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COLLEGE TIMES

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state Teachers College, Loch Haven, Pa.
No. (i

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1940

Vol. 17

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Debating Squad
Debates Before
.Six High Schools

Praeco Discussed

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At Last Week's
Council Meeting

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Council to Send
Representative to New
York Conference

Makes Tour Through
Huntingdoh Co. Schools
The m o n t h of Dccemlit-r has
fiiuml thi- debating: squad vfry a c tive. Tlie Mi"ou_p opened the month
by t i a v e l i n p through Huntinjrdon
County a n d debating before t h e
t i i f e r t n t Ilifxh .Sehools of the counly. Four t e a m s , two r e p r e s e n t i n g
the (leliating squad, a n d two t h e
(lebatiiiK' ilaHS, acconipiiiiied by
Di-. Harry W e b e r and Mi'. Klem
ing, debated the iiatipnal fraternity q u e s t i o n : Ke.-<)lved t h a t t h e
X a ' i o n s of t h e W e s t e r n
llemi.sphere .Should F o n n a T'ennaneat
Union. Tho. William Hoover debating the negative while Willard Poff and J u n e
Hollenback d e b a t i n g t h e affirmative. Those of the deliating squad
t h a t debated were for t h e affirmati\'<», Ethel Batley a n d Emily
Elliot; for the negative,
Ruth
High and Rita Hurd. T h e d e b a t i n g
cla~s debated a t W a r r i o r s .Mark
and Petei^bui-g High School. T h e
d e b a t i n g squad debated a t Alexandria
and Mount Union
High
Si'hools. 'I'he debating .squad a n d
d e b a t i n g class then m e t in a joint ,
T h e Oregon style of cross-examination was used.

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BEST WISHES

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.JOYOUS CHRISTMAS

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AND A NEW YEAR
FULL OF PEACE
AND HAPPINESS

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Christmas SeasotM is
Observed At College
Vacation Beains Sat.

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STUDENTS WARNED ABOUT VACATION 'CUTS'

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Must Be l}iick at Noon
Thursday, Jan. 2

tin T u e s d a y , Ijecember U), Lock
Haven's negative which consisted
This y e a r ' s Christmas rece.-^s—
of, Dick Cook and Lewis Kathge- a eoruiiarativi'ly long one—^begins
ber. ro noon T h u r s d a y , .hin-.- '2, i ; i 4 1 . ObThe d e b a t i n g stiuad will have an- \
other radio debate which will be servance of the Christinas season
held
lietwi-en Lock Haven
;ind here a l school has been marked
by the annual Nativity jiageant
( C o n t i n u e d on P a g e Five)
on Sunday, and various gift e x changes and iirograms.
One new f e a t u r e , the Salvation
Army gift donation, is scheduled
for Satiii'day morning. This a n d
the o t h e r major holiday season
events a r e r e p o r t e d in detail elsewhere in t h e paper.
Alone with the Christmas spirof going home, howSanta Claus to Pay
a w a r n i n g from t h e
Visit to Student Body
Deans r e g a r d i n g t h e " c u t t i n g " of
classes before and after t h e vacation officially begins. Dean ParThe annual Christmas p a r t y will sons in p a r t i c u l a r w a n t s t h e beys
have
be lield in The old gym
F r i d a y , t h a t " c u t s " this s e m e s t e r
Dec. 20. 'I'liis affair may easily be been entirely t o o f r e q u e n t , a n d
t e r m e d the m o s t p o p u l a r p a r t y of l e t t e r s will be sent home to p a r the year. Sponsored by t h e Social ents in t h e event of f u t u r e u n C o m m i t t e e , t h e p a r t y a l w a y s af- necessary c u t s .
fords a varied p r o g r a m enjoyed by
both s t u d e n t s a n d faculty. T h e
gym will be d e c o r a t e d i n a m a n W h e n w*e r e t u r n from Christner fitting t h e Christmas season.
R e f r e s h m e n t s will be served a n d mas vacations^ w e sHall have the
the highlight of t h e evening's e n - following: social events t o enjoy:
J a n . 6 Dayroom Girl's Luncht e r t a i n m e n t will be a visit from
eon.
S a n t a Claus.
J a n . 8—i^Alpha S i g m a T a u P a r l y .
This will b e a n all school a f f a i r
J a n . 10 Spring Festival.
and no outside guests will b e a d mitted w i t h o u t t h e pemiisaion of
the c o m m i t t e e .

Social Committee
Christmas Party
Friday Night

LOOKING FORWARD—

HOLIDAY GREETINGS

Student Body to
Donate Gifts in
Chapel Program
Chapel Committee
Planninjj for Gift
Day on Friday
111 keeping with the s p i r i t of
('iiri-tirias, t h e chajiel committee
has (losisiM! a (dan which has never been I lied on t h e college c a m pus before, 'llit- plan calls for the
complete coojieration of e v e r y o n e

in the college, both faculty and
s t u d e n t body, and i t s siicci
'"
depend on t h e i r help. T^
jiose of t h e plan ijs to prov m
finer a))precialion of Christinaas many poverty-stricken boys and
girls of t h e c o m m u n i t y a s possible. T h e pi'Ogr-eim will be carried
out in this w a y :

President Link called the regular meeting of t h e Student t'oopeiative Council to order, !-'„'''•'• I - J
ltf40.
The m i n u t e s were read
the
ecretju'?' and approved.
Mr. Hartzell gave t h e financial
rejiort for the month of Xoveaiber.
lii-lO.
A discussion arose
cnricerning
!!u- Council's pux-chase of au e.xtra
page in the P r a e c o . Mr. Shuey
moved t h a t the Board of Directors
purchase a n e x t r a page i n the
I'.Ul I'raeco in. addition to the
one g r a n t e d t o t h e m . The motion
wais seconded by Mr. Grenoble and
carried.
P r e s i d e n t Link t h e n g a v e t o
each club r e p r e s e n t a t i v e a c h a r t e r
, blank t o be filled o u t by t h e faculty adviser a n d t h e represejitutive. This is t o be r e t u r n e d t o tli.
Council in o r d e r t h a t for all time
there will be a c h a r t e r f o r eacli
orfanizatioin on file.
.Attention was- then directed to
the organization of a system to
elect a Praeco .sUiff. .After some
discu-sioii Dr. FlosNei:- -utrgeslcil
that a committee be apijointed to
c(«ifer witli o r g a n i z a t i o n s , such athe I^racfd .-md tlie Times, a n d
their a President Link t h e n i:nformed
thf directors t h a t a r e p i e - e n t a t i v e
must b e elected t o r e p r i - i n t tlie
(•ouncil at t h e N e w 'i'ork convention of the E a s t e r n .Stales .-\si-oeialion of Pi'ofessional Schools f o r
rtai-hiMs. D r . F l o w e r s then e-x( Contin u e a on p a g e 4 )

Annual Christmas
Pageant Given by
College Clubs

" P e a c e on E a r t h , " t h e story of
iUtivity, a n u n u s u a l p r o d u e 1..M of the musical and dramatics
clubs was given S u n d a y a t 4 p.m.
in the new college a u d i t o r i u m with
Scripture, p a n t o m i m e and son:.;under the direction ' " '
Crace
Everyone in t h e college i s e x I Ullemeyer a n d M.
rdelia
pected to jiurchase a gift suitable
I Brong.
for some boy o r girl up t o IC o r
I P a r t i c i p a t i n g were the College
17 y e a r s of age. T h e gift need
i Choir, the Bel Canto Choral Club,
not be expensive, b u t it is very
the Women's (.'horus, the voice
i m p o r t a n t t h a t it be new.
; and diction class verse choir and
On t h e a f t e r n o o n of PViday, De- I the D r a m a t i c s Club.
c e m b e r 20, a r e p r e s e n t a t i v e of t h e I Members of the ,
: I,oi-.Ssilviiition ."^nny will be p r e s e n t a t • Stevenson, Prophe!
: rcciithe chapel p r o g r a m , and to himI man, J o s e p h ; Miss lleltri fiurgess,
the gifts will be presented.
A I'Ang^^l; Joseph
Danis, William
large box will be placed o^n t h e i Bickford, Blair Owens and Fred
( C o n t i n u e d on page 4 )
j!
(Continued vn psg* 4)

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THE COLLEGE TIMES

COLLEQE TIMES

FROM the FILES

OUR DEMOCRACY

A Few of the Past Exploits of
Favorite H e r o
—or—
T H E SAGA O F S U L L I V A N

T h e College Times is publi.-5hod al the Lock Haven S t a t e T e a c h e r s
dlege. Lock Haven. Penna., by the Editorial Board of the College;
1 lllU.;.

i'ublisheil Scini-monlhly During the School Yi

.Ml. Sullivan Ties His Line to a
[•ord.

A
:;rr.lay al'oiit five
o'cioi-k ioii:..i Ml'. Sullivan in scrMou- trouble with the Dmiye P.rotheis. To a^n observer, everything;
.seemed all r i g h t — t h e en,'j;me r u n riir.f;-. the I'ar movinjj, and Mr. Sulivan tiitting' behind the •wheel
smiling as only he can smile; b u t
on closer observation one
could
see that line fastened to a F o r d
a b o u t 20 f e e t ahead.
T h e .serious trouble came when
t h e y tried to t u r n a c o m e r . T h e
Ford ,=lowed down and Mr. Sulli! van g'ot over his line and bumped
.»nto the r e a r wheel of the F o r d .
He had lost control of his c a r
and his line, b u t not for a m o m e n t of his snniling face.
N o r m a l T i m e s — F e b . 2 5 , 1926.

E D I T O R I A L BOARD
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
J O H N F. Q U I G L E Y
i
Assistant E d i t o r
G t o r g e Givens
M a n a g i n g EtStor
Joseph M. Moran i
Sports E d i t o r
Pon Rathgeber;
Features Editor
Richard HartzelL
Social E d i t o r
William Masterson;
Literary Editor
Richard Brown
Business Manager
Lewis R a t h g e b e r
Advertising Manager
' Dale Olmstead
Circulation Manager
J. Russell Gabel
Columnists
loe Moran, Don R a t h g e b e r , Richard H a r t z e l l , ' Bill Masterson, B a r n e y Underwood, Bill Bittiier. .
Staff 'Writers Priscilla Hess, B e t t y Thompson, Louise Caldwell, Rita
H u r d , Loi* R a u p , Maxine Hoffman, Phyllis Wolfe, F r e d V a i r o .
Typists Eileen Glennon, E s t h e r Coder, Maxine Hoffman, Leona
McKoviac, W a v a Hoover.
A c c e p t a n c e for mailing a t special r a t e of postage provided for
in Section 1103, Act of O c t o b e r .3, 1917, authorized J u n e 3, 1 9 2 3 .
E n t e r e d as Second Class m a t t e r - N o v e m b e r 6, 1928, a t the Post
Office a t Lock H a v e n , Penna., u n d e r the Act of March 3, 1879.

Mr. Sullivan in Sociology Class
- ^ " N o w class, I h a v e n ' t stuck to
the t e x t ; I'm like the old colored
m i n i s t e r w h o said to his c o n g r e g a tion, 'I a n n o u n c e m y t e x t , I d e p a r t
from ma t e x t , a n d I n e v e r coma
back to m a text.'
Nevertheless,
I think I've profited by t h e recitation."
Normal T i m e s — F e b . 2.5, 1926.

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1940
THE CHRISTMAS SPIRIT
Christmas is the season when Santa Claus comes to
town, when we deck the halls, spread good cheer and generally bubble over with that thing called "Christmas Spirit." But
since the halls have already been decked, since we left Santa
Claus behind when we registered in L. H. S. T. C, and since
we're cheerful as the jolly old man himself becausS we're going home for vacation, there isn't anything we can say about
that except the usual bland banalities.
There is something to be said, however, trite as it may
be, about prevailing Christmas Spirit. GIVING has always
been synonomous with that spirit; it has always been the
very essence of Christmas. The ancients worsipped the sun
and their holidays Were significant in the sacrifices made in
gifts brought to the altars of their god. The real origin of
the day, which gives it its name "Christmas," is God's own
gift to the world, the birth of Jesus Christ. Throughout the
years, peoples have had their own ideas about Christmas giving. We recently uncovered a novel angle concerning this
ancient tradition. The legendary Saint Nicholas' favorite
sport was giving away money secretly to marriageable,, but
moneyless young maidens as dowries. A pastime popular in
Sweden had its matrimonial aspects, too . . . the cropping up
of one's self as a Christmas package to be delivered to the
girl frieiwis . . . and then, we used to hang .up our stockings
on Christmas Eve. No doubt this custom developed for the
same reason that an old boot was associated with a wedding
. . . to bring good luck and to drive away evil spirits.
We can see then, through these illustrative traditions,
that GIVING at Christmas time counts. Especially to be recommended in the school's Christmas project . . . a cooperative plan for unselfish giving.
The idea, originated by Dr. Coxe, developed by the Chapel Committee, participated in by every student and faculty
member in Lock Haven State Teachers College, is real |
"Christmas Spirit."
ON NIGHT FOOTBALL AND STADIUMS
Dr. Flowers' speech last week at the banquet recalled to
mind an editorial published last year in the "Times" which
advocated the raising of alwut $30,000 to build an up to date
stadium on the site of Bal Eagle Field. The credit for the
idea in the first place does not go to this paper, however, as
it was a suggestion of the Alumni Association.
As we remember it, the Association offered to donate
quite a sizeable nest egg to a fund for the purix)ae of building a stadium, 'and their offer wa.s never accepted. It i.sn't
at all hard to understand why, because the remainder of the
$30,000 needed would be far more than we could hope to
raise through ordinary means.
We haven't much of a solution to offer. If we could get
federal assistance through the WPA, which would provide
the labor, then it is our opinion that we could make this

Mr. Sullivan—-"And the w e a k e r
sex cried." T h e cla.ss cocked e y e brows and looked puzzled.

Mr. S u l l i v a n — " S o you
think
the same as Mr. Hoe? S o r r y , b u t
he hais t h a t d-»finition copyrighted."
College T i m e s — A p r i l 12, 1 9 3 3 .

dream of stadiums and night football a reality. The necessary cash needed could be raised through the Alumni, the
Student Council, the town, or it could even be borrowed.
The advantages of night football here at this time are
evident to persons knowing the college and the town. Lock
Haven is definitely a football town and will support a winner
or a team that can put on a show. We can vaguely remember the days of old Lock Haven High School's state and national championship teams, when the city's business district
resembled a ghost town on Saturday afternoon. Every self-respecting merchant closed shop and went to the football game.
Next year or the year after, we will have a winning
team—but so will the High School. If we can play night
games and put on a show for the townspeople along with our
winning football team, it shouldn't be at all difficult to pack
a stadium .seating four or five thousand or even more paying customers. We believe that night football in a modern
stadium is the solution to a good many of our current problems.
;

Members of PSEA
Meet Last Week
.T. Wynn Fredericks,
President of Organization,
Presides Two Days

Wyrni Fredericks, f o r m e r head of
t h e physical education d e p a r t m e n t
a t the College, and n o w chief of
the physical e d u c a t i o n b u r e a u in
the state association, presided a t
the .se-ssions F r i d a y amd S a t u r d a y .

Bethlehem Named
On Christmas Eve

Should we believe all we h e a r ,
especially when Mr. Sullivan e x plains " b o y c o t t "
as
t h e place
where a felow t a k e s a map!
College T i m e s — N o v . 5, 1 9 2 8 .
Prof. Sullivan: " M r . Thall,
t r e a t y clased the w a r of t h e
trian Succession?"
Mr. T h a l l : " I d o n ' t know.
not a m e m b e r of t h e S e n a t e
eign Relations c o m m i t t e e ! "
College T i m e s — M a r c h 12,

what
AusI au
fVjr1931.

•What is t h e dfetance b e t w e e n m
long and s h o r t ballot? Mr. S u l l i r a n
says i t i and six f e e t .
Colleeg Trniea—May 15, 1934.
In hopes t h a t t h e S a g a of S u l livan will c o n t i n u e f o r e v e r a n d
anom, we leave you w i t h this proof
t h a t times do n o t c h a n g e .
Prom
the April 1 1 , 1930 College T i m e s :
"Campus Chatter: Squirrels o«
the C a m p u s . "
sylvania have c e n t e r e d in Bethlehem and n e a r b y N a z a r e t h .
T r a v e l e r s in t h e vicinity of
Bethlehem d u r i n g
the
hoUdays
will again see the f a m o u s illumdnated S t a r of Bethlehem, a 100 foot
high steel s t r u c t u r e on
South
Mountain.
M o r e t h a n 40 city blocks will be
included in the e l a b o r a t e sttreet
l i g h t i n g consisting of s t a r s a n d
colored
bulbs, t h e
Bethlehem
C h a m b e r of Commerce has informed t h e S t a t e D e p a r t m e n t of Coiiimerce.
A n o t h e r h i g h l i g n t of t h e season's observance in Bethlehem ia
t h e Moravian " P i t z , " a h u g e d e piction of t h e Nativity scene which
each y e a r a t t r a c t s thou.sand^ of
visitors.

Dr. H. H. Baish, .secretary of
Bethlehem, called " T h e Christthe Public School E m p l o y e s R e - m a s City of t h e United S t a t e s , "
t i r e m e n t B o a r d a t Harrisiburg, w a s received its n a m e on Christmas
the gue.st .speaker S a t u r d a y eve-1 ^ v e 199 y e a r s ago.
ning, I>ec. 14, a t t h e m e e t i n g and 1 In t h e s p r i n g of 1 7 4 1 , David
dinner of the Lock Haven Teach- > Zeisberger a n d o t h e r Moravian
era College B r a n c h of t h e P e n n - B r e t h r e n began a n e w s e t t l e m e n t
sylvania S l a t e Kducation Associa- n e a r t h e forks of the D e l a w a r e a t
the confluence of the Lehigh Rivtion.
The teaeher.'i dined a t t h e Vic- e r and Monocacy Creek in w h a t \
was then Bucks county, but since '
A modern a d a p t a t i o n of an old
torian Inn a t 6:30 p. m.
! h a y i n g might be applied t o c e r t a i n
R e s e r v a t i o n s for the
d i n n e r has become N o r t h a m p t o n .
were in c h a r g e of Miss Lillian
On Christmas eve of t h a t y e a r : belligerent nations in this wise:
Rusticll.
Count Zinzindorf, religious organ-1 "I>on't serve up y o u r Briitish E m Miias Dixon was a m e m b e r of a izer, visited t h e newly established , pire until it is c a r v e d . " — Washpaincl to evaluate demonstration mission and gave it tihe Biblical i ington Star.
lessons in d a n c i n g on the conven- name of Bethlehem.
Ever since |
tion p r o g r a m a t P i t t s b u r g h . J . t h e n Moravian actfvities in P e n n - |

HOLIDAY GREETINGS

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THE COLLEGE

TIMES

COLLEGE SPORTS
1940 FOOTBALL SQUAD WHICH WAS HONORED LAST WEEK AT BANQUET
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Above are shown the members oi this year's football team, who, alonji wiiu m .
day evening in the dining hall. Twelve of the squad were given letters.

Twelve Gridsters, Sixteen Soccer
Players Get Letters at College
Football-Soccer Banquet Last Week

rej team were guests of honor at a banquet held last Tues-

1940 Football Stars Basketball Team Boxing, Wrestling
'Squads Look to
Prepared for
Mansfield Contest Big 1941 Season

GEORGE P. MILLER, INDIANA COACH, SPEAKER
Dr. Flowers Urges
Night Football and New
Stadium for Football



Several

Other

Speakers

Members of the football
and
soccer teanr^ were honored at the
a n n u a l sports banquet last T u e s day evening in t h e college diniiiJ'

hah.

Lose at Penn State
La.st Week by
Decisive Margin

I FOOTBALL AND SOCCER
LETIEK WINNERS
L e t t e r s w i n n e r s in football and
soccer a n n o u n c e d a t the a n n u a l
I sports b a n q u e t wei'e :
Football 12—William Beightol.
Senior;
fleni-y
Blake, ,Robert
Kemerer
and Dominic
Sagolla,
J u n i o r s ; Don Campbell, .Vlelviu
Dry, Robert F o y e , Glenn Miller.
Robert Mv>ore and Clyde Tucker,
SiiphoniLires and Clair Ludwip anil
Walter Marusiak, Fi'eshmen.

Guests
included city
oflicials
and othei- community booster^ of
the teams, alumni a n d Lock Haven High School coaches.
Soccer IG—Ralph Link, C h a r k s
Coaches George P . Miller of I n d i a n a T e a c h e r s College^ one of Cathei-man, I ^ u i s Martella, LawLock
Haven's f o r e m o s t
rivals, rence Leniii-, W a i r e n l l o s t e i m a n ,
g a v e the ad Giles, Maurice
,' I,>etters were awaixied to 12 Robert Slenker and Student Manm e m b e r s of the football squail id'
Seniors;
34, with the one Senior, Captain ••iger Monroe Hurwitz,
William Beightol, U i n e .Juniors Gi'rald Bloom, Dale Florey, John
six Sophomores and two Freshmen Gehron, Lewis Smith, Don Winkg a i n i n g a w a r d s . E i g h t Seniors, six leblech and Clair Klinger, SophoSophomores and two Freshnie'i mores, and Clyde Danis and Ran
g a i n e d soccer a w a r d s — 1 0 in all.
dall W a g n e r , F r e s h m e n .
The need of liM'hts to solve the
problem of divided a t t e n d a n c e was
b r o u g h t o u t by Dr. J o h n G. Flow- Howard Yost, e-xprcssed his gralie r s , after he had welcomed the fications al being at Lock Ha\ i- i
g u e s t s and thanked the commun- Teiicheii- and woi'king with tlie
ity for its support of the team team and Coach W. Max Bossert.
T h r e needs for improvement in
and ciillifr(. With n i g h t football,
he declared, the a t t e n d a n c e should s t c c e r w(!i-e expressed by the Ri ,
B. Hamond, t h e sot i c '
increase. He also mentioned
the Blake
n e e d of a stadium seating ,3,000 coach. They were a r e g u l a r p u u
and a fence for the present field. ' t ' c e field,' more men coming out
P l a n s for night football a r e now for the team and the aiHJUsinj; of
i i t c i e s t among- high school s t u - ;
u n d e r consideration.
d e n t s who have played soccer, i n !
Dr. Thomas, M a y o r H e r r Speak
a t t e n d i n g tlie T e a c h e r s College.
Dr. David W. Thomas, president
I,awrence and Mollura Speak
of t h e Board of T r u s t e e s , said t h a t
T r a i n e r S. Dure (Whitey) Law- ;
the t i u s t e e s were i n t e r e s t e d in t h e
t e a m , and Mayor Charles E. H e r r r e n c e , and P e t e r Molluraty^tar fullb r o u g h t gi-eetingi5 from t h e city. back in f o r m e r y e a r s and an a s this year,
spoke
Captain Beightol, speaking f o r s i s t a n t coach
his t e a m m a t e s , .said he t h o u g h t biiefly.
t h e y did well dcvspite the fact t h a t
Coach Miller b r o u g h t t h e g r e e t t h e team was gi-een and t h a t t h e ings from I n d i a n a and said he was
past .season h a d b r o u g h t home to looking forward g r e a t l y to
the
players the importance of working first g a m e of t h e season h e r e next
together when t h e going
was y e a r when hi^ii team plays Lock
rough.
Haven.
Charlas C a t h e r m a n , a Senior
In ord«r to h a v e a g>ood t e a m ,
soccer player, reviewed the sea- he sai son in which the t e a m won t h i e e picture cards, an ace o r two, to
g a m e s , tied one and lost four.
know how to play those c a r d s a»d
The n e w assistant coach. W .
(Oontinmd on Pake 4)

Wrestlers, with Eight
Matches Expect big
Things; I lioxers Back

Boxing

( a mi; bull—Sophomore

Ala I..

ii.^iutiaii

Beightol—Senior

Schedule

Short

Lock Haven T e a c h e r ' s Colleges
1904-41 edition of the baBketball
The
boxing
and
wrestling
team staged a no^ne too auspicious squad-i have been w o r k i n g since
debut .Saturday evening, Decem- before the Thank.sgiving v a c a t i o n
ber 7 against Penn S t a t e ' s J u n i o r
for schedules which
Var.sity in R e c r e a t i o n Hall a t j in preparation in J a n u a r y or earl.v
-State's ainnual basketball
clinic.
|
will
begin
late
Collegians i jj, f v b r u a r y . Lock Haven, one of
The Centre
County
' ' " - ' i t h e few t e a c h e r - colleges in t h e
jdastej'ed a 4.5-17 d e f e a t on
i s l a t e lioa-ting o u t s t a n d i n g lio-X-ing
untried Lock ILivenites.
land wreKtling teams, is p l a n n i n g
Head Coach \V. Howard "i'ost.
sei-ving his first .vear as m e n t o r of ' the nvo-t ext(«n,-ive program in
the local eagei-s was not sui-prised these sl)or!s .-isire their inaugui-aat the showing of the Eagles as tioii .ome J ^ ar.- back,
wrixtlers,
under
Hank
insufficient practice in the new sys- i The
tem he is teaching this year p r o - Blake, DuBois s t a r , have --ix meets
duced a te-am t h a t was well-nigh. -cbe-duled nvK with one or two
bewildered on the floor. .Slate's nioi'e in ihr olVing. On S a t u r d a y ,
big, wellgeared j u n i o i s c a u g h t the five of them atteiided a. clinic a t
Penn .Stat<' in preparati.nn for their
local- completely u n p r e p a r e d .
Practice for the basketeei's has weet with the supposedly g r e e n
been long and serious since t h e team from lvutzt showing against .State in p r e p a r a - 24. Their finest icai test comes
•ion for the first gjime J a n u a r y 7, on Feb, 8 when they face a vet' ' <-n .Mansfiehi's
.Mountaineers eran outfit from ,\Ian.-field, Fol• ii-n l!u- regular season here. It is lowinjr tbi'.-e two matches. West
iloubtful if the new gym in the Cbi.^:i.r and Kast S t r o u d s b u r g will
iield house will be equipped by be met.
in.iL time, but Coach Yost is hopeProspects Goo ;ul brl'ore liie season is v e r y old,
Prospects for a succes-1'ul seathe basketball team will be p i a y ri^' all their home cwitests in t h e son a r e bright, with every member of last y e a r ' s s t a t e championnew building.
shi])
t e a m back for action with t h e
Coach Yost ha.s been using a
Ru.ss Y IC5
lii'st five composed of SUm Daley, exception of
bi-illiant J u n i o r v e t e r a n and Dale pounder. Promising newcomei^s a r a
Florey, sopohomore, both
from J o h n Bernardo, DuBois, and Bill
Williamsport.,
a t forwards, J o h n Beck, Renovo.
-Michael, Pitcairn sophomore
a t Short Boxing S c h e d u l e
The boxers headed by Bill Skercenter, and Captain Chick Springpuncher
nm'U, Williamsport, the lone sen-, '*""' cla&sy 145 p o u n d
; ior on the squad, and J e r r y Bloom, ""••'
|»"*' co ^ ' 'by W. Max Bossert,
: DuBois sophomore, at guar ' ley and S p r i n g m a n were regulai-s ana, Catholic U, Maryland
la.st y e a r , while Florey a n d Bloom City College of New York, C-oacU
saw p a r t - t i m e sei-vice on t h e first Bo.ssert has been having no Lsmall
team. Michael played quite a bit a m o u n t of difficulty in scheduling largei- " n a m e schools" in boxas a reserve.
I Re,serves include Bill Grenoblc ing because t h e y a r e unwilling to
i and. J o e Moran, both of Lock H a - risk a beating by such an obscure
ven, foi-wards; Jim Larkin, Oi! school. The E a g l e m i t t m e n in the
City, center, and T u t .Moore, of past have beaten such t e a m s a.s
(-Continued o n P a g e F o u r )
P h i l i p s b u r g ; Glenn Miller, P i t t s burgh, and Molly Dry, Bellefonte,
g u a r d s . F r e s h m a n caJididates, some Additional Sport* on Next P a g e
of whom will f o r m a j u n i o r var- ''
( C o n t i n u e d on P a k e 4)
HOLIDAY GREETINGS

THE COLLEGE TIMES
- \ N ^ ' ' * T, r ' T i « i - : T \ l A S
( F r o m Page One)
Weakland, S h e p h i m l - : .lames ,-\kI .\ . !• n >i .Jami •
- ni-y Ry• -i;--:
.. : ..ino liai-l• abhvi.ij. I abel
Cal-

Scene form College Players' Production

RENZO'S
Shoe Repair I
10 Bellefonte Ave.
|
I LOWEST PRICES IN
I
TOWN
! Material and Workmanship
!
Guaranteed
j THE SHOP WITH THE i
I
BIG SHOE SIGN
j

William
(;(.,i!"'e

Hr
11

.•,::!:i., .\lai., .-\nn -M.'iuk, MarLlia
.\u-i anipiMii,
l''raiices
Molitor,
Dale Olhi.-lead, .lack Pi'obst, Lewi- Rath|.';e!>ei'. liaymnnd Rathinell,
Luc.v Reed, Kileen o s m a n , ISsthei- Shea, Jai,icey .Stratton, Mra
Washburn,
The waits w e r e Misses
Anna
Griel, Dorothy Gilson,
Beatrice
Corle, Kvelyn O'Connor,
Nellie
Donovan, Mary -Mapes, u t h Brungard,
Hazel
Crider,
Bmestine
F l a n a g a n , Helen
Howe,
Ivabell
Lyons, Helen B e c k e n b a u g h , Marg a r e t B e l k n a p , Florence
Brown,
Winona Brown, Helen Jo-hnson,
M a r y McCollum, F r a n c e s Hibbler,
Lois R a u p , Phyllis A u r a n d , J e a n in'ctte G a u n t t , G e r t r u d e L u t z , Bett y Seltzer, LouLs W a g n e r , M a r y J .
Moyer,
Virginia
Montgomery,
D o r o t h y Keuster, Emily D a y .
The m a r s h a l ! in charge of waits
was F r e d a F a u l k n e r .

STUDENT BODY
(From Page One)
s t a g e , and in it Dr. F l o w e r s , the
m e m b e r s of t h e faculty, t h e Seniors, J u n i o r s ,
Sophomores and
F r e s h m e n , in t h a t order, will place
t h e i r gifts. T h e vSalvation Army
will then a c c e p t these gifts for
distributio'n to the children of
needy families in a n d a r o u n d Lock
Haven.
The only stipulations a r e that
t h e gifts be well wrapped and a c companied by a card on which
should be p r i n t e d tho sex a n d a g e
of the person for whom y o u r gift
would be suitable. Such an a r r a n g e m e n t will necessitate a minimu m a m o u n t of h a n d l i n g on the
p a r t of the Salvation A r m y .
It is i-(M)Ue^te(l t h a t all s t u d e n t s
w o r k tottethur toward thiw worthy
gi>al, the aid of those y o u n g people loss f o r t u n a t e t h a n themselves
and let us hope t h a t t h r o u g h o u r
help lhe.-.e boys and girls m a y r e ceive a g r e a t e r m e a s u r e of t h e
f r u i t s of the Yuletide seaison and
a truer a))preeiation of t h e .significar.ce of the spirit of Christmas.

PRAECO DISCUSSED
( F r o m Pdge O n e )
plained the set u p of t h e convention and informed the m e m b e r s of
t h e various topics t h a t will be discussed. T h e r e w a s discussion conc e r n i n g to which topic Lock Haven
could best c o n t r i b u t e . Mr. Poff
ni..
Lock H a v e n S t u d.
1' Council
accept
petia:
ion 1
(What
Shoub 1
ntial C h a r a c terislb
;iti(m of
sttiido'
uciatiO'ti)
Xew York
.)rbin secondmotion aiid it was carried.
in.Ttirvns f o r t h e repre!!ent>iti >
Sb
moved thiU. liie
no.I
I closed and Mr.
Poff Seconded the motion. I t was
carried.
Mr. Link w a s elected r e p r e s e n tative to tlio convention,
Pi-esi(](Mit Link called a t t e n t i o n
t o the copi(\< of thn T e a c h e r s Kducational .lonrntii.
Ho informed
the Council Uiey will be di-strihu t e d to t h e YMCA room a n d t h e
YiWCA room, and the library, etc.
Mr. Hartzell moved t h a t the
m e e t i n g be a d j o u r n e d . Muss Kilsd o n k seconded the motion and it
wa.s c a n n e d .

i
MERRY
I
I CHRISTMAS I

F r o m left to right a r e shown Sonia 'Venger, William R. B i t t n e r a n d J a c k Probst in a setene
"Yon C a n ' t Take It 'With Y o u " pro«lucMl laat m o n t h by the College D r a m a t i c Club.

Spring Festival to
Be Presented Jfan.MO
in Old College Gym
SCENE IS LAID IN OLD SWEDISH
Classes in Polk, Modem
and Tap Dancing to Take
Part in Program

TAVERN

from

of the t a v e r n .
Once mo're a rosy glow s u g g e s t s
the fairy quality, a n d the Nixies
dance a g a i n . A clock s t r i k e s the
midnight h o u r ; the line of d r e a m folk move slowly o u t . T h e r e d
light fades as t h e Nixies creep
back into the fireplace. The d r e a m
ends as the soldiers of today march
p a s t ; t h e i n n k e e p e r a n d his wtife,
wide a w a k e a t la.st, see only the
dim, deserted t a v e r n , its candles
still b u r n i n g , the embers still flicke r i n g in the g r e a t
fireplace.
Amazed a t t h e lateness of the
hour,
t h e y t r u d g e off to bed,
white t h e capricious Nixies follow
them in a final m e r r y g e s t u r e .

FROMM'S
Cleaners and Dyers
THREE PIECE
CASH

I

AND

SUIT

CARRY

--49c-

I

SoftV, t h e Nixies, or Swedish
fairies—whose
summer
hidingplace is in the m a n y s t r e a m s a n d
canals of Swedem, b u t in w i n t e r
have s o u g h t t h e w a r m t h of the
DIRECTED BY MISS DIXON fireplaces which a r e in the c e n t e r
of every Swedksh h o m e — c r e e p
T h e T w e n i e t h A n n u a l College o u t of the e m b e r s a n d join in a
I
by Lucien LeLong |
Activity P r o g r a m will be p r e s e n t - mischievous dance. T h e y decide
t
o
bring
to
the
.sleeping
couple
a
ed by the classes in folk, m o d e r n
and t a p d a n c i n g on F r i d a y eve- d r e a m of lomg ago, ^ o n g ago, when
ning, J a n u a r y 10, 1 9 4 1 , a t 8 o'- t h e y o u n g i n k e e p e r a n d his fair(From Page Three)
haired bride danced gaily with the
clock in t h e College Gymnasium.
Cit.v
College,
last y e a r ' s E a s t e r n
t r a v e l e r s from e v e r y land g a t h e r The p r o g r a m will bo open to al!
ed for Christmas m e r r y m a k i n g in Intercollegiate champs, and Wests t u d e n t s ; for othei-s, t h e r e will be
t h e t a v e r n halls.
.A.S the Nixies ern Mai-yland.
an admis.sion fee of 25c for down- ' e n d their dance, t h e y t h r o w the Outlook Fair
stairs bleacher scales, or 3.5c for door w i d e ^ p e n , and the " g h o s t s " T h e outlook for the s p o r t
this
seats in t h e balcony. No s e a t s will i of
y e s t e ^ a y e n t e r — a glowing, season is only mediocre. R e t u r n i n g
be reserved. S t u d e n t s m a y ^occupy i rosy light s u g g e s t i n g the fairy f r o m last y e a r a r e W o r t h Randall,
b l e a c h e r s e a t s only.
I quality of their carefree p r e s e n c e J e r s e y Short, a t 1 1 8 ; Bob K e m T h e p r o g r a m this y e a r will fol- ' in the dai-k world of continental e r e r , Lock Haven, 1 6 5 ; Don C a m p mLmcimLelottg'iCthgi$0»M
|
bell, CuFwenisville, 175 a n d Skerlow a t h e m e suggested by the ' E u r o p e t o d a y .
Atomixtr. The ideal wy t a
|
y e s t e r d a y ' s pon. O n e other experienced puSwedish custom of prolonging ; The townsfolk of
enjoy C o l o g n e . CompleM
f
Chri.stmas festivities until " T w e n - I Sweden first p r e s e n t a g r o u p of gilist. Bill Barnes, Williamspoi-t,
with atomizer
flacoii.nTed*>
|
tieth-Day K n u t e driveth Y u l e o u t " ^traditional .Swedish folk d a n c e s ; a m a t e u r 128 p o u n d e r h a s shown
Ughtfol fnignuicet.
M
— i n o t h e r words, until t h e thir- i-the Danish w a i t r e s s e s show t h e i r up well in practice.
t e e n t h of J a n u a r y . T h e scene is j dance c u s t o m s ; traveling m i n s t r e l s
a t a v e r n in Sweden of the prej^ent ' f r o m far-off N e w Orleans, i n t h e
day, the F r i d a y evening before New World, join in the m e r r y Continued from Page 3
the end of this Christmas season. : making. As the t a v e r n scene goes •
Soldiers a r e emtering and leaving, ; on, other t r a v e l e r s e n t e r ; those finally to m a k e a finesse o r two.
eating, talking.
W a i t r e s s e s a r e i who a r e n o t dancing s c a t t e r a b o u t H e reviewed t h e football season
c a r r y i n g t r a y s to the tables, b u t i t h e room, w a r m i n g their h a n d s a t | j u s t past a n d said he w a s glad to
there a r e no other girls present. ; t h e fireplace, sipping the coffee | see the exten.sion of the wide-open
T i c iiiiikeeper and his wife, both t h a t brews from m o n i i n g till night g a m e .
ire host and hostess. The on every Swedish stove, a p p l a u d - | I n closing Coach Bossert t h a n k - »
I n Colors
S
p l a y i n g a m o d e r n t u n e . ; ing and often j o i n i n g in the d a n c - ed the .school for its, spirit a n d coThe townsfolk, with t h e i r operation a n d declared t h a t possiSoldiers a s k permission to d a n c e ing.
with the waitresses, a n d half a i c h a r a c t e r i s t i c Scandinavian- -vigor, bly in a y e a r or two Lock H a v e n
dozen couples .join in t h e dancing. | a n d love of the dance, a r e most football would a g a i n be on the it N a m e S t a m p e d in Gold F r e e j i
M
, heights. Serving as t o a s t m a s t e r ,
The inmkeeper proposes a t o a s t ; active.
to " A u l d L a n g S y n e , " a n d eight
At last h o w e v e r it is t i m e f o r | Mr. Boasert introduced the guests
soldiers respond with a traditional j t h e d r e a m to e n d ; .sleighbells I and m e m b e r s of t h e school staff
Swedish dance, crossing swords | sound as t h e first g r o u p l e a v e s ; in 1w"ho had aided t h e t e a m .
as t h e y m a r c h - f n m i l i t a r y f a s h i o n : a confused p a t t e r n , ,the sleeping |
Parker and .Sheaffer
S
a r o u n d t h e quadrille. T h e i r n e x t ' couple visiom a traditional d a n c e ;
dance, a modern " s h a g " which is of summer, when the Nixies, from"
so mui-h like y e s t e r d a y ' s "schot- t h e i r uv.ual h a b i t a t , entice into
tische," is i n t e r r u p t e d by the call their water-fairyland the couples
of the l>ugle. The soldiers leave; who dance on their river b a n k s .
N a m e S t a m p e d in Gold F r e e ^
the i n n k e e p e r falls a.sleep; his T h e lines of d a n c e r s , amd thedr fin(Prom Page Three)
wife ajnd t h e waitresses finish the al shout, waken the .sleepers, who,
See O u r Many O t h e r Giftt x
chores, t h e y t u r n the lights low half dozing, t u r n off the r a d i o ' s sity aggregation to play iprelimiFRED
J
and t h e waitresses go home
for b l a t a n t melody and h e a r a g a i n the naries include Tommy H a n n a , Dan
JEWELER
the night, sleighbelLs echoing t h e i r t u n e s of a n o t h e r e r a a.s t h e last S t a n l ^ ' , Ludge Maru.^ak, Jim
31 B E L L E F O N T E A V E
d e p a r t u r e . The wife, too, falls dance brings the reat of the d r e a m P a t t o n ,
Hen C a s p e r and
Clair
asleep.
' folk into o n e semicircle a t t h e back Klinger.
~(tl«i«HW««««WtW«W«»tW«W«B«W«

I *iop of the class'

Boxing, Wrestling I PARFUM
Squads Look to
Big 1941 Season

Twelve Gridsters,

$1.25 «nrf S1.50 I
I Buxton Billfolds I
I
$1.00 «p
I
I Lady Buxton 1

I

$1.00 «p

\ j

i|

Dresser Sets i!
$3.95 «p
i|

Basketball Team
Prepared for
Mansfield Contest

Pens ond Sets
From $3.95

EISEMANN i

|
I

THB OOLLfiGE TIMES

Miss Frey Hostess I Fair Sized Crowd
To Kappa Delta Pi; At Sophomore Hop
Gift for Miss Geary

Local College Physical
I Education Devotees
Attend Convention

College Students Win Big Prizes

Miss Deach and Miss Dixon
of Faculty and iVli.ss Harriet
FiKR-les Participate at Meet

was ll
<»t l i e

Tcachi'

I •'. I»i>e.mlier 1 :i and 1 1, Misses l)i>r()tl)y Deach, Maloise Dixon ,
and Harriet Figgles attended the
Annual State Comvention of tha
American Health and Physical E d ucation and Recreation Association.? at Pittsburgh.
On Friday, Miss Deach acted as
cha.innain of the Student Conference, whose topic was "Improvement of Profes.sional Education."
Harriet
Figgles spoke on " l a
What Ways May a 'Major' Improve Skills Outside of Class?"
Some of the other schools r e p resented were:
University .>f
PerDnsylvania,
Ea.it Sti State Teachers College,
Slippery
Rock State Teachers College, Univensity of Prttsburgh, Temple U n iversity, Penn State Beaver College and Ursinus College.
Miiss Dixon spoke as a specialist
on damcing on the panel "Elvaluations of the Teaching of Physical
Education Activities." Members o f
the evaluating panel diKcu.s-sed the
teaching of physical education activities. Teachers of physical education preseinted groups of p u i pils in demonstration lessons
in
I order to .show procedures in the
I teaching of .-.ctivitiets. The panel
•for each group consisted of an
outstandinig psychologist, sociologist, health specialist, school principal, school superintendent, cujiriculum expert and specialiist in the
activity demonstratiom.

• Ul- !•-, !•-

Jiiug a h,,,.,,
.,... -.; i>a,u' was
presented l(i Miss Cathei'inc
K.
trt'iiry. a mcinher. who has resigned her position on the faculty to
take up a new position at Chester.
S h e leaves Jan. 15.
T h e Christmas program included a story, "Keeping Christmas,"
by Van Dyke, read by Miss Josephine Gauntt; a story "The Mother" by Robert Schauffler, read by
.Miss Rosella Corbin; and a poem,
"Following the Star," given By
Miss Dene Hocker.
Gifts were exchanged, games
•enjoyed and refreshments .sei^ved
later in the evning.

The nuisic of Bruce Bell and his
vi;rs:itile organization provided the
(laueoi-s with plenty of incentive to
get out and concerned.
I

DEBATING
(Continued ft cm pagv 1)
Penn .State over station WRAK in
Williamsport
The debating, team will debate
Bueknell University om Decembjr
19 before the Lewasburg High
School student body.
The weather made impo.s,sible
the squad's trip to N e w Wilmington where they were to attend the
debate tournament.
The debatiTig equad with Dr. H.
F. Weber, advber, is doing very
good work considering that nearly all of its members are freshmen.

W

HO wouldn't be as happy M the of $250 for best coverage of th« conimiling trio in trontT They test in college publications. Tha
bare lust received the three top second prize of $160 went to tha
awards In the nation-wide tSO.'OOO MacMurray College Greetings, MaoChina Essay Contest when this Murray College for Women at Jackphotograpli was taken, while the sonville. 111. The Prhiceton Sunday
three In the back row are the per- News received tho third prize of
sons who had most to do with the $100.
4
All Types of
running o( the contest.
In addition to the three top prize
* LADIJ^S' HAIR DRESS
At the left front Is Minerva P. winners, ten students were awarded
$100
each and twenty students $50
Desing ot Collingswood. N. J.,
MEN'S HAIR CUT
each. They were from colleges as
graduate
student
at
the
University
FRESHMEN ELECT
of Pennsylvania, wko walked oft distantly removed from each other
Freshman Class officers .elected with the flrst prize of $1,200 and a as Harvard and Alabama Polyyesterday are Don Bloomen, pihes- round trip ticket to Chungking, technic Institute.
The man In ceremonial Chinese
ident; John Tucker, vice presi- China, via the China Clipper. In the
dent; Helen Bupges.s, treasurer, center, front, ia Richard E. Curl ot robes is Dr. Roy Chapman Andrews
24 East Main Street
ZUltson, Ohio, erraduate student at of Gobi desert and dinosaur egg
and Pri.sciUa He.ss, secretary.
—DIAL 2312—
Ohio State University, winner of the fame. He was a Judge. In the censecond prize of $760. Beside him is ter, back row. Is Pherbia Thomas
Helen Averitt of Pasadena. Cali- Thornburg, contest director and
fornia, junior at Pasadena Junior sister of Lowell Thomas, who preCollege, who won the third prize sided at the award banquet held in
of $600. This picture was taken In the Executive Lounge of the Ford
the Ford Motor pavilion at the pavilion at the Pair. Beside Mrs.
These members of the panel disThornburg Is William D. Pawloy.
New York World's Fair
GIVE US A TRY
financial sponsor of the contest, cussed the values of the activity
and the teaching techniques on the
The subject of the contest was who is president of the Intercon"Our Stake In the Future of China", tlnent Corporation and a longtime
basis of their probable contribuand 70 per cent of the accredited resident of China. Pawley holds tha
tions to wholesome living, to •sA
colleges and universities in the record for crossings on the China
understanding and actions, and to
country had entrants representing Clipper, making 14 such trips to
the development and integration o f
4S of the 48 states. In addlticmal date.
desirable characters and pei-sonalrecognition of Miss Desing's victory
Among the distinguished speakers
ity traits.
the University of Pennsylvania re- and guests were Real- Admiral
ceived $300 in cash for the pur- H. E. Yarnell, Pearl Buck. Dr.
On Saturday, Miss Deach spoke
Next to Herlocher's
chase of books on Far Eastern James Rowland Angell, Anna Mar
on "Should Pennsylvania OrganBftalrs.
The
Bachelor,
student
news213 E. MAIN ST.
Wong and others. Fred U Black,
ize a State G.A.A." Both
Mi«
paper of Wabash College. Craw- director of the Ford exhibit, walt--'j Deach and Miss Dixon are loyal
(ordavillo, (ndiftna. won first prize corned the Contest's Kuaata.
I supporters of a Girls' Athletic Agjsociation and have done very much
Guest performers for the show in- j to further this program.
clude some of the best swing dancers, tap dancei's atui skits ever
,
seen
on our campus. The music
LOCK H A V E N ' S LEADING T H E A T R E S
i will be of the popular type, taken
There was a open meeting of
from musical comedies, operett.us
Thur.., Fri.
Dec. 19, 20
Thursday, Friday, Saturday
and popular dance numbers. The Ithe Aiiiei-ican Meteorological AsThe
Senior
Cla.-w
has
announcDec. 19, 20, 21
sociation Thursday evendng at 7:,30
ed that the first musical revue ev- acting will he directed by Charles
"GALLANT SONS"
in the Junior High School build—Featuring
Norlund'amd Kug'cne McCramer of
er
to
be
sponsored
by
a
colleig-e
i n g (formerly called the Model
Featuring—
W A Y N E MORRIS
class will be presented sometime the speech department and the School).
Saturday, December 21
JACKIE COOPER
It was conducted by L. J. Ulduring the early part of February. iiuisical numbers will be under the
WM. BOYD
BONITA GRANVILLE
liirectiot! of Willard Poff and Bill mer of the college faculty who inFinal plans are now being drawn
Masierson. Watoh for aninounce- vited persons into'- ••>•' -n tech"BAR 20 .lUSTICE"
Sunday, Monday, Tuesday
up hy the officers of the class and
;.
meiit concerning admission
and nical nietcorollgj'
and
Dec. 22, 23, 24
it.s adviser. Miss Bentley.
^'••*''-rnlogists ii>.,,, , ^.m State
special numbers.
B E N LYON
"CHRISTMAS IN J U L Y "
Tho ;s}u)w will bo ffiven in three
noke. Dr. (",aii \ e w l ) e r g "TREACHRY ON THE
DICK POWELL
scenes: A plantation scene, a night
•'" ''u-ized Light in
J^HIGH
S
E
A
S
"
ELLEN DREW
club scene, and a camups scene.
' )iisi ;ii'ii' Turbuh'liri-; .M.iiM r , - e l on ''UtilizaSunday, Monday
Dec. 22, 23
CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY
tion of Winds Aloft in l l i - h Level
FATHER IS A P R I N C E "
PROGRAM
Klyinf;-" and William I„ t'ressman
Featuring
Dec. 25, 26, 27. 28
on ••iru>thei topic.
GUY K I B B E E
THE MARX BROTHERS
—and—
—In—
JAMES N E W E L L

: Student Patronage
Invited . . . .

CAPRIO'S

: Barber and Beauty Shop

Students

SWARTZ
Barberfl"''Beautyi
Shop

mmmmmmmmm

R O X Y I MARTIN

Seniors to Present
Musical Revue

I Meteorological Association
I Has Meeting Here

"THE QUARTERBACK'

HOLIDAY GREETII^S

Printing-Office Supplies

"GO WEST YOUNG MAN"
"SKY BANDITS"
Sunday, Monday, Tuesday
Dec. 29, 30, 31
B E T T E DAVIS
—in—

"THE LETTER"
N E W YEAR HOLIDAY
PROGRAM
Jan. I, 2, 3 , 4

"COMRADE "
—Featuring—
CLARK GABLE
HEDY LAMAR

CHRISTMBAS HOLIDAY
PROGRAM
December 2 5 and 26
A BRAND N E W HIT

"TUGBOAT ANNIE
SAILS AGAIN"
—with
MARJORIE RAMBEAU
Friday, Saturday, Dec. 27, 28
JUDY GARLAND
—in—

"LITTLE NELLIE
KELLY"

I
PROCiRAMS — BOOKLETS — RING BINDERS —
LOOSE L E A F — NOTE PADS — PENCILS — P E N S
INKS — MENDING TAPE

A COMPLETE NEW STOCK

I

THE

Airline Taxi
E X T E N D S TO YOU
y
A MERRY CHRISTMAS
AND A HAPPY N E W YJsAR
Ride to the Bus and Train
Depot in One of Our 3
Taxicabs

TIMES

1, 2, :', or 4 can ride for
a single fare

PUBLISHING COMPANY
11.J Bellefonte Avenue

Prompt,

25C
Courteoua

S»rT!c«

«ic«i«if
THE COLLEGE TIMES

The Staff of the

COLLEGE TIMES
Wish to offer their sincere thanks to the
following and any other advertisers
who may have contributed to
the support of the paper
«
Roxy and Martin Theatres

Hoy's Men's Wear

Garden Theatre

Smith and Winter

Campus Corner
LaRouge Beauty Shoppe
Weaver and Probst
Fromm's Dry Cleaners
Caprio Beauty Shop
Renzo Shoe Repairs

Eisemann's Jewelry Store
Swartz Beauty Shop
Bottorf Bros.
Betty Barner Beauty Shoppe
The Hub

Air Line Tdxi

Times Publishing Company

Ricker's Flower Shop

Grossman's

Brown Boot Shop

Lock Haven Laundry

Widmann and Teah

The Victorian

Peter's Beauty Salon

Ernie's Lunch

City Office Supply Co.

Sandwich Shop

THE COLLEGE TIMES
Official List of 1940-11
Graduates in the Field

OFF the RECORD and ON
By B I L L

Scenes from "You Can't Take It With You"

MASTERSON

Two of Last Year's
Graduates Are
"In the Army Now"

Orchids to the Apollo Boys'
I Choir for giving the s t u d e n t liodv
ia program they really enjoyed. A
i little jiiore ajiplause
iinwi-vi-r,
C L E A R F I E L D COUNTY
I would have given us a few moi'e
*Kyler. Duane, Paradise G l a m - '•: encores.
m a r .School. L a u r e n c e Township, \ .Some of us enjoy music b u t
Phil Bressler and Fred
< i'arfield.
Yon at Fort Meade,
I a r e too tired to applaud.
Next
Hudson, John, Locust
S t r e e t r p r o g r a m if you like Mi.ss Skinner,
Maryland; First Draftees
ijchool, Curwensville.
d o n ' t be afraid to let h e r know
In Clinton County
) ' M i l l e r , LyI, Moshannon School J t .
D e c a t u r Township, Osceola Mill.s.
Amofcher thing worth m e n t i o n i n g
*Ogden, Elizabeth, L u m e r City in this column i^ some business w e
Borough Scho"bl, L u m b e r City.
Two of the m e m b e r s of Ia. might call " a p p l a u d i n g e t i q u e t t e . "
y e a r ' s g r a d u a t i n g class have b e e n
We.sekey, H a n n a h , Morris T W D . I t seems few of us know when to
cho.sen to t a k e p a r t in t h e p r e s e n t
School, Morrisdale.
applaud. It is customary to a p p l a u d
coin.<5cription. These two f o r m e r
t h e p e r f o r m e r s on their first a p CLINTON COUNTY
s t u d e n t s a r e F r e d Yon and P h i l Bagley, Hugh, C e n t r a l Consoli- p e a r a n c e amd above all t h e d i r e c ip Bressler. T h e y have b o t h b e e n
d a t e d School, Hammer.siey P o r k . tor. The choir boys and their v e r y
assigned t o F o r t George M e a d e ,
* B a r n e r , Riuth, Pine Creek. Con- aible director felt- u n c o m f o r t a b l e
Md.
s o l i d a t e d School, I*ine' Greek T w p . w h e n the a u d i e n c e did n o t g r e e t
F r e d Yon of Renovo w a s t h a
Betts, Arlene, Woolrich School, t h e m in the cu.stoma.ry mamner.
first of t w o in t h e c o u n t y to v o l Let us, the faculty and s t u d e n t
Woolrich.
u n t e e r his s e r v i c e s ; his a c c e p t a n c e
Bluhm, George, Renovo H i g h body, lead t h e way and shake off
filled the q u o t a f o r t h a t p e r i o d
the name of the " C O L D , L I F E School, Renovo.
and t h e n e x t tn line w e r e j u s t b e •Bower, Ruth, Mill Hal! Ele- L E S S A U D I E N C E O F LOCK H A g i n n i n g t o p a t themselves on t h e
VEN."
m e n t a r y , Mill Hall.
back when the n o t i c e c a m e of P h i l
•Dietrich, P a u l , Salona.
Did you people know t h a t you
Blre.ssler's acception. Now t h e r e
•Doebler, Christina, Renovo E l - have exactly 11 days left to h e a r
a r e a g r e a t m a n y y o u n g men in
e m e n t a r y , Renovo.
most of y o u r favorite songs s u n g
this a r e a t h a t a r e a c q u i r i n g moi-c
Fredericks, Alice, Juniior H i g h and played o n the air.
Trouble
t h a n t h e i r s h a r e of g r e y hairs o v School, Lock Haven.
between the A S C A P a n d BMI h a s
e r the m a t t e r .
Gloissner, Eula, Q u a y Scliool, become so intense and b i t t e r t h a t
D A L E OLMSTEAD A N D HARRIET F I G G L E S
Beech Creek.
F o r t Meade is one of the l a r g e s t
the three m a j o r networks
have
•Gradien,
Elizabeth,
Allison agreed to b a r all A S C A P songs
of t h e conscription c a m p s in t h e
Town.ship School, Lock H a v e n .
east and has for a long time b e e n
from the a i r J a n . 1, 1 9 4 1 . W h a t
Frey,
Margaret,
Roosevelt does it m e a n ? It m e a n s the songs
the scene of m a n y different t y p e s
School, Lock H a v e n .
of training. Sinse its i n a g u r a t i o a
of Stephen Foster, Carrie Bond,
• L a k n e r , E s t h e r , B r o w n School, Hoagy C a r m h i c h a e l , Cole P o r t e r ,
the Citizens Military
Training
Mill Hall.
Corps has been located t h e r e , while
J e r o m e K e r n a n d many o t h e r com• L o n g , Miriam, Castanea School posers will no longer be heard on
the advanced t r a i n e e s iih t h e inCastanea.
f a n t r y R O T C of this corps h a v e
the big p r o g r a m s . Lost to us un•wHilFSn-Mlo shrd lup up up up til an a g r e e m e n t is made will be
had t h e i r six w e e k s t r a i n i n g p e r •Ostrom,
Charlotte,
Renovo such songs a s " J e a n n e with the
iod a t this c a m p . T h e r e g u l a r s o l E l e m e n t a r y , Renovo.
diers q u a r t e r e d t h e r e a r e p r e t t y
Light Brown H a i r , " " I Love You
well used t o s e e i n g y o u n g r e c r u i t s
•'Rich, E t h e l , C e n t e r School, T r u l y , " " S t a r d u s t , " " N i g h t a/nd
.stumbling over each o t h e r and t r y W a y n e Township, Lock Haven.
D a y , " " B e g i n the B e g u i n e , " " M a k e
ing vainly to u n d e r s t a m l w h a t t h a t
•Rickard, Helen, Mil! Hall High Believe," etc.
nit-wit t o p sergeant thinks they
^School. Mill Hail.
A N D ON
are.
hite, Mildred. Renovo H ^ h _
-Tfetj—bifgrest-««h3F€ltng- disap^
S-^M'-S", Kenovo.
~
As y e t we h a v e n ' t been i n f o r m p o i n t m e n t in m o i t h s is J i m m y
HUNTINGDON COUNTY
ed as t o ju.st w h a t branch of t h e
Doi-sey's r e c o r d i n g of " B e r k e l y
Banzaff,
Anne,
P u t t s t o w n S q u a r e . " T h e \oca.l is good b u t
seiwice F'red a n d Phil have been
School, S a x t o n .
a.ssigned b u t a s F o r t Meade
ia
instrumental
treatment
n o t
l Y C O M I N G COUNTY
noted for its i n f a n t r y we can be
J. D.'s usual stuff. Kay K y s e r amd
•Alfon. justified in supposing t h a t it ii
•Baip, M a r y , M o n t g o m e r y - C l i n - this beautiful English ballad. R e tho i n f a n t r y . If so, we can s y m t o n J o i n t School, M o n t g o m e r y .
pathize v e r y d e e p l y with o u r m u cording honors of the m o n t h go to
•Bastian,
Marjorie,
Lincoln Tommy Dorsey and A r t i e S h a w
tual frieaid.s.
School, Williamsport.
T h e a v e r a g e person has a m i s for their beautiful a r r a n ^ m e n t of
LOIS R E E D E R AND J . R U S S E L L G A B L E
Conn, Ruth, e C n t r a l
G r a d e " S t a r d u s t . " S h a w use.s his full
informed conception of the life a t
School, South Wiilliamsport.
one of t h e s e c a m p s for t h e f i r s t
band in a m e d i u m slow d r a g a r •Crist,
Kruth, B r o a d
S t r e e t r a n g e m e n t f e a t u r i n g t h e king of
two o r t h r e e d a y s . It is q u i t e a
School, J e r s e y Shore.
bit different from a n y o t h e r e x t h e c l a r i n e t himself. Record col*Dykens,
Jean,
F r e n c h t o w n lectors should own this orae. T o m perience one could have. T o b e
School, Muncy R. D.
YOUR R E A D I N G LIST is
a ' ductory chapter
which
F l y n n brief these days consist of p r a c my Dorsey brings u s a n o t h e r b e a u Elison, Dorothy, Montoursville tiful r e c o r d i n g following close on new f«atuire of t h e T I M E S which | t h o u g h t accessary to explain his tically n o t h i n g but s t a n d i n g in •
E m e r y , Dorothy shrdl u p u p u p the heels of "I'll Never
line f o r a b o u t
two
Smile b r i n g s to you reviews of receovt ; motives, h e s t a t e s t h a t t h e book is c o n t i n u o u s
G r a d e School,
Montoursville.
Again."
His arrar^^^ment
of p o p u l a r books. I t boj>es t o encour- ' not m e a n t to be a comprehensive hours, only t o finish where you
• E m e r y , Dorothy, M o n t g o m e r y " S t a r d u s t " f e a t u r e d
the
" P i e d a g e m o r e and b e t t e r r e a d ing i analysis of the N e w Deal. It is weire being held u p to do, such aa
Dr. N o r t h ! not. I t is w r i t t e n in t h e concise r e g e d t e r i n g o r some other trivial
Clinton J o i n t Slchool, M o n t g o m e r y P i p e r s " aaid T o m m y himself on t h e a m o n g t h e s t u d e n t s .
style of an exceJlent thing, in a b o u t two m i n u t e s which
P l u m a n , V a h n a , F r a n k l i n Build- trombone. If you h a v e n ' t h e a r d it offers t h e free use of a n y book r u n n i n g
in t h e T. C. lending l i b r a r y to comme-ntator who tries h a r d to j u s t p u t s you right in t i m e to fall
ing,' Williamsport.
make it a point to d o so.
anyoflie who will w r i t e a r e v i e w of be an h o n e s t o b s e r v e r b u t really into a n o t h e r line and repeat t h e
• H e i v l e y , Leroy, W a l n u t S t r e e t
A WORD T O T H E W I S E
Building, J e r s e y Shore.
Record prices were slashed
a it for publication in this column, j leans strongly t o w a r d anti-Roto- same t h i n g ail o v e r again.
Keiler, LeRoy, W a l n u t S t r e e t few m o n t h s a g o b u t t h e fight be" S l e e p y " Von and " I n k y " BressY O U R R E A D I N G L I S T is simp- seveltism.
'Wild Geese C a l l i n g , " by S t e w - ler, who incidentally i« a local
School, J e r s e y Shore.
tween A S C A P and BMI m a y cause ly a bulletin for s t u d e n t opinion
Love, Helen Louise, Oval chool a raise again. O n e way of h e a r i n g I t does n o t p r e s u m e t o offer pro- a r t W h i t e . Reviewed by Richard boy will, it's hoped, emjoy t h e i r
Nasbet.
Brown.
stay, o r to be a little s t r o n g e r ,
y o u r favorite songs is on r e c o r d - fessianal criticism.
•Priest,
Margaret,
C e n t r a l ings a n d record companies will no
"C
tr
^^^^
^^^
^"'^^ M u r d o c k a r e their .sentence in t h e services of
Flynn,
J
o
h
n
T.

G r a d e School, South Williamsport doubt see a chance to reap a harl ^ a m o n g^ thoseA f Ao r 4t u nt-x.
a t e „™„!,
people„.f who
Squire in t h e White H o u s e , „" " JNew
,,,- the United S t a t e s A r m y . A t least
• R o h e , M a r t h a J a n e , W a t e r v i l l e vest.
Doubleday, Doran
Com have
^York,
. - , . r,"u,^A.„
n.-.„ &
tl r^r^
responded
t
o
t
h
e
w
a
v
e
o
l
pi- they should a f t e r t h e y g e t uaed
o n e e n n g — t h e wave t h a t cairried
School, Cummings Township, W a to t a k i n g orders from people m u c h
pany, Inc., 1940. Reviewed by
J o h n ' s f o r b e a r s from
Scotland smaller than themselves if such a
terville.
L
o
r
e
t
t
a
P
e
t
r
u
c
c
i
.
T h e population of Washington,
across t h e Atlantic a n d
N o r t h person exists. ^This business of b e • S w e i t z e r , Ned N., O a k Grove
D. C , h a s j u m p e d 37 p e r c e n t .in
" C o u n t r y Squire in t h e W h i t e , ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^ Oregon.
J o h n has ing in t h e a r m y is no picnic ajid
School, Williamsport R, D. 2.
- Turner, Jeanne,
M o n t g o m e r y - the past t e n years. Needless to H o u s e " is, in t h e a u t h o r ' s own | j,^^jj,g,j ^-^^ ^fl^^^ f^^ t e n y e a r s there a r e m o r e t h a n a few w h o
cow-hand, s h e e p - h a n d , l u m - would not t r a d e places with t h e m
Clinton H i g h School, M o n t g o m e r y . say, f e w • of t h e 37 p e r c e n t e r s words, " a n a t t e m p t t o explain t h e j ^
before for quite a few cyphei-s.
•Young,
E a r l , Clay
School, would join in a n y chorus of " W e New Deal in terms_ of th« m a n Hjp,j.^^n_ ^ ^ j p r o s p e c t o r
W a n t W i l l k i e ! " — R e p u b l i c Bulle- who sponsored it." Flynn reviews m a r r y i n g Sally, then one night in
Williamsport.
The e n t i r e .-student body, a n d
bin.
quietly t h e y e a r s before F r a n k l t n Seattle t h e y hear wild geese g o SNYDER COUNTY
their i n t i m a t e friends and acDelano Roosevelt became a politi- ing north and quite w i t h o u t r e a • H a r r o l d , Beulah C , P o r t T r e q u a i n t a n c e s wish them a lot of
T h i n g s both political platforms cian, selecting t h e events c a r e f u l - son decide t o follow t h e m in t h e i r
v o r t o n School, P o r t T r e v o r t o n .
luck a n d hope t h e y d o n ' t n e e d it
ly
to
c
r
e
a
t
e
t
h
e
impression
t
h
a
t
Lepley,
Jeanne,
Kratzville overlooked: u l t i m a t e disposition
boat, t h e Tillicum. T h e wave too g r e a t l y .
School, J a c k s o n Township, Selins- of t h e v a c a t i o n e r who writes t h e chief executive is, a t h e a r t , a comes to r e s t in A l a s k a .
about s l e e p i n g tinder b l a n k e t s a n d c o u n t r y s q u i r e , t h a t he sees himgrove.
W h i t e ' s purpose i= t o depose
Newman, Harvey, Beaver Con-j of the pest who asks, " I s is hot self as the rich man in the m a n - ji^p d e b u n k e r s of tho bona fide pi- dowed with a sense of h u m o r and
soMd.ited School, Beaver Springs. enough for y o u ? " — C h r i s t i a n Sci- sion on the hill cheerfully passing o„,j,pr by p r e s e n t i n g pioneering as love of new thin.gs and for plaoe.s'^Wild Geese Calling" ip very
o u t money (borrowed money, of j^„ i n t e r e s t i n g a d v e n t u r e made hy
nish,
Marcella,
R e i c h e n b a c h j ence Monitor.
light,
yet i n f o r m a t i v e ; it is a novcourse, Flynn notes) to the poor respectable people. T h e r e a d e r will
School, Reichenhach.
i
el of a t m o s p h e r e , r a t h e r than of
RingWr, Marj- Ellen, Miffliln- B u t the book g a t h e r s m o m e n t u m gnc^j^nter no p.sychological discus- c h a r a c t e r or t h e m e . If it m a y be
U N I O N COUNTY
j
• D a t e s m a n , Ruth, Buffalo Rds. b u r g E l e m e n t a r y School, Miffliln- a s it goes along and the whole sjo„g_ ^^ c h a r a c t e r s who a r e per- .said to 'have a them<>, it is t h a t
t h i n g ends up as a b i t t e r denounce- sonified complexes, n o t tiresome except as y o u r life is an a d v e n burg.
School, Lewisburg iR. D.
• Indicates g r a d u a t e s of t h e m e n t of Roosevelt, his militaristic discourses on the more obscure t u r e , it is nothing. ^
• H a r b a c h , Phyllis, Mifflinburg
*
views, and his entire New Deal phases of love or envy or hate o r
class of 1940.
Public Schools, Mifflinburg.
disillusionment
or d e s p a i r ; b u t
All other individuals a r e m e m - policy•Heckel, Mary, Rand School, R.
HOUDAY GREETINGS
b e r s of the class of 1939.
In " T h e W a r n i n g , " an i n t r o - i w i l l meet vigorous c h a r a c t e r s e n , D . 1.
(Continue
YOUR READING LIST

THE COLLEGE

TIMES

Cantpus

THE PROLETARIAT—Walter was seen in complete sport outfit
So I think I'll hang up and kit
Ganz felt to rip-snorting about the other day in the field house, the hay . . . Merry Christmas to
going to the Hop with Mary K. taking off a few extra pounds by all and may St. Nick be moat genMartin that Roomie Sags Sagolla —playing barminton . . . Confi- erous with you . . . (that old stuff
JOE MORAN
Had to rope him to the bed to dentially Kisner and Michael are
calling the breadwinner
St.
keep him from leaping through progressing nicely . . . Height jf Nick!)
the ceiling . . . Rosie Brachbill, oi Ambition: Janet L. White has conBellefonte furniture fame, hasn't fessed to aspiration of becoming j
Hitler is aispleased with his asmissed a wc«k-end since Septem- the whistle in the Dundee tran- j trologer's reading of the stars.
ber—there
must be something scription over WRAK . . . Ludge j The Gestapo can't do anything
inor% besides the Brockerhoff Ho- Marusiak's threats as to what will | about the stars, but they can
tel in the Centre County seat . .. happen to us if thhs column does make things unpleasant for the
If Tom Boyce lives to be a hun> him dirt don't frighten us a bit, a!?trologers.—Toronto Globe and
dred he'll never make
chang* but we won't say ariythng this Mail.
without slipping a fbw nickels in time because—well, anyhow, we
FOREWORD—
!ety) sleeping most any place so's to urge one to play the "one- haven't room . . . The following
Again we are tardy writing this about the institution ^^. . your life armed bandit" . . . If all the love statistical survey which purports
Beset Britain, fighting with
pillar, as the verbal lashings of'will begin down Argentine Way letters from the state of Ohio were to show conditions under the New both fists and having to "concilithe slave-driving editor smite oui • • • ^'0\x\e Martella "in the Shop" laid end to end, they would still : Deal was stolen by this pillar from ate" in outlying parts of the
ears, urging us to a' quick finish, ""'•'^t any time after dinner of an lie—we hope! . . . John YoHiers : another publication:—
world, must wish she had a third
And how, might we asflt, can any- evening niutilating .skulls—witness says that he gets along fine with Population of U. S.
124,000,000 hand, he palm of which could
one (lea.st of all this lowly per- Tl"-omas Michael Anthony Hanna girls* mothers, but with the lassies Eligible for old age
son;ige) compo.se a so-called col- • • • things about the same back themselves. He's got a problem
make deprecating motions. —
pension .
30,000,000
yum with the Sandman urging us home.'
Washington Star.
. . . . Philip Fromm did not curb
xxxx
to hit the hay and the beefings of
his high-stepping tactics a mite at That leave.> to do the
}
AI) LIBIDUM—Overheard:— the Hop, despite coaching from
the aforementioned Simon Legrec
work
94,000,000 I
who is the editor of this publica- gues« 1 pa.ssed—Dr. Rude said I Deacon Shuey, who was also pres- Employes of State,
tio-n, sounding on our ears????? niust have had the test well in ent . . . Budge Bailey and W. W.
Federal, County, City
hand" . . . Our pet hate: The Skerpon, pugilist extraordinary^
xxxx
Governments
20,000,000
louse
across
the
street
who
turns
STUFF!—Christmas coming up
seemed to be getting along rosily
bringing with it the little chore of on an electric razor during the at the Hop, in spite of earlier That leaves to do
buying for the Lovely One a lit- "Rt^nfrew of the Mounted" pro- troubles.
the work
,
74,000,000
tie remembrance, lads . . . Ah, how . (fiam . . . Bear Catherman down
Ineligible work under
xxxx
fortunate that this department to Bucknell for the week-end
child labor acts .
60,000,000
Couple of the Week^—K. Euwill have no .such problem, being showed all three of his dateis a gene Stine and Lorna Zettle.
\V
as this department is strictly a \ '"^'''ly time—one great big nickel
Song of the Week—" A Hand- ' That leaves to do
ncn-participant
in
romantic: drink per lady . . . Ingraham'.^,
—From—
^
the
work
14,000,000
ful of Stars."
goings-on hereabout-; . . . May we n^'w sray .suit was indeed a gor- \
13,999,998
Laugh of th Week—^Dagwood No. of Unemployed
Si
pa.ss along this little tid-bit of ad- Keous affair at the Soph
Hop |
Bumstead.
vice to the local co-eds, gleaned ' l-'other evening. However, William I
That
leaves
to
do
the
Man of the Week—S. Claus.
from the pages of the ' Emmits- t-his is Lock Haven and all such |
work (me and FDR)
Lucky Girl of the Age—^Marburg (Md.) Chronicle, a journaK things go far naught like Gray's |
jorie Hanawalt, another Altoona Number going fishing
of which we were formerly
a "flower—"And wastes its sweet.- \
canary—'She went to the Soph Hop
12 Bellefonte Ave.
faithful
reader—"Cold
cream ^ "««* on the desert air" . . . Pepsi |
That leaves me to do all
with John Gehron.
smeared on the eyelids is as ef- ' Beveridge, it is reported, has a |
:i«igcgt««!gtgte!«teic«eis!C!e!g%>eicigte!sie!$
the work and I'm getting
XXXX
fective as eye-s.«hado\v, without supra-speaking acquaintance with
tired of it
Ben
Ulrich
:
IN
CONCLUSION

Overheard
giving that 'hard' look" . . . Any- " Flemington lassie
ost
ground
in
that
\
"I
won't
go
out
with
anybody
one wi.shing to engage in a bit of seems to have
Most lo- i el-''^ during vacation, and I'll write
n
fisticuffs has only to ask for a P'iscilla Hess league
fag of an evening in the dotm cal lads and lassies with ".stead- every day" . . . Fountain Broiwn
reports a very illuminating dis. . . Weeds hit a new low this ies back home (an incidentally
Si
cussion with his date at the Soph
suckers
on
the
hook
here
at
L.H.)
week as the pre-Christmas lull
affair last Friday. The higb spot
ate
reporting
much
mail
these
sets in . . . Marriage is the goal
of the discussion was reached
of 96 per cent of the women en- days as Yuletide comes closer —
when they talked over the heat of
rolled in the Pennsylvania Col- could be mebbe the llfpe of a present, mebbe???? . . . Chet Pfef- the past summer . . . Tylersville,
lege for Women.
1 »
at
f er's lament,—"six deliveries over I represented locally by the Misses ;
xxxx 1
Hilda
Probst
and
Margaret
Shafentirely
unnecessary.
THINGS
YOU'LL
NEVER due"—is

HEAR DEPT.—ANY student in Just dangle the mid-winter formal fer among others, has caused all
i
soils
of
revolutions
in
the
cardiac
ANY one of Prof. Sullivan's his- before her eyes, m' boy.
'Tops in Pernianent Waving'
Men's Wear
I region of one William Hoover . . . y
tory classes—"Wasn't that last
xxxx
DIAL 2'A2
y
E.
Main
St.,
Lock
Haven
^
Famous
sayings:
Colonel
Lawrence
testa snap?" . . . George Bailey:
HAIR AND THERE — Chick
»Jf5«!«J!8>6!«i«!S(S!«lg(S"€!««€i«'€'«f€'«!S!«:<«.
—"Good Luck" . . . Duke Davies,
"Poker?
Poker?
oh, you Springman still leads Bobby Mar- fiiend of one and all hereaboute, >
mean one of those long jiggers shall by .'several hairs in the race
^i3t3i9t»%>tSlfc3l3i9i3)9i3l3l»%a)3g3)9i3lS^3t3ia«3l3i3!»ai3]asa)3l3i%3i%%9)»i3t»t»,3)»
they use to stir up a fire with?" for "top" honors . . . I>ick Selt. . . James Patton: "Farragut had zer i- :;ls(i right in there pitching
a lousy t^am that year" . . . . . . . -tune of the ferns would look a
Be Sure of Your Store
Bloody Bill Bitner( the South lutler bald than they do sporting
—Always Reliable—
Jones St. Bill): "My last fishing siinie of the tonsorial get togeth- »
-LOCK HAVEN'S SHOPPING CENTER5?
trip was a flop" , . . Dot Heller: ei-s seen locally.
Sf
i
STUDENTS—While .you are in Lock Haven
"Marks don't mean a thing" . . .
Blair Owens: "Gee, I'm a lousy
feel
free
to
make
this
store
your
shopping
if
'
'
•wrestler."
« i

Chatter

By

After the Soph Hop and a
Turbulent Week-end, We
Should Write a Colyum!!

HOLIDAY GREETINGS

I

II

MERRY
CHRISTMAS

'

I RICKER'S
I FLOWER SHOP

%

Clothes
for Young
Meiv—

11 CHRISTMAS
if GREETINGS
PETER'S

. HOY'S

BEAUTY SALON

I

SMITH & WINTER

gi

XXXX

YOU'LL .FIN15—The gym dee|i
in gore after one of the Piper
Boy's Saturday matinee se.s.sions- the lads who labor at the indu:-try that's "Helping to' Make Lock
Haven Famous" do not fool whilst
get-ting their I'eerealion in tlie
court, mi.xing in a mite of football, soccer, and hockey to make
things more interesting . . . the
Eiu-yclii
I Do Your Xmas
Widmann & Teah I Shopping Early
TWO STORES

^
t^

d t
a n d at

Main and Vesper Sts.

I
I

Lock Haven's Most
Beautiful Clothing

Bellefonte Ave. and
Church St.

TRY OUR FOUNTAIN
SERVICE

»*Sia.aassa&&Siaaaiatsi>iSi9ias)^«i3iSjSJssSiSiaa!S>sias!3'(3)3i3i»atsiSi3'3i3<»|*?^:

City Office Supply and Book Store
REMINGTON PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS
Christmas Greetings and General Family Lines
Thousands to cboo»e from

GIFTS
BOOKS
BILLFOLDS
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS and SUPPLIES
Parker and Sheaffer Fountain Pens
Bibles
Photo Albums
Scrap Books

I

I
J?

— P I P E S and TOBACCOS—
KAY-WOODY
DR. GRABOW
YELLOW-BOWL

$3.50 to $5.00
$1.S0
$1.00 and $1.50

K. W. HASSINGER, Prop.

place.

WE APPRECIATE YOUR PATRONAGE



I

Store

^
S
Sf
g

All Merchandise Reasonably
Priced and Boxed Absolutely
Free. All Advertised Guaranteed Brands as Follows:—

i

To ike Faculty and
Student Body

I
—Stetson H a t s
»
—Interwoven Hose
S
— J a r m a n Shoes
I
_ T r u - \ a l Shirts
I
—Essley Shirts
w ' — A r r o w Shirts
^
^

Michael-Stern
CLOTHING

y

Startbury Alpagora

g

TOPCOATS

I

Brentwood

V
V
g

Alligator

SWEATERS
RAINCOATS

Tru-Val PAJA1V5A.S

I

" T h e Best Place to Shop Aft«r All"

H IWeiT^ Cbristmas
—AND—

s
jx

s*

j ; If

g WEAVER & PROBST
Iiieic!ciete«ctetat«««tcct(;>e««
"TOPS IN CLOTHING"

V

Bauman^s
Campus Comer

»eieietctewe><'e>cc«c>ete>ceietc