate urged the students to turn out and vote, continuing the “democratic way of life’’ at Bloomsburg. The election procedure, patterned after public elections, was No. 2 Vol. THK AU MM (il AHTKKLV May. 1«4S Published quarterly by the Alumni Association of the State Teachers Bloomsburg, Pa. Entered as Second-Class Matter, August 8, 194], at the Post Office at Bloomsburg. Pa., under the Act of yiarch 3, 1879. Yearly Subscription. .$1.00; Single Copy, 25 cents. Colie. /e, H. F. E. H. FEX'STE.MAKER, NELSON, T1 ’12 EDITOR BUSINESS MANAGER nage One T HE A L U :\I X I QUARTERLY set up by an election board of which John Morgan, Old Forge, and Julia Pichel, Hellertown, were the co-chairmen. This board and the election officials were advised by Robert Van Sickle, deputy treasurer for Columbia county, in a special meeting held earlier in the week. Other members of the board were: Eloise Noble, Milanville; June Saxton, Mauch Chunk; Robert Reitz, Shamokin; Frank Dean, Lost Creek; eKnneth Wire, Harrisburg; Jack Gillung, Brock way. Election officials were sworn in by Charles Schieffer. Steelton .in special ceremonies observed in the weekly assemblv program held in Carver Hall auditorium. Students who served as judge of election were Edward Baker, Spring City; Donald Maietta, Williamsport, and Mildred Palumbo. Mt. Carmel. Majority inspectors were Gloria Galow, Hazleton Charles Boyer, Pottsville; Matt Maley, Pottsville. and Berdine Logar, Weston, Minority inspectors were Rose Thompson. Towanda; Marcella Evasic, Luzerne, and John Morgan. Those who helped as minority clerks were Mary Ellen Grube, Bethlehem; Joe Sopko, Carbondale; Philip Joseck, Easton, and Shirley Donnelly. Willow Grove. Santo Prete. Hazleton, and Alfred Marchetti, Tamaqua. acted ; as constables. Members of the watchers’ staff follow: Carol Stair. Wapwallonen; Dorothy Mever. Nanticoke; Hidegard Hurm, Taconv; Ruth Doody, Canadensis: Charles Kazm.erovicz, Plains; Kenneth Borst. Equ'unk; John Klotsko, New Philadelphia, and Shirley Boughner, Trevorton. During the balloting, the election board put on a series of demonstrations to show the students election procedure in unusual s tuations. Joseph Vincent, Ashley, portrayed the part of a man with two broken arms. George Remetz, Swoyerville. assisted him through the voting procedure and helped him cast his ballot. The part of the blind man who wanted to vote was plaved bv Robert Llewellvn, Wilkes-Bare. He was aided by Shirley Walters, Factory ville. Several students had their right to vote challenged by election officials and other students acted as witnesses to certifv as to them eligibility. Thaddeus Swigonski. of Nanticoke, a member of the junior class, will serve as president of the Community Government Association during the college year of 1948-49. Other officers chosen along with him were Frank Lucknick, Mount Carmel, sophomore and a member of the varsity football squad, vice president; Miss Dorothy Lovett, sophomore, Nanticoke, secretary and Joseph Curilla, of Shamokin, treasurer. All of the men are World War II veterans. Thus ended the most heated election in the history of the local institution, one in which the ballots were counted thrice. The last count was made by the legislative committee of the Student Government Association, into whose hands the controPage Two 'r H E A L IT M X I QUARTER L Y versy was placed. While additional ballots were invalidated as the count progressed, the final results placed in office those who had received majority votes on each of the tabulations. There was only one vote separating the candidates for president when the election board made the count the day of the election. This count was started before the polls closed. Included in the allegations at that time were that those who had no right to be present at the count were in attendance and that rival campaign managers who rush out from time to time to round up voters. When the second count was made two ballots were invaliThen the matter was turned over to the legislative committee which made a re-check. It was reported that the committee invalidated about fifty ballots because of check marks instead of crosses, erasures or other illegal marks of identification. At any rate the student body, which was considerably “hepped up” both by the strenuous campaign and the repercussions that followed can settle down to the current term. The election is history. Tales which have the campaign as a basis, however, dated. many a discussion for years to come. in the history of American education, the three leading national teacher organizations have begun functioning as a single, unified organization to be known as the American Association of Colleges for Teacher will feature In what was acclaimed as a milestone Education. Among the 260 colleges and universities affected by the the Bloomsburg State Teachers College, which is represented in the new association by President Harvey A. Andruss. merger is o Lieutenant General Idwal H. Edwards, of the Army Air Force, was the principal speaker at the thirtv-eighth annual banquet of the Saint David’s Society, held at the Hotel Jermyn, Scranton, on Monday evening, March 1, 1948. o Dr. Leon H. Bryant, who has had his offices at 908 Chimes Building, Syracuse, New York, will be located at 712 University Block, Syracuse. o Bloomsburg State Teachers College was repi’esented at the Seventh Annual Vocatioal Guidance Clinic sponsored by the Kiwanis Club of Pittston and held Friday, April ninth, at the West Pittston High School. John A. Hoch, dean of men, served as Counselor for Teaching during the morning sesion. There was an attendance of 1800 juniors and seniors from the schools or the Greater Pittston area for the affair, which has become one of the largest of its kind in the state of Pennsylvania. Page Three THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY DAVID L 6LOVER David Livingston Glover, eighty-one, of Hazleton, a member of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College Class of 1886 and long a trustee of the local institution, died Saturday, January 19, at his home from heart trouble. He had been ill several months. He was in Bloomsburg in the Spring of 1946 to attend the sixtieth year reunion of his class. He was first appointed a trustee at the time the institution was a Normal School and a half of the trustees were selected by the school and half named by the state. He remained on the board until around 1930 and after it had become a Teachers College. He was one of the board present when the first degree of Bachelor of Science in Education was presented in 1927 and he was serving at the time that Dr. Francis B. Haas now Superintendent of Public Instruction in the Commonwealth, was chosen president at Bloomsburg. He was born in Hazleton on December 17, 1886, the son of the late Robert V. and Helen Gellman Glover. He was a grandson of John Glowr, pioneer settler in Buffalo Valley, who served in the Revolutionary War. He studied law in the office of his brother, Horace P. Glover, and was admited to practice before the Union county bar in 1893. He practiced with his brother until 1914 in the law firm of Glover and Glover and then, following the brother's death, continued practice alone. He was a member of the Union County Pennsylvania and American Bar Associations. He served as district attorney of Union county from 1896 to 1908. For fifteen years he was solicitor of Mifflinburg and for more than twenty years president of the school board in his home community. In 1898 he organized the Mifflinburg volunteer hose company and served as its president for twenty years. He served on the visiting committee of the Lafayette College alumni and was a trustee of the Presbyterian Central Pennsylvania home at Newvdlle. He served the Mifflinburg Bank and Trust Company as its trust officer, director and president and at the time of his death was chairman of the board. He was a member of the Council of National Defense in World War I and active in the war loand drives. He had similiar duties in World War He was II. a member of the Presbyterian Church of Mifflinburg, serving as a trustee and elder for over thirty-five years. He was also superintendent of the Sunday School. He served as a trustee of the Delta Upsilon fraternity, being a member of the Lafayette chapter. He was a member of the Mifflinburg Lodge, F. & A. M. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Elizabeth Church Glover; a daughter, Mrs. Louise Glover Goerhing, WexPage Four T H E A I. U M N I QUARTER L Y and three grandchildren. services were held in the First Presbyterian Church, Mifflinburg. The Rev. J. C. Moore, retired Presbyterian pastor, and the Rev. Dr. William Rearick, retired Lutheran minister, officiated. Burial was in West Side Cemetery, Mifflinburg. ford, The funeral o A stiring appeal for a Christian outlook in a troubled world 8, by Norman S. Horner, missionary and special representative of the National Student Service Association in an assembly program held in the Carver Hall Auditorium of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College. Mr. Horner, who is on furlough from a Presbyterian mission in Cameroon, South Africa, spoke on the subject, “The Challenge of Foreign was made Thursday, April Missions.” Mr. Horner, in a most interesting fashion, told the college audience that people have too long confused and ignored the command of Christ to His disciples to go into all the world and preach the gospel to all nations. He then classed Christians according to their outlook on the problem of world missions. Some he caUede amateur anthropologists. These are the people who question the ability of foreign people to comprehend the Christian message. Others he termed spiritual myopics, who are nearsighted and argue that “charity should begin at home.” Mr. Horner admitted that their claim is probably true, but asked whether it has to stop there. Many Christians can be termed “businessmen” because they are vitally concerned about investments in the mission field. Rather than question the wisdom of the investments, these people, Mr. Horner said, should learn more about foreign lands and their tremendous economic possibilities. He called some church workers “Mr. Worldly Wise.” These are the people who question the practice of taking the Christian religion to a people already have one. The speaker stated emphatically that people in most of the mission fields have no organized religion to begin with and should be given an opportunity of hearing the who Christian message. In conclusion Mr. Horner pointed out the great need in the world of an intelligent and informed outlook toward the foreign missions and pointed out that in this field there are opportunities for Christian service that should not go unnoticed by college men and women. He was introduced by E. A. Reams, chairman of the faculty assembly committee while President Harvey A. Andruss pi'esided over brief devotional exercises. o “Variations,” a series of original dramatic sketches by Miss Elissa Landi, noted stage and scren star, featured the famous actress’ appearance at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College Monday evening, March fifteenth. Page Five T H E A E V :NI X I Q U A R T E R I. Y JOSEPH L TOWNSEND LI^1II^PIJII MUJ—»L«I— 1— Joseph L. Townsend, seventy-one, prominent in the civic, business and fraternal lilfe of the community for almost a haif century, died Thursday, February 12, in the Geisinger Hospital, Danville, from complications following an operation. Critical since the preceding Saturday, when he was returned to the hospital from his home on East street, he was rational almost to the end. Mr. Townsend had been ill for about seven weeks. He improved rapidly following the operation and was convalescing at his home and apparently v/ell on his way to recovery when he sustained a relapse. Two years ago he sustained a heart attack and was confined to his home for a time. His recovery, however, allowed him to return to his duties and he appeared in his usual health until the final illness. A lifelong Republican and active in the councils of the party for many years, he was elected county auditor last November but his illness prevented him from ever assuming that office. He served as county treasurer, by appointment from 1933 to 1935 and was deputy prothonotary for two years during the administration of his brother, Harry W. Townsend, and the Republican candidate for that office in 1943. For four years and until just prior to the election last Fall he was county registration clerk. He was active in the civic affairs of his community, serving council, 1911-1915, and was a member of the school board for twelve years. For eighteen years he served as a trustee of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College and throughout his life took a keen interest in the school program here. He was a member of the Bloomsburg board of of health for more than a quarter of a century and was serving as its president at the time of his death. graduate of the Bloomsburg High School and of a tailoring school in New York, he was long identified with his father, the late John R. Townsend, and later with his brother in the operation of a men’s clothing store at the corner of Main and Center streets, the site of the present Martha Washington Hotel, until that business was discontinued about eighteen years ago. Following that and until he entered public life he was soliciting director for the First National Bank and was serving as a director of that institution at the time of his death. He was active on the civilian front during the periods of both Warold Wars I and II. During the conflict of 1917-18, he served as one of the “Minute Men” that had an active part in two two-year terms as president of A Page Six T HE A L U M N I QUARTERLY drives and also in the civilian morale program. Mr. Townsend in October, 1940, was chosen chairman of District No. 1 draft board, Bloomsburg, and continued in that office for several years, resigning to become deputy prothonotary. A member of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, he was of the vestry for twenty-five years and in recognition of his service last j^ear was named an honorary member of the vestry. His interest in all phases of the life in Bloomsburg was broad and through the years he was secretary or treasurer of numerous organizations. He was a prominent member of the Masonic bodies and was honored at Cincinnati in 1932 when he was crowned a Thirtythird Degree Mason. He was commander-in-chief of Caldwell Consistory from 1942 to 1945 and during a period when the Consistory made many strides forward. member of Washington Lodge, No. 265, F. & A. M., he was a past worshipful master of that body. He was also a member of Bloomsburg Royal Arch Chapter, No. 218, and Crua lifelong member A sade Commandery, No. 12, Knights Templar. He was a member of and a past presiding officer of Orient Conclave No. 2, Red Cross of Constantine; a member and past president of the Craftsman Club; a member of Irem Temple Shrine, WilkesBarre, and of the Bloomsburg Shrine Club. o One of the country’s top-flight musical groups, the Rus- sian Operatic Quartet, presented the final number on the 1948 Artists Course program at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College Thursda yevening, April eighth, at 8:15 o’clock. Organized in 1945, the “Russian Stars of Opera’’ have made an enviable reputation in appearances throughout the United States and Canada. The talented group appeared in a summer session concert here last year, and a large and appreciative audience enjoyed a highly interesting progra mof Russian music. A demand at that time for a later appearance led college authorities to secure these distignuished artists for an entertainment course number. The group was under the direction of Dr. Antin Rudnitsky, famous composer and conductor. o Mrs. Louise Adams Bachman and Paul H. Trescott, both of Philadelphia, were married Wednesday, March 10, by the Rev. Howard J. Bell at the manse of Carmel Presbyterian Church in Glenside, Pa. The bride, a graduate of the Berwick High School, the Bloomsburg State Normal School, and of the Philadelphia School of Industrial Art, is advertising director for Deweed, one of Philadelphia’s leading women’s specialty stores. Mr. Trescott is an editorial writer for the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin. Page Seven ^ T H E A E U M N I Q U A R T E R L Y Noetling Hall To Be Remodeled Remodeling of Noteling Hall, one of the oldest buildings on the campus of Bloomsburg State Teachers College, will be undertaken in the near future according to an announcement made by President Harv^ey A. Andruss who disclosed that there is $35,000 available for the job. Priority will be given to a day m.en’s lounge that will be suitable for the large number of commuting male students now enrolled at the College. Although the plans for remodeling are quite indefinite, for as yet an architect has not been employed, it is believed that the new lounge will be placed on the second floor of the hall. Alumni of the College will recall that bookkeeping classes were once located in the room where the new lounge may be located. Steel lockers will be built into the walls, and extensive renovation and refurnishing will make the quarters not only comfortable but attractive. At the present time, the day men’s lounge is located in Hall, but the site of the lounge has been shifted many It was once in the former men’s locker room in the times. basement of Carver Hall. Then it was moved to the first floor of the building, from there to the basement of North Hall, and then to the Industrial Arts room of the Junior High School building which is popularly known as Navy Hall. Navy New lavatories v/ill be incuded in the remodeling of Noetling Hall, and one of the second floor rooms will be made the center for visual education with central projectors and slide macnines installed. Six faculty offices are planned for the second floor. At the present time, no plans are being made for remodelling the first floor which contains the speech and psychology clinics and the day women’s lounge. o A program of one act plays was presented by the Bloomsburg Players Friday night, April sixteenth, in the Carver Hall auditorium of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College. The college dramatic club, under the direction of Miss Alice Johnston, selected a varied repertoire of plays as its spring presentation. The first play was presented at 8:15 o’clock, and for the curtain-raiser the Bloomsburg Players presented “First Class Matter,’’ a comedy by Pcachel Field, one of the country’s outstanding authors and short story writers. The second play was “The Monkey’s Paw,’’ an adaptation from a well-known classic. The authors of this dramatic hit are Louis N. Parker and W. W. Jacobs. As their final effort, the Bloomsburg Players enacted “Wild Hobby Horses’’ by John Kirkpatrick, eminent New York dramatist, producer, and writer. Twenty-one members of the Bloomsburg Players were given part in these three productions. Page Eight 'I' H E A E U M N I Q U A R T E R L Y Retail Sales Training Conference Exciting new fabrics and brilliantly-designed consumer goods, many of which have not yet reached retail store counters throughout the United States were revealed to a crowd of almost five hundred persons who attended the second annual Retail Sales Training Conference held in February in the Carver Hall Auditorium of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College. Recent advances in the field of women’s accessories, woolen fabrics, and textiles were discussed by four speakers representing nationallyfamous retail stores and promotional agencies. Under the direction of Charles H. Henrie, retail selling instructor of the Department of Business Education, the conference sessions attracted a capacity crowd of interested persons. Among those present were owners and manager of a number of retail stores in Bloomsburg and the surrounding area, managers of chain store outlets, business educators and teachers, and college students interested in consumer education. Loyal D. Odhner, managing director of the Pennsylvania Chain Store Council, who assisted the College in planning the session, was present along with a large number of members of the state-wide organization. The general conference session was nreceded by a luncheon President Harvey A. Andruss and members of the faculty of the Department of Business Education acted as hosts to the conference speakers and guests. Luncheon was served to twenty-five persons. President Andruss in the College dining I’oom. later opened the conference with a brief address of welcome. Pie was introduced by Charles H. Henrie who served as conference leader. Among the speakers were Miss Dorothea Kenna, stylist and buyer for the Kenney Shoe Company; Harry A. Barth, assistant director of store operations, W. T. Grant Company; and Miss Helen Harper and Miss Peg O’Grady, of the International Wool Secretariat. Miss Kenna spoke on the topic, “Handbaks, Gloves and Nylon Hose,” while Mr. Bartha used as his topic “Fabrics of the Future.” Both Miss Harper and Miss O’Grady developed the subject “What’s New in Wool.” The speakers demonstrated a number of items showing recent advances in the field. New woolen dresses were modeled by: Marie Mack, Shenandoah; Madelyn Schalles, Nescopeck, and Mrs. Louise Dunham Riefski, New Abany. o Robert Johnson Conners, Montana. Mr. Johnson, who specialized in music, took up song writing as a hobby, and is the composer of “God Night, Soldier,” “Have You Ever Seen Montana,” and “In the Heart of the Bitter Root Mountains.” lives in Page Nine 'r H !•: A L U M XI Q U A R T E r. L Y Secondary Education Conference A varied program of educational interest featured the annual conference on Secondary Education held Saturday. April tenth, in the Carver Hall auditorium of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College. Over one hundred teachers and school administrators had signified their intention of attending the conference, which is one of the services the college gives to high schools in its service area. The morning program was especially interesting and in- cluded two addresses, one by Mr. George Salt, English Department, Grade School, New York University. Mr. Salt discussed the problem “Language as an Instrument of Thought.” The second speaker was Dr. Frederick Pond, Bureau of Secondary Education, Department of Public Instruction. Dr. Pond developed the subject “Activities for Education for Effective Citizenship.” A series of group meetings was held immediately following the auditorium program. These meetings were in charge of outstanding teachers in the field and school administrators. One group was in charge of Dr. Oliver C. Kuntzlenian, superintendent of schools, Sunbury, Pennsylvania. This group discussed the question “How Shall a School Develop Functional Objectives?” A second group under the leadership of Miss Maree Pensyl, Sociall Studies Department, Bloomsburg High School, and Mr. Frank Camera, English Department, Hazleton High School, was assigned the question “How can tool subjects be taught so as to facilitate the student’s functioning effectively as a member of democratic society?” A third group, of which Mr. Leonard Best, Coordinator of Integrated Program, Hazleton High School, was the chairman, probed into the rather interesting question “What are the nature and need of a core curriculum?” Mr. Richard Abbott. Social Studies Department, Sunbury High School, served as chairman of a fourth group which was assigned the nuestion “How shall the activities of a high school faculty be organized for curiculum study and revision?” At the conclusion of the group meetings a cafeteria luncheon was served in the College dining room. Reports by the chairmen of the group meetings featured the after dinner program. o Kenneth Burns, Oregon, has been preparing to go to Venezuela as a government agent to establish good neighbor relations between North and South America. After being graduated from Iowa State College, he remained as a member of the faculty, and later went to Utah State to become Dean of the College of Agriculture and Forestory. He next became manager of the Ogden Live Stock Market, and from this position he took a position in the Department of the Interior. Pa.ge Ten Ikeler, of T New HE A L U M XI Scholarship Q U A R T E R L Y Announced The Bloomsburg State Teachers College announces “The President’s Scholarship” to be awarded during the Second Semester of each year to a deserving student. This scholarship is unique in that it will be given to a student who demonstrates his need and ability during the first semester of the college year and for any reason is not eligible for the other scholarships offered by the college or the Alumni Association. Based upon the income from a book written by President Harvey A. Andruss titled “Business Law Cases and Tests” and originally published by Prentice-Hall, Inc., of New York City, it is expected to reach $50 the first year and will increase in the future. Since there are no royalties to the author or profit to the College Retail Book Store, the income from sales will be available for the scholarship after a small handing charge is paid. The book will be used in connection with Business Law I and II classes in the Department of Business Education. Assembled under the direction of Professor Walter S. Rygiel, the new edition will be available immediately. A special committee composed of Dr. Kimber Kuster, Professor Walter S. Rygiel and President Harvey A. Andruss will make the award to worthy students. No hard and fast policy will be developed as the “President’s Scholarship” is intended to i-ecognize students who may not, on account of special circumstances, be able to qualify for other scholarships offered by the Alumni Association. o President Harvey A. Andruss served as a member of a committee to conduct an evaluation of the G.A.R. Memorial High School in Wilkes-Barre on March 9, 10 and 11. This committee has been selected by the Middle State Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools to determine the ability of schools to be placed on the accredited list of the Association. Graduates of high schols holding membership in the Middle States Association will be admited to colleges who are members of the Association without examination. Schools that are placed on this list are ubject to re-examination from time to time to determine whether or not they have continued to meet the requirements set up by the accrediting group. The WilkesBarre school is in this category, and the school plant, personnel education, and school practice will be scrutinized by the Association committee. President Andruss will be responsible for the evaluation and arrangements of administration, staff, and business education. Page Eleven THE ALUMNI j Q U A R T E R L Y m’smz . ^ J J - ,JDil L. J >LA-^>iAM A.MA^t dI-,T'. V .'f- -J 1- S 01,'jli^D j>i . h Li. CA^.X'. , A , y : y: . : ; A /:' A —A 0 • iUJ'f&OQii ii> •' <» - - ' jVAA KAlAXoi w:r''-3 U?‘Lv. '] :_:' . j.syjvieisD J-AJOIO^ /, - . . A ir iiD.P -Fi'/AAA^i-'^o >M>i - -'^'V JA Di)j< u V! yi. iiUAL uiaa j a.d 021a.lsj aM'ksha... :: J AVfAJfM'lL A.AaAIL. J A DASAL G. Al'SCZ . .. J A rLLAA D.jZcOk.:J .jA -Jau GL j'/ii'liii yyZDAiAA'%lLA-ASil . ' ! '' . J -r, T ,: : A,- ...JAl _ _ . - J.iitA J Hi i ly^ZALAiAAB A.AfSiXjiZL LA?ilC 7!‘r y^iixLAAL^is. AA'A^AIj ;G 2i:; 7 Ai;j^ : i 1 J J j -L-^- yjCTDl ivr ' i . f. SGiix^y 4-^w' 'V i .. .S, w : . jAWAUrMAh.AAiA jAGT^II 3.AU9fAA.rA _ J jiLSUiG' '1 A iMaAT f -i<. : . sj. * y <-:' . ZAIiVAY A.BAsSZZ iijiJ^y^'X -iAA r, J..J.AAJAAZ AAWJi^slAA AA3AAJ Z.A.II2jAIA3'yZAr ... r .. ji -- ''•V -1 .-..HH :. ^ V* .- / H'Jl.-. .’sL/^a f‘y ? -yx> ^ ^ ^ SA- -A inTi lt-? ZUA. 0. AL ASAIIAZIA 11,>^.L A. 1JJA.LA. 7L J. (ii,C»CSit2ffliRG Page Twelve STATE vCCiLUSfS^ THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY ' Saucer ed and Slowed' E. H. NELSON, ’ll Largely through the efforts of Hervey Smith and his committee the Husky plaque is now a reality. The lower part is locked on and can be removed easily for the addition of more names. We are hoping that classes with representatives in the list of honored head will sponsor their names in the bronze plaque. For example: * Sponsor Class of 1943 If the class sponsors more than one name, an additional star is added for each one. Sponsoring 3 classmates would read *** Sponsor Class of 1943 We hope interested Alumni will subscribe to the Husky Club, either as sponsors or as graduates. Then, too, we believe that branch alumni groups will want to be represented, appear- ing as follows: 1 * Branch Friends of the sports program on the hill will Sponsor be included as follows: * Club Sponsor And when the list gets too long for the present plaque a new one will be ordered. Continued interest will provide needed help in promoting good athletic teams of which we are proud. “Years to come will find us ever true to Bloomsburg still.” nameplate costs the donor $50.00^ A A few weeks before her death we received a $50.00 check from Miss Stella Lowenberg to be applied to the 1886 Scholarship Fund. Just yesterday we received a $20.00 check from her niece. Miss Elsie Lowenberg, enclosed with the following letter; 885 West End Avenue, 25, N. Y. April 22, 1948 New York Dr. E. H. Nelson, President Alumni Association, State Teachers College, Bloomsburg, Penna. Dear Mr. Nelson; The enclosed money was given to us for a gift “In Memory of Stella Lowenberg.” It is made by Roe Dreifus, Milton, Pa.; Arthur Dreifuss, Philadelphia; Florence and Lillian Ullman, Camden, in place of funeral flowers. Since Aunt Stella was so interested in the college, we are giving it to the Class of 1886 Scholarship Fund. Very truly yours, Elsie Lowenberg It is expressions such as this that give us the determination and desire to carry on for the College on the hill. See you on May 22nd. good program is being arranged. A Page Thirteen THE ALUMNI Q U A R T E R L Y Mid-Year Commencement lege Twenty-two seniors of the Bloomsburg State Teachers Colwere presented for the degree of Bachelor of Science in Education at simple but impressive graduation exercises held Thursday, January 16, in the Carver Hall auditorium. All of the sixteen men who received their diplomas upon completion of the semester were veterans of World War II and most of them attended Bloomsburg before entering the armed forces. The convocation, climaxed by the presentation of the candidates for degrees by Dr. Thomas P. North, Dean of Instruction at the College, was featured by a timely address by President Harvey A. Andruss. Speaking on the subect, “Dilemmas of Today,” President Andruss claimed that one of the marks of an educated man is his ability to look beyond the over-simplifications of readymade thinking of news commenators and newspaper headlines and take the long view in order to make this world a better place in which to live. He urged his audience to avoid being forced to choose between two alternatives dilemmas set up with the thought that in the choice we will reach a predetermined opinion. During his address, the College head warned his listeners of the dangers of over-simplification and in choosing alternatives, either of which would cause us to supplant what we have with something new or untried rather than supplement it with something better. He indicated that many times wo do the right things for the wrong reasons, but if the eventual effect is wholesome, one should not question the motives if the means is offered to improve the world in which we live. During the program, President Andruss read the Scripture lesson which was chosen from the twenty-fifth chapter of St. Matthew and Joseph Curilla, Mt. Carmel, sang a baritone solo, “Ask for Nothing More.” by Deis-Swinsburne. His accompanist was Miss June Keller, Benton. Audience singing of “America the Beautiful.” which opened the convocation, and the College Alma Mater, which closed the exercises, was under the direction of Miss Harriet M. Moore. Howard F. Fenstemaker, Sr., was — at the console of the organ. Graduates who completed the requirements for the degree were Paul Baker, Bloomsburg, Business Edward Bollinger, Erie, Secondary; Rosanna Broadt, Bloomsburg, Secondary; Joseph Chesney, Mt. Carmel, Secondary; Anna Cumberland, Hunlock Creek. Secondary; John Davis, Kingston, Business; Doris Hosier, Bloomsburg, Business; Clement Koch. Shenandoah, Business; Lewis Kohn, Wilkes-Barre, Business; Ellen Moore Lipski, Edwardsville, Secondary; John Longo, Sheppton, Business; Frank Molinaro, Pittsburg, Cal., Secondary; Anne Northrup, Dalton, Elementary; Clem Novak, Nanticoke, Business; Clayton Patterson. Nescopeck, Secondary; Theodore Radai, West Haz; Page Fourteen THE A 1. U M N I QUART E R E Y Secondary; Michael Remetz, Swoyerville, Secondary; Donald Rishe, Bloomsburg, Business; Lawrence Rittmiller, Danville, Secondary; James P. Rooney, Philadelphia, Secondary; Robert leton, Schramm, Pottsville, Business; Dorothy Winkelblech, Woodland, Elementary. o High school students of this area had a chance to select their caz’eers when the Future Teachers of America, a pre-professional organization at the State Teachers College, Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania, sponsored a “Career Day,” Friday, April twenty-third, for their benefit. The facilities of the College were made available to youngsters from Bloomsburg, Catawissa, Scott Township and Beav^» Township. President Harvey A. Andruss welcomed the students atid Maupin was the principal speaker. A film “Choosing Your Career” was shown in Carver Hall Auditorium and immediately after the film, members of the Future Teachers of America interviewed and counseled the students. A luncheon was served in the college cafeteria, followed by enteitainment Dr. Nell and swimming. Members in charge of this program were Robert Llewellvn, Wilkes-Barre, chairman; James Tierney, Bloomsburg; Mildred Palumb, Mt. Carmel; Barbara McNinch, Bloomsburg; Charles K. Moore, Millville; Helene Brown, West Hazleton; Marjorie Brace, Hunlock Creek; Carson Whitesell, Hunlock Creek; Mrs. Ann Boyer, Catawissa; Janet Gilbody, Bloomsburg, and William Troutman, Bloomsburg. The sponsor of the Future Teachers of America is Mr. Joseph R. Bailer. o Reynold D. Paganelli, Guidance Director, Wilkes-Barre Public Schools, was the guest speaker at the Friday evening, February 27, 1948, meeting of the Future Teachers of America, Bloomsburg State Teachers College. Mr. Paganelli is a graduate of the local College as well as the Cathoic University, Washington, D. C., and is now engaged in graduate study at Columbia University. Before becoming guidance counsellor in the WilkesBarre Public Schools, M. Paganelli was a teacher at the National School for Boys, Washington, D. C. The National School for Boys is operated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation to care for juvenile delinquents. o The marriage of Miss Margie Wright, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wright, of town, and Leo Speicher, son of Mrs. Elizabeth Speicher, of Kingston, took place at 6:30 o’clock Tues- da yeevning, January 22, at St. Columba Rectory, Bloomsburg, with the Rev. Father William J. Burke performing the single ring ceremony. Page Fifteen THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 1948 Commencement The speaker at the 1948 Commencement, to be held MonMay 24, will be Robert Kazmayer, author, lecturer, world traveler, and radio commentator. He is the publisher of a news letter for American and British businessmen, “Things to Watch For.” He conducts the Kazmayer European Seminar Tours over Europe each summer. He is one of the youngest men listed in “Who’s Who.” He was in Berlin when World War II began, and was in almost the same spot in Berlin when it ended. He is one of the few United States platform personalities having an international reputation, and has made repeated lectures in England, France, Canada, and Mexico. At the Baccalaureate exercises to be held Sunday, May 23, will be the Rev. G. Douglas Davies, whose topic will be “The Changing Horizon.” day, o BASKETBALL CONFERENCE STANDINGS, Mansfield West Chester W L 5 6 4 7 6 7 3 4 5 4 1 Pet. .833 .667 .667 .583 .545 .500 .500 .500 .417 .408 3 2 Shippensburg 5 Millersville _ 5 7 Slippery Rock __ _ 3 4 Indiana Lock Haven _ 7 Kutztown 9 (Not enough games to figure) 2 Clarion 3 2 3 East Stroudsburg 4 Edinboro 0 — o California BLOOMSBURG 1947-1948 .600 .400 .000 — Mr. and Mrs. 0. S. Johnson, of Bloomsburg R. D. 3, nounce the engagement of their daughter, Betty Mae, to Paul D. Slusser, son of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Slusser, of Bloomsburg R. D. 3. Miss Johnson, a graduate of Bloomsburg High School, class of 1945, is now employed as a burler in the finishing department of the Magee Carpet Co. Mr. Slusser is a graduate of Mifflinville High School, class He is a veteran of of 1942, and is now attending B.S.T.C. thirty-three were spent No months service in World War European Theater. II, eleven of which in the definite date has been set for the wedding. > Page Sixteen T HE ALUM N I QUARTERLY Dean North Chairman of Commission Bloomsburg State Teachers College was signaly honored during the past week by the appointment of Dr. Thomas P. North, dean of instruction, as chairman of the newly-created Commission on Teacher Education and Professional Standards for Pennsylvania. The appointment, authorized by the Executive Council of the Pennsylvania State Education Association, was made by N. Eugene Shoemaker, president of the state-wide organization. The appointment was said to have ben made largely as a result of Dr. North’s general knowledge of teacher education in the state and nation and his relationship to the National Commission on Teacher Education and Professional Standards. During the past year. Dr. North served as advisor to the national group. For the past three years, he has been chairman of the Pro' Standards Committee of the Association of State Teachers College Faculties. In his relation to the national committee, the Bloomsburg dean was not only invited to attend the first general meeting held by the commission at Lake Chautauqua in 1946 but also represented Pennsylvania at the Oxford Conference last July and the regional conference held in Washington in December. The work of the state commissio will likely parallel that of the nafonal commission with the same title. This group is charged with the responsibility of being the voice of the rank and file of the organized teaching profession in such matters as recruiting, selection, and preparation of teaching standards. fessional o Dr. Guido C. L. Riemer, president of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College from 1923 to 1927, has announced that he will seek the RepuWican nomination for State Representative in the fourth district of Berks county. Dr. Riemer is a former member of the faculty at Kutztown State Teachers College and before going there was from 1928 to 1937 president of the State Teachers College at Clarion. He also served as a faculty member of Bucknell University. o Judge William Kreisher, of Catawissa, has been appointed to the board of trustees of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College, with the announcement made in Harrisburg by Governor James H. Duff. The jurist will fill a vacancy which was created by the death of Thomas Morton, of Berwick. C. Page Seventeen THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY CAMPUS EVENTS The “inside story’’ of the Mt. Palomar telescope, its construction and operation, was the interesting background of an infonnative talk given Thursday, March 18, at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College by Robert B. Edgar, well-known American astronomer and scientist. Mr. Edgar, whose father was one of the men associated with the designing and building of the great instrument now being tested and adjusted at Mt. Palomar, featured the last assembly program before the start of the Easter recess. He told of the origin of the idea to construct a huge 200inch mirror and suggested that the story of the “big glass” was really the story of the late Dr. George E. Hale, who built the Mt. Wilson telescope, which was the largest in the world until the Mt. Palomar instrument was designed. Much of Dr. Hale’s success in building the big telescope was due to the Rockefeller General Education Board which gave a gift of six million dollars to launch the project. Through demonstrations with a number of scale-size models, Mr. Edgar illustrated the working and functionings of telescopes One paras well as problems involved in their construction. ticularly interesting exhibit was a scale model of the mirror itself, the manufacture and grinding of which he described in deHe also told of the role played by his father in the inventail. tion and design of a special mounting for the huge reflecting mirror. Mr. Edgar described the Mt. Palomar instrument as a “preHe said that like your best wrist watch.” cision instrument the griding and polishing job was the most accurate vere done in the history of lens manufacture, indicating that tbe face of the giant mirror was polished to an accuracy of two-one millionths of an inch. It required eight years of expert craftsmanship to finish the job. o President Harvey A. Andruss has accepted an invitation to become a member of an advisory group to assist the United States Office of Education in making a Basic Business Education Research Study. As a business educator, President Andruss has long been concerned about the future of general or basic business education and he brings to his new position a wealth of experience as a teacher, supervisor and administrator in the — field. The United States Office of Education has put all of its faciities at the disposal of M. Herbert Freeman, Senior Specialist Mr. Freeman in Business Education, who will direct the study. has projected an ambitious program for a five-month period, hoping to achieve success by drawing upon the experience and Page Eighteen 'r HE ALUMNI Q U A R T E R L Y cooperation of leading business educators throughout the country. “We seem to be about fifteen or twenty years behind academic education in our applications in the Business Field,” stat“Business teachers and department ed President Andruss. heads, who are rapidly declining in number and authority, have been entirely too modest in stating their case. This is partly due to their lack of understanding of the basic trends in secondary education as it affects academic subjects ,and those areas of business education subsidized by federal funds.” It is hoped that this new study will result in improvement and integration of materials in the field of business education, and the Bloomsburg State Teachers College is honored to have a share in the overall development of the program. o the tower of Carvel Hall, Bloomsburg State Teachers College, has been ticking away for more than a haf century with little or no thought as to what makes it go or strike each hour and half hour. Like the old tower clock, few persons have been aware that the driving power for the clock movement has been the presence of a small cable upon which is suspended a five-hundred pound iron weight, while the striking device is energized by another cable of weights, weighing five hundred pounds. The cables are wound on separate drums, and the weights travel vertically a distance of approximately fifteen fet. Oddly enough, in this mechanical age, the winding has been done by hand, by means of a large crank, three times a week. All this now has been changed. Under a program of rebuilding the interior stairs at Carver Hall, a rewiring contract has also been in progress which has resulted in improvements to the old tower clock. Foley and Son, Harrisbug, general electrical contractors, engaged Tower Clock Service Company, Springfield, Ohio, to handle the improvements. o The presentation of the personality of Abraham Lincoln through a Lincoln talk and impersonation was given by George J. Lehre at the weekly asembly program of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College held Thursday, February 12, in Carver Auditorium. Mr. Lehre’s dignified and realistic manner portrayed the great character of our sixteenth president in a gripping and inspiring manner. An actor and stage director with thirty-five years experience, Mr. Lehre presented a moving interpretation of the personality, patriotism and devotion of the great emancipator before giving a biographical narrative of Lincoln’s life. His impersonation of Lincoln was given in costume, and he told news items of that era and details of bitter wrangling of the cabinet The large clock in Page Nineteen THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY members during the Civil War. He climaxed his presentation with a dramatic rendition of the Gettysburg Address. Its dignified solemnity was most impressive and added a superb touch to an inspiring program. President Harvey A. Andruss presided over the assembly and spoke briefly on the significance and character of the life He pointed out of Abraham Lincoln and George Washington. that underlying the principles of self government is the need for governing self. Mr. E. A. Reams, chairman of the faculty program committee introduced Mr. Lehre. o Dr. J. Almus Russell, member of the English Department of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College, is the author of a revealing article in the February issue of Frontiers, a magazine devoted to natural history. Dr. Russell’s latest article, which has its setting in central New York State, is entitled, “Land of Dr. Russell is the author of more than one hundred Hops.’’ articles published in educational and public magazines. o The world-famous Russian Operatic Quartet appeared at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College on Thursday evening, April eighth, as the final number of the 1948 Artist Course. The internationally-known singers thrilled a large audience here last June when they presented a program for summer session students, and persons who heard the quartet at the time asked College officials to arrange a return engagement. A varied group of numbers was presented, including a number of selections in English. The quartet also sang several rousing Red Army songs and Russian folk ballads. o “We had better find a way to understand and be understood if we are to have peace in our time,’’ was the realistic advice given students of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College by E. C. Ramsey, globe-trotting reporter and world traveller, in a stirring address that feature the regular Tuesday assembly held in the Carver Auditorium. Speaking on the topic, “The International Mess,” Mr. Ramsey discussed recent international developments in view of his extensive experiences abroad and intimate contacts with many of the leaders who are helping shape world affairs today. o Bloomsburg State Teachers College Alumni Association has embarked on a strenuous campaign to raise funds for the Husky Club which has for its principal interest a well balanced program of athletics at the local college. The club has decided to place a roll of memorials of club members at the entrance of the Centennial Gymnasium or some other suitable place on the campus. Memorials or memberships are fifty dollars and already a dozen have enrolled and the numPage Twenty THE ALU M N I Q U A R T E R L Y expected to reach substantial size by Alumni Day. of the work was discussed at a meeting of the board of directors of the General Alumni Association with Most of the members Dr. E. H. Nelson, president, presiding. ber is The furtherance were in attendance. One of the aims is to have the classes sponsor as memorials the placing on the roll the names of their classmates who made the Supreme Sacrifice in World War II. Another thing which was given consideration, and which will be submitted to the College authorities for action, is the granting of a lifetime pass for athletic events to the Bloomsburg College athletes who through their participation in sports have earned the College key. This emblem has been recognized at contests but the alumni believes that the lifetime pass will be a suitable recognition in addition to the key. o One of the leading articles in the January. 1848, issue of the Balance Sheet, a magazine of Business and Economic Education, was written by President Harvey A. Andruss, of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College, with the title of “Where Do We Go from Here.” This article was originally an address delivered during the 1947 summer session in Pennsylvania State College at the Business Education Conference, and deals with Basic Business Education for all the children of all the people. By answering three question (1) Where are we? (2) Where do we want to go ? ( 3 ) How do we get there ? a general philosophy of Business Education is explained in relation to Consumer Education, and the proposals that are being made to increase the effectiveness of Economic Relations of all Americans. High Schools are preparing 25% of their students for college, from which they emerge with professional training; 25% are being trained for skilled occupations or trades but they need to educate for the remaining 50% for living, since they will have to learn to make a living at jobs, the duties of which they will learn after they obtain the jobs. High Schools must not only prepare students for college and train them for jobs, but must also educate them for life. Basic Business Education has an important part to play in this — — ; picture. o Eight students from the Bloomsburg State Teachers College participated in the first intercollegiate State Band Festival sponsored by the Pennsylvania Music Educators Association which was held Friday and Saturday, April 2 and 3, at Lock Haven State Teachers College. Participants in this event included students from most of the colleges and universities in Pennsylvania. About 135 college students participated in this festival Page Twenty-one THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY which closed with a band concert in the Lock Haven State Teachers College auditorium. Mr. Erich C. Leidzen, of New York City, was the guest conductor. Mr. Leidzen is famous for his arrangements of popular and classical music for the band. During the three-day festival the students and directors had rehearsals and clinics in the various instrumental fields. On Friday afternoon a student concert was given which was broadcast from the Lock Haven station. A number of people from Bloomsburg attended the Saturday evening concert. The program included the Finale from the New World Symphony, “Rhapsody in Blue,” “Hora Staccata,” “Caribbean Fantasy,” “William Tell Overture,” “Headlines Overture,” “My Hero” and a number of classical and semi-classical numbers including marches. Mr. Thomas E. Bowman, 326 East Fourth street, Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania, a junior at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College, was selected soloist for the concert rendered at the Intercollegiate State Band Festival, sponsored by the Pennsylvania Music Educators Association. The Bloomsburg musician was accorded this honor in competition with more than 130 instrumentalists representing seventeen universities and colleges throughout the state. The students going to the festival from the College with the director of the Maroon and Gold Band, Charles H. Henrie, were as follows: Thomas Bowman, Bloomsburg; Carleton Ermish, Berwick: Ruth Von Bergen, Hazleton; John Brown, Harrisburg; Francis Hantz, Duryea; Luther Jones, Wilkes-Barre; Kenneth Wire, Harrisburg, and Robert Holman. Kingston. o The Bloomsburg State Teachers College played host to the lecturers of the Pennsylvania State Grange in a series of meetings held March 22, 23 and 24. The sessions, which attracted a crowd of more than four hundred men and women, was held Carver Auditorium and classrooms in Waller Hall. Noetling and Navy Hall. Preliminary plans for the annual meeting were made after a conference with Dr. Lester H. Dimit, Lecturer, Pennsylvania State Grange, from Indiana, Pa. Dr. Dimit, a member of the faculty of the State Teachers College, Indiana, met with Dr. Thomas P. North, who served as general chairman in charge of arrangements; Dean John A. Hoch, Dean Marguerite V. Kehr, C. M. Hausknecht. Business Manager; Miss M. Beatrice Mettler, College nurse. Along with President Andruss, the local committee worked with Dr. Dimit to make final arrangements to handle the large affair. Dormitory accommodations were provided for 200 women in Waller Hall, while one hundred men were housed in the men’s in Hall, Science Hall, section of the same Page Twenty-two building. THE ALUMNI Dean s List Q U A R T E R L Y Announced The names of sixten seniors at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College lead the list of forty students who have been placed on the Dean’s Honor list for the first semester, 1947-48, according to an announcement made by Dr. Thomas P. North, dean of instruction at the College. Ten juniors and seven members of the freshman and sophomore classes are named on the firstsemester honor roll. In order to be named on the list, students must have a quality point average cf 2.5 or better for the semester or a cumulative average of at least 2.0. Included in the list are the following; Freshmen Robert Balent, 928 Spruce St., Kulpmont; Roosevelt Mem. H. Rose C. Eifert, 644 Fiot Ave., Bethlehem; Liberty H. S., Bethlehem. Lois J. Evans, 38 East Trenton Ave., Morrisville; Morrisville H. S. Muriel F. Marks, 1328 Lancaster Ave., Reading; Shillington H. Corinne D. Mittelman, 238 Wright Ave., Kingston; Kingston H. S. Janet R. Rosen, 2215 Gordon St., Allentown, Allentown H. S. Eloise M. Symons, 4 Atlantic Ave., Edwardsville Edwardsville H. S. S. S. Sophomores Thomas M. Donan, Columbia; Columbia H. S. M. Louise Lohr, 331 East Second St., Berwick; Berwick H. Nerine Middleswarth, Troxelville; Beaver Springs H. S. Stephen F. Sakalski, 158 West Main St., Bloomsburg; Berwick H. S. William A. Stimeling, 343 Mary St., Berwick, Berwick H. S. Martha L. Teel, 240 West Fourth St., Bloomsburg; Bloomsburg H. S. John Richard Wagner, 716 East Third St., Nescopeck; Nescopeck H. S. R. D. 2, S. Juniors Herbert H. Fox, 408 Pine St., Danville, Danville H. S. George Gera, 94 Main St., Eckley; Foster Twp. H. S., Freeland. Daniel E. Kelly, 520 S. Anthracite St., Shamokin; Coal Twp. H. S., Shamokin Wilmer F. Nester, 1442 Shimerville Road, Emmaus; Emmaus H. S. John M. Purcell, 18 East Lloyd S.t, Shenandoah; Shenandoah Catholic H. S. Joseph J. Putera, 198 Main St., iKngston; Kingston H. S. John H. Reichard, R. D. 4, Bloomsburg; Bloomsburg H. S. Emory S. Riefski, 18 Coal St., Glen Lyon; Newport Twp. H. S., Wanamie Page Twenty-three THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Ruth C. Von Bergen, 551 North Wyoming Hazleton H. S. Joseph R. Yakoboski, 248 S. Shamokin Shamokin H. S. St., St., Hazleton; Shamokin; Senior.s Mrs. Anne Baldy South Third Catawissa H. S. Bo}^er, 127 St., Catawissa; Helene L. Brown, 238 North Broad St., West Hazleton; West Hazleton H. S. Elroy F. Dalberg, 1106 Somerset Ave., Windber; Windber H. Blodwen P. Edwards, Briar Creek; Hanovr Twp. H. S., S. Wilkes-Barre. Theodore Harwood, 1021 West Main St., Plymouth; Plymouth Twp. H. S. Martha A. Hathaway, 207 Grand St., Danville; Danville H. S. Mrs. Doris G. Hosier, 139 East Eighth St., Bloomsburg; Berwick H .S. Elizabeth Lehet, 34 Kulp St., Wilkes-Barre; James M. Coughlin H. S., Wilkes-Barre Harold L. Miller, 32 Cherry St., Danville; Bloomsburg H. S. Lawrence J. Pekala, 269 Main St., Fern Glen; Black Creek Twp. H. S. Charlotte R. Reichart, Light Street; Scott Twp. H. S., Espy. Reginald S. Remley, 208 West Main St., Bloomsburg; Orangeville H. S. H. Jean Richard, 391 Lightstreet Road, Bloomsburg; Bloomsburg H. S. Robert F. Schramm, 1326 Mahantongo St., Pottsville; Pottsville H. S. Hazel S. Sigworth, 19 Hinkel St., Warren; Berwick H. E. Anne Wright, 58 East Fifth St., Bloomsburg; Bloomsburg H. S. S. o Miss Elizabeth Anne Baldy, daughter of Mrs. Christine G. Baldy, of South Third street, Catawissa, became the bride of Captain Lea M. Boyer, son of Mrs. Jessie M. Boyer, South street, Catawissa, in a candlelight ceremony at eight o’clock on the evening of Februiry 18 at the home of the bride’s mother. The Rev. Carl W. Weber, pastor of St. John’s Lutheran Church, officiated at the single ring ceremony which was attended by the immediate families of the couple. The bride attended Catawissa High School and is in her senior year at Bloomsburg State Teachers College. 'The groom attended Bucknell pre-dental school and was graduated from the University of Pennsylvania. Captain Boyer served in the U. S. Army during World War II, with eighteen months overseas in the European Theater of Operations. At present with the regular army dental corps, he left San Francisco March 1 for the Philippines. Page TAventy-fcur THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY THE ALUMNI <;e> khai, am mm assomation Board of Directors E. President Vice-President Secretary H. Nelson Ruth Siieary Griffith Mrs. C. r. Housenick !Mrs. Harriot Carpenter Fred W. Diehl Hervey B. Treasurer Edward F. Schuyler Smith H. F. Fenstemakei Elizabeth H. Huber •k 1883 CLASS REl NION — ALUMNI DAY, MAY 22, 1948 1885 Miss Sally C. Watson, of Jerseytown, a school teacher for fifty years and sister of the late John Watson, former prothonotary and clerk of courts, died at her home in Jerseytown at 5:45 Aged eighty-three o’clock on February 2 from complications. years, she had been ailing four years and bedfast two years of that time. A native of Jerseytown, she did all of her school teaching in New Jersey, being a member of the faculty at Keyport for thirty-three years. All of the other years of her life were spent in this county. She was a faithful member of the Presbyterian Church, Keyport, N. J. Surviving is one sister. Miss Ella Watson, at home. CLASS REUNION 1888 — ALUMNI DAY, MAY 22, 1948 1890 Daniel Rinehart, of Waynesboro, died at his home Wednesday, January 6, and his death was followed forty-one hours later by that of Mrs. Rinehart. Double funeral services were held Saturday, aJnuary 9, at the home. Mrs. Rinehart, the former Meta Walter, of the class of 1891, had been in failing health for the last several years and confined to her bed since October. Her husband had been failing since last March and had been confined to his bed for about six weeks prior to his death. Mr. Rinehart was a native of Ringgold, Md., the son of John and Susanna Rinehart. He attended the grade schools at Ringgold and then came to Waynesboro to high school. He was the member of the Class of ’88. continued his education at Bloomsburg State Teachers College and then returned to this section to teach school. He last living He Page Twenty-five THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY served five years in the Washington Township one room school and his last years saw Mount Vernon school grow from a one to a two room institution of learning. Mr. Rinehart had some 70 pupils in his one-room school at Mount Vernon and implored the School Board to enlarge the building and add another room. This was done and Mr. Rinehart was promoted to principal when a second teacher was hired. In those days, Mr. Rinehart often reminisced, teachers received $37.50 a month and principals $42. During his brief school teaching career he became associated with C. H. Snively and in 1892 joined him in forming the firm — Snively and Rinehart — and opened a general merchand- ising business at Ringgold. He continued in business there until ’95 when he sold his interest to Mr. Snively and came to Waynesboro where with E. S. Rinehart, a cousin, and A. F. Rohrer, they purchased the busiThe present store has been the site ness from S. C. Plank. of a hardware business for nearly 90 years. In 1904 Mr. Rinehart became the sole owner of the business and several years later acquired the business block which bears his name. He was a member of the Lutheran Church and the First Bible Class of the Sunday School. He had served on the Church Council for many years. Mr. Rinehart was a director of the First National Bank and Trust Company, Waynesboro Ice and Cold Storage Company, Y.M.C.A., Waynesboro Hospital, Franklin County Mutual Fire Insurance Company. He had been president of the Waynesboro Building and Loan Association for more than 35 years. Mr. Rinehart served also on the Waynesboro school board. He served three terms as president of the Pennsylvania and Atlantic Seaboard Hardware Association. He was also a member of the Kittochtinny Historical Society, Waynesboro Rotary Club, Acacia Lodge F. & A. M., and the Shrine. In January, 1944, Mr. Rinehart sold the business to W. L. It is today Waynesboro’s oldest hardware store. Mrs. Rinehart was born in Greencastle the daughter of C. Luther and Amanda (Funk) Walter and moved with her parents to the Rock Forge section when a small girl. Her father operated a farm and quarry there. After her manage to Mr. Rinehart, in June of 1900, she Harbaugh. came to Waynesboro. She was a member of the Lutheran Church, the First Bible Class of the Sunday School and had served as president of the Annie E. Sanford Missionary Society and Monday Reading Circle. She had also served as president and secretary of the AuxY.M.C.A. and was Annuity Secretary of the Wom- iliary of the Page Twenty-six THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Maryland Synod of the Lutheran Church. Surviving is a daughter, Miss Margaret, at home. Mrs. Margaret E. McNelis, widow of Dr. Anthony J. McNelis, died recently at her home, 819 S. 49th st., Philadelphia. She was 78 years of age. Mrs. McNelis was for many years a member of the BVM Sodality of the St. Francis de Sales Church and of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College Alumni Association. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. William L. Barrow, and a brother, John A. Moran, both of Philadelphia. 1893 CLASS REUNION ALUMNI DAY, 22 1948 1898 CLASS REUNION ALUMNI DAY, >IAY 22 1948 1900 Samuel L. Miller, cashier of the Farmers National Bank since 1931 and affiliated with the institution for forty-seven years, died at 7:55 o’clock on the evening of February 9 from a coronary occlusion. He was aged sixty-nine years. The esteemed Bloomsburg resident had been at the bank as usual earlier in the day and his death came as a profound shock to the family and a legion of friends. Mr. and Mrs. Miller were driving with friends on West Main street in early evening. Some cross links out of a rear tire chain caused a bumping that annoyed him and he stopped the car at the side of the street. He had some difficulty in getting the car started and after re-entering the machine a second time, after looking over the situation, he collapsed. He was rushed to the Bloomsburg Hospital but w'as dead upon admission. Mr. Miller sustained an attack in the Spring of 1946 and was hospitalized a week at that time but since then had been able to go regularly about his duties at the local banking house. A native of Lime Ridge, he was the son of the late John W. and Julia Miller. The family later removed to Espy where he resided until coming to Bloomsburg in 1919. He was a graduate of the Bloomsburg Normal School, class of 1900, and at the age of eighteen started to teach. He was employed in the Center Township schools for three years and then accepted a position in the Farmers Bank, Bloomsburg, and advanced steadily, being appointed cashier of that institution in 1931. In 1911 he married the former Miss Grace E. Robert, of Plymouth, who survives him. He is also survived by a son. Dr. John J. Miller, of Bloomsburg, and by a daughter. Miss Roberta an’s Society of the — — MAY , , home. Mr. Miller was a member of the First Methodist Church of Bloomsburg, being a member of the official board of the Men’s Miller, at Bible Class. He was a member of the Espy Lodge of Odd Fellows, of Washington Lodge, No. 265, F. & A. M., and of Caldwell Consistory. Funeral services were conducted by the Rev. Dr. Elvin Clay Page Twenty-seven THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Myers, pastor of the First Methodist Church of Bloomsburg, and burial was in the Creveling cemetery, Almedia. 1903 CLASS REUNION ALUMNI DAY, MAY 22 1948 1907 Mrs. W. J. Burke, of 150 37th Street, Union City, New Jersey, has sent the QUARTERLY the following poem, written by D. T. Meisberger, Superintendent of the Coal Township schools. The poem was read during the reunion of the class of 1917, on — Alumni Day , last year. When your bones begin to ache. And your knees begin to shake. And you shy away from things Quite risky. When your belt no longer fits, hair has mostly flit. Those, brother, are the signs That you’re sixty. And your When your figure, then lithesome, fair. Gets bulbous spots, with rolls to spare. And dreaming dreams of long ago When you were frisky The children crawl upon your lap. Disturbing grandma’s pleasant nap. Those, sister, are the signs That you’re sixty. We answer now the old roll call. In rising tones that rise and fall. With weary eyes, we gaze, we stare At each and other, and wonder where Is gone the youth, the glory of Heaven, That walked these halls in nineteen-seven Helen Roat (Mrs. J. Elmer Harrison) lives at Qtrs, 104-C, MacDill Field, Tampa, Florida. Mrs. Harrison wrote recently, expressing her appreciation of the very enjoyable time she had at her class reunion last year. 1908 CLASS REUNION — ALUMNI DAY, MAY 22 1948 1909 Stewart E. Acor, teacher of Manual Training in the York High School, died Monday, October 20, 1947, at his home in York. His health had been failing for several months, and he was stricken at school three days before his death, and one month after his sixty-third birthday. He is survived by Mrs. Acor and a son, Charles. Mr. Acor entered the York school system in 1926 and served in the Hannah Penn Junior High School. He became a member of the William Penn faculty in 1932. Page Twenty-eight , THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY His teaching career began in Montour County, and he then taught in Clarion and Franklin Counties and in Ontario County, New York. He was a member of the First Methodist Church of Canandaigua, New York. 1911 Joseph L. Lorenzetty lives at 2434 Willow Avenue, Niagara Falls, New York. 1912 Frankie Davis lives at 23 Rector Place, Red Bank, New Jersey. Mrs. Helen Fuller has been chosen by the School Board for a permanent position as a teacher for the Berwick school disShe had been teaching as a substitute for a number of trict. months. The new teacher will instruct children in the first grade. 1913 CLASS REUNION — ALUMNI DAY, MAY 22, 1948 Eizabeth K. Scharf lives at 7 West Pine Street, Selinsgrove, Pa. She is teaching fourth grade in the Selinsgrove schools. 1915 Alma M. Baer (Mrs. Eduardo D. Llerena) lives at Rua Prudente de Moraes 947, Rio de Janeiro. Her eldest son Eduardo is the proud father of a daughter ‘Nancy Lee’ born January 5, 1958, at Panama City. Eduardo, Jr., is connected with Kodak Panama Ltd. Juan, the second son, graduated from Wharton College (University of Pennsylvania) June, 1946. He is now working for the Moore McCormack Steamship Lines in Rio de Janeiro. Paul, the third son, is now a student at Wharton School (University of Pennsylvania.) 1916 The many Bloomsburg friends of Mrs. F. Alex Nason, the former Katharine Bakeless, daughter of the late Prof, and Mrs. O. H. Bakeless, unquestionably will enjoy this article concerning her which was written by Cornelia Curtiss, feature writer for a Cleveland, Ohio, paper: Her friends have always said of Mrs. F. Alex Nason, “Yes, she plays a musical instrument, the victrola.’’ But Mrs. Nason, who describes herself as the “laziest person in the world’’ is about to blossom forth as a drummer, thus giving the lie to her own characterization and also proving to her pals that she can beat out a rhythm with her own hands. David, the Nason son, recently acquired the drums. They occupy a conspicuous spot in the living room of their domicile at 15814 Oakhill Rd., East Cleveland. His mother hasn’t been able to resist them. She gave me a small demonstration, and it sounded as if she has already caught the trick of manipulating the sticks and the various pedals and cymbals. As for her record player, it’s no wonder she’s an expert disc jockey. She owns volume after volume of recordings of Page Twenty-nine THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY the world’s best music. Her self-styled laziness is a debatable question, too. She’s always doing something and laughingly remarked that sometimes she has to be restrained. During the war she joined the Red Cross Motor Corps, drove thousands of miles all over the community and has kept up her vounteer stint ever since. “I consider it a really worthwhile piece of work,” she explains. She was born in Bloomsburg, Pa., “which is just about in the center of the state.” Then she was Katharine Bakeless and she reversed the custom of going east to college by coming “west” to Flora Stone Mather College of Western Reserve University. “f had intended to stay a year “but I loved big city that I just Along the way of Technology, and called, and then transfer,” she reMather so much and Cleveland was such a stayed.” she met Mr. Nason, then at Case Institute another of those Case-Mather romances be- gan. David, returning from war service, followed his father to Case and that presents a strained atmosphere in the Nason menage on Thanksgiving Day. Then, as any Cevelander knows, the annual Reserv'e-Case football game is played in the morning. She reflected: “Reserve usually wins and that means thick gloom from David and his father all the rest of the day. And I don’t dare gloat over the Reserve victories. Often I’ve watched the game, just praying Case will win.” It has reached the point now where Mrs. Nason refuses to go. It’s not quite so bad listening over the radio, she thinks. While her name is Katharine, no one ever calls her that except on rare occasions when they want to impress her. Otherwise she has always gone by the nicknames of “Bakey” or “Biddy,” the latter being her brothers’ pet designation for her. When David was 10, he one day fondly referred to “Bakey” as “my good old mother.” “Well,” declares she, “I immediately decided I had better pep myself up.” She did, by going back to Reserve and obtaining her master’s degree in fine arts. “This involved a part in a play a week, almost like a stock company. After a year I had had enough of acting.” Since then she has kept in touch with the drama by being a pillar of the Play House, a first-nighter and member of the women’s con mittee. A collector of pressed glass, figurines, bells from Java and odd pieces of brass, Bakey displays them all prominently and even uses the glasses for table service. Via the phonograph and linguaphone records, she is brushing up on her French. There’s possibility she may go to EurPage Thirty T HE ALUMNI Q U A R T E R L Y ope this year with Mr. Nason. They had a similar journey a year ago and while he was engaged in business, Bakey went sight-seeing tirelessly. They “got away from it all” by going to Nassau over the holidays. Staying a month at the Country Club and home only a fortnight ago, Mrs. Nason has a sun-tan deep enough to make any sun lover pale with envy. 1918 — ALUMNI DAY, MAY 1923 CLASS REUNION — ALUMNI DAY, MAY CLASS REUNION 22, 1948 22, 1948 Plans are underway for our Attention, Class of 1923! twenty-fifth reunion. We are planning a get-together for BYiday evening, Mav 21, at the home of Minnie Mellick Turne'’. There will also be a six-o’clock dinner Saturday evening, May Watch for 22, for class members and their husbands or wives. your notice and give it your prompt attention. 1928 CLASS REUNION — ALUMNI DAY, MAY 22, 1948 Ray E. Hawkins, formerly former member of the faculty of Newport Township, and a of the Scott Township High School, has been promoted to the position of superintendent of the Barcalo Manufacturing Company, Buffalo, New York. 1929 A son, William August, was born Friday, November 21, 1947, to Mr. and Mrs. August Kern, of 1509 Bavis Street, Philadelphia. Mrs. Kern was formerlv Anna Mary Wasley. 1930'^ The “Sunday Independent” recently published the follow- ing concerning Elfed H. Jones: “Besides handling his daily duties as principal of the 'Dodson school, Wilkes-Barre, one of the largest grade schools in Northeastern Pennsylvania, Elfed H. Jones finds time for other activities. He is the newly-elected superintendent of the Junior Department of the Westminster Presbyterian Sunday School, and he has served as president of the Men’s Sunday School Class of that church. “He was recently named an instructor in the Extension School of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College. He is teaching classes at Kingston High School and Coughlin High School. “He is known to thousands of sports fans as the former coach of basketball at Nanticoke and Coughlin High Schools, and he has been one of the leading football officials of Northeastern Pennsylvania for many years.” Mr. Jones lives at 95 Elizabeth Street, Wilkes-Barre. A 1932 daughter, Ruth Ann, was born to Dr. and Mrs. Chester C. Hess, of Bridgeville, Pa., on January 1, 1948. 1933 CLASS REUNION — ALUMNI DAY, MAY 22, 1948 Pa?e Thirty-one THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY McCaffrey, of Hazleton. The couple were married on September 5, 1947, in St. Gabriel’s Church, Hazleton. Mrs. McCaffrey is teaching in the Allentown schools. Mr. McCaffrey has been attending Bloomsburg State Teachers College and is a veteran of World War II. Mr. and Mrs. Jay C. Clossen of Bloomsburg R. D. 5, recent’/ announced the engagement of their daughter, Paulina Vee, to H. Paul Lauderman, son of Mrs. Estella White, of McNair street, Hazleton. a graduate of Scott Township High School She is a secretary in the office of the Dean of Instruction at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College. Mr. Lauderman, a graduate of Hazleton High School and B.S.T.C., is now teaching at Lititz High School. Mr. and Mrs. Leland Miller, of Bloomsburg, announce the engagement of their daughter, Lavona, to Richard W. Rowlands, son of Mrs. William Rowlands, of Reading. Miss Clossen is and the Wilkes-Barre Business College. 1935 Reed, teacher in the Bloomsburg High School, was elected president and secretary of the Columbia County Chapter of the Pennsylvania Division of the American Cancer Society at a meeting held in the main court room as the program for 1948 was formulated. Howard Berninger, of Mifflinville, was graduated from the Dickinson Law School at exercises held at Hotel Hershey Friday, February 6. Mr. Berninger, a graduate of the Mifflinville High School and the Bloomsburg State Teachers College, received his master’s degree at Bucknell University. He served four and a half years in the armed forces, being attached to the 20th Air Force at the time of his discharge. 1938 William I. — ALUMNI DAY, MAY 22, 1948 1943 CLASS REUNION — ALUMNI DAY, IVLAY 22, 1948 CLASS REUNION Sally Hottenstein (Mrs. Robert C. Dix, where her husband is practicing medicine. have a daughter, Virginia Jill. Jr.) lives in Milton, Dr. and Mrs. Dix 1944 — ALUMNI DAY, MAY 1945 CLASS REUNION — ALUMNI DAY, MAY 1946 CLASS REUNION — ALU4INI DAY, MAY 1947 CLASS REUNION — ALUMNI DAY, MAY CLASS REUNION Page Thirty-two 22, 1948 22, 1943 22, 1948 22, 1948 BUSINESS CARDS — BLOOMSBURG GRADUATES FRANK CREASY & WELLS IJUILDrS'G MATERIALS Mrs. S. C. Creasy, '81. Pres. WESLEY KNORR, JfOTABT ’34 Poletime Comuntzis, '44, Mgr. Athamantia Comuntzis, '46 Ass’t. Mgr. 142 East Main Street Bloomsburg 529 ’16 Bloomsburg BARTON, REAL ESTATE 52 ’96 — INSURANCE West Main Street TUG CHAR-MUND INN '41, THE WOLF SHOP LEATHER GOODS — REPAIRS M. C. Strausser. '27, Prop. 122 East Main Street Mgr. Main Street Bloomsburg 356-R 50 We.st SMITH, '15 Bloomsburg, Pa. 24-.I FOR YOUR RiniNO CLOTHES B. S. Mrs. Charlotte Hoch, Prop. ARCUS WOMEN’S SHOP HERVEY HARRY 1926 716 East Third Street Arcus, ’ll Bloomsburg 850 ANNUITIES an.:t: ^ ’? ;! =^J: £ Page Two ,. a THE A L U M N’ I QUARTERLY ern Pennsylvania people are still talking about the brilliant running of I-Iazleton’s Dan Farrell, that led the Bcomsburg Teachers to their fifth straight win. Next, the Maroon and Gold traveled to Shippensburg to face a powerful Greyhound team that held one of the two defeats of B.S.T.C. in 1947. The Huskies faced a stubborn outfit that rainy day, but Georgie Paternoster pulled the game out of the fire with just four minutes to go with a beautiful running catch of a Kriss-throvv^n pass. The score: Bloomsburg 13, Ship- pensburg 7. The Huskies powered to their seventh straight victory over Kutztown before a Homecoming Day crowd of 3,000. Scoring in each of the four periods ,the Teachers showed great reserve power by swamping the Golden Avalanche, 27-0. The squad had a real breather in L-vcoming. The lads from Williamsport were never in the game. Coach Bob Redman used his first outfit only in the first quarter, but the Maroon and Gold showed as much power as the varsity by scoring in every period to mount the score to 47-0. The Huskies completed their undefeated season by overpowering East Stroudsburg, 14-0. It was quite evident again that the Teachers Conference teams had no line to match that of the Huskies. Tommy Donan was brilliant in his final game as a Husky and will be long remembered as one of the greatest tackles in Bloomsburg history. Four other top-notch gridmen played their last and best game for Bloomsburg that day Angie Albano, George Paternoster, Larry Mussoline and Frank Luchnick. As the season drew to a close, there was much discussion among fans and sports writers as to the possibility of a post-season game with California State Teachers College, to decide the championship of the State Teachers Colleges in Pennsylvania. That the Huskies would play no post-season football game, with the exception of a bowl game “under favorable conditions,” was the decision made by the team and coaching staff. After the Huskies attained an undefeated, untied record for the 1948 season to tie the once-defeated California Teachers for the mythical title i’ennsylvaia Teachers College competition, sports entnus'asLs felt that these two schools should meet to decide the championship. In a statement to the press. Dean Hoch, Director of Public Relations and assistant coach, claimed that Bloomsburg should be the unchallenged champion. He stated that California’s team is really a freshman team, made up largely of Penn State players, and is, therefore, not to be classed with the teams in a four-year curriculum. In a telegram to E. H. Cubbons, Athletic Director at the m Page Three THE A I. U M N I QUARTERLY Left to riglit; Matt Maley, assistant baekfield; Robert Redman, head coiu'h; Richard Hallisy, line coach; John Hoch, assistant coach. Western Pennsylvania college, Hoch, as a spokesman for the college, said that “B.S.T.C. feels that nothing will be gained by a post-season game with California.” Concerning the controversy, a Penn State official said, “Freshman students are sent to the different colleges according to their curriculum. California caters to physical education students and, therefore, the majority of athletes are sent there.” Through Dean Hoch’s releases to the Associated Press, B.S.T.C. and its championship ball club has received the attention of many metropolitan nevt^spapers and various other papers throughout the nation. During the week before the East Stroudsburg game, the question was “Eight down and one to go could the Huskies do it?” After the curtain fell on the 1948 season ,the question was — answered. The powerful Huskies of Bloomsburg have received much attention throughout the sporting world, and they have been Page Four THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Any team that has the grit, determination, it all. and ability to defeat nine consecutive opponents of the caliber of East Stroudsburg is worthy of any laurels that may be heaped upon it. deserving of We should not, however, forget the old Qhinese proverb: man there are always able men.” Behind our gridiron squad, we have one of the most capable coaching staffs “Behind an able in little collegiate football. In Coach Bob Redman, who came from Ne wYork State to take over the helm of the Husky squad two years ago, B.S.T.C. has a shrewd and capable tactician who is well deserving of any credit that may be bestowed upon him. In Dean John Hoch, Assistant Coach, one finds a well-liked and capable assistant who not only proved his worth on the coaching spread the fame and fortune of staffs but has also helped B.S.T.C. in the sporting world through his postion as Publicity Director of the College. Rounding out the staff are R'cha’cd Hallisy and Matt Maley, backfield and line coach, respectively, for the Huskies. Though the latter are newcomers to the Husky staff, they deserve much praise for their diligence and efforts in helping to Bloomsburg the first undefeated season in the history of the College. President Andruss and his administrative staff have been of great assistance in the writing of this chapter of Bloomsburg athletic history. Over a span of two years of Redman-Hoch leadership, the Huskies have made an enviable record of fifteen victories, with only two defeats. This is a record that any institution would be proud of, just as are all Bloomsburg alumni. Additional honors are being garnered by varsity gridders of unbeaten an untied football team of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College, 1948 champions of the Pennsylvania State Teachers College loop. Leading the Huskies in garnering laurels is Tommy Donan, Columbia senior and tackle on the only undefeaied and untied college club in the state. Donan, who picked up More votes than any other player named to the All-State Teachers College team, was also selected as first team tackle on ine the All-Pennsylvaia team picked for the press associations. He was tie only Teachers College player to grace the AP All-East squad, and has been nominated for a Little All-American honors. A fellow townsman, Elmer Kreiser, was named to an end post on the All-State Teachers College first team and picked up a spot oi the All-Pennsylvania third team while Joe Appichella, Hazleton, and Frank Luchnick, Mt. Carmel, won spots on the All-Statfc Teachers eleven and honorable mention on the AllPennsylvania selections. Page Mve THE alumni quarterly Homecoming Day Alumni and friends of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College returning for Homecoming on Saturday, October 13, were certain to get the warmest welcome in the history of the annual event for plans had been completed to make the Twenty-First Annual Homecoming Day a “Happy Homecoming.” Students and faculty spared nothing to make the day’s program as full of interesting things as a freshman’s wardrobe trunk. President Harvey A. Andruss served as host for the gala occasion and welcomed “home” a large crowd of alumni. The occasion is the high spot of the college year, and the Board of Trustees, the faculty and student committees made every effort to offer the visitors every opportunity to renew old friendships and make new ones. Although the Homecoming Day’s activities unofficially got underway Friday night with a gigantic bonfire and pep rally for the college’s unbeaten and untied football team, the annual Homecoming Day assembly in Carver auditorium Saturday morning at 10 o’clock was the official curtain raiser. The Maroon and Gold Band, under the direction of Charles H. Henrie, presented a short program of snappy band music as a feature of the program. During the exercises. Dr. E. H. Nelson, president of the General Alumni Association, spoke, and a new color film, “Living and Working at Bloomsburg” was shown for the first time. A cafeteria luncheon was served to alumni and visitors in the College dining room at 11;30 o’clock. Miss Della M. Thayer, College dietician, planned and executed colorful and unusual decorations, featuring a football theme for the annual event. Of course, the annual Homecoming Day football game was the focal point of sports interest at two o’clock when the uidefeated eleven of Coach Bob Redman tangled with the Kulztown aggregation of Coach Joe Patton on Mt. Olympus. The Maroon and Gold gridders were seeking their seventh successive victory of the season at the expense of the visitors who had been victorious twice in five starts, one game having been a scoreless tie. The Huskies played on the Mt. Olympus grdiron for the first time since 1946 when they toppled another Kutzown club, 19-0. The fans left the game happy becatse of Bloomsburg’s 27-0 victory. The Gabfest began directly after the game in the newlyrenovated Waller Recreation Room and Lounge. Here alumni found their friends, refreshments and music. The a,nnual Homecoming Dance was held in the Waller lounge, beghning at nine o’clock. Bob Clemens and his Central Pennsylvanians provided the music for the dancing. Page Six THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY New Members of the Faculty Harry F. Garner, of Pittsburgh, has been appointed director of secondary education at the Teachers College, here, to fill the vacancy which was created when Joseph R. Bailer left the college in October to assume his duties as professor of English at the American University in Cairo, Egypt. Mr. Garner is a graduate of the University of Pittsburgh, with the Degres of Bachelor of Arts and Master of Education, and is a candidate for the Doctor of Education Degree at Teachers College, Columbia University. He also attended Duquesne University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana. For the past two years he has been head of the Department of Education and Director of Student Teaching at Lafayette College, Easton, and before that time gained teaching experience at Indiana University; Butler, Pa., Senior High School; Benjamin Franklin Junior High School, Uniontown, Pa., and Schenley High School, Pittsburgh. While in the Navy, Garner had the unique experience of teaching, in French, the operation of radar equipment to officers and enlisted men of the French Navy. He is a member of Kappa Delta Pi, and Kappa Phi Kappa fraternities, and is also connected with the National Education Association and American Association of University Professors. Miss Marcella M. Strickler of Roaring Branch, Lycoming County, has accepted a position at the State Teachers College, here, teaching and supervising in Grade III of the Benjamin Franklin Training School. From 1940 to 1948, Miss Strickler was an elementary principal in the Otto Township schools in McKean County. Previous to 1940, Miss Stickler was director of the nursery school at the State Teachers College, Mansfield. Miss Stickler received her Bachelor of Science degree from the State Teachers College, Lock Haven and her Master of Science degree from St. Bonaventure College, Olean, New York. She has taken graduate work at the Pennsylvania State College, where she has worked with problem cases in reading in the reading clin'c at the Pennsylvania State College. She brings an excellent background of training and experience for her present position in the Teachers College. Miss Mariorie A. Keller, Savre, Pa., has b^en appointed to the faculty of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College. The new faculty member, who has been employed by the Pennsylvania State College Extension Service during the past year, is teaching in the Department of Business Education. Page Seven THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Miss Keller has had a varied and interesting background of experience in teaching, having taught speed dictation and transcription and Business English since January of this year to a large group of twenty stenographers and junior secretaries of the G. C. Murphy Company in McKeesport. This work has been under the supervision of the Pennsylvania State College. Prior to that time she taught for a year at the Pennsylvania College for Women in Pittsburgh. While on the faculty there, she was an instructor in secretarial science. At one time she was an instructor on the faculty at Westminster College. Miss Keller is a native of Sayre, Pa., where she attended the public schools and graduated from high school in 1936. She received her Degree of Bachelor of Science in Education from the State Teachers College at Indiana, Pa., where she was a member of Kappa Delta Pi, honary education fraternity; Pi Omega Pi, and Theta Sigma Upsilon. She received a Master of EducaAt tion Degree from the University of Pittsburgh in 1945. Pittsburgh she was elected a member of Delta Pi Epsilon, honorary graduate fraternity. Following her graduation from college, she worked on the secretarial staff of the Pennsylvania State Motor Police in Harrisburg, but she resigned that position in order to accept a teaching position at South Whitehall High School near Allentown. In 1942 she was elected commerteacher in Sayre High School where she taught two more commercial In September, 1944, she was elected a teacher at Butler High School where she taught for one year. The following fall Miss Keller moved to Indiana, Pa., where she taught commercial subjects and served as supervisor of student teachers at the State Teachers College. Included in her work experience she worked as a secretary for the Westinghouse Electric Corporation at Pittsburgh. As a result of this experience, she wrote an article “My 1945 Summer Experience” which was widely published in various business journals. Miss Keller brings to the College a background of valuable contacts in commercial activities as well as classroom excial years. perience. Mr. Edward D. Sharrets, Berwick, has been named instituBloomsburg State Teachers College. Mr. Sharretts, who graduated from the College in 1941, is serving as an assistant to Nevin T. Englehart, superintendent of grounds and buildings, and is assigned to the office of the Business Manager, C. M. Hausknecht. A graduate of the Berwick High School, Mr. Sharretts is a veteran of World War II, having served in the Army Air Forces as an administrative officer. During his army career, he attended and also graduated from three army service schools. He was tional secretary of the Page Eight THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY separated from the armed forces in April, 1946, with the rank of captain. Following his separation, he was employed in the auditing department of the American Car and Foundry Company, but in September, 1946, he was named office manager of the Benscoter Memorials Company in Berwick. A native of Berwick, Mr. Sharretts is married and has one child. He assumed the duties of his new position in June. o Professor Bailer Goes To Egypt Joseph R. Bailer, director of secondary education, at B.S.T.C. has accepted a position as professor of English at the American University at Cairo, Egypt. He and his family will reside in Maadi, a suburb of Cairo. Professor aBiler has studied and taught abroad before, having spent a year in Istanbul ,Turkey, as instructor in English and phoentics at Robert College. He came to the local Teachers College in January, 1940, and has in recent years served as director of secondary education, director of placement and director of extension. He is secretary-treasurer of the Association of State Teachers College Faculties, a member of the Secondary School Principals Association, Kappa Delta Phi, Pi Omega Pi, Phi Sigma Pi, and the Caldwell Consistory. He was listed in the 1948 volume of “Leaders in Education.’ Born in Athens, Pa., Mr. Bailer was educated in the public schools there in 1925 was graduated from the University of Pittsburgh. While employed with the Butterick Publishing Company, New York City, he traveled in Europe and in South America. From 1929 to 1939, he was instructor at Robert College, in Istanbul, Turkey. Upon his return to America, he became head of the English department at the High School in Point Pleasant, N. J. In 1934, he was head of the social studies department at the high school in Metuchen, N. J. Mr. Bailer engaged in graduate studies at the University Camof Grenoble, Grenoble, France; Cambridge University, bridge, England; Columbia University and New York University. He received his Master of Arts degree from New York University where he is now completing his work for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. The American University at Cairo, where he will teach, is an American institution consisting of the College of Science, College of Education, of College of Oriental Studies and College of Liberal Arts. Page Nine THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Dean and Mrs. Sutliff Observe Golden Wedding “We took our bicycles with us on our honeymoon to Asbury Park and had a wonderbul time exploring the countryside for cycling was a popular pastime fifty years ago,” Dean William B. Sutliff, of College Hill, reminisced on the eve of the half-century observation of his marriage to Mrs. Sutliff. Few couples on their golden wedding day can boast the presence of the minister that married them but the Sutliffs can. Dr. G. H. Hemingway, the Presbyterian minister who married Dean and Mrs. Sutliff on the tenth of August, 1898, was present for the festivities that marked the anniversary. “I remember in^ay rainy. it was a very merry wedding party,” Dr. Hem- day was grey and The retired minister, who appears far younger than his recalled, “in spite of the fact that the ’ ninety years ,took great pleasure in recalling with the Sutliffs the flurry of activity on that far-distant day. Seventy-five guests attended the simple wedding which took place at noon at the home of Mrs. Sutliff’s parents, in Stauchburg, a small town in Berks county. Mrs. Sutliff, then Miss Ella Stump, wore a white voile gown for the ceremony, which took place in the living room of her home before the fireplace. Yes. she still has the dress, but fifty years have taken their she says, and it hasn’t been out of the trunk in which it has been carefully preserved for some time. The marriage book, filled with the signatures of the wedding guests and clippings of wedding anniversary observations of the past fifty years, brought many memories to the Sutliffs and Dr. Hemingway. Between the pages was a carefully written page containing the words spoken by Dr. Hemingway at the toll, wedding. “We wanted Dr. Hemingway to write it out in his own hand,” Mrs. Sutliff smiled, and she pointed also to where he had signed his name fifty years later below his signature on the marriage certificate. After the honeymoon, the couple went to live in an apartment in Waller Hall which was just over the main entrance. Dean Sutliff, at that time, had just completed work for his degree at Lafayette College and had returned to the Normal School to teach mathematics. Mrs. Sutliff, a graduate of the New England Conservatory of Music, at Boston, had been teaching piano at the Normal School for several years before her marriage and continued for Page Ten THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY several years after. After six years, they went to live at 412 East Second street, where they have made their home for the past forty-four years. Mr. Sutliff became the dean of instruction at the school in 1921 and was in that position when the Normal School became the Teachers College The in 1926. He retired in 1937. have three children, Robert G. Sutliff, who is with federal civil service in Baldwin, L. I., N. Y. Helen E., who is a teacher in Harisburg, and Harriet, who is Mrs. Harold H. Herr, of Palmyra. They have one granddaughter, Marcia Herr, Sutliffs ; three years old. o Henry L. Scott, the originator of Concert Humor, and hilarious artist of the piano, engaged in a three-round bout with the grand piano on the stage of Carver Auditorium at Bloomsburg State Teachers College Thursday evening, October 7, and came off the winner as usual. Scott reduced a packed house to a mild semblance of hysteria with a new form of art never before seen locally. — During his concert, he not only played classical musical with an artistry all his own, but he gave a series of humorous impressions of musicians at their best and worst. The props used during the performance incuded an orange, a wig and his famous brown mittens. He played compositions by Chopin, Liszt and Scarlatti, with boogie-woogies and ballads. His lectures included “The History of the Lost Chord,” “Chopin in the Citrus Belt” and “Rhythm at Any Cost,” and “How to Play a Piano.” A crowd of almost eight hundred persons attended the first number of the 1948-49 Artists’ Series Course. o The culminating social event of the Summer Session of the Bloomsburg State 'Teachers College was the anual Summer Dance held in the Waller Hall Lounge and Recreation room on August 3. Many students and friends of the College were present at the gala affair. A committee headed by Thaddeus Swigonski, Nanticoke, president of the Community Government Association, transformed the recently-renovated room into a veritable summer fairyland with pastel colors and cool green palms. Others on the committee were Miss Carmen Tarole, Bethlehem; John Brovm, Harrisburg; Lois Datesman, Bangor; Wilmer Nester, Eminaus; Henry Kulik Mt. Carmel and Frank Luchnick, of Mt. Car’^iel. Page Eleven THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Driver Education at B. S. T. C. The popular belief that little preparation for driving a car needed by high school students was denied by R. B. Redman, instructor, Driver Education, Bloomsburg State Teachers College. Mr. Redman, whose Summer Session course in Driver Education and Training had an enrollment of 37 students, stated that unrealized and undesirable accident-breeding habits have been passed from one individual to another by parents who have taught the r sons and daughters to drive. Youthful drivers of high school age have a bad traffic fatality record according to studies made recently by the American Automobile Association, and this record offers a challenge that has been successfully met by the Bloomsburg State Teachers College which has made its services available to the immediate community and society as a whole. Because careful planning and training are necesary to deIS velop the “best method’’ of instruction of prospective drivers, Mr. Redman organized his course into a classroom-laboratory plan of teaching correct driving habits and testing driving skills. For example, during the first week of instruction, classroom lectures, moving pictures, and discussions developed the topic of automotive mechanics and the functioning and maintenance of the automobile. Laboratory demonstrations then gave the class enrollees practical experience in that phase of the work. In order to test the behind-the-wheel skills enabling drivers to meet any driving situation, the College set up a standard A.A.A. driving course near Navy Hall, where students were required to pass certain standard tests for driving skill. The course included barriers for “weaving tests’’ and turns, stalls On for checking parallel and diagonal parking, and steering. this course, a number of volunteer “guinea pigs’’ were given the opportunity to maneuver the car in close limits under the personal supervision of one of the regular class enrollees. Mr. Redman brought to the College a number of authorities in the field of Highway Safety Education and related fields of endeavor. Jack Housenick, of the Housenick Motor Company, Bloomsburg, spoke to the Driver Education class on the “Functioning and Maintenance of the Automobile.’’ Another who addressed the group was Ivan J. Stehman, Chief, Division of Highway Safety Education, State Department of Public Instruction, in a two-day conference. Mr. Stehman not only addressed the class, but he brought with him the psychophysical testing devices which are useful in discovering physical limitations of drivers, most of which can be compensated for if the driver is properly trained. In addition to Mr. Stehman, Lieutenant Albert L. Flick, Page Twelve ! THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY I State Motor Police, visited the campus Tuesday, July 13, and discussed the general subject of the “Pennsylvania Vehicle Code and Its Enforcement.” P. B. Muff ley, Pennsylvania State Department of Highways, was here Thursday, July 15, and informed the class on the topic, “Highway Signs, Signals, Markings, and Traffic Engineering.” At the present time, six semester hrours in Highway Eduction and General Safety Education are required for state certification to teach Driver Education in the schools of Pnensylvania. The Bloomsburg course may be used to obtain temporary certification in the field and meet one-half the requirements for per- manent certification. o The largest summer session enrollment in the history of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College was announced by President Harvey A. Andruss who revealed that 568 men and women had completed registration requirements at the end of the first day. Tne enrollment was nearly one hundred greater than last year’s record-breaking total of 484 students. Veterans of World War II led in the registration figures with 304 ex-G.I.’s enrolled for six-week courses in the fields of Business, Secondary and Elementary Education. Boarding studeius totaled 22u men and women. Teachers-in-service, who returned to the campus to complete their requirements for the degree of Bachelru of Science in Education or to make their certificates pv^rmanent, boosted the non-veteran enrollment to nearly 250. New worRshops in consumer education and secondary education as well as the popular Elementary Education Workshop attracted capacity enrollments. Among the new courses being offered this summer was a course of study in Driver Education and Training. Robert B. Redman, instructor, reported an enrollment of forty students of whom half were “guinea pigs” who were taught safe driving habits by members of the class during the six weeks. o The Connie Mack Baseball School travel unit of the Philadelphia Athletics, held a three-day session of instruction and tryouts at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College during the last week in August. Classes opened Monday morning, August , 23, and and were resumed again on Fridav and Saturday, August 27 28. All players in this area wishing to receive instruction in and fielding or desirous of a chance to play professional ball were invited to attend. The instructors were Ira Thomas and Jack Coombs, famous A’s battery in the 1910 era, assited by Charlie Gault, scout. The staff taught how to hit and field correctly by means of a public address svstem set up for the benefit of all attending the school. Youths sixteen and over were eligible to enroll. hitting Page Thirteen THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Secondary Education Workshop The means of building habits and attitudes necessary to American life were investigated during the past six weeks in the Junior High Summer School sponsored by the Teachers ColTaking its mandate from the State Legislature, which relege. cently appropriated $100,000 to carry out its order that democracy become a way of life rather than a list of items learned from a textbook, the College undertook the study as a project secondary education workshop. Along with leading educators and public school leaders, the Commonwealth has become increasingly concerned about the in its building of citizenship in the public schools as well as the quality of the products of those schools. Because of a growing awareness of the importance of proper habits and attitudes in the development of “the American Way,” many educational institutions are re-examining their methods and the results of their teaching. The College discovered that the children in its Summer Junior High School have become increasingly competent in learning situations when the activity developed from their interests. Also, the basic attitudes and habits of conduct improved as the various individuals and groups met, discussed and recognized their needs. One of the surprising discoveries of the session was that the needs of young people are not necessarily met in traditional school situations. Johnny is not stupid just because he doesn’t do his math lesson everyday. He may very likely prefer to spend his study time in playing with an airplane motor or some other item which is more real to him. By discovering with what things Johnny spends his spare time, teachers can find new ways to develop deeper and broader interests in him. This led observers during the past six weeks to carefully study the interests and needs of the Summer School children in order to get at basic pupil drives. In that way they discovered new pupil responses as well as the fact that pupils are willing to accept responsibilities. This fact is important in the formation of democratic attitudes and hbaits because the privileges extended citizens in a democracy by its ‘way of life” mean nothing unless those citizens also accept the responsibilities that go with them. Thus, the school program can contribute effectively to education for democratic living. o 1934 Madalyn Dunkelberger (Mrs. Harry W. Stephens) Union Deposit, Pa. Page Fourteen lives at THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Elementary Education Conference When the fii'st atomic bomb cast its pall of death over Hirthe final days of World War II, few persons anticipated that its implications would be felt in the elementary school, but the whole problem was considered at the annual conference on Elementary Education held Saturday, December 4, at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College. Conference theme was “How Can Science Fit the Child for Better Living in the Atomic oshima in Age?”t Following registration in the Benjamin Franklin School at 9:15 o’clock, a series of interesting demonstration lessons was taught by the Benjamin Franklin School faculty. From the kindergarten class to the Special Class, vitally-significant topics were presented by the regular teachers of the campus laboratory school. Round-table discussions of the lessons followed the class and a number of outstanding personalities in the field of education consented to serve as discussion leaders. Included in the group v/ere the following: Mr. J. Fred Jones, Superintendent of Schools, Nantlcoke, Pa., Kindergarten; Grade I Mrs. E. Victoria Bundens, Elementary Teacher, Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania; Grade II Miss Anna Troutman, Elementary Teacher, Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania; Grade III Mr. Fred W. Diehl, Superintendent of Schools, Montour County, Danville, Pennsylvania; Grade IV Miss Robina Batey, Principal, Elementary School, Plymouth, Pennsylvania; Grade V Mr. Paul N. Brunstetter, Asst. Superintendent of Schools, Columbia County, Bloomsburg; Grade VI Mr. Ralph D. Felton, Elementary School Principal, White Haven, Pennsylvania. An interesting program was presented in the Carver Auditorium at eleven o’clock, featuring an address by Dr. Gerald S. Craig, Porfessor of Natural Science, Teachers College, Columbia University, New York. Dr. Craig had chosen as his subject “Science in the Education of Our Children.’’ The Men’s Glee Club, under the direction of Miss Harriet M. Moore, presented a short musical program prior to Dr. Craig’s address. Conference guests were served a luncheon in the College dining room at 12:45 o’clock. Dr. Craig and President Harvey A. Andruss spoke during the after-dinner program, while William Trego and John Reitmeyer, both of Milton, presented sevDr. Craig used as his topic, “Bloomseral musical selections. burg Then and Now,” while President Andruss spoke on “What’s Happening to Our Elementary Education?” Invitations were sent to more than 1500 elementary teachers and administrators throughout Central Pennsylvania. periods, — — — — — — — Page Fifteen THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY B. S. T. C. Students in 'Who's Who' Seven students at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College have been accepted for recognition in the 1948-49 edition of Who’s Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges. This publication is an official annual publication of distinguished students selected from colleges and universities throughout America. Scholarship, leadership and cooperation in educational and extra-curricular activities, general citizenship, and professional promise were considered by those making the nominations for this year’s selections. Included in this year’s list are the following students; Edwin M. Allegar, Stillwater; Ruth P. Elder, Berwick; Shirley Henley, Scranton; John Purcel, Shenandoah; Margaret Suchy, Forest City; Ruth Von Bergen, Hazleton; Carson Whitesell, Hunlock Creek. Allegar, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Allegar, R. D. 1, Stillwater, is an all-around athlete at the College having starred on the Husky soccer and baseball teams during the past four years. He was president of the Junior Class and has been prominent in college dramatics as a member of the Bloomsburg Players. He is a member of Alpha Psi Omega, honorary dramtic fraternity, and Phi Sigma Pi, national honorary men’s education fraternity. Miss Elder, daughter of Mrs. Mary Elder, 600 East Third Street, Berwick, has been active in the affairs of the Business Education Club and the Day Women’s Association. She has served on the staff of the Maroon and Gold, the College weekly newspaper, and is a member of the Athenaeum Club and Pi Omega Pi, national honorary business education fraternity. Miss Henley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Henley, 2031 Luzerne Street, Scranton, has also had an active college career. She is treasurer of the Business Education Club and vice president of the Waller Hall Association as well as a member of the governing board of the latter group. During the past two years, she has been an active member of the Women’s Chorus and the Student Christian Association. As Sophomore girl representative she was a member of the College Council. She also served as secretary of the Junior Class. Miss Henley holds membership in Pi Omega Pi, national honorary business education fraternity, and Kappa Delta Pi, national honorary education fraternity. Mr. Purcell, who resides with Miss Mae F. Purcell and Miss Marie Kehl, 18 East Lloyd Street, Shenandoah, is one of the busiest seniors on the Bloomsburg campus. The young man, who was treasurer Page Sixteen of the Community Government Association last THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY is an active member of the Business Education Club and Student Christian Association. He is a member of Phi Sigma Pi, national honorary education fraternity, and is president of the Oscar Hugh Bakeiess Chapter, Future Teachers of America During the past two summers Mr. Purcell assisted College authorities with the general direction of the recreational program. year, Miss Suchy, daughter of Mrs. Julia Suchy, 355 Main Street, Forest City, is another busy senior at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College. At the present time she is treasurer of the Business Education Club; secretary-treasurer of the Women’s Chorus, and secretary of the Dramatic Club. Along with these duties, she manages to find time to serve as staff reporter for the Maroon and Gold, the College’s weekly newspaper. She is also one of the College cheerleaders. During the past two years, Miss Suchy has been fashion coordinator for the very successful Spring Fashion Show and is responsible for a great deal of the success enjoyed by that affair. She is a member of the Anenaeum Club, Pi Omega Pi, and Kappa Delta Pi. Homer E. Whitesell, His active in campus affairs at Bloomsburg. many activities include membership in the Bloomsburg Players, Phi Sigma Phi, and the College Council of the Community Government Association. He serves as vice president of the Student Christian Associat'on and secretary-treasurer of the local chapter of Future Teachers of America. During his junior year, he was boy representative for the Junior Class. Whitesell is an Mr. Whitesell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hunlock Crek, is Elementary Education major. Miss Von Bergen, the daughter of Mr .and Mrs. Edwin Von Bergen, 551 North Wyoming Street, Hazleton, has been very active in College music circles. Her talent for music has given her an opportunity to appear in many assembly programs where she has been featured as a piano soloist and an accompanist for vocalists. She is a member of the Maroon and Gold Band and is a member of the College Council of the Community Government Asociation. o An outstanding program of choral music was presented to the students of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College Wednesday, June 9, in the Carver Hall auditorium by the Princeton Theological Seminary Choir as a feature of the first convocation of the pre-summer session. The twenty-four men of the nationally famous organization were on a transcontinental tour which carried them into Canada and northwestern United States. Carl Berninger, Bloomsburg, a graduate of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College with the class of 1943, is a student at the Seminary and a member of the famous choir. Page Sevenleen THE Page Eighteen A L U M N I (J U A K T E R L Y THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Saucered and Blowed By E. H. NELSON, ’ll All at once just like that, only quicker, we have an active, vigorous Alumni Branch in Washington, D. C. At the All-State College Dinner, held in the Hotel Statler, Washington, D. C., last fall about 20 Bloomsburg Alumni were present. (Sorry we can’t show you a picture of the whole group but the photographer made good on only one table.) temporary organization was effected immediately after the dinner. Since then ten more memberships have come in from the Branch Treasurer, Mrs. Fitzpatrick. A meeting of the group was held at the home of the President, Lili an Zimmerman, ’15, on November 19th last. With youngsters like Pauline Lattimore Douden, ’92, and Harry O. Hine, ’85, giving guidance and advice with the eagerness of a couple of ambitious 30 year olds, along with the enthusiastic interest of all concerned, what a vital unit that D. C. Branch is, and wll continue to be! Hazleton, Williamsport and Sunburv will have organization meetings in the near future. All of this points to a wonderful reunion and homecoming next May. Plan now to bo there. Plenty of surnrises in store fo reveryone. The 50 year class already has big plans underway. A Our hats off to Redman, Hoch, Hallisey, the squad and all contributed to that State Championship football tea"^ this year. What a pride and joy to see those boys in aePon Champions all. who ! Wandering around the corridors we find Noetling Hall (the old training school building) closed off entirely. It is getting a complete renovation and v/ill be thoroughly up-to-date in its new dress. The old town is getting dressed up for Christmas. The College contributes her share by having “B.S.T.C.” stand out in large electric letters on the Carver Hall tower. Which reminds me that years ago Professor J. H. Dennis had a circle of electric This lights placed around one of the cupolas on Waller Hall. “crown” was lighted on special occasions. He said someday he was going to write a poem “Normal Wears Her Crown Tonight.” I guess he never got it done. Today the t’tle of such a poem might be “The College Adorned is by Her Tiara This Eventide.” But who could wax poetic with a start like that, so here’s to a Merry Christmas. May the New eYar bring to you much Health and Happiness. Page Nin'-^een THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Freshman Customs The following, which appeared in the “Passing Throng” column of the Morning Press, may bring back memories to some of the Alumni: They are having Freshman Customs up on College Hill, part of the college year which the town takes for granted. The frosh walk about, some of them rather gaily decorated with signs and other items, and draw few second looks. But in the days following the time when the College, back was granted the right to grant degrees of Bachelor of Science in Education, the Customs Week program was something new and got the attention from the town’s folk that is always aroused in a presentation that is out of the ordinary. Customs Week didn’t come immediately after the institution was advanced from a Normal School to a College. It took a little time for the College to get accustomed to the new role. Once things settled down somewhat they decided that Bloomsburg was going to be a college in all the aspects befitting an institution of such rank and the freshman customs were inaugurated. The customs, as we recall, always included the girls, too, but the fellows made the most of the situation. Perhaps that was because of the fast that the male population at that time, unlike the present, was definitely in the minority and that the men saw customs as an opportunity to step into the spotlight. Whether that was the reason or not they certainly did become the center of attention. They started off the evening with a pajama parade that drew lots of attention from feminine population of the student body as well as the town’s folks. One look at the pajama garbed fresshmen always gave you the impression that every fellow was wearing the pajamas of some other chap. At least no one was garbed out in a suit that came even close to a near fit. That, of course, added to the fun of the night. The first stop for a main event of the evening was at the fountain at the entrance to the college. There wasn’t much water in the shallow bowl of the fountain to start with, and by the time the last freeshman had had a chance to do his stuff it was certainly a dry place, or more accurately a dry concrete swim. The climax was always in the court off faculty porch. 'The court is bordered on three sides by Waller Hall which in those days gave over the use of its upper floors solely to the housing of girl students. in 1927, The freshmen, with all proper ceremony, were marched into the court yard and instructed to pray for rain. Then the girls, who were watching from the windows, would dump water from Pa^e Twenty THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY sorts pf containers upon the first year men. Everyone had a good time. But the “prayer for rain” brought so many protests from some of the townspeople that the president of the college issued a decree that the Lerm could no longer be used. The institution committee got its heads together on the grave problem. The feature was one, they felt, that had to stay on the program or the entire night would bee ruined. So from they on when the night’s activities got around to that part of the program the freshmen “petitioned” for rain. That brought no protests and all everything was fine again. Back the later days of World War II some of the Navj'^ V-5 boys decided to put on a little demonstration of their own at the fountain on Market Square. Some of the V-5 lads had just arrived at the school and fellow gobs decided that would be a. splendid time to throw them into the fountain. The residents of the town got a real kick out of that but the commandant didn’t think such maneuvers were befitting the dignity of the naval branch of the armed services, ind some of those fellows who had such a happy time that night didn’t see Main street for a considerable period thereafter. m o “Sketches from Fairyland,” a dramatization of five of childhood’s favorite stories, was presented by first and second grade pupils of the Benjamin Franklin School of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College Thursday and Friday mornings, July 29 and 30. Mrs. Lucile J. Baker, training teacher of the first and second grades, directed the program. The plays, an outgrowth of a unit of study in Children’s Literature, was staged and dramatized under the supervision of a number of students who were doing their practice teaching at the Benjamin Franklin School this summer. A — o men and women set a new record for Post Session registration at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College. Of this total, 261 were veterans of World War II. The three weeks session began Monday, Augusst 7, and continued until noon, August 27. full program of activities was planned for the large student body, including the annual softball championship series and a tennis tournament. o Dr. Thomas P. North, dean of instruction, of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College, attended a national conference on Higher Education held in June at Bowling Green Universitv. Bowling Green, Ohio. The Boomsburg dean is one of several delegates from Pennsylvania who attended the sessions. He is also chairman of the Pennsylvania Commision on Teacher Education and Professional Standards. total enrollment of 383 A Page Twenty-one THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Secondary Educators At Conference A thorough survey of local problems before the setting up of course was recommended by secondary educators of the area in their summations of a two-day secondary curriculum revision workship which concluded at the Teachcers College on Saturday, June 26. The findings will be submitted to Swarthmore which is serv- ing as the headquarters for the Secondary Principals Association of Pennsylvania, a part of the national organization, in its studies of the secondary curriculum. The plan being devised with the help of those in the field is to have the work in the high schools built around the problems of the co^imunities rather than to have the state lay out a plan of work for all schools of the Commonwealth. The educators were thoroughly in accord with the plan but insisted that to make it a success there must be clear thinking. Educators of five area counties attended, the sessions being exceptionally well attended. There was a continuance of discussions on Saturday morning, with the summations being delivered at the luncheon program. The conference committee included J. Frank Dennis, principal, Elmer L. Meyers High School, Wilkes-Baire; Dr. Fred L. Bond, supervising curriculum consultant, Harrisburg; Joseph R. Bailer, Director of secondary education. Teachers College; Kenneth L. Terry, superintendent and David Shuman, high school pincipal, Berwick; Earl E. Davis, supervising principal of Scott Township schools L. C. Dubeck, principal. Forty Fort high school; Ray M. Cole, county superintendent of schools; R. E. Kuhnert, supervising principal, Dallas, and Miss Iva Mae Van Scoyoc of the laboratory school of the Teachers College. ; o Eight hundred and sixty-seven full-time students are now registered at Bloomsburg State Teachers College, comprising The the largest enrollment in the history of the local college. figure surpasses the enrollment for the fall semester of 1947 by thirty-seven. Of the total enrollment, 376 are living on the campus, and 391 are registered as day students. President Andruss announced that the College is maintaining extension centers this fall at Kingston, West Pittston, Wilkes-Barre, Hazleton, Shamokin and Watsontown. The enrollments at these centers bring the total registration of the College to considerably more than a thousand. Extension instructors are Shanno, Hazleton; J. Claire Patterson, Bloomsburg; George ing, Nescopeck Mrs. Charles Beeman, of Bloomsburg, and Elfad Jones, of Nanticoke. ; Page Twenty-itwo THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Freshmen Enteitain Upper-Classmen Another outstanding Freshman Show was written into the books as a talented cast presented the “Frosh Varieties of 1948” in the Carver Auditorium of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College Thursday, Ocober 21. Ben Burness, Atlantic City, N. J., served as Master of Ceremonies for the program which was produced under the direction of George Thear, Nesquehoning and Jane Keller, Bloomsburg. The range of talent surprised even the most optimistic upperclassmen who are annually entertained by the incoming freshman class. The opening number, a monologue “Boy Crazy” by Lila Savage, Catawissa, set a high standard for the balance of the program. James Crawford, Bloomsburg, entertained with two organ solos “Romance” by Arthur Rubenstein and “Autumn Noctturne.” Phil Search, Wilkes-Barre, was next introduced in a var'ety of musical novelties, whistling Gounod’s “Ave Marie” and “Without A Song.” During his act Search played several original piano compositions and his own arrangement of “St. Louis Blues.” Morris Krap, Shenandoah, gave a series of impersonations with the assistance of a quartet composed of Bud Tepper, Wilkes-Barre, Bob Miller, Wilkes-Barre, Vince Boyer, Lewisburg, Donald Reese, Mauch Chunk and Edward Gunther, Towaiida. A blackface skit by Nancy Trembly and Bill Kuster, both of Bloomsburg, was one of the big hits of the show. Miss Trembly imitated a radio torch singer and Kuster a song and dance man. Martha Rapp, Warnersville, played Elgar’s “Pomp and Substance” for a well-received piano selection, while Donna Long, Berwick, entertained with the “Sabre Dance” and Chopin’s “Minute Waltz” in another series of piano solos. Three baritone solos by Harry Coleman, Bloomsburg, literally “brought down the house.” Mr. Coleman sang “Danny Boy,” “There’s Music in the Land” and “Old Man River.” Pie was accompanied by Jean Ruckle, Bloomsburg. Two lovely soprano solos were presented by Marion Pollock. Sunbury. She sang “My Heart is Aching” and “Indian Love Call.” Final number on the show was the eyefilling chorus number. The Frosh Follies, presented by a group of freshmen girls. They were dressed in vivid costumes of the Gay Nineties and sang and danced to the music of the period. Martha Rapp accompanied the chorus which included the following: Cathy Aagard. Raubsville; Saya Silverman, Pittsburgh; Lois Pulver, Wilkes-Barre; Mary Transue, Easton; Peggy Savage, Shirley Fobzen, Kingston; Patricia Barfield, Northumberland; Patricia Sv/ee'ev, Rochester; Margaret McDowell, Reading; Ann Geibel. Northumberland: Maryaret Roberts, Pevloc; Jenny Knauer, Ruth Finklestein, Wilkes-Barre and Betty Koploviz, Lewistown. The program was among one of Page Twenty-three THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY the finest ever presented in the Carver Auditorium by a freshman class. Mary Ann Stewart, Dermont, presided over devotional exercises. During the program Robert Lang, Milton and James Whitney, Sunbury, appeared in novelty acts. o Jennet and Ferris Robins, two charming and dynamic personalities in the entertainment world, presented their unique program of popular songs and music of the nations of the world, at the regular weekly assembly program of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College in the Carver Auditorium on Tuesday morning, September 28. He is a French lad and she a Scotch lassie, with a most interesting background, who, with the assistance of the unorganized underground, after being trapped during the Battle of Dunkirk, made their escape through the Nazioccupied countries. The program is a fast-moving sequence of popular songs and music from all countries of the world. Ferris, a headliner on the radio and continental stage, is a versatile personalilty singer, who uses a guitar to accompany himself. His wife is a product of the Royal Academy of Dancing, London, England. She is a solo accordionist and enhances the program by Irish and Scotch dances, including the Highland Fling. o Theodore Swigonski of 361 Ridge street, Nanticoke, Pennsylvania, represented the Bloomsburg State Teachers College at the first Congress of the National Student Association held at Madison, Wisconsin, August 23-28. He was one of the six hundred delegates representing nearly 750,000 students from 230 public, private and sectarian colleges, universities, and technological schools in all parts of the country. Also attending the conference as observers were student leaders from France, Denmark, Sweden, Switzerland, Greece and Czechoslovakia. Designed to aid student governing bodies in solving problems on their campuses, there were flexible workshops on such national problems as economic aid to students, discrimination, cultural activities, relief drives on campus, travel and reconstruction abroad. On hand for consultation were students, faculty members, and businessmen versed in the topics under discussion. o One of the largest post-session enrollments in the history of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College was reported Monday, August 9, as 340 men and women students registered for classes. Of the enrollment, 261 post session students were veterans of World War II. Me nand women dormitory students number 153 with the balance of students commuting from their homes. Page Twenty-four THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY SUSANNE E. LEHMAN The body of Miss Susanne E. of special education at the College, Lehman, of Espy, instructor was found in her car Friday morning, October 29. Death was due to carbon monoxide poisoning, Coroner John M. Evans, of Orange township, reported following an investigation. N. T. Englehart, superintendent of buildings and grounds at the College and also a resident of Espy, saw the morning newspaper on the front porch of the Lehman home when he left his residence in the morning. When the teacher did not later report for classes it was felt that something was wrong. He returned to Espy. The house was locked and, fearing that she was ill, he summoned her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Lyons, of Riverside. They reached Espy in a short time. Investigation showed in the home and everything in order. Lyons then went to the garage and found that it was locked from the inside. He forced a door, secured by a hook, and found the body in the car, the machine also locked. The engine was not running at the time and the indicator showed that the gasoline tank was empty. An extra set of keys, secured from the home, allowed the openno one ing of the car. A physician was summoned and it is believed that death had occurred some time before and probably around 7:30 o’clock. Miss Lehman resided with her father, Charles S. Lehman, eighty-five ,an employe of the Magee Carpet Company. He left for work at 6:45 o’clock and did not see his daughter before leaving. Miss Lehman was widely known in this area as a result of her teaching. She held a Degree of Bachelor of Science in Education from the local institution. She also studied at the Pennsylvania State College, Maryland School of Fine and Industrial Arts and Johns Hopkins University. She did graduate work in the School of Handicrafts, Penland, N. C., and studied at the Pennsylvania Folklore Industries, Plymouth Meeting, Pa. Prior to joining the college faculty she taught at Moscow, Pa.; Wilmington, Del.; Baltimore, Md., and in Berwick. Miss Lehman was a member of Si". John’s Lutheran church. Espy, and of the Moses VanCampen Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, Berwick. Her father and sister, Mrs. Lyons, survive. Page Twenty-five THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY The 1948 Enrollment Enrollment of 1,002 at the Bloomsburg State Teachers Colwas annouced recently by President Harvey A. Audruss. This number includes 870 regular students and 132 who are taking extension work. The enrollment at the five extension cenlege ters at the present follows Hazleton, forty-nine ty-eight; Shamokin, nineteen; Sunbury, moved town, thirteen and Wilkes-Barre, thirteen. : ; Kingston, thir- from Watson- The total represents an increase of forty students over the There are 422 World War II veterans and 348 others in the regular student body. There are exactly twice as many men as women students, v/ith the male enrollment 580. In the extension course the women out number the men, 114 to 19. Among the veterans in the regular college are two women. The Bloomsburg State Teachers College will accept approximately eighty new students for the semester beginning January 19, 1949. This action is taken by the college authorities because year. of the critical sshortage of teachers. Dr. Thomas P. North, Dean of Instruction and also Chairman of the Pennsylvania State Commission on Teacher Education and Professional Standards, points out that a study just made by the National Commission reveals that, in the light of the recent increase in birth rate and the present enrollment ofo prospective elementary teachers, a most critical shortage will exist for at least the next ten years. In fact, it is doubtful that the shortage can be met in that time if the present enrollment of college students preparing to be elementary teachers were to be increased by three or four times, especially when consideration is given to the number of new teachers as they die, retire or leave the classrooms for other reasons, and in the replacement of part of the large number of teachers now holding emergency licenses. Although the increase in birth rate will later seriously affect the high schools, there are existing shortages of teachers in the high schools at the present t’me. One of these areas is in the field of business education. o Clayton H. Hinkel ,of the business education department, is the author of an article appearing in the October, 1948, issue of the United Business Education Association Forum. The article is entitled “What Shall We Teach in Our General Clerical Classes?” and is based on the author’s experience as a high school department head, teacher, and college instructor. Hhis is Mr. Hinkel’s first contribution to this magazine, but his articles have appeared in other professional magazines of the past seven years. He is also the author of a monograph, “Business Education,” which was developed to interest high school students in teaching business subjects. Page Twenty-six THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY ON THE CAMPUS A distinctive program of music was presented at the weekly assembly program of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College on Thursday, October 28, in Carver Auditorium by the Utah Centennial Chorus of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. This group of twelve ordained ministers appeared in Bloomsburg during the eighth week of their Eastern tour, which will conclude a two-year mission. The Chorus presented a varied group of religious and secular music featured by unique arrangements an doutstanding solo numbers. o of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College represented the College at the Eighth Annual College Hour of the Willilam Penn High School, York, Pennsylvania, held in November. Representatives from sixty-three colleges and universifes were present for the annual affair which attracted more than 1600 high school seniors and their parents from York county schools. Dean Hoch was accompanied to York by HarScience Department, who old H. Lanterman, of the College showed several conference groups the College’s new color film, “Living and Learning at Bloomsburg.” Dean John A. Hoch o A program of dramatic sketches from famous Broadway plays featured the first assembly program of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College held in Carver Auditorium. Vivid bits of comedy and moving dramatic scenes marked with interludes of fantasy were portrayed by Miss Ruth Enders, lovely young Broadway actress. Miss Enders portrayed each part with a subtlety of infection, accent and gesture which brought a colorful bit of Broadway to the local stage. Her first interpretation was a scene from the Broadway comedy “One Sunday Afternoon,” while her second role was that of Joan of Arc from George Bernard Shaw’s masterful “St. delightfully varied Joan” created a vivid impresion on the College audience. For her third number. Miss Enders did an excellent job of a scene from Robert Sherwood’s “Idiot’s Delight.” In this scene she portrayed the role of a phony Russian adventuress. Perhaps the most dramatic presentation was her next selection taken from “Mary of Scotland” by Maxwell Anderson. Here Miss Enders created the personality of Mary, Quen of Scots and Queen Elizabeth of England. It was brill’antlv tione. For her final characterization she picked GeorP’e Bernard Shaw’s brilliant comedy ‘Pygmalion” and gave a series of vivid characterizations of the dowdy English flowe rgirl transformed into a lady by a professor of phonetics. who was Page Twenty-seven THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Proving conclusively that talent is often found in one’s own backyard, upperclassmen of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College staged the first part of a double-barreled entertainment program in the Carver Auditorium Thursday, November 4. Their efforts were stimulated by the success of the annual freshman show held several weeks before, and campus observers are still unable to figure out which show packed the biggest entertainment value. .John Lydon, Upper Darby, seryed as Master of Ceremonies for a fast-moving show that was opened on a musical note when Isabel Bolinsky, Hazleton, sang two popular numbers “Just For Now” and “I Don’t Know Why.” Ruth Von Bergen, Hazleton, served as accompanist for all the musical numbers. Miss Von Bergen combined her efforts with the talent of Dick Wagner, Berwick, in a series of three piano duets featuring novel arrangements of “Pavanne,” “Stormy Weather” and “Kitten on the Keys.” In the next number Charles Edwards, Shamokin, who also directed the entertainment, sang three tenor solos “Bluebird of Happiness,” “Maybe You’ll Be There” and “One Alone.” note of comedy was added in a black-face skit “Sonny Boy” featuring the smging of John Czerniakowski, Plains and Johnny Lydon. Czernaikowski presented a perfect imitation of A1 Jolson. the jazz singer. The final act provided a brilliant climax to ihe unusual nrogrami. gav ninet’es trio composed of Max Kaplan, Port Chester, N. Y. Norman Kline, McClure and Andrew Macieko, Nanticoke, entertained with a variety of musical selections. Macieko’s accordian playing w'as terrific, while the soft shoe and dance routine of Kaplan and Kline brought dowm the house. Donald Maietta, Williamsport, presided over' brief devotional exercises preceding the revue. — A A ; o The Bloomsburg State Teachers College was represented at the Twelfth Annual Conference of Student Government Associations held recently at Kutztown by Dorothy Lovett, Nanticoke and Arlene Pope, Danville. Miss Lovett is the secretary of the Community Government Association at Bloomsburg. Miss Ethel A. Ranson, a member of the local faculty, accompanied the Bloomsbvrg representatives to the conference whicch was attended by representatives from each of the state’s fourteen teacher-education institutions. This year’s conference reached agreements on four major problems concerning student publications, athletics, social programs, and budgeting for student acRecommendations were made to secure improvement tivities. of social activit’es, less censorship of student newspapers and yearbooks and more efficient means of controlling student finances. .'".'Te Twenty ? Eight THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY The boards of trustees of all the Teachers Colleges have auand the State Superintendent of Public Instruction has approved, an increase in the housing rate for students from thorized, $16.00 per semester to $180.00 per semester. Student food service, if secured separately from room and laundry, has been increased from $117 to $144. The contingent and community activities fees will not be increased at this time. Mounting food and labor costs have made this increase absolutely necesary and a comparison of these revised rates, which went into effect in September, 1948, indicates that they are much lower than the costs of other institutions of higher education, since it is the policy of the state to operate its housing facilities on a self-sustaining non-profit basis. o An oustanding assembly programs featuring some of America’s leading entertainers and concert artists made the summer session of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College a memorable one for the largest student body in recent college history. More than 650 students concluded their studies after six-weeks session. Perhaps the finest entertainment of the session was provided when Dr. March Babbitt, noted psychologist, spoke to a capacity audience in the Carver Auditorium. Using as his topic, “Scientific Advances in Hypnotism,’’ the famous New York scientis presented an unusual series of experiments using a group of twenty student volunteers. Audience reaction to the presentation was moth enthusiastic with the average student terming th eperformance “the best ever staged here.” o Miss Norma Ruth Robinson, of Council Bluff, Iowa, and Thomas P. North, Jr., of Bloomsburg, were married Saturday, October 9, in the Grace Presbyterian Church, Council Bluffs. Mrs. North is a graduate of Grinnell College, Iowa and completed here work for her master’s degree at the Pennsylvania State College. Mr. North was graduated from Bloomsburg High School in 1938 and attended B.S.T.C. for two years. He later received his degree in journalism from the Pennsylvania State College. During World War II he served with Army Intelligence in both the European and Pacific Theatres At present he is city editor of The Morning Press. o Miss Cora M. Seely, of Bloomsburg, and Delbert J. Snie^el, of Esny, were married Saturday, October 9. at the Esnv Methodist church. The bride is a graduate of the Berwick High School and Mr. Spiege is a graduate of the Scott Township high school and is at present a student at Bloomsburg. He served \viih the Armv during World War II, and was stationed for thirteen months in Korea. Page Twenty-nine H E A E U M N I Q U A R T E R L Y Because of the current interest in improving the teaching Americanism and in curriculum revision, the Bloomsburg State Teachers College sponsored a Secondary Curriculum Reof vision Workshop as the culminating feature of the pre-session summer school Friday and Saturday, June 25 and 26. A large number of high school principals and school administrators attended the workshop, which will be the first of its kind sponsored by the College. J. F. Dennis, principal, Meyers High School, Wilkes-Barre, served as co-chairman of the conference. Joseph R. Bailer, director of Secondary Education of the College, was secretary of the v/orkshop. A large number of problems dealing with materials of interest to v/orkers in the field of Secondary Education, were presented for discussion. The subject of “Functional Objectives” was handled by L. C. Bubeck, high school principal from Forty Fort, while Ray M. Cole, county superintendent of schools, Columbia county, served as consultant in the field of “Making The Learning of Americanism Effective.” Miss Iva l^.Iae Van Scoyoc, a member of the faculty of the Benjamin Franklin School, served as cha'rrnan of the group in its consideration of “General W'orkshop Procedures,’ and R. E. Kunhert, supervising principal of schools, Dallas Township, was the consultant in the field of “Curriculum for Ncn-College Youth.” A number of outstanding national authorities in the feld of Secondary Education served as consultants during the two-day workshop conference. Dr. Robert Kennedy, American Education Press, Columbus, Ohio, was present and led the discussion group in the problem of “Social Studies and Current Affairs.” The headm.aster o fthe Erie Day School, A. N. Zechiel, directed discussion on the subject “Organizing the High School Faculty for Curriculum Study and Revision.” General consultant for the conference was Dr. FredericK Pond, curriculum consultant. Department of Public Instruction, Harrisburg. o Mrs. Charlotte Whipple, aged ninety-one, one of Mnotour county’s oldest residents, died at her home in West Hemlock township Monday m.orning, June 6. She had been in good health until Saturday when she suffered a heart attack. She was the daughter of the late Charles and Nancy Herr Saul, and spent her entire life in Montour county. She taught school in West Hemlock and Derry to\vnships for fourteen years. Her husband, William, preceded her in death sixteen years ago. She was a member of the Strawberry Ridge Reformed Church, the ladies aid society of the church and servde as a Sunday School teacher for many years. Page Thirty THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY One of America’s outstanding educators, Dr. Rose Lammel, of Columbia University, spoke to several hundred Summer Session students at the Teachers College Monday, June 26. Dr. Lammel, who is an expert in the field of curriculum construction and a curriculm consultant at the New York school, addressed a session of the Secondary Education Workshop on “Development of Scientific Habits and Attitudes in the Classroom.” o The Rev. Clyde B. Snyder, of R. D. 1, Hunlock Creek, pastor of Roaring Brook Baptist Church, died of a heart attack in Nanticoke State Hospital Friday afternoon, June 11. He was born at Hughesville, graduated from Bloomsburg Normal School and then taught school and acted as loca Iminister at Hughesville for several years. In 1905, he was ordainin the Evangelical ministry but later changed to the Baptist ministry. ed He had served churches at East Point, Tioga county; Quiggleville, Lycoming county; Millheim, Center county; Nescopeck, Scrancoii, Mlton and Jackson, the latter in Pike county. His pastorate at Roaring Brook had covered eleven years and included charge of a Baptist church in Plymouth. He was a past master of the Center Hall Lodge, F. & A. M., and v/as a former oficer of the Baptist Associations in Luzerne and other counties where he had ministered. Surviving are his wife, the former Clara McClintock, of Berwick! two daughters, Mrs. Clinton A. Sullivan, of California, and Mrs. E. T. Weaver, of Lewistown, and two grandchildren. o Miss Lenore Marie Rarig, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rarig, of Numidia, and Charles A. Savage, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert C. Savage, of Leonard street, Bloomsburg, were united in marirage Friday, June 4, in the Methodist parsonage. The Rev. Dr. Elvin Clay Myers performed the ceremony. The bride is a graduate of the Harisburg General Hospital, Harrisburg, Pa. The groom is a veteran of three years service in the Infantry and at present is a business student at B.S.T.C. o In a pretty ceremony performed at four o’clock Saturday, June 5, in the Shiloh Evangelical and Reformed Church, Danville, Miss Pauline Edna Adams and Howard Raymond Hartzell, Jr., son of Mr .and Mrs. Howard Hartzell ,were united in marriage by the Rev. Ernest Andrews. Both are graduates of the Danville High School, the groom a graduate of the class of 1945 and the bride of 1946. The bride is employed at the Geisinger Memorial Hospital. The groom is a student at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College. During World War II he served with the air Corps. Page Thirty-one THE ALUMNI QUART EliLY More than fifty school building custodians attended a two- day training conference held in August at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College. The custodians represented various schools Under the general supervision of in the College service area. Alfred S. Holt, principal, Public School Institute, Department of Public Instruction, the conference began with lectures and demonstrations which proved of vital interest to those attending. Fred Diehl, superintendent of schools, Montour County, spoke Following Superinon “The School Plant and the Custodian.” tendent Diehl’s lecture Sherman Eicke, chief custodian, Wyoming Borough Schools, spoke about and demonstrated the proper maintenance and care of wood floors. Following a lunch the group again were given a demonstration of “Housekeeping Practices” by Mr. Eicke. Schuyler Kase, Olyphant, addressed the conference on the subject of “Fire Prevention and School Safety.” A demonstration by Mr. Eicke on techniques of sweeping concluded the day’s session. Others appearing before the conference were E. J. Finn, Anthracite Institute, Philadelphia, who discussed the subjects of “Fuels and Firing Methods” and “Care and Operation of the Heating Plant,” and H. Prather, assistant principal. Public Service Institute, Department of Public Instruction, who presented the topic “Care of Electrical Wiring and Appliances.” A demonstration of the storage of mechanical equipment and care of ventilating systems was given during the session. The concluding address of the conference was made by Ray M. Cole, superintendent of schools, Columbia County, who discussed “The Custodian and the New Look.” At the conclusion of the conference sessions certificates of attainment issued by the Public Service Institute were presented to conference members by Mr. Holt. The College made its facilities available for the conference which was under the general supervision of Nevin T. Englehart, superintendent of grounds and buildings. o In an informal ceremony in the Presbyterian Church Friday, May 28, Miss Patricia V. Moyer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William V. Moyer, of Center street, Bloomsburg, became the bride of Edmund L. Parker, Jr., son of Mr and Mrs. Edmund L. Parker, of East Orange, N. J. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. G. Douglas Davies, pastor of the church, before a background of ferns, lilies and snapdragons. The bride is a graduate of the Bloomsburg High School and of Syracuse University, N. Y. The groom attended Bloomsburg State Teachers College and is a veteran of four years service with the United States Navy, twenty-seven months of which were spent in the Central and South Pacific Theaters. Page Thirty-two THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY M. Beatrice Mettler, College Nurse, Bloomsburg State Teachers College, was selected to teach a course in School Nursing at the Pensylvania State College during the 1948 Summer Session. Miss Mettler worked in collaboration with Miss Mildred S. Coyle, School Nursing Advisor, Department of Public Instruction, and Dr. Willis E. Pratt, Director, Department of Education, the Pennsylvania State College, in presenting the course entitled, “Principles of Teaching in School Nursing and Advanced School Nursing.” A number of persons from the Department of Public Instruction and the Pennsylvania Department of Health were guest speakers during the six-weeks’ course which is required for permanent certification in the field of school nursing. Miss Mettler, however, organized and planned the complete course of study which had a capacity enrollment of undergradutes as well as school nurses. Miss Mettler, who is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Willard K. MeP»er, Elysburg, is well qualified for her position. She is a graduate of Bucknell University, and the Johns Hopkins Hospital. Last Summer she received the degree of Master of Science from the University of Pennsylvania. In addition she has completed work in the Graduate School of Social Service Administration, University of Chicago. Miss Mettler resumed her duties at the College at the beginning of the Post Session. During her abence. Miss Marie Lee, R. N., Light Street, served as College Nurse. The romantic history legends and dramatic stories behind the folk songs and ballads of America were presented by Paul Arnold, American folk song balladier, at the regular weekly assembly program of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College on Thursday, August 19. Mr. Arnold, who starred in the Army Air Force “Flying Varieties” during the war, sang a number of folk songs of the Mississippi river valley as well as varied collection of ballads, two chanteys and romantic tunes from his collection of five hundred melodies. o A diversified program of distinctively-styled melodies, including booming versions of “Wagon Wheels” and “St. Louis Blue,” by the “Ebonaires” thrilled a large Summer Session audience at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College Wednesday, August 11. The nationally-famous male quartet, formerly known as the “Deep River Singers,” offered a program that included everything for which colored singers and entertainers are noted. Page Thirty-three THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY One of the radiant personalities of the concert stage, Miss Eileen Borwell, thrilled a large and appreciated audience at the Bloomsburg States Teachers College, Wednesday, July 28, a brilliant interpretation of the folk songs and ballads of South Africa. Miss Borwell presented an unusually interesting and varied program of scintillating, romantic and humorous songs from the “other U. S. A.” Union of South Africa. Before presenting her recital, the South African singer described the melodies and historical background of the songs which were brought to the country by the early pioneers. These songs, explained Miss Borwell, have the rare power of romantic suggestion. Her interpretation was not only impressive, but artistic. He rvoice disclosed genuine musicianship as well as natural gifts. m — o “Around the World in Music” was the subject of an unusual program of entertainment presented at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College Friday, July 8, by Dudley Glass, a wellknown Australian pianist and composer in the Carver Hall Auditorium. Mr. Gass, who is currently making a tour of American schools and colleges, gave a lecture which was well interspersed with music illustrating countries on the imaginary tour. o “Get busy now and do your part to prevent the spread of anti-American doctrines and propaganda,” was the advice given students at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College Thursday, July 22, by Major Paul Cyr, one of General “Wild Bill” Donovan’s “Cloak and Dagger Boys” whose wartime record in the Office of Strategic Services won him the nation’s highest military honors. Major Cyr urged the creation of a Central Intelligence Agency ot counteract the activities of agents of other countries in America today. In a remarkably interesting address entitled, “The Adven^ tures of An American Spy,” the personable young American officer related his wartime experiences in occupied Europe. He was the first American to be parachuted behind the enemy lines in France during World War II, and he recalled many of the thrills and adventures he had during his four years of service with the most colorful branch of the American Intelligence Services. o Eighty-seven sophomores at the Pennsylvaia State College were initiated into Phi Eta Sigma, national scholastic honor society. Among D. 5, the initiates is Robert J. Eshleman, Bloomsburg R. a student at Bloomsburg during his Freshman who was year. Page Thirty-four THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Bloomsburg State Teachers College was singularly honored summer by an inspection tour of its campus and facilities by members of the Pennsylvania Commision for Post-High School Study. Dr. W. Earl Armstrong, dean of the School of Education, University of Delaware, and Dr. George Works, formerly of the University of Chicago, visited the College, which was one of two teacher-education institutions in Pennsylvania this included in the state-sponsored survey. Dr. Works, who is probably the outstanding expert in the United States in making surveys of facilities for education, has had a long and distinguished career in the educational world, while Dean Armstrong is one of the younger leaders in the field of teacher education in the nation today. The two men spent the day in a series of inspection visits, conferences, and meetings, and their findings will be incorporated in a report which is scheduled to be made late this year. o An ambitious schedule of sixteen basketball games for the Bloomsburg State Teachers College Huskies has been announced by John A. Hoch, chairman of the College Athletic CommitThe Huskies, who are coached by Peter R. Wisher, will tee. play ten Teachers College Conference tilts as well as six games with three area colleges Wilkes College and Kings College, Wilkes-Barre, and Lycoming College, Williamsport. The Maroon and Gold courtmen will pry off the lid of their 1948-49 schedule on the Centennial Gymnasium court Saturday evening, December 11, when they entertain Coach John Pucillo’s Millersville Teachers. The strenuous campaign will close Feb- — ruary 26, 1949, when the Huskies travel to Williamsport for a tussle with Coach Bob Smith’s Lycoming dribblers. The complete card follows: — — — — — — — — — — — — February 19 — Shippensburg, away. February 22—Mansfield, home. February 26 — Lycoming College, away. Decemer 11 Millersville, home. December 17 Lock Haven, away. December 20 Wilkes College, home. January 8 East Stroudsburg, away. January 11 King’s College, away. January 22-— Lock Haven, home. January 26 Wilkes College, away. January 29 Shippensburg, home. February 1 King’s College, home. February 3 Mansfield, away. February 10 Lycoming College, home. February 12 East Stroudsburg, home. February 18 Millersville, away. Page Thirty-fiva THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY It was “picnic time” for more than four hundred students and friends of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College Wednesday, July 14, and the Summer Session crowd made merry during the afternoon and evening hours at Rolling Green Park, near Sunbury. John A. Hoch, dean of men ,who was in general charge of the outing, said that the picnic was one of the largest ever held by the College. Four busses were used to help transport the students to the Central Pennsylvania amusement resort, although hundreds made the trip to the park in private cars. During the afternoon, a croquet tournament was staged along with the annual softball game between the married men and the single men. Despite an early deficit, the unmarried team rallied to defeat their older rivals by a slim 6 to 5 score. Lionel Livingston, Courtdale, was in charge of the recreational activitiess. A delicious picnic supper was served at 5:30 o’clock under the direction of Miss Della M. Thayer, College dietician. The day’s program was climaxed by a “Lollypop Dance” in the park’s “Rainbow Ballroom.” o A dramatization of the whole field of mathematics was given students of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College Thursday, June 17, by Alfred Hooper, noted British educator, author and lecturer. Speaking on the subject, “The River Mathematics,” Dr. Hooper made interesting a subject that, for most people, is and uninteresting. The English educator, who served for a number of years as Headmaster of the Hillstone School in Malvern, England, wrote a best selling non-fiction book “Mathematics Refresher” as well as the “River Mathematics.” A third book will be published this year. Mr. Hooper is also the editor of a mathematical film that has been produced by the American Council of Education. In his lecture at the College, Dr. Hooper indicated that mathematics is the key that opens up the treasure-house of modern science. It is bringing closer and closer to us the power lifeless beyond our present imagination. To understand the part plaved by mathematics in the rapidly unfolding tale of human endeavor is esential for men and women of today, and even more so for men and women of tomorrow. n Miss Elizabeth Esaias, of Danville, and Clayton Pollard, of Allentown, were married Sunday, June 27, in the Grove Presbyterian Church, Danville. The bride has been employed in the office of the Bell Telephone Companv. in Danville: the groom, a graduate of Pennsylvania State College, is emploved as a project engineer by the Pennsylvania Power and Light Company in Allentown. to control forces of nature that are utterly Page Thirty-six THE A 1. U M N I QUARTERLY Two of America’s most brilliant exponents of Theatre Dance, Jan Veen and Adele Hooper, thrilled a capacity Summer Session audience at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College Thursday, July 15, with a dramatic performance that left little to be desired. Mr. Veen, who is director of the Dance Department of the Boston Conservatory of Music, and Miss Hooper, who is his asociate, fused their talents with a dramatic quality seldom seen outside the metropolitan areas. o Miss Beverly Cole, daughter of Mr .and Mrs. Harry E. Cole, 100 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg, and a student at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College, was honored recently when she was elected secretary of the Pensylvania Branch of the National Student Association. Miss Cole, who is a sophomore, has been extremely active in campus activities, and during last year served as freshman representative on the College Council ,the governing body of the Community Government Association. o pre-summer session at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College were broken by the heavy All attendance records for a registration of 467 students weeks. The total who attended classes for three was more than 100 greater than last year’s registration which broke all previous enrollments. Nearly 200 students were living on the campus, but men students exceeded the women students by a large margin. The session continued until Thursday noon, June 24. o Miss Eleanor Ruth Hess, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Hess, of Kingston, and Allen Wood Austin, son of Mrs. Letitia Austin, also of Kingston, were married Saturday eve ning, July 17, at the summer home of the bride’s parents, on Waller Road, Benton. Mrs. Austin is a graduate of Benton High School, Nesbitt Memorial Hospital School of Nursing, attended Bloomsburg State Teachers College and the University of Pennsylvania. She has been on the staff of the West Side Visiting Nurse Association, Kingston ,for the past fou ryears. Mr. Austin is a graduate of Luzerne High School, served four years with the Marine Corps with two years overseas, and is at Baird’s Kingston Dairy. o Miss Hilda Schmidt, of Danville R. D. 2, and Hurley Baylor, Danville R. D. 4, were married Saturday, September 11, at the rectory of St. Joseph’s Catholic Church. Mr. Baylor is a graduate of the Berlin High School, Berlin, New Hampshire, and served thre years as a radio operator in the Navy. Page Thirty-seven THE A.LUMNI QUARTERLY Hit tunes from the current musical successes “Brigadoon” and “Song of Norway’’ as well as familiar melodies from Gilbert and Sullivan featured an unusual costumed recital by Wesley Boynton, distinguished tenor of concert and stage, at the Bloomsburg States Teachers College Tuesday, June 24. The recital was the feature of the closing assembly program of the pre-summer session. o Miss Florence M. Kunkle, Dean, Maryland College for Women, Lutherville, Maryand, served as acting dean of women at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College during the regular Summer Session. Miss Kunkle, who served in a similar capacity at the College last summer, was on the local campus for six weeks during the absence of Dr. Marguerite V. Kehr, who was enjoying a vacation with relatives in Washington, D. C. o Miss Olga Forster, of Barneesville, and Joseph V. Murdock, of Keiser, were married Thursday, August 19, at St. Columba’s Church in Bloomsburg. The Very Rev. William Burke officiated. The bride is a graduate of The Immaculate Heart of Mary Academy, Mountain Springs, and attended B.S.T.C. Mr. Murdock is a graduate of the Mt. Carmel Township High School, and is at present a student at Bloomsburg. — o Miss Betty Johnson and Paul D. Slusser, both of Bloomsburg R. D. 3, were married Saturday, September 4, in St. John’s Reformed Church, Catawisa. The bride is employed at the Magee Carpet Company, and the groom is a student at Bloomsburg. Miss Helen Yedinak, of Berwick, and Ralph Ande, of Bloomsburg. The groom, now a student at Bloomsburg, served three and one-half years with the Air Corps during World War II. o Frank Marhefka, a former V-12 student at Bloomsburg, is serving as health and physical education teacher in the High School at Catawissa. Mr. Marhefka was graduated this year from the East Stroudsburg State Teachers College. While in the Navy ,he served as an athletic instructor. o A short program of music by the Men’s Glee Club of the Bloomsburg 'Teachers College featured the regular weekly assembly of the College held Thursday, April 22, in the Carver Hall auditorium. The splendid organization, under the direction of Miss Harriet M. Moore, presented four numbers which were favorably received by the audience. Page Thirty-eight THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY “Democracy is founded on sacrifices. That is the destiny of those who have made the sacrifices,” the Very Reverend William J. Burke, Rector, Churchc of Saint Columba, told the students of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College in a special Armistice Day program held in Carver auditorium. Father Burke’s address was entitled “Destiny of a Main Who Believes in SacriDuring his inspiring talk, Father Burke indicated that fices.” we do well to stand here and recall our dead. “Remember,” he said, “the graves of our hnoored dead are altar shrines of liberty.” He warned his listeners to be on guard for those groups that want to change the American way of life. As for the leaders of boys and girls, his listeners were told that they would have to sacrifice and give up many things. He pointed out that future teachers must not be afraid to go out and live the princiAmerican democracy. During the program the college audience sang “America” and “America the Beautiful” v/ith Miss Harriet M. Moore directing the group singing. Howard F. Fenstemaker w’as at the console of the college organ and President Harvey A. Andruss presided over che devotions. President Andruss also read Governor Duff’s proclamation setting Armistice Day as an official holiday. Classes were dismissed after the assembly period for ples of the balance of the morning. o Dr. J. Almus Russell of the English Department, Bloomsburg State Teachecs College, is mentioned in Roger Butterfield’s new book “The American Past”- A History of the United States from Concord to Hiroshima, 1775-1945, as one of saveral authorities who furnished information, pictures and assistance in the preparation of this pictorial volume. “The American Past” is told with the aid of a thousand pictures, reproduced from original photographs, paintings, cartoons, lithographs, engravings, especially selected and arranged to illuminate and illustrate the politics, personaities, wars and peaceful progress of American — and its peoples. o — The implications of atomic power, the story of its development, and the spectacular Bikini experiment “Operations Ci'ossroad” featured two motioii pictures shown the weekly assembly program of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College, held April 15 in the Carver Hall auditorium. The films, brought to the College through the kindness of Mrs. Marion T. Adams, chairman of the International Relations Group of the American Association of University Women, were enjoyed by the students. — Prior to the showing of the pictures, Harold H. Lanterman, instructor in the Science Department of the College, gave ^hort but informative talk on the latest developments in the field of atomic energy. Page Thirty-nine THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Charles H. Henrie, retail selling instructor at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College, has been appointed Membership Chairman for the United Business Education Association m Pensylvania. The UBEA is a division of the National Education Asociation and boasts a membership of 6000 business teachers. Thirty associations of business teacliers are affiliated with UBEA, while three national groups aie supported by the UBEA the Research Foundation, Administrators’, and BusinessTeacher Education. Another of its activities is the sponsorship of the Future Business Leaders of America. The national membership goal of the Association for 194849 is 7000 business teachers, or one member for every five business teachers in high schools and colleges. The goal for Pennsylvahia has been set at 500 and is only surpassed by New York State which has given a goal of 891 and California with 529. Dr. Hamden L. Forkner, Director of Business Education, Columbia - — University, is president of the UBEA, which Dr. J. Frank Dame, former director of Business Education at this College, is Forum Editor. o Litwhiler joined the fourth National League team of his big league career when he played right field for the Cincinnati Reds against the Brooklyn Dodgers. The Cincinnati club acquired Danny’s services in a reported straight cash deal from the Boston Braves. Danny o President Harvey A. Andruss, of the Teachers College, was the principal speaker at the testimonial dinner tedered the superintendent-elect of the Potsville Public Schools, Dr. H. H. Lengel, at a meeting of the Pottsville Kiwanis club held at NeccoAllen Hotel Monday, May 10. —— — o A letter from Ralph Tremato, of Easton, stated that he had accepted a position wit hthe Texas Oil Company, and expected to fly to Bogota, Colombia on April 12. His address is Relph A. Tremato, care of the Texas Petroleum Company, Bogota, Colombia, South America. o Mr. and Mrs. Roy Deitterick, of Bloomsburg R. D., announce the engagement of their daughter, Julia, to Paul Sholley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Deitterick of Lewisburg. Miss Deitterick is a graduate of the Bloomsburg High School with the class of 1947 and is now attending B.S.T.C. Mr. Sholley served three years in the European theatre of war and is now employed as a mechanic at Lewisburg. Page Forty THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY THE ALUMNI GENERAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Board of Directors E. H. Nelson Mrs. Ruth Speary Griffith Mrs. C. C. Housenick Harriot Carpenter Fred W. Diehl Edward F. Schuyler Hervey B. Smith President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer H. F. Fenstemaker Elizabeth H. Huber 1887 Miss Anna S. Kurtz, of West 111th Street, New York City, died Sunday, August 29, at her home. Miss Kurtz was born in Berwick and was a member of the first graduating class of the Berwick High School. After graduation from Bloomsburg, she taught in the public schools of Freeland, Catawissa and New York City. 1889 Brower, seventy-nine. East Main Street, Bloomsburg, died at the nursing home on Mill street, Danville, at 2:30 o’clock Thursday, June 17. He had undergone an operation in 1942 and had been in ill health since that time. However,, his condition had not been serious and his death came suddenly. He was born in Bloomsburg and lived here all of his life except for five years that he taught in Steven Institute, a preparatory school, Hoboken, N. J.- He graduated from the Bloomsburg Normal School, class of 1889, and was graduated from Jay J. Harvard University, class of 1901, and from the Philadelphia Business College. Surviving are a niece, Miss Mary Brower ,and sister-in-law, Mrs. W. H. Brower, of town. He was a member of Washington Lodge, F. and A. M. No. He was a 265, the Caldwell Consistory and affiliated bodies. member of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church. 1892 Sue Creveling (Mrs. G. W. Miller, Jr.) lives at 315 Second Stret, Weatherly, Pa. 1894 On May 19, 1948, Dr. George E. Pfahler was honored, together with 22 other physicians of Pennsylvania by the presentation of a Certificate for 50 years Service in the Practice of Medicine, given by the Pennsylvania State Medical Society at a testimonial dinner. Page Forty-one THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY In 1930, he received the Honorary Degree of Doctor of Science; in 1942, the Honorary Degree of Doctor of Laws, from Ursinus College, and the new Science Building was named “Pfahler Hall of Science.” 1896 Rear Admiral Charles Maiden Oman, seventy, a native of Light Street, died at his home in Beacon, N. Y., Monday, November 1, three years after retiring as one of the Navy’s top medical officers. He had been in the service of his country for forty-four years. The officer, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Henry Oman, was a brother of the late Rear Admiral Joseph Wallace Oman, whose death occurred in London shorttly after the outbreak of World War II in 1939. The brothers were the only two in the history of the United States Navy to attain the rank of Rear Admiral. His last post before retirement was commandant of the U. He was the auS. Naval Convalescent Home, Harriman, N. Y. thor of two books, “Minor Surgery” and “Doctors Aweigh.” He was commissioned in the Navy Medical Corps in 1901 and served in the Philippines, Cuban and Mexican campaigns before World War I. Admiral Oman commanded the Navy Base Hospital at Brest, France, during the First W^orld War and served later in China. He also served in the Messina, Sicily, earthquake relief in 1909. He was an American Red Cross delegate during 1937 to During the Geneva Congress to revise the Hague convention. World War II he commanded the National Naval Medical Center at Bethesda, Md., before his transfer to Harriman. Suviving are his wife, the former Helouise Brinkerhoff; a sister, Mrs. Clara Oman Lecher, of Wilkes-Barre and a brother, Joshua T. Oman, of Riverside. During his youth he attended school in Light Street and then removed with his family to Wilkes-Barre. He graduated from the University of Pennsylvania Medical School in 1901 and in December of that year he was commissioned a lieutenant, junior grade. In March, 1902, he was assigned to the Asiatic theatre and was stationed in the Philipnines and with the Asiatic fleet. He was transferred to the Naval Hosnital, Norfolk, Va.. in 1905 and in 1906-08 he served on the battleships Ohio, Arkansas annd New Hampshire. For three years, from 1909 to 1912, he was at the Naval Hospital, New York, and then for three years medical officer on the flag ship Wyoming. From 1915-18 he was at the Naval Hospital, N. Y., and was assigned to the hosnital shin Comfort from March to October, 1918. While serving in Brest. France as the officer in charge of Naval Base Hosnital No. 1 he was awarded the Navy Cross for meritorious service. For two years he was aide and field surgeon for the Atlantic Fleet. From 1920 Page Forty-two THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY to 1924 he was commandant of the Naval Hospital, Washington and for three years following was with the Marine detachment of the American legation, Peking, China. He then was named head of the Naval Medical School and president of the board of Naval Examiners. In 1931 he became commandant of the Naval Hospital at Anapolis and in 1935 was transferred to commandant of the Naval Hospital at New York. He served as medical officer of the Third Naval District 1, 1937 to June, 1939, when he was named inspector of the medical department activities on the Atlantic Coast. From 1941 to 1943 he was commandant of the National Naval Hospital, Bethesda, Md., and from 1942 until his retire- from September ment he was commandant at Harriman. Admial Oman was a of the Amrican College of Surgeons and a member of the National Board of Medical Examiners, a Fellow of the American Medical Association, an Episcopalian and a thirty-second member degree Mason. Arthur L. Crossley, of Hicksville, L. I., N. Y., a graduate of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College, class of 1896, and a former member of the faculty, died Sunday morning, June 6, at his home. A native of Columbia county, he taught school for a time after completing his work here and then secured a degree at Lafayette. Later he was a member of the local College faculty for a number of years, being in the English department. After he became affiliated with the school system of New York City, holding that position until his retirement about five years ago. Mr. Crossley was here for the fiftieth year reunion of his class in 1946. 1900 Mrs. Miles Kilmer died August 25, 1948, at her home hi South Orange, New Jersey. Florence Stump, as her classmates knew her, was graduated in 1900 and returned to take the College Preparatory Course, which she completed in 1903. Having specialized in music, she was for many years in charge of the music in the public schools of Haddonfield, New Jersey. Shortly after the close of World War I, she was married to Miles Kilmer, whom classmates will remember as a fine baseball and basketbal player, under the coaching of Dr. Aldinger. After graduation at State College, Mr. Kilmer has spent many years as a construction engineer, working on the various tunnels leading into New York City. 1901 Mayer (Mrs. Clarence W. Keck) of Town House, 424 West Broard steet, Hazleton, whose husband died on July 8, 1947, succumbed to a short illness at her home Saturday, June Elizabeth Page Forty-tbree THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY She was stricken with a heart attack a week before her Mrs. death and two trained nurses had been in attendance. Keck was a member of a pioneer family of Hazleton, and spent practically her entire life there. Her father was superintendent of the Hazleton Gas Company, which has since been absorbed After graduating from by the Luzerne Gas and Electric Co. Hazleton High School she entered the Bloomsburg State Normal School and after graduation, taught school in Hazleton and Shickshinn. Mr. and Mrs. Keck were wed thirty-nine years ago last December. Their only son, Joseph Winfield died at the age of seven years. Mrs. Keck was a member of Trinity Lutherar. 26. church. 1902 Mrs. Helen Reice Irvin has retired from teaching in Philadelphia, and is living in Florida with her brother, Stephen Reice. formerly of Bloomsburg. Her address is 915 South 15th Street. Fort Pierce, Floria. 1901 Irwin Cogswell, who lives at R. D. 3, Montrose, Pa., is employed as a machinist and machme tool operator with the Beach Manufacturing Company, Montrose. His son, Howard Cogswell, who graduated with honors at Whittier College, California, entered the University of California at Berkley this fall ,for post-graduate studies in Biology. During the past summer, he taught in a nature camp operated by the Audubon Society. Mrs. Adele Mead McKendrick is National Commander of the “Yeomen F,” organized in September, 1926, at the national convention of the American Legion. The organization is composed of women who enrolled in the United States Naval Reserve Force during World War I. Mrs. McKendrick’s address is 2929 S. W. 7th Street, Miami 35, Florida. Ann Challes Thompson lives at 7 Peter Cooper Road, New York 10, N. Y. She is teaching in the Washington Irving High School, 40 Irving Place, New York City. She taught in the Physical Education Department at Bloomsburg from September, 1904, to February, 1906. Mrs. Thompson would like to get in touch with other members of ’04, to plan for the 45th reunion of the class on Alumni Day, May 21, 1949. 1905 Mary A. Mitchell (Mrs. Charles K. Vermorel) lives at 690 Summit Avenue, Hackensack, New Jersey. 1906 Mary F. Mitchell (Mrs. William H. Bean) of Riegelsville, died July 27, 1948, at her home, after an illness of eight years. A resident of Riegelsville for the past twenty-four years, Mrs. Bean was the daughter of the late William and Ellen Mitchell. She was formerly a teacher in Nockamixon Township for many Page Forty-four THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY years. She was a member of the St. Lawrence Catholic Church, Durham. 1907 Mrs. Mary Hess Colyer lives at 924 Wood Street, York, Pa. 1909 Alma Wallace Papago Indian children at a school in Ajo, Arizona, where she has been working for the past seven years. She has been spending her summers in Los AnShe regeles, attending the University of Southern California. ports a delightful visit this summer with Norman H. Cool ’86, and Florence Hess Cool ’88, and says that they are still as enthusiastic as ever about Bloomsburg and its progress, as well as the welfare of its alumni. Scholl teaches 1913 FIGHTING FRONTIERSMAN: The Life of Daniel Boone, by John Bakeless, was published by William Morrow and Company, New York, on September 27. Based on Dr. Bakeless’ distinguished biography, Daniel Boone: Master of the Wilderness (published in 1939) this new version for young people is elaborately illustrated by Edward Shenton. Like Boone, Dr. Bakeless was born among the Indians in Pennsylvania. His early playmates were almost entirely Indian boys, and he was the only white student ever to attend Carlisle Indian School. For years prior to the writing of Daniel Boone, Dr. Bakeless studied every available Boone document. With his wife, Katherine E. Little (’15), he traveled the Boone country extensively and talked with antiquarians on the spot, and corresponded with everyone likely to have Boone material. The original work contains many facts and documents never before printed: the first authentic detailed story of Boone’s escape from the Indians; the first accurate story of Boone’s depatrure from Kentucky; the first completely documented study of the three carvings all things of absorbing interest to young readers. In the rewritten version, nothing of the flavor, excitement and authenticity of the original has been sacrificed; the pace of the book has been quickened by the omission merely of material that while of intense interest to the adult reader, would pall on the teen-ager. Elizabeth L. Pugh lives at 54 Manhattan Street, Ashley, Pa. Elizabeth K. Scharf lives at 7 West Pine Stret, Selinsgrove, — , Pa. is The address of Gertrude Thomas (Mrs. Albert S. Leonard) Route 5, Box 153, Evansville, Indiana. Myrtle Keefer (Mrs. Harry Brumbach) lives at 100 Little Street, Belleville, New Jersey. Page Forty-five THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 1916 Martha Yetter (Mrs. Harry E. Rider) died suddenly on Sunday, June 27, at her home on East Third Street, Bloomsburg. Mrs. Rider was a graduate of the Bloomsb'urg High School, the Bloomsburg State Normal School, and Bucknell University. For a number of years she w'as a very successful teacher in the Bloomsburg High School. She was an active member of the First Methodist Church of Bloomsburg throughout her For many years she was a member of the choir, and also life. served as superintendent of the Intermediate Department of the Cnurch School. She was also a member of the Bloomsburg Branch of the American Association of University Women. She is survived by her husband and one daughter. 1917 William Reade Brower, husband of Dorothy Miller Brower, passed away Friday, July 9, at the home of Mrs. G. W. Miller, Jr. 1919 Lucia Hammond (Mrs. Robert L. Wheeler) lives at 269 Washington Avenu..,, Providence 5, Rhode Island. Mrs. Wheeler IS teaching at a school for officers’ children at the Quonset Naval Air Base. The school is a part of the North Kensington school system. Mi. Wheeler is a. feature writer and columnist for the Providence Sunday Journal. Mr. and Mrs. Wheeler have four children: a son recently udisica the Air Corps, another son in iiigh school ,anol.hcr son eleven years old, and a daughter, six years old. 1924 Helen Zydanowicz (Mrs. Joseph Schwall) lives at 14378 Rutland Road, Detroit 27, Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. Schwall have one daughter, Carole Elaine, who will soon be eleven years old. 1926 Marjorie Sick Fassett, class of 1926, passed away Sunday, October 24, 1948, at the General Hospital, Wilkes-aBrre, Penna. Diagnosis of her illness placed the cause of death as an infection in the blood stream. Prior to her passing Marjorie made her home in Tunkhannock, where she was co-owner, with her husband Harry D. Fassett, of two department stores located at m Tunkhannock and Laceyville, respectively. Marporie’s passing leaves a spirit of sadness among her many classmates and friends at Bloomsburg. 1927 Mary Elliott Jones, of Scranton ,is now living at 4302 EastWest Highwav, eBthesda, Maryland. Miss Jones, who taught last year in Rockville, Maryland, has been transferred to the Lynnbrook School in Bethesda. Miss Jones has a master’s degree in elementary science from Columbia University. Edwin Barton was selected by the Superintendent of Page Forty-six THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Schools of Elizabeth, New Jersey, to attend a three weeks’ conference on curriculm planning, held at New York University this summer. Clara Zydanowicz (Mrs. Herbert Peterfreud) lives at 535 East 14th Street, Apartment 8-C, New York City. Her husband teaches law at New York University. Mrs. Peterfreud received her bachelor’s degree at Pennsylvania State College in 1935. 1931 In a ceremny whic htook place Tuesday, June 1, at the Grace EUB Church, at Lemoyne, Pa., Miss Corrine A. Hess, daughter of Claude H. Hess, of Bloomsburg R. D., became the bride of Don E. Miller, son of Mrs. Altha Miller, of Mill Hall, Pa. Rev. A. H. Houseal, pastor, performed the ceremony. The bride is a graduate of Bloomsburg State Teachers College and resided for a time in Berwick. She taught school at Bloomsburg, later attending the Palmer Schdol of Chiropractry at Davenport, Iowa. She now has a practice at Lewistown. The groom served three and one half years as a lieutenant in the Navv, hi;; tour of duty covering service in Pacific Theatre of Operations. He is now a student at the Palmer Chiropractic School. Helen M. Walborn (Mrs. Nelson M. Penman) lives at 160 Street, Bloomsburg. Mr. and Mrs. Penman have two children ,a son ten years old, and another son, Richard Lee, born West 8th March 13, 1948. Donald Karnes is a teacher in the schools of Lamar, Colorado. He and Mrs. Karnes are rejoicing over the arrival of a daughter, Nell Marie, born Monday, July 12 1932 Emilie Zydanowicz (Mrs. Bernard Sage) lives at 317 N. Reginald, Dearborn, Michigan. Dr. and Mrs. Sage have two children. 1933 Wallace Derr, of Bloomsburg R. D. 1, at Jerseytown, was one of the men and women receiving the Degree of Master of Science in Education at Bucknell University’s ninety-eighth Commencement exercises Saturday, June 5. His majors were administration and supervision. Mr. Derr also hold a Master’s Degree in Education awarded by Temple University in 1936, with a major in history. He holds a minor in education from . graduate work pursued. Mary Stahl is teacher of first grade in the Berwick schools. She taught for several years in Salem Township before being elected to her present position. The home of Mr. and Mrs. L. P. Gilmore, of East Second Street, town, was the scene of a quiet wedding Saturday, August 7, when their daughter, Dorothy Evangeline, became the bride of James H. Lovell, son of Mrs. G .L. Lovell, of Salem, Oregon, and the late Reverend Lovell. Page Forty-seven THE ALUMNI QUARTEHLY Mrs. Lovell is the former assistant librarian of Bloomsburg State Teachers College. Mr. Lovell has been with the merchant marine since 1942. During World War II, he saw active duty in the Atlantic and Pacific theaters of war. He returned from Belgium and Holland in July. The couple are now 15, living at 711 S. E. 3rd street, Portland Oregon. 1934 Dorothy I. Wolfe (Mrs. William C. Williams) lives at R. D. 3, Bloomsburg. Gladys Bakey (Mrs. Thomas Davis) lives at 3306 Highland Place, N. W., Washington 8, D. C. Bartha Hornberger (Mrs. Walter Powers) died in April, 1947, and is survived by one son. Beulah M. Lawrence (Mrs. Roy D. Masser) lives in a suburb of Reading. Her husband conducts the Roamer Tours out of Reading. The address of Freda Shuman (Mrs. Clyde Laubach) is Box 172, Elysburg, Pa. 1936 Bernard J. Young, formerly of Berwick, is assistant professor and director of guidance at the Laboratory Training School, Western Illinois State College. He and Mrs. Young, who was formerly Miss Frances I. Riggs, of Bloomsburg, live at 603 West Calhoun Street, Macomb, Illinois. They have one son, four years old. 1937 Hower, of Bloomsburg, was found dead in his car in Bloomsburg on Saturday, January 31, 1948, when the late chief of police, Ben Jacoby, made an investigation to determine why the car was halted in a traffic lane on busy East Street. Luther P. him was his three-year-old daughter, Vicianne. Mr. Hower’s death came as a profound shock to his family and friends. He had left his home a few minutes earlier to do some errands in the business section. Evidently forewarned of the heart attack which caused his death, had pulled the car to the left, so that it was partly out of the main line of traffic, and stopped the machine. The car was noticed there, and the little girl was seen by passersby. Mr. Hower was slumped over, so that his body was not visible. Those who first noticed the car believed that the driver was in a nearby store or in a physician’s In th car with office. During World War II, Mr. Hower was a second lieutenant in the Quartermaster Corps, serving from April 16, 1943, until April 1, 1946, and during two years of that time he was in the expeditionary forces. He was a resident of Espy at the time he entered the service, being with the 667th Quartermaster Truck Page Forty-eight THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY the 66th Infantry. He served in the campaigns on Northern France and the Rhineland, and held the American Defense Medal, European-African-Middle Eastern Service Ribbon with two bronze stars, the American Theatre Service Medal and World War II Victory Medal. Company with He was a native of Bloomsburg. After graduation from the Scott Township High School in 1933, he entered Bloomsburg Teachers College and received his Bachelor’s Degree in 1937. He was a member of St. John’s Lutheran Church, Espy. Surviving are his wife, the former Victoria Muskaloon ’37, his daughter, Vicianne, his mother, Mrs. Mary Hess Colyer ’07, and a sister, Mrs. John German. Miss Marie E. Foust, of Milton, Pa., has been named Execu- Lebanon and Lebanon County and assumed her duties there at the Completion of one month tive Director of the Girl Scouts in of special training at National Girl Scout Headquarters, WashMiss Foust graduated from Milton High School ington, D. C. education in 1933, received her Bachelor of Science degree in from Bloomsburg State Teachers College in 1937, where she majored in French and English and minored in social studies. She also took graduate work at Bucknell University. She has taught in Pennsylvania schools for nine years. to 1943 she taught in a consolidated country high Her duties school in eBaver Township, Columbia County. there included the teaching of English, art, music, health, physical education and history. She also coached dramatics and girls’ bisketbal land served as librarian. From 1944 to 1945 she taught French and English at Milton High School, after which she spent two years with the American Red Cross as a hospital recreational worker, training at the American University, Washington, D. C., and taking extension training at the station hospital. Camp Croft, S. C. From 1938 Her work with the Red Cross took her to Manila, Japan and Korea over a 14-month period, and she spent eleven months in Korea as a club and recreational worker at an “on post” club. She was on duty with the occupation army. For the past year, M’ss Foust has been a teacher-librarian at Benton. Columbia Countv. Her interests include literature, music, crafts, outdoor She has activities, phototgranhv and many scouting activities. had ten vears’ experience as counselor at a state Sundav School camp and had her own Girl Scout troop of intermediates while teaching at Milton. She trained at Camp Edith Macy, a nation- Amone Miss al Girl Scout training camp, Pleasantville. N. Y. Foust’s duties will be the training and supervision of adult volunteer workers, the organization of troops, program administramembership tion, camping, public realtions, financing, council selection, statistical analysis, keeping records and reporting staff and office administration. Page Forty-nine THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 1938 Dorothy Frick (Mrs. Sheldon A. MacDougall) lives on a farm near Benton, Pa. Her addres is R. D. 1, Benton. Mrs. MacDougall was graduated in the two-year course in 1931, and returned to Bloomsburg to complete her work for the aBchelor’s degree. 1939 James R. Kantner is Employment Superintendent at the U. S. Naval Ammunition Depot, Shumaker, Arkansas. He is living in the Billkitts Housing Area at the Naval Ammimition Depot, at 314 Ingram. Lucille E. Adams (Mrs. W. P. Ruemmler) has moved to 1117 West 156th Street, Calumet City, Illinois, where her husband is employed as a metallurgical engineer. Mr. and Mrs. Ruemmler have two sons, Thomas Richard, born February 21, 1948, and W. Philip Ruemmler II, who was four years old No- vember 14. Miss Pearl E. Poust, of Pine street, Orangeville, teacher in the Orangeville Elementary School, Orangeville, was selected by Ray M. Cole, Columbia County Superintendent of Schools, to participate in the second Health Education Workshop at the Pennsvlvania State College, June 28 to July 17. 1940 Paul Paulhamus, of the Millville Joint Junior-Senior High School, has resigned from the Millville faculty, where he taugh seventh grade English, mathematics and art. He is now principal of the Wyalusing Senior High School with a staff of ten teachers and an enrollment of 160 from grades ten through twelve. Mrs. Honora Dennen Barr, wife of Herbert Barr, 417 Water street, died in the University Hospital, Philadelphia, on Saturday, June 12. She had been a patient in the hospital since June Death was the re4, and had been ill for the past three weeks. sult of cerebral hemorrhage. Mrs. Barr was born December 7, 1916, in Anthony TownMrs. James ship, Montour county, the daughter of Mr. and Dennen. She attended the Anthony township school and was a graduate of Sacred Heart Academy, Danville, and the Bloomsburg State Teachers College. She was employed as a teacher of the first and second grades of Anthony Township Consolidated School, and was united in marriage to Herbert Barr on October 9, 1947. Since that time she resided in Danville. Mrs. Barr was a member of St. Joseph’s Catholic Church, Danville; president of the Sacred Heart Academy Alumnae Association in the Danville area, and a member of the Living Rosary Society of the St. James CathShe was vice president of the Turbotolic Church, Exchange. ville Civic Page Fifty Club. THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Surviving are her husband, her parents, a sister and two brothers. Charles S. Girton has received the appointment as supervisor of the Los Angeles office of the U. S. Weather Bureau’s Flight Advisory Weather Service. This is one of twenty-six such units located in Airway Traffic Control Centers for the purpose of providing short range detailed weather information and forecasts for airway traffic controllers and other aviation interests. Mr. Girton has had two and one-half years’ service with the weather bureau in Fort Worth, Texas, and Los Angeles, and five and one-half years’ service with the American Air Forces. 1941 The present address of Ruth Shay is Mrs. Richard A. Biery, Care of T-Sgt. R. A. Biery, 2030048, 20-6 Air Weather Department, Itazuke Air Base, APO 929, Care of Postmaster, San Francisco, California. In a recent letter she writes: “We have now here quite well. been in Japan eight months, and we like it There are now over three hundred American families living at Itazuke Base, so our own little community is just like any at home. I have a Japanese girl who lives in our home with us and does all the housework and takes care of the children. She speaks very little English. I have learned to speak some Japanese, and we talk with a mixture of the two lan- guages. “I find aJpan most interesting, because their customs are so different from ours. In June we visited Nagasaki and even after three years there is still much evidence of ruin and destruction. “We buy all our food at the Army Commissary, the food being sent over from the States. We use no native food at all. Except for fresh milk, which we never get, our supply and variety are quite good. In spite of the lack of milk, my children are healthier than ever.’’ Miss Claraline F. Schlee and Kenneth A. Baylor, both of Danville, were married Friday, July 23, at St. Paul’s Methodist Episcopal Church in Danville. The Rev. Glenn Mowrer performed the ceremony. The bride is a graduate of the Danville High School and B.S.T.C. The groom was graduated from the Bloomsburg High in 1940, after which he served three and one-half years in the Navy. He was graduated from Marshall College, Huntington, West Virginia, in 1948. He is now a member of the staff of the Williamsport Sun. Mrs. Michalene Zuchoski Bowen is teaching in the Anthony Township Consolidated School. She taught last year in the schools of Hanover Township, Luzerne County. Jane Rutledge lives at 1942 16 Montgomery Avenue, West PittsPage Fifty-one THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY ton, Pa. Edith E. Bartha is a teacher in the Chester High School and taught courses in Marketing at Temple University during the summer session of 1946 and 1947. During the past summer, she worked in Philadelphia as a marketing research assistant. Stanley T. Schuyler has begun his fifth year of teaching at the Muncy High School. He teaches commercial subjects, is var^ sity wrestling coach, and has assisted two years in football. His address is R. D. 1, Turbotville, Pa. Spencer Roberts, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Roberts, Catawissa, who ome months ago was assigned as an attache at the American Embassy, Moscow, by the State Department, recently wrote an interesting letter of a few of his early experiences in the Soviet capital. The letter was written to President Harvey A. Andruss, of the Teachers College, where Roberts was a student for some time. He speaks highly of the Russian theatre but “each day I thank God that I was born in our little spot on the Susquehanna, where the people at least have shoes and the opportunity -ake a bath when they want it.” In his letter he observes “There was such a mad rush to buy all the things I would need here for my two-year assignment here in Moscow things that are unavailable here, and that one really neds to make life comfortable. You can imagine the supply I had to bring with me However, I am now setled quite happily in a Soviet apartment building four rooms, a wonderful grand piano, several excellent painting and two efficient Russian maids. “i\Iy job as an attache here in the Embassy, of course ,is proving to be extremely exciting especially since I must have a lot of contact with the Soviet officals and people thus using my Russian every day to great advantage. The theatre, ballet, and concerts are on a level that New York could never hope to reach ,and the fine thing about the theatre is that at least half of the repertory consists of the classics. Here for the first time I am seeing Sheridan, Moliere, Lope de la Vega, etc. The acting, sets and costumes, and, of course, the direction, are unbelievably wonderful. I am wasting no time practically every night is theatre night for me tickets are fabulously cheap. “However, that is about the only thing I can find that is superior to dear, old New York. Each day I thank God that I was born in our little spot on the Susquehanna, where the people at least have shoes and the opportunity to take a bath when they want it.” The body of Second Lieutenant Earl J. Harris, U. S. Army, was interred with appropriate funeral services held at the Hidlay Church Saturday, September 18. — ! — — — Page Fifty-two — — THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY I ; I : : I ! Lt. Harris was killed in action on March 1945, while 28, participating in the invasion of Cebu Island in the Philippines. He was aged twenty-four and was a graduate of the Scott Township High School and the Bloomsburg State Teachers College, being awarded his degree of Bachelor of Science Education in 1942. He received his basic training at Fort Benning, Ga., where he was commisioned, and joined the expeditionary forces in December, 1943. The officer was severely wounded in action on July 8, 1944, on Bouganville Island in the Solomons. After recovering from his wounds he participated in the invasion on Leyte and was wounded a second time. He was killed by Japanese mortar fire while leading his platoon against an airfeld on Cebu. Dawn Osman, of Shamokin, and Robert J. Trewella, of Kulpmont, were married Saturday, June 19, in the Chestnut Street Methodist Church in Shamokin. Mr. Trewella is a graduate of Gettysburg College. Mr. and Mrs. Trewella are living at Market and Walnut Streets, Shamokin. 1943 Miss Marjorie Ruth Coombs, of Wapwallopen, and Clyde C. Deets, also of Wapwallopen, were married Saturday, June 26, in The bride has been serSt. Stephen’s Church, Wilkes-Barre. ving as a teacher in the schools at Nuangola. Mr. Deets, a graduate of the Newport Township High School, and a veteran of World War II, is employed by the American Car and Foundry Company. Eleanore Althoff (Mrs. Jerome G. Lapinski) lives at 811 South Ogden Street, Baltimore 24, Maryland. Mr. and Mrs. Lapinski welcomed their first child ,a baby daughter, born May I I i [ 27, 1948. Announcement has recently been made of the engagement of Miss Janet R. Shultz to Fred A. Ungerman, an engineering student at the Drexel Institute of Technology. Miss Shultz is teaching in the Crispin School in Philadelphia. Her address is 5951 Belden Street, Philadelphia 24. Dorothy L. Schmidt sailed in October from San Francisco resume her missionary work in a school in Japan. Her address in Japan is “Hokusei Jo Gakko, Sapporo Hokkaido, Jap- to [ i 5 an.” Harold J. O’Brien received the degree of Master of Arts at the 16th Post Sessions Commencement held at the Pennsylvania State College September 18, 1948. An innovation in June manages was consumated here when a local minister officiated at the wedding of his son. The event took place Monday, June 14, as Miss Mars:aret P. White, of Bloomsburg, became the bride of Charles H. BomPage Fifty-three THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY boy, son of the Rev. and Mrs. D. L. Bomboy, 744 Market street. The Rev. Bomboy .pastor of the Buckhorn Lutheran Parish, performed the impressive double ring ceremony at the Market street residence. The bride has been employed at Sneidman’s jewelry store. The groom is a graduate of Bloomsburg High School, the Bloomsburg State Teachers College, and Columbia University. During World War II he served thirty months with the Eighth Air Force. For the past two years he has been an instructor at Wilmington, Del. John Witkoski has been in Alaska for the past two years. He is manager of the McKinley Park Hotel, McKinley Park, Alaska. The hotel, which is operated by the Department of the Interior, is situated halfway between Anchorage and Fairbanks. Elizabeth Bartha Nunziato is a teacher in Public School 99 in New York City. Her address is 1391 West 6th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 1944 Anne T. Sabol is instructor of Secretarial Studies at Hood College. Mrs. Bette Fuller Smith, of Berwick, has been elected teacher of the first grade in the Greenwood lementary school of the Millville cooperative district. Mrs. Smith is a gi’aduate of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College, class of 1944, holding the degree of Bachelor of Science in Education. She taught the kindergarten for one year in Yardley, Bucks county, and for two years was teacher of the first grade there. Margaret Latsha (Mrs. Walter M. Smiley) lives at 506 West Fifth Street, Lewistown, Pa. Mrs. Smiley is a first-grade teacher in Lewistown, and her husband, a graduate of Ithaca College, is in charge of instrumental music in the elementary schools of Lewistown, directs the Junior High School orchestra, and assists with the direction of the high school band. He is a member of Phi Mu Alpha fraternity and the Lewistown Kiwanis Club. Stella Williams (Mrs. James N. Fulton) is teaching in Connecticut. Her addres is Unionville Road, Farmington, Conn., care of Robert I. Sperry. 1946 Miss Jacqueline Shaffer, of Bloomsburg, and Charles W. Creasy, Jr., of Catawissa R. D. 1, were married Saturday, June The 19, in the Washington Memorial Chapel, Valley Forge. couple was united in marriage by the Rev. John Robbins Hart, rector of the chapel. Mrs. Creasy is a teacher in the Bloomsburg schools. Wanda Kehler is teaching in Butler Township. During the summer she worked as a secretary with the Sun^Oil Company in Page Fifty-four THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Gradyville, Pa. Henry who has been teaching in now a member of the faculty Gatski, of Bloomsburg, the Scot Township High School, of the Danville High School. is “It felt pretty good to get back,” Mark Collins Wanich, of Light Street, home from two years’ abroad, stated after his return. “That 3,000 miles that lies between you and security if anything goes well, its good to know you can walk home wrong.” . . . Mr. Wanich returned in August from England where, on the last leg of his return journey across the European continent, he had witnessed part of the Olympic games. He had been a member of the high school faculty at the Cairo School for Americans located at Maabi, about fifteen minutes from Cairo, Egypt. During his overseas teaching assignment, he had visited twelve different nations. border patrol in Switzerland had permitted him to step on German territory briefly to add to the A total. Returning from Egypt with Wanich was Barret Weeks, a seventeen-year-old former student at the school at which the Light Street man taught. Weeks, the son of a U. S. War Department employe presently stationed in Egypt, will enter the University of Pennsylvania this fall. The youth was born in Paris, France, and spent most of his early life in Italy. Concerning the economic situation, Mr. Wanich said that living was expensive over there. Americans are more fortunately situated, however, “because the dollar is God” and has a high exchange value. Little Russian influence has been felt in Egypt although the native at times remark “Why not let the Russians come in no one else does anything for us.” But the remarks, Wanich believes, are spoken purely in the spirit of jest. Concerning the State of Israel, Wanich reports that newspaper accounts of the situation emphasize the excitement. The Egyptians do not favor the state, but rioting reports are exaggerated. At the time that President Truman reconized the state of Israel, the American University in Cairo, was a secondary target for a few stones. As a result, the University, with which Wanich’s school was affiliated, closed for a day. “They were really throwing at a building across the street,” Wanich believes. A graduate of Bloomsburg State Teachers College, Mr. Wanich completed his education here the Summer of 1946. On August 25, the same year, he left for New York, and two days he sailed for Naples on the first leg of the journey to Cairo. During vacation periods and other brief periods, he visited many countries. One summer he was employed as a machinist later Page Fifty-five THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY England. His tours included a visit to Palestine during the Christmas season, and a plane trip with students to Luxor on a in o the tombs of the old kings of Egypt before Christ. The climate is wonderful, he reports, although during the summer the mercury rises to 115 degrees in the shade. Rain occurs perhaps four or five times a year, Wanich confirmed. A few Egyptian students were members of Wanich’s classes. The Light Street man instructed in science, mathematics and physical education of the secondary curriculum of the school. 1947 Miss Frances C. Mylet, of Sugarloaf, and Anthony Kopuschinsky, of Harwood, were married Saturday, July 31, at the Holy Trinity Slovak Church in Hazleton. The bride is a graduate of the Rock Glen High School and of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College. She had been teaching in Lewistown. Mr. Kopuschinsky attended the Hazle Township High School, and is employed by the Pennsylvania Power and Light Company in Hazleton. During the war, he served fo rtwo years in the Pacific Area with the Army. Miss Eltheda M. Klingaman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Klingaman, of Shumans, became the bride of Robert L. Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leon Smith, Troy, in an impressive ceremony performed by the Rev. Mr. Rhody in St. Peter’s Lutheran Church Saturday evening, June 12. The bride was given in marriage by her father. The bride is a graduate of the Beaver Township High School, 1943, and Bloomsburg State Teachers College in 1947. She served last year as teacher of mathematics and science in the Catawissa Junior High School. The groom spent four years in the Navy, during World War II, being stationed in the Pacific and is now employed by Remington Rand in Elmira, N. Y. Miss Harriet Rhodes, of Bloomsburg, and James W. Hantin St. jis, of Berwick, were married Saturday, September 25, Matthews Lutheran Church in Bloomsburg. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Edgar D. Ziegler, pastor of the church. Mrs. Hantjis is a member of the faculty of the Bloomsburg High School, and Mr. Hantjis is a senior at Bloomsburg State Teachers College. 1948 Donald Rishe, of Bloomsburg, is a teacher of commercial subjects in the Scott Township High Sphoool. Mr. Rishe who was graduated at the end of the first semester, taught during the second semester at Dalmatia. In a lovely ceremony at St. Matthew Lutheran Church, of town. Miss Jean Richard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George H. Richard, of Bloomsburg, became the bride of John Zagoudis, son Page Fifty-six THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY Church, Danville. The ceremony was performed by the pastor, the Rev. Ernest Andrews. Mr. Barnhart is employed asa linotype operator on the Danville Morning News. Miss Betty June Collins, of Berwick, and J. Gilbert Henrie, Jr., of Grovania, were married Saturday, June 19, in the Bower Memorial EUB Church in Berwick. The ceremony was performed by Dr. Adam C. Ruth, pastor of the church. The bride is a graduate of the East Stroudsburg State Teachers College, and received her Master’s degree at Columbia University. She served last year as director of health and physical education at Frances Shimer College, at Mount Carroll, Illinois. Mr. Henrie served three and a half years in the Army Air Force. Miss Mary Gertrude Severn and Francis X. Brennan, both of Bloomsburg, were married Saturday, June 26, at St .Columba’s Catholic Church. The Very Reverend William J. Burke officiated at the double ring ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Brennan are living in Chicago, where the former is a student in journalism at Northwestern University. Miss Ethel A. Benninger, of St. Johns, and Albert C. Zimmerman, Jr., of Hazleton, were married Saturday, August 14, in The bride was graduSt. John’s Reformed Church, St. Johns. of Mr .and Mrs. Peter Zagoudis, of Brooklyn, N. Y. The double ring ceremony was performed by the Rev. Edgar D. Ziegler, pastor of the church, at 2:30 o’clock Saturday, June 12. The bridegroom served three and one-half years in the Navy, having been stationed in the South Pacific and as a member of the V-12 program, later attended Bloomsburg State Teachers College. He is a graduate of Pennsylvaia State College and is employed as a junior engineer with the Firestone Tire and Rubber Co., in Akron. Miss Joyce Gass, of Danville, and Howard Barnhart, Jr., of Sidler Hill, were married Saturday, July 24, at the Shiloh Evangelical and Reformed Church. The bride is teaching in the Sunbury schools, and the groom is employed as a linotype operator on the staff of the Danville Morning News. Harry G. John, Jr., of East Second street, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry G. John, Sr., of Main township, has accepted a position with the Farmers National Bank of Bloomsburg. Miss Martha Hathaway has accepted a teaching position in Carlisle. Miss Fern Shellenberger and Robert C. Baker, Jr., both of Bloomsburg, were married Friday, August 20, in the First BapThe ceremony was performed by tist Church of Bloomsburg. the Rev. Malcolm C. Hunsicker, pastor of the church. Mr. Baker is a student at Bucknell University. Miss Joyce Gass and Howard Barnhart, Jr., both of Danville, were married Saturday, July 24, in the Shiloh Reformed Page Fifty-seven - THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY ated from the Hazleton High School, and of the Allentown School of Nursing. She is a member of the nursing staff at the Berwick Hospital. Mr. Zimmerman served in World War II, and at present is employed as display and decorating manager at the Sears Roebuck store in Bloomsburg. Miss Jean Licthenwalner, of Orangeville, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. H. A. Lichtenwalner, has accepted a position with the Cairo School for Americans, affiliated with the American University, at Maabi, Egypt. Miss Lichtenwalner sailed from New York aboard an Egyptian steamer on September 3, for Naples, Italy. From there she will travel by boat to Alexandria. A graduate of Bucknell University, where she was awarded a Bachelor of Science degree. Miss Litchenwalner received her elementary teaching certificate at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College last January. Her appointment with the Egyptian school was received through the local college placement service. She will be assigned to elementary instruction at the Cairo school with which she has a three-year contract. Students of the system are Americans and the children of government ofLocated at ficials, air line, oil company, and other personnel. Maabi, the school is about fiften minutes drive from Cairo. Page Fifty-eight THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY 1948-49 Basketball Schedule December 11 December 17 December 20 January 8 January 11 January 22 January 26 January 29 February 1 February 3 February 10 February 12 February 18 February 19 February 22 February 26 Millersville Lock Haven Wilkes College East Stroudsburg Kings College Lock Haven Wilkes College Shippensburg Kings College Mansfield Lycoming College East Stroudsburg Millersville Shippensburg Mansfield Lycoming College Home Away Home Away Away Home Away Home Home Away Home Home Away Away Home Away Page F^fty-nine 1 THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY BUSINESS CARDS — BLOOMSBURG GRADUATES CREASY & WELLS FRANK BUILDING MATERIALS Mrs. S. HUTCHISON, Bank Building First National Bloomsburg 777-J WESLEY KNORR, ’34 HOMER ENGLEHART, NOTARY PUBLIC ’ll INSURANCE West Fifth Street Bloomsburg 669-R 252 1821 Market Street Harrisburg 3836-0 TEXAS LUNCH FOR YOUR REFRESHMENTS Poletime Comuntzis, ’14, Mgr. Athamantia Comuntzis, ’46 Ass’t. Mgr. 142 East Main Street HARRY S. BARTON, REAL ESTATE 52 — ’96 INSURANCE West Main Street Bloomsburg 529 Bloomsburg 850 CONNER & FLECKENSTINE THE CHAR-MUND PRINTERS TO ALOINI ASSN. Bloomsburg, Pa. Telephone 867 Mrs. J. C. Conner, ’34 ’41, Mgr. West Main Street Bloomsburg 356-R 50 HERVEY B. NN SMITH, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW ’15 Bloomsburg, Pa. FOR YOUR RIDING CLOTHES Arcus, I Mrs. Charloitte Hoch, Prop. ARCUS WOMEN’S SHOP Max ’16 INSURANCE C. Creasy, ’81. Pres. Bloomsburg 520 J. S. THE WOLF SHOP LEATHER GOODS — REPAIRS M. C. Strausser. ’27, Prop. 122 East Main Street Bloomsburg, Pa. ’22 IMOYER BROTHERS PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS SINCE 1868 Court House Place William V. Moyer, ’07, Pres. Harold R. Moyer, ’09, Vice-Pres. Bloomsburg 1115 Bloomsburg 246 Page Sixty i ee