COME VOL 3—No. 3 1 THE .SPECTATOR^ I HOME STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE, EDINBORO, PA., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 193$ r Annual to Have I Alumni Section 1 I I I j I The Conneautteean staff announces plans for a section of the annual which will be devoted to the alumni. This is a forward step on the part of the staff and one which should serve to band the alumni more close­ I ly to the school. This division of the book will in­ I clude a group of pictures of all members of the alumni who attend the homecoming festivities, together with personal notes on prominent graduates. The subscription blank, printed on another page of The Spectator, should be mailed as soon as possible iI to Mr. Edward Simon, Editor-inChief of the yearbook, care of the { 1 college. The deposit will be one dollar per copy. The remainder of the fee has • j riot yet been determined, but will be ! announced as soon as more detailed • !| plans are made. I 1 I I I I I I j Hockey Players Have Outing at Cleveland Part of the hockey team accepted the invitation of the Cleveland Field Hockey Association and attended “Play Day” at Laurel Hill School on October 19. Among the interesting events of the day was a discussion of rules and regulations led by Miss Hilda Burr, of England. Our girls joined with players from Hiram and Flora Mother Colleges and elected Miss Leona Grimshaw captain of the team. Under the name of College Etcetera, and gave a boost to the college by tying the score. 1-1, showing that their training here had not all been in vain. The second game was played against Cranberry, a womens club of Cleveland. Here they found that more experienced lassies were slightly better for they lost the game 3-0. All in all, we feel that they played nicely and gave a good showing for the school, especially Josephine Boyce who warded off many advancing balls and kept the score from growing larger. Those who attended the “Play Day” were Leona Grimshaw, Isabel Crawford, Margaret Adler, Jean Campbell, Josephine Boyce and Bessie Lindell. They were escorted by Miss Ruttie and Frieda Yonkers, who took her national refereeing test. “The grouchiest person known is the man who refuses to sleep on a feather bed for fear it will tickle him and make him laugh.”—High School Buzz, Hutchinson, Kansas. | I I | J J i I I i i j t PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE TO ALUMNI To Our Alumni: This issue of ‘The Spectator” is devoted exclusively to our Alumni, A copy is being sent to all living alumni whose addresses are known. Uncle Sam will reach nearly 4000 loyal of_____ Edinboro in .............. every state sons and’ daughte: _'_.__,l__2rs l _____found ..._____ ............in _ the . Union'. With this copy of the College paper goes an earnest ..... ” K, ’j and warm invitation to • visit the old College Nov.- 9,’ the annual Homecoming Day. We hope that this day will be much more than the mere occasion when the football team plays our ancient and friendly rivals from Slippery Rock. We invite you to return to renew your old Edinboro spirit and to see your many friends who are planning to be here. We want you to return because Edinboro needs you, and needs you now as never before. Our growth and our influence will depend upon your support and upon your real interest, While our enrollment is just about holding its own compared with a drop of 30 % three years ago, and 25 % a year ago, and while our Freshman Class has increased in numbers 20% over last year s, nevertheless we call upon you to HELP. Edinboro is one of the very few State Teachers Colleges that do not have a working Alumni Fund to assist worthy students. Literally scores of fine young men and women have been turned away this year because we had no substantial way to help them. Federal Aid to youth has enabled 54 young men and women to come to college or to remain in college. We have been compelled to refuse aid to that many more in college and to scores asking to come. Only one in my position can realize the real needs and the great desires of many to come to Edinboro, but unable to do so because of lack of means. Then, too, there are a great many in College who must secure some aid during the year if they are to continue in College. 1 am, therefore, making an urgent plea to the Alumni that they assist in building up an Alumni Loan Fund. There is no reason why 4000 Alumni should not be able to create a fund .lj wouia of at least $3000. An average contribution of $1.25 would do this. But there are many who undoubtedly can give much more. If 500 Alumni would give $10 each, we_ could easily raise this fund. WHAT WILL YOU GIVE? DO IT NOW! Enclosed you will find a subscription card, Send it along with your contribution. ___________ Any fund that may be raised will be administered by the college and an accounting given the Association annually. We are this year celebrating the 75th year of the founding rtion. Let us make this the Diamond Jubilee Loan of this institution. Fund! Thanking you in advance in behalf of the young men and women who will be helped by your contribution, I am, Very sincerely yours, CARMON ROSS, President [ Leonard Craske Appears Here I I i i 1 I I IB j j j . j j j : ■ ! I j j : 1 [ | j j • : ! I I ■uu— j j ■ ! s | i f Raiders Bow Before Saturday and Mansfield 20-0 Extension Classes This semester Edinboro State Teachers College is offering a number of courses that are attended by teach­ ers in service. These classes are divided into two main groups: the Saturday classes which are held on our campus, and the extension classes which are held in other schools in nearby towns. The teachers of the Saturday classes and the courses they teach are: Mr. Doucette, Jewelry; Mr. Zahniser, American Literature; Dr. Mudge, American History. The extension classes are as fol(Continued on Page Four) Leonard Craske, an international­ ly known sculptor, will appear on the college platform Wednesday evening, November 6. His subject for the oc­ casion will be “The Making of a Statue.” The lecture will be illustrat­ ed by over one hundred views, show­ ing the processes which a statue goes through from the first clay sketch to the finished bronze or granite. Mr. Craske was born in London, England, and received his higher edu­ cation in London University and St. Later on he branched into the field of acting and played in Sir John Harvey’s company. Since 1920, Craske has devoted his entire time to sculpture. Perhaps his best known work is the World War memorial at Amesbury, Mass. Attention, Football and Basketball Fans It has been suggested by several alumni who are interested in athletics that they would like to create a fund specifically for the encouragement of athletics at Edinboro through grant­ ing financial assistance to worthy students with athletic ability. A dozen or more alumni have made this statement, “If we could start an Alumni Athletic Schalorship Fund I would ‘kick in’ ten dollars to start it.” Now, wouldn’t that make a good be­ ginning if all those who have made such a statement would act right now by making good their proposal. No doubt there are many more who have thought the same thing and would be willing to adopt the idea. It sounds like a good one. Let’s give it a try anyway. If you care to as­ sist with the establishment of such a fund, make your remittance payable to Treasurer, Alumni Athletic Fund, and mail to the same, c-o Alumni Secretary, Box 363, Edinboro, Pa. Perhaps you have some friends whom you wouid like to send to your Alma Mater but who may need some as­ sistance. This fund would take care of such a situation. Now is the time to put our words and thoughts into action. Let’s not delay. Let’s also plan to be at Edinboro on Homecom­ ing Day and see the football game with our friendly rival, Slippery Rock. Better bring your check book or some extra cash, you might be suddenly inspired when you find your­ self on the sidelines once again root­ ing for your team. Before a small Parents’ Day crowd, Edinboro’s “Red Raiders” dropped the second game of the season to a heavier, older Maroon and Black team from Mansfield. Edinboro started off well, and soon after the game began was well into Mansfield territory. A series of bad breaks, however, soon brought a re­ versal of form. Mansfield took the ball and advanced into Edinboro ter­ ritory. Here a short pass, caught Frank: “I’d like to see something near the sidelines, paved the way for cheap in a felt hat.” the first score, which came on a short Clerk in store: “Try thia on and buck by fullback Borden. Borden look in the mirror.” — Areopagus, (Continued on Page Four) Talcott, W. Va. THE SPECTATOR Page Two THE SPECTATOR Published bi-monthly by the students of Edinboro State Teachers College. Editor-in-Chief Business Mgr News Head Sports Editor Exchange Faculty Adviser John Shepley Margaret Adler Delores Willey James Smith Richard Wagner F. L. LaBounty Come Up and See Me Sometime “Will I ever be glad when the day comes that I am through school! Be­ lieve me I’ll never darken the doors of this place again!” It looks like a dark future as well as lonely halls, when “would-be” alumni talk like this. But we seldom see the real fun in anything until it’s past. The time you will most appreciate Edin­ boro is when you’ve been on your own for a year and find what tough going it is. Then you will grow sentiment­ al if by chance you hear the Alma Mater or meet an old school chum. Schools aren’t made by teachers, or enrollments by catalogs, but through the alumni. I’d wager every one of you came to Edinboro be­ cause you knew someone who did. We’re planning' a grand time for November 9th, so show some anima­ tion and come. You might be sur­ prised ! ! ! We Need a Class Diamond Jubilee Scholarship Fund Born in the Alps . . Within a few months your Alma Mater will be celebrating the seventy­ fifth anniversary of growth, develop­ ment and service since its beginning as a normal school in 1860. As an appropriate memorial on this great occasion the Alumni Association pro­ poses to establish a loan fund for the purpose of assisting worthy students at Edinboro. Our Alma Mater now boasts of about four thousand living­ alumni scattered throughout fortysix states in the United States, the District of Columbia, two United States territories and six foreign countries. Just imagine it! And just imagine the size of the fund which could be created and the good which could be accmoplished through it if every loyal alumnus would contrib­ ute on an average of five dollars! Just pause for a moment and look back over your own normal school and college days. Can you not re­ call times when even a small loan would have helped you tremendous­ ly? Can you not recall times when some of your friends were in need of a little money to pay their fees and buy books, or even food, in order ' that they might stay in school a little longer? Yes, these things happened sixty years ago and are happening today in youth’s struggle for an edu­ cation. Then, let us get together and put the DIAMOND JUBILEE LOAN FUND across in a way of which we will be proud. Right now let each and every one of us do our part and mail our remittance, no mat­ ter how large or how small, to the office of the Alumni Secretary, Box 363, Edinboro, Pa. Contributions of one, two, five, ten, twenty-five, or even fifty dollars will create a use­ ful fund of which we can well be proud. Remittances should be made payable to “Treasurer, Diamond Jubilee Fund.” This fund will be administered by the College Presi- We need a class in football for the girls of this college. Their actions at the games and after them certain­ ly show lack of any knowledge con­ cerning football. No one blames the fellows for be­ ing disgusted when they come home from a game, half of them injured physically and the other half, probably, mentally, only to have some I cherubic person who doesn’t know a I dent, or other designated preson, first down from a quarter, spend the ;through a board of trustees and an dinner hour telling how awful she | accounting and auditing will be made thinks our football team 1 is, how aj- regUiar intervals. much better her highi school team I Let’s do our part right NOW and was, and what ever happened at that through the help of each and every game anyway. Its the same way at one of us create a lasting memorial the games, the girls stand behind the symbolical of our faith in our Alma bench yelling “Take horn out,” and Mater, the glories of her past and some five seconds later “Put him in ’ the possibilities of her future. until the fellows on the bench could RUSSELL D. McCOMMONS cheerfully throttle every one of them. Executive Secretary, General Let’s do something about this, be­ Alumni Association. cause it really isn’t such a dire calam­ ity to lose a game. If you don’t FOOTBALL TERMS EXPLAINED know anything about football, don't . Goal—fuel used in winter time. broadcast the fact; if you do know Halfback—change from one dollar something about it pick out the smart for price of admission. plays and dwell on them—it might Punt—lowest form of wit. help. Kick—protest raised by student. Coach—baby’s perambulator. Block—child’s toy. ’Twas in a restaurant they met— Formation—telephone operator. Young Romeo and Juliet. All freshmen memorizing these But when they left, they left a debt, definitions within a week are entitled For Rome-o-d what Juliet.—Munsonto a free yard of scrimmage—High ian, Muncie, Ind. School News, Doylestown, Pa. JT’’S JT S a rakish affair, this smart Alpian hat that’s being worn by style-conscious college men. Narrow brims and tapering crowns; roughish, pliable felts; colorful shades . . . Mountain-Blue and Swiss-Brown . . . and just . . . $ 350 P. A. MEYER & SONS 817-819 STATE ST., ERIE, PA. ANNUAL HOMECOMING PROGRAM FRIDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 8 7:00—Movies, College Auditorium—“Farmer Takes a Wife” 7:30—Alumni Girls Basketball Game—Gymnasium 9:15—Alumni Men’s Smoker—Gymnasium Cards for the Ladies—Haven Hall SATURDAY FORENOON, NOVEMBER 9 9:00—Registration of Alumni and Visitors—Maven Hall 10:00—Meeting of Alumni Executive Committee—Loveland Hall Library J 10:30—Girls Field Hockey—Alumni Golf Tournament for those desiring to participate (Address Mr. A. i L Cochran, Box 363, Edinboro) 12:00—Luncheon, College Dining Hall. Forty cents SATURDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 9 1:30—Alumni Business Meeting—College Auditorium 2:30—Football—College Varsity vs. Slippery Rock. cents 6:00—Alumni Homecoming Dinner—College Dining Hall. Price seventy- 1 five cents. Kindly make reservations by November 6 SATURDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 9 8:15—Faculty Play—“Have You Anything to Declare”—College Auditorium. Admission twenty-five cents. (Proceeds for Alumni General ■ Fund) 9:00—Dancing—College Dining Hall. Admission free to alumni whose dues are paid, others fifty cents. iiihhiiiihiiiiiihhihihiiihh........... .... . ................................ .... ........................................ .uhu,.........ntT SUBSCRIPTION BLANK Name has deposited $. for 1931-’36 yearbook. (Refer to front page for details.) »n«m i nn i mm ii mi i ii m mm ii i iiiniHiiiiHiiimHiutiinuimiiiniiiiuiHiiiiiiiiuuuimu,!,umniHii* BAKER’S II I ? t t X 1850- 1935 We extend a cordial invitation to all Edinboro men to come in and see the new I Fall and Winter Styles in Men’s Clothing, Furnishings and Shoes ISAAC BAKER & SON sPTh II Page Three THE SPECTATOR Alumni Continue Their Education !■ |: i ■ Realizing that graduation is the beginning and not the end of educa­ tion many of our alumni have con­ tinued their studies. Frank Hand received his Masters degree from Columbia this summer. Nelson Hale, ’31, although finding that two cannot live as cheaply as one and helping the situation by selling the World Book during his vacations, has found time to earn a Masters degree from Duke. Lawrence McVitty, ’33, has received his Masters from Pitt. Arthur Christie, ’31, was president dent of the New England group at Columbia this summer and Laberta Mahoney, ’35, and Edna McGorry, ’33, were also in attendance there. George Giesler, ’32,, and Oscar Palmquist, ’34, motored to Duke and at­ tended the summer session. Winifred Mong, ’27, was at the English Colony at Bread Loaf, Vermont, meeting many interesting writers and enjoy­ ing New England scenery and cli­ mate. The following alumni were at Ed­ inboro for the summer session get­ ting the necessary credits to make their certificates permanent: Henry Anderson, ’32, also helped Coach Harrison with his summer camp, Claudia Bowman, ’31, Eleanor Beer­ bower ’32, Henry Benninghoff ’31, Juniata Cook ’34, Warren Dingle ’32, Viola Friskhorn, Florence Gourley, Harriet Hogan, Verna Huff, Marian Pulling, Jean Sutherland, Marlyn • Woodburn, George Yochim. Many of our two-year graduates were back working towards degrees. Among those on campus this summer were Ethel Babe, Sidney Bier, Anna Black, Lucille Blakeslee, Beatrice Brown, Alice Chambers, Kathryn Chambers, Margaret Crowell, Esther Evans, Priscilla Guckes, Gwen Horsman, Mary Louise Johnson, Ruth Kearney, Saloma Kocher, Winifred McCarthy, Nelle Pattan, Helen Simpk’ns, Louise Snyder, Margaret Snyder, Leon St.John, Archie Sundback. sister of Lois Welsh, ’32; Irene, sister of Gazella Palfi; Wayne, brother of Leslie and Lou Ellen Fobes. Erie County Hires Half of Edinboro’s Beginning Teachers Of the class of ’35, thirty-four have positions in Erie and Erie coun­ ty. Peggy Fisher, teaching at Jones ERIE, PENNA. School, Erie, thinks the college should offer a course in the pronunciation of foreign names. Garnett Wright and If unable to shop in person use our Esther Davies are working with MAIL ORDER SERVICE Charles Gilbert, ’32, at Cranesville. Millcreek Township claims three with Frances Davenport in primary work at Lakewood, Nona Warnei* at Tracy replacing Mary Schaper, ’32, recent­ Wolcott to Rexford, George Merges a valuable primary teacher through ly married, and Marybelle Pollock at to Aliquippa, Francis Rogers to Mor­ the death of Anna Masello, ’26. West Millcreek. Wilma Dieter, Hilda gantown, West Virginia, and Helen Douville and Helen Carnahan are in Smart to Ford City. North East Borough and Township. Many of our alumni have moved McKean Township tops the list to bette rpositions. Carl Beck is now with five new teachers. They are at Steelton. Catherine O’Keefe has Winifred Beddows, Mary Foglebach, left North East to become a member Harold Peffer, Margaret Rick, and of the Erie Academy faculty. Attractive school teachers, alumni Jean. Rick. The new teachers of Romayne Billings has a new position of Edinboro, disprove the fact that Washington Township carried off the at Westminster. William Zahniser few school ma’ams get married. Our honors at the Edinboro Fair. Elsie is teaching at Ludlow. Anyone in­ most recent announcement has been Harrison easily rated first, with Vir­ terested in life insurance can find an that of Vada Cutshall to Clarence ginia LeSeur second, and Clarence eager salesman in David Yomtob. Dailey. Gladys Hartel, ’32, was (Corky) McLallen received much well Robert Gibson is doing commercial married to Lieut. Sheldon Brown at deserved praise for his health project. art work in Pittsburgh, Gertrude Glendale, California, in the Wee Kirk Mildred Duran and Winifred Joslin Forness has accepted a position in o’ the Heather, a reconstruction of are teaching in Elk Creek Township, Buffalo. Bill Bannister has recently Annie Laurie’s own original church Norman Gross and Marian McDon­ been elected to the Harborcreek in Scotland. Isabel Falconer ’30 and ald in Harborcreek, while Marjorie faculty and Jeanette Seabrooke is at Sherman Dance were married last Zortman and Agnes Lilley are in Albion. Delta Phi Delta recently year. Shirley Simpson and Gordon Amity Township. The following made Genevieve Jeffords a member Emery were married at Easter time. townships boast of but one our our of its organization. She is Are Beatrice Babbitt ’27 is now Mrs. new teachers: Mary Rhodes in Green Demonstration Teacher in Frick Richard J. Welsh of Erie, Pa. Her Township, Edna Sexton in Union, Training School, Pittsburgh. three very attractive stepchildren are Helen Wickwire in Conneaut, Mary Friends of Gilbert Osterberg will fortunate and happy to have her for Louise Johnson in Concord, Ruby be pleased to know that he is now in their new mother. Mr. and Mrs. Busch in Wayne. Helen Cunningham Florida, much improved in health. Peter Kval (Josephine Bernard ’27) holds forth in the seventh and eighth Anyone traveling through New are now living at 102 German Street, grades of Spring Creek. Wilmington in the summer will be Erie, Pa. Crawford County received twenty welcomed and well fed at a roadside We have many reports of other of our new teachers. Laberta Ma­ restaurant operated in the Beerbower people being married but no one honey is in Beaver Center, Maxine home by Merrill Young, ’31. seems to know to whom." We would Mattern, Edna Sternberg, Harriet Word has been received of the be glad to have the name of the lucky Leberman, and Jane Monteleone in death of William Norris, ’26, in the man and Miss Chapman would appre­ West Mead Township, Mary Blanch­ Philippine Islands, where he had been ciate having your new name and new ard and Lila Ingraham in Blooming . teaching. Edison School, Erie, lost address for the alumni files. Valley, Ernestine Brown in Troy I Township, Marjorie Brown in Union | Township, Marybelle Chapman in ' Many younger brothers and sisters Springboro, Marjorie Decker in TRASK, PRESCOTT & RICHARDSON COMPANY of our alumni are in the present Hartstown, Della Foye in East FairFreshman class. The name Huff has field Township, Marguerite Holtz in been on the class rolls for some time, Steuben Township, Magdalene Stagl with Esther now a minister’s wi/e, in Summerhill Township, Lucile Trask, Prescott & Richardson Co. are not just selling graduating in 1927, Bill, also a mar­ Blakeslee in Sparta Consolidated merchandise, they are offering you joy, happiness and con­ ried man, graduating in 1934, Verna school, Beatrice Brown in Steuben tentment that is your right when you invest your money. teaching art in the eastern part of Township, Marjorie Bole in Hayfield the state a member of the class of Township, Mary Marsh in East Fal­ We sell nothing but 1932, Lydia, teaching in Erie, also of lowfield Consilodated school, Ralph 1934 and with Olive now enrolled as Scrafford in Cussewago, Carl Peter T FIRST QUALITY MERCHANDISE a freshman. Of the Ssabrooke fam­ son in Espyville. ily we have Wilma, a sister of Jean­ New teachers going to greater ■ Mail and Phone Orders Filled ette, ’34, and Virginia, ’26. The distances are Rouene Graham to Zahniser name is being continued Venango County, Ralph Hazen to with Joe the last but upholding the Monroe County, Harriet Marrison to family heights. Other brothers and Ambridge, Sybil Odell to Lower Bur­ sisters are Robert, brother of Law­ rell Township, Pittsburgh district, DEPARTMENT STORE ERIE, PA. rence Behan, ’35; Ruth, sister of Sam Sullivan to Aliquippa, Gladys X Elizabeth Ramsey, ’32; Marjorie, Witmer to North Warren, Alberta ••• BOSTON STORE School Teachers Do Get Married Brothers and Sisters ? I PHILOSOPHY i ? ? i I I I I ? Trask, Prescott & Richardson Company Page Four RAIDERS BOW (Continued from Page One) also booted the extra point from placement. The local warriors held the boys from the hard coal district even throughout the remainder of the first half and the score at intermission read: Mansfield 7, Edinboro 0. In the third quarter, McDonald ran over his own right tackle, cut back to left and raced twenty yards for Borden the second Mansfield score added the- point. Score: Mansfield 14, Edinboro 0. The final period saw the invaders turn on another scoring drive that terminated in a score si < minutes previous to the final gun. Combs, substitute back, scored on a short play. Borden failed in his attempt for the point. In the final six minutes, the Raid­ ers started a drive which threatened to carry the ball across the Maroon goal. The final play of the game, a heroic effort to save a shutout, sent Billings back in punt formation. He faded to rifle the final salute, but as he looked for a receiver, two of the Mansfield forwards crashed through. He broke into a run for the left side­ lines, leaped into the air and flipped a pass into the arms of Langer, who likewise was in the air for the catch. The gun barked, robbing the Crimson of a first down on Mansfield’s ten yard stripe and ending the game. The local gridders, who played a decidedly improved game, were dealt severe blows in the injuries to Davies and Chimenti, Davies suffering a very painful broken collar bone and Chimenti receiving an injured ankle, “Red ’ Moorehead also left the game due to aggravation of an injury re­ ceived in the California game. Line-ups: Mansfield 20 Edinboro 0 Chimenti Terry L. E. Witalis Brown L. T. Mischler Vvakus L. G .... C Denison Wilhelm .. .R. G VanSlyke Hydes (c) .R. T Hastie Kaegle .... .R. E Shaffer Lambert .. ... Q Davies McDonald L. H Billings Feldman . Axtell R. H Intrieri Borden F Langer Mansfield 7 0 7 6—20 Touchdowns—McDonald, Borden, Combs. Extra points: Borden (2) placement. First downs: Mansfield 17, Edinboro 5. Substitutions—Edinboro: Moore­ head le, Scarpetti le, Coyle c, Kirsch­ ner rg, Zahorchak rg, Bennardo rg, Case rt, Demiankow g, Wilkins lh, Burke lh, Crunick fb. Referee, Abele; Umpire, Martin; linesman, Fitting. X t A. L. L. COCHRAN COCHRAN EDINBORO, PA. PA, •=• X ❖ X i ....................I Slippery Rock Slips other those from the South appeared a wee bit longer when they set out for their home campus. That feature is an especially interesting one in ,view the fa,ct that .opportunities were afforded the green shirts to demonstrate any of their far sung ability in the vicinity of their own goal. The immediate move for our vic­ tory was furnished by a pass from “Howy” Rose to “Nutts” Arrowsmith over the heads of our unsuspecting opponents. So quickly and accurate­ ly was it made and executed that it ranks as a piece of unparalleled tech­ nique. More remote but ever as paramount causes for our victory were Coach Harrison’s reorganiza­ tion during the week preceding the game and the splendid support, fight­ ing persistence and enthusiasm dur­ ing the game as displayed by every member of the team. The 6-0 score will probably remain on record longer than pigskins will be used to kick nmnnH. it will ever remain in the 1I around, memories of those who witnessed the' event and who are justly proud of I every player. Hail to the Edinboro eleven who for the first time ever won a game from Slippery Rock! —The Clan, 1932. Before a crowd of three hundred 1 alumni, students and visitors who lin-I ed both sides of the gridiron to wit­ i ness the event, Captain Art Arrow­ , smith piloted the Edinboro eleven SATURDAY CLASSES through the most spectacular and de­ (Continued from Page One) cisive intercollegiate battle in the lows: American Literature, taught by annals of Edinboro athletics. Sl*pMr. LaBounty at Technical High pery Rock fell—and how! Having School in Erie; Unit Studies in Geo­ suffered repeated defeats at the hands graphy, taught by Miss Ketcham at of lesser foes earlier in the season, the same school; Recurring Problems. this year’s Homecoming game was a in Civilization, taught by Dr. Craw­ victory over which we cannot be too ford at Meadville; Character Educa­ generous in our praise for those fel­ tion, Mr. Wheatley at Meadville; lows who smiled at four slaps on one Diagnostic and Remedial Teachin?, cheek before turning the other to Dr. VanHouten at Stoneboro; Teach­ show of what they are actually made. 1 ing of English in the Elementary A touchdown scored in the second Schools, Mr. Mallory at Franklin. quarter through the medium of a These classes make up one of the very clever pass flashed Slippery services which our school offers to Rock’s doom. Checking their op­ its former students and also to other ponents on every move from the first teachers in its service area. kick-off to the last whistle, Coach Harrison’s men handled the erstwhile ■ reputable Rockers what was perhaps the most surprising defeat in their — history. The smashing blow was de­ Every educational institution depends to a large extent upon its loyal livered on the merits of sheer tech­ nique and unprecedented physical alumni to perpetuate its existence and to strengthen and to spread its in* fluence. In these days of keen competition for students of fine ability and stamina. We choose to term it a spectacular future promise as teachers, the college will be glad to have its loyal alumni game in that Slippery Rock’s reputa­ suggest the names of students for the Freshman classes. Will you, there* tion for having exceptional linemen fore, use the following form for your suggestions: and aggressive plungers suffered an To the Registrar: I desire to suggest the following persons for the Freshman class: amusing embarrasment. Time after time bulks of red shot through the Midyear, 1936 Name green wall of defense, the latter color Address seemingly appropriate for the un­ seasoned judgment and resistance displayed. Our sidelines and bleach­ ers were provoked to laughter when our opponents’ urge to “show Edin­ boro what it means to be hit” prov­ Fall, 1936 ed to be nothing but a boomerang. Let us claim that it was a decisive battle on the grounds that Slippery Rock reaped defeat for teh first time this season. While no faces on either Suggested by Class. team were observed to assume flat­ tened contours, for some reason or Address ABOUT PROSPECTIVE STUDENTS