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NORMAL TIMES
At
State
Normal
LOCK HAVEN, PA., FEBRUARY
VOLUME 5
L
Central
IS
School
10,1927
NUMBER 8
w
February Graduates
Number Eighteen
Eighteen members of the Senior Class
graduated at tho close of the first semester. This effected many changes in the
school organizations, nearly every club
losing at least one meinber. Most of
those who graduated went directly to
Dr. William R. Sandy, director of the positions to which they have Vieen
bureau of Mental Health, in the State elected.
Departnient of Welfare, discussed "MenAnne Fahlman had the good fortune
tal Health and Childhood" with fifty to have two xiositions offered her, and
students, members of the three psych- chose Ridgway, only twenty miles from
ology classes, at a dinner iu the New home. Anne is perhaps the best basF.allon Hotel on J a n u a r y 26. Dr. Arm- ketball player in the Senior Class. This
strong siioke; also Mrs. B. Franklin may be because she is from Kane, Pa.
Long, Hugh Fredericks, Dorothy Bickel, .\niie is a member of the Beta Sigina
Ivan Fritz, and Miss Minnie Jane Mer- Chi sorority and of the Art Club.
rells of the faculty. Huth Jones, toastSharon, Pa., claimed Carrie Allen. Sho
mistress, introduced the speakers of the
was here for the full terms of 1924-25,
evening.
and for the first seniester this year.
Miss ilerrells introduced Dr. Sandy, Carrie will teach the fourth grade at
stating that he represented the fourth of Bradford, Pa.
the four types of peoiile who are needed
Dorothy Apple was with us only one
to make a complete iitrestigatioii of some semester, but during that short time
perjilexing cases among children; the had gained a liost of friends. Her home
psychologist, the physician, the teacher, is ill Smethport, Pa.
and the psychiatrist. Each dealt with
One of the most active members of
il phase of child-nature; the work of
each, supplementing the work of the the Senior class, whose departure we
others, is necessary adequately to diag- regret very much, is Marian Smith. She
nose .and prescribe treatment and train- was a member of the Art Club, the Glee
I'lull and the Xormal Times staff.
ing for the develoiiing child.
Dr. Sandy, of State Department,
Advocates Gradual Building
Up of Mental Health Clinics
and Training.
N. S. she was a niember of the Y. W.
C. A., and the Normal Times staff.
Mary Louise Buddy left Saturday for
her home in Scranton, Pa. Third floor
West will certainly miss Mary Louise.
.She was a member of the Y'. W., Price
Literary and the Psychology Clubs.
Florence Macbeth Sings Herself
Into First Place Over All the
Notable Vocali.sts Here Since
1922.
ter. She was a former meuiber of the
Normal Times, and rejoined with the
staff this year.
The "Shadow Song" of Meyerbeer was
perlia|is the biggest number on the program. It sceiiH'd that every phase of
vocal expression was found in this piece
which Miss Macbeth siileiididly iiiterIireted.
Besides clioosing a prograni which
e\'er\' niie ciiiibl a|ipreciate, ^liss Macbeth, hersidf, was cliariniiig. Her personalitx' won every nieniber of her audieiii-c, anil SIKHIC right tlirinigh her singing. She is beautiful and graceful.
When singing "Si jc pouvais iiunirir," hy
Harbolli.
the audience caught the
tlioiiglitfnl sadness and, in a comiilete
coiitr.-isl, the merry swing of "Come to
the Fair," liy Martin, gave them an idea
of the force nf Miss .Maclictli's dramatic
ability. She was forced to resiiond to
{Continued on Page 2)
The recital given Friday evening,
January 2S, by Florence Macbeth, prinia(^harlotte Knapp left for York, Pa., on
doiiiia of the Chicago Civic Opera Com.January 28, to teach physical education.
pany, assisted by her husband, George
Have you ever seen Charlotte wield a Roberts, compiiser-piaiiist, was without a
hockey stick? Those who have think doubt the most enjoyable of the five
she will hold her new position with .years of ^liisical Artist's Courses at the
honors. Charlotte is a member of the Central State Normal School.
.41pha Sigina Tau sorority, t h e Art Club,
Her first liumber, "Tarantella," by
and t h a t mj'sterious organiz.ation of the
Kossiiii, gave us a splendid introduction
day-room called the L. A. L.
to the brilliancy of Miss Macbeth's
Helen ilcCloskey is leaving East voice, full of jiower and color. Her
dormitory for the unknown wilds. She range, power, enuiiciation and attack
was a member of the Y. W. C. A., marked her as one of the great coloraShakespeare Literary Society and tlio ture sdiiranos of the age.
Psychology Club.
"i'anl.-i," by .\rdidi, was esiiecially
Lucy May Mitchell gained a, week on good. Kach wiiril, clear cut, fell from
us, leaving here for a position on Janu- the singer's lijis with ease and grace.
ary 22. Lucy May was here tirst in 1925, Man.v of her lighter numbers reiinired
and came back and finished this semes- very careful enunciation.
Mrs. Kane is another one of tlie dayThe inembers of the Health Kducation students to leave this semester. She was
classes of York, Pa., should be glad of here for only one semester. She exthe fact that .Tanet Stewart has been pects to teach ill Lock Haven's schools,
selected to teach them. While at C. S.
(Continued on Page 2)
"Mental Health and Childhood"
Dr. Sandy told of the inception of
systematic study of mental hygiene, and
of the establishment of mental clinics
over the United States for the prevention of mental disease, a movenient so NORMAL SINKS ALUMNI'S
recent that there are now but 55 such
FIVE IN SLOW GAME
clinics in this country, thnt number,
Victory at last! The Ceutial State
however, rejireseiitiiig a three-fold gain
tive showed soiuething of its real metover li)22.
tle when they tiimiiied the alunini team
Dr. iSandy advocated careful diagnosis
2(i-l(i on Saturday, .l.-iiiiiary 211, in a game
of children, so that the normal, the sufeatured b.v lagged passing and fair
pernormal, and the subnormal may each
shooting.
receive the type of training suited to
The game was one-sided from the
his special needs. Ho would establish
start. The first half ended 14-9 in favor
classes for parents, to teach them some- of Normal, and two minutes before the
thing of iiiiportaiu-e of rearing their final wliLstle had been run np to 24-9.
children correctl.y. The ideal situation Not until several substitutions had been
tow.ard which I'eiiiisylvania is slowly made in Normal's lineup were tho old
moving, he said, is one in which thor- grads able to sink a counter, fair or
(Contiiuied on I'ago S)
foul. Coach D.yck made three sulistitutioiis almost simultaneously, and tlie
Two Permanent Members of aliiiiiiii ii'spiiuded swiftly with three
Held goals and a foul.
Council Elected
The aliiuiui team was no easy aggreA T one oj the most important mci'tgation. .\ll of tlieiii were local players
•^^ ings of the yenr for ihe Juniors.
who have kept up with the game every
Mowrie Ebner and Anne Orlin tvere
season, and who are in good pla.ying coiielected to the Student Council jor the
cliliiiii. Their floor work had much to
remainder of this year and. next year.
commend, but their shooting was ragged
They succeed Julia Gibbons and Agnes
Gallagher, the temporary Junior repreand their defensive work more than
sentatives.
The election took place
once resembled football tactics.
January 17. January 24 the girls were
Normal's iiassing was olf-color, and
installed and introduced to Dr. Armtheir general toam-play well below anystrong, Miss Roberts, and the Senior
Class.
thing exhiliited this year. An ability
(Contiiiut'd on Page 7)
EDUCATION OF WOMEN
TRACED AT ED DINNER
One hundred ten members of the History of Kducation sections held a dinner
ill the Sunda.v school rooms of the Presliyteiiaii Church at Mill Hall on Januaiy 29, at which Dr. Thomas Woody, who
iKcupies the chair of llistor.y of Education in the LTiiiversity of Pennsylvania's
.Scliool of Education was t h e guest of
honor. Fidlnwing the dinner Dr. Woody
lectured on "-Modern Phases in the History of Woiiian's lOdiu-nt ion," and short
talks were given liy Hr. I). W. .\riustroiig
and several iiH'iiiIiers of the class. Isaliclle !5oylaii acted as toastmistress aud
gave the .-iddreas of welcome.
Dr. .\riiistroiig conipliniented the students on the work that had been done
ill the history of education riaasos here,
and .stressed the fact that while educational methods have changed, the iiurpose of education has been unchanged;
always educiition has striven for the development of character ill the individual.
Georgine Nuiiii sketched the life of
Marj- Lyons, the founder of Mount
Holyoke, and Claude Stangel talked on
the achievements of Alice Freeman Palmer, earlj- a president of Wellesley Col(Contlnued on Pnge 3)
Dayroomers Graph Moral Tone
T~\OWN in that end of the dayroom
^
iihere men are men, a jagged line
u'orlis its way, day by day, from one
edge of the floor toward the other.
Someti?nes it veers sharply upward.
Sometimes it sheers steeply doicn. Now
and then it steers a monotonously level
course straight ahead.
IP'hlchtver direction it goes, it gives
the I). R. B's the satisfaction of knoicing that on occasions the morale of the
hoys' dayroom has been above par. For
the line is a graph, which, for eighteen
weeks, represents the moral status of
the dayroom.
Just at present it has gone far below
the ideal standard, partly due to the
worry of midterm e.xams, and parity
because of the spare time wliile new
courses are started the boys have to
while away somehow.
NORMAL
TIMES
Praeco Staff Has Added New
Members
Thirty-Five New Faces in
Classes
Miss DuBois Supervises All
Training School Art
The Praeco Staff has boon growing
rapidl.y within the last few weeks. From
the original five it has increased to
twelve. Peg McCauley was elected to
work on the Calendar section. In the
Art department, Sterl Artley, Paul Vonada, Euth Jones, Dorothy Lambert and
Peg McCauley aro now at work. Catherine Orth, Josephine Paul and Helen
Eettger were selected to make writeups on the social organizations. To
Mar.v Kirby was assigned the humor section.
These people are organizing the book
on a fuller and more collegiate plan.
New features are plentiful, especially in
the photographs, the Calendar, and the
Art sections.
The photograph editor, Claudia Kelly,
is plannig to have the organizations of
the school uiiiform in style and form.
To make the .athletic section more realistic she wants to snap the players and
leaders i n action. She is also trying to
collect as large a variety of unique and
freak snapshots as possible.
The Calendar section is being worked
out ill news-reel form, totally different
from anything that we have ever had.
The name of the book "Praeco" gave
the -Vrt department the idea of carrying
out the Eoman style and form df art
throughout the book.
The social organizations are to be
givi'ii nicii-e attention. Their activities
and unusual experiences shall be treated on the same page as their group picture.
The facetious collections of Mary Kirb.v lire going to be plenty in number.
Praeco will be totally unlike any of
its predecessors, reconstructed from stem
to stern, to make it the livest yearliodk ever published here.
Thirty-live new faces are smiling
cheerfull.v or nervously, according to the
temperament behind the face, about the
halls and classrooms since the opening
of the second semester. Some of them
are familiar from former sessions, regular or summer; some of them still have
to become familiar for the first time.
Supervision of all the art work in
each grade of tho Training School will
constitute a big part of Miss DuBois'
work for this semester. Last semester
this work waa divided between Miss
Atherton and Miss DuBois.
Miss DuBois' student teachers are:
Group One—Amy Bitchey, Edith Lundeen, Priscilla Heath, Agnes Mattson;
(Jroup Two—Matilda Cornmesser, Bessie
Lipez, Alice Whitney, Georgine Nunn,
Catherine Gardner, Pauline H.amilton;
Group Three—Geraldine Donahue, Ella
]\Iae Lilly, Ann Winkleblech, Josephine
Viering, and Paul Vonada.
GREATEST ARTIST IN
MUSICAL EXPERIENCE
(Continued from Page 1}
repeated encores, and in some instances
to leiicat even the encores themselves.
Mr. Hiibirts. Miss Macbeth's able accoin|iaiiist, also played a group of piano
select inns which were received by the
audieuii- with great enthusiasm. An interest iny IVaturc of his performance was
that he played without the assistance of
notes.
The piiigraiii as presented was as follows :
I
Tarantella
Kussiiii
I Know Wliere I'm Goin'
Hughes
Ave Maria
Schubert
Parla
Ardidi
II
Flenrs des .\lpes
Weckerlin
Si je pouvais mourir
Baribolli
Nuit d'Etoiles
Debussy
Le Papillon
Fouiidrain
III
Ballade in D Minor
Brahms
Eomance
Eoberts
Staccato Etude
Eubiiistcin
i l r . Kobe its
IV
Shadow Song (IJinorah) . . . . Meyerbeer
V
Deep in M.v Heart a Lute
Aylward
Come to the Fair
Martin
Sandman Is Calling You
Eoberts
A Song of May
Eoberts
Gene Pierson, for example, is back,
unchanged in any respect, just as every
one would have wished. Gene has three
3'ears of work behind her, having graduated in June from the Junior high school
course, but now that degrees are to be
granted Gene is bound to be among the
first to win one.
Ressie Blackburn, one of our most
westerly regular customers, is another of
the old standbys to reappear, with precisely the same smile she left us with.
Eleanor Close is putting in another
semester toward her normal school certificate ; and Ellen Williams and Martha
Dill have both taken up their books
where they dropped them. Seems good,
you know; seems good when they come
early and often.
Frances and Martha Barnhart, Pauliue
Bongioviiii, Marian Bradley, Marian
Burt, Nellie Donahue, Mary Dougherty,
Vendla Faulk, Jessie Gregory, Alice Hall,
Eunice Manley, Helena Meisel, Margaret
Mickalonic, Ethel Miller, Dorothy Eeading, Emily Sayers, Helena Sharer, Louise
Siuiles, Verna Stanlej', Euth Summers,
Anna Taylor, Margaret Tyson, Florence
Urban, Kathryn Wagner, Frances Waxier, Clara, Lelia, and Helen Willianis,
Ethel Ekendahl, and Mabel Eenner, most
of them among our most sociable suininer students, make up the rest of the
thirty-flve arrivals.
Miss Roberts Gives Farewell
Tea
Miss Eoberts held a very charming
farewell tea-partj- for the mid-year
graduates on Friday afternoon, January 28, from ,1:30 to 5:30 in the Blue
Room. The members of the faculty were
also there to express their regrets at the
students' departure and to wish them
much success and happiness.
The members of the student council,
Rose Bower, Esther Snavely, Ann Orlin,
and Jlowrie Ebner, saw that all the
guests received as much of the refreshments as they desired. Eose's particular duty was to see that no cup was
emptj' at any time.
FEBRUARY GRADUATES
NUMBER EIGHTEEN
(Continued from P a g e 1)
and has done substitute teaching here
during the semester just ended.
Mary Mj-crs, another day-room student, is leaving this seniester. She is a
niember of the day-room organization,
L. A. L., and also the Eho Omega Lambda sorority.
Quite popular in East dormitory was
Katherine Weidert, and that place will
certainly miss her a great deal. She
was an active member of the Y". W.
Louise Escobar was here lust summer
and completed her work the first semester. Her home is in Warren, Pa., wdiere
she expects to teach in the intermediate
grades.
Helen Eadonisky completed her work
here at the close of the first semester.
She also attended several sumnier sessions. Helen was a member of the
"Sb.ike" Literary Society.
Quite a few of the graduates seem
to be from the day-room. Edith Suudberg is another to le.ave that place. She
was a member of the L. A. L.
Not only First floor west, but all the
students, will miss ilildred Eeiter. "Mid"
always liad a jolly greeting for every
one. iSlie was a nicmtier of the "Shake"
Literary Society and (]uite active in all
sports. Especiall.y in hockey did "Mid"
shine. She had the real C. S. N. S.
spirit.
Another da.y student, Gene Asplund,
has left for her home at Eidgway, Pa.
She too was a member of the L. A. L.
Altoona, Pa., greeted Euth Blumeiiscliein, Saturday, January 29. While
at C. S. N. S. Euth was a member of
the Y. AV. C. A. and of the Art Club.
The school extends to all these girls
The tea was poured by candle-light,
creating an atmosphere which made hearty congratulations and wishes them
success in anything they undertake.
every one feel perfectly sociable.
The students present in whose honor
the tea was held were:
Catherine
S. R. O. in Library
Weidert, Euth Blunienshein, Marian
Why so many people iu tho library
Smith, Louise Escobar, Helen McCloskey,
i\Irs. Kane, Mary Myers, Edith Suudberg, the night of February 31 Every chair
Mildred Eeiter and Mary Louise Buddy. occupied, some students standing, and
all of them for tho time being hard at
work increasing their stores of knowlGround Hog Digs in Again
edge.
Prepare for six more weeks of winPerhaps the opening of the new semester. The ground hog emerged from his ter accounted for it; ever,y one was starthole in the hillside up the Boys' Glen, ing in with vim and vigor. Perhaps
saw his shadow, giive one snort, and de- tlie faculty had had the vim and vigor,
clined to come out for classes for six and li.ad assigned unusually long refermore weeks. Februar,y 2, plus six weeks; ences. Be that as it may, the library
count 'em and weep.
surely was being used with a vengeance.
Sweet Selling Sweets
Candy—now they have it. The boys
have finally realized that there are possibilities in candy, and have placed a
stock of it on sale.
The Y'. faced a financial problem before Christmas, and decided that candy
might relieve tho strain. Bill Sweet was
appointed to take charge of the buying
and selling, and has gone into business
over in the East Donn.
So much has been purchased from
him within the past two weeks that
niiiny appetites have lost their keen edge.
Sales have been heavy, but will probably fall off somewhat when the idea
has lost its novelty, iuid the candy appetite gets back to normal. Even at
that, the Y. seems likely to continue
in Sweet's sweet business because of the
]ilcasiiig profit therefrom.
New Programs Give Half
Holidays
The programs for the second seniester
have brought broad grins to many of
the Juniors. Half-holidays appear on
their new programs.
Those in the Junior High School group
find themselves with Wednesday and
Saturdaj' afternoons off. No classes;
who is dissatisfied with that? The intermediate grade courses spread about
the program cards more evenly, but at
that Friday afternoon is wide open—
for study. None of the sections of the
primary group was eciually fortunate;
classes are distributed both mornings
and afternoons throughout the week.
Every One Moves
"Say! Did you get .vour new program
made out j'ct?"
"Why no. Who said we should?"
"Why don't you use your eyes ? There
has been a notice to that effect posted
on the mail-box cabinet all day."
"Let me see your card. I suppose
miiie'll be the same. Wow!
Eight
o'clock classes every morniug but Saturda.y."
"Yeh, and did you notice when wo take
Gym?"
"This H200 is Gym, isn't it? But what
is this SS240?"
"Why, that's Economics."
"Economics? That teaches you how
to save money, doesn't i t ? "
"I don't know, but if it does I better take down a few points from it.
Well, so—long. It's time for Biology
and this is the day for the test."
"Go to it, you can pass."
"Thank goodness this is the last one."
A score or more of such conversations
was the order of things during the last
week of the first seniester. They took
phico ill the halls, in the Y. W. .and Y.
JI. rooms, in student's rooms, ;ind in
the da.v-rooni.
Early in the week every one seemed
to catch the thrill of a rapid closing up
of the work. Those who had done well
in their work experienced a satisfied
feeling and were anxious to take up
new subjects. Those who had not done
so well were glad that they were about
to throw off the old yoke and start anew.
NORMAL
NORMAL TIMES
Normal Times is published at Central State
Normal School, I.ock Haven, Pennsylvania, by
the Board of Editors of Normal Times.
The subscription rate to all alnmnl and undergraduates of the school is 75 cents.
BOARD OF EDITORS
Lenore Sliarp, Rose Bower, Harriet KeU,
David Ulmer, iaverda Richardson, Sterl ,\rtle.v,
Blanche Wahl, Margaret Sutton. Ella Mae I..illy,
Edward Sherkel, Marion Smith, Janet Stewart,
Mar.v Margaret Adams, Mildred Stewart, Thomas
Hosterman, Luc.v Ma.v Mitelieil, Dorotliy Riley,
I'aul Vonada, Reginald Fitzsimmons, Ruth Jones.
S5EC1AI, CONTHIBUTORS TO THIS ISSUE
Florence Macbeth
Jo Guild
Dayroom G-rapiis Moral Status
Max Bossert
Sweet Selling Sweets
William Sweet
Groundhog Digs In
Ray Zaner
Skating on Athletic Field
Helen Bengston
We Expect Too Mnch
Mary D^vyer
Better Than Hurry
Mary Dwyer
New Programs Provide Holidays.. .Julia (Jilibons
New Girls Receive Attention
Russell Bohn
S. R. O. in Library
Albert Hobba
Everyone Moves
Matthew Shaw
High Speed Start
Rovena Goodman
Coach Dyck Gathers Apples
John Varner
New Club Entertains
Harriet Kelly
Just About Jerry
lone Potter
Scraps
'
Mary Kirby
Engineering Feat
Ellis Boyer
Our Own Little Diary
Dorothy Riley
Tennis for Beginners
Dent Bowser
Preparing for Winter
Sterl Artley
FEBEUAEY 10, 1927
Welcome, Owl
The "Owl," from California State Normal .School, is the latest addition to our
exchange list. It is new, not only to
us, but to every one who has seen it,
for onr copy is only the second issue of
vidume one.
I'rofessioiial make-up in its type arrangement, headings, and balanced columns, and excellently written news
items are characteristic of this issue of
the "Owl."
The staff deserves much credit for issuing such a splendid paper. We extend our congratulations to the "Owl,"
and extend it a hearty welcome to our
office.
Skating on Athletic Field
The football field where pigskin battles raged last fall now wears the icy
surface of a miniature lake. The scars
of battle have been erased by the hand
of Nature, leaving a clean slate on which
to p r i n t the story of future victories.
All of which suggests that, if the field
could be flooded in the early days of
winter, all thiit low-lying portion nearest to the railroad embankment would
give us a fine skating rink right on our
own campus. The cost would be insignificant; the r e t u r n great.
We Expect Too Much
Most of us expect too much of those
about us. They are too busy with themselves to bestow upon us the appreciation or the notice we think we deserve.
But this t r u t h has a comforting side,
for if our services and successes do not
win thanks or praise, neither do our
slips and failures attract hiilf the attention we fear. We have only to pick
ourselves up and go on again as best we
may, and the rest of the world will p.ay
little heed.
So long as we are honestly trying to
do our best, we may be sure t h a t those
about us are not likely to misjudge us
greatly, either by over or under-estimatiou.
New Girls Receive Attention
The many newcomers to the girls'
dormitory hiive provided plenty of material to keep the more curious of the
"regulars" interested in life.
They showed up conspicuously in the
dining-room. As quickly as me.als could
lie finished the "regulars" rushed out into the hall, to wait until tho recruits
came out for inspection. It m.ay have
been uncomfortable for some of the recruits, but at the same time it resulted
in many of them acquiring a supply of
friends.
I n the library also the newcomers
were conspicuous, especiall.y the first
nights of the semester. The library waa
crowded; library rules were properly
noted and obeyed; y e t it was noticeable
th.at people could succeed in getting acquainted, even those who had thought
they had nothing better to do, so early
in the term, than to impress the facult3' with their studiousness.
EDUCATION OF WOMEN
TRACED AT ED DINNER
Surprise Party Given for Mary
Louise Ruddy
Two Marriages Surprise
Junior Class
Georgeanna Clark and Eleanor Little,
Mary Louise Euddy waa the guest of
honor at a surprise party given by a who last September heard the call to benumber of her friends at Herlocker's come school teachers, have recently answered a more insistent call. They have
Tea Boom on January 27.
become Mrs. George Whipple and Mra.
After dinner, speeches were made by
Hilmer Shire,y.
members of the Scranton Club .and later
On January 15, 1927, Goorgeann.a Clark
dancing was enjoyed.
discontinued her work here and left to
Those who attended the dinner were meet her husband in Philadelphia. Mrs.
Ibir.v Louise Euddy, K a t h r y n Lynch, Whipple is from Salladasburg and her
Alice Cannon, Phyllis Schaefer, Mary husband, Mr. George Whipple, who was
Dw,ver, Mary Davidson, Katherine Kelly, .attending Temple University as a freshBetty Jordan, Claire I^angan, Mary man, lives ill Williamsport, at which
Grier, Grace Ott, Agnes Gallagher, Anne place they will make their home.
Gilloegly, Helen Iloron and Helen CarOn January 26, 1927, Miss Eleiinor
den.
Little, accompanied by her sister, left
Following the dinner Mary Louise was for Baltimore, where she was married
presented with a beautiful compact by to Mr. Hilmer Shirey. Mr. Shirey is atthe "Wheelers," of which she is a mem- tending sehool in Springfield, Mass., asber. The other meinbers are Phyllis piring to be an athletic director. EleaSchaefer, Josephine Guardino, Kathryn nor and her husband visited C. S. N. S.
Lynch, Mary Dwyer, Mary Davidson, on Monday, January 31, and received
Betty .lordan, Claire Langaii, Grace Ott congratulations right and left.
iuid Alice Cannon.
(Continued from Page 1)
lege. Liiid.a Bryan and Violet Duck contributed vocal solos.
Gladj's Wilson and Helen Eettger
managed the finances of the b.anquet, no
sniall task.
Traces Woman's Educational Progress
Dr. Wood}' was presented by Miss Minnie Jane Merrells, of our faculty, and
a former graduate student under Dr.
Woody, who referred to Dr. Woody's
seven years of work at Pennsylvani.a, to
his three ye.ars of service in Eussia and
France during the World War, and to
the many books of which Dr. Woody is
the author.
Dr. Woody sketched the early rise of
the status of woman from that of a
mere ch.attel to her present social position. He described the earlier developments in education for women, all of
them recent enough in point of time,
when the only training she was permitted was in simple feminine accomplishments, such as dancing and painting on silk. Dr. Woody stressed the
fact that even in early times in this
country women were thought inferior in
intellect to men, and were barred from
higher education "for fear their brains
might crack."
The seminary, he said was the pioneer
educational institution for women, and
from 1770 to 18(i0 furnished almost the
only education which any woman received. About 1860 it began to be believed that women could study the same
subjects as men, and m.'iny higher institutions began to permit them to enter.
Women were admitted to teaching. Dr.
Woody said, because schools paid so little for their services that the positions
h.ad become uiis.atisfactory to men. Mary
Lyon taught for seventy-five cents a
week, an average salary for her time.
In 1829 the first teiichers tr.aining school
was opened, .and in 1839 the first normal
school, in Massachusetts, and for women
only.
The first women entered medical
schools in 1848. Later the profession
of law was opened to them. The first
woman's college, Mt. Holyoke, opened in
1837, the first pupils enrolling helping
to tack down the carpets in the school.
8
TIMES
The whole student bodj' wishes these
girls bon voyage.
Vocational Guidance
Presents Worth-While Studies
Believing that an intensive survey and
study of a phase of any subject is of
most benefit to a student than an ex.aniination in that subject, Mr. Sullivan
had his class in Vocational Guidance
busy on projects relating to guid.ance.
Collection, organization, and
flnally,
presentation of material to the group
constituted the completion of the projects.
The topics investigated and analyzed
bj' the students a r e :
Guidance Through Mathematics.—Harriet Kelt.
Guidance in the SniiiU J. H. S.—Eose
Bower.
History of the (Tiiidaiice ^Movement.—
Mildred Erickson.
MENTAL HEALTH IS
MAIN TOPIC AT DINNER
{Continued from Page 1)
ough surveys of the mental and physical health of children will be made,
remedial measures taken systematically
wherever possible, courses in education
iidapted to the mentality of all children,
parents given systematic training, and
regular instruction in mental hygiene
estiiblished everywhere.
Other Talks
Dr. Armstrong illustrated the importance of applied psychology in practical
life. Hugh Fredericks told again of digging his Ford out of snow drifts while
he was acting as chauffeur for Miss Merrells, during the weeks thiit she was administering mental tests to children in
nineteen Clinton County rural schools.
School Eeeords as an Aid to Guidance.
Dorothy Bickel spoke of the needs of
—Sariih Felix.
the psj'chology department. Ivan Fritz
Guidance Through Extra-Curricular in his talk furnished original illustrations of mental complexes in the proActivities.—Guendolyn Stringfellow.
The Need for Vocational Guidance.— cess of learning.
Euth Jones.
A Eeview of Any Eecent Book on
Guidance.—Dorothy Campbell.
Guidance Tlirough Eecreational Activities.—Mildred Eeiter.
Avociitional Guidance.—Edward Sherkel.
i l r s . B. Franklin Long, a graduate
student holding her M. A. from Bucknell, who is taking special work iu
psych olog.y here, described the series of
tests given by Miss Merrells and some
of her students in order to ascertain t h e
physical and mental status of pro-school
children.
The Training of Vocational Counsellor.—(^yde Swoyer and Edith Morrison.
Guidance Through Instruction in
Civics.—Paul Vonada.
How Can Field Trips Be Made to Contribute to Guidance.—Beginald Fitzsimmons.
Use of Educational Tests and Measurciiieuts in Guidance.—David Ulmer.
Analysis of Self-Analysis Tests Given
to J. II. S. Pupils.—Lenore Sharp.
Lloyd Bauman, general chairman in
chiirge of the dinner, and Miss Merrells
deserve much credit for the unquestioned success of the banquet.
Guidance Through Instruction in English.—Elverda Eichardson.
Training for
Citizenship.—Thomas
Larkin.
Guidance Througii Science.—Wilford
Pomoroy.
(Guidance in the Eochester Public
Schools.—Ann Winkelblech.
Miss Barkhuff Entertained
Miss Biiikhuff, Supervisor of tho
First Grade, was eiitcitained b.v her student teacdicis at dinner at Achenbaeh's
ou Wednesday evening, January 20. After a (lilicious dinner, the jiarty went
to the movies, where they enjoj-ed a
"most thrilling show." Those present
were iliss Laura Barkhuff, Betty Jordiin, Grace Ott, .Martha Gaffney, Claudia
Kelly, Dorothy Apple, Eunice Hoffman,
Mary Todhunter, Nell Holton, Margaret
Creighton, Pat Eiley, and Vera Mae
Duke.
NORMAL
Scraps
T h e s e scraii liook
fiends!
E v e r y notice, iiiil(|ue i n m a n n e r , c l e v e r i n des i g n , o r d i f f e r e n t in n u y n i a n n e r is
n a b b e d a l m o s t a s y o u put t h e l a s t t a c k
ill t o h o l d it uji. T h e b i l l l i o a r d s a r e of
v e r y l i t t h ' v a l u e t o a n y o n e , n o w , exce|it t h e s e s c r a p - c o l l e c t o r s .
Basketball
annouiu-eiiieiits'
yes—ill some
one's
Kci-ajibook.
Art
Club?—same
place.
Natnnilist i l e e t i n g . Notice to Dormitory
S t u d e n t s , Council notices. P a c k a g e lists,
e t c . — a l l t h e s e i t e m s c a n be f o u n d i n a
s n a p book s o m e w h e r e .
TIMES
Sir Gallantlad Is Unhorsed
Ve Olde
h a s set t h e
t h i n g has
a n d it has
T i m e K n i g h t , Sir ( i a i l a i i t l a d ,
E a s t D o r m by t h e c a r s . S o m e d i s t u r b e d his u n e a s y s p i r i t ,
reajijieared a m o n g u s .
Library Makes Additions
A m o n g t h e n e w books a d d e d t o t h e
l i b r a r y recentl.v a r e ;
"(ienetic Studies
of G e n i u s , " b y L e w i s T e r m a u ; " A Dictioniir,y of M o d e r n E n g l i s h U s a g e , " b y
H. W . F o w l e r ; " W h y AVe B e h a v e L i k e
H u m a n B e i n g s , " b y G e o r g e A. D o r s e y .
T e n or a d o z e n of o u r b o l d e s t w i e l d e r s of t h e p i e - k n i f e w e r e h o l d i n g a c o n M i s s Dixon h a s jilaced i n t h e l i b r a r y
f e r e n c e in t h e l i a t h r o o n i on t h e n i g h t
two m a g a z i n e s , " H y g i e a " a n d " C h i l d r e n , "
of J a n u a r y 20, w h e n s u d d e i i l 3 ' t h e d o o r
for t h e u s e of t h e s t u d e n t b o d y .
flew open, a n d in c h a r g e d Sir G a l l a n t l a d ,
Miss MacDonald has also a d d e d " T h e
l a n c e read.v, b e s t r i d i n g a s n o r t i n g s t e e d .
B
o
o k m a n " for t h e s t u d e n t s t o u s e .
T h e conflict w a s b r i e f b u t d e c i s i v e . O u r
A new magazine, "The Psychological
liold l a d s will face a n y t h i n g l i v i n g , b u t
C l i n i c , " h a s been a d d e d to t h e l i b r a r y
Wlicii s o m e Jiersons b i d f a r e w e l l for- t h e open w i n d o w s w e r e left b e h i n d t h e m
lists.
a
s
e
v
i
d
e
n
c
e
s
of
t
h
e
i
r
f
e
a
r
t
o
f
a
c
e
a
cvei- 1(1 C. S. N . S. t h e y will t a k e with
i l i s s M a c D o n a l d has s e l e c t e d a n d jiostt h e m iiiiiii.v t h i n g s in r e m e m b r a n c e s . Of sliiide of t h e jiast.
ed on t h e b u l l e t i n b o a r d in t h e l i b r a r y ,
what valiie will t h e y be.' Oh s u r e ! t h e y
S i r ( b i l l a n t l a d t h e n s w u n g a b o u t on
a list of t h e m o s t i n t e r e s t i n g a r t i c l e s
will k n o w who wns j i r o c t o r o n c e , who h i s c h a r g e r , a n d , s e e i n g severiil s t u d e n t s
f r o m t h e m a g a z i n e s for tlie
current
w e n t iiiit fur B a s k e t b a l l s o n i e t i n i e s , who s t u d y i n g b.v t h e l i g h t s i n t h e h a l l s , h e
iiionth.
T h i s list will be a v a l u a b l e
u s e d til have n a m e ciirds on t h e i r d o o r s , c h a r g e d a g a i n , a n d w o n l d h a v e w o n a n g u i d e to t h e s t u d e n t wdio w i s h e s t o u s e
etc., but will the.v reall.v g e t such a lot o t h e r b l o o d l e s s victor.v h a d n o t h i s n o iiiiigaziiU'S for r e f e r e n c e w o r k .
of Jileasure f r o m t h e s e trifies.' AVe, who b l e steed stiiiiibled a t t h e c r i t i c a l m o suffer lieciinso of t h e i r wilful d e s i r e s , m e n t a n d d e p o s i t e d his r i d e r o u t h e
cbuilit it. W h y d o n ' t t h e y sjieiid t h e i r tloor.
Better Than Hurry
tiiiic i;c'ttiiig a l i t t l e kiiiiwledge to t a k e
Sir Gallantlad vanished like smoke,
I t is not h i i i r y t h a t g e t s y o u o v e r t h e
with t h e m a n d n o t so m a n y fool reb u t Abix FitzsiinuKins p i c k e d h i m s e l f u p , gi'ouiid, b u t c o n c e n t r a t i o n . If y o u h a v e
i n i n d e r s .'
h e l p e d Bill Sweet g e t t h e r e i n s o u t of niore t h i n g s tn do in ;i gix'en t i m e thall
W e d i s l i k e t o j i i e d i c t t h e i r f i i t n i e ca- h i s moiitli, a n d both of t h e m w e n t b a c k it s e e m s jidssible td nccomjilish, b e w a r e
r e e r s , b n t with t h i s f o r a s t a r t we c a n ' t t o w o r k .
how y o u go fluttering f r o m o n e t a s k t o
li(d]i t h i n k i n g of " r a g m e n ! "
another.
Instead, put y o u r e n t i r e atNew Club Entertains President t e n t i o n o n o n e t h i n g . G i v e y o u r s e l f t o
O m e g a B e t a , o r g a n i z e d by s o m e E a s t it a s a b s o l u t e l y a s if y o u h a d n o o t h e r
New Exchanges Come From
D d i i n g i r l s , e n t e r t a i n e d its p r e s i d e n t , i n t e r e s t i n life t h a n its a c c o m p l i s h m e n t .
Twelve Normals
Clniidin K e l l y , at a d i n n e r - d a n c e a t C d i i c o i i t r a t e d a t t e n t i o n c a n do m u c h i n
T w i ' h i ' luirinnl school jnildiciit ions .Vclu'iibaidi's ou Thursdii.v, F e b r u a r y ' 3. little t i m e , while h u r r y u s e s m u c h e n have iiiM'ii a d d e d to .Viirinal T i m e s ' list It was 11(1 c d i n c i d e i i c e t h a t t h o d a y hiip- e r g y f o r ver.v s m a l l r e s u l t s .
(if ;-|ic;iking ac(|iiaint;iuci's s i n c e o n r last
.•i|ipcnr.-iiicc. T h e Nornnil .Axis, of N o r t h
. \ d n n i s . Mass.; T h e I'iuc l.iig, of X.'icog(1(1.dies, l.a.: t h e \ i s l n , of
Kdiniinds,
( i k l a . ; T h e Kiigle, of S a n t a
Barbara,
t'lilif.: t h e Indiana. I ' e n n , of
Indiana,
I'ciiini; .'^tndc'iit O|iinioii, of Klleiisbiirg,
W.isli.: Xornial Kclioes. of .lolinson, V t . ;
t h e K e n t Stiller, of K e n t , O h i o ; t h e
WiiKiiii.i, M i n n . ; Ilee iMin-Kss, of llniiI m i y , ('(inn., t h e F r o n t Line, of F r o s t I m r - , .Md.; a n d t h e Owl, of ( ' a l i f o r n i a ,
I'cnii.L, ;ire on (iiir r e g u l a r e.xidiange list
—U}\- iiiaii\' y e n i s , \vi' hojie.
.Ml of thi'se a r e n e w t o L o c k H a v e n
exi('|it t h e I n d i a n a P e n n , D e e - E i i i i - E s s ,
anil t h e i:,iglc. all of w h i c h l o s t t o u c h
wilh us ;it Ihe .stai-t of t h i s s c h o l a s t i c
yciM.
Mine tli.'in iift.v n o r m a l schools
i'N(di,iii},'i' with us r e g u l a r l y , a l l of t h e
juililicnl idiis Iieing o n file iu Eiioiii 24.
High Speed Start for New Term
('hisses licg;iii as jiroinpt 1\' on .l;iiiua r y ,",l as on a n y (illiei- KKI''; sidiodl dax-.
.All s t U ' l c n t s ^\'^^^•^' in t h e i r jilaces. K.\
c e p t f o r g e t t i n g t h e rolls t o r t h e new
s e n i e s t e r . t h e r e was no d(day in g e t t i n g
d o w n t o n e w s u b j e c t s .•md new assigiiiiieuls.
All t h i s WJIS jKissilde liecause s c h e d u l e s
h a d liecn m a d e out a week or iiKiri' in
i i d v a n c o b y e \ i ' r y s t u d e n t in coiifereiice
with Professor Higli. Work progressed
wilhont the slightest halt, nnd every
chiHs got iiway to a flying s t a r t .
Of ediirse t h e r e was some ex.xciteineiit.
T h e new |ir;ictice t e a c h e r s wci-e liuviiig
Mer\(ins sjiasiiis o v e r w h a t wns j u s t .-ihead
(if llieni.
.Vew c l a s s m a t e s gave e v e r y
one Jilenty In size iiji. X e w s u l i j e c t s a n d
n e w i n s t r u c t d r s st i i u i i l a t e d . N e w scliednles w e r e a l i t t l e c o n f u s i n g . Vet if t h e
s e m e s t e r keejis on as it begiiii i t s h o u l d
b r e a k r e e d i d s f o r w o r k a n d scliolarshiji.
jieiied to be C b i u d i a ' s b i r t l i d i i y .
t h e g i r l s a t t e n d e d t h e inovies.
Later
T h e girls p r e s e n t were C l a u d i a Kell,v,
L i l l i a n M i t c h e l l , I'eg AlcCauley, E u t h
Oe(blei-, Kvidyn H e t h e r l i n , E t h e l B a u m g a r d n e r , Ibdeii .Anstead, E l l a M a e L i l l y ,
E i i t h .Scliiiiidelineier, !\biry A n g u s , a n d
Iln 1 liel K e l l v .
Betii
Signiii
Chi
initiated
its
t w e l v e j d e d g e s on S a t u r d a . v , J a n u a r . v 22.
during the afternoon.
W e carry the largest
D r u g s in C l i n t o n C o u n t y .
stock
of
LET U S FILL Y O U R
PRESCRIPTIONS
Prieson's
PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS
S. E. Corner Main and Vesper Sts.
A simple dinner
Very
was s e r v e d i n t h e M u s i c S t u d i o a t six
ceremonies
held i n t h e c l u b r o o m .
The
new inenibers n r e :
"Her
niece
Pronounced
is
rnther
good-looking,
don't you t h i n k ? "
Kitt.v
Ann
An-Xerney, L o u i s e B o w e s , B e r t h a AVolfe,
lUdirer, C l a i r e
Ciiiich I'aul llyck a n d K u s s e l l Biihii Abiry Kodgers, I h d e n
w e n t over i n t o B o a l s b u r g o n S u n d a y , ( h i l l n g h e r , i'llizabetli H r e s s l e r , .luliii Gib.laiiuavy 80, t o visit B o h n ' s f i i m i l y . B o t h bons, -Mnrgiiret ('diiii, .Anna Gilbiegl.v,
df tlieni f(dl Sd good a t b e i n g o u t on t h e Liiurii Stiiiirt.
f a r m again t h a t t l i e y o v e r d i d t h e m s e l v e s
at t h e d i n n e r t a b l e — a u d at t h a t t h e y
X ' o r t h w e s t e r u U n i v e r s i t . v is p r o t e c t i n g
(inl.v b r o w s e d i i r o u n d t h e e d g e s of all
t h a t t y p i c a l C e n t e r C o u n t y h o s j i i t a l i t y , itself a g a i n s t t h e flood of w o u l d - b e c o e d s .
('iiacli Dyck s a y s .
T h e d a n g e r of f e n i i n i z i i t i o n is w a r d e d off
W h e n 1he,\- rdlled back on t h e ciinijins,
t h e rciir df ('dindi l>\-ck's 1-lnick w;is
lilled Willi C e n t e r ('(iiiiity npjiles.
Beauty Clays
Pace Powders
Single Compacts
Double Compacts
Talcum Powders
Cold C r e a m s
Shampoos
Hair Nets
Tooth Paste
Tooth Brushes
Soaps
Stationery
Films
Fountain Pens
Shaving Creams
Razor Blades
Razors
Shaving Brushes
P l a y i n g Cards, E t c .
T h e m o c k i i i i t i a t i d i i wns h e l d i n t h e g.ym
o'clock f o l l o w i n g t h e f o r m a l
Coach Dyck Gathers Bohn's
Apple Crop
MAKE OUR STORE YOUR
H E A D Q U A R T E R S FOR
Pharmacy
Bitter Sweets Initiate
The
Prieson's Pharmacy
"(."areful of t h e l a i g l i s h , o l d chiip; one
snys, ' K n e e s
are'."
Wiedhahn Jewelry Co.
117 East Main St., Lock H a v e n , P a .
E s t a b l i s h e d 1855
by II recent cdllege d i ' d i n a n c e t h a t h e r e after
t h e r e must
be 4."i(l m e n
admitted
for i'\"er,\' ;t."i(l woineii j i e r m i t t e d .
Everything
fVe Serve the Ladies Also
W e i n v i t e the l a d i e s t o c o m e to
our b a r b e r s h o p for their hair
c u t t i n g and t r i m m i n g a n d p e r m a n e n t w a v i n g . W e are spec i a l l y e q u i p p e d to r e n d e r a
p r o m p t a n d s a t i s f a c t o r y service. W h e n y o u or t h e children require tonsorial a t t e n t i o n y o u will find u s r e a d y to
serve y o u . W e have a chart
t h a t shows the v e r y
latest
m o d e s of b o b b i n g , c u t t i n g a n d
trimming.
Come to t h e
Sanitary barber Shop
Guaranteed
FINE JEWELRY and
SILVERWARE
C. S. N. S. RINGS
Fine Wrist W a t c h Repairing
Parker, Wahl
and
Waterman
Fountain
Pens
NORMAL
Engineering Feat Completed in
Boys' Dormitory
JUST ABOUT JERRY
"Behind t h e Scenes"
"It's queer the girls don't come," said
Jerry as she paced up and down the
wings. I told them to be here early."
"Oh, there's plenty of time," put in
Betty. "It isn't seven yet, and if they
are going to dress in their rooms it
won't take much time .iust to make them
UJI and put on their wigs."
"Hang, Bett,y! Might have known
she'd do something like this," breathed
Bonnie, "Did you hear a noise? Pretend you did," he whisjiered to Jerry.
After some five minutes they got biick
on the triick again and the audience was
unaware of the fact that anything had
been missing.
At the fall of the curtain, Betty fell
on her knees at Jerry's feet. Bonnie
"Betty," said Beggy Lair, a newcomhelped her up and said, "Never mind,
er, "what are you doing here ? I didn't
Betty, the audience never knew the difknow you were in the cast."
ference, and anyway it was fill for the
"AVell, I am," said Betty.
best. My mustache wouldn't have stayed
"Oh, are you? I saw the program but on more than two raiiiiites longer. iSince
I've forgotten it. I've often wondered it turned out well, we'll forgive you."
why you haven't been in any of the
plays."
Never before in the history of the
Bo,ys' dorm has such a feat of engineering skill been displayed. A new extraordinary epoch in the way of inijirovement will mean as much to the
dormitory boys as the Industrial Bevolutioii meant to the manufacturer.
Some of the more religious element
of the dormitory, when returning from
church about eleven-thirty and ujioii entering by the side entrance, had their
attention attracted by sounds that indicated sonic gre.at confusion at the farther end of the hall.
Tlie.y heard some one call: "Six! Seven! Three! Two! Two!"
Some one iinswered, "Check! Cheek!"
"It's a minor jiart," explained Betty. Margaret Sutton Alpha Zeta Pi
Again the call, "Six! Seven! Three!
President
"I'm a noise."
Two! Two!" iind the answer acconipauied with great clanging and hanging:
"A noise ?" echoed Peggy.
Aljiha Z e t a I'i e l e c t e d i t s n o w officers
"A'es," replied Betty, "when the hero
"To the right! Too much! To the left!
for t h i s s e m e s t e r a t t h e u s u a l n i e e t i n g
says to Jerry, 'I will brave all for your
o n M o n d a y n i g h t , J a n u a r y 24, 1927. T h e y All right! Check! Check!"
sake, I will follow you to the ends of the
Then all wiis (juiet for a few minutes
are:
earth,' I iiiake the noise, I sit behind
i b i r g a r e t S u t t o n , I ' r e s i d e n t ; H a r r i e t liut the same thing was soon reiieatcd
scenes on a tall stejdadder and drop a
K e l t , V i c e - P r e s i d e n t ; Klla M a e L i l l y , only iu a greiiter degree.
liiiii|i-cliiinne,v. It luny not sound like
S e c r e t a r y ; I'Mverda E i c h a r d s o n , T r e a The bdvs were liewildered.
The}'
an important part but it is the turning
sneaked <|uietly in the direction of the
surer.
point of the whole thing. I have to do
T h e i r j i r e d e c e s s o r s , E d w a r d S h e r k e l , sounds. The sounds led toward the pressthe making up, so .von'll have to exI'resideiil
; David I ' l n i e r , v i c e - [ ^ r e s i d e n t ; ing room. They walked quietly to the
cuse me now, Peggy."
Blniudie Wdlil, S e c r e t a r y , a n d M a r g a r e t jiressiiig room door. It was closed. Some
"Ves, good-by," iinswered Peggy. "If
S u l t d u , r e t i r e d from office J a n u a r y I I , lirave one in the crowd tried the door
you get any flowers I'll send them in."
hut it was locked.
111127.
"Do—thanks," replied Betty.
"I'm
The calling of nuiuliers, left, right,
sure I'll get a lot."
check, and the (daiigiug became more inBitter
Sweets
Entertain
for
Buck stage all wns confusion. "Betty,
tense. The bo.vs held a liiistj' conferAnne Fahlman
don't you think I'm too red? I know
ence and decided to flnd out the trouble.
it'll all come off wheu Bonnie kisses
A little timid, but determined, they
Anne Fnlilniau was the guest of honor
me,"
lit a liridge jiiiity given b.y the Bitter- gained enough courage to heave all to"If it comes off as easi].v as that you'll Sweet sororit.y ou January 27, The gift gether oil the door. It flew open. The.v
be more fortunate than most people I prize Jiresented by the members to Anne beheld in iiiiiiizement an engineering
make up," Betty rejilied, "You'd look was 11 iiiivclt.v necklace of pearls and feat thnt call rightfully be called one
ghastly if you went the way you want- gold links,
of the Seven Wdiiders of C, S. N, S,
ed to,"
I'limeroy and Boyer hnd cleverly reAune has accejited a position in the
"Betty, look at this wig," moaned Jer- lirsl grnde at Ridgway, and left on Pri- vi'rsed the cover on the pressing board,
ry. "It's positively orange. He calls dii.v, .liinuiiiy 28, to assume her duties. A clean surface was exposed!
me his dark-eyed beauty and I can't
imagine any one with dark eyes or anj'
other kind of eyes, having hair like this.
My own looks better,"
US AND
"Wear j-our own then, .Terry, only
keep out of sight. If Kath.v ever saw
you didn't have it ou after jiaying so
lunch to rent it, she would go iiJi in
smoke," ciiutioned lietty.
At tive luiniites of eight everything
was in readiness, "Clear tho stage!"
some one called as the orchestrii coiiimenced to jday. After tho music of
the orchestra had died down the curtain
parted and J e r r y was discovered sitting
in a garden.
As the curtain fell at the end of tho
act, J e r r y hugged Betty. "Oh, it's flfty
times better than the last one!"
The curtain rose on the fourth act.
Bett.y had prepared herself behind the
scenes with a lamp-chimney in her hands.
The noise was not due for sometime, so
Betty whiled awa,y the time by examining tho stars.
On the stage, Bonnie w.as making au
exceppent lover. He was saying to Jerry,
"Say t h a t you will be mine and I will
brave all for your sake. I will follow
you to the ends of the earth." He gazed
into hor eyes and waited for the terrible noise, but none came.
OTHERS
Miirgaret S m i t h a n d K l i z a b e t h Welsh
n t e r t n i n e d g u e s t s S u n d i i y , . l a n u a r y 23.
"lliiriy"
cniue to
sec ( t r a c e
Ott
ini
Siinilii.v.
Hidty lluliley's sister, Ciitheriue, cniiic
nnd hel|ie(l her friends enjoy the weekend of .lanunr.v 2!!,
Mrs, Cresswell's diiughter is visiting
her.
.Agues Kelly and Mnry Kii.vuinnd sjieiit
the week-end iu Belief onte.
A t r e d u c e d rates t o
C . S. N . S. S t u d e n t s
Use Eastman
Films
in the yellow box.
We sell them.
Leave your films
today—get y o u r
pictures tomorrow
The Swope Studio
Kamp's Shoe Store
for the
Latest Styles in Footwear
Guaranteed
Hosiery
110 East Main Street
We can tell you the most
beautiful way to say it
CARLSON,
Florist
AT THE MONUMENT
D
AINTY SERVICE
ELICIOUS CANDIES
ELIGHTFUL SUNDAES
Gwen Stringfellow and her roomie,
Bernice Beck, were visiting friends iit
State and of course
!
Henry Keller's Sons
Style
I'eg Brelli wns home over J a n u a r y 23.
Tiilking of distinctive names for
school jiapers, how does this one strike
Altooua was a popular place over this you? At the Ellensburg, Washington,
jiiiiticiilar week-end. Ruth Schandel- Normal, the student publication meekly
iiieyer, Betty McKee, Reba Johnson and labels itself The Wildcat's Whiskers.
several others were home.
Mnry ibirgaret Adams, Mabel Klein
and Mid Stewart visited Eleauore Bickert and came back happy.
All Photos
No. 2l!i i'lnst wns eiujity. Alice Hesser
and Helen Shenier deserted it for Alice's
home in Willinmsjiort.
Elizabeth Stammaley was called home
over the week-end of J a n u a r y 23, on acAlice Corby was hiijipy to have her
count of the death of her uncle. The
friend, Freda Titus, with her over the
school symjiiithizes with Elizabeth.
week-end.
Mid I'lumiiier visited with friends.
5
TIMES
The scientist who has been spending
the past six semesters studying the habits of the domestic snail has reported
that they seem to have no conception
of the proper use of the oyster fork.
Quality
New Spring Styles in
Oxfords and Slippers
103 Main St., Lock Haven, Pa.
T
6
NORMAL
OUR O W N LITTLE DIARY
MONDAY, JANUARY 17
I can't say t h a t anything very exciting happened today. Missed a couple of
meetings. Went down-town after conferenee.
It's funny, I inight as well give it up
as a bad job—I just can't pass the Sugar
Bowl. It seems as though my feet just
naturally turn in at that place on the
street.
TUESDAY, JANUARY 18
Movies ill the auditorium. Worked in
the Library. Started the reference work
on my "Bee" report. Never knew there
was so much to know about it. I thought
it wouldn't take long to do the report,
b u t those darn things are living up to
their name—I got stung! I've only
started it and have three papers fllled.
My arms will give out before I'm
through.
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19
Saw the picture, "The Lady in Ermine." It wasn't so good. We rushed
back up to school. lone never went so
fast in all her life. Neither did I. I
can walk fast, but Tacs has me stopped.
When we arrived' up here I was weak.
Two letters from home revived me in
double quick time though. What struck
them?
Movies in the auditorium lasted pretty
long. Couldn't work in the Library.
Thought maybe I'd do some more on the
"Bees," but they'll have to wait.
THURSDAY, JANUARY 20
The rest of t h e movies were shown
tonight. The films were rolled backwards, so we couldn't see them last night.
Continued my reference work in the
Library. Finished it. I t ' s a relief to
have that done. I could start a beehive, I believe. Worked on a seat-work
set too. !M,y fingers are almost broken.
Another letter from home. I believe
something is wrong. I never received
t h a t many in one week before. That's
good for three weeks.
notony. I didn't do a thing all day. I
inight just as well finish the day the
same way.
MONDAY, JANUARY 31
Classes again. I'm so glad my teaching is over. I liked it while I was teaching and would just as soon continue, I
suppose, but a taste of classes alters
everything. I'll see how it feels to be
bossed once more.
Came in from our week-end vacation.
Seems funny but good to be here again.
I had an awful time getting used to sitting for an hour. I've sat through five
today; I eau sit through ten now without a bit of trouble. The rest of the
gang are getting used to the trials of
teaching.
Donuts was all thrilled about being
home. I felt as though I were home by
listening to her. She makes news out
of nothing.
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1
That package Mom sent me comes in
nice every now and then. I have not
been hungry at all. She saved my life
when she gave it to Donuts for me.
Girls nieeting. Met all the new girls.
I hope they like it here as much as we
do. Worked for a while in the Library.
What I don't know about H e n r y V I I
and V I I I isn't worth knowing now. Eeeeived a letter from Dotty. I wish I
were home to see every one. There's a
couple dances too; I'm missing a lot.
TIMES
We've been getting into the dining
hall awfully early, it seems. Punctual
to the nth degree.
The C. D. C's had a meeting. Some
people are going to meet their Waterloo
in about three jerks.
Went down to Church at seven. The
wind was blowing like everything. We
had three windows up and there was a
regular gale in here. I was expecting
either Tacs or myself to be picking ourselves up in the hall. We opened the
door and all the dust that was laying
around was soon out.
had a circus after we came over
the gym. Had lots to eat too. I
think I've had so much fun since
come back. It all had to end too
SATURDAY, JANUARY 22
Helen got a box today. I sampled
everythiug right off the reel. Everyone would think the box was mine. She's
m y roomie, t h o u g h ; what's her's is mine.
W e n t to the movies in the afternoon.
Danced in tho evening. The music was
p r e t t y good. Totty called. I made it
down to t h a t booth in short time. We
have the news of the town now for the
next six weeks.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 23
W h a t ' s the use of living? Everything
is going the same as usual. I wish somet h i n g would happen to break the mo-
Kus came in. She was thrilled to a
Iieanut. Who wouldn't be?
Pennsylvania Projects for
History of Education
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4
Miss Merrells announces that the hisHad four classes today. Recited in tory of education courses for the second
one. Never thought I would muster the semester will do co-operative investigacourage to even drag myself out of the tion and writing on two group projects.
The projects will develop phases of the
seat. I did though.
history and of the organization of eduWent down town after classes. Met
eation in Pennsylvania. Typical groups
Donuts down there. I guess she thought
of early settlers, such as the MennonI fell through. I didn't know she had
ites, the Quakers, the Amisli, and their
been waiting so long, but she lived
contributions to educational progress in
through it.
this state will be investigated; also
The movies were cute. Every one the growth and development of the priseems to have enjoyed them.
vate academy, etc.
Kus went this evening. We won't
see her until Sunday night. That's a
The Moron Club
long wait. She's anxious to get there.
This week we admit to the secret mysSATURDAY, FEBRUARY 5
teries of the Moroiiies, the Altoona girl
Two classes on Saturday, last semes- who argued that, with the students using
ter I had only one. They both come all that milk every week, the Normal
the first thing in the morning, so that's
School ought to own its own cow.
one consolation.
Hope that dancing we did in the Gym
class doesn't cripple us. Donuts has been
going around like an old h e n ; every
time she goes up or down stairs you'd
think it was her last act. Didn't get
any mail today. Had two from Totty
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2
Worked like everything today. My yesterday.
She's getting good.
mother wouldn't recognize me the way
Was down town and I had a circus.
I've been rushing around. She would
think there was something the matter. This crowd is crazy, or the next thing
It's just wonderful out. Like a day in to it. Helped carry a vie baek, nothing
Spring. The sun would have to shine light about it. Not so bad when two
today. The groundhog won't appear carried it. Hurried to get ready for
dinner, when bing, out went our lights!
again.
These people around here fix things at
Walked down town. The easier I the wrong time.
walked the worse my stockings got
Danced iu the Gym. We came over
We practiced "Ilayfoot." I know as
splashed. Some people go and never and were starved. I was so hungry that
much aliout it now as I did when we
get touched. I'm not going out any it wasn't even funny. It was our own
started. We have the test tomorrow.
more.
FRIDAY, JANUARY 21
fault though. We were warned i n the
Another letter from home. This is
afternoon. Wonder what Kus is doing
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3
too much. I didn't think the letter I
Kus was flitting around this morn- tonight.
wrote them would affect them like that.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 6
ing with that perfume. It's enough to
Boys' Basketball game was pretty
waken the dead. The next time she gets
One week of the second semester over.
good. The fellows began fine. They
in our room at 0:30 A. M. she'll know it. That's going fast. I have plenty to do
should have kept the good work up.
We
from
don't
we've
soon.
now. I've camped in the librarj^; thinking about getting a lease on the place.
I t would bo more convenient.
Wrote umptun letters this morning.
I owed every one I guess. Don't any
more. Thank goodness! My arm is almost crippled. I'll be getting writer's
cramp.
Lock Haven's Shopping Center
We invite the Student Body to visit this store with a
feeling of freedom and under no obligation whatever to buy.
We appreciate your patronage and will serve you to the
best of our ability.
HOSIERY, Silk or Cotton—UNDERTHINGS—NECKWEAR
Complete Dry Goods Department
China—Houseware—Gift Department
Rugs—Draperies—Curtains
The Smith & Winter Department Store
Compliments of
•'T5i)t Clinton"
Restaurant-Delicatessen
Table Luxuries
312 Vesper St., Lock Haven
The home of
Hart Schaffner
& Marx
Clothes
HARRY H. WILSON
LINTZ'S
Wearing
Apparel
at
Money Saving
Prices
NORMAL
TIMES
Hosterman
Forward
Bossert
Center
Slierkel
Guard
Ulmer
NORMAL SINKS ALUMNI'S
FIVE IN SLOW GAME
(Continued from Page 1)
to drop them through the rim with frequency, to make good their scoring
chances, for the first time this season
became pleasantly evident, and more
t h a n made up for other lapses.
Tommy Hosterman and Max Bossert
both had their eyes on the basket. Tommy ringing up four baskets, with a foul
point for good luck; and Max caging
three field goals. Bauman, McCloskey,
and Sherkel each dropped one through
from the floor, and Sherkel ran his total
points to five by his foul-shooting. McCloskey's general floor work during the
half game he played was distinctly creditable. Dave Ulmer improves regularly
at his guard position, showing an ability to handle two men in pinches without allowing either to cut in for easy
shots.
The lineup was:
Normal
Alumni
Fosterman
Henry
Forward
Bauman
Dorey
Forward
Bossert
Clark
Center
Sherkel
Eishel
Guard
Ulmer
Vonada
Guard
Substitutions: Normal—McCloskey for
Bauinan, Fredericks for Bossert, Williams for Ulmer, Bohn for Sherkel.
AluniHi—Bittner for Vonada, Vonada
for Eishel, H a n n a for Henry.
Eeferee:
school.
Stewart,
from
the
high
Dickinson Seminary Trounces
Normal
The Normal team, iiiiiiinved in passing but poor in shooting, suffered the
fourth defeat of the season at the hands
of Captain Nye and his Dickinson Sem
boys.
The first quarter was real basketball,
both teams penetrating the other's defense, but the Seminary boys made their
shots and took a safe lead in the latter
part of the quarter. They kept increasing this lead until half time when the
score stood 18-4.
Normal came baek at the beginning of
the second half, making it interesting
for Dickinson bj' scoring 5 points. Bossert was then removed for personals and
Bauman went out with an injury. The
game from then on was decidedly onesided until the end. The flnal score was
49-14.
Hosterman and Sherkel caged the
points for Normal, Tommy making 10
and Sherkel the rest.
Gorit.v to fingers to give the ball greater impetus. I t was from this stringed glove
Austin that the racket developed. The ball was
originally made of cork; t h e n changed
S m n e h a r t to India rubber to which in time a t h i n
flannel covering was added.
Walsh
(Continued in Next Issue)
Guard
Substitutions;
Normal, Bohn, Eeniiinger. Bloomsburg: Macp.ath, Wodus,
Maybe He Had Had a Hard Day
Shusser.
"Conductor! Conductor, will I get a
Heferee: Puterbaugh.
shock if I step on that trolley-rail?"
"Not unless you put your other foot
Dickinson Sem
on
the trollej-wire, madam."
McKay
The lineup:
Lock Haven
Bauman
Forward
Hosterman
A'an Antwerp
School Essentials
Forward
Bossert
Neal
Center
Slierkel
Nye
Guard
Ulmer
Hoheiishelt
Guard
Field goals: Hosterman 4, Sherkel 1,
McKay 7, Shugart 3, Hohenshelt 3, Neal
2, Fryberger 2, Chambers 1. Fouls:
Hosterman 2-3, Sherkel 2-4, Renninger
0-2, Bauman 0-1, Bossert 0-1, McKay
3-4, Shugart 0-1, Van Antwert 1-3, Nye
2-3, Hohenshelt 1-4.
Substitutions: Lock Haven—Renninger, Bohn and Williams. Seminary:
Chambers, Schugart, Fryberger, Humphrey, Lindemuth and Posega.
/ o r Q)
Beomncr<;
liy Dent Jlowser
Tennis—the International Game
"Tennis"—the onlj- sport in the world
which has no national boundaries. America has football and baseball, England
has cricket, Norway and Sweden have
track, and so on down the list. Each
country has its favorite sport or game,
but the one game that is universal to
all is tennis. There are many reasons
for this international popularity, the
most important of wdiich is, the standardization of the game. I t is played in
all parts of the world on the same type
of court, with the same kind of balls
and rackets, and governed by the same
rules and regulations.
Another reason for the popularity of
tennis is that it produces an all around
physical development. In many sports
certain groups of muscles are over-developed—in running the legs receive the
greatest idevelopnient; in roiving tho
arms and shoulders are over-developed
in proportion to the rest of the body.
But tennis brings into play all the muscles of the body. Instead of making the
muscles hard .and stiff, tennis makes
CHARLEY VONADA, EX.'28
them elastic and flexible which gives
Who Helped Alumni Drop Their Game. greater speed and control to the body.
Tennis is popular also because it is
democratic. It is not the rich man's
Bloomsburg Wins Over
game, although the aristocracy enjoy
Lock Haven
playing it as much as any one. Tennis,
The Normal Sehool basketball team unlike most sports, is played only for
was not able to hold Bloomsburg Nor- honors—for titles and occasionally a
mal, January 21. Both teams iilayed cup, never for money.
fast; both teams played well, but the
THE DEVELOPMENT OF TENNIS
third game of the season for Ijock HaTennis
was originally played iu Engven ended 48-8 in Bloomsburg's f.avor.
land in 1874 and was patented in that
The Lock Haven boys carried the ball
as much as Bloomsburg, but shot after country. The court was shaped like an
shot rolled around the rim of tho bas- hour glass and was sixty feet long and
ket and fell off. Good passing, poor thirty feet wide at the base lines. The
net was seven feet high at the ends and
shooting.
four
feet high in the center. In 1877
The flrst half of the game ended with
the court was altered to its present rectNormal behind 23-4.
Bauman and Hosterman shot field angular form a n d the net lowered to
goals, Sherkel and Bohn adding four three feet three inches in the center and
five feet at the posts. In the early
points on fouls.
stages of tennis the ball was struck with
The lineup;
the
hand as in handball; then a glove
Normal
Bloomsburg
was used to protect the palm and in
Bauman
VanBuskirk
time strings were stretched from thumbs
Forward
Curlers
Hot Plates
Irons
Grills
Toasters
Fans
Chafing Dishes
Manicuring Sets
Pen Knives, Shears
Alarm Clocks
Safety Razors, Etc.
We Have Them
Shaffer,
Candor & Hopkins
17 East Main S t r e e t
Normal Students
Welcome
to
G r u g a n ' s Hard>vare
(Class '08)
Electric Heaters, Electric
Curling Irons, Electric
Irons, Alarm Clocks, Pen
Knives, Mops, Polish,
Double Sockets, etc.
H. M. Grugan
45-47 Bellefonte Ave.
Quality
Shoe Repairing' and
Shoe Shining'
J. F. T O R S E L L
BELLEFONTE AVE,
"¥
NORMAL
8
P R E P A R I N G FOR
The preparatioii of the lower life
forms, such as tho birds, and flowers,
for tho winter season, arises from some
great instinct jiassed up through many
generations. In human beings living in
northern elim.ates there is also a similar
iiistiiiet whieh directs them in their preparing activities. When fall approaches
we begin to put away in cellars, pits,
b a r n s .and grainaries life necessities to
tide us over the long winter, until spring
comes.
WINTER
sire to participate. A "huskiii' p a r t y "
may seem too crude and old-fashioned
now.
!M.v father would tell how the corn
would be hauled into the barn, and then
some moon-light night the neighbors
would meet for a general good time.
The men and boys would husk corn
while tho women would visit. It was
every boy's gre.at desire to come across
a rod ear, for that gave him the permission to kiss some p r e t t y girl in the
crowd. After the corn was all husked,
the floor was cleared and one of the
famous barn dances would be enjoj-ed
by all. Perhaps a barrel of sweet cider
would also be tapped. What days those
must have b e e n !
To me, who lived on a farm in Northern Pennsylvania, this was always a
joyous time of year. The efforts I had
seen put forth at planting time now
were realized. Crops were bounteous
and there was an abundance of food
and grain. All that remained for us to
Another crop gathered in about this
do was to store it up for future use.
time was potatoes. I must say, however,
Although the task of preparation for that I never found much enjoyment in
winter is carried through all sunimer, the work of digging "spuds." I rememwith canning, drying, etc., the real stor- ber very vividly the baek breaking hours
ing season does uot begin until the mid- I have spent in picking up potatoes from
dle part of September, wdien the fre- the newly plowed earth. The day seemed
quent frosts make gathering in from as though it would never end; each hour
the outside necessary. Corn cutting geii- seemed like a day. Oh, how glad I was
erall.y comes at this period, usually af- when I heard Mother sound the dinner
ter the first frost, about the middle of horn. But I did enjoy those meals, real
Sejitember. The corn is usually ripe, country meals. I often wonder now, as
and the frost is to our advantage, for I go into a restaurant and get a lunch,
it stops growth, dries the leaves and what a meal like the kind Mother jireJiared would really be worth.
makes it easier to shock.
Early in the morning, in the crisp
September air, with the sun rising over
the eastern hill, sending its warm rays
down u]i(in the frost-covered earth, we
went out with oui cutteis to the lield
of standing corn. The frost several
nights before made it fit for cutting,
for the leaves wi>re dead and dried. The
.stocks fell rapidly before us and were
stacked in huge shocks for further drying in the air. This process of corn
cutting always reminds mc of clearing
a standing forest, such as my father
used to describe. We went into the forest of corn aud made a clearing, stacking the corn logs iiji for further use.
I ahvays enjoyed, as much as anything, picking apples. We always had
to make it a plan to pick orchard fruit
before the lieavy frosts and wind storms
should come. Those big, luscious apples—how wonderful they all looked
piled ill d a t e s and barrels ready for
winti'i- c(iiisiiiii]itioii. It was my work to
pick the fiuit from the lower branches,
as I was not permitted to work on the
ladder. That seemed to be the exclusive right of my father. Often while
he was on a high limb, his bucket would
become full wdien there were only a few
more to jiick. Then, h.aving me stand in
an ojien spot, he would toss the apples
down for me to catch. When they were
nil crated, the.y were taken to the Jiit
where they were covered with blankets
to await sides or consumption. How good
they tasted those winter nights when
the wind was howling outside and the
snow was coming down in sheets.
The clearing of the corn field usually
disclosed many things to our sight. There
were Iniiidreds upon hundreds of golden pumpkins l.ving in the field, and I
visioned them all being made into big,
thick pumpkin jiies. Besides the pumpkins we saw the burrow of the big, fat
ground hog who had so happily dined on
The gaiileu products, such as squashes,
our young clover. Soon he would see the beets, cabbage, and celery, would be
fat to great advantage in keeiiiiig him- gathered in and put into the pit where
self Avanii through the wintei". lie, too,
was picpaiing.
Those da.vs with the frost.v mornings,
warm, vigoratiiig noon-day sun, and
clear, cool afternoons, I shall never forget. 1 can Jiicture them in my mind as
tliough tliey were .vesterday.
I have ofleii lieard my father tell of
the old-fashii)iH'd "iiuskiii' jiarties" which
used to lie held at tlie various farm
houses when the corn was fit for husking, generally two or three weeks after
cutting. Why this form of country
amuscmeiit has jiassed out of practice
is more than I can tell, unless it is because this type of pastime was about
the (iiil.v one that the farmer •and his
faniil.v had the ojiportunity of attending. Now there aro so many things to
take its place, the radio, for instanco^
that the farmers do not have the
TIMES
the even temperature of the earth would
keep them fresh and whole. The grapes,
however, gave us a bit more trouble.
Tho variety we had on the farm were
rather late and generally the frost
would catch them before they were full.v ripe. We took precautions; whenever a cold, clear night came, we covered the vines over with burlap, blankets or anything we eould flnd. I n this
manner we jiroloiiged their growing season several days and gave them plenty
of time to ripen.
At last all the fall work was flnished.
For nearly three months we had been
preparing for winter. We reaped, we
gathered in, we stored. The barn was
liulging its sides witli hay and grain
for the stock. The cellar was fllled with
canned fruit and potatoes. The rafters
of the attic were hung full of seed and
pop corn. In the pit were stacked crates
of apples and vegetables. I'reparedness
had been out watchword.
Bring your Kodak
Films to Us to Develop and Print.
Well, He Who Hesitates
"What's all the noise down the street?"
"Fella turned a corner."
"Yeh?"
"Sure. There wasn't any corner."
Try This on Your Library Partner
"Thinking of me, honey?"
"No; was I laughing?"
The Newest Models
Are Here for Your C h o o s i n g
Velvets, Satins, Patents,
Straps or Plain
KLEWAN'S
SHOE STORE
21 £ . Main St.
Hungry?
Satisfy It With
Good Food
We carry all sizes of
Films and Cameras
and Kodaks in stock.
Hilton & Heffner
Lock Haven's Leading Drug Store
This is the Hunter's
Moon
STEVENSON'S
Sporting Goods Store
has complete equipment
for every hunter, every
fisherman—every player
of every sport.
Are you ready to get the most
enjoyment out of skiing, skating
and hiking over the snowy hills ?
Achenbaeh's
Arbor
Lunches
Candy
Fruit
Served
Ice Cream
Sodas
Susquehanna Avenue
TITUS'
S e r v e D a i n t y L u n c h e s and T a s t y
Sandwiches
Delicious Sundaes made wilh Sheer's
WJtite Deer Ice Cream
Enjoy a noonday luncheon just off
the Campus.
We deliver Ice Cream or Lunches
to Normal Students at 9:45 P. M.
l \
At
State
Normal
LOCK HAVEN, PA., FEBRUARY
VOLUME 5
L
Central
IS
School
10,1927
NUMBER 8
w
February Graduates
Number Eighteen
Eighteen members of the Senior Class
graduated at tho close of the first semester. This effected many changes in the
school organizations, nearly every club
losing at least one meinber. Most of
those who graduated went directly to
Dr. William R. Sandy, director of the positions to which they have Vieen
bureau of Mental Health, in the State elected.
Departnient of Welfare, discussed "MenAnne Fahlman had the good fortune
tal Health and Childhood" with fifty to have two xiositions offered her, and
students, members of the three psych- chose Ridgway, only twenty miles from
ology classes, at a dinner iu the New home. Anne is perhaps the best basF.allon Hotel on J a n u a r y 26. Dr. Arm- ketball player in the Senior Class. This
strong siioke; also Mrs. B. Franklin may be because she is from Kane, Pa.
Long, Hugh Fredericks, Dorothy Bickel, .\niie is a member of the Beta Sigina
Ivan Fritz, and Miss Minnie Jane Mer- Chi sorority and of the Art Club.
rells of the faculty. Huth Jones, toastSharon, Pa., claimed Carrie Allen. Sho
mistress, introduced the speakers of the
was here for the full terms of 1924-25,
evening.
and for the first seniester this year.
Miss ilerrells introduced Dr. Sandy, Carrie will teach the fourth grade at
stating that he represented the fourth of Bradford, Pa.
the four types of peoiile who are needed
Dorothy Apple was with us only one
to make a complete iitrestigatioii of some semester, but during that short time
perjilexing cases among children; the had gained a liost of friends. Her home
psychologist, the physician, the teacher, is ill Smethport, Pa.
and the psychiatrist. Each dealt with
One of the most active members of
il phase of child-nature; the work of
each, supplementing the work of the the Senior class, whose departure we
others, is necessary adequately to diag- regret very much, is Marian Smith. She
nose .and prescribe treatment and train- was a member of the Art Club, the Glee
I'lull and the Xormal Times staff.
ing for the develoiiing child.
Dr. Sandy, of State Department,
Advocates Gradual Building
Up of Mental Health Clinics
and Training.
N. S. she was a niember of the Y. W.
C. A., and the Normal Times staff.
Mary Louise Buddy left Saturday for
her home in Scranton, Pa. Third floor
West will certainly miss Mary Louise.
.She was a member of the Y'. W., Price
Literary and the Psychology Clubs.
Florence Macbeth Sings Herself
Into First Place Over All the
Notable Vocali.sts Here Since
1922.
ter. She was a former meuiber of the
Normal Times, and rejoined with the
staff this year.
The "Shadow Song" of Meyerbeer was
perlia|is the biggest number on the program. It sceiiH'd that every phase of
vocal expression was found in this piece
which Miss Macbeth siileiididly iiiterIireted.
Besides clioosing a prograni which
e\'er\' niie ciiiibl a|ipreciate, ^liss Macbeth, hersidf, was cliariniiig. Her personalitx' won every nieniber of her audieiii-c, anil SIKHIC right tlirinigh her singing. She is beautiful and graceful.
When singing "Si jc pouvais iiunirir," hy
Harbolli.
the audience caught the
tlioiiglitfnl sadness and, in a comiilete
coiitr.-isl, the merry swing of "Come to
the Fair," liy Martin, gave them an idea
of the force nf Miss .Maclictli's dramatic
ability. She was forced to resiiond to
{Continued on Page 2)
The recital given Friday evening,
January 2S, by Florence Macbeth, prinia(^harlotte Knapp left for York, Pa., on
doiiiia of the Chicago Civic Opera Com.January 28, to teach physical education.
pany, assisted by her husband, George
Have you ever seen Charlotte wield a Roberts, compiiser-piaiiist, was without a
hockey stick? Those who have think doubt the most enjoyable of the five
she will hold her new position with .years of ^liisical Artist's Courses at the
honors. Charlotte is a member of the Central State Normal School.
.41pha Sigina Tau sorority, t h e Art Club,
Her first liumber, "Tarantella," by
and t h a t mj'sterious organiz.ation of the
Kossiiii, gave us a splendid introduction
day-room called the L. A. L.
to the brilliancy of Miss Macbeth's
Helen ilcCloskey is leaving East voice, full of jiower and color. Her
dormitory for the unknown wilds. She range, power, enuiiciation and attack
was a member of the Y. W. C. A., marked her as one of the great coloraShakespeare Literary Society and tlio ture sdiiranos of the age.
Psychology Club.
"i'anl.-i," by .\rdidi, was esiiecially
Lucy May Mitchell gained a, week on good. Kach wiiril, clear cut, fell from
us, leaving here for a position on Janu- the singer's lijis with ease and grace.
ary 22. Lucy May was here tirst in 1925, Man.v of her lighter numbers reiinired
and came back and finished this semes- very careful enunciation.
Mrs. Kane is another one of tlie dayThe inembers of the Health Kducation students to leave this semester. She was
classes of York, Pa., should be glad of here for only one semester. She exthe fact that .Tanet Stewart has been pects to teach ill Lock Haven's schools,
selected to teach them. While at C. S.
(Continued on Page 2)
"Mental Health and Childhood"
Dr. Sandy told of the inception of
systematic study of mental hygiene, and
of the establishment of mental clinics
over the United States for the prevention of mental disease, a movenient so NORMAL SINKS ALUMNI'S
recent that there are now but 55 such
FIVE IN SLOW GAME
clinics in this country, thnt number,
Victory at last! The Ceutial State
however, rejireseiitiiig a three-fold gain
tive showed soiuething of its real metover li)22.
tle when they tiimiiied the alunini team
Dr. iSandy advocated careful diagnosis
2(i-l(i on Saturday, .l.-iiiiiary 211, in a game
of children, so that the normal, the sufeatured b.v lagged passing and fair
pernormal, and the subnormal may each
shooting.
receive the type of training suited to
The game was one-sided from the
his special needs. Ho would establish
start. The first half ended 14-9 in favor
classes for parents, to teach them some- of Normal, and two minutes before the
thing of iiiiportaiu-e of rearing their final wliLstle had been run np to 24-9.
children correctl.y. The ideal situation Not until several substitutions had been
tow.ard which I'eiiiisylvania is slowly made in Normal's lineup were tho old
moving, he said, is one in which thor- grads able to sink a counter, fair or
(Contiiuied on I'ago S)
foul. Coach D.yck made three sulistitutioiis almost simultaneously, and tlie
Two Permanent Members of aliiiiiiii ii'spiiuded swiftly with three
Held goals and a foul.
Council Elected
The aliiuiui team was no easy aggreA T one oj the most important mci'tgation. .\ll of tlieiii were local players
•^^ ings of the yenr for ihe Juniors.
who have kept up with the game every
Mowrie Ebner and Anne Orlin tvere
season, and who are in good pla.ying coiielected to the Student Council jor the
cliliiiii. Their floor work had much to
remainder of this year and. next year.
commend, but their shooting was ragged
They succeed Julia Gibbons and Agnes
Gallagher, the temporary Junior repreand their defensive work more than
sentatives.
The election took place
once resembled football tactics.
January 17. January 24 the girls were
Normal's iiassing was olf-color, and
installed and introduced to Dr. Armtheir general toam-play well below anystrong, Miss Roberts, and the Senior
Class.
thing exhiliited this year. An ability
(Contiiiut'd on Page 7)
EDUCATION OF WOMEN
TRACED AT ED DINNER
One hundred ten members of the History of Kducation sections held a dinner
ill the Sunda.v school rooms of the Presliyteiiaii Church at Mill Hall on Januaiy 29, at which Dr. Thomas Woody, who
iKcupies the chair of llistor.y of Education in the LTiiiversity of Pennsylvania's
.Scliool of Education was t h e guest of
honor. Fidlnwing the dinner Dr. Woody
lectured on "-Modern Phases in the History of Woiiian's lOdiu-nt ion," and short
talks were given liy Hr. I). W. .\riustroiig
and several iiH'iiiIiers of the class. Isaliclle !5oylaii acted as toastmistress aud
gave the .-iddreas of welcome.
Dr. .\riiistroiig conipliniented the students on the work that had been done
ill the history of education riaasos here,
and .stressed the fact that while educational methods have changed, the iiurpose of education has been unchanged;
always educiition has striven for the development of character ill the individual.
Georgine Nuiiii sketched the life of
Marj- Lyons, the founder of Mount
Holyoke, and Claude Stangel talked on
the achievements of Alice Freeman Palmer, earlj- a president of Wellesley Col(Contlnued on Pnge 3)
Dayroomers Graph Moral Tone
T~\OWN in that end of the dayroom
^
iihere men are men, a jagged line
u'orlis its way, day by day, from one
edge of the floor toward the other.
Someti?nes it veers sharply upward.
Sometimes it sheers steeply doicn. Now
and then it steers a monotonously level
course straight ahead.
IP'hlchtver direction it goes, it gives
the I). R. B's the satisfaction of knoicing that on occasions the morale of the
hoys' dayroom has been above par. For
the line is a graph, which, for eighteen
weeks, represents the moral status of
the dayroom.
Just at present it has gone far below
the ideal standard, partly due to the
worry of midterm e.xams, and parity
because of the spare time wliile new
courses are started the boys have to
while away somehow.
NORMAL
TIMES
Praeco Staff Has Added New
Members
Thirty-Five New Faces in
Classes
Miss DuBois Supervises All
Training School Art
The Praeco Staff has boon growing
rapidl.y within the last few weeks. From
the original five it has increased to
twelve. Peg McCauley was elected to
work on the Calendar section. In the
Art department, Sterl Artley, Paul Vonada, Euth Jones, Dorothy Lambert and
Peg McCauley aro now at work. Catherine Orth, Josephine Paul and Helen
Eettger were selected to make writeups on the social organizations. To
Mar.v Kirby was assigned the humor section.
These people are organizing the book
on a fuller and more collegiate plan.
New features are plentiful, especially in
the photographs, the Calendar, and the
Art sections.
The photograph editor, Claudia Kelly,
is plannig to have the organizations of
the school uiiiform in style and form.
To make the .athletic section more realistic she wants to snap the players and
leaders i n action. She is also trying to
collect as large a variety of unique and
freak snapshots as possible.
The Calendar section is being worked
out ill news-reel form, totally different
from anything that we have ever had.
The name of the book "Praeco" gave
the -Vrt department the idea of carrying
out the Eoman style and form df art
throughout the book.
The social organizations are to be
givi'ii nicii-e attention. Their activities
and unusual experiences shall be treated on the same page as their group picture.
The facetious collections of Mary Kirb.v lire going to be plenty in number.
Praeco will be totally unlike any of
its predecessors, reconstructed from stem
to stern, to make it the livest yearliodk ever published here.
Thirty-live new faces are smiling
cheerfull.v or nervously, according to the
temperament behind the face, about the
halls and classrooms since the opening
of the second semester. Some of them
are familiar from former sessions, regular or summer; some of them still have
to become familiar for the first time.
Supervision of all the art work in
each grade of tho Training School will
constitute a big part of Miss DuBois'
work for this semester. Last semester
this work waa divided between Miss
Atherton and Miss DuBois.
Miss DuBois' student teachers are:
Group One—Amy Bitchey, Edith Lundeen, Priscilla Heath, Agnes Mattson;
(Jroup Two—Matilda Cornmesser, Bessie
Lipez, Alice Whitney, Georgine Nunn,
Catherine Gardner, Pauline H.amilton;
Group Three—Geraldine Donahue, Ella
]\Iae Lilly, Ann Winkleblech, Josephine
Viering, and Paul Vonada.
GREATEST ARTIST IN
MUSICAL EXPERIENCE
(Continued from Page 1}
repeated encores, and in some instances
to leiicat even the encores themselves.
Mr. Hiibirts. Miss Macbeth's able accoin|iaiiist, also played a group of piano
select inns which were received by the
audieuii- with great enthusiasm. An interest iny IVaturc of his performance was
that he played without the assistance of
notes.
The piiigraiii as presented was as follows :
I
Tarantella
Kussiiii
I Know Wliere I'm Goin'
Hughes
Ave Maria
Schubert
Parla
Ardidi
II
Flenrs des .\lpes
Weckerlin
Si je pouvais mourir
Baribolli
Nuit d'Etoiles
Debussy
Le Papillon
Fouiidrain
III
Ballade in D Minor
Brahms
Eomance
Eoberts
Staccato Etude
Eubiiistcin
i l r . Kobe its
IV
Shadow Song (IJinorah) . . . . Meyerbeer
V
Deep in M.v Heart a Lute
Aylward
Come to the Fair
Martin
Sandman Is Calling You
Eoberts
A Song of May
Eoberts
Gene Pierson, for example, is back,
unchanged in any respect, just as every
one would have wished. Gene has three
3'ears of work behind her, having graduated in June from the Junior high school
course, but now that degrees are to be
granted Gene is bound to be among the
first to win one.
Ressie Blackburn, one of our most
westerly regular customers, is another of
the old standbys to reappear, with precisely the same smile she left us with.
Eleanor Close is putting in another
semester toward her normal school certificate ; and Ellen Williams and Martha
Dill have both taken up their books
where they dropped them. Seems good,
you know; seems good when they come
early and often.
Frances and Martha Barnhart, Pauliue
Bongioviiii, Marian Bradley, Marian
Burt, Nellie Donahue, Mary Dougherty,
Vendla Faulk, Jessie Gregory, Alice Hall,
Eunice Manley, Helena Meisel, Margaret
Mickalonic, Ethel Miller, Dorothy Eeading, Emily Sayers, Helena Sharer, Louise
Siuiles, Verna Stanlej', Euth Summers,
Anna Taylor, Margaret Tyson, Florence
Urban, Kathryn Wagner, Frances Waxier, Clara, Lelia, and Helen Willianis,
Ethel Ekendahl, and Mabel Eenner, most
of them among our most sociable suininer students, make up the rest of the
thirty-flve arrivals.
Miss Roberts Gives Farewell
Tea
Miss Eoberts held a very charming
farewell tea-partj- for the mid-year
graduates on Friday afternoon, January 28, from ,1:30 to 5:30 in the Blue
Room. The members of the faculty were
also there to express their regrets at the
students' departure and to wish them
much success and happiness.
The members of the student council,
Rose Bower, Esther Snavely, Ann Orlin,
and Jlowrie Ebner, saw that all the
guests received as much of the refreshments as they desired. Eose's particular duty was to see that no cup was
emptj' at any time.
FEBRUARY GRADUATES
NUMBER EIGHTEEN
(Continued from P a g e 1)
and has done substitute teaching here
during the semester just ended.
Mary Mj-crs, another day-room student, is leaving this seniester. She is a
niember of the day-room organization,
L. A. L., and also the Eho Omega Lambda sorority.
Quite popular in East dormitory was
Katherine Weidert, and that place will
certainly miss her a great deal. She
was an active member of the Y". W.
Louise Escobar was here lust summer
and completed her work the first semester. Her home is in Warren, Pa., wdiere
she expects to teach in the intermediate
grades.
Helen Eadonisky completed her work
here at the close of the first semester.
She also attended several sumnier sessions. Helen was a member of the
"Sb.ike" Literary Society.
Quite a few of the graduates seem
to be from the day-room. Edith Suudberg is another to le.ave that place. She
was a member of the L. A. L.
Not only First floor west, but all the
students, will miss ilildred Eeiter. "Mid"
always liad a jolly greeting for every
one. iSlie was a nicmtier of the "Shake"
Literary Society and (]uite active in all
sports. Especiall.y in hockey did "Mid"
shine. She had the real C. S. N. S.
spirit.
Another da.y student, Gene Asplund,
has left for her home at Eidgway, Pa.
She too was a member of the L. A. L.
Altoona, Pa., greeted Euth Blumeiiscliein, Saturday, January 29. While
at C. S. N. S. Euth was a member of
the Y. AV. C. A. and of the Art Club.
The school extends to all these girls
The tea was poured by candle-light,
creating an atmosphere which made hearty congratulations and wishes them
success in anything they undertake.
every one feel perfectly sociable.
The students present in whose honor
the tea was held were:
Catherine
S. R. O. in Library
Weidert, Euth Blunienshein, Marian
Why so many people iu tho library
Smith, Louise Escobar, Helen McCloskey,
i\Irs. Kane, Mary Myers, Edith Suudberg, the night of February 31 Every chair
Mildred Eeiter and Mary Louise Buddy. occupied, some students standing, and
all of them for tho time being hard at
work increasing their stores of knowlGround Hog Digs in Again
edge.
Prepare for six more weeks of winPerhaps the opening of the new semester. The ground hog emerged from his ter accounted for it; ever,y one was starthole in the hillside up the Boys' Glen, ing in with vim and vigor. Perhaps
saw his shadow, giive one snort, and de- tlie faculty had had the vim and vigor,
clined to come out for classes for six and li.ad assigned unusually long refermore weeks. Februar,y 2, plus six weeks; ences. Be that as it may, the library
count 'em and weep.
surely was being used with a vengeance.
Sweet Selling Sweets
Candy—now they have it. The boys
have finally realized that there are possibilities in candy, and have placed a
stock of it on sale.
The Y'. faced a financial problem before Christmas, and decided that candy
might relieve tho strain. Bill Sweet was
appointed to take charge of the buying
and selling, and has gone into business
over in the East Donn.
So much has been purchased from
him within the past two weeks that
niiiny appetites have lost their keen edge.
Sales have been heavy, but will probably fall off somewhat when the idea
has lost its novelty, iuid the candy appetite gets back to normal. Even at
that, the Y. seems likely to continue
in Sweet's sweet business because of the
]ilcasiiig profit therefrom.
New Programs Give Half
Holidays
The programs for the second seniester
have brought broad grins to many of
the Juniors. Half-holidays appear on
their new programs.
Those in the Junior High School group
find themselves with Wednesday and
Saturdaj' afternoons off. No classes;
who is dissatisfied with that? The intermediate grade courses spread about
the program cards more evenly, but at
that Friday afternoon is wide open—
for study. None of the sections of the
primary group was eciually fortunate;
classes are distributed both mornings
and afternoons throughout the week.
Every One Moves
"Say! Did you get .vour new program
made out j'ct?"
"Why no. Who said we should?"
"Why don't you use your eyes ? There
has been a notice to that effect posted
on the mail-box cabinet all day."
"Let me see your card. I suppose
miiie'll be the same. Wow!
Eight
o'clock classes every morniug but Saturda.y."
"Yeh, and did you notice when wo take
Gym?"
"This H200 is Gym, isn't it? But what
is this SS240?"
"Why, that's Economics."
"Economics? That teaches you how
to save money, doesn't i t ? "
"I don't know, but if it does I better take down a few points from it.
Well, so—long. It's time for Biology
and this is the day for the test."
"Go to it, you can pass."
"Thank goodness this is the last one."
A score or more of such conversations
was the order of things during the last
week of the first seniester. They took
phico ill the halls, in the Y. W. .and Y.
JI. rooms, in student's rooms, ;ind in
the da.v-rooni.
Early in the week every one seemed
to catch the thrill of a rapid closing up
of the work. Those who had done well
in their work experienced a satisfied
feeling and were anxious to take up
new subjects. Those who had not done
so well were glad that they were about
to throw off the old yoke and start anew.
NORMAL
NORMAL TIMES
Normal Times is published at Central State
Normal School, I.ock Haven, Pennsylvania, by
the Board of Editors of Normal Times.
The subscription rate to all alnmnl and undergraduates of the school is 75 cents.
BOARD OF EDITORS
Lenore Sliarp, Rose Bower, Harriet KeU,
David Ulmer, iaverda Richardson, Sterl ,\rtle.v,
Blanche Wahl, Margaret Sutton. Ella Mae I..illy,
Edward Sherkel, Marion Smith, Janet Stewart,
Mar.v Margaret Adams, Mildred Stewart, Thomas
Hosterman, Luc.v Ma.v Mitelieil, Dorotliy Riley,
I'aul Vonada, Reginald Fitzsimmons, Ruth Jones.
S5EC1AI, CONTHIBUTORS TO THIS ISSUE
Florence Macbeth
Jo Guild
Dayroom G-rapiis Moral Status
Max Bossert
Sweet Selling Sweets
William Sweet
Groundhog Digs In
Ray Zaner
Skating on Athletic Field
Helen Bengston
We Expect Too Mnch
Mary D^vyer
Better Than Hurry
Mary Dwyer
New Programs Provide Holidays.. .Julia (Jilibons
New Girls Receive Attention
Russell Bohn
S. R. O. in Library
Albert Hobba
Everyone Moves
Matthew Shaw
High Speed Start
Rovena Goodman
Coach Dyck Gathers Apples
John Varner
New Club Entertains
Harriet Kelly
Just About Jerry
lone Potter
Scraps
'
Mary Kirby
Engineering Feat
Ellis Boyer
Our Own Little Diary
Dorothy Riley
Tennis for Beginners
Dent Bowser
Preparing for Winter
Sterl Artley
FEBEUAEY 10, 1927
Welcome, Owl
The "Owl," from California State Normal .School, is the latest addition to our
exchange list. It is new, not only to
us, but to every one who has seen it,
for onr copy is only the second issue of
vidume one.
I'rofessioiial make-up in its type arrangement, headings, and balanced columns, and excellently written news
items are characteristic of this issue of
the "Owl."
The staff deserves much credit for issuing such a splendid paper. We extend our congratulations to the "Owl,"
and extend it a hearty welcome to our
office.
Skating on Athletic Field
The football field where pigskin battles raged last fall now wears the icy
surface of a miniature lake. The scars
of battle have been erased by the hand
of Nature, leaving a clean slate on which
to p r i n t the story of future victories.
All of which suggests that, if the field
could be flooded in the early days of
winter, all thiit low-lying portion nearest to the railroad embankment would
give us a fine skating rink right on our
own campus. The cost would be insignificant; the r e t u r n great.
We Expect Too Much
Most of us expect too much of those
about us. They are too busy with themselves to bestow upon us the appreciation or the notice we think we deserve.
But this t r u t h has a comforting side,
for if our services and successes do not
win thanks or praise, neither do our
slips and failures attract hiilf the attention we fear. We have only to pick
ourselves up and go on again as best we
may, and the rest of the world will p.ay
little heed.
So long as we are honestly trying to
do our best, we may be sure t h a t those
about us are not likely to misjudge us
greatly, either by over or under-estimatiou.
New Girls Receive Attention
The many newcomers to the girls'
dormitory hiive provided plenty of material to keep the more curious of the
"regulars" interested in life.
They showed up conspicuously in the
dining-room. As quickly as me.als could
lie finished the "regulars" rushed out into the hall, to wait until tho recruits
came out for inspection. It m.ay have
been uncomfortable for some of the recruits, but at the same time it resulted
in many of them acquiring a supply of
friends.
I n the library also the newcomers
were conspicuous, especiall.y the first
nights of the semester. The library waa
crowded; library rules were properly
noted and obeyed; y e t it was noticeable
th.at people could succeed in getting acquainted, even those who had thought
they had nothing better to do, so early
in the term, than to impress the facult3' with their studiousness.
EDUCATION OF WOMEN
TRACED AT ED DINNER
Surprise Party Given for Mary
Louise Ruddy
Two Marriages Surprise
Junior Class
Georgeanna Clark and Eleanor Little,
Mary Louise Euddy waa the guest of
honor at a surprise party given by a who last September heard the call to benumber of her friends at Herlocker's come school teachers, have recently answered a more insistent call. They have
Tea Boom on January 27.
become Mrs. George Whipple and Mra.
After dinner, speeches were made by
Hilmer Shire,y.
members of the Scranton Club .and later
On January 15, 1927, Goorgeann.a Clark
dancing was enjoyed.
discontinued her work here and left to
Those who attended the dinner were meet her husband in Philadelphia. Mrs.
Ibir.v Louise Euddy, K a t h r y n Lynch, Whipple is from Salladasburg and her
Alice Cannon, Phyllis Schaefer, Mary husband, Mr. George Whipple, who was
Dw,ver, Mary Davidson, Katherine Kelly, .attending Temple University as a freshBetty Jordan, Claire I^angan, Mary man, lives ill Williamsport, at which
Grier, Grace Ott, Agnes Gallagher, Anne place they will make their home.
Gilloegly, Helen Iloron and Helen CarOn January 26, 1927, Miss Eleiinor
den.
Little, accompanied by her sister, left
Following the dinner Mary Louise was for Baltimore, where she was married
presented with a beautiful compact by to Mr. Hilmer Shirey. Mr. Shirey is atthe "Wheelers," of which she is a mem- tending sehool in Springfield, Mass., asber. The other meinbers are Phyllis piring to be an athletic director. EleaSchaefer, Josephine Guardino, Kathryn nor and her husband visited C. S. N. S.
Lynch, Mary Dwyer, Mary Davidson, on Monday, January 31, and received
Betty .lordan, Claire Langaii, Grace Ott congratulations right and left.
iuid Alice Cannon.
(Continued from Page 1)
lege. Liiid.a Bryan and Violet Duck contributed vocal solos.
Gladj's Wilson and Helen Eettger
managed the finances of the b.anquet, no
sniall task.
Traces Woman's Educational Progress
Dr. Wood}' was presented by Miss Minnie Jane Merrells, of our faculty, and
a former graduate student under Dr.
Woody, who referred to Dr. Woody's
seven years of work at Pennsylvani.a, to
his three ye.ars of service in Eussia and
France during the World War, and to
the many books of which Dr. Woody is
the author.
Dr. Woody sketched the early rise of
the status of woman from that of a
mere ch.attel to her present social position. He described the earlier developments in education for women, all of
them recent enough in point of time,
when the only training she was permitted was in simple feminine accomplishments, such as dancing and painting on silk. Dr. Woody stressed the
fact that even in early times in this
country women were thought inferior in
intellect to men, and were barred from
higher education "for fear their brains
might crack."
The seminary, he said was the pioneer
educational institution for women, and
from 1770 to 18(i0 furnished almost the
only education which any woman received. About 1860 it began to be believed that women could study the same
subjects as men, and m.'iny higher institutions began to permit them to enter.
Women were admitted to teaching. Dr.
Woody said, because schools paid so little for their services that the positions
h.ad become uiis.atisfactory to men. Mary
Lyon taught for seventy-five cents a
week, an average salary for her time.
In 1829 the first teiichers tr.aining school
was opened, .and in 1839 the first normal
school, in Massachusetts, and for women
only.
The first women entered medical
schools in 1848. Later the profession
of law was opened to them. The first
woman's college, Mt. Holyoke, opened in
1837, the first pupils enrolling helping
to tack down the carpets in the school.
8
TIMES
The whole student bodj' wishes these
girls bon voyage.
Vocational Guidance
Presents Worth-While Studies
Believing that an intensive survey and
study of a phase of any subject is of
most benefit to a student than an ex.aniination in that subject, Mr. Sullivan
had his class in Vocational Guidance
busy on projects relating to guid.ance.
Collection, organization, and
flnally,
presentation of material to the group
constituted the completion of the projects.
The topics investigated and analyzed
bj' the students a r e :
Guidance Through Mathematics.—Harriet Kelt.
Guidance in the SniiiU J. H. S.—Eose
Bower.
History of the (Tiiidaiice ^Movement.—
Mildred Erickson.
MENTAL HEALTH IS
MAIN TOPIC AT DINNER
{Continued from Page 1)
ough surveys of the mental and physical health of children will be made,
remedial measures taken systematically
wherever possible, courses in education
iidapted to the mentality of all children,
parents given systematic training, and
regular instruction in mental hygiene
estiiblished everywhere.
Other Talks
Dr. Armstrong illustrated the importance of applied psychology in practical
life. Hugh Fredericks told again of digging his Ford out of snow drifts while
he was acting as chauffeur for Miss Merrells, during the weeks thiit she was administering mental tests to children in
nineteen Clinton County rural schools.
School Eeeords as an Aid to Guidance.
Dorothy Bickel spoke of the needs of
—Sariih Felix.
the psj'chology department. Ivan Fritz
Guidance Through Extra-Curricular in his talk furnished original illustrations of mental complexes in the proActivities.—Guendolyn Stringfellow.
The Need for Vocational Guidance.— cess of learning.
Euth Jones.
A Eeview of Any Eecent Book on
Guidance.—Dorothy Campbell.
Guidance Tlirough Eecreational Activities.—Mildred Eeiter.
Avociitional Guidance.—Edward Sherkel.
i l r s . B. Franklin Long, a graduate
student holding her M. A. from Bucknell, who is taking special work iu
psych olog.y here, described the series of
tests given by Miss Merrells and some
of her students in order to ascertain t h e
physical and mental status of pro-school
children.
The Training of Vocational Counsellor.—(^yde Swoyer and Edith Morrison.
Guidance Through Instruction in
Civics.—Paul Vonada.
How Can Field Trips Be Made to Contribute to Guidance.—Beginald Fitzsimmons.
Use of Educational Tests and Measurciiieuts in Guidance.—David Ulmer.
Analysis of Self-Analysis Tests Given
to J. II. S. Pupils.—Lenore Sharp.
Lloyd Bauman, general chairman in
chiirge of the dinner, and Miss Merrells
deserve much credit for the unquestioned success of the banquet.
Guidance Through Instruction in English.—Elverda Eichardson.
Training for
Citizenship.—Thomas
Larkin.
Guidance Througii Science.—Wilford
Pomoroy.
(Guidance in the Eochester Public
Schools.—Ann Winkelblech.
Miss Barkhuff Entertained
Miss Biiikhuff, Supervisor of tho
First Grade, was eiitcitained b.v her student teacdicis at dinner at Achenbaeh's
ou Wednesday evening, January 20. After a (lilicious dinner, the jiarty went
to the movies, where they enjoj-ed a
"most thrilling show." Those present
were iliss Laura Barkhuff, Betty Jordiin, Grace Ott, .Martha Gaffney, Claudia
Kelly, Dorothy Apple, Eunice Hoffman,
Mary Todhunter, Nell Holton, Margaret
Creighton, Pat Eiley, and Vera Mae
Duke.
NORMAL
Scraps
T h e s e scraii liook
fiends!
E v e r y notice, iiiil(|ue i n m a n n e r , c l e v e r i n des i g n , o r d i f f e r e n t in n u y n i a n n e r is
n a b b e d a l m o s t a s y o u put t h e l a s t t a c k
ill t o h o l d it uji. T h e b i l l l i o a r d s a r e of
v e r y l i t t h ' v a l u e t o a n y o n e , n o w , exce|it t h e s e s c r a p - c o l l e c t o r s .
Basketball
annouiu-eiiieiits'
yes—ill some
one's
Kci-ajibook.
Art
Club?—same
place.
Natnnilist i l e e t i n g . Notice to Dormitory
S t u d e n t s , Council notices. P a c k a g e lists,
e t c . — a l l t h e s e i t e m s c a n be f o u n d i n a
s n a p book s o m e w h e r e .
TIMES
Sir Gallantlad Is Unhorsed
Ve Olde
h a s set t h e
t h i n g has
a n d it has
T i m e K n i g h t , Sir ( i a i l a i i t l a d ,
E a s t D o r m by t h e c a r s . S o m e d i s t u r b e d his u n e a s y s p i r i t ,
reajijieared a m o n g u s .
Library Makes Additions
A m o n g t h e n e w books a d d e d t o t h e
l i b r a r y recentl.v a r e ;
"(ienetic Studies
of G e n i u s , " b y L e w i s T e r m a u ; " A Dictioniir,y of M o d e r n E n g l i s h U s a g e , " b y
H. W . F o w l e r ; " W h y AVe B e h a v e L i k e
H u m a n B e i n g s , " b y G e o r g e A. D o r s e y .
T e n or a d o z e n of o u r b o l d e s t w i e l d e r s of t h e p i e - k n i f e w e r e h o l d i n g a c o n M i s s Dixon h a s jilaced i n t h e l i b r a r y
f e r e n c e in t h e l i a t h r o o n i on t h e n i g h t
two m a g a z i n e s , " H y g i e a " a n d " C h i l d r e n , "
of J a n u a r y 20, w h e n s u d d e i i l 3 ' t h e d o o r
for t h e u s e of t h e s t u d e n t b o d y .
flew open, a n d in c h a r g e d Sir G a l l a n t l a d ,
Miss MacDonald has also a d d e d " T h e
l a n c e read.v, b e s t r i d i n g a s n o r t i n g s t e e d .
B
o
o k m a n " for t h e s t u d e n t s t o u s e .
T h e conflict w a s b r i e f b u t d e c i s i v e . O u r
A new magazine, "The Psychological
liold l a d s will face a n y t h i n g l i v i n g , b u t
C l i n i c , " h a s been a d d e d to t h e l i b r a r y
Wlicii s o m e Jiersons b i d f a r e w e l l for- t h e open w i n d o w s w e r e left b e h i n d t h e m
lists.
a
s
e
v
i
d
e
n
c
e
s
of
t
h
e
i
r
f
e
a
r
t
o
f
a
c
e
a
cvei- 1(1 C. S. N . S. t h e y will t a k e with
i l i s s M a c D o n a l d has s e l e c t e d a n d jiostt h e m iiiiiii.v t h i n g s in r e m e m b r a n c e s . Of sliiide of t h e jiast.
ed on t h e b u l l e t i n b o a r d in t h e l i b r a r y ,
what valiie will t h e y be.' Oh s u r e ! t h e y
S i r ( b i l l a n t l a d t h e n s w u n g a b o u t on
a list of t h e m o s t i n t e r e s t i n g a r t i c l e s
will k n o w who wns j i r o c t o r o n c e , who h i s c h a r g e r , a n d , s e e i n g severiil s t u d e n t s
f r o m t h e m a g a z i n e s for tlie
current
w e n t iiiit fur B a s k e t b a l l s o n i e t i n i e s , who s t u d y i n g b.v t h e l i g h t s i n t h e h a l l s , h e
iiionth.
T h i s list will be a v a l u a b l e
u s e d til have n a m e ciirds on t h e i r d o o r s , c h a r g e d a g a i n , a n d w o n l d h a v e w o n a n g u i d e to t h e s t u d e n t wdio w i s h e s t o u s e
etc., but will the.v reall.v g e t such a lot o t h e r b l o o d l e s s victor.v h a d n o t h i s n o iiiiigaziiU'S for r e f e r e n c e w o r k .
of Jileasure f r o m t h e s e trifies.' AVe, who b l e steed stiiiiibled a t t h e c r i t i c a l m o suffer lieciinso of t h e i r wilful d e s i r e s , m e n t a n d d e p o s i t e d his r i d e r o u t h e
cbuilit it. W h y d o n ' t t h e y sjieiid t h e i r tloor.
Better Than Hurry
tiiiic i;c'ttiiig a l i t t l e kiiiiwledge to t a k e
Sir Gallantlad vanished like smoke,
I t is not h i i i r y t h a t g e t s y o u o v e r t h e
with t h e m a n d n o t so m a n y fool reb u t Abix FitzsiinuKins p i c k e d h i m s e l f u p , gi'ouiid, b u t c o n c e n t r a t i o n . If y o u h a v e
i n i n d e r s .'
h e l p e d Bill Sweet g e t t h e r e i n s o u t of niore t h i n g s tn do in ;i gix'en t i m e thall
W e d i s l i k e t o j i i e d i c t t h e i r f i i t n i e ca- h i s moiitli, a n d both of t h e m w e n t b a c k it s e e m s jidssible td nccomjilish, b e w a r e
r e e r s , b n t with t h i s f o r a s t a r t we c a n ' t t o w o r k .
how y o u go fluttering f r o m o n e t a s k t o
li(d]i t h i n k i n g of " r a g m e n ! "
another.
Instead, put y o u r e n t i r e atNew Club Entertains President t e n t i o n o n o n e t h i n g . G i v e y o u r s e l f t o
O m e g a B e t a , o r g a n i z e d by s o m e E a s t it a s a b s o l u t e l y a s if y o u h a d n o o t h e r
New Exchanges Come From
D d i i n g i r l s , e n t e r t a i n e d its p r e s i d e n t , i n t e r e s t i n life t h a n its a c c o m p l i s h m e n t .
Twelve Normals
Clniidin K e l l y , at a d i n n e r - d a n c e a t C d i i c o i i t r a t e d a t t e n t i o n c a n do m u c h i n
T w i ' h i ' luirinnl school jnildiciit ions .Vclu'iibaidi's ou Thursdii.v, F e b r u a r y ' 3. little t i m e , while h u r r y u s e s m u c h e n have iiiM'ii a d d e d to .Viirinal T i m e s ' list It was 11(1 c d i n c i d e i i c e t h a t t h o d a y hiip- e r g y f o r ver.v s m a l l r e s u l t s .
(if ;-|ic;iking ac(|iiaint;iuci's s i n c e o n r last
.•i|ipcnr.-iiicc. T h e Nornnil .Axis, of N o r t h
. \ d n n i s . Mass.; T h e I'iuc l.iig, of X.'icog(1(1.dies, l.a.: t h e \ i s l n , of
Kdiniinds,
( i k l a . ; T h e Kiigle, of S a n t a
Barbara,
t'lilif.: t h e Indiana. I ' e n n , of
Indiana,
I'ciiini; .'^tndc'iit O|iinioii, of Klleiisbiirg,
W.isli.: Xornial Kclioes. of .lolinson, V t . ;
t h e K e n t Stiller, of K e n t , O h i o ; t h e
WiiKiiii.i, M i n n . ; Ilee iMin-Kss, of llniiI m i y , ('(inn., t h e F r o n t Line, of F r o s t I m r - , .Md.; a n d t h e Owl, of ( ' a l i f o r n i a ,
I'cnii.L, ;ire on (iiir r e g u l a r e.xidiange list
—U}\- iiiaii\' y e n i s , \vi' hojie.
.Ml of thi'se a r e n e w t o L o c k H a v e n
exi('|it t h e I n d i a n a P e n n , D e e - E i i i i - E s s ,
anil t h e i:,iglc. all of w h i c h l o s t t o u c h
wilh us ;it Ihe .stai-t of t h i s s c h o l a s t i c
yciM.
Mine tli.'in iift.v n o r m a l schools
i'N(di,iii},'i' with us r e g u l a r l y , a l l of t h e
juililicnl idiis Iieing o n file iu Eiioiii 24.
High Speed Start for New Term
('hisses licg;iii as jiroinpt 1\' on .l;iiiua r y ,",l as on a n y (illiei- KKI''; sidiodl dax-.
.All s t U ' l c n t s ^\'^^^•^' in t h e i r jilaces. K.\
c e p t f o r g e t t i n g t h e rolls t o r t h e new
s e n i e s t e r . t h e r e was no d(day in g e t t i n g
d o w n t o n e w s u b j e c t s .•md new assigiiiiieuls.
All t h i s WJIS jKissilde liecause s c h e d u l e s
h a d liecn m a d e out a week or iiKiri' in
i i d v a n c o b y e \ i ' r y s t u d e n t in coiifereiice
with Professor Higli. Work progressed
wilhont the slightest halt, nnd every
chiHs got iiway to a flying s t a r t .
Of ediirse t h e r e was some ex.xciteineiit.
T h e new |ir;ictice t e a c h e r s wci-e liuviiig
Mer\(ins sjiasiiis o v e r w h a t wns j u s t .-ihead
(if llieni.
.Vew c l a s s m a t e s gave e v e r y
one Jilenty In size iiji. X e w s u l i j e c t s a n d
n e w i n s t r u c t d r s st i i u i i l a t e d . N e w scliednles w e r e a l i t t l e c o n f u s i n g . Vet if t h e
s e m e s t e r keejis on as it begiiii i t s h o u l d
b r e a k r e e d i d s f o r w o r k a n d scliolarshiji.
jieiied to be C b i u d i a ' s b i r t l i d i i y .
t h e g i r l s a t t e n d e d t h e inovies.
Later
T h e girls p r e s e n t were C l a u d i a Kell,v,
L i l l i a n M i t c h e l l , I'eg AlcCauley, E u t h
Oe(blei-, Kvidyn H e t h e r l i n , E t h e l B a u m g a r d n e r , Ibdeii .Anstead, E l l a M a e L i l l y ,
E i i t h .Scliiiiidelineier, !\biry A n g u s , a n d
Iln 1 liel K e l l v .
Betii
Signiii
Chi
initiated
its
t w e l v e j d e d g e s on S a t u r d a . v , J a n u a r . v 22.
during the afternoon.
W e carry the largest
D r u g s in C l i n t o n C o u n t y .
stock
of
LET U S FILL Y O U R
PRESCRIPTIONS
Prieson's
PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS
S. E. Corner Main and Vesper Sts.
A simple dinner
Very
was s e r v e d i n t h e M u s i c S t u d i o a t six
ceremonies
held i n t h e c l u b r o o m .
The
new inenibers n r e :
"Her
niece
Pronounced
is
rnther
good-looking,
don't you t h i n k ? "
Kitt.v
Ann
An-Xerney, L o u i s e B o w e s , B e r t h a AVolfe,
lUdirer, C l a i r e
Ciiiich I'aul llyck a n d K u s s e l l Biihii Abiry Kodgers, I h d e n
w e n t over i n t o B o a l s b u r g o n S u n d a y , ( h i l l n g h e r , i'llizabetli H r e s s l e r , .luliii Gib.laiiuavy 80, t o visit B o h n ' s f i i m i l y . B o t h bons, -Mnrgiiret ('diiii, .Anna Gilbiegl.v,
df tlieni f(dl Sd good a t b e i n g o u t on t h e Liiurii Stiiiirt.
f a r m again t h a t t l i e y o v e r d i d t h e m s e l v e s
at t h e d i n n e r t a b l e — a u d at t h a t t h e y
X ' o r t h w e s t e r u U n i v e r s i t . v is p r o t e c t i n g
(inl.v b r o w s e d i i r o u n d t h e e d g e s of all
t h a t t y p i c a l C e n t e r C o u n t y h o s j i i t a l i t y , itself a g a i n s t t h e flood of w o u l d - b e c o e d s .
('iiacli Dyck s a y s .
T h e d a n g e r of f e n i i n i z i i t i o n is w a r d e d off
W h e n 1he,\- rdlled back on t h e ciinijins,
t h e rciir df ('dindi l>\-ck's 1-lnick w;is
lilled Willi C e n t e r ('(iiiiity npjiles.
Beauty Clays
Pace Powders
Single Compacts
Double Compacts
Talcum Powders
Cold C r e a m s
Shampoos
Hair Nets
Tooth Paste
Tooth Brushes
Soaps
Stationery
Films
Fountain Pens
Shaving Creams
Razor Blades
Razors
Shaving Brushes
P l a y i n g Cards, E t c .
T h e m o c k i i i i t i a t i d i i wns h e l d i n t h e g.ym
o'clock f o l l o w i n g t h e f o r m a l
Coach Dyck Gathers Bohn's
Apple Crop
MAKE OUR STORE YOUR
H E A D Q U A R T E R S FOR
Pharmacy
Bitter Sweets Initiate
The
Prieson's Pharmacy
"(."areful of t h e l a i g l i s h , o l d chiip; one
snys, ' K n e e s
are'."
Wiedhahn Jewelry Co.
117 East Main St., Lock H a v e n , P a .
E s t a b l i s h e d 1855
by II recent cdllege d i ' d i n a n c e t h a t h e r e after
t h e r e must
be 4."i(l m e n
admitted
for i'\"er,\' ;t."i(l woineii j i e r m i t t e d .
Everything
fVe Serve the Ladies Also
W e i n v i t e the l a d i e s t o c o m e to
our b a r b e r s h o p for their hair
c u t t i n g and t r i m m i n g a n d p e r m a n e n t w a v i n g . W e are spec i a l l y e q u i p p e d to r e n d e r a
p r o m p t a n d s a t i s f a c t o r y service. W h e n y o u or t h e children require tonsorial a t t e n t i o n y o u will find u s r e a d y to
serve y o u . W e have a chart
t h a t shows the v e r y
latest
m o d e s of b o b b i n g , c u t t i n g a n d
trimming.
Come to t h e
Sanitary barber Shop
Guaranteed
FINE JEWELRY and
SILVERWARE
C. S. N. S. RINGS
Fine Wrist W a t c h Repairing
Parker, Wahl
and
Waterman
Fountain
Pens
NORMAL
Engineering Feat Completed in
Boys' Dormitory
JUST ABOUT JERRY
"Behind t h e Scenes"
"It's queer the girls don't come," said
Jerry as she paced up and down the
wings. I told them to be here early."
"Oh, there's plenty of time," put in
Betty. "It isn't seven yet, and if they
are going to dress in their rooms it
won't take much time .iust to make them
UJI and put on their wigs."
"Hang, Bett,y! Might have known
she'd do something like this," breathed
Bonnie, "Did you hear a noise? Pretend you did," he whisjiered to Jerry.
After some five minutes they got biick
on the triick again and the audience was
unaware of the fact that anything had
been missing.
At the fall of the curtain, Betty fell
on her knees at Jerry's feet. Bonnie
"Betty," said Beggy Lair, a newcomhelped her up and said, "Never mind,
er, "what are you doing here ? I didn't
Betty, the audience never knew the difknow you were in the cast."
ference, and anyway it was fill for the
"AVell, I am," said Betty.
best. My mustache wouldn't have stayed
"Oh, are you? I saw the program but on more than two raiiiiites longer. iSince
I've forgotten it. I've often wondered it turned out well, we'll forgive you."
why you haven't been in any of the
plays."
Never before in the history of the
Bo,ys' dorm has such a feat of engineering skill been displayed. A new extraordinary epoch in the way of inijirovement will mean as much to the
dormitory boys as the Industrial Bevolutioii meant to the manufacturer.
Some of the more religious element
of the dormitory, when returning from
church about eleven-thirty and ujioii entering by the side entrance, had their
attention attracted by sounds that indicated sonic gre.at confusion at the farther end of the hall.
Tlie.y heard some one call: "Six! Seven! Three! Two! Two!"
Some one iinswered, "Check! Cheek!"
"It's a minor jiart," explained Betty. Margaret Sutton Alpha Zeta Pi
Again the call, "Six! Seven! Three!
President
"I'm a noise."
Two! Two!" iind the answer acconipauied with great clanging and hanging:
"A noise ?" echoed Peggy.
Aljiha Z e t a I'i e l e c t e d i t s n o w officers
"A'es," replied Betty, "when the hero
"To the right! Too much! To the left!
for t h i s s e m e s t e r a t t h e u s u a l n i e e t i n g
says to Jerry, 'I will brave all for your
o n M o n d a y n i g h t , J a n u a r y 24, 1927. T h e y All right! Check! Check!"
sake, I will follow you to the ends of the
Then all wiis (juiet for a few minutes
are:
earth,' I iiiake the noise, I sit behind
i b i r g a r e t S u t t o n , I ' r e s i d e n t ; H a r r i e t liut the same thing was soon reiieatcd
scenes on a tall stejdadder and drop a
K e l t , V i c e - P r e s i d e n t ; Klla M a e L i l l y , only iu a greiiter degree.
liiiii|i-cliiinne,v. It luny not sound like
S e c r e t a r y ; I'Mverda E i c h a r d s o n , T r e a The bdvs were liewildered.
The}'
an important part but it is the turning
sneaked <|uietly in the direction of the
surer.
point of the whole thing. I have to do
T h e i r j i r e d e c e s s o r s , E d w a r d S h e r k e l , sounds. The sounds led toward the pressthe making up, so .von'll have to exI'resideiil
; David I ' l n i e r , v i c e - [ ^ r e s i d e n t ; ing room. They walked quietly to the
cuse me now, Peggy."
Blniudie Wdlil, S e c r e t a r y , a n d M a r g a r e t jiressiiig room door. It was closed. Some
"Ves, good-by," iinswered Peggy. "If
S u l t d u , r e t i r e d from office J a n u a r y I I , lirave one in the crowd tried the door
you get any flowers I'll send them in."
hut it was locked.
111127.
"Do—thanks," replied Betty.
"I'm
The calling of nuiuliers, left, right,
sure I'll get a lot."
check, and the (daiigiug became more inBitter
Sweets
Entertain
for
Buck stage all wns confusion. "Betty,
tense. The bo.vs held a liiistj' conferAnne Fahlman
don't you think I'm too red? I know
ence and decided to flnd out the trouble.
it'll all come off wheu Bonnie kisses
A little timid, but determined, they
Anne Fnlilniau was the guest of honor
me,"
lit a liridge jiiiity given b.y the Bitter- gained enough courage to heave all to"If it comes off as easi].v as that you'll Sweet sororit.y ou January 27, The gift gether oil the door. It flew open. The.v
be more fortunate than most people I prize Jiresented by the members to Anne beheld in iiiiiiizement an engineering
make up," Betty rejilied, "You'd look was 11 iiiivclt.v necklace of pearls and feat thnt call rightfully be called one
ghastly if you went the way you want- gold links,
of the Seven Wdiiders of C, S. N, S,
ed to,"
I'limeroy and Boyer hnd cleverly reAune has accejited a position in the
"Betty, look at this wig," moaned Jer- lirsl grnde at Ridgway, and left on Pri- vi'rsed the cover on the pressing board,
ry. "It's positively orange. He calls dii.v, .liinuiiiy 28, to assume her duties. A clean surface was exposed!
me his dark-eyed beauty and I can't
imagine any one with dark eyes or anj'
other kind of eyes, having hair like this.
My own looks better,"
US AND
"Wear j-our own then, .Terry, only
keep out of sight. If Kath.v ever saw
you didn't have it ou after jiaying so
lunch to rent it, she would go iiJi in
smoke," ciiutioned lietty.
At tive luiniites of eight everything
was in readiness, "Clear tho stage!"
some one called as the orchestrii coiiimenced to jday. After tho music of
the orchestra had died down the curtain
parted and J e r r y was discovered sitting
in a garden.
As the curtain fell at the end of tho
act, J e r r y hugged Betty. "Oh, it's flfty
times better than the last one!"
The curtain rose on the fourth act.
Bett.y had prepared herself behind the
scenes with a lamp-chimney in her hands.
The noise was not due for sometime, so
Betty whiled awa,y the time by examining tho stars.
On the stage, Bonnie w.as making au
exceppent lover. He was saying to Jerry,
"Say t h a t you will be mine and I will
brave all for your sake. I will follow
you to the ends of the earth." He gazed
into hor eyes and waited for the terrible noise, but none came.
OTHERS
Miirgaret S m i t h a n d K l i z a b e t h Welsh
n t e r t n i n e d g u e s t s S u n d i i y , . l a n u a r y 23.
"lliiriy"
cniue to
sec ( t r a c e
Ott
ini
Siinilii.v.
Hidty lluliley's sister, Ciitheriue, cniiic
nnd hel|ie(l her friends enjoy the weekend of .lanunr.v 2!!,
Mrs, Cresswell's diiughter is visiting
her.
.Agues Kelly and Mnry Kii.vuinnd sjieiit
the week-end iu Belief onte.
A t r e d u c e d rates t o
C . S. N . S. S t u d e n t s
Use Eastman
Films
in the yellow box.
We sell them.
Leave your films
today—get y o u r
pictures tomorrow
The Swope Studio
Kamp's Shoe Store
for the
Latest Styles in Footwear
Guaranteed
Hosiery
110 East Main Street
We can tell you the most
beautiful way to say it
CARLSON,
Florist
AT THE MONUMENT
D
AINTY SERVICE
ELICIOUS CANDIES
ELIGHTFUL SUNDAES
Gwen Stringfellow and her roomie,
Bernice Beck, were visiting friends iit
State and of course
!
Henry Keller's Sons
Style
I'eg Brelli wns home over J a n u a r y 23.
Tiilking of distinctive names for
school jiapers, how does this one strike
Altooua was a popular place over this you? At the Ellensburg, Washington,
jiiiiticiilar week-end. Ruth Schandel- Normal, the student publication meekly
iiieyer, Betty McKee, Reba Johnson and labels itself The Wildcat's Whiskers.
several others were home.
Mnry ibirgaret Adams, Mabel Klein
and Mid Stewart visited Eleauore Bickert and came back happy.
All Photos
No. 2l!i i'lnst wns eiujity. Alice Hesser
and Helen Shenier deserted it for Alice's
home in Willinmsjiort.
Elizabeth Stammaley was called home
over the week-end of J a n u a r y 23, on acAlice Corby was hiijipy to have her
count of the death of her uncle. The
friend, Freda Titus, with her over the
school symjiiithizes with Elizabeth.
week-end.
Mid I'lumiiier visited with friends.
5
TIMES
The scientist who has been spending
the past six semesters studying the habits of the domestic snail has reported
that they seem to have no conception
of the proper use of the oyster fork.
Quality
New Spring Styles in
Oxfords and Slippers
103 Main St., Lock Haven, Pa.
T
6
NORMAL
OUR O W N LITTLE DIARY
MONDAY, JANUARY 17
I can't say t h a t anything very exciting happened today. Missed a couple of
meetings. Went down-town after conferenee.
It's funny, I inight as well give it up
as a bad job—I just can't pass the Sugar
Bowl. It seems as though my feet just
naturally turn in at that place on the
street.
TUESDAY, JANUARY 18
Movies ill the auditorium. Worked in
the Library. Started the reference work
on my "Bee" report. Never knew there
was so much to know about it. I thought
it wouldn't take long to do the report,
b u t those darn things are living up to
their name—I got stung! I've only
started it and have three papers fllled.
My arms will give out before I'm
through.
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19
Saw the picture, "The Lady in Ermine." It wasn't so good. We rushed
back up to school. lone never went so
fast in all her life. Neither did I. I
can walk fast, but Tacs has me stopped.
When we arrived' up here I was weak.
Two letters from home revived me in
double quick time though. What struck
them?
Movies in the auditorium lasted pretty
long. Couldn't work in the Library.
Thought maybe I'd do some more on the
"Bees," but they'll have to wait.
THURSDAY, JANUARY 20
The rest of t h e movies were shown
tonight. The films were rolled backwards, so we couldn't see them last night.
Continued my reference work in the
Library. Finished it. I t ' s a relief to
have that done. I could start a beehive, I believe. Worked on a seat-work
set too. !M,y fingers are almost broken.
Another letter from home. I believe
something is wrong. I never received
t h a t many in one week before. That's
good for three weeks.
notony. I didn't do a thing all day. I
inight just as well finish the day the
same way.
MONDAY, JANUARY 31
Classes again. I'm so glad my teaching is over. I liked it while I was teaching and would just as soon continue, I
suppose, but a taste of classes alters
everything. I'll see how it feels to be
bossed once more.
Came in from our week-end vacation.
Seems funny but good to be here again.
I had an awful time getting used to sitting for an hour. I've sat through five
today; I eau sit through ten now without a bit of trouble. The rest of the
gang are getting used to the trials of
teaching.
Donuts was all thrilled about being
home. I felt as though I were home by
listening to her. She makes news out
of nothing.
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1
That package Mom sent me comes in
nice every now and then. I have not
been hungry at all. She saved my life
when she gave it to Donuts for me.
Girls nieeting. Met all the new girls.
I hope they like it here as much as we
do. Worked for a while in the Library.
What I don't know about H e n r y V I I
and V I I I isn't worth knowing now. Eeeeived a letter from Dotty. I wish I
were home to see every one. There's a
couple dances too; I'm missing a lot.
TIMES
We've been getting into the dining
hall awfully early, it seems. Punctual
to the nth degree.
The C. D. C's had a meeting. Some
people are going to meet their Waterloo
in about three jerks.
Went down to Church at seven. The
wind was blowing like everything. We
had three windows up and there was a
regular gale in here. I was expecting
either Tacs or myself to be picking ourselves up in the hall. We opened the
door and all the dust that was laying
around was soon out.
had a circus after we came over
the gym. Had lots to eat too. I
think I've had so much fun since
come back. It all had to end too
SATURDAY, JANUARY 22
Helen got a box today. I sampled
everythiug right off the reel. Everyone would think the box was mine. She's
m y roomie, t h o u g h ; what's her's is mine.
W e n t to the movies in the afternoon.
Danced in tho evening. The music was
p r e t t y good. Totty called. I made it
down to t h a t booth in short time. We
have the news of the town now for the
next six weeks.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 23
W h a t ' s the use of living? Everything
is going the same as usual. I wish somet h i n g would happen to break the mo-
Kus came in. She was thrilled to a
Iieanut. Who wouldn't be?
Pennsylvania Projects for
History of Education
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4
Miss Merrells announces that the hisHad four classes today. Recited in tory of education courses for the second
one. Never thought I would muster the semester will do co-operative investigacourage to even drag myself out of the tion and writing on two group projects.
The projects will develop phases of the
seat. I did though.
history and of the organization of eduWent down town after classes. Met
eation in Pennsylvania. Typical groups
Donuts down there. I guess she thought
of early settlers, such as the MennonI fell through. I didn't know she had
ites, the Quakers, the Amisli, and their
been waiting so long, but she lived
contributions to educational progress in
through it.
this state will be investigated; also
The movies were cute. Every one the growth and development of the priseems to have enjoyed them.
vate academy, etc.
Kus went this evening. We won't
see her until Sunday night. That's a
The Moron Club
long wait. She's anxious to get there.
This week we admit to the secret mysSATURDAY, FEBRUARY 5
teries of the Moroiiies, the Altoona girl
Two classes on Saturday, last semes- who argued that, with the students using
ter I had only one. They both come all that milk every week, the Normal
the first thing in the morning, so that's
School ought to own its own cow.
one consolation.
Hope that dancing we did in the Gym
class doesn't cripple us. Donuts has been
going around like an old h e n ; every
time she goes up or down stairs you'd
think it was her last act. Didn't get
any mail today. Had two from Totty
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2
Worked like everything today. My yesterday.
She's getting good.
mother wouldn't recognize me the way
Was down town and I had a circus.
I've been rushing around. She would
think there was something the matter. This crowd is crazy, or the next thing
It's just wonderful out. Like a day in to it. Helped carry a vie baek, nothing
Spring. The sun would have to shine light about it. Not so bad when two
today. The groundhog won't appear carried it. Hurried to get ready for
dinner, when bing, out went our lights!
again.
These people around here fix things at
Walked down town. The easier I the wrong time.
walked the worse my stockings got
Danced iu the Gym. We came over
We practiced "Ilayfoot." I know as
splashed. Some people go and never and were starved. I was so hungry that
much aliout it now as I did when we
get touched. I'm not going out any it wasn't even funny. It was our own
started. We have the test tomorrow.
more.
FRIDAY, JANUARY 21
fault though. We were warned i n the
Another letter from home. This is
afternoon. Wonder what Kus is doing
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3
too much. I didn't think the letter I
Kus was flitting around this morn- tonight.
wrote them would affect them like that.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 6
ing with that perfume. It's enough to
Boys' Basketball game was pretty
waken the dead. The next time she gets
One week of the second semester over.
good. The fellows began fine. They
in our room at 0:30 A. M. she'll know it. That's going fast. I have plenty to do
should have kept the good work up.
We
from
don't
we've
soon.
now. I've camped in the librarj^; thinking about getting a lease on the place.
I t would bo more convenient.
Wrote umptun letters this morning.
I owed every one I guess. Don't any
more. Thank goodness! My arm is almost crippled. I'll be getting writer's
cramp.
Lock Haven's Shopping Center
We invite the Student Body to visit this store with a
feeling of freedom and under no obligation whatever to buy.
We appreciate your patronage and will serve you to the
best of our ability.
HOSIERY, Silk or Cotton—UNDERTHINGS—NECKWEAR
Complete Dry Goods Department
China—Houseware—Gift Department
Rugs—Draperies—Curtains
The Smith & Winter Department Store
Compliments of
•'T5i)t Clinton"
Restaurant-Delicatessen
Table Luxuries
312 Vesper St., Lock Haven
The home of
Hart Schaffner
& Marx
Clothes
HARRY H. WILSON
LINTZ'S
Wearing
Apparel
at
Money Saving
Prices
NORMAL
TIMES
Hosterman
Forward
Bossert
Center
Slierkel
Guard
Ulmer
NORMAL SINKS ALUMNI'S
FIVE IN SLOW GAME
(Continued from Page 1)
to drop them through the rim with frequency, to make good their scoring
chances, for the first time this season
became pleasantly evident, and more
t h a n made up for other lapses.
Tommy Hosterman and Max Bossert
both had their eyes on the basket. Tommy ringing up four baskets, with a foul
point for good luck; and Max caging
three field goals. Bauman, McCloskey,
and Sherkel each dropped one through
from the floor, and Sherkel ran his total
points to five by his foul-shooting. McCloskey's general floor work during the
half game he played was distinctly creditable. Dave Ulmer improves regularly
at his guard position, showing an ability to handle two men in pinches without allowing either to cut in for easy
shots.
The lineup was:
Normal
Alumni
Fosterman
Henry
Forward
Bauman
Dorey
Forward
Bossert
Clark
Center
Sherkel
Eishel
Guard
Ulmer
Vonada
Guard
Substitutions: Normal—McCloskey for
Bauinan, Fredericks for Bossert, Williams for Ulmer, Bohn for Sherkel.
AluniHi—Bittner for Vonada, Vonada
for Eishel, H a n n a for Henry.
Eeferee:
school.
Stewart,
from
the
high
Dickinson Seminary Trounces
Normal
The Normal team, iiiiiiinved in passing but poor in shooting, suffered the
fourth defeat of the season at the hands
of Captain Nye and his Dickinson Sem
boys.
The first quarter was real basketball,
both teams penetrating the other's defense, but the Seminary boys made their
shots and took a safe lead in the latter
part of the quarter. They kept increasing this lead until half time when the
score stood 18-4.
Normal came baek at the beginning of
the second half, making it interesting
for Dickinson bj' scoring 5 points. Bossert was then removed for personals and
Bauman went out with an injury. The
game from then on was decidedly onesided until the end. The flnal score was
49-14.
Hosterman and Sherkel caged the
points for Normal, Tommy making 10
and Sherkel the rest.
Gorit.v to fingers to give the ball greater impetus. I t was from this stringed glove
Austin that the racket developed. The ball was
originally made of cork; t h e n changed
S m n e h a r t to India rubber to which in time a t h i n
flannel covering was added.
Walsh
(Continued in Next Issue)
Guard
Substitutions;
Normal, Bohn, Eeniiinger. Bloomsburg: Macp.ath, Wodus,
Maybe He Had Had a Hard Day
Shusser.
"Conductor! Conductor, will I get a
Heferee: Puterbaugh.
shock if I step on that trolley-rail?"
"Not unless you put your other foot
Dickinson Sem
on
the trollej-wire, madam."
McKay
The lineup:
Lock Haven
Bauman
Forward
Hosterman
A'an Antwerp
School Essentials
Forward
Bossert
Neal
Center
Slierkel
Nye
Guard
Ulmer
Hoheiishelt
Guard
Field goals: Hosterman 4, Sherkel 1,
McKay 7, Shugart 3, Hohenshelt 3, Neal
2, Fryberger 2, Chambers 1. Fouls:
Hosterman 2-3, Sherkel 2-4, Renninger
0-2, Bauman 0-1, Bossert 0-1, McKay
3-4, Shugart 0-1, Van Antwert 1-3, Nye
2-3, Hohenshelt 1-4.
Substitutions: Lock Haven—Renninger, Bohn and Williams. Seminary:
Chambers, Schugart, Fryberger, Humphrey, Lindemuth and Posega.
/ o r Q)
Beomncr<;
liy Dent Jlowser
Tennis—the International Game
"Tennis"—the onlj- sport in the world
which has no national boundaries. America has football and baseball, England
has cricket, Norway and Sweden have
track, and so on down the list. Each
country has its favorite sport or game,
but the one game that is universal to
all is tennis. There are many reasons
for this international popularity, the
most important of wdiich is, the standardization of the game. I t is played in
all parts of the world on the same type
of court, with the same kind of balls
and rackets, and governed by the same
rules and regulations.
Another reason for the popularity of
tennis is that it produces an all around
physical development. In many sports
certain groups of muscles are over-developed—in running the legs receive the
greatest idevelopnient; in roiving tho
arms and shoulders are over-developed
in proportion to the rest of the body.
But tennis brings into play all the muscles of the body. Instead of making the
muscles hard .and stiff, tennis makes
CHARLEY VONADA, EX.'28
them elastic and flexible which gives
Who Helped Alumni Drop Their Game. greater speed and control to the body.
Tennis is popular also because it is
democratic. It is not the rich man's
Bloomsburg Wins Over
game, although the aristocracy enjoy
Lock Haven
playing it as much as any one. Tennis,
The Normal Sehool basketball team unlike most sports, is played only for
was not able to hold Bloomsburg Nor- honors—for titles and occasionally a
mal, January 21. Both teams iilayed cup, never for money.
fast; both teams played well, but the
THE DEVELOPMENT OF TENNIS
third game of the season for Ijock HaTennis
was originally played iu Engven ended 48-8 in Bloomsburg's f.avor.
land in 1874 and was patented in that
The Lock Haven boys carried the ball
as much as Bloomsburg, but shot after country. The court was shaped like an
shot rolled around the rim of tho bas- hour glass and was sixty feet long and
ket and fell off. Good passing, poor thirty feet wide at the base lines. The
net was seven feet high at the ends and
shooting.
four
feet high in the center. In 1877
The flrst half of the game ended with
the court was altered to its present rectNormal behind 23-4.
Bauman and Hosterman shot field angular form a n d the net lowered to
goals, Sherkel and Bohn adding four three feet three inches in the center and
five feet at the posts. In the early
points on fouls.
stages of tennis the ball was struck with
The lineup;
the
hand as in handball; then a glove
Normal
Bloomsburg
was used to protect the palm and in
Bauman
VanBuskirk
time strings were stretched from thumbs
Forward
Curlers
Hot Plates
Irons
Grills
Toasters
Fans
Chafing Dishes
Manicuring Sets
Pen Knives, Shears
Alarm Clocks
Safety Razors, Etc.
We Have Them
Shaffer,
Candor & Hopkins
17 East Main S t r e e t
Normal Students
Welcome
to
G r u g a n ' s Hard>vare
(Class '08)
Electric Heaters, Electric
Curling Irons, Electric
Irons, Alarm Clocks, Pen
Knives, Mops, Polish,
Double Sockets, etc.
H. M. Grugan
45-47 Bellefonte Ave.
Quality
Shoe Repairing' and
Shoe Shining'
J. F. T O R S E L L
BELLEFONTE AVE,
"¥
NORMAL
8
P R E P A R I N G FOR
The preparatioii of the lower life
forms, such as tho birds, and flowers,
for tho winter season, arises from some
great instinct jiassed up through many
generations. In human beings living in
northern elim.ates there is also a similar
iiistiiiet whieh directs them in their preparing activities. When fall approaches
we begin to put away in cellars, pits,
b a r n s .and grainaries life necessities to
tide us over the long winter, until spring
comes.
WINTER
sire to participate. A "huskiii' p a r t y "
may seem too crude and old-fashioned
now.
!M.v father would tell how the corn
would be hauled into the barn, and then
some moon-light night the neighbors
would meet for a general good time.
The men and boys would husk corn
while tho women would visit. It was
every boy's gre.at desire to come across
a rod ear, for that gave him the permission to kiss some p r e t t y girl in the
crowd. After the corn was all husked,
the floor was cleared and one of the
famous barn dances would be enjoj-ed
by all. Perhaps a barrel of sweet cider
would also be tapped. What days those
must have b e e n !
To me, who lived on a farm in Northern Pennsylvania, this was always a
joyous time of year. The efforts I had
seen put forth at planting time now
were realized. Crops were bounteous
and there was an abundance of food
and grain. All that remained for us to
Another crop gathered in about this
do was to store it up for future use.
time was potatoes. I must say, however,
Although the task of preparation for that I never found much enjoyment in
winter is carried through all sunimer, the work of digging "spuds." I rememwith canning, drying, etc., the real stor- ber very vividly the baek breaking hours
ing season does uot begin until the mid- I have spent in picking up potatoes from
dle part of September, wdien the fre- the newly plowed earth. The day seemed
quent frosts make gathering in from as though it would never end; each hour
the outside necessary. Corn cutting geii- seemed like a day. Oh, how glad I was
erall.y comes at this period, usually af- when I heard Mother sound the dinner
ter the first frost, about the middle of horn. But I did enjoy those meals, real
Sejitember. The corn is usually ripe, country meals. I often wonder now, as
and the frost is to our advantage, for I go into a restaurant and get a lunch,
it stops growth, dries the leaves and what a meal like the kind Mother jireJiared would really be worth.
makes it easier to shock.
Early in the morning, in the crisp
September air, with the sun rising over
the eastern hill, sending its warm rays
down u]i(in the frost-covered earth, we
went out with oui cutteis to the lield
of standing corn. The frost several
nights before made it fit for cutting,
for the leaves wi>re dead and dried. The
.stocks fell rapidly before us and were
stacked in huge shocks for further drying in the air. This process of corn
cutting always reminds mc of clearing
a standing forest, such as my father
used to describe. We went into the forest of corn aud made a clearing, stacking the corn logs iiji for further use.
I ahvays enjoyed, as much as anything, picking apples. We always had
to make it a plan to pick orchard fruit
before the lieavy frosts and wind storms
should come. Those big, luscious apples—how wonderful they all looked
piled ill d a t e s and barrels ready for
winti'i- c(iiisiiiii]itioii. It was my work to
pick the fiuit from the lower branches,
as I was not permitted to work on the
ladder. That seemed to be the exclusive right of my father. Often while
he was on a high limb, his bucket would
become full wdien there were only a few
more to jiick. Then, h.aving me stand in
an ojien spot, he would toss the apples
down for me to catch. When they were
nil crated, the.y were taken to the Jiit
where they were covered with blankets
to await sides or consumption. How good
they tasted those winter nights when
the wind was howling outside and the
snow was coming down in sheets.
The clearing of the corn field usually
disclosed many things to our sight. There
were Iniiidreds upon hundreds of golden pumpkins l.ving in the field, and I
visioned them all being made into big,
thick pumpkin jiies. Besides the pumpkins we saw the burrow of the big, fat
ground hog who had so happily dined on
The gaiileu products, such as squashes,
our young clover. Soon he would see the beets, cabbage, and celery, would be
fat to great advantage in keeiiiiig him- gathered in and put into the pit where
self Avanii through the wintei". lie, too,
was picpaiing.
Those da.vs with the frost.v mornings,
warm, vigoratiiig noon-day sun, and
clear, cool afternoons, I shall never forget. 1 can Jiicture them in my mind as
tliough tliey were .vesterday.
I have ofleii lieard my father tell of
the old-fashii)iH'd "iiuskiii' jiarties" which
used to lie held at tlie various farm
houses when the corn was fit for husking, generally two or three weeks after
cutting. Why this form of country
amuscmeiit has jiassed out of practice
is more than I can tell, unless it is because this type of pastime was about
the (iiil.v one that the farmer •and his
faniil.v had the ojiportunity of attending. Now there aro so many things to
take its place, the radio, for instanco^
that the farmers do not have the
TIMES
the even temperature of the earth would
keep them fresh and whole. The grapes,
however, gave us a bit more trouble.
Tho variety we had on the farm were
rather late and generally the frost
would catch them before they were full.v ripe. We took precautions; whenever a cold, clear night came, we covered the vines over with burlap, blankets or anything we eould flnd. I n this
manner we jiroloiiged their growing season several days and gave them plenty
of time to ripen.
At last all the fall work was flnished.
For nearly three months we had been
preparing for winter. We reaped, we
gathered in, we stored. The barn was
liulging its sides witli hay and grain
for the stock. The cellar was fllled with
canned fruit and potatoes. The rafters
of the attic were hung full of seed and
pop corn. In the pit were stacked crates
of apples and vegetables. I'reparedness
had been out watchword.
Bring your Kodak
Films to Us to Develop and Print.
Well, He Who Hesitates
"What's all the noise down the street?"
"Fella turned a corner."
"Yeh?"
"Sure. There wasn't any corner."
Try This on Your Library Partner
"Thinking of me, honey?"
"No; was I laughing?"
The Newest Models
Are Here for Your C h o o s i n g
Velvets, Satins, Patents,
Straps or Plain
KLEWAN'S
SHOE STORE
21 £ . Main St.
Hungry?
Satisfy It With
Good Food
We carry all sizes of
Films and Cameras
and Kodaks in stock.
Hilton & Heffner
Lock Haven's Leading Drug Store
This is the Hunter's
Moon
STEVENSON'S
Sporting Goods Store
has complete equipment
for every hunter, every
fisherman—every player
of every sport.
Are you ready to get the most
enjoyment out of skiing, skating
and hiking over the snowy hills ?
Achenbaeh's
Arbor
Lunches
Candy
Fruit
Served
Ice Cream
Sodas
Susquehanna Avenue
TITUS'
S e r v e D a i n t y L u n c h e s and T a s t y
Sandwiches
Delicious Sundaes made wilh Sheer's
WJtite Deer Ice Cream
Enjoy a noonday luncheon just off
the Campus.
We deliver Ice Cream or Lunches
to Normal Students at 9:45 P. M.
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