K-II— "—««—«"" — «~«—M I News Brevities I ¦ . London I Soviet forces broke the southern ¦ mchor of the German defense line ¦ vnd hurled back the Nazis along the ¦vhol e fron t. I Moscow announced the capture of ¦Rostov and Voroshilovgrad in the ¦Donets Basin. W A Switzerland report stated that ¦Hitler was preparing to surrender his Icommand of the German Army to the ¦German general. I British planes raided the submarine ¦base at Lorient and other points on ¦the French coast.* I In Algeria new appointments indicated a clean-up of pro-Vichy eleIments. I Washington I Lend-lease deliveries to China are I steadily improving. I U. S. Navy disclosed that 6,066 Ja p I anese were killed in the drive to control Guadacanal. Bloomsburg Students in the Army Air Corps Enlisted Reserves have been notified lo be prepared for immediate call in the near future. —o Social Usage Club to Admit Navy Men "— — " ¦ " ¦" " ¦ Ml — - i r T" ' "., 1, if Army Issues Notices To A. C. E. R. Men Students Present Fellows With Gift P acka ges; Left Last ARMY CONTINGENT IS GIVE N SEND-OFF Sunda y Night The college students and faculty met in a body at the D. L. & W. station Sunday night to give a send-off to the twenty-five boys in the contingent of reserves ordered to active duty on February 15. The boys boarded a special coach that left the station at 8:02 and was scheduled to arrive at Camp Lee, Virginia , sometime Monday morning* The day and the dorm students presented each of the boys with a gift package containing chewing gum, candy , an address book, and a Valentine . Reynold Paganelli, the twenty-sixth member of the contingent, was confined at his home in Wilkes-Barre with a case of chicken pox. __ r\ yj * t Playe rs to Decide on Chapel Program The weekly meeting of the Bloomsburg Players was called to order by President Harry John. Miss Johnston addressed the club. She stated that the club would have to put on two chapel plays, some public plays downt own , and, if the club chose to do so, the semi-annual big play. Final decision was to be made at the next meeting. The program was turned over to Anita Behler, who directed the play for the evening entitled , "There's St il Alarm. " The following took part in the play: Marilyn Sailer, Lucille Mar t ino , Shirley Starook, Elsie Flail and Betty Lebengood. — — — —— ¦« Reservists Notified to be on the Poetr y Club Spon Alert For Definite Orders sors Patriotic Poems an d Instructions The regular meeting of the Poetry Club was held Thursday afternoon, February 12. This semester the Club is sponsoring a series of patriotic poems. The firs t of this series was Edna St. Vincent Millet's "The Murder of Lidice," read by the club sponsor , Miss Gilmore. "The Murder of Lidice " is a poem about the Czechoslavakian village of Lidice which was completely wiped out by the Nazis. The men were killed, the women and children were sent to concentration camps, and all the buildings in the village were burned to the ground. There is a town in Illinois named Lidice, and recently Madeline Carroll, the movie actress, dedicated a statue, "Lest We Forget," in honor of the Czech village that was destroyed. A Mexican city, too ; has been renamed Lidice since this drastic happening. Pill Vacancy In order to fill the vacancy of the office of vice-president made when Elizabeth Bartha was graduated in January, Anita Behler was elected new vice-president of the club. In a notice dated February 9, 1943, twenty-four college fellows now in the Army Air Corps Enlisted Reserve received notice that the War Department had informed the Aviation Cadet " Examining Board at Harrisburg that "All A. C. E. R. men now included in the files of the Harrisburg Aviation Cadet Board" were "cautioned to be on the alert for definite orders and other instructions." Among those who received the notice are: John Bruner, Boyd Buckingham, Robert Bunge, Wayne Deaner, Buddy Hartman, Leon Hartmafi, Xen Hosier, John Hubiak, Harry G. John, David Jones, Ted Jurasik, Andrew Magill, Hugh Niles, Paul Rowlands, Donald Schlieder , Barton Scott, George Smith, Joseph Stauder, Edwin Vastine, Herman Vonderheid, Elwood Wagner, Vincent Washvilla, Philip Yeany, James A. Zweizig. u Sweetheart Ball The Social Usage Club held a soWas a Gala Event cial-dinner meeting in the wing of the dining room on Monday evening, FebThe Sweetheart Ball held Saturruary 8. day , February 13, in the Centennial At this meeting, it wa s decid ed t hat Gym in honor of the twenty-six boys MIXED CHORUS the Navy men will be asked to future who lef t for Camp Lee Sunday night, social meetings. The club is also try REORGANIZE S proved a gala event. The gym was ing to work in a series of programs to decorated with Valentines, which interest students. One of these proBecause Uncle Sam has t ak en so formed archways at the entrances. gra ms is going to be a course of inmany of our men, the Mixed Chorus Two large white-lace trimmed hearts struction in bridge, which wil be has divided into two groups: the Wo- suspended on easels were on either given, for those students who wish to men's Chor u s and Men's Chorus. side of the bandstand , which was learn. After the course is over, the Wednesday afternoons at 4:00 o'cl ock given a white border covered with u club is going to hold a formal bridge is still the time of meeting for the wo- red hearts. party. The club has also recently NEW CLUB ORGANIZED men, but the men meet Thursday af- The Sophisticated Swingsters who " purchased an album of semi-classical ternoons at 4:00 o'clock. provided the music for the evening, records. With the approval of College Coun- On Wednesday, February 10, the featured a vocal trio, a soloist, and a After the dinner , a trio from town cil and President Andruss, a Speech s Chorus had its first meeting. reasonable facsimile of Ish Kibibble. accompanied by Mr. Arnold Wagner, Club has been organized by some of Women' suggested that the Chorus Much of the success of this j ointMoore Miss sang a group of varied selections. the students for the purpose of gain- work toward a Spring concert and class dance was due to the capable ing further knowledge and training perhaps import a soprano soloist. The direction of the general chairmen, in the art of speech for classroom ac- idea appealed to everyone, and the Frederick Dent, James Zweizig and SCIENCE CLUB MEETS tivities and for social and business girls are eager to begin working on Royal Conr ad, and the fine cooperaThe Science Club meeting was held needs. Various activities will be some numbers. At the meeting on tion of the committeemen representin the Social Room of Science Hall at planned to provide opportunity for Wednesday, they went over two ing each class. three o'clock on February 11, 1943. fun as well as for learning. Meetings songs-. "Bells of Youth" by Oley n It was a party mainly for the new of the club will be held every Thurs- Speaks and "Galway Piper ," a rolick- "In Boston they ask, 'How much members. * A baseball game was day at four o'clock in room E of Noet- ing Irish tune. does he know,' In New York, 'How ; played with different kinds of ques- ling Hall. All college students are much is he worth?' In Philadelphia, tions . Dr. Kuster was the referee. welcome to attend. "Cauliflower is nothing but cabbage 'Who were his parents?' " u : Refreshments were served after the with a college education. " —Mark Twain. ¦ , Oh Please Do! • —Mark Twain. game. i ~ —— v o A suggestion against the advisaengagement in After the recent The association of theatrical man- bility oi! mutes for the saxaphone has "A man's dying is more the surEdinburgh of the British National j agers of Berlin has stopped the re- been met with another to the effect vivor 's affair than his own." Company, Mozart was Opera voted as —Thomas Mann, 1 hearsals of all French plays and will that what the saxaphone needs is .a the favorite composer being with i withdraw all French plays now run- Maxim silencer.—Twenty Years Ago. close second Verdi n and Wagner a i ning. The boycott, which is the result "If you don't like the New England (of the invasion of the Ruh r district A library where the published weather , wnit a minute and it will poor third.—Twenty Years Ago. l has extended to the State Opera works of every composer will be change. " —Mark Twain. *-» \ Where "Carmen" has been eliminated available has been established at 15 "I was gratified to be able to anJ irom the rep ertoire—Twenty Years Boulevard des Italians, Paris, by the Governor Edward Martin received swer promptly, and I did. I said I recently organized Franco-American an honorary degree of Doctor of Laws did n't know. " i Ago. —Mark Twain. Musical Society. —Twenty Years Ago. from Pennsylvania Military College o —;— n :— • at the Chester institution 's 122nd an- "He is now fast rising from af"If you pick up a starving dog and i make him prosperous, he will not "I have a feeling that once I am at nual commencement exercises. Gov- fluence to poverty." — Mark Twain, t bite you. This is the principal di/i'er- home again I shall need to sleep three ernor Martin is the fifth chief exec ence between a dog and a man." weeks on end to -get rested from the cutive of Pennsylvania to receive the "The vagabond , when rich, is called —Mark Twain, rest I've had. " a tourist." —Thomas Mann, degree from P. M. C. —Paul Richard. -¦ ¦'- r\ ¦'— ¦ -U— — - ._ \j ___ ¦' ¦ . —¦ t\ — KJ ¦ ¦ n w —_ — — \j ^^ ' "U 1 . i . . Mu ramx mb (&nlb Libra ry Notes WWWXSffl . Film Previews Monday and Tuesday the Capito] Editor 's Note: The following are some presents M-G-M's "Seven Sweetof the new books on our library hearts " starring Kathryn Grayson, shelves. Get a few out and look Van Heflin , and Marsha Hunt. This them over. They are interesting. picture is a modern story of seven y By P a r r *** sisters in a little Dutch colony in the *Scarlet Pimpernel—Orczy. Henry Taggart, a young mid-west. has a number of Haverford School A well known story of a daring played reporter, by Van Heflin, falls planned with the idea of fitactivities band of young Englishmen who saved in love with the youngest of the seven in the armed service ting students for Member members of the French nobility from sisters, played Billie, by Kathryn A summer school to aid studforces. the guillotine by taking them to EngAssociated GolleSiate Press Grayson, but finds that tradition completing their courses ahead ents in land. of time, and a two hour weekly drill stands between them . According to Until the Daybreak—Bromfield . EDXTOBXAXi STAFF Saturday afternoon to augment custom, the eldest daughter must wed each This , a dramatic story of Roxana John Hubiak Editor-in-Chief regular physical education pro- first. After a series 'of complicated the Lucille Martino Associated Editor Dawn, an American dancer who Marilyn D. Sailer Managing Editor ' of the innovations. And situations, the young reporter finally gram are two Make-up Editor Florence,Paust matched wits with the Gestapo in ocfor those who want it, Morse Code wins the girl he loves. Sports Editor Millard C. Ludwig cupied Paris. Feature Editor Reba Henrle theory and radio have been offered as "Life Begins at Eight-Thirty " plays Exchange Editor Helen Parangosky *Murder of Lidice—Millay. at the Capitol Wednesday only. This electives. The narrative poem written by Feature Writers Twentieth Century Fox production © Leo Donn, Bernard Kane, Betty Hagen- Edna St. Vincent Millay to recreate Irv : Uncle seems hard of brings back to the screen that master bu ch, Jeanne Keller, June Keller, Har- Lidice, Czechoslovakia—that village hearing."Your riet Sterling. of merriment, Mont Woolley, and co" destroyed by the Germans. Beporte rs Pag : "Hard of hearing! Why once stars Ida Lupino, mistress of the Joyce , Hay, Joyce Lohr, Irene Kulik, Sal- Look to the Mountain—Cannon. conducted family prayers kneeling dram a, with Cornel Wilde, new disvatore Mazzeo, Athamantia Comuntzis, The romance of Whit Livingstone he Jacqueline Shaffer, Margaret Latsha, and Melissa Butler under the shadow on the cat." —Hammer and Tongs. covery, and features a well rounded Arlene Superko. cast. of Mount Chocorua in New Hamp Typists The lazy man is of no more use From all the far-flung fields of batIrene Kornaski, Flora Guarna, Jean Mas- shire. than a dead man and takes up more tle, there has come no more stirring Witness Tree—Frost. chal, Mary Schroeder. —Hammer and Tongs. story than the heroic epic of Libya. Robert Frost's sevent h book of room. * Henry Fonda and Maureen O'Hara © BUSINESS STAFF poems. Business Manager Anne T. Sabol I'm sure we all either read "Mrs. are starred in this Twentieth CenAdvertising Manager Joanne Fice *See Here, Private Hargrove—Har- Miniver or saw the movie. Well, it's tury Fox picture of a Libyian battle, " Assistants: grove. Elaine Kreisher, Saramarie Dockey, interesting to note that Jan Struther, "Immortal Sergeant," which plays Carmel Sirianni. Army life through Hargrove's eyes author .of the book, received the hon- Thursday, Friday and Saturday of lot of sense and nonsense. —a * orary degree of Doctor of Letters at next week. FACTJIiTY ADV2SEBS _ r\ Robe—Douglas. the University of Pennsylvania midMr. S. W. Wilson Miss Pearl Mason The robe belonging to Christ was year graduation. The Heights * gambled for by Roman soldiers as He • Published weekly when college is in "Is he lazy?" © session. died on the cross; Lloyd Douglas tells Dedicated to the Student Teacher "He is. He'll go into a revolving what became of it. The practice teacher was bashful and door and then wait for somebody to Apple in the Attic—Jordan. FEBRUARY 19, 1943 come along and turn it around. " shy; Here is a folk tale of the Pennsyl- Her pupils were fresh as the breeze. ——v vania German farmers. The plot cen- So rattled was she when she bumped One Road ters around the apple schnitz. Do you the desk Of all the paths of life but one—the know what sdhnitz is? Read the book That she murmured, "Excuse me, path of duty—leads to happiness. and find out. please!" —Indiana Penn. *Castle on the Hill — Elizabeth ffl Goudge. Foibles of the Famous Miss Goudge explains the new Eng- Keats liked red pepper on toast. land growing up today around the Dickens was fond of wearing j ewelry. character of Dolores Brown and her Daudet wore his eyeglasses when Ed i t o r i a l l y life in a 900-year-old Birley castle. [• *^ i asleep. Under My Elm—Grayson. Thoughts in Our Passing Life all his chairs to Joaquin Miller nailed In the expensive business of fightA book of country discoveries and the wall. ing a war, a dime's worth of oxyj *** reflections by David Grayson whose Edgar Allen Poe slept with his cat. gen may seem like an inconsequenEDUCATION— I of life has long brought Thackeray used to lift his hat when- tial item, yet that much oxygen is Education makes a people easy to philosophy satisfaction to American readers. ever he passed the house in which enough to keep a bomber pilot alive lead, but difficult to drive; easy to From the Land of Silent People—St. he wrote Vanity Fair. for 40 minutes in the high altitudes govern , but impossible to enslave. John. always reached by today 's war planes. Hawthorne washed his hands . —Lord Brougham. complete, uncensored, au- before reading a letter from his When operating at such extreme The first WAR— ranges, the lives of the pilot and thentic report of the tragic campaign wife. If I am asked what we are fighting in Yugoslavia, Greece and Crete. Oliver Wendell Holmes used to carry his crew, as well as the safety of for, I can reply in two sentences. In Rock and the Wind—Bretherton. a horse chestnut in one pocket and his plane, depend upon the unfailthe firs t place, to fulfill a solemn in- A romance of the Pacific Northwest a potato in another to ward off ing supply of this precious gas ternational obligation . . . an obliga- by one of its own daughters. which makes up for the deficiency rheumatism, tion- of honor which no self-respect- Queen of the Flat-tops—Johnston. of oxygen in rarefied air. © ing man could possible have repudAn eyewitness story of the Coral Have you written to a soldier, sailiated. I say, secondly, we are fighting Sea battle and the loss oj the U. S. S. or, or marine this week? Don't let to vindicate the principle that small Lexington. any of the service men go hungry for nationalities are not to be crushed in Haunted Lady—Rinehart. mail! defiance of international good faith Another mystery by the one and w at the arbitrary will of a strong and only Mary Roberts Rinehart. If bats They Say So overmastering Power. scare you, don read it 't before going into the merry-maker dashed A —-Premier Asquith, August 4, 1914. to bed! police station, Perspiration poured WOMEN— ?Especially good. from his forehead. Oh, woman, perfect woman! What o "Help!" he yelled at \the top of his distraction Child Lif e voice. Was meant to mankind when thou Isn't your son rather young to join A startled desk sergeant looked wast made a devil! the army? down at him. What an inviting hell invented! Yes; but you see, he's only in the "What' s happened man?" he asked —Beaumont and Fletcher. infantry. quickly. Your purchase of War Savings DECAY— n "A stick-up !" shouted the reveler. Stamps not add up to the hunNot the Hook There seems to be a constant decay "There's a robbery being committed!" dreds ofmay thousands ot dollars need* Game Warden—Are the fish biting The sergeant leaped from his chair. ed to buy one of those of all our ideas; even of those which high-flying are struck deepest and in minds the today? "Where?" he demanded. but every time you "inbombers, Weary Angler — I don't know. If most retentive, so that if they be not Une other shook his head. 10-cent Stamp, you are vest in a sometimes renewed by repeated exer- they are, they 're biting each other. "How should I know?" he murmur- providing money for the oxygen '¦' V cises of the senses, or reflection of ed. "But according to statistics, there 's without which our great air fleets those kinds of obj ects which at first Just That! robbery being committed every two would be practically useless. Your occasioned them, the print wears out, She—"You had no business to kiss minutes in¦• this country!" Schools at War program will help _ » and at last there remains nothing to me." \j show you the Importance of buying be seen, He—-"That wasn't business; that In life there is always room for War Stampi regularly. —Locke, Human Understanding, was a pleasure." U, S, Tnatury Dipartmcnt courtesy. . .— . —\j~ ¦ •WluUtfouBuy Wdk• WAR STAMPS _ .. .._ 11 A hu skies Win Over Kutztown , 67-57 j I ¦Lead Most of Way in Game ; ¦Slegeski Stars ; Game a I | ^Thriller I The Huskies of Coach George C. ¦Buchheit hung up a well-earned vic¦tory over Kutztown State Teachers ¦College last Wednesday in the Cen¦fennial Gymnasium by a score of ¦67-57. ¦ At only three stages in the contest ¦were the teams tied and only twice Bwas Kutztown ahead, but the game Bwas exceedingly close until the last [four minutes of play when the Huskj¦ es began to pull away. Action was ¦so fast that both outfits were forced ¦frequen tly to call for time. Slegeski Top Scorer, I I Eagle-eyed John Slegeski led both ¦team s in scoring with twenty-one ¦poin ts. Slegeski repeatedly whipped ¦ the cords when the Golden Avalanche came within striking distance. Dick Bierly, Kutztown 's leading threat all season, paced the MacGovern-coached team with seventeen markers. Joe Chesney hit his old time form, and Whitey MeCloskgy gam© through with ten points in addition to his fine work on defense. Kutztown led at the half, 30-29, but after three minutes had elapsed in the third period, Slegeski 's shot p ut the Huskies ahead, 41-39, where th ey stayed the rest of the way. Bloomsburg (67) MI^^W i^BMai^aaBHaMAMMMM^HNMaMBM^BmBWMaaMMM ^•¦•¦¦•• ¦•• ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ •^ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ •¦¦•¦¦¦ ^ ¦¦¦ •¦•• ¦•¦•¦¦•• ¦•¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ •¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ • • ¦•¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ •¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ •¦ ¦ ¦ ( ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ •¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ^M Huskies at West , Chester Tomorrow \ BfLOtiU ^biato f, •¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ^M^^ HMMHMHaM •¦¦•If l a L BY MlLLABD LUDWIG Hope to Get Four th Win : Mil. lersville Will Play Here Tuesday t In an attempt to hang up their \j, fourth win of the season, the Huskies .f will invade Ehringer Gymnasium tomorrow night to play the West- Ches' • ter State Teachers College basketball team. Coach Buchheit will be without Bernie Pufnak who left for tne *service last week. Tony Valente and John Slegeski will probably be at the forward spots. Slegeski is rapidly developing into the team's leading scorLock Haven last week became the third Teachers College team to drop er, and Valente all year has displayed basketball for the duration, Mansfield and Edinboro being the first two. The needed offensive punch. Bald Eagle? lost the starting five and three of the second team to the Army. Vince Washvilla will likely line up Coach Hubert Jack's team posted a creditable record of eight wins and two at center with Joe Chesney and Whitlosses before howing out of the cage picture. The combination of Metzler, ey McCloskey at guards. Mike. RemShaner, Coront, Bernardi and Mitro was rated one of the best in the Haven- etz, only Husky to do any real point it es' history. making in the fourth quarter of the *** East Stroudsburg affair, will probably The Camp Fort Meade team has now only two men remaining from the see action before the fray progresses aggregation that appeared here—Kociban and Warner. Several stars have been added, including Dick Brown, high scoring forward from the famous West Chester StrongWest Kentucky State team. Recent victories for the soldiers have been con - West Chester has a record of four quests over Millersville and Shippensburg. wins and five losses thus far with victories over Mill©r§yil!§r Baltimore and Putting the sport shot here and there . . . Kutztown State Teachers lose Delaware twice. None of the five two basketeers to the Army, Norris and Smith, forward and center, respect- losses have been by a margin of more ively .. . Dick Dunkle's converse basketball standings place East Stroudsburg than fourteen points. in sixth position among eastern teams with a rating of 62.1 . .. A near riot Conn elly, a forward, and Nathan occurred two weeks ago when Gipe, Shippensburg guard, and Miller, West Kendig, a guard, are the leading Chester forward, engaged in a head-on collision . . . Play was rough the en- scorers of the Chester five. Both are tire game . . . Kutztown is practically the only Teachers College to have well up in the standing of individual «. *. w. arts. wrestling this year .. . The Huskies had a good grappling team four years scorers in the Philadelphia area. DalValente, F. 1-2 11 ago when Ken Horner was mentor. las Miller is the other forward who —- 5 Slegeski, F. 9 3-7 21 may pair with Connelly. Kendig and Washvilla, C. 5 0-0 10 Miller are the only two veterans from Chesney, G. 7 1-2 15 last year's squad , which lost toM the ' McCloskey, G. 5 0-1 10 Huskies, 44-40. Bomboy, G. 0 0-0 0 Millers Lose Two More Remetz, F. 0 0-0 0 wli engage the Huskies Mil ersville l Gymnasium next Centennial in the 31 . 5-12 67 at eight 'o'clock. evening "P istol Pete " Scores 44 of Big point total. Bernie Pufnak partici- Tuesday Kutztown (57) defeated the BuchMillers pated in his last inter-collegiate game Since thein late January, they G. F. G. Pts. have Red' s 80 Points; Huskies for the duration. The shifty guard heitmen 17 5 7-9 Bierly, F. _— one to more contests, Weakened by Fouls gave the fans some consolation from dropped two 13 4 5-7 Norris,' F . to Philadelanother and the game with his fine floor work as Fort Meade 12 6 0-1 Smith, C. phia Pharmacy. The Lancaster CounOne of the largest scores ever rehe bowed out of the picture. 0 1-3 1 corded by a Husky opponent Purnell, G. ty school's record now stands at one occurred 12 5 2-2 Young, G. -— lone victory compared to five defeats. last Saturday evening as East 1 0-0 2 Stroudsburg s quintet Musselman, G. Bob Wray, hero of the previous remained un' game at Millersville, will lead his defeated by rolling up an 80-49 count 57 over the Maroon 21 15-22 team against the Huskies. Sid Bitter and Gold team in 15 14 21 17—67 the Centennial Gymnasium. Bloomsburg and William Mahoney, forwards, and girls of B evening the Wednesday 10 20 13 14—57 Kutztown _ "Pistol Pete " Pasko ran up a total Club held their monthly meeting. Dave Neff and Bruce Rathbun, Referees—Bryan and Williams. of forty-four points, more than half Dispensing with their usual athletic guards, are other members -of the of the Big Red's tallies and only five activity, the girls held a theatre party. starting five. Latest Styles less than the entire Bloomsbure total. The girls saw the picture, "You Were It will be the last home game of the the following Never Lovelier," starring Rita Hay- season for the Maroon and Gold, and Jim—Have you been First Half Close new styles? Led by John Slegeski, who had sev- worth and Fred Astaire. The party Coach Buchheit is expected to have one ten followed George—Sure. I enteen points to head the Husky at- was in honor of their sponsor, Miss his team at lull strength ior the oc' blocks only today. tack, the Buchheit team matched the Lucy McCammon. The girls present- casion. O o -—Pocono outfit almost point for point. ed her with a gift as a token of their Ha ppiness in Little The score at the end of the first two appreciation of her ever helpful serAfter the show the girls met Remember this—that very little is WIPE THKt SNEER OFF HIS FACE / periods was 30-24 with East Strouds- vice. needed to make a happy life. burg in front, but at only one stage together for refreshments. were the¦Huskies more than seven ¦¦ ¦¦ ¦¦ ¦¦ ¦¦ ¦¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ • ¦ « « ¦ ¦¦ ¦¦ ¦¦¦«¦¦ • • ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ « • ¦ ¦ ¦ • ¦ ¦ • ¦ ¦¦¦¦ < ¦ ¦¦ ¦ • ¦ ¦ • ¦ *£ ?i*u points behind. Pasko was held to eighteen points during the first twenty minutes. Pasko started the second half with ¦ [ (Includin g Games of Februar y 13) goals, two field and from then on the I Big Opp, \ Pts. Red built up an overwhelming j Pet. W. L. lead that the Huskies were never able 1.000 328 188 j 5 0 to even come within reasonable dis- \¦ East Stroudsbur ar .714 344 304 • Look Haven 5 2 tance. .667 115 ' 96 : 2 1 ". Indiana ,~ Lose Th ree Men 1 .667 150 141 2 The Buchheit club was considerably ! Clarion 3 .571 300 352 • -_ 4 Kutztown ; weakened by the loss of McCloskey, „ 4 .333 265 268 | 2 Washvilla and Valente on personal I Shippensbur g: 1 2 .333 119 134 ; : MiUor sville fouls. When the starting combination ¦ BLOOMSBURG .286 310 2 5 394 ; — — was broken up via the foul route, the 1 3 .250 160 fcll \ : West Chester „_, 1 powerful Big Red started to roll. ! 0 3 .000 124 167 ¦ California -_ -.—-— Bpy Mike Remetz, substitute forward , *' 0 0 .000 0 0 I came through with nine markers in | Slippery Rook t ¦ ¦¦ • • ¦ • ¦ ¦ • • • ¦ ¦• ¦ • ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ • ¦ ¦ • ¦ ¦• ¦ ¦• ¦ ¦• ¦ ¦ j j M M • «j» ¦ • • ¦ • ¦ ¦• •¦ ¦ • ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ • ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ • • • ¦ ¦ • , the last six minutes to lift the Husky rfjg »¦i i• Peter Pasko's forty-four points last Saturday night still has the fans talking. As far as all-time records are concerned, Pasko fell far short of any individual mark. The collegiate single gam e record is held by Dick Goone, a Senior now at Salem College, West Virginia, when he scored fifty-nine points against Rio Grande College f last year. Hank Luisetti, of Stanford, had previously held the record at fifty-four points. However, "Pistol Pete" came dangerously close to this year's record of forty-five points held by six-foot, seven-inch , Harry Boykoff , St. John's giant. Pasko's percentage of shots made was almost unbelievable. The Big Red forward swished the net eighteen out of twenty-two tries for a mark of ,818. . V f V •i* i* *i* Pasko Runs Wild As East Stroudsburg Wins t- B Club Holds a Theatr e Part y ¦ — '¦ " -¦ ' _r\ KT . , § M j WRSAVINQS B0WD8 &STAWS State Teacher Colleges Standin gs * : LIFE WITH UNCLE 1 by B. W. Kane :; «!• j * Ju 4 For the benefit of any boys who might be new in Camp, two old timers , from Chanute , published the following "inside dope " on soft j obs. Maybe some of you "fellas " can make use of it too. MASTER SERGEANT—Easy work, but no chance for promotion. FIRST SERGEANT—Nothing to do all day but answer foolish questions. TECHNICAL SERGEANT—Nothing t o do bu t t ea ch t h e offic ers not t o bother the "non-coms" t raining the yardbirds. * STAFF SERGEANT—Nothing to do but wish you were a first sergeant. PLATOON SERGEANT—No thing to do but holler "Hup, tub, thrup, fup !" BUGLER—Nothing to do but play pinochle with the supply sergeant. CLERK—Nothing to do but correct the first sergeant's spelling on paper work. ? CORPORAL—Nothing to do. The best way to get promoted to ^ of these "sof t jobs " is to do some any extra work for the officers, like washing the captain 's car; helping a "looey " paint the officers ' day room; or getting the colonel's name into the Longhorn. Another way is to get something on the officers. than the army life of an enlisted man. To my knowledge, there is one time when such is the case. When? Payday ! I'm in the Ordnance Section of the 474th Bomb. Sqd.r and we all get along like "one big happy family. " In fact , I of ten compare it to the good old days on "The Hill. " — i ¦« Americanizing Africa Donald Schminky. The population of this region I'm in is made up of French and Natives who speak a little American. They use such words as gum, cigarettes, good and American. The American gum and cig arettes make a "hit" with both the French and the Natives, so they nearly drive us crazy asking "Gum , cigarettes." • . I would like to tell you more interesting things about this place and what we are doing here, but if I did , the censor would check me, Every passing day finds us looking more like an American camp. Why , Down But Not Out Pvt. Richard Rowlands. Considering that I spent some time in the hospital with the "flu ," I'm now feeling pretty good. The worst thing about being sick, was not being able to talk, but I'm making up for lost time now. Before I went to the hospital, I had an interesting experience with the Commander of the Guard. While I was posted at the munitions dump , the C. G., who like;s to surprise guai-ds at their post, cam e to my post which is near a main-linq railroad track. Not recognizing him as the C. G. when I saw him , I halted him as he stepped from behind a box car onto the main line. Yes, a train was coming; he didn 't move for he knew I was a "rooki e" who might follow the orders which were to shoot and* ask questions later. I had him advance three paces so that the train j ust missed him. According to him , it was one of his close calls, Slow But Sure Pvt. Morris M. Cabelly. During my first couple months in t he army , I found it pretty tough going, but as time passed, I learned to like army life. Right now I'm in the Combat Engineers Regiment , but in the next few months, I'll enter Officers Candid ate School. I'm eligible for it now, but you sometimes play a waiting game in the army. tel§ I =3 Come In Jim James Smith , R. M. 3/c . Having graduated from the Naval Radio School at Connecticut, I'm now a petty officer third class; now I'm in for more schooling. However, the coming course won't be as long as the last one. Although it wasn't my first choice, communication is a very interesting field , and I like it very much. 1—~^£ we've set up our own kitchen from which we serve the best of food. Litw hiler Goes With Franchi se Way Back When Donald L. Tenzi , Instructor. Former Husk y Athlete Called For the past three months, I've "Only Maj or Lea guer on been getting the Maroon and Gold, Phils ' Squa d. " bu t thus far with regret, I've not iced that only the most recent graduates Danny Litwhiler, Philadelphia Phil and those students recently inducted outfielder , who used t o don a Maroon or voluntarily enlisted in the Armed and Gold uniform, last week was inForces are contributing their "bit" to cluded with the franchise taken over "Life With Uncle. " It sure w ould be by the National League. The Phils nice to know where some of my had owed the league a debt estimated school-buddies are. I'm certain that around the $200,000 mark. they, too, would feel as I do. It would Litwhiler was termed by leading help considerably to revive pleasant authorities of the Junior Circuit as the memories and without a doubt , it only "Big Leaguer on the entire Phil would make one feel good "inside " to roster." For the present the National know that one 's Alma Mater is doing League will operate the club, but syn more than its share , not only in fight- dicates from New York and Baltimore ing men, but in various other phases are reported to have been bargaining of war work that today are so essen- for the ownership of the former tial for ultimate and complete victory. Nugent-owned outfit. A tip to those who wish to be in the Litwhiler Has Record "thick of things." The title of the col- An all time National League fieldumn well bespeaks what life with ing record was established by "Dan ' Uncle " is. You can't always get gerous Dan last summer when he " what you want, but "Uncle " knows posted a spotless mark of 1.000. Litbest where you belong. I'm an in- whiler s batting average of .275 last ' structor and not because I volun- year was considered low according to teered for such service, but because his previous records, but in the light there 's such a thing as a,service reof the Phils type of team the mark cord kept by "Uncle Sam," which was exceedingly high. shows in great detail what you were, Litwhiler is expected to have a betare , etc. We instructors are called the new ownership when ter chance "pedagobs." takes over the franchise. Although he is in the upper bracket of individAnswer to Last Week's Question ual league records, he has constantly Where does the term "Blimp " come played with players below his calibre, from? under many handicaps. The Phil Answer: In World War I, ships of slugger during the past summer was this type were designated as "Class selected to play in the annual AllB airships, limp " (non-rigid). There- Star game. fore , B-limp soon shortened to the Not For Pa t ient still-current blimp. Visitors to the house in the daytime made so much noise that the This Week's Question night nurse could not get sufficient What is a "t ract or " plane? n rest. One day she mentioned this to the Father Webster doctor, who wro t e a large n ot ice Son— "Pa , wha t 's a bachelor?" bearing th e w ords : "Please remember Pa— "Lucky, my son. " the night nurse," and placed it on the table. Getting Old Next evening, when she came on Some men know better as they duty, she found beneath the notice a grow older. Others merely know doll a r , a half , two dimes and eight more. nickles. ¦ u— ; f\ ^^^ tftfiflGB SBSBR^te^k^ /V Wings For Donnic Lt. Donald Jenkins. On January fourth , 1 got my "Wi ngs" and my commission in the Army Air Corps , so now I'm classified as a "Shavetail. " For my duty, I chose heavy bombardment , and I'm co-pilot on a. consolidated B-24. I never .saw so many instruments on a ship, but it isn't bad when you know what they 're for. It's what I wanted , and Tm sure I'm going to like it. Where Mountain Meets Sky Lenard Wearre. Here at Hills Field , I'm working in the office of Military Personnel, and I like everything except the bitter bold that sometimes comes to this snow-capped mountain region. l«g In Pay? ' Sgt. Leon Greenly. S/ I'd like to see "Stan " Esmond again and ; have him prove to me that army life as an officer is so much better DUn V w LIKE YOU NEVER -a.DID BEFORE ^^^^ jw ^j u^j l-a-a. ^ .^^ _a-^^ _ a_ ^ Supp ort the ^£AZ,\ ! SINKING FUND B*lWARSAVINGS BONDS & STAMPS -