B. of Abyssinia, because of rough terrain. She will probably reach her destination unless diplomatic negotiations and agreements stop her. "Perhaps Italy 's recent proposal that the Ethiopians be given control of the highlands about Addis Ababa, and that Italy be given mandatorial power over the peripheral This year the Library has placed on its reading shelves in the magazine room the "Student Leader " which 1b the successor to "Vitalized School Journalism." The "Student Leader " has for its purpose to serve the National Association of Student Government OfTicerB, and the Student Graphic Arts Society, all of which organization s are sponsored by the Journal of National Education Association. lands of the country, may be indicative of what the outcome of the war will be. "Mussolini must have something to show the Italian people and retain his prestige and leadership," r" -r^^=^ ¦— . ' ¦- — '— " ' Welcome From Student Body ^ It has been the sincere effort and desire of the entire college community to design a Homecoming program in such a manner that everyone may have a fine time. With this information in mind I should like t o welcom e, in behalf of the student body, all alum ni , paren ts, and friends , and I sincerely hope that all of you will make complete use of the facilities of the College and leave, wishing, as we do , that you could remain with us always. Very sincerely yours, William L. Morgan President, C. G. A. Spend Week-End At Spring Brook Cottage Y. W. C. A. Cabinet members of Bloomsburg state Teachers College spent the week-end of October 5, at a cottage near Spring Brook Park, as the guests of Miss Verna Jones. The purpose of t he retrea t was t o plan the calendar of events for the association during the school trem 1935-36. Those enjoying the weekend were: Mildred Merrix, Thelma Moody, Gladys Brennan , Kathryn Van Auker, Verna Jones, Helen Weaver, Marie Faust, Amanda Babb, Florence Snook , Violet Brown and M iss Pearl L. Mason, sponsor of the Y. W. C. A. FULL ISSUE OF ALUMNI QUARTERLY PUBLISHED Alumni of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College have just received their October edition of the College alumni Magazine, the Alumni Quarterly, a periodical which is published four times each year and which gives inform ation concerning current and past happenings at the College and among graduates. Professor H oward Fenst em aker, of the College faculty, and m em bers of the class of 1912, edi t s the popular alumni magazine. Mrs. F. H. Jenkins, graduate if the class of 1875, acts as business manager. Mrs. Jenkins resides in Bloomsburg. The October edition, in addition to its alumni news, contains news of interest about the College, including items of interest about the summer session. Half of the magazine contains alumni notes. PROFESSOR 0. S. HARTUNE TELLS OF TRIP TO YELLOWSTONE PARK TEN MEM BERS MAROON AND GOLD STAFF ORGAN IZE PRESS CLUB: OFFICERS ELECT ED Student Council , at its meeting, October 21, approved the organization of a Press Club as set up by a group of ten members of the Maroon and Gold Staff who during the past few years have qualified fo r cha rt er membership in such a club. The organization has drawn up a constitution and has already begun its activity in preparation for what is expected to be a busy year. Qualification for membership will be based upon a point system now being worked out and will be confined en tirely to members of the staff of the Maroon and Gold , t houg h poin t s t oward s membership will be granted for service on the staffs of the Obiter and the Handbook. Instruction and motivation in journalism with an end in view of bettering the ' standards of journalism at ;Bloomsburg is listed as one of the several purposes and objec ts of the Press Club. Included in the plans of the club is initiating of a acholastic newspaper con t est for schools in the Bloomsburg service area. Officers for the year, elected at the first meeting, Oct ober 18, were : H. P. Bevilacqua, president; Ruth Smeth'ers, vice-president; Josephine Magee, secretary ; and Amanda Walsh, treasurer. M embers, ot her t han officers , are : Ernest Lau , senior ; Charles M ichael , senior; Daniel Jones, senior; Stasia Zola , junior; Jay P ursel , junior; and Bernard Young, senior. MUSICAL UNITS FURTHER PLANS Further plans for the year have been made by the newly-organized A Cappella Choir of thirty-two selected voices. Miss Harriet Moore, director and organizer of the group, has established definite times for rehearsal , and work has already begun in preparation for scheduled programs. Old motets, English Madrigals, folk songs , sac red mu sic of all pe r iods, and choral works of the modern composers are considered for study. The Mixed Chorus of 114 voices, assisted by the A Cappella Choir, is at the present time rehearsing a proDr. L. K. Ade Appointed State of Christmas' imusic to be preSuperintends Public Instruction gram sented in chapel, Friday, December Bloomsburg students should ac- 20. quaint themselves with the name of Dr. Lester K. Ade, former president of State Teachers College at New Haven , Connecticut , who succeeds Mr. and Mrs. Ray Tumor, of SharDr. James Rule as the new Superintendent of Public Instruction of Penn- on, 'Pennsylvania , delighted the student body with a musical program in sylvania. Dr. Ade is a native of Pennsyl- chapel, Friday, October 25. Both excellent singers, Mr. and vania , born at Trout Run , Lycoming Mrs. Turner sang many fine selecCounty. He was educated in a tions, among which was the extremeschool, in Muncy Norcountry rural mal School, commercial college at ly difficult "Glory Road." So difficult Williamsport, ana micknell univer- is the song that John Horrick , radio sity. He received graduate degreeB singer who vssited Bloomsburg last from New York University and Yale. year, never attompted it. He expluinThe degree of Doctor of Philosophy ed that tho range nooiletl for the Bong was awarded him by the former Is difficult to find. Mr. and Mrs. Tiu'nor were tho school in 1026. guests of Profoaaor Edward Roams. Dr. Ade served in Sibora with the Expeditionary Forces as Captain of began in the elomontavy and secondthe 27th infantry during the World ary schools at WUHamsport. Ho serWar. He is a member of the Sigma ved successively as suporvlslnff prinAlpha Epsilon , Phi Kappa Dolta , cipal of Muncy Normal School, and and Kappa Delta Phi fraternities. dean of State Teachers College at Superintendent Ado's experience Wost Chester. STUDENTS ENJOY PROGRAM OF MR. AND MRS. TURNER As one recalls the various features, the incidents, the pleasures, the discomforts, and embarrassments of a t our like the su bject of this report ed conversation ; looks at it from different angles; reflect on these in different moods, he is to wind likely up HHH||H| ^H| ^^^^^^^^^ | witfy t h ;e advice ^H^^^^^^H for those who get and do ^^P^^^^^^H "Go thou students likewise"—espec^^¦^^^^^^ 1 ^^^|flfl^^H ^^H^^^^^^H ^^HH^^^^H ^^^Kjj^^^^B ^^^H^^^^H ially if you are a teacher. Many artists, writers of Action and poetry, special of many subjects , college professors, and steadily increasing numbers of the laity from all walks of life , don 't need the advice. They "just naturally " do it. You likely will when you get at it and see that it is the vogue, the thing to do, and has large values for the individual and for the country. The record visits to the Yellowstone alone for one season were made this summer—300,000 people fro m all parts of this country, including the Philippines, Hawaii, Alaska, Canada, South America and many European countries. Your turn is coming. Go by automobile! The railroad trains are nice, the nicest ever— streamlined and air-conditioned. But this is for your old age, when you want to be less strenuous and need not consider economy so carefully, when you can compare the impressions you now get by auto travel, with those you get in the comfort such train-travel affords, after the changes that you helped bring about. Living in this north-eastern corner of Pennsylvania and going from here on such a tour you will have an opportunity to cross almost the whole length of our great state. Select one of the many scenic routes. This is not hard because practically all are scenic , in Pennsylvania. Then let it be one you have not traveled before. Pennsylvania is apt to be bigger, finer, greater, than you now know. The impressions you get will serve as a fine background for what wou will see in the mighty West, and you will be likely to come back to Pennsylvania prouder of it than ever before. A nice pick of highways will be part of the great Route 11, the stretch of it along here and on to Lake Ontari o, known as the Sullivan Trail ; along the North Branch of the Susquehanna to Northumberland , across the West Branch to Shamokin; opposite Sunbury, at the beautiful junct ure of the two branches, leaving the Sullivan Trail for the Susquehanna Trail to Lewisburg. This choice will give you a generous por^^^^ ¦^^^^^ CONTINUED OK PAGE 3 BIO LOGY DEPT. UNDERGO ES CLEANING BY DR. KUST ER As a part of his plan of adapting the facilities of the Biology Department to his particular methods of teaching, Dr. Kimber Kuster , recently named the successor to Professor D. S. Hartline, has called foi* a general housecleaning in the laboratories and workrooms of the department. Assistants working under the new student-aid plan have been buBily engaged Jn reorganizing tho material kept on supply in the dark room as well as that to bo found in tho biology and zoology laboratories. Some work has also been done in tho museum room , malting it more useful as n place for study of collected specimens. Kr»bUJ.UC*j r) VblU UCA \J f it /UU ALPHA PSI OMEGA WILL PRMENMA. ADD NEW BOOKS OF ripJE TELLS S. PROFESSOR D. | ENTERTAIN ALUMNI TONIGHT 1 COMMITTEE NAMED TO COLLEGE LIBRARY YELLOWSTONE PARK TRIP Many New Books Added To The Shelves By Libarian During Past Few Months The following1 new books have been added t o the College lib r ary d u ring the past few months: Adams, March of Democracy, 2 vol.; Allen, American Prosody; Blankenship, American Literature; BohnEly, Great Change ; Canby, Study of the Short Story; Cartwright, Ten Years of Adult Education ; CohenCoryell, Educating Superior Students; Cole, Intelligent Man 's Review of Europe; Cole, What Everybody Wants to know About Money ; CoxiLangfitt, High School Administratration and Supervision ; De La Roche, You ng R en ny; Douglas, Green Light; Douglas, Magnificent Obsession. Fleg, Biography of Jesus; Forest, School for the Child From Two to Eight ; Prank , Vagabond in Sovietland ; Gulick, Toward Understanding Japan; Halline, American Plays; Hartwick, Foreground of American Fiction; Hatcher, Creating the Modern American Novel; Hocking, Spirit of Worid Politics ; Johnson-Scott, Anthology of Children 's Li terature; Johnston, Confucianism and Modern China. Jones-Leisy, Major American Writers; Kaufmann-Hansl, Artist s in Music of Today; King, Tempest over Mex ico; Koffko, Principles of Gestalt Psychology; Lewin, Dynamic Theory of Personality; Lord, Plan for Self Management; Mason, Great Design; Transi t ional Public quehanna Trail, along the West Branch , with impressions of the great North Branch acquired by residence ¦'.—their broad valleys and ancient canyons, towering cliffs, ex pansions ¦and contractions of the streams,their islands and shoals, the people and I their industries, t owns, and farms. What grand similarities '. What entrancing differences! Do you get interested in the names of these places as you roll along and see and hear and have time to "think on these things?" Shikelemy Cliff is honored by the name of this great and good Indian chief; it proudly wears and glorifies the great name. And Nature , as if playfully, anticipated Gutzon Borglum by carving the benign face in silhouette on the magnificent wall. Did the great artist get his inspiration here ? Catawissa Narrows is as grand as its name—lives up to it! Montour An ticline, gracefully rising from the valley floor along the North Branch at Berwick to the dignity si a mountain as it approaches Ssikelcmy Cliff , is cut across by the West Branch to make a cliff that is as graciously haughty as the famous Madame Montour, whose name it bears. Tilsbury Knob , standing in superb granduer at the head of the ancient, fossil canyon of the North Branch, extending from Nanticoke to Shickshinny with walls wirn down to gentle beauty, wears proudly the name of its earlier, humble own er. And likewise Campbell's Ledge, above Pittston. But why Sullivan Trail ? A great trail with the name of a great doer, probably worthy of it because itself now greatly doing by carrying immense traffic, but one may wish that better selection had been made. A 4* ^^ ^a ^y M A f t gieatei , mule vi^% 4^ «¦a m 4 *•( j % ^» v* 4* aigiiij.u;&uiu 4*a 4 ria j iiatui -u; cjj* i % ,n v ^^4t1 A ^% w% isode might have suggested some euphonious name like "Wyovia " or its translation, "Wyoway." Isn't "Sullivan " a bit over-done ? Is there such poverty of material for nomenclature that we must constantly repeat ? Compare such things as well as physical features seen as you pass. It gives you happy, useful thinking that ministers to the spiritual as the other does to the physical. You will be too busy to get sleepy as did Mark Twain. You will not worry, farther on, about "endless corn and wheat fields" and the montonous prairies. Vast as the boundless horizons is the material, small and great, for your mental activity on such a tour. But you are rolling on. Leaving the Susquehanna Trail at Lewlsburg and going on to Mifflinburg in the Buffalo Valley, through superb mountain country to State College, to the FEATHERS FLYING, RESULT OF WINS While the team "brings home the bacon" spectators are feathering their hats with the now maroon and gold feathers being sold on the campus by the Girl s' B Club. For every game won by the Huskies a spectator is entitled to purchase and wear one of these feathers so that, if the team wins all remaining games on the schedule, students and other fans may look as much like Indians as they please. The idea of wearing a feather for every game won comes to Bloomsburg from University of Pittsburgh and other large colleges and universities. edge of Bald Eagle Valley, on t o the great Route 322 to Clarion and ;Franklin and Mercer and to Sharon on the Pennsylvania-Ohio state line, you are traveling through wonderfully beautiful country all the way. Before getting to this artificial boundary, you pass over the edge of the great Susquehanna Basin to get into the greater Mississippi Basin, somewhere between Clearfield and Dubois, probably by the villages of Rockton and Mome Camp, on the brink. Through the rest of (Pennsylvania you are in the Mississippi Valley. You have many routes to choose from for crossing Ohio,Jhidiana , Illinois and Iowa. What wonderful cities you may go through if you like crowds and traffic. What wonderful farm lands, resplendent in prosperity! What a garden this ancient inland sea 'bottom has come to be! Choosing either rural or city routes, you are hurrying to the West through a const ant, magnificent show. How thrilling to cross the Great Father of Waters! Nice school memories surge to the foreground of thought. What will Iowa do with all this corn ? The horizon is all one huge mass of cornstalks. And the people are as big, prosperous looking as their cornstalks. There is no end to the cornfields. There is no "depression!" But this amazing gasoline motor, close to doing the impossible, has rolled our cage to something like an end. Now there is -wheat and corn. Now the Wheat seems as endless as the corn did. "Here you are at Sioux Falls, South Dakota. Roll on, say a hundred miles or so farther—no corn. The wheat becomes less and less frequent: thinner, sm aller , hardly worth while. None! Now you know that corn and wheat fields are n ot en dless as you thought in Iowa. Here is an end ! This is all sagebush. You are now in the West, the high zone of the great western plains—edging up to the mountains you will come to if you keep going. Nothing but sagebrush ! How vast and lonely! Nothing to suggest an end to it except the horizon, 3etting the limit of your vision where the blazing sky rests on it and moves forward with you. But there is the black-topped highway, a narrow ribbon on which you roll. Will you ever come to the end of it in the horizon line ahead ? Hours and hours—miles and miles of it, with travel at 50-55 miles an hour in your wonderful little machine, apparently no living thing. Stop a moment and step out. There are grass-hoppers a-plenty ; and this fuzzy mess that iyou have been seeing on the road top—the crushed carcasses oi jack -rabbits. You have seen many. A count of those you pass as you speed on—one hundred in a thirty minute count. Those fleet things, playing at night on the nice smooth surface and startled by sudden appearance of dazzling lights rushing towards them with great noise and speed, to which they are unaccustomed, become befuddled and are crushed! Well , if they do not learn It soon, their will be no occasion for the farmers to organize groat rabbit drives, killing off vast numbers, to prevent loss ol their crops. The automobiles of the tourists will do it. Hawks and buzzards of various sizes are frequently seen flying) circling, sailing or hovering over these areas. Grasshoppers, rabbits, and smaller rodents are their food. After all, these areas are not lifeless. But what's this? What have we Alpha Psi Omega, national dramatic fraternity, will welcome its past ¦members at a banquet at the Elk's ;Home tonight. This is an annual event, and a large number of guests are expected. Bernard Young, president of the fraternity, will welcome the graduates with a short talk , and will introdu ce the past president s, each of whom will make a short sppech. • The banquet is scheduled for six o'clock , and at the conclusion the guests will attend the Homecoming dance in a body. come upon now ? The looks and expressions of the' party are interesting. The Bad Lands! Utter ruin of lands and rock not yet formed. Almost absolute desolation. When you have spent some days under the sun-light which blaz es over them, and slept in and on them, there will be fi nds that show tha t these, too, are lands caming-bo-be fit for a civilization. And on to Rapid City, situ ated on the eastern border of the Black Hills, on the edge of the Bad Lands, a combination of prairie and mountains. As R ome was built on seven hills, so Rapid City lies at the apex of Beven valleys. It boasts a very fine School of Mines Museum which offers to the public an in teresting and valuable collection of minerals and prehistoric fossils. The city has many other items of in t eres t, bu t let us con tin u e ou t to Cust er Park , named for the great man who led the battles at this point against the Indians. This park, located in the Black Hills, is as scenic and strikingly beautiful a place as you will encounter. Rapid Canyon, the petrified forest, Ice-box Canyon, Jewel Cave, and Sylvan Lake, seen from travel on a marvelous highway cut through the hills, are all absorbingly interesting. H owever, there is one feature of Cu st er Park which towers out and above all others. It is the Rushmore Memorial, where^ the- artist of colossal sculpture, Sutzon Borglum, is carving the faces of the four outstanding men, corresponding to the four outstanding periods in the history of America. A few years ago he attempted such a work in the Stone Mountains of IN VIOLIN RECITA L William Mor gan, Pres ident , Announces New List Of Student Activities Officers . President of the Community Government Association, William Morgan , has announced the complete list of committ ee chairmen as follows: Thomas Reagan, customs; Elaine Saltz er , Mary Grosek, social; Robert Savage, chairman, and Mary Lorah , co-chairman, pep committee; Jay Troxell, chairman, and Edith Justin, co-chairman, chapel committee; Lamar Blass, chairman, and Julia Schlegel , co-chairman, studen t welfare committee; William Tannery, chairman , and Margaret Potter, co-chairman , hospitality committee; Harold Border ,chai rman , and E leanor M orris, co-chairman, relation to other colleges committee; Rachel Beck, chairman , and Wal t er Whitka, co-chairman , entertainment commi tt ee; Joan Phillips, dining room; Sam Cohen, fire dr ill ; William Turnow, chairand Jane M anhart, co-chairman, awards committee; Marjorie Beaver, handbook. Georgia, but due to some dispute he left the work, after smashing a part of it. He conceived the idea of doing this piece of work in the west, found his way out to Rapid City, presented his plan , decided upon Mount Rushmore for the site, and in the fall of 1926 he started work. Money for the project was donated by the people of th e Black Hills, by many wellknown men and women in ou r cou n , try, by the South Dakota legislature, and by the .federal government. In the history of the United States we have four distinct periods of history. First—the Revolution, the winning of our glorious freedom and liberty. The one man who stands out in the minds of all is Washington. The completed f eatu res of his face carved on Mount Rushmore are sixty feet from the top of his forehead to his ch i n, but it is not only the size that impresses one, it is the character of the granite face. How privileged are those mountains of the West o be gazed upon by the eyes of Washington! Second—the organization of the nation, the formation of the plans of government as suggested in the Declaration of Independence for the newly free colonies. And the leading spirit in this was Jefferson. Third— the . trial period, seeing in this was work in a growing nation, a growing CONTINUED ON PAGE 7 EXCHANGE NOTES Pierre Hcnrotte, Concert Master and Conductor of the Motropolltnn Opera Orchestra! Now York City, won a tremendous ovation from the students of Bloomsburg State Teachers College when he played a program of violin music at the chapel exercises last Monday morning, tfreshman customs have been revived at Bucknell after a lapse of several years. The Bucknellian prints an editorial deploring their return, saying they are absurd and not necessary to college life. Several of our faculty members, graduates of Bucknell, will be wondering what to do now. Bucknell's Homecoming is scheduled for today. Clarion Teachers College has six new tennis courts with an arrangement for flooding in the winter, providing ice skating for the students. Horseback riding is a sponsored activity at Lock Haven Teachers College. Archery.is also on the list of activities sponsored by the physical education department. WiPA projects approved for Shippensburg Teachers College , include ten new tennis courts, a sunken garden for the campus, and an open air theatre. Slippery Rock has also organized an A Capella Choir. Sacred music ... and Russian songs will bo featured, ifflaroon anfcr (goto Published Bl-Weckly During the College Term By Students of Bloomsburg State Tonchers College. EDITORIAL STAFF Editor In Chief II. P. Bevllncqun Managing Editor Jay Pursel News Editor Dnnlel Janes Sports Editor Bernard Young Assistant Sports Editors . .Gilbert Kline, Charles MIchnel. Feature Editor Ernest Lau MANAG ERIAL STAFF Office Manager Florlne Moore Typists Bcttjr Hnrter, Anna Jean Lnubnch, Betty Savage, Mdva Carl, Anna Ebort, Gladys Brenuan , Dorothy Wenner, Norninn Henry, Evelyn Freenafer. Circulation Sara Sliuinan, Samuel Cohen, Alex JtcKechnle. REPORTORI AL STAF F Until Smothers, Josephine Magee, Jane Lockard, Btnsla 7.%'n , Mnrjorle Braver , Amanda 'Walsh, Dorothy Selocky, Gladys Rl nard , Margaret Smith, Mlnet te Rosenblatt, Rebu Bransdorf , Robert Diclil , Itny McBridc, Leonora S]K>tts, Emily McCall , Marinn Taylor, Lola Fa rmer, 'Winifred Jluckle, Anna Ornor, Ruth Dugan, Dorothy Englehnrt, Minnie Bouilmnn, Miriam Utt, Lois Johnson , Mnry Zehner, Martha Wright, W. Frank BacliIngiT, Lconurd Mnnjone, Margaret Creasy, Margaret Potter, Sylvia Conwny, Esther Cross , Cornelia McGin nls. Rebecca AVhlte, HowCross, Rebecca White , Howard Lemon, Claire Miller, Hnrrict Kocher. ffegterpear Did you know that students and alumni were obliged to pay $1.50 a year for the Maroon and Gold ? *** Read these customs which were endured by the unhappy Juniors back in 1925: Juniors must wear black lisle hose. They must wear their hair straight, or if it is naturally curly, they must wear hairnets. They may not dance more than once with one young man in an evening at the after-dinner dances. Moreover, all Juniors, on Friday nights, for one month mu st eat with spoons and with the left hand. Attendance at dinner is compulsory. *** The slogan ten years ago was, "The news about you, of you , written for you." ?** All girls who had ukes, banjoes or similar instruments were requested to join the Uke Club of Waller Hall. *?» E ach dance at the af ter-dinner dances cost the boy a nickle. No charge accounts were run up. . *** Twenty-two commercial advertisements appeared in the October issue ten years ago. ALUMNI NOTES FACULTY SPONSOHS 1875—Mary M. Thomas, of NantiMiss Maude Campbell , Miss M. Murphy, Miss Pearl Mason, Mr. Willinm Forney, Samuel L. coke , who celebrated her 16th Alumni Wilson, chairman. Day this spring, visited Bloomsburg COMMENDABLE ACTION The attitude of Bloomsburg students during the County Teachers Institute held on the campus last weekend drew much favorable comment from those in attendance. Not only were they impressed by student act ions, but they were also equally impressed by the interest shown in the sessions of the Institute. It is est im at ed tha t an average of at least fifty or sixty students attended every session in the auditorium. Many attended even if only for a very short ti m e bet ween classes , and the unobtrusive manner in which they ent er ed and lef t t he session m eetings was commendable. The student body may well take pride in themselves and in their actions last week-end. The incident was a clear reflection of a developing professional spirit. ART OF COMING HOME friends recently. Miss Thomas was a classmate of H. O. Bakeless, la t e of the Bloomsburg faculty. 1893—Minnie Penman, who taught for many years in the Bloomsburg school system, is now teaching in the schools of Ard m ore, Pennsylvania. 1900—Mr. Corson Eves, son of Mrs. A. H. Eves, of South Range, Wisconsin , has been appointed agricultural agent of Douglas County, Wisconsin. 1909— Fred W. Diehl, Superintendent of Montour County Schools and member of the Board of Trustees of the College, received his Masters degree at Bucknell University during the past summer. 1900—John Bakeless, N ew York City, has recently been named a trustee of Williams College. He is the youngest member of the Board of Trustees. 1934—Fred Jaffin has been named head coach a t Canton High School. Betty Hake is teaching sixth, seventh and eighth grades in Northfield , New Jersey. 1933—Rostand Kelly has been appointed a member of the faculty of St. John's Military Academy, at Osj rfnning on the Hudson. He will teach history and biology. This editorial is directed to graduates who are comuag back f or COLLEGIATE BRIEFS Homecoming arrf sradeias •vrlo soine- i day expect to come iIl*gs tduyn. 1. A poor lesson is better than noRather , the sdeaD Bcttowwruag Daything. and the one dtsind art JHwauhurg-iM 2. Nothing is better than a good a perfect blend oi eoadtaiU and alumlesson , ni. It is the one day daring the year 3. Therefore, a poor lesson is better when graduates return mentally and than a good lesson. physically to their college days, the Lessons in Progress one day during the year when the The following was seen on the professional man and woman forget bulletin board of Carnegie Tech: their professions and become modern, "Cheerleader wanted ; must be neat, youthful collegians, boisterous, peppy, honest, and intelligent I" and appreciative of a busy program One week later: "Cheerleader outlined for the day. wanted ; no qualifications necessary." Moreover, Homecoming Day at Definitions Bloomsburg, is an open day for parWith apologies to "The Buff and ents as well as for alumni. All are Blue " of Gallaudet College we print welcome, provided they "wipe that the following definitions: frown from their faces, click their Bread—The four yoar college loaf. heels together, root for that team, Climate—Caused by emotion of the and got into the rhythm of the pro- earth around tho sun. gram. " Then make it that kind of Circle—A round straight line with day. a hole In tho middle Editor 's Notebook Edward J. O'Brien, editor of the annual Whither .Literature? book, "Best Short St orie s," remarks as a part of his introduction to the 1935 edition that the art of ¦writing may be entirely lost in time as a result of the tendency to jud ge literature according to its political or religious content. Not only does Mr. O'Brien lament this fact but he also fears that acceptance or rejection of the works of modern writers will become dependent upon the amount of politics and religion included. The warning issued by Mr. O'Brien in his introduction is one founded on a sound combination of fact and prophecy. No critic is better qualified to make such a statement than the editor of "Best Short Stories, 1935." Not only will his prophecy of the decline of the art of writing become a fact but modern civilization will lose its most cultu ral tool. With its loss will come the decline of the English language , because—as is evident even in present writing—corruption due to opinion of groups or factions results in neglect of style in favor of added concentration on subject matter. The ordinary reader is usually not conscious of the art or style in writing; he is, truly enough, interested more in what the writer has to say. On such grounds writers are justified in stressing political and religious content as an answer to the demands of ordinary readers. But does the common reader ever stop to consider that careful style and technique facilitate reading for content? And again, aren 't there readers other than the ordinary who should be considered ? That the slightest slip of . a finger may cau se*' a" seriou s error is seen in the following list of "before and after" items taken before and after the proofreaders read the copy which went into the Maroon and Gold from time to time. Many of these errors were the result of poor handwriting, while a very few were deliberate mistakes, Several Members of faculty Shot. Fi rst scenes , etc. should have been, Several Members Have Shot First Scenes, etc. Annual Sophomore Cotillion Will Be Hell Tonight should have read, Annual Sophomore Cotillion Will Be Held Tonight. Dramatic Club Now Has Enrollment of 7555 Students should have read, Dramatic Club Now Has Enrollment of 75 Students. McCutcheon Makes DeBume As Singer should have been, McCutcheon Makes Debute As Singer, '35 Track Card Lists Only 3 Dames should have read, '35 Track Card Lists Only Three Games, (shouldn't have been games anyway) Kutztown Coach Resigns; Was Three Seven Years should have been, Kutztown Coach Resigns; Wa3 There Seven Years. Shippensburg Rows In Last Half Rally should have read , Shippensburg Bows In Last Half Rally. Moleski, Circovics, Mericle Given Places On Fist Eloven should have been , Moleski , Sircovics, Miricle, Given Places On Firat Eloven. Thirsty Candidates Report should have been , Thirty CnndidatoB Report. Bo A Spurt (an editori al) should have been, Be A Sport. Training School Children And College Prepare For Hay Dny was corrected to read, Training School Children And College Preparo For May Day, Dancing From 11:00 to 11:45, in the head announcing the plans for the Junior Prom, sounded much better to the dancers of Bloomsburg when the Assorted Errors f KA MPUS KULM For Sale: One used Blu« Eagle, badly maimed . . . will need some repairs such as new leg, removed by Supreme Court . . . Good for onefourth mile - perhaps . . . At last the old NRA Eagle has passed out - of the upper left corner of the front page . . . This should be an obituary, not a For Sale notice . . . Drama in one act : - Time, the magazine room; Place, eighty degrees in the shade; Temperature , one evening last week. In comes a gentleman to do some reading. In two minutes he is asleep. His head is nodding. It's slipping down ! His nose will bump the table! No, he recovers and pulls himself up! Wait, he's going down again! ! Oh, this is awful. Won't someone save him ? His nose will surely be broken ! ! Down , down , do wn , now it's only eight inches from the hard wood of the table top !! ! Six inches to go, now it's only four !! Heavens, two to go! A miracle happens ! ! He recovers again! This man is a fighter, he is not going down withou t a terrifi c struggle. This time his eyes pop open for a fraction of a second, but Morpheus closes them again. Look out , he 's sinking fast now! This time he goes down in one magnificent swoop, and now he hesitates at the very edge of the table. Will he go over? No, thank goodness, he 's caught between Popular Science and the Ladies Home Journal . . Guess I'll have to wake him .. "Come on Mr. Reams* the magazine room is closing, it's 9:30 " Famous words—Shortess, in chemistry lab: "These drains don't work, we'll have to use our heads" . .. Tate, at foo tball prac t ice: "This is a football, you wahship it . . . I want two quahtahbacks and a gahd ovah heah" . . . Bill (iPoet Laureate) Savage, at pep meet in g: "We'll sing the collar song " . . . Leon Dixon, in the Bloom Hospital with a broken collarbone received in the M illersville game, in sist s he heard Tate talking to the boys over on the field . . . By the way, we haven't got this straight yet, was it "Austie" or the bus that upset the Austin car in Harri sburg ? . . . Did you ever notice that all the girls from school wave to the old gentleman who always sits by the window in the house part way down College Hill ? . . . Dr. Nelson is conducting classes in darning . . . He gave two girls a lot of football players' socks to darn, and they came back with the hole sewed together with cord . . . After he got over the spasm, Doc got out his trusty darner and needle, and proceeded to show them how it was .... hours were changed to, 8:00 to 11:45. Kappa Delta Pu was translated from the Chinese to read, Kappa Delta Pi, thank our lucky stars! Keller, "Simba 's" Mountain Lion, Is Sold might have caused a flunk in art had it not been changed to read, "Simba", Keller 's Mountain Lion , Is Sold. In that same story, in the sub-head, was the following serious error involving Professor George Keller: 120 Pound Arizona Lion which reared and trained Prof. Keller For Past Two Years simply had to be changod to, 120 Pound Arizona Lion Which Prof. Keller Reared and Trained. Several times Coach Buchheit was called Roach Buchheit. Another ono of those "regatta " errors : Huskies Row To Kutztown meant, to read , Huskies Bow To Kutztown. done . .. He did a great job, too . . . (A great job darning the sock, I don't know how it got over to the girls), , , Some of you grads who haven't been back for some time will be pleased by the m any improvments . . . The campu s becomes mor e beaut iful each year .. . . There isn't a prettier one at any ot her Teachers' College . . . Dr. Haas has an arrowhead found by one of the workmen on the new athletic field this summer . . . Maybe there are a few redskins hanging around the campus . . . The grove would be Any arrows a likely place . ever fly into your rooms girls? . Homecoming Day is getting tougher on the old pocketbook . . It used to be jus t tags . .now there are tags, corsages, and even feathers, not to mention something to eat at tho game and af ter the dance . . . Bill Tannery, at Millersville, t old a girl he never danced before . . . He wanted to go off to the side of the floor , but she dragged him out to the middle and said, "Now you do it this way, take a long step and glide." . . . The football team is doing its share . . only lost one out of four . . . Tied Lock Haven, beat Millersville and Clarion before stumbling over Mansfield. . . Go up on the field today and watch them push Indiana around . .. A nice crowd of students followed team to Mansfield . . Koch has a picture of them all running across the field between quarters, and yelling to beat the band . . (Mans field's band) . . . Some of you older graduates will probably remember when the lions were placed on the pillars on Senior Walk . . . At the time there was quite an argument - should they be lions or eagles? . . . The eagles put up qui te a fight, but the lions won out . . . Maybe they should be changed to Huskies, now that we have adopted Roongo . . . Other things that will be remembered by graduates are the fountain which used to be on the lawn to the left of Carver Hall . . .It was placed there by members of the late Dr. Bierman's class . . . There was originally a flagpole on top of Carver Hall . . . During a storm lightning struck it and pieces flew as far as Science Hall . . . It was replaced by the lantern now on top . . By the way, the lantern is over eight feet high . .. . Doesn't look that much does it? . . . .We're taking too much of your time, rambling around like this . . • There are too many other things to do and see today . . . Nuff Sed .. STUDENT COUNCIL NOTES Student Council members and committee chairmen were guests of the College at dinner, Monday 7. After the dinner a Freshman tribunal was held in Room L. A business meeting followed the tribunal. Mr. Camera gave a report on committee personnels. ??? A committee was organized to investigate the material being placed on tho bulletin boards. Complaints were brought to the attention of the Council to tho effect that the notlcoB were constantly being disfigured. ??? At a party held in the social rooms of Science Hall following the first meeting Dean of Mon , John Koch, acted as office boy and aided the group in making a newspaper, "TheCider Pross." mll i | M " " '""" "S i I SPORTS | s z : ' "" ¦" ¦ ¦ ¦ • i I SPORTS I = : : ; : TtlllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIMMI 2 s IIIIIIIII *»«6 HUSKY TEAM DETERMINED TO SCALP INVADING INDIANS ORGANIZE PROGRAM OF INTRAMURAL SPORTS SAM COHEN MAKE S PLAN S Definite arrangements are now being made for an organized system of intramu ral sport s for men, according to yesterday's announcement by Sam Cohen, who was delegated by Coach George Buchheit to handle the program. Present arrangements list the order of sports events as follows : handball t ou rnament, volley ball league, fo ul shooting tournament, basketball league, track meet, and soft ball league. A point system has been worked out and will be put into effect with fchp opening of the intramural season. Entrance points will be given every individual (who 'begins participation with a team. Then, after participation, additional points will be given to each person on the winning team. To the players on the teams winning leagues or tournaments winners' points will be ,given. An award, not yet determined, will be given to the person having most points at the close of the program. Cohen , in announcing these pla n s, emphasiz ed, "Nothing as yet is definite, but we are trying to make this year the greatest in the history of Bloomsburg State Teachers College's intramural activities." SIX TEAMS BEGIN GAGE BALL LEAGUE Cage B a l l Is On l y Girls S p o r t Carr ying Credit Points this Semester WESTERN ELEVEN LOST ONLY ME FOOTBALL GAME SINCE 1933 CONFIDENT OF WIN Indiana Forw ard Wall Avera ges Over 174 Pounds; Backfield at 162 Pounds This afternoon the Husky football squad, determined to kill two birds with one st on e, will engage the strong Captain "Whitey " Molesky, hard running Husky back, will lead his strong team into Battle today against a heavy eleven from Indiana. ^Bloomsburg hopes to avenge for its 3-0 loss of lapt week at Mansfield and picks Indiana as the victims. Will Have To Watch Indiana Passing Attack Is Opinion If Bloomsburg coaches are to be- lieve all they hear, then the Huskies will have t o be on their t oes this af t ern oon against India n a's strong passing attack. A study of the Indiana statistics this year show that the Indians, lacking a very strong running attack, have relied on their u se of passes in almost every game played so far. In view of this fac t coaches of Bloom sbu rg hav e been bu ildin g up the locals' defensive against passing. The entire past week was devoted to a study of Indiana 's passing methods. Another thing the Huskies will have to be on the look-out for is the possible attempt for field goals. Indiana won their Homecoming game against Edinboro by the score of 3-0. Cage ball, the only women's sport •on the campus for which team points will be given this fall, got underway two weeks ago and will continue until the Thanksgiving recess. Six teams of twenty players each have been playing in competition every Monday and Friday afternoon at 4:00 o'clock. Extra games, when occasion arises, are played on Wednesday at No Injuries In Local Camp the same time. Officials for the league season are Anna Ebert, Julia Bloomsburg enters today 's game Schlegel, and Gladys Rinard, without any injuries to interfere with the lineup. Mericle's eye, injured two weeks ago in the Lock Haven May Enter Two Races game, has healed enough that it won't keep him out of the starting team. Latest reports from Coach George Buchheit bear the possibility of Bloomsburg representation in the modified marathon races at Scranton and in Bloomsburg. The local harriers won the Scranton race last year, First Downs bringing back several medals and a trophy. Bertoldi broke the course reYards gained cord in that race. Yards lost Passes attempted Passes intercepted by CAGE BALL STANDINGS Passes completed Yards gained by passes W, L. Tied Standing Yards gained by punts 0 Team I 5 0 No. of punts 1 Team II 1 8 Avg. yardage punts 0 Team III 2 8 Total yards by pentaltles 1 Team IV 1 8 ; Fumbles Team V 3 2 0 — 0 Team VI 3 2 ?Doob not include blocked punts Indiana eleven. After last week's hairbreadth defeat by a clicking Mansfield aggregation , an improved and inspired Maroon and Gold combination will seek revenge at the expense of the Indiana stalwarts . Besides squaring accounts for the Mansfield game, the boys intend to teach their western foes not to snap four-game winning streaks ,as did Indiana last falL Indiana , last year's gridiron kings of the Pennsylvania Teachers' Colleges , comes to local stamping grounds with but a single defeat to mar its long string of victories during the past two years. With a rugged forward wall averaging over 174 pounds, several rangy and speedy ends, and a galloping backfield that tips the scales for a 162 pound average, tomorrow's visitors are certain to furnish stiff competition to a snarling pack of Huskies. Should their • heady quarterback, Woodring, begin a rapid-fire aerial attack with Red McDowell on the receivi n g end, Blootmsburg will have to get her best defensive methods out of the bag. These two lads are especially adept at those fla t passes over the center of the line. With its sturdy line from end to end and its alert backs working together with machinel i k e precision, Indiana 's scoring threats will be frequent. Outweighed by approximately five pounds to the man, the Huskies make up this lack of avoirdupois by the traditional Homecoming spirit. A Bloomsburg passing attack with Captain Moleski heaving the oval to either of the local fleet ends might easily put Indiana 's reputed air-tight defense to shame. However, a running offensive is very ' likely, for the Husky backs of this |season are swift as greyhounds , and they charge like cutting broncos. Every member of the squad with ¦the possible exception of Finder, who has a bad ankle, will be in the "pink" of condition when he marches on the field toimorrow afternoon. After a few good scrimmages during the week. Composite Statistics f or Games To Date BLooMSBim a Totnl Avor ngo 87 821 81 66 6 25 282 *1638 * 46 * . 05 11 ( 9,25. 205. 20 17 1,5 6 58 409.5 11.6 88.4 24 2,75 i orroNHNTs Avorn go Totnl 21 547 98 47 7 18 150 *1820 * 58 •— 115 10 5.25 187 2.45 12 1.75 4.5 40 455 13 84.4 29 2.5 fr ^ History of Football ¦ ¦ —¦ ¦¦ ft —' Part 2 Between the years 1800-1865, rapid strides and much progress was made in the development of the game. A student of the Rugby School brought the game to Yale University, at New Haven, Connect icut, where he combined the best featu res of it with the best features of a somewhat similar game being played in American schools. The American game, however, was not really a game in the true sense of the word. It was just a campus pastime, without organiza tion , rules, or objectives. The new game was played on a field , parallelogram in shape, which was 300 feet from goal line to goal line , 360 feet from end line to end lin e, and marked off in SO five-yard strips with two ten-yard end lines. The width of the goal posts was 18 feet 6 inches, and the height of the cross bar was 10 feet. Rules were few but severe. They consisted chiefly of what was then called a football code. This code specified there was to be no holding, no sideline coaching, no talking to officials or opponents, no beating the ball. The football itself gradually became a stronger and bett er one and was no longer made from the bladder of a Pig. It was in the Fall of 1869 at .New Brunswick,New Jersey, that Rutgers University met Princet on in wha t is recorded as the first inter-collegiate football game in history. The game was w on by Rut gers by the score of 6-4. Both teams had been in the process of fo rm ation since 1865, and between then and 1868 for m al ru les were envolved. Each team was composed of 25 m en whose d ut y it was t o kick the ball and not carry it. Six goals were necessary to win the game. In 1870 a regular series was inaugurated involving Rutgers and Columbia-Princeton. Rutgers, having won the game with Princeton in 1869, was given the advantage in the series and was not required to play as many games. Two years later, Yale began her long period of inter-collegiate football by defeating Columbia at New Haven, Connecticut, November 16. The following year marked the beginning of organized control for inter-collegiate football. Yale, Princeton, Rutgers, and Columbia drafted a set of rules for use COLLEGE RUNNERS LOOK VAINLY JTO OPPOSITION CANT MAKE OUT SCHEDULE With the cross-country season already half over the Bloomsburg State Teachers College harriers are still looking for competitors. So far this year all prospective opposing colleges have written coach George Buchheit that they have no teams this year. Captain Ernie Lau and his fellow runners have been faithfully preparing for any race that may turn up* at any time. They have even, as alast resort, written to two of the best runners ever produced at Bloomsburg, Lo uis Bertoldi and Francis Sell , with the hopes of getting them to form a team for Homecoming competition. Sell, however,has been forced through busy teaching duties to give up running for the present time, and Bertoldi can't form, a winning teattn all alone, so that idea was dropped. Some of the schools which have n o cross-country teams this Pall are Susq u ehanna , Shippensburg, Indiana , and other teachers colleges. West Chester State Teachers College team is willing t o ru n, but so far a suitable date has not been found. Bloomsbu rg's 1935 edition of the cross-country tea.m con sist s of half veterans and half new men. Veterans from last year are Ernie Lau, Bernard Young, and Tom Davison. BERTOLD WILL RUN AT BERWICK Begins Serious Tr aining By Runn ing Course Last Saturday in 55 Minutes Louis "Iron Man" Bertoldi, one of the mainstays of Bloomsburg's crosscountry and track teams last , year, has annuonced his intention of entering the annual Berwick Marathon again this year. He began serious training for the widely-publicised . Turkey Day run last Saturday morning when he journ eyed to Berwick and "trotted " over the nine mile, three hundred and eighty-six yard course in a little less than fifty-five minutes, which is good time for any runner in his first GONTOTUED ON PAGE 0 effort. Bertoldi's time in the race year was slightly less than reSPEAKER SYSTEM INSTALLED last corded last Saturday, but the raco FOR BROADCAST OF GAME was run when the Weston lad was in. mkl-season form. Bloomrburg's Homecoming game Since leaving Bloomsburg Bertoldi with Indian a will be broadcast over has been teaching in the schools of a system of loud speakers again this his home town , Weston , Pennsylvanyear. ia. The practice was started last year and met with much comment and comIntramu ral Point System mendation. Dean John Koch will again be the announcer, Last year Sports Entrance Add'nl Winners PtB . Pts. Ptu. his point of vantage, above the bleach- Hnmlbnll | 25 | BO | 75 ers, was such that he could interpret | 35 | 65 | 100 " the game better than the ordinary Volleyball Foul Shoot. | 5 | 20 [ SO " spectator. Two speakers will be In use , one at Basketball | 50 | 100 | 150 the elevated platform back of the track | 40 |"~ 6Q | iqq Bloomsburg bleachers and one at the Soft Ball | 25 | 50 | 75 east end of the field . FIELD GOAL WINS W NS FOR MANSFIELD FROSH FOOTBALL MATERIAL HEAVY STRONGEST HUSKY SQUAD IN YEARS : i Placement Kick By Gambl e in Final Quarter Upsets Bloom Husk ies, 3-0 Average Weights Top Those of Past Few Years to Give Bloom Good Out look Taking a Gamble, a desparate Mansfield team won its Parents Day game, October *19, by shading the Bloomsburg waariors 3 to 0. The toe of Gamble, a reserve back , snapped the winning streak of the local eleven, "wihen it booted the pigskin squarely between the uprights in the closing minutes of the contest. Although the Huskies maintained a decided edge in all the departments of the game, n o one can deny tha t it is the final score that really counts in determining the winner of any one game. Both t'eams fumbled at critical points in each quarter, and man y potential scores went glimmering when seemingly perfect passes were grounded. After battling the fine Lock Haven team the previous week-end, the MaToon and Gold boys lacked the necessary punch when in scoring position. iBoth Vershinski's and Sircovics' at tempts at field goals were futile. The box score; Bloomsburg (0) Mansfield (3) J_ Vershinski I.e. Terry Dixon l.t. Cagle Mericle l.g. Pascoe Sircovics c. Wilhelm Camera r.g. Hyder Henry 1 r.t. Brewer Litwhi'ler r.e. Lambert Moleski q. Feldman Shedlosky l.h. Borden Krashinsky rlh. Axtel Laubach f.b. Dutka Score by quarters : Bloomsburg •_ 0 0 0 0—0 Mansfield 0 0 0 3—3 Substitutions: Bloomsburg, Wenrich for Vershinski, Dietrich for Litwhiler , Zeleski for Sircovics, Border for Camera , Stenko for Henry, Jones for Shedlosky, Troutman for Krashnski. Mansfield—Parks for Fieldman, McDonald for Borden, Yurich for Axt ell , and Gamble for Yursick. Some of the heaviest first year men in many years reported for football on Mount Olympus this year, according to announcement from Coaches Buchheit, Seely and Tate. : Alvin Lipfert, formerly tackle fo r Coughlin High School, Wilkes Barre, tops the list in weight, tipping the scales at 195. The lightest freshman to answer the call was Leonard Barlik , Duryea prod u ct, who weighs only 140. Barlik is an end candidate. Raymond Ernie, William Penn High School, a six foo ter, and weight, 170 pounds, candidate for end. Sheldon Jones, N anticoke, five feet, ten inches; weight, 16£, candida te for quarterback. Chalmers Wenrich, Harrisiburg, six fee t, on e inch; weigh t, 165, candida t e for end. Stanley Zelesky, Frackville, six fee t, one inch; weight 159, candidate for center position. Joseph Rsgszinsky, Fr&ekville, five fee t, ten; weight, 148, candida t e for end. Elvin Krashinski, Frackville, five feet, ten ; weight 171,. candidate for backfield. Joe Conhan , Haz leton , five fee t, ten; weight 156, candidate for backfield. Winfield Potter, Old Forge, five fee t, eleven; weight 172, center. Leonard Barlik , Duryea , five fee t, seven; weight 140, end. Jack Simpson, Bloomsburg, six one; weight 168, end and backfield. Dick Strauser, Bloomsburg, five feet, five inches; weight 150, backfield. Frank VanDevender, Shamokin , six feet; weight 156, candidat e for backfield. Mike Stenko, Berwick, six feet ; one; weight, 186, tackle. Bob Hopfer, Bloomsburg, six feet; weight, 184, fullback. Alvin Lipfert, Wilkes Barre, six feet; weight 195, tackle. Robert Kantner, Danville, five feet, five; weight 150, candidate for guard. BLOOMSSURG WEIGHTS Name Position Height Weight Border, Guard 5' 11" 172 Camera, Guard 5' 11" 173 Conahan, Half-back __ 5* 5" 160 Con aha n, End 5'_11" 158 Dietrich , End 5' 10" 170 J. Dixon , Tackle 5' 8" 180 L. Dixon , Tackle 5' 10" 170 Erney, End 6' 170 Finder, Half-back 5' 9" 160 Guffr-oviteh, Tackle 5' 10" 208 Harney, Guard 5' 8" 171 Henry, Tackle 5' 9" 185 Hopfer, Fullback 6' 184 Krashinsky, Half-back 5' 10" 170 Laubach, Fullback 5' 11" 170 Link, Tackle 6' 175 Lipfert, Tackle 0' 105 Litwhiler, End 5' 9" 185 Mericle, Guard 0' 2" 100 Moleski , Quartor-back _ 5' 7" 172 Nolan , Half-back 160 5' 11" Price, Tackle C' 2" 180 Patrick, Guard C 185 Ragazinsky, End 5' 10" 150 Rompalo, End 5' 8" 158 Shedloski, R. H.-back 5' 10" 175 .Sircovics, Centor _: 5' 0" 150 Stenko, Tackle 18G 0' 1" Strausser , Quarterback 5' 5" 150 SupchinBky, Guard B'_ll" 174 Troutman , Half-back _- 5' 11" 175 Van Dovender „ H.-bk 6' 16G Vorshinski , End —_ 0' 170 Wenrich, End G 1 1" 105 Kolenkuski H.-back _'_ 51 7" 160 _ . 6' 1" Zelesky, Center 152 Left to right—back row—Goldstein, Frosh manager; Coach Tate, Coach Buchheit. Coach Seely, Michaels, studen t manager; Kupris, assistant manager; second row—Kolenkuski; Dietrick; Zeiss, trainer; Duy Hutchinson, Jack Fassett, mascot s; Sircovics , Supchinsky , Champi; third—L. Dix on, Gearmack, Simpson, Price, Conahan , Zelesky, Erney, Line, Lipferfc? fourth row^YanDeyender, Troutman, Bagaznisky, K rashinski , Noland, Wenrich, Hofer, Har« ney; fif th row—Strausser, Finder , Jones, Stenko, Guffrovit ch , Shedlosky, Patrick; front row—Rompalo, W. Litwhiler, Laubach , Vershinski , Border, Captain Moleski, Camera , Henry, Mericle and J. Dixon. f , SMETHERS 39r WINS ANNUAL COLLEGE INTRAMURAL TENNIS TOURNAMENT Sport Spurts DO WNS YEAG ER IN THREE SET S Notre Dame has nothing on Bloomsburg when it comes to mass" substitution in a football game. Not , "so and so , get in there and do something wi t h those ends ," but, "second combination , of backs, get in .there. " And what's more , look at that lineup if you want to see the "fightin ' Irish." *** "Gib" Kline isn't out for football this year, the first sin ce he came t o Bloomsburg three years ago. Why isn't he out? There 's only one answer, som e on e else ca m e here who could wear Kline 's suit. Maclyn Smethers, Freshman from Berwick , defeated John Yeager in straight sets, 6-4, 7-5, 6-3, to win the second annual intramural tennis tournamen t, which has been m oving alo n g slowly since September. In winning the tournament Smethers came through without losing a single set. His first match, with Webb, was won by defa u lt af ter the latter failed to appear. Then, rising to great form, he p roceded t o down Mathews, 6-2, 6-1; Havalicka, 6-0, 6-1; and Mer r i ll , 6-4, 7-5. His serve was particularly helpful in his win over Yeager for the title. Thirty aspirants for the title began play on September 18, with the followi ng advancing to the second round : J. Slaven, N. Ritchie , J. Yeager, S. Green , E. Lau, A. Kazansky, E. Philli ps, E. Mathews, E. Havalicka , C. Wenrich , K. Merrill , E. Kershner, C. Klinger, G. Kline. The third round saw Yeager defeat Slaven, Phillips nose out Lau, Smethers win easily over Havalicka, and IMerrill humble Klinger. In the semifinal round Yeager won over Phill ips , 3-6, 6-4, 6-4, while Smethers, the ultimate winner, eliminated Merrill , 6-4, 7-5. Coaches are studying the amount of enthusiasm displayed by participants with the view in mind of establishing the intramural tennis tournament as a regular fall contest in the intramural sports program now being *?* "The Snapper ," Millersville newsp aper , charges Bloomsburg State Teachers College with waylaying three potential powerhouses for their backfield. *** Local sports enthusiasts will look a long time before finding a better display of defensive play than was shown by both the Huskies and the Lock Haven team , in their deadlock game of a few weeks ago. *** Despite the Huskies' 3-0 loss to Mansfield last week, Bloomsburg's goal line remains uncrossed this year, And that's something to boast about! SPIRITED PEP MEETING STAGED LAST NIGHT A spirited ipre-iHomecomlng pep meeting was called last night by Robort Savage, chairman of the pep committee, and turned out to be the best such meeting of the year. The program for the evening started with a dunce in the gymnasium , from 0:80 o 'clock to 8:30. A band concert followed tho dance; then the group joined In singing and cheering. Spoochos wore given by Robert Savago, Dr. FranclB B. Haas , Dr. H. Harrison Russol, Dr. E , H, Nelson, Miss Lucy McCammon , Professor Koch, and the three coaches, 4.UI IIICU. Many Default in Tennis Tourney It is Interesting to note that seven of the fourteen tennis players entered in the Intramural tournament who advanced to the second round did so throu gh default by their oppononts. In almost every case the reason for defaulting was failure to appoar for competition. All in all the proper attitude was not shown by those guilty of defaulting. It was ju st another example of lack of seriousness on tho part of some- students, and it certainly hinders Intramural sports progress. MA NSFIELD GAME Scrimmage B.S.T.C. M.S. Total yds. gained __ 198 Total yds. lost 18 Net yds. gained 180 115 22 93 Total yds. gained 55 Total No. passes ____ 19 Passes completed 8 Passes interc. by 0 First downs 9 1st downs passes 4 1st downs penalty — 2 *Punts 9 ?Total yd. punts 324 *Avg. yd. punts 36.0 Ru nbacks , Tot. yds. __ 114 Kickoffs 75(3) Penalties Total yds. 25 Number 3 Fumbles 3 Own recovered 1 Scor e 0 40 10 4 3 4 3 1 13 402 30.9 30 0(0) Passes 30 6 4 2 3 *Does not Include blocked punt by Mansfield. INDIANA SQUAD LAB6E No. Name Position 32 Chambers, Center 33 Veronie, End 40 Gendrich, End of History Football 44 Sutila , Tackle 45 Lazzaro, Halfback CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5 46 McLaughlin, Halfback in their contests. 47 King, Guard In 1875 Harvard won from Mc- .49 Miller, Guard __J Gill in America's first game of Rug- 5Q Blake, Guard by. Canadian schools still play rug_; Grosklos, End Two jJ61 by as tlheir chief fall sport. 52 Wood ringr, Quarterback years later, in 1876, football first 53 Vokes, End took on the cloak of "big business" 54 Green, Halfback when the American Inter-collegiate 5B .McDowell, End Football Association was formed. A 56 Berretta, Halfback rules committee was appointed and 57 Erriffo, Tackle few changes in rules and in power of 58 Kohler, Guard officials followed. The referee was 59 R. Grosklos ,Halback the only one to have any power, three CO Fulton , End judges acting only as aids in keeping ftl Mon oher, Guard the game under control. 62 McKnlght, Halfback Professional football began at 63 Joyner, Guard , ' Latrobe, Pennsylvania, August 31, 04 Caroflf , Tackle 1895. On that date Latrobe Y. M. C. 66 George, Center A. dofoated Joanotte. Between 1876 CO Hpenstine , Guard and 1805, many changes were effect- i C7I Roed, End ed in the game of football. In 1883 08 Hay, Guard It was decided that there was to be 68' Hay, uGard two judges, one from each school; 70 Kelly, Quarterback ' the following fall the judges were. Til;. (Dick, Fullback abolished ,, . leaving only a referee; 72 Oddi, Tnoklo then , In 1887, an umpire was added • |78 Croneaur, End and had juris diction over the ball, ' Tomb, Fullback Weight 168 145 152 187 147 167 165 150 170 175 145 140 150 155 159 193 165 155 176 165 148 141 190 ¦__ 140 1B4 146 167 175 160 1G0 102 17G . 157 ATHLETIC RECORDS IN " REVEALS 161 TOWNS PERMANENT FORM REPRESENTED Oil LOCAL CAMPUS 33rd HARTLINE TELLS OF Dr. Haas Awarded Degree, Masonic Order SURVEY SUMMER TRIP CONTINUED EUOM FAOE 3 Dr. Francis B. Haas, president of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College, journeyed to Cleveland, 0., last week, where he was crowned as an honorary member of the Supreme Cou ncil , Scot tish Rite M asons, ThirtyThird Degree. The Thirty-third Degree is one of the highest achievement awards given in any organization in the country and is awarded to only a choice few after years of hard work. Dr. Haas was nominated by the Caldwell Consistory, of Bloomsburg, of which he is an active member. With him at the meeting and receiving a similar degree was Willie Law, .also of the local Consistory. population , and growing national industries. Into this crept slavery, demoralizing a new world, and forming classes in a country where classes would be disastrous. It took a leader to settle this dispute; it was Lincoln. Fourth—the capitalistic system, again forming classes: the rich and the poor. We are still in this period, but Theodore R oosevelt has been the fi r st to blaze a way out. This memorial is not only a masterf ul piece of art but it is a lastin g comm emoration t o the lives of these great leaders of our nation. How long will they endure ? Hundreds of thousands of years, through ice, wind, sleeping. At the same time this and snow, which may sweep our coun- party went up, there were two others try in days to come. What manner making the ascent: four Boy Scouts of men shall gaze upon them and and the assistant guide, and a ranchwonder about them ? Time alone will er and his family, in which party answer that question and in the there were two women. They, too, meantime work continues as funds stayed in the shelter camp this night. are available. The face of Washing- The next morning the BoyScouts ton has been completed and unveiled. party was the first to leave, with inThe face of Jefferson is coming along structions from the chief guide not nicely and a start has been made on to loosen any rocks which would fall Lincoln. The face of Roosevelt has on the others following. The ranchnot been started as yet because of the er and his famUy following the Hartline party, brought up the rear. The lack of funds. was keen but the sun was bright Continuing on from Rapid City and air and it was a fine morning for the Custer Park, crossing the state of climb. They Wyoming, you come to the Teton rock mass tha started out across the range of mountains. There are var- by -the glacier,t has been shoved down ious peaks, bu t the highest, called the ly cornered , rock fragments sharpclosely packed together. Grand Teton , is 13,766 feet. The When they came to the edge of the climb up the Grand Teton was beg un glacier, they got on it for a way, but August 31, and the top was reached it soon got too soft for travel, so they September 1. The party consisted i left it for the rock mass which was of the chief guide, Mr. Paul Petzoldt, finer rock , called "skree." Dr. H. Keffer Hartline of the University of Pennsylvania, Dr. Counts, The rock that extends from the chief raTic pT- and "Dr. T). S. TTnrtliTi p Grand Teton to the Middle Teton, over which the glacier flowed , makes of Bloomsburg. an abrupt rise, and this had to be The start was made a little after climbed by a rope attached from 1 o'clock from the tent of the guide, above. This structure, known as a driving by car as far as the mouth of saddle or "col" was qu it e wide and Garnet Canyon. Here the trail, which clear of loose st ones and ran across zig-zagged by eighteen bends up the on an even level. Here they got a slope of the foo t of the mou n t ain magnificent view on the Idaho side of pass, was taken to the Teton Glacier. the Tetons, clear across the prairies Two-thirds of the way up is a fire- to the Bitter Root Mountains. In engine for fighting fire clear to the among these mountain peaks are nutimber-line. At this piont the main merous small glacier lakes and a trail was left and entrance into Gar- winding trail which goes clear around net Canyon was made on an obscure the mountain massif. Looking northfoot-path worn by the few who hike ward , they peered down int o deep across. This trail led on a diagonal canyons, colored granite walls which line into the canyon, along the slope ar e impos sible to scale, an d which far up near the timber-line. The make one shudder to think of climbstratified rock, making up the side- ing. wall , had been cut through by the From here the guide knew five or glacier and its stream of water and six different trails but he chose the rock debris, so that very high cliffs one on which the first ascent was make up the lower end of the canyon made, This leads over the head of a walls. Leaving this behind, they got in on canyon nearly filled with skree and the floor of the canyon where they boulders closely packed together, mahail to climb over and paBS around, in king a difficult climb to another col. and among vast rock fragments, This is quite short and soon brought broken loose from the mountain mass them to the eastern side of the mounby the various erosion processes of tain where they could look into Casgravity, water, ice, and wind. Here cades and Indian Paint-Brush Canand there a stream appears at the yons, and the chain of mountains surface and wherever it goes there Is known as Obsaroka, mostly covered sure to be a small patch of grass with snow. They now put down their axes or althrough which grow flowering plants pen stocks and packs and were tied tobrilliant colors. Then of beautifully here 3s a little ncok in the side of the gether by a rope, the guide leading, wall where a few deciduous trees and and an experienced climber bringing a small clear spring of water are up the rear. From here on It is rock found, Huckleberries, of peculiarly climbing. They soon struck a horidelicious taste , in pink , blue, and zontal lodge about COO feet from the top. This leads about the side of the black, grow about the spring. At the timber lino 1b the shelter mountain , becoming a mere niche of camp, really a large cavo formed by 20 or 80 inches width, through which great rocks which have rolled down one "coons " or wriggles along like a from the mountain walls and fallen snake, unable to rise even on the elover each other, to overlap. This is bows. While safe enough because of on a point jutting out over the ravine the Inward slope, it is spectacular befrom a side wall, and, because formed cause one can dangle his arm out over in this mannor, is most appealing to the 3,000 foot abyss. The last lap of the climb is the climbers as a spot to rest from fatigue or for shelter in rainy weather. chimney, which is formed by a groove The party spent the night in this or crack in tho wall at the back of camp, building a fire, eating, and which there is usually a small, frozen stream of water. The guide climbed Number Is Unusual In View of the chimney first and then, r oping Fact Enrollment each of the other s in tu rn , st eered the Is Only 600 climb up this chimney. The view is Jackson s ' superb; you can see all of More than 160 towns and cities of Hole and the walls of mountains Pennsylvania are represented by bounding it. On the east the Wind students on the campus of Blooms; River and the Gros Ventre River. You can also see the town of Jackson and burg St ate Teachers College, accordJackson's Lake which has been taken ing (to the investigation of an inquirover by the government to supply ing Maroon and Gold 'reporter. In view of the fact that the total water and power for the people. This number of students enrolled falls peak, which from below appiears to be slightly short of 600 the number of bu t a mere point , is about a quarter towns represented is very unusual and of an acre in area. It is not level, but one probably never equaled before at by o n t he s u rface som ewhat rounded , the local institution. Figuring it out rock fragments. : mathematically, and using the two Upon being questioned by the guide,! figures, 161 t owns, and 600 studen t s, Mr. Hartline told the party that in 15 there is one town or city for every days he would be 69 years of age. He ' three and a half students. is the oldest man ever to climb the Bloomsburg is best represented on Grand Teton. This was recorded on the campus with a total enrollment of the records in the brass cylinder eighty-one students, while Ber wick which stands on the top of the Grand follows next in order with a repre"know Teton. It is interesting also to sentation of thirty-eight. Danville that one of the ladies in the party tnat with twenty students, Scran t on wit h days was 59 years of age. There were sixteen , and Hazleton with fifteen , 13 people on the top this day, which follow in succession. Wilkes Barre was the largest number ever up there also shows a total of fifteen students . at one time. According to tlt§ feeA complete list of towns representords , 168 had thus far climbed the ed and the number of full-time stuGrand Teton. They did not stay long, excep t to dents in attendance at Bloomsburg eat lunch , which , by the way, was State Teachers College is as follows: Alden, one; Arendtsville, one; Alvery light. The descent was not made , one; Aristes, one;Ashland ,four; media by the "cooning place ," but by a proAtlas, two; Allentown, one; Ashley, cess known as "rapelling'". This time two ; Bloomsburg, eighty-one; Beaverthe guide , instead of being first, is last. He fastens the rope about his town, one; Benton , three; Barnesperson, himself holding the one end ville, one ; Beaver Brook , two; Berrysat the top, and then the person lets burg, one; Berwick, thirt y-eight; himself down, slipping along the Tope Brady, one. to the bottom. Then the guide, being 'Centralia, four; Columbia, one; Carlas t, lassoes a rock at the t op and bondale, two ; Cumbola , one ; Connerlowers himself. It is dangerous, but ton , eleven; Cat awissa, eleven; Carmuch faster than the "cooning " meth- lisle, one; Clifford , one; Conyngham, od. The rest of the descent was fast. one; Chester, one; Dickson City, one ; They slid down the "skree " and down D elano, one; Danville , twen ty; Duryea , the glacier, and before long found two; Du nmore, six; Dallas, two; Excelsior, one; E gyp t, one; Espy, eight; themselves at the bottom. From the Tetons, the party contin- E dwardsville, nine; Easton, three. Fleetwood, three; Freeburg, on e; ued out to Yellowstone National Park. There is so very much of interest to Fernville, one; Freela nd , six; Forkst ell tha t it wou ld be im possible t o give ville, one; Forrest City, four; Fortyeven a small part of it in so short a Fort, two; Fern Glen, on e; Frackville, space , b ut th ere is one shor t inciden t six; iGermantown , one; Glen Lyon, which is both interesting and amus- two; Girardville, two; Genesse, on e; ing. It is the feeding of the bears in Harrisburg, four; Herndon, on e; Hazleton, fifteen ; Helfenstein, on e; the park. Jermyn, four ; Jeddo, one. As you know, much of the park is Kulpmont, eleven ; Kelayres, one; wild country and the bears are plentifu l, though not 'bold , not civiliz- Kingston, one; Keiser, five; Light ed. There are two kind s of bears, the Street, one; Lost Creek, two; Laurelblack and the grizzly. The black, dale, one; Lee, one; Laketon, one; though bold, is not as ferocious as the Luzerne, four; Lattimer Mines, one; grizzly. He has become such a nuis- Lancaster, one; Leek Kill , one ; Loance bothering the tourists for food, cust Dale, two ; Middleburg, two; Milthat it is now illegal for the tourists ton, four; Mifflinville , three; Mahanto feed the bear. Although you will oy Plains, four; Millville , six; Mount Carmel, ten; Montgomery, two ; MunCONTINUED OK PAGE B HIGH SCHOOL PAPERS SEEK COLLEGE CRITICISM During the past few weeks several high schools in the Bloomsburg service area have sent copies of their school newspapers to the office of the M aroon and Gold aski n g for cri ticism and suggestion. The papers will be turned over to the recently organized Press Club for fullfillment of the schools' requests. Criticism service t o high schools near Bloomsburg has been accepted as one of the principal enterprises for the club this year. Local journalism enthusiasts feel that such work will not only render valuable service to hi gh school neighbors but it will also offer training in establishing a critical attitude among members of the club at Bloomsburg. On October 16, Dr. Haas attended the annual board of directors meeting of the Pennsylvania Tuberculosis Association. At the conference, which was held in Philadelphia, matters pertaining to the fight to prevent tuberculosis and the sale of Christmas seals were discussed. cy, one; Mifflinburg, one; McAdoo Heights, one; Mahanoy City, two; Milnesville, one; M ocanaqu a, one ; Mount Pleasant Mills, one; Montoursville , one; Muncy Valley, one ; Muncy, one; Moscow, two; Miners Mills, one; Northumberland , four; Nuremberg, nine ; Nanty Glo, one; Nanticoke, nine; Nescopeck, three; Natalie, one; Numidia, two. Orangeville, two ; Olyphant, two ; Oxford, one; Old Forge, two; Orwigsburg, one ; Pittston, one; Palmerton, one; Pine Grove, ,one ; PLainsville, one ; Plains, four; Philadelphia, two; Parsons, one; Pottsville, four; Plymouth, five ; Peckville, three; Renshaw, two ; Rohrsburg, one; Rummerfield, one; Reading, one; Ringtown , five; Riverside, one; Rebuck, one; Southampton , two ; Simpson, five ; South Williamsport, one, Stillwater, two; Summit, o nfe; Scneatown , two ; Sunbury, ten ; Selm'sgrove, one; Summit Station, one; Shenandoah, nine; Susquehanna, one; Sugar Run , two; Shepton, two; Scran- ' ton , sixteen; Shamokin , twelve ; Swoyersville, o n e ; Shickshinny, one; Schuylkill Haven, one; Tomhicken , ^k ^ &X idl^^^^ C^^^ ^H^^^^ '^iSv^lilfll ^V<. VK' .^^^^^ .B' 'i^Xk^^^^^ nC ^kfl^B three; Tamaqua , two ; Tuscarora , one; Throop, one; Treverton , two ; Turbotville, four; Taylor, seven; Tunkhan nock, one; Tremont, one; Tower City, Northumberland, four: Nuremberg, one ; Uniontown, one; Unityvllle, one; Wapwallopen , two; Winfleld , two; Wyoming, one; West Wyoming, one } Wast Pittston , one; Wilkes-Barro , fifteen ; Wanamle, seven ; West Fairhaving, as its ancestors, two of the viow, one; West Hazleton , five; WatdogB used by Perry in his first exped- sont own , one ; Weston, onoj Woatherition to the North Pole. ly, one; York, one. Roongo Begins Third Year As Off icial I College Mascot; Adopted In 1933 Roongo , who was voted the official mascot of Bloomsburg State Teachers College in October 1933, is celebrating his second anniversary. The dog, weighing about 115 pounds or mor e, is just five years old and has lived its entire life near Bloomsburg and in the possession of Professor Keller, Born as bho offspring of Toto, an Alaskan husky,' and Folletto, a North Greenland husky, Roongo early fought for Ws right tofbecome leader of Professor Keller 's kog team. The victim and formor leader was Comuck, the dog which was later purchased by Indiana for mascot at the Indian a State Teachers College. He came out of the fight with one ear torn off. Roongo enjoys the distinction of Mimeographed sheets containing ten year records of all Bloomsburg arthletic contests have been distributed t o members of the faculty and officials of all organizations. The records were compiled during the past two years by Dr. E. H. Nelson and Dr. Francis B. Haas and include the wins and losses in foo tball, basketball, baseball , t ennis , wrestling, cross-country, and track. Opponent t eachers colleges , N ew Y ork teachers colleges, Pennsylvania liberal art colleges, seminaries and private schools, special college junior varsities, schools, and special groups. The total wins and losses in college competition indicates that Bloomsburg has won 176 contests, lost 118, and tied ten. i & GoldStaff MAGAZINES READ BY STUDENTS REVEALED CHILD OVER SUBJECT MATTER EMPHASIZED Maroon Meet In Groups BY L H. DENNIS AT COUNTY INSTITUTE IN RESULTS OF LIBRARIAN'S SURVEY " ;¦•- • • >, , : All new and old members of the Maroon and Gold staff have 'been divided into thr ee sm all groups, which will meet at definite times during each week for the purpose of studying modern problems in journalism as well as the newer technique used in the publication of school papers. At the first meeting of the groups, held three weeks ago, certain, definite items of style were discussed. The subject of study at the second meeting concerned the technique in writing the leads for stories and the main divisions of newspaper stories. The third meeting, held on Tuesday and Thursday of this week, was devoted to a study of methods in the establishment of newspapers in high schools. It included ideas concerning the better forms and styles as well as some information about how to hold pupil interest. The last part of the meeting was taken up with a discussion of the display used in the Homecoming issue of the Maroon and Gold. The schedule for the future calls foi ' more discussion about the physical make-up of papers, the wri ting of headlines, and a . discussion of civic journalism. Friday morning of last, week mark- POETRY CLUB REORGANIZES ed the beginning of the seventy-ninth FOR YEAR ; ELECT OFFICERS annual institute for teachers of Columbia County. Af ter several preliminary meetings In the session Friday afternoon, a group of students, under the direcLindly H. Dennis, a former county tion of Miss Ruth Eismann , orga n iz ed t eache r himself , and now executive a poetry club at a meeting held in the secretary of the American Vocational Social Rooms of Noetling Hall last Association emphasized in his add- Tuesday afternoon at four o'clock. ress , "Keeping Abreast of the Times The poetry club is an out-growth of a in Ed u cat ion ," the importance of vo- group of students known as the poecation al w ork in preve nting social try committee, which was ac tive on maladjustments. Mr. Dennis pointed the campus last year. out that real teaching centers around The object of this new organization the child and not the subject-matter is t o con tin u e the work which was and that the teacher herself must ap- started last year: sponsoring a poetry proach her duties from the stand- book containing verse written by poi nt of the child rather than t ha t of members of the faculty and student body, studying and comparing the the adult. One of his most striking illustra- style of modern poets, and developtio n s concerned the priso n at Jackso n, ing an appreciation among students M ichigan .the largest in the world. for poetry. The constitution committee consist. Two thousand of the prisoners are between the ages of sixteen and twenty- ing of Sam Cohen, chairma n, Josefive , and Mr. Dennis declared that phine Magee and Reba Bransdorf, most of them were there because of presented a document containing the social maladjustment which could >ay-laws for the organization. It was have been elimated through proper ratified and accepted"by the club after a few alterations were made. vocational training. Officers elected for the following Other prominent speakers during the sessions were : Dr. George S. two semesters are : Jay Pursel, pre¦ Counts of Columbia University, "The sident; John Fiorini, vice president; Future of American Democracy;" the Ru th Smethers, secretary; Ruth LeiRev. Thomas A. Coyle of Milton,"The foy, treasurer. Most of these officers .You th M ovemen t in E u rope; " and were active in the poetry committee Through the courtesy of Dominick Carl S. Millward, superin t enden t of last year. D elliq u anti, class of 1934, the library The p r ogram committee,. appoin t ed Milton schools, "How My Poin t of is receiving the camp paper of Camp b y the presiden t, consists of George View Has Changed Concerning EdSharp, ch airman , M inet t e Rosenbla tt 139, Company 137, Greentown, Pennucation." The entire program was as follows : and Bessie Levine. This committee sylvania, where Mr. Delliquanti is lohas charge of preparing all programs. cated at the present time as one of the Friday educational advisors. This camp paMorning session—Group singing, per will be found on the racks in the Dr. George S. Counts; recess address , magazine-reading .robin j arid will unand grouj) .singing, address ,L. H. Dendoubtedly be of in t erest t o some, es'irnsT"""" ' pecially those who are acquainted Af ternoon session—Group singing; with Mr. Delliquanti. Rev. Thomas L. Coyle; recess address , CONTINUED FHOM PAGE 1 and group singing; address, Carl Millward; greetings from Charles S. divid u als," Dr. IMaupin explained. D avis , superintendent emeritus, Steel- "This outlook was promised years ago by Mussolini. Mr. John Baketon schools. Dinner meeting—(Principal Gilmore less, in his re m arkable book , "The At the request of Mr. Ray Cole, •and Harriet Moore, Gerald Hartman, Origin of the Next War," written in director of the County Girl's BasketMrs. Raymond Kashner; Howard Fen- 1926, sho ws clea rly tha t It aly a n d ball League, some Bloomsburg State stemaker, pianist ; decorations, Mrs. Great Bri tain would clash over what Teachers College girls are officiating J. J. Fisher, chairman; ten minute Italians popularly call 'il mare nos- at games played at Orangeville, Catafolk s, Maree Pensyl and Superintend- ¦tro '—our sea—for the real struggle wissa , Locust, Miffli n, and Center. involves the establishment of a great- Those acting as official s are : Julia ent Davis. Evening session—joint session er Italy but threatens the British Schleg el, Anna Ebert, Beatrice Thomteachers and P.T.A. convention; mus- possessions in Asia and in Africa." as , Muriel Stevens, Mary Grosek, Dr. Maupin , in he r disc u ssi on of Anna Grosek, Florence Snook , Maric , College orchestra ; remarks, Mrs. H. T. Reiser, president district two, the present affair in Europe and tha Dreeso , and Alice Auch. P.T.A., add ress, Mrs. H. H. Hall, pre- Africa , emphasized the probability of sident Pennsylvania Congress of Par- other upsets before this one is settled. Few Changes In Handbook ents and Teachers; music; "Human "Japan ," she claimed, "has come to Heritage," motion picture in color, di- li f e, and Germany has much to settle Few changes are noticed in the rected and prepared by Professor Geo- and change that must come before 1935-193G edition of the College Handrge J. Keller and children of the train- the German people will settle down.'" boo k, distributed to the students during school; music; address, Dr. FrancStatus Quo—Object ing the first few days of the term. is B. Haas, president of State TeachWe need not be surprised that the The only marked change occurs in er's College; reception and social League of Nations suddenly becomes the dormitory section, whore further events, College gymnasium. active now, though It allowed Japan organization of material and better Saturday to further her interests in Asia, Dr. sequence has been made. Other Morning session—joint session, Maupin intiimated. "The League changes were those necessary for reCollege auditorium; group singing; Council is concerned not with peace vision and bringing the book up to devotional exercises; address, Mrs. H. and justice in the diplomatic world, date. H. Hall, State President Pennsylvania but to maintain and continue the big Several additions were made, chief Congress of Parents and Teachers ; re- nations in power—to keep the status of which was the rating necessary for cess and group singing; address, Is- quo, in other words, is the chief pur- holding office. Its omission in aac C. Sutton , state director Nation- pose." This, she explains, is just an- last year's book was the subject of al Youth Administration. other phrase of the British policy of much discussion. Afternoon session—business sosa- the Balance of Power that has been Ion , vote for members of rotinement the key to British diplomacy for a municatlons , must be secured. States board; election of two auditors ; Jun- century or more. build their stren gth and power on ior Red Cross, Leah Rarig, Esther Dr. Mau pin , in later discussi on , as- wealth and its control just as inCaldwell; election of P.S.E.A. conven- sorted that this war may be the be- dividuals do. It may be that this tion ; address H. E, Gayman, repre- ginning for a new policy in controll- war is anoth er step in the problem of senting P.S.E.A. office at Harrlsburg, in g the wealth and natural resources a better distribut i on of wealth , both that nations noed. "War has been for nations and Individuals , since the Sends Camp Paper DR. MAUPIN VIEWS ITALO-ETlPIANDISPUTE Girls Asked To Off iciate Three hi gh school bands are guests of the Colle ge at the game today. The bands of Shamokln and Shonandoah hi gh schools as well as that of Bloomsbur g high will come to the campus for a Homecoming visit , . the way nntl-ns obtained wh at they present methods give no satisfaction THIRTY -FIVE MEMBERS , GOAL SET BY BAND With thirty-five members set as its goal for the year the Maroon and Gold Band , under the , di rection of Howard Fenstemaker, has just added eigh t een ne w mu sicians t o the growing list, bringing the total to thirty-one members and a new high for the past few years. Those taken in this year and the instruments they play are the following: Joseph Baraniak , She n a n doah , alto; Isaiah Bomboy, Bloomsburg, sax aphone ; Vince Cinq uegra n i, Scranton, snare drum; Frank Ferguson, trumpet; Charles HaVmony, Bloomsburg, clarinet; Harry Kahler, Bloomsburg, clarinet; Alfred Koczansky, Shenandoah , trumpet ; Ray McBride, Berwick, snare drum; Robert Ohl, Ber wick , saxaphone; William Penny, Harrdsburg, clarine t ; Gflen Rarich , Scott, trumpet; Alex McKechine, Ber wick , baritone; Robert Reimand, Bloomsburg , saxaphone; Michael Strahosky, K ulpmont, clarinet; Walter Wayovitch, Shamokin, trumpet; Ray Schrope Tower City, bass drum. Accustomed To Day Room Men Day students are gradually becoming acclimated to the new quarters provided for them .in the ground floor of North Hall. The new rooms are larger and better equipped than those of the past few years. COACH BUCHHEIT TELLS WHAT TO WATCH AT GAME Coach George Buchheit, in a nswer to a reporter's qu estion , "What do you advise the spect at or t o look at in a foo tball ga m e," listed the following bit of information for the benefit of students and other fans: Probably the bigges t mist ake ma de by ordinary spectators is watching the ball instead of the players. Watch the players or you'll miss the play every time. Watch the men closely before they run down the field for the kickoff. You will get a good idea of the nerous tension they are working under at the time, and at the same time you will learn something of he positions. Watch the receiver and notice whether he has interference. Whether he has or not watch his style of running and shaking off tacklers. You 'll be able to tell whether the man may be expected to cause trouble later in the game. If he has interference ] oes he follow it? In scrimmages, watch the line. It's the linemen who open up for the backfield. When the home team is playing defensive watch the center. You will find him playing in the backfield usually. After the ball is in play he will probably be the man closest to the opponent's ball carrier. Also when the team is on defensive keop an eye on the tackles and ends. Sometimes the guards will come out of the line on the offense. They often protect the passer. PREMIERE SHOWING OF HUMAN HERITAG E CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 desired , and in the Ught of the facts , to the poasossion of wealth nor to br ought much war and its hazzard s wore pref erable to p eace and its conse quences , even in the minds of the common soldier. " Wealth Is Domin nnt The Shenandoah band will also be "To llvo as a prosperous state , natu ral resources , trade routes , comguests of the College at the dinner , those who do not possess it." "The world ," Dr. Maupin said in conclusion, "Is faced with the buildin g of new social Instit utions to cope with this great and fine scientific achievement In the mater ial roalm. " favorable comment from those who vlowed the picture last week. The music synch ronized Into the picture was handled by Miss Harriet Moore. It consists of children 's melodies and Instrumental music. Results of a magazine , survey carried on for more than a full semester of las t yea r by the library staff of the College have j u st bee n r eleased by M iss Pearl Maso n, librarian. The survey was designed to give the librarians information concerning the number of times each magazine on the rack is read by the students. While the survey indica t es cer t ai n magazines are read far more often than other students and readers should bear in m ind tha t in many cases special assignments in some were made by instructors. For inst ance , the Balance Sheet, a commercial maga z ine , leads the list in number of times taken out. The magazine is used by all students in the Department of Commerce. Readers Digest follows closely, probably also explainable by the special assignments given in classes. A few of the more freq u en tly read periodicals and the number of times they were registered out last semester follow: Balance Shee t, 466; R eader 's Di- gest, 458; Hygeia, 453; Vogue, 408; Literary Digest,- 392,- Saturday Eyen-r ing Post, 372 ; Business Education World , 346; Journal National Education Association, 308; Time, 304; American Magazine, 280; Ladies Ho me Journal , 202 ; Good Housekeeping,182 ; Forum, 169; Popular Science , 154. Popular Mechanics, 142; Heal th and Physical Education, 134; Grade Teachers , 138; New Outlook, 133; Scribners, 127; Golden Book, 127; and Atlantic Monthly, 114. The magazines least read over the period of time alloted to the investigation were South "America^ '¦'¦Modern "' ::¦ Language Journal, and the Research Quarterly of American Physical Education, each of which were used but once. Platoon School was read only by two students, Modern Music is registered out but four times, and the maga z in e, Science Education, is listed with a four. Others range from seven up to 100. Hartline Tells of Trip (continued from page 7) not likely be arrested for feeding him , you 'll have to take the consequences, which is often the ruining of your tent or your car or getting your provisions. He has been fed so much that he will do anything now for food , even to breaking a door or smashing in the top of your car. The legal way, however, is this. In one of tJhe ravines, where there is forest all around, is a large fenced pen. In this are log seats. On the outside of the pen is a platform. At sunset every night, food and garbage is itors, perhaps two or three hundred in number, are placed in the pen. Hero they alt on the logs and wait for the bears, hundreds of blacks and grizzlys, to come and eat. And then the fun begins. The blacks are just nicely started on their meal and here comes a grizzly. What happens ? The blacks leave—and not slowly either. If one happens to be particularly bold, he stays. Ho stays, but he fights ; and he usually comes out on the wrong, side of the meat. When an old grizzly and her two cubs appear, the others always make room for her. And it is interesting to note how perfectly her cubs obey her, doing Just as she does and as she wishes. The cubs stay with their mother two years, during which time they are well trained in boar manners. In a tour covering a period of nine weeks, there is an unlimited amount of material to tell. This is but a very small part, but It is hoped that you have found It interesting,