JLi WITNESSES" DEMONSTRATION BE HErtlS lNfil At a recent meeting.of the Business Education Club President Harvey A. Andruss; Mr. William Forney, Head of the Business Education Department; Mr. C. M. Hausknecht, Business Manager; Mrs. Anna Knight , Secretary to the President; Miss Paulina Clossen, and Miss Mary Lou Fenstemaker of the Dean of Instruction 's office were guests of the club. B. Robert Bird , Berwick, Pa., introduced Mr. Stuart L. Hartman, a ! gradua te of the College and now a |representative for International BusI iness Machines, who demonstra ted I the Electromatic Typewriter. After § the demonstration , members and I guests had an opportunity to use the S typewriter. 1 Certificates were awarded to the 1 winners of the Typewriting Contest which was held at the last meeting. : This"*'contest was under the direction of the sponsor , Mr. W. S. Rygiel. Evelyn Witman , General Chairman of the contest chose the following to serve on the Correcting Committee: Berth a May Sturman , June Novak, Marcella Vogel, Mary Fox and Rose Cerchiara. Those receiving certificates were Rose Marie Kraiser, Betty L. Fisher, Elizabeth Lehet, Harold Miller, Estelle Friday ,^ Pauline Kokolias, Josephine Padula , Raymond Popick and John Cohoat. Betty Lehet was the champion with 73 words per minute and an accuracy rating of 99 per cent. Honorable Mention was given to Betty L. Fisher, 71 words, 96 per cent accuracy; Rose Marie Kr a iser , 71 words, 93 per cent accuracy ; Pauline Kokolias 70 words, 96 per cent accuracy . Plans are being made for the ban- USHfiRE Tf ES VOLUNTEER THEIR SERVICES FOR PLAY quet which will be held in May. r> . Who Says That the Dessert Comes Last ? FRESHMAN HOP TO AH , YES , SPRING ! - - A brief informal meeting of the Bloomsburg Players was held Tuesday nigh t, ~April 2. The members are all cooperating wholeheartedly in helping with the stage set, make- up, etc., to make the play , "The Man Who Came to Dinner ," a big success. * * The cast is practicing diligently under Miss Johnston 's direction. The following members volunteered their services as usherettes the night of the play: Pauline Kokolias, Arbuta Wagner , Charlotte Young, Marie Dieffenbach , Betty Jane Anella , Peggy Suchy and Alberta Naunas , Chairman. . April 1 brought forth the occasion for an unusual B-Club supper. The ' four cooks of the evening chose a new method in serving the meal instead of the . conventional manner oJ! (1) Appetizer , (2). Main Course, (3) Dessert. These girls, in deciding to produce a different effect , served the gingerbread and whipped cream dessert first , followed by barbecued hamburg and French fries. The last item on the menu was the appetizer. Chief cooks and bottle washers of the evening were: Renie Paul , Betty Fisher, . Janet Gilbody and Rosanna HOW SONGS ARE WRI TTEN Broadt. The general opinion was that Methods of songwriting were reno matteriuvhich comes first , dessert by Mr. Fenstemaker at a revealed or appetizer , it is the food itself that of the Athenaeum Club. meeting cent counts, analyzed several songs and deHe supper the McPreceding , Miss on the piano how they monstrated gave college the Cammon "B's" to qualifying members who earned 1000 were • formed. Members were surpoints in sports activities this year. ' ] prised to learn that supposedly original songs were in reality a combina¦ Butcher— "What can I do ' for you , tion of several. Mr. Fenstemaker then played. Madam?" Doodle " in numerous tem"Yankee like to have would "I New Bride— pos to illustrate its versatility. He I hear bo meet track of that some . relate|Miow also he and Dr. Haas spring. ' " every about much —The Rocket. wrote the s||ig "Old Bloomsburg." —— - 1 —¦" /¦Y u «' The Freshman Hop will be held AiHh 27, in the Centennial Gymnasium. Plans for the event are well under way and Ivan Faux 's orchestra1 from Wilkes-Barre has already been » , engaged. The admission ta-tlie semi- •.< formal dance , to be held from 8:30 P. M . until 12 P. M., is $1.10 per couple: Midge Fuller, Madge Fuller and Harold Reinert are in charge of the committees for the dance, which are as follows: Refreshment -_ Peggy Lewis '. ___ Midge Fuller Program _ Invitation Glenn Loveland Decoration Madg e Fuller Band Peter Parnell l The Freshman Hgpj s the beginning of the actfvities 'lhat the Fresh man class has planned for the!*remainder of the semester. A weiner roast is being planned for the* first , , part of May. o—: Or. SVBaupi&i Tel ls of Trap to BVlSBwaukee At a recent meeting' of the Kappa* Dclterinii Honorary Society , Dr . Nell ' Maupin, faculty advisor, gave a very interesting account of her experiences • while attending the Fifteenth Con- * vocation of that society. The gathering was hsldj&t the Hotel Schroeder , Milwauke^^Wiscohsin, on March 11, 12 and lS^Every two 'y ears the local chap ters of the Kappa Delta Phi have a national meeting, which the councilors or elected members of the local groups attend. At this time, the rules and regulations are changed and revised to keep up with the reWhat 's On In Cha pel? ports from the various groups. To be a member of this society, one It isn't Wednesday morning unless must be a student at a college which someone asks about ten o'clock , offers educational courses and is rat"What' s on in chapel?" Sometimes ed A-l by an outside rating agency. . .. someone knows, but generally it's a Also, he has to be a Junior or Senior"M^ wait-and-see proposition. The fol- and have six higj frs in education if * , lowing is the necessary information the former; twewe, if the latter. The that can make everyone an authority quality of his work must place him on this vital question: in the upperquartile of the institution -< Brandt Concert Company and the Dean of Instruction 's cerMay 1 Athenaeum Club Program tification is necessary for the honor. May 8 Bloomsburg Players Finally, the members vvote on the May 15 May 22 Unscheduled character and personality of the eligThe Brandt Concert Party on the ible students and if a maj ority vote first day of May will present, in ad- is received , they are admitted to the dition to their light , tuneful and pop- society. Bloomsburg State Teachers ular numbers, a musical tabloid , "The Chapter is the Gamma Beta. Moonlight Sonata ," based on the life After registering on the eleventh, of Beethoven. The company will use Dr. Maupin attended the general asthe music of the "Moonlight Sonata " sembly over which Dr. McCrackin of as the basis, of how Beethoven came the University of Ohio, presided . At *lo write this inspiring number. this .meeting, the different sections Beethoven lives again in son-g and were broken up; North sat with South story with the Hugo Brandt Concert and East with West. The 144 local P-nrtv chapters that attended were repreThe Athenaeum Club expects fo sented by over 230 people from all present as its program on the eighth , over the United States. ' the Girls ' Glee Club oil Berwick, The next day was highlighted by a alctag with some additional soloists. lunch at which Mr. T. U. Musselman , The Bloomsburg Players have not one of the student founders of the yet revealed the title of the play they Kappa Delta Phi , was the' guest of will present on May 15, but everyone honor. In the afternoon , Professor J. knows it will be worth waiting for. Continued on Page Four "Since the twenty-second comes j n the last week fethis semester^which planned for that period at . the presis full of SenidFactivities , nothing is ent. . ' j Utar rrmt attb (ilfllft Published at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College • A Weekend in North Hall Cam pus Cliques i Social Service Club I The purpose of the Social Service Everyone has heard stories as to Club is to help needy people. Each 1 how one of our soldiers felt when ho week the members of this club spend 1 was about to make an invasion; and a certain number of hours doing ser1 the wave of emotion that sweeps , especially serve They • I vice for others Press ileftiate Associated Go S UJig ffig3 over one when he must leave his the poor and needy about this com8 parents and friends to go over&eas— munity. • I but nune» of these sentimentalities A few of the club's activities are^'. t , I even begin to compare with the pains collection of clothes to be sent to"' ' 'J*: £ STAFF Jean Richard and agonies of one of our male stud- Europe , toys for poor children at 1 Editor ___ .--_ Barbara McNinch, Eloise Noble ents who is condemned to North Hall Christmas, entertainment for the I Editorial Board Helen Mae Wright for a weekend. Worse things could people at a nearby Home for the - Business Manager I ' Peter Parnell, James Scarcella happen to one, but off-hand , I don't Aged. Sports Editors 1 ' Exchange Editor Barbara Greenly know what. Regular meetings are held during | Rosanna Broadt There are various reasons for be- the noon hour Thursdays in Room F. 1 ,;> Circulation Manager Albert Zimmerman ing a campus guest over a weekend. The officers of the club are: Pres1 Art.Editor 1 Feature Writer - William Hummel The main cause is, of course, catch- ident, Anna Pappas; Vice President, rf^i 1* ing up on previously neglected work; Betty Fisher; 1 Joyce Goss; Treasurer, t " Reporters^Estelle Friday , Peggy Lewis, Jane Livzey , Ralph McCracken , or doing the "gone-with-the-wind" ' Secretary, Harriet Rhodes. Miss Rich | ¦^ Arbuta Wagner, Anne Wrigh t, Shirley Walters, Gretchen Troback , Har- assignments some few o'f our profes- is the club sponsor. I old Miller, Dawn Eshleman , Robert Martin , Dorothy Kocher, Peggy sors so gleefully pass out on SaturScience Club 1 1 Suchy, Zita Spangler , Anne^Bafcly, James Smith. day morning. There isn't a more The Science Club is for all people 1 ^ touching sight than seeing some of interested in the broad field of sci1 Typists—Carolyn Hower, Gladys, Kuster, Martha Jane Sitler, Ra y mond our brawny, husky, bleary-eyed ence. The club's yearly program conI Popick , Harold Reinert , Samuel|Pleviak , Sara Graham. students (such as Benson, '. %». Barry, speakers, sists of outside 1 speakers Sponsor—S. L. Wilson ¦ . ' : -?1£E Gillung and various other Friday- from the club, scientific current _____——^———————^— 1 nighters) coming up the walk toward events, scientific , quizes, and short f our beloved home, with tears stream- field trips about the college campus h ing endlessly down their faces; often and community . Once a year the " v Newspapers Have ASB Americans looking back toward the classroom club members go on an all-day field from which they came; making un- trip to a nearby place of interest. Work Together printable predictions as to their Greiri lins ^oo I The club meetings are held in the hopes for certain teachers' immediate social rooms of Science Hall Thurs; Ther e are certain things, certain futures. After having entertained days at 4 P. M. John Hmelnicky is [ Tribune " ideas , certain principles which make ideas for an entire week of appetiz- President of this group . The other Fiom the New York Herald ; slightly Americans "stand out" from all oth - ing f oo d , an especially ' soft bed , the •officers are: Vice President, Shirley For ihe millions who are i oi! the pi xy-minded, the discovery er people on earth. sympathetic family—all the luxuries Secretary, Dorothy Kurchar| One of these principles is *our in- of home—these dreams are shattered Kaiser; •ivemlins , rinse devilish little sprites Eltheda Klingerman; I ski; Treasurer , fliers of up for the born desire to work together—to in a few soft spoken heart-piercing Program Chairman , Ellen Moore. Dr. \vno mess tilings I Viie Royal i\5r Force, provided one of team up—whether it be in a club— words. Truly, it is pathetic. sponsor. I Kuster is the club the n~ p.,;'"¦<)¦ excitements of the war. or on a baseball team—or in a facStudent Christian Association. There are the others of course , who | Como to +.hr.ik of it , it is as easy to tory or office. The Student Christian Association i depart precisely at 11:00 A. M. believej in gremlins as in banshees There's a reason why we do it that | 2nd .U i > !'< .ic/i'T.:n« rv in any of the way. It's because, from the very be- Among the first few departees are corresponds to a . combination YMCA g creature.* that dance across uie'^u-gcs gniiimgs oi our country, we've found |Kritzberger and his ever faithful and YWCA organization with which | cof that fine Irish writer , Mr. AJames that , only by co-operating, can the companion Smigle. (He got his prac- it keeps in close contact. program includes outThe club's tice for the 880 dash from his Satf Stephens. thing we 're after be obtained. : But gremlins were not enough. Of course, that doesn't mean that urday morning take-off). The next side speakers , entertainers, and a club is at the present chorus. The contingent is Kriziwiki and his mob exasper\ sometimes The alert though all has been "love and roses " on this sponsoring two courses of re| time (which of course includes Shirley radio the conduct ating minds that business of pulling together. Human ligious study that meet weekly in I Evans) who have been fixing up with forward have come industry b e ings , after all , still are human be, group The sponsored a I Science Hall their motors in the parking lot since These people. of cute little their set ings. And so it's only natural that collection of funds to be sent to the | are called grohms. Cne ! type of we pull in different directions at 9 A. M. Oh, at 10:55 the entire help World Student Service Fund to building rocks with the excitement up" the"louses , slobnik the grohm , ' 4 limes. foreign countries buy I copy scrip writers ; and another , the But. let's never forget that it's only and eager anticipation of those who the students ofsupplies \ badly needed . Inffnix , flattens the lines p£ comed- by pulling together that we get things are leaving. At 10:55 nothing can be meets Wednesday eveThe S. A. C. heard except the | muffled sobs of ians. This, also, is an interesting dis- done. For instance , right now , only covery, sure to provide much merri- when workers and management pull those forgotten souls who remain. nings at 6:45 in the social rooms of ment among the people ol: radio , to together can we keep factories and One would think the place had been Science Hall . Club officers are: President, Rennee Paul; Secretary, June whom laughter comes rather easily. business going, laying the foundation contaminated with the plague . Novak; Treasurer , Mary Rush. The At noon , the unfortunates go for But why the excitement? Jqurnal- I lor prosperity . * sponsor of the group is Miss faculty ism itself has long had its own set of It's j ust part of being an American their "C" rations, excuse me, I mean Major. little rascals upwho for generations to work together with others—for lunch. After partaking of a frugal one thing or anoth - Americans work together meal (and I do mean frugal) they i^rp ave messed . Strongr Words '"er. Various phenomena observed in return to the morguish atmosphere supervisor received the A railway " » ¦ ¦' • of their humble abode. Here they are newspaper offices leads to the ines- ? * following note from one of his forebeckoned by their boring, dry-lookNOTICE! capable conclusion that , journalism id : ; " sending ' in the accident "I am me n : ing, seldom-used textbooks; and also haunted by as pernicious a eel of Casey foot which he report on 's airstrange folk as ever harassed an \ All names will be printed in the; by their soft, downy , springy, inv itspike maul. Now, unstruck with a radio I College Obiter 'exactly.as they ap- jj ing, friendly-looking bed (or "sack" plane pilot or made life in a ¦ pear on the bulletin Board across ; to you ex-G. I.'s). After realizing der 'remar ks' do you want mine—or studio miserable, Casey's?" These troublemakers have been ; the hall from the library. Anyone : how much work is to be done , the , student naturally falls into his bed , tentative ly named mergenfellers , and " finding his name listed incorrectly ? they come in many guises, Most !should make the necessary chang- J tolally exhausted at the thought of the work he has to do. For further • cs . puckish of the lot , perhaps, are the ^ ¦• K » U M i . » ¦• ¦• e »?•? information on this subj ect see Bob eternally playful twins, etaoin and Cramer , John Longo, or that sleeper shrdlii , who have great fun sliding up Mrs.— "That new couple next door of all sleepers—Jim Hanjis. (Doctor and down the keyboards of linotype seem to be very devoted. He kisses Kuster will verify this last statemachines. Th ey can inj ect a note of '•j if f, her every time they meet. Why don 't ment). After blissfully reclining in nonsense and confusion into the most *¦'.¦¦ Com imtzis D. J. you do that?" the arms of Morphus from 1:00 P. M. solemn discourse, Mr.— "I would , but I don 't know until 6:00 P. M., the would-be eager f»~- <*__•¦_«•—.••—•.•-—'¦•—••-— 1I-—M._M—»H—-•(• There are the slantites , th e tiniest beavers dash madly for dinner , feeland meanest of them all, who have her well enough yet." ing certain that after partaking of the can't be expected to get his laundry been known to bite all the members evening meal they will return to their in his laundry bag, and study, too— the spot where Plantagenet in of a newspaper staff , giving them a Mrs. room i' o r an evening ol feverent en- so he naturally gets his laundry reaChimp supthe was a cut of Lizzie depressing low-KMii o infection known deavor. Few even getv past the foungreeleyold cackling go; the posed to as sUintltis. Victims are afraid of ; as it is Upon retiring for the night, he straight facts; they hoot at the ideal bums, who cause people to write un- tain outside the dining 1:99m 'the gaunt- mentally sticks his tongue out at all ncj xt io impossible to the or abusive letters to riftri intelligible of objectivity ; everything they touch must be given a "slant" o r an "an- editor; the ortho-groves, who licht let of our B. S. T, C. sub-debs; 2.5 students; realizes the futility of gle." In time they begin to walk on the shoulders of reporters and ru- dressed fit-to-kill and eager to go— spending a weekend on campus and decides for the remainder of his colsideways . The final result is a lmost writers and make them incapable of ev en dutch. '.Homing Sunday in spent right—particularly in lege career, he will never spend anspelling names church always fatal. u -i and Sunday afternoon in. the Social other weekend in North Hall. T middle initials. the matter of flxpixies who arc Then there are ^ Rooms. Sunday nigh t—well , a man The Spirit of North Hall. responsible for putting the picture of ' list is long.—A . C, P. , 't ¦ 1 • 1 . . ¦*-, . ji T *f- "The Canteen Hour " *b *(- .' . *p ,u *p* "Borrowed Banter " ,M>(lV , • . . . " . ^ . ' , . .- . ¦ : :?'T77 ' f.. . ¦' ¦' ? =c~^ ¦ ' . :. .\ ¦ ¦ . ! ¦ '' r ¦* ' ; * . .. >;v ' ¦ - .* ' TOPS IN WAX__BidcJc 3 Brown ; ,^ and Beige—two 12rinch Victor ^ Showpiece'uNb . SP-9. , "• • records \, 'v . ¦ Here, is the most pretentious V and significant work ' from the Pen of j Suk eJEl.lingtoti . This is % 5 r" " *'^ v .._ '^3 ';f3v 'Vrfa" > £" " as they perform it in the picture, Breakfast in Hollywood , with the group singing a solid, driving chorus that is topped only'by fine piano-guitar choruses. Dig this for a collector 's item. On the back the boys display their wares—Oscar Moore's guitar , (he's the "Esky*1 winner this year), Johnny, Miller's fine bass work, and Nat Cole's piano s"fii the instrumental, Sweet Georgia Brown. Duk« Ellington gained. It ^• DANCE—if you like your music traces the life of the Negro %asy on the ears, if you want a through three hundred years— beat for dancing, if you like a through slavery, the wars, their religious fervor, their sorrows arid joys, and their philosophies. Sfarred are the saxes of Otto Hard wicke, Johnny Hodges, Al Sears and Harry Carney ; the trumpet of Taft Jordatl; Trieky Sam -Nanton's'strombone; Ray Nance, violin; Junior Raglin , Tommy Tucker bass; and Joya Shcrrill at her The Three TWO * vocal best. Timers sing it, a subtone clariS net carries the melody with a' G guita r filler and Tommy Tucker's band gives you the beat VOCAL TRIO _ The Dinning with background music. On the Sisters, Jean , Ginger and Lou reverse, the band plays, the of the tricky harmonies, sing a same vocalists sing When The pair of commercial, but good One You Love (Simply Won't sides: Wav e To Me, My Lady Love Back), (Columbia). j and Do You Lcue Me? The former is a railroad novelty chant which sticks in the mind , arfOji the latter, a ballad , is tak^p*Ij a zz for collectors from the Twentieth Century —Brunswick issues another album in their "Collectors' Series" Fox picture of the same nanv (Capitol). titled Johnny Dodds. This alL bum contains four 10-inch discs, among which are these bests — Weary Blues, Af ter STANDQUT_i' VOCAL m A ,Bi £ You've Gone, Joe Turner Blues have been Girl Now. This may and Piggl y Wiggly. The immorintended for dancing, but Sam- , gtttal Dodds' clarinet, played in ^traditional New Orleans style where the one reed instrument serves as an entire reed section, runs the complete range from subtone to harmonics. Here is a ¦nust for collectors! Betty Barclay "stylist," ( and will be discovered by press and reviewers alike when the nation's "jukes " catch on), and the greatest thing ¦.•to happen to a band since Bonnie Baker. On the backing she joins vocals with Billy Williams to sing Put Your Litt l e F oot Ri gh t Ou t, (Victor) . ;» *¦ ' < NEW AND WORTHY IMPRESSIONS (N WAX FUU MOON AND EMPTY ARMSGortfon MacRao,Vocal (Muticraff) SEEMS LIKE OLD TIMES - Vaughn Monroe,Danes (Victor) ALL THROUGH THE DAY-Margaret • Whiting, Vocal (Capitol) . JUICE HEAD BABY - Cootie William*,Dane* (Capitol) INSTRUMENTAL TRIO — Nat Cole, with The King Cole Trio, does a groovy waxing on the Capitol label in, It la Better To (D«cco) - COUNTY SHOPS ' ¦; -I . \ / • ; ;• ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ •- ' ¦ ¦ ' • © ¦¦ ¦¦ ¦ " ' * . .¦ • . . ;^;"' ' . . , , "'¦ P e n h e y, ' s • • .;,;';: " . '¦ " Biooiint&burg, Pfv , ______ *i ; - 1* % ^ BMV Hit MM M ft VHM ^P 1|I MH^M fwb. ?m : ¦ . . ; • DRY ' IIM m i ff^Kto II M ^mh MH ¦MMH H M ¦^ ¦ ^ ¦1 B M^MB MM 4|HHb " SHO? flOtt ^tft JtflMM^^ V frV4 fl ¦ o.. • n The Danville Cat aw i s « a BLOOMSBURG Below the Square ¦ }k' Dixie B l o o m s b% r g H a z 1 e t o '#$ " " MILLE R 9 CLEANER ¦-»»i~-ti—»n— »«¦——" >|ti—i mni n». in ^—w.«n»«—"«' """ ~ • •; Sn .y.der ' ft Clot hier " ' ' Hit the silk! The command we never expected to hear had become a reality . Releasing the escape hatch I tumbled into the slipstream only to j ump from the frying pan into the fire. When I had dropped clear of the plane, I pulled my ripcord . The next thing I remember was the terrific j olt as my parachute opened. I looked at my chute, burning slowly, as I hung there in the sky . Imagine my consternation when I saw the fire licking across the silk. Finally, it went out much to my i-elief. Now I could concentrate on landing, but all thoughts of escape vanished when I saw German civilians waiting to take me prisoner. I hit the ground with such force it knocked me unconscious. It seemed like a bad dream. When I came to, the civilians were shaking me and shouting in German, which I could not understand. Two husky German farmers grabbed my arms and started to drag me to! wards the center of town. I saw a sign marked Landaw , Germany . Peo|ple would fall in behind us from every alley and street. Up to this time, I j had not been mistreated but I feared the worst. German civilians had no ; pity on bomber crews. I kept looking for other members of my crew or a friendly face, but none were to be seen ; only scowls and sneers. Now and then I would hear someone say, "Amerikaner swine." My fears increased when I saw a man carrying a large coil of rope. A little girl was behind me beating me on the head with a stick. It was not long until we reached the town square^" which had two large ***%* oak trees in it. The crowd took me beneath one of them while one of their * number threw a rope over the lower branches. Another man put the noose around my neck. My fate was clear to me now . The crowd grew silent as the rope was being drawn tighter , when from - around the corner I heard hob-nailed shoes clickih'g^ on the cobblestones. A German soldier came runi ning over to me and forced the crowd back witih his gun. Taking me by the hand , he led me away to the Gestapo Headquarters. I was searched by the uestapo . One by one soldiers and people would come in and stare at me, soon to leave. They were immediately replaced by other people. The officer in charge finally cleared the office and told me I was a prisoner of the German Government. He asked for my name, rank , and serial number which I gave him. He called for a soldier who came in and escorted me to a cell. This was to be my lonely, filthy home , for nine days. Each morning at 9:00 o'clock I was questioned. The first morning I was treated like a soldier , but from the second to the ninth day they beat me each morning in an attempt to get inf ormation. On the morning of the ninth . day I was taken to a prison camp. I was now a legitimate prisoner of war. Wililam C. Vought. j TRIP TO MILWAUKEE On the Highway j A peach at his right , Continued From Page One A nut at the wheel, B. Shouse gave an interesting ad- A turn in the road , —The Collegio. dress on the "Characteristic Features Fruit salad. of the Twentieth Century, " emphasizing greater character and ethical the first time in a month , the train principles. Tuesday evening Charles arrived on time at Harrisburg. Hubbard Judd , formerly of the University of Chicago , gave an address on "Teaching Evolution oi Civilization." His book omthis subj ect will Office Supp ly & Equip. Co. be published in May. On Wednesday there were meetings to discuss chap j ter problems and policies. School and Office When asked whether she had any Supplies outstanding experiences on the trip, Dr. Maupin exclaimed that her train j ude from Milwaukee to Chicago , a I distance of ninety miles, was covered in seventy-five minutes with four or Vi*k 0 V $k five stops. She said , "It was the ( wflP" smoothest and fastest ride I have COLLEGE taken. You just seemed to whizz along with no jolts at all." Also, for MEN and BOYS' a nd ;. '; . „;;.;..; S A V E S ; . / " / . " ; C A P T U R E D ! r *\ I Bar t P u r 8e1 COLUMBIA " ' in Dair y J. ' " " - ¦- W H E R E : ' ; ' ' DAY BY DAY-Blna Croiby, Vocal ; Be. By Yourself, This is played . ¦ ' 1 Ofr*********************^****^* ********** ^***'* '!'******© " '¦ '. rj Is33d review• ¦ ¦ ¦»' : .: S ho p s ¦* ¦ ; . ¦ Bloomsburg F '' : . . : 's Fashion Corner 1 « ii n—m m »it n»ni i n -.hi*-. m—i>— m . mnmMi——n ¦ « >¦ iii i n HI M«— HmmmH —-M—M —-M—»—M—W ¦»¦*¦» ¦—,% k