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NORMAL TIMES
At
VOLUME 1
Central
State
Normal
LOCK HAVEN, PA., JUNE
School
6,1923
NUMBER 13
1923 Graduates at Gayest
Commencement
y
1923, Hail and Farewell!
Rollicking Alumni Day!
Chuckling
Class Day!
Solemn Commencement
Day, when the tears are too near the
surface for smiles to be entirely certain ! Dad, mother, and all the folks
back to see their boy, their girl, in the
scenes of wdiich they have talked so
much.
Teachers standing about the
halls, trying to pass over wdth a hastily
formed, half hearted jest, the very real
heartache t h a t they feel in themselves
and sense in the senior who has paused
for .a last contact. Mother, father, coming up to miiet some one on the faculty,
half with a desire to see in the flesh one
who has existed only as a naiiie, half in
the hope of hearing something more to
add to the i'.ride in their own graduate,
a. pride that; they cannot entirely conceal, thougli it lies too deep for expression. Seniors a r m in arm, hanging about together, as if trying to postpone the parting.
Sudden unbidden
tears, hastil.v concealed by an averted
head—or by iflight. There is nothing like
Comineucem^'^t Season, in this or any
other great American school.
It was a gre.""',t class, this class of 1923,
a class that canie ver.y close to the hearts
of those who knew them and worked
with them- Classes do have personality,
individi;'.,lity; aud this class was ono in
vvl'-t'se accomiilishments it was easy to
-'take warm pride, one that measured up
to all t h a t a school could ask, scholastically, athletically, humanly—especially
humanly.
And it was fitting that such a class
should have almost perfect Commencement weather. None of the gusty showers or continuous downpours tliat have
marred so many Commencements here!
Instead, steady sunshine, warmth, days
perhaps a trifle too hot, but cool June
nights, with a hardworking moon. From
the night of the Junior Play until the
Commeucement Day exercises were over,
there was not a discordant note, not a
flaw in a well planned and gloriously
executed program of the week.
With the departure of the big delegation that went off on the Fliers on
Tuesda.v afternoon, an unaocustonied
quiet settled down over the big building, a quiet that was rather hard to bear.
It was almost as though Aliiia. Mater,
having kept up her smile until she waved
away the last of her children, had turned
back to her empty home and her heartache. Other chihlren she has, yes; but
fhe eldest have started off to make their
fortunes; their places are empty; they
will not be filled. Their footsteps have
worn griioves in her stair-treads; their
rollicking hands have left marks in tiieir
old rooms, in her halls. A slinky chairarm, a scuff on some varnish that should
{Continued on page 2)
Commencement
Class Day Exercises
Alumni Day Doings
On Tuesda.v niorning a t 10:00 came
the parting of the ways. All the rest
of Commencement Week is pure fun,
but there is no trace of rollicking spirits
anywhere in the poignancy of Comnienccment Da.y. The parting is too
iinmiiient; for the first time it becomes
a tangible thing.
Class da.y exercises were better this
.year, from the standpoint of both spectutors and graduates, than they have
ever been, in recent luemory, at least.
Informality, fun, ease of manner and
cleverness in speech, marked the afternoon program out under the frees of
the west campus.
I t was a solemn audience that filled
the auditorium.
The Commencemeiit
hush was so real that i t could almost
be touched. It did not disappear as
the exercises went on, but grew and
grew. Sylvia Breth did beautifully with
her oration pleading for more kindergartens in Pennsylvania.
Gwendolyn
Glise upheld the reputation she has
made for herself by her effective delivery of an exposition of the purel.y
practical values of art education as it is
now given in the schools. Frederick
Hunter's talk on the worth of the pla,y
siiirit ill school work was interesting
even to the somewhat jaded ears of the
faculty.
Gertrude Harper traced the
growth of the Junior High Sehool movement from its inception to the complaint
of Dr. Eliot, of Harvard, back in 1888,
to its rapid burgeoning in Pennsylvania
af this time, and closed with a strong
appeal that the type of school be further encouraged, because of its unique
suifabilit.y to the educational requireiiients of adolescent bo^-s and girls. The
orchestra played from time to time.
Ernest ,Schrot 'in a speech as short as
it was sincere gave to the school 192.'i's
class meinorial, a standard motion picture niachinc: "And may you have as
much ,id.y in using it as we have had in
giving it to yon," It was almost over.
For the school Mr. Drum accepted
the gift, and then presented tho class
for its diplomas to Williain Keiiier, vice
president of the Board of Trustees, acting in behalf of the Hon. M. B . Rich,
who is ill. Dr, J, A. Foberg, director
of mathemafics in the state department,
delivered the commencement oration,
advising the graduates of the practical
principles iind ethical ideals that they
ought to follow.
The planting of the ivy, with President Frederick Hunter, of the class of
I92.'i, as the speaker, started off the afternoon. An informal band then lead
the graduates, in cap and gown, in a
picturesque parade across fhe campus
to the place of the class day exercises.
Principal W. N. Drum aud Mr. Gage
leading the class. The ivy oration was
given by Mercella Burf; tlie class oration, b.y Fred H u n t e r ; the history, by
Gertrnde Hiirper, the wdll, hy Grace Russell; the prophecy, b.v Gwcndolj-n Glise;
and file presentations, b.v Kay Cawley
and Jean Hahn. The senior mantle was
passed down to the Juniors by President
Hunter, and was received for them by
Helen Dittmar, president of the junior
class.
At 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon t h e
big doings coinmenced to occur fast a n d
furious. The seniors tore open the .afternoon wdth a costume parade that h a d
class. Ted Schreiber led the van, in
Colonial uniform, followed by tho Spirit
of '76, carried off by Steve Bydesky,
Ernie Schrot and Guy Luck, with verisimilitude, eclat, and all that sort of thing.
In the line were also Bill Skelton's Zobo
band and Happy Sissler's Ukelele (Juartet, all setting the time for a weird
crowd of marchers, costumed in fhe outfits of all seasons and none, t h a t
stretched along the west campus from
the main entrance to the tennis courts
and half way back again. Following the
seniors came the alumni, who stuck faitlifuU.v despite the senior quickstep until
the line turned into the dormitories for
a jamboree, and who rejoined them when
they came out and paraded over to the
athletic field.
The orchestra struck up, A song, it
matters not what. Then the slow processional, up the aisle, out through the
swinging doors, out the ni.ain hall—^the
last time—an attempt to hold together—then a dash for one's room, to
win back the control which tradition says
must be ours wdien we say the hardest
of words.
After a while, back again. Some of
the good-byes are said; many more are
just handgrips, more eloquent than the
words that stick in tho throat. Then
the trolley; the t r a i n ; the hills of Loek
Hiiven fading, blurred; home.
(Continued on pag:e 2)
The spirit and finish of the day's program caused Mr. Drum to sa.v that he
had never .^een at C. S. N. S, a class day
performance that approached this iu
qualify, and thiit he recollected none as
good iin.vwhere else.
Giving Kindergarten Publicity
There is ju.sf one kindergarten iu Lock
Haven, and flint is t h e only one in a
radius of thirfj- miles. At the last
nieeting of the International Kindergarten Union, wdiich Miss Hinies attended as the represent.itive of this
school, the tremendous strides that the
kindergarten movement has recently
made fired all delegates wdth enthusiasm,
and caused a desire to spread the idea
from now on wdth almost a missionary
spirit.
Miss Hinies and Mr. McDougall arc
undertaking fo spread local interest in
kindergarten work, so as to innltiply
the number of children who are receiving the undoubted tremendous benefits
of well managed kindergartens. Through
pulilicity work, convcrsiitions, posters,
nnd personal letters they aud their committee, niiide up of group I students,
they hope to promote kindergarten activity in as m.'iny schools as can be
reached.
The sunimer session kindergarten, to
be operated in connection with this summer session, is benefitting particularly
by this publicity campaign; it will in
its turn be an active agent in creating
interest in new communities in kindergartens and kindergarten ways.
Dr. David W. Thomas, '00, iiumediatel.y
turned loose a prograiu of stunts into
which, despite the heat of the afternoon, alumni of all cliisses entered like
the good sports for which C. S. N. S.
has been noted. Newspaper races were
won by Mrs. Hazel Shannon Thompson,
'0.'!, Dr. W. P. Comely, '01, and R. Bruce
Stover, '17. Cracker-eating contests were
carried off b.v Principal W. N. Drum and
Homer Grattius, '98. The treat of the
afternoon, however, was the indoor baseball game, wdiich the senior boys had
their hands full in wdniiiug from an
nlumni team of wdiich fifty per cent used
to live in the east dormitory, the final
tally being 7-0,
Prof. All, of the Music department,
called the sharps and flats. Some of his
decisions were rather sour, but t h a t
was due, naturall.v, to the failure of
the managers to iirovide him with a
certified pitclipipc. Prof. Ulmer furnished the fielding feature of the afternoon; disguised as a senior, he handled
every ball that came into right field perfectly. None came there. Ted Schreiber's earnest efforts at third base were
so energetic that he was moved to second,
where he had fewer chances to jilay
hopscotch with the ball, and where first
base was in firing distance. Con Cornely's pitching, for the alumni, had
much of the snap t h a t used to characterize i t back in '01, when Normal used to
have some real ball teams. Had he been
provided wdth something smaller th.an
the sperical beanbag wdth which indoor
baseball is played, his fielders might
have had less to do—^for which t h e y
would have been grateful. Smiles Balfour's home run was tho longest hit
of the game! it traveled all around the
field, info the coal pile back of the
(Continued on pagre 2)
NORMAL
Alumni Day Doings
(Continued from pagre 1)
heating plant, and up on the railroad
track back of third, before it caught up
to him—and then he was sitting down.
Mrs. "Bill" Shannon Thompson's speed
on the base paths brought cheers from
the scorekeeper and others. Mrs. Lib
Eaub's work in right field was notabl.y
peaceful, wdiile over in left Mrs. Lue.y
Miller cavorted like another T.y Cobb;
she eould field and she could throw.
The game lasted two innings onl.y, but
those two innings contained as much
action and perspiration as any big
league full strength contest. If you don't
believe it, ask them who acted aud perswcated.
Runs scored: Alumni, Con Corncl.v, '01,
p, 1; Mrs, Bill Thompsou, 'O.S, 2b, 1;
Chunk Grafius, '98, c, 2; Mrs. Lib Raub,
'03, rf, 1; Smiles Balfour, '0,1, ss, 1 (home
r u n ) ; Mrs. I'earl Staley, '03, cf, 0; Barca
Snyder, '01, l b , 0; Pep Smith, '97, lib, 0;
Mrs. Lucy Miller, '0.1, If, 0.
Seniors: McCarthy, c, 1; Rydesky, p, 2;
Thompson, l b , 1; tSehroiber, 21), 1;
Schrot, ss, 1; Luck, ,1b, 1; Hunter, If, 0;
Skelton, cf, 0; Ulmer, rf, 0,
CLASS OF 1908 PROGRAM
At 4:00 a pleasing program was rendered by the class of '08 on the west
campus. I t included a reading by Mrs.
A. F. Stock, vocal solos b.v Mrs. H. B.
Otway and Mrs. G. T). Mervine, and a
piano solo by Miss Estella R. Wagner.
Dr. Thomas, '06, presided, and gave .an
excellent talk, as did also Dr. M. E. McAllister, '83, of Ridgway. Mrs. P . E.
Kamp, '20, and Miss Mabel E. Kneclit,
'08, acted as accompunists for the soloists and fur the communit.y singing,
wdiich was led b.v Miss Mar.v M. Shaw,
of the facult.v.
THE ALUMNI BANQUET
The largest alumni attendance in
many years enjoyed the alumni banquet
on Saturday evening. Nearly two hundred newly made or more accustomed
alumni sat around the tables in the dining room, decorated for the occasion
with green branches and pink carnations, their colors standing out against
the white trelliswork that carried them.
Three unusual talks featured the toast
list. Principal W. N. Drum defended
vigorously the management of this school
against the charge of extravagance implied in the King report on normal
schools. He said that it was well understood among the members of the commission headed by King that a comparison of figures at this time could not
be an.vthing but unfair, because all the
normal schools had passed under state
control so recently that those wdiich had
been very badly run down a t the time
the .state took control are still laboring under the neces.sity of spending
much mone.v in putting the pli.vsical
plant of the schools into decent shape.
Those schools wdiich had been prosperous
before state control showed to better
advantage than those which had been
unable, under former fln.ancial conditions, to keep up with repairs.
Certain items in wdiich Lock Haven
led the rest of the state Mr. Drum offered no apologj' for. He said that so
long as it could bo done, he proposed
to keep on offering to the students that
attend this school the best paid faculty,
the best living facilities, and the best
dining room nieiiu in the stiite. He criticized the King report principiill.y in
that it did not attempt to discover wliiit
each iKirmtil scliool got for the mone.v
if spent; hence if fell short wdien if atfenipted to indicate or imply injudicious
expenditures, in that it had not really
studied the expenditures at all.
Dr. Charles Davis, '83, superintendent
of schools in Steelton, opened the eyes
of nian.v of the alumni to the big differences iu purpose, methods, and aims
of instruction in the normal schools of
toda.y and formerly. The normal schools
of Peniis.vlvania have become reasonably
efficient professional schools for the first
time in this state, he said; and the practical proof of their efficiene,y is tluit
school superintendents of schools now
go fo the normal schools frying to secure their graduates, whereas not long
back fhe norinal graduate was barred
from many school systems by Board of
Education rules until she could prove
b.y several years of teaeliing that she
was of some use as a teacher.
Dr. Davis then launched into an explanation of the offer of reappointment
made by Governor Pinchot to Dr. Fiuegaii, declared its terms humiliating and
incomprehensible, and urged the passage
of a resolution requesting that Dr. Finegan be reappointed inimediatel.v.
Dr. Davis' resolution was vigorously
discussed, and passed the alumni association with but two dissenting votes.
It was forwarded to fhe Governor immediately. (Subsequent events indicate that
the Governor is independent in his
thinking—so far as the men and women
vifall.y interested in the schoiils are concerned.)
The third feature of the program of
toasts was the reading of a clever poem,
written for the occasion by Williiim J.
Weaver, '80, of Mill Hall, and full ot
local allusions.
Other speakers were Mrs. E. E. Adams,
'83; Fred Balfour, '03; John S. Walkey,
'08; Mrs. Edward Livingston, '13; and
Miss Eniil3' Brown, of the graduating
class.
THE ALUMNI DANCE
Immediately following the banquet,
the alumni dance began in the gymnasium, wdiich had been beaufifull.y decorated ill green and white. About 12i)
cduples made good use of the program
(if seventeen dances, while many more
gathered around the edge of the floor
to reminisce and to enjoy Dr. Tliomiis'
concoction of punch. The L.yric Orchestra furnished the music here as well as
at the banquet.
ELECTION OF OFFICERS
All former officers of the iiluiuni association were re-elected by acclamation.
Dr. Thomas wdll servo another terra as
president; J. S. Cranmer, '82, of Williamsport, vice president; Miss Helen
Harper, '02, of Bellefonte, second vice
president; Miss Edna D. Rich, '06, of Lock
Haven, secretary; George A. Mincemoyer,
Mechanicsburg, treasurer. The Executive
Committee will .agiiin consist of Hon.
Ives L. Harvey, '98, Bellefonte; I. T.
Parsons, '97, Lock Haven; Mrs. Christine
E. Riehens, '05, Lock Haven; Mrs. G. D.
Mervine, 'OS, Lock Haven; Williain P .
Cornely, '01, Madera; and J. Buell Snyder, '01, of Perryopolis.
TIMES
Commencement
1923, Hail and Farewell!
(Continued from pagre 1)
Gradually the ache fades, 1923. Time
is kind. But so was Alma Muter, 1923.
Your feet and hands these years have
worn theinselves into her structure and
into her heart. She cannot now leave
y o u ; ever, wherever and however you
stand or fall from now on, she stands
there or falls with you. Nor can you
leave her. Every old school is hallowed
with memories of the boys and girls who
roughened its stnirfreads and scarred all
its newnesses. You can never grow up
awa.v from old C. S. N. S. Some day,
when yon arc tired of all the dignity
that ma.v be thrust upon you, slip away;
slip back to the old normal; feel yourself, nlmost as you enter her doors, shedding the years that will elapse, and becoming again just what you were when
you played and worked and were
obedient or disobedient as the spirt
moved .vou, or you moved your spirit,
back in the days wdien we first learned
to love you more than a little. Goodbye, 1923; good luck; may every school
bell make you think again of Alma
Mater!
(Continued from pagre f)
have been new, a tree they planted, a
gift they gave, a little ivy struggling up
il wall, to show that they had been here.
It is these that give the touch of saintliness that clings to old schools; i t is
such tokens thiif are fhe proud gray
hairs and workworn fingers, hairs turned
gra.y and fingers worn iu loving service,
of Alma Mater.
She would not have you back again,
1923. She is as proud of you and as certain of .your success as you can ever be.
She wants you to staid out, to struggle,
to win if you can, and to fiiil if you
must, if you but fail trying. She wants
.you fo go, for your sake. If she grieves,
it is just because these old days have
been sweet to think upon. Go out smiling, 1923. Goodbye; conu back soon.
Junior Class Colors
/
The junior class held a meeting in the
chiipel on Tuesday, May 8, for the purpose of selecting class colors. Green
and wdiite were the colors approved by
fhe niiijorit,v vote, from a list of several combiniitions submitted by the color
committee.
The Best of Luck to You, 1923
Agnew, Esther, Mill Hall
Armour, Beatrice, Jeanette
Anderson, Lelia, Clearfleld
Ash, Edith, Mill Hall
Barefoot, Edythe, Alum Bank
Be.as, Florence, Johnstown
Betteus, Gladys, Flemington
Bretll, Sylvia, Clearfield
Brown, Emil.v, Betula
Brumbaugh, Ethel, Altoona
Brungard, Mildred, Lock Haven
Burt, Marcella, Eoulette
Campbell, Catherine, Loek Haven
Carlson, Esther, Kersey
Cawdey, Catherine, Scranton
Crider, Ethel, Lock Haven
Chapel, Ina, Austin
Chapel, Inez, Austin
Cooper, Catherine, Loganton
Coyle, Elsie, Johnstown
Custer, Lydia, .lohnstown
Decker, Miriam, Montgomery
Delevett, Edna, Bellwood
Dice, Martha, Newberry
Doerr, Eleanor, Loganton
Donovan, Ruth, Jerse3' Shore
Fickes, Mildred, Altoona
Fritz, Evelyn, McElhiiftan
Funk, Loretta, Falls Creek
Furst, Elsie, Mackeyville
Gallagher, Rosella, Renovo
Gates, Elizabeth, Renovo
Glise, Gweldolyn M., Lock Haven
Green, May, Utahville
Hafner, Estella, Woolrich
Hahn, Janefta, Altoona
Harper, Gertrude, Irvona
Holly, Christine, Ceres, N. Y.
Hoover, Graee, Kylertown
Howard, Augusta, Altoona
Hunter, Frederick, Beech Creek
Ingalsby, Willma, Bradford
Ishler, Grace, Center Hall
Johnson, Hazel, North Bend
.lohnson, Nellie, Laurelton
Kennedy, Anne, Scranton
Kessinger, Dorothea, Mill Hall
Kinney, Helen, Bodine
Kintner, Louise, Mill Hall
Leathers, Hilda, Howard
Lee, Ethylene, Irvona
Liddle, Hester, Williamsport
List, Amelia, Irvona
Lord, Bernice, Emporium
Luck, Guy, Benfer
McDonald, Dawson, Hout zdale
ifaiitle, Helen, Jersey Shore
Marcy, Walter, Monroeton
May, Helen, Westport
7\IcCarty, Warren, Sprotki
McCliutick, Caroline, Salona
McClintock, Estella, M ill Hall
McLean, Mary, Mill H^r'1
Mechtley, Ivan, Tylersvilfe
Miller, Glenn, Lamar
Miller, Margaret, Williamsport.
Moran, Marie, Genesee
Morrall, Ruth, Northumberland
Mowrer, Mary, Watsontown
Neve], Edna B., Lock Haven
Newcomer, Zelma, Williamsport
O'Shea, Grace, Irvona
Parsons, Helen, Lock Haven
Peters, Amy, Clearfleld
Pletcher, Flora, Howard
Powers, Mary, Mill Hall
Purvis, Dorothy, So. Williamsport
Richardson, Louise, Loretto
Ricker, Genevieve, Salona
Ricker, Viola, Lock Haven
Robb, Eleanor, Altoona
Russell, Grace, Genesee
R.vdesk.y, Bridget, Austin
R.vdesk.y, Stephen, Austin
Scantlin, Ruth, Blanchard
Sclireiber, Vincent, Kersey
Schrot, Ernest, Clearfleld
Shank, Verna, Orviston
Sissler, Jean, Altoona.
Skelton, William, Philipsburg
Smith, Marie, Smethport
Sn.vder, Thelma, Renovo
Somerville, Christine, Beccaria
Stangel, Catherine, Wilcox
.Strii.yer, Florence, Johnstown
Summers, Lucretia, Philipsburg
Thompson, Clarence, Howard
Thompson, Mary, Altooua
Katherine, Tribley, Clearfield
Wheeland, Cleta, DuBois
Wise, Annie, Williamsport
Zimmerman, Sadie, Nesquehoning
f
NORMAL
NORMAL TIMES
Teacher Training Plan Renewed With City
The outstanding feature of the monthNormal Times is published at Central State
Normal School, Lock Haven, Penna,, by the ly meeting of the Lock Haven Board
Board of Editors of Nornial Times,
The snbscription rate for this year is $1.50, of Education on Tuesday night, June 5,
Address all eonimunieations to Amy Peters, Busi- was the renewal of the agreement enness Mantiifer, C, S, N, S., Lock Haven, I'enna,
Edltor-ln-Clilef
Gertrude Harper
Assistant Editor
Sylvia Breth
Alumni Editor
Louise Richardson
Associate Editors—Esther Agnew, Evelyn Fritz,
Graee Ishler, Bernice Lord, Jean Halm, Mabel
Iloni, Emily Brown, Gladys Bettens, Theodore
Schreiber.
Business Manager
Amy Peters
Associate Managers—Amelia List, Marie Smith,
Neta White, Julia Coffey, Frieda Staiman,
Velma Ridge, Grayce Coppersmith, Ina Chapel,
Ruth Malone, Catherine Cooper, Louise Kintner,
Marie Moran, Guy Luck,
Faculty Manager
T, W, Trembath
/
/
J U N E 6, 1923
A Word for Your Private Ear
Normal Times has labored through its
first year. It has been .a good paper;
you know it has. I t has covered everything, important and unimportant, and
played it up iu good, breezy fashion, so
that every friend of this school has been
able to get something more than just
all the news—they have been able to get
the inside spirit, the "feel" of the
school.
Y'ou seniors who have just gotten
away from us, you know that this has
been no easy matter. You know how
much hard labor has gone in to doing
this. You know what our ambitions
have been—and will be. You know how
much we hope Normal Times will mean
to the school. You know now, just
as you knew on C o m m e n c e m e n t
Day, how much the school means to
you. Don't let Normal Times fall down
for lack of your support. Don't let
the school fall away from you. Borri'W,
if you have to, the last sum you may
ever have to borrow, from the folks, and
send your subscription in to me now.
Don't postpone doing i t ; if you put it
oflf until next pay day, sad experience
says that the chances are ten to one you
will never send it in. If you can't get
the money, drop me a card anyhow, telling me to send the paper and where to
send it. I've trusted you before; guess
I can do it again.
You alumni, whom I may not know so
well, and with wdiom I cannot be so famiUar: Glance a t the alumni column of
this paper.
Then glance over the
news—listen: wdiat do you come back
to reunions for?
Isn't it to hear
about the folks in your own class
first of all'.' And, next, to get the latest
news about old Central State and how
she is weathering along? Normal Times
wdll bring just that right to your door
ever.y other week all through the year.
Obey that impulse!
Normal Times will iippear lo times
next .year, starting the first week in
October. Send me $1,50, and you can
hold all fifteen of those reunions wdthout leaving home. It wdll also appear
four times during the sumnier session.
Add 25 cents to the other rate, and we
wdll start you with the first issue.
Do it now!
T. W. TREMBATH,
C. S. N. S.
Sylvia Breth and Blanche Smith gave
readings iu chapel on May 30, the Gettysburg address. In Flanders Field, and
Memorial Da.v being their selections of
suitable material.
TIMES
The Junior Play
A comfortably filled house greeted the
junior players in their finished production of "A Single Man," the first event
of the Commencement Week. The comedy situations wore cleverly brouglit out,
with a finish in action which speaks
well for some treats during 192-1. The
lure of the vamp wdio fries and cannot
catch the aft'ectious of the desirable
bachelor around whom the play centers; the baby ways of fhe precocious
sub-deb wdio does without t r y i n g ; the
quiet dignity of the faithful secretary,
who conceals her own affection, until
she finds it returned; all were done
with a smoothness that the plot hiirdl.v
warranted.
Albert Eberl.y, as Robin
Worthington, the much sought bachelor,
was excellent, and made as much of liis
characterization as ,Iulia Coffej- made of
hers. Her "straight" acting came close
to tlie professional; there is talent in
this young person. Lucille Burnham
was a perfectly natural toniboy-growiiigup; and Alice Ryan brought down the
house at times with her energetic comedy vamping.
In the lesser parts, Sall.v Hann.a as
Robin's sister-in-law gave a creditable
performance; and Carl Hayes entered
into his role wdth more sincerity than
perhaps any member of the cast. Isabella Wabsdii, as Lady Cottrell, Victor
Hauey as Dickie Cottrell, Edythe Morrall as Bertha Sims, Ruth Kangsford as
Robin's housekeeper, and Ann Peters as
the iMrlor-miide, rounded out a capable
cast.
tered into by the Lock Haven school
authorities and the normal school, whereb.V members of the senior class in the
normal school may receive practice
teaching training in the public schools
of the city. There was no alteration in
the plan followed last year.
Dr. Benson, superintendent of the
schools of Lock Haven, had earnestly dosired that tho compensation paid to the
training teachers by the normal school
should be increased, so that these teachers nught be able to take summer fraining courses, improving themselves as
teacliers, a n d , particularly as training
teachers. His request had much to commend i t ; if would have brought about a
highly desiralile situation from all
angles; but in view of the present situation financially in the state it was impossible for the normal school to offer
more than it had offered last year. Mr.
Drum and Mr. McDougall did offer to
the city the services of the measurements
courses in the norinal school, so that
without expense to the city other than
the cost of materials an exhaustive survey of the intelligence might be made. Such a survey would
involve, should the city have to undertake it independently, an outlay of not
less than five thousand dollars. This
offer was not accepted at this meeting,
but is under Dr. Benson's adviseinenf.
Senior.s Finding Schools
Ifs acceptance or rejection will not now
Through the aid of fhe C. S. N. S,
iiffecf the teiicher fraining that this Placement Bureau, luaiiy of the graduschool can now offer to all who enroll. ates of this year's class have alread.y
It is a matter for hearty self-con- been placed in schools. In fhe rush of
gratulation t h a t the very cordial rela- the Commencement season jt has been
tionship between the two school systems impossible f i interview more than a
ill this city is to be continued. The nor- fraction of the class, but the results
mal school interests could ask nothing indicated thtit the high standard of work
better from the city school superintend- insisted on at this school is wduning the
ent, school board, and teachers, than fhe confidence of school superintendents.
The following have made definife confriendliness and effectiveness of fhe cotracts :
operation during 1922-23.
Lucretia Summers, Camden, N. J.;
Amy Peters, Sylvia Breth, Leila AnTwelve Honor Teachers
derson, Clearfield; Eleanor Robb, State
Cenfral State Normiil is proud of
('ollege; Ruth Scantlin, Blanchard;
twelve teachers, "who have shown special
Elizabeth Gates, Marcella Burt, Hazel
aptitude iu the handling of chililren
.lohnson. Emporium; Eth.vleue Lee,
and subject matter, to whom have been
Amelia List, Irvona; I n a Chapel, Inez
iiwarded honors in teaching for the secChapel, Austin; Grace Ishler, Grace
ond semester of this year.
Hoover, Tyrone; Mary Thompson, J e a n
In group I the honors went to Anne Sissler, .Tanetta Hahn, Mildred Fickes,
Kenned.v, Scranton; Jean Sissler, Al- Gertrude Harper, Gwendolyn Glise, Altoona; Lucretia Summers, Philipsburg; tooua ; Mar.v Mowrer, Watsontown;
and Bridget Rydesky, Austin.
Bridget Rydesky, Marie Moran, Russell
Ill the intermediate group they were City; Mary McLean, Mary Powers, Mill
awarded to Gwendolyn Glise, Lock Hall; Stephen Rydesky, Weedville; WilHnveu; Inn Chapel and Inez Chapel, liam Skelton, Clearfleld; Nellie .lohnAustin, aud Edith Ashe, Mill Hall.
son, Laurelton ; Catherine Cooper, LogniiThe .lunior High honors were carried fou; Edith Ashe, Ethel Crider, Hilda
off b.v May Green, Utahville; Gertrude Leathers, Genevieve Eieker, Esther HafHarper, Irvona; Glenn Miller, Lamar, ner, Bellefon+e; Florence Beas, Florence
and Fred Hunter, Beech Creek.
Stra.yer, Johnstown; Martha Dice, Zelma
Newcomer, Williamsport; May Green,
The seventh and eighth grade pupils Roseland; Loretta Funk, Daguseahonda;
from, the training sehool gave a dram- Edith Morrall, Northumberland; Grace
atization of Hawthorne's tale of Feather- O'Shea, Pittsburgh; Christine Summertop, in the chapel period on Friday ville, Beccaria; Ivan Mechtly, Blaine
morning, Ma.y 25. Maria Reish, Merrill City,
Grimm, Charlotte Hanna, Thelma Zeigler, Blanche Smith, Kenneth Eberhart,
Eiiiil.y Brown read Guest's poem. ToFloyd Harmon, Georgia Hursh and Hilda morrow, at Vespers, May 29, Alice Kunes
Croak were in t h e cast.
played Souvenir. Hazel Johnson led.
Normal Times Staff Work
to Be Easier
The Normal Times staff next year will
not have to work under the difficulties
that have hampered this year's staff.
Mr. Drum lias consented to fit up a room
so that the work of handling the papers,
f.vpiug fhe material, etc., may be accomplished without all the delay that
has been unavoidable this year. Typewriters, filing boxes, tables, etc., will be
provided, so that the papers need be
handled once only iu the process of
turning copy into t.vped form for the
printer. Mr. Treinbath says t h a t this
will make it possible for the 192-1 staff
to be in control of the process from
start to finish. This year's staff exclaims, in heartfelt chorus, "Pretty soft!"
Baccalaureate Sermon
Rev. William E. Harr, pastor of the
First Reformed Church, delivered au inspiring message to the inembers of the
graduating class in the presence of an
as.seinbl3- ot reliitiyes and friends that
filled the auditorium. He pleaded for
worship, prayer, brotherhood, ideals,
and service in the spiidts of the graduates, aud particularly for that larger
brotherhood that will nipe out all differences of race, caste, creed, or class
iu unselfish service. Rev. Edward Crumbling delivered the benediction.
Girls' Council Members Chosen
Due fd Mary Hile's decision not to return until the second term next year,
the Junior girls at their meeting on
Ma.v 23, faced the necessity of choosing
two members to act wdth Alice Wieseu
as the senior representatives ou the student council next year. Blan.die Smith
and Grayce Coppersmith were fhe final
selections, after close balloting. They
were chosen from the list of all students
having an average grade of 2 or better
for their junior year.
Preceding the election Mr. Drum spoke
of fhe value of student government to
fhe scliool, and of the many privileges
which student councils had wou for the
girls that previous normal school generations had not enjoyed. Mary Mowrer
and Martha Dice, graduating members
of this year's council, also spoke, telling of wdiat help membership on the
council and the exiicriences that go with
it had been to them.
Alice Wieseu wdll be president of the
new council, Blanche Smith vice president, and Grayce Copiiersniith secretary.
Coming Scrubs Observe
Teaching
The junior chiss met with Mr. McDougall, director of the training school,
on Tuesday, May 15, to get their teaching assignmeufs for next fall. The assignments are being made much earlier
this year than has been the custom.
Tliere has been heretofore too much of
a break at the beginning of the fall
term. It has taken the new scrub faculty several weeks to get themselves adjusted, find out how the training teachers wdsh their classes to be handled, etc.
This year each student assigned for
teaching in the fall will have ample opportunity to observe the work of the
class in wdiich she is to teach, thus making the transition from junior student
to senior teacher easier both for the
pupils and for the training teachers.
NORMAL
TIMES
Annual Junior Prom
Drawls Crowd to
Gym—Some Time!
The iinnual Junior Prom was held in
the "gj'in" on Saturday evening. May
19. The junior class did themselves
proud iu providing a royal good time
for all of its guests.
The receiving line was exceptional,
headed by Mr. Drum, and ending wdth
Miss Yale and Mr, High—but oh, those
.lunior go-betweens! Miller's Serenaders
furnished the music for tho dancing,
and surpassed themselves.
Punch, wdth an unusual kick (don't
misunderstand us) was one of the most
popular features of the evening. Worn
out by all the attentions it received, it
ran out before the evening was half
over.
The headlights of the decorations
would have furnished excellent material
for a moonlight waltz, had there been
occasion for one.
Guests were present from State College, Bucknell, and all the surrounding
places, whence guests can usuall.y be
obtaineil. Rah, rah. State! Only thirtynine were able to come over for the affair, due to the number of similar fetes
in progress over there that night; but
they were a select lot, say those who
selected—and distributed—them.
Anyway, there never was a man like
my man! On wdth the danee—Root a
toot, toot, Bing! Bang!
Tlie committees in charge were:
Refreshments—^Mary
Hile,
Lucille
Burnham, Be Music—Ruth Langsford, Jo Sweeny,
Marion Wilson, Alice Kunes, Julia Coffey.
Decorations—Cleouii Coppersmith, Victor Haney, Carl Hayes, Catherine Devereux, Edith Burgeson.
Cloak — Caroline
Mallison,
Naomi
Simar, Mildred Ericson.
Y. W. Senior Farewell
The Senior Farewell exercises of the
Y. W. C. A. were held on Wednesday
evening. May 30, with Gertrude Harper
in charge. The usual devotional exercises were held, after which each senior
told what Y. W. had meant to her during her days a t C. S. N. S. The meeting
closed with the forming of the friendship circle and the singing of fitting
hymns. It was hard to sing with the
lump in one's throat.
The seniors held a classmeetiug on
Ma.v 14 to make final selection of a
senior memorial.
The Graphoscope
Junior motion picture camera was the
almost uniinimous selection. Now we
hope that wc can keep i t busy.
The Dramatic Club held a picnic in tlie
boys' glen on May 22, combining a
howling good time, eats, and the initiation into membership of Lucile Burnham, Neta White, Julia Coffey, Sara
Hanna, Marie Crain, Helen Buffington,
Alice Ryan, Mar.v Hile, Edythe Morrall,
Carl Hiiyes, and Victor Haney. Everything was successful except Marey's coffee.
The Naturalist's Club lias unanimously
cho.sen twelve new members, wdio were
initiated May 25,
The delectable
dozen are Ruth Summersgill, Margaret Larkin, Helen Thall, Naomi Simar,
Helen Nace, Ann.a Mao Landis, Beatrice
VanZandt, Blanche Smith, Hetty Staver,
Florence Smith, Caroline Mallison and
Amy Bilker,
The seniors have been holding daily
class meetings to prepare for the music
of Commencement and Class Da.v.
Two members of the Y. W. will go to
Eagles Mere as representatives of this
scliool during the week of June 19. They
arc Blanche Smith and Beatrice Van
Zandt.
A deiiion.stratidii of the moving picture
miicliiiie that the seniors are presenting
to the school as their griiduiifion ineniorial was given to the seniors iu the
liiborator.v of the training school on
May 1-1, I t was this demonstration that
convinced the seniors that they could
make no more fitting gift. The school
heartily agrees. Three cheers for 1923.
Wednesday, May 10, was the birthday
of two members of the faculty. Miss
Vale and Miss Himes. Miss Yale received a flower and postcard shower
from students who appreciate what she
has done for them. The Arts Club presented her with a box of cand.v. The
junior and senior members of group one
presented Miss Himes with a be.autiful
bouquet in appreciation of the great
help she has been to them.
Quite a few nienibers of the scrub
faculty have said good-by to lesson pliius
and will renew their acquaintance with
the first semester's work, interrupted for
them early last January.
Miss Butler gave C. S. N. S. a g r e a t
surprise when she drove up to the door
in her new car instead of arriving via
the trolley. The students are all willing to be properly gratful if she will
The old infirmarj- is no more. The let them try out the riding quaUties of
rear room has been fitted up with com- her sporty new Maxwell.
fortably upholstered chairs, a reading
The Naturalist Club planted a young
table, and all other conveniences as a beech tree on the campus a t 6 o'clock
rest room for the Normal School faculty; iu the morning on May 2. Who says
wdiile fhe front room has been equipped that the organization is not wide awake?
as an office for Miss Florence Love, the
A new yictroha has been placed iu the
new dietician.
auditorium.
The 9:20 a r t class is rejoicing that
The girls of the Naturalist Club raided
110 more lesson plans have to be written Woolworths on Saturday, May 16, for
this term. The students cannot quite ten-cent straw hats, in whieh tn go hikunderstand such an abrupt ending to ing over to the reservoirs back of Castheir round of pleasure, unless the book tanea. Many of the club are unlikely
room has run out of supplies; surely ever to forget the t r i p ; they were inMiss Yale is still bountifully supplied duced to sample the roots of the JackMr, Drum, Mr, High and Fred Hunter wdth ideas.
in-the-pulpit.
motored fo Windber recently, wdiere Mr.
Innovations continue to be made in
The moving picture machine, which the
Drum delivered the commencement ad- the dining room since the arrival of Miss
senior class has presented to the school
dress.
Love. There is a greater variety of as its class memorial, was given a thorCommencement addresses were given eats, and these are seasoned just right— oui;h tryout on Monday niglit. May 28,
by Mr. Trembath at Hazlehurst, McKean as Mary Mowrer said, "Nearly a s well wdien five reels of Mr. and Mrs. Johnas I could do." Moreover, on Sunday son's hunting adventures in Borneo were
County, and Benezette, Elk County.
The students of Mr. McDougall's there are fiowers on the table, apple shown in the auditorium to the entire
school efficiency classes had the jileasure blossoms, lilacs, etc.; and an early ar- student body. It somehow did not seem
of going to the exhibitions of school rival on the table was strawberry short- like C. S. N. S. to sit there and be
work in the public school buildings of cake. All we can say is, we like living watching movies affer 9 o'clock at night.
Loek Haven on May 29. There was much on Love.
It does the juniors a lot of good to sit
work on exhibition that was t r u l y reVesper services on May 20 were con- back and anticipate getting the most
markable. The exhibitions surely gave ducted by Emily Brown. They con- out of that ra,achine next year. If the
evidence of the peak of efficiency that sisted entirely of singing.
idea of a meinorial is to keep memories
has been attained by the local schools
alive pleasantly, the seniors have surely
The boys' dormitory was almost deunder Dr. Benson.
hit the nail on the head in their choice.
serted on May 12 and 13, when most of
The senior members of the students' the boys, with Mr. High, went on a
Miss Rowe and the student teachers
councils, accompanied by Mr. Drum, fishing and camping trip to Stevenson's in the intermediate group gave the pupils
Miss Yale, Mr. Sullivan and Mr. Martz camp, a few miles northwest of Renovo. of the fourth and fifth gr.ades a picnic in
were served a chicken dinner at the Nit- The boys went by train to Whetham, the normal glen on Thursday afternoon,
faii,y I n n on Thursday evening. May 31. and hiked from there to the camp, a May 31. The pupils of the sixth grade
The councils' members are Mary Mowrer, distance of fourteen miles. Naturally, were out picnicking with Miss Hagan and
Martha Dice, Mildred Fickes, Stephen they enjoyed the trip, but they are say- the teachers of that grade the following
ing very little about the weather.
Rydesky, Guy Luck and Ivan Mechtly.
afternoon.
The Dramatic Club at its last meeting
elected the followdng to office for next
.vear: Sara Hanna, president; Isabel
Watson, vice president; Edith Morrall,
sccrefar.v-frcasurer,
GRADUATES (
i
NORMAL
Banquets, Picnics,
Etc., Eases Parting With 1923
SHAKE'S PICNIC
The main thing ,at Shakespeare's picnic was the good time idea; and with
all the weiuers, the browned marshmallows, bananas, peanuts, coffee, cake,
pickles of all nationalities, etc., and the
gaines and races a good time was the
one thing that everyone had nothing
else but, to quote Mr. O. Roy Cohen,
the negro interpreter.
At the business session, Cleona Coppersmith was elected president for next
semester; Edith Burgeson, vice president ; Catherine Deveraux, secretary;
Naomi Simar, treasurer; Beatrice Van
Zandt, editor of As You Like I t ; Caroline Mallison, monitor; and Veronica
Cuneo, pianist.
BITTERSWEETS BANQUET
The members of the Beta Sigma Chi
sororit.y held a reunion banquet at the
New Fallon House on the evening of
May 26. Emily Brown and Ruth Langsford entertained the Bittersweets with
several readings, and Miss Shaw accompanied Marie Crain while Marie rendered several of her favorites.
The guests were: Kay Cawley, Jean
Hahn, Mary Thompson, Anne Kennedy,
Emily Brown, Helen Kinney, Jean Sissler, Marie Crain, Frances Cook, Marian
Wilson, Julia Coffey, Neta White, Ruth
Langsford, Alice Ryan, Ann Peters, Lucille Burnham, Joanna Sweeney; Miss
.lessica Aver.v, Miss Mary Shaw, Miss
Gisetta Yale, of the faculty; Florence
Holmberg, '21, and Mary Sherman, of
Norristown; Sara Petermiiu and Eleanor
Troutman, both of '21; and Marian
Buehler, '22.
R. O. L.'S GO ON PICNIC
The Rho Omega Lambda sorority gave
their seniors a farewell sendoff at a
picnic on the old Normal school
grounds, up on the hill back of the
present school. Miss Shaw, Miss Groff,
Miss Raffle and Mrs. Gage, all honorary
members, were among those present,
those "among whom they were among
which" being the entire senior and
junior membership of the sorority. Special unmcntioned features of the afternoon were the endurance
contest,
staged by Hilda Leathers and Leila Anderson, who carried fhe lemonade between them for a mile up the boys' glen
•lES O F 1923
TIMES
and ton miles back; and Betty Gates
Pageant by SS Class
exhibition of leap-frogging, even though
No, sister, that headline does not indishe did sit on Sal's neck and dislocate cate Sunday School Cla.ss, it represents,
her disposition.
for headline purposes, Mr. Sullivan's Social Studies Class, and believe me, Al,
ALPHA SIGMA TAU RISE EARLY
that is no Sundii.y School picnic.
The girls of the Alpha Sigma Tau
That class staged a "Pageant of Ansorority put themselves in the place of
Prehistoric Man on Tuesday morning. cient Civilization" in chapel on TuesMay 24, wdien they left the Normal at day, May 29. The pageant was written
5:30 in the morning, to wander out and staged b.y a hhstory class in the
into the woods for their breakfa.st. Ex- Eureka High School, in California.
perience quicki,y taught luckless ones
The bill of f a r e :
that thin twigs might be easy to cut, but Mother of Civiliz.ation, ,Margaret Larkin
that they usually failed to hold the Spirit of 1923
Mary Hile
sandwich meat just at the point when Herald
Veronica Cuneo
it was well roasted; with the use of Pages
Frances Cook and Neta Kelsey
bab.y planks came success and peace. Al- Prehistoric Man
Helen Cherry
most—not quite—all the girls were able Egypt
Catherine Deveraux
to rouse themselves at t h a t unheard of Babylon
Cleona Coppersmith
hour, and turned up a t the cookfires Assyria
Sara Gardner
with healthy appetities and color.
Phoenicia
Isabel Watson
Judea
Caroline Mallison
MISS SHAW DINES GLEE CLUB
Rome
Alice Kunes
"Come on, girls: three cheers for Miss
Persia
Anna Mae Landis
Shaw!"
Greece. .Bertha Burt, I n a Kilmer, Grayce
Having brought the Glee Club to a
Coppersmith.
pitch of perfection that no normal school
glee club has previously reached, Miss
High School Teachers Meet
Shaw topped off a. year of heartily apHere for Annual Conference
preciated efforts by issuing the invitaThe annual conference of the high
tion that brought out the above shout.
On Thursday evening. May 24, she enter- school teachers of Central Pennsylvania
tained the entire club a t a dinner at was held in the Normal School audithe Lock Haven Country Club. The torium ou Friday and Saturday, May
fields, the wondering brook, the chat- 4 and 5. A large number of teachers,
tering of the birds and of the porch- nearly 200, came here from high schools
loads of excited girls, the afternoon of in Lycoming, Center, Clinton, Bradford,
cards or unrestrained visiting and wan- Clearfield, Tioga, Potter and Blair Coundering about, the chicken dinner, the ties.
dancing afterward. Well, we could not
The principal speakers for the conhave forgotten Miss Shaw anyhow, and ference sessions were Dr. Edward Rynow we double couldn't!
nearsou, iirincipal of the Fifth Avenue
In addition to the members of the High School, of Pittsburgh, and Dr,
Glee Club, Miss Shaw entertained Mrs. George 8, Counts, in charge of the work
Calvin Armstrong, Mrs. G. H. Troxell, in secondary education at Yale UniverMrs. Philip Kift, Miss Hazel Kift, Mrs. sity.
Ella Peck, Mrs. Harr,v Sleicher, Miss
On Friday •n'ening, between the speakMuriel Sleicher, Miss Geraldine Lock- ers' addresses, the Normal School Glee
hart, Miss Gisetta Yale, Mrs. W. N. Club sang twice, and was heartily enDrum, Mrs. Philip Kamp, and Miss Lu- cored, as was also the Varsity Quartet,
cille Maillard.
which sang two of its humorous numbers.
The Saturday session of the conferTliere was great excitement wlicn the ence was given over to round table disnames of those receiving, as the result cussion of submitted questions, and to
of this year's work, Zaner Method departmental meetings.
Teachers' Certificates was posted. It is
This appearance of the glee club was
a cause for some congratulations that its first, locally. Its two numbers, "The
fifty-two members of the class received Sweet Little Girl With the Quaint Squeethe reward, which is to be won only by gee," and "When Twilight Weaves Its
highly meritorious perforinance. Twen- Gentle Spell," have just aroused our apty-two others received the lower, yet petities for more. And that quartet,
still commendable. High Sehool Zaner wdth its "T\Vo Clocks" and "The Lady
certificate.
Bug," was certainly jim-dandy.
Recital of Piano
and Vocal
Pupils Pleases
Mr. All's private pupils in piano and
two of the girls who have been taking
vocal training from Miss Shaw gave
a very enjoyable recital in the auditorium on Tuesday evening. May 15. A
good sized audience heartily applauded
the work of the performers, some of
whom were from the training school,
some students here, aud some residents
of Lock Haven.
The iirogram:
1. Merrymaking
Arnstein
Kirby O'Connell.
2. Dance of the Bears
Schutte
Sarah Wiiinger,
3. Twilight
Friml
N.arcissus
Nevins
Marguerite Fishburne.
4. Musette and Tambourine
Wachs
Veronica Cuneo.
5. Song Without Words. .Eschaikowsky
Alta Campbell.
6. I Know Where a Garden Grows..
Dinsmore
From the Land of the Skyblue
Water
Cadman
Marie Crain.
7. Morning Mood (From the Peer
Gynt Suite)
Grieg
Bertha Baer and Hazel Berry.
8. Bereuse from Pocelyn
Goddard
Gavotte
Wright
Hazel Barrett.
9. Serenade
Pierne
By Moonlight
DeKoven
Bertha Baer,
10. Gavotte and Musette
Soro
Etude Melodique
Rogers
Marguerite Burner.
11. The Last Rose of Summer
Moore
A Song of Sunshine
Turner-Maley
Alice Kunes.
12. Etude Op. 25, No. 1
Chopin
Le Coucou
Daquin
Impromptu
Reinhold
Vonda Johnston.
On Tuesday evening. May 29, Mr. Ulmer's methods class in science went
over to the training sehool laboratory
to study the construction and workings
of the radio instruments there. They
heard a lecture on life saving, broadcasted for Boy Scouts from the station
at Schenectady.
NORMAL
Glee Club Concert Is
Credit to C. S. N. S.
Once they promised to sing in the
"gym," a t a Saturday evening fracas,
and they did—not. Once again they were
promised a trip awaj' to sing, aud they
got it>—not. All through the year they
have kept us worked up to concert pitch
in anticipation, and t h a t anticipation
has been rewarded. The Glee Club has
appeared on its own stamping grounds
at last; and there is no room for choosing adjectives to describe their work:
they were—Good. It is hard, hard luck
for the school that the fates interferrcd
and broke up the trip out of town, for
that club would have reflected unlimited
credit on the institution t h a t claimed
it for its own.
Space at this time prevents proper accounting for the songs of the evening.
Only the program can be given but let
us say once more that that club did
honor to Miss Shaw, to the school, and
to every member wdio took part.
The program:
Row, Row Us Swdft
Cauipano
Ave Maria
Franz Abt
When Twilight Weaves
Branscombe
Glee Club.
Forget-Me-Not
On the Twig of a Chestnut Tree
Robinson
Varsitj- Quartet.
The Snow
Edward Elgar
Glee Club.
Readings, The Pudding, and The
Diary of a Stomach
Emily Brown.
Kodak
The Camera Unive?'sal
lYemember that the name
Eastman designates a Superior Product, and that we
carry at all times a complete
line of Eastman Photographic Supplies and
Cameras
TIMES
"Hiawatfia's Wedding Feast"
CLINTON T R U S T CO.
LOCK HAVEN, PA.
Capital $200,000
Surplus
$80,000
Designated Depository
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
City of Lock Haven.
Lock Haven School District.
Central State Normal School.
3% I N T E R E S T P A I D ON SAVINGS DEPOSITS
The Sweet Little Girl and the Quaint
Squeegee
Warner
The Elephant and the Chimiianzce
Hattic L. Sims.
Wake, Miss l i n d y
Warner
Glee Club,
Two Clocks
Rogers
Mighty Lak a Rose
Nevin
Varsity Quartet.
Goodnight, Goodnight, Beloved. .Pinsuti
Stand Up and Cheer (A Parody on
Alouette)
Glee Club,
Miss Shaw and Mrs, P. R. Kamp, who
have faithfully attended every rehearsal,
and whose acconipanimcnts had much to
do with the excellence of the work of the
club, were presented wdth flowers by
the members of the cluii.
Normal Times Staff Chosen
for 192.3-24
The board of editors of Normal Times
has elected its successors for next year
from a list of junior candidates submitted bj' Mr. Trembath, the faculty advisor, and recommended by him as well
able to handle the editorial task with
complete success. Those chosen were:
Marie Crain, Albert Eberly, Helen Nace,
Cleona Coppersmith, Grayce Coppersmith, Edith Burgeson, Neta White,
Velina Ridge, Lucille Burnham, Frances
Cook, Mary Hile, Helen Ditfmar, Ciitherine Devcreux, Sara Gardner, Frieda
Staiinan, Helen Bufliiigfon,
Blanche
.Smith, Leah Hile and Ruth Langsford.
Not all of these may serve, but next
year's board will be chosen from them.
At a staff meeting to be held soon the
editor-in-chief and others of the major
positions will be filled by vote of this
board.
They will work wdth the iiresent board
on this and the subsequent issues this
j'car. They wdll have to do some clever
thinking, in the opinion of the school,
if they are to t u r n out a better paper
than this year's has been; but that
thinking they are fully capable of doling, is the opinion of the junior class.
Wild Life in L. H.
On a beautiful evening iu May—^May
24, fo be exact—^several of the modest
students from the east dorm were wandering around the streets of the metroiiolis, wdien they saw a gray streak
giving an almost successful exhibition
of disappearing around a corner. They
set sail after the streak, rounded the corner, and saw the gray backhand stubby
legs of away from its bushy tail down the
center of Main street. The boys followed in hot pursuit, but it was not until Ted Schreiber tripped, fell, and lit
right on the wild animal that they were
able to bring it to a stop.
After binding it tail and foot, the
happy infants returned to C. S. N. S.
with their prey. For several days they
kept it in the dorm, feeding it little
by little, and getting it fairl5' tame;
tame enough, at any rate, that Mr. Ulmer was willing to come and take it over
to his home wdth little opposition. May
they both live happy ever after!
SAVE TIME—SAVE STEPS—SAVE MONEY
GO T O
Honest Value
Good Service
Hilton & Heffner
DRUGGISTS
5-10-25 and Variety
Toys and Games
Party Favors
Candy
Notions
Senior Privileges Again
Senior privileges went into effect Monday, May 21. Many of the seniors are
inclined to complain that they do not
have a sufficient nuniber of special
rights; the juniors are not unanimously
of the same opinion. One-half hour extra on the campus nights is not much
unless you are fhe ono that has to come
ill a half hour early.
The special privileges granted this
year are as follows:
Campus iiriyilege until 8:00.
Down town privilege two nights a
week until 9:;i0.
Campus rights during quiet hour.
Ifauce iu fhe gym Thursday evening.
Right to use both campuses.
Right fo use the main entrance.
Senior picnic" indvilege.
Arbor made open territory to boys.
1 m
The GRIFFITH Store
Stationery
Office Supplies
School Supplies
House Furnishings
Hiawatha's AVedding Feast, a cantata
written liy Samuel Coleridge Taylor, the
famous negro composer of London, was
beautifully presented by the Lock Haven
Community Choral Club in the Normal
School auditorium on Friday night. May
11. The music, with its true Indian
rhythm, was particularly lovely. The
club brought out well in its interpretation
the touch of pathos t h a t runs through
the whole cantata. Mr. Gordon Curtis,
of the Cornell University Glee Club, carried the tenor solos to the delight of his
iiudience. It was something of a blow
to niiiny of the young dreamers in the
audience when the aunouneement was
made privately that he was engaged to
he married immediately after graduation, and that he was sailing for India
as .a missionary.
Before the cantata Miss Sara Gabriel
read the portion of the poem that dealt
with the wedding feast, interpreting the
personalities of the Indian characters admirably.
At the close of the program the club
presented to Miss Shaw, our music department head, who has lead the Choral
Club throughout this, its first year, a
sapiihirc and diamond bar pin as a token
of their esteem.
An unexpected addition to the program
provided the audience wdth one of the
best and longest laughs Normal School
.audiences have enjoyed in many a moon.
While Miss Gabriel was reading the lines
of the poem, and just as she arrived at
this "lagoo! Here's lagoo come among
us!" a large gray cat sauntered across
the platform, sat down beside her, and
mewed loudly for attention. I t was several ininutos before the audience could
quiet itself sufficiently to let Miss
Gabriel go on.
Hardware
Camp Supplies
Hosiery
Millinery
cTMEMBER OF CONSOLIDATED MERCHANTS SYNDICATE
An Association of Merchants Operating Over 900 Stores
I
Avis Measurement Work
The educational ineasuremeuts class,
under the direction of Mr. McDougall,
has been giving special diagnostic and
general measurement tests in the .schools
at Avis during the year. Fourteen members of the class have participated iu
fhe adminisfration of the tests, which
have included general intelligence measurements and diagnostic tests in reading, spelling, and arithmetic. The tests
were scored by the whole class, and
at the close of the period of testing a
recommendatory diagnostic report, including the list of specific difSculties discovered and the means of correction, was
sent back to the principal of schools.
NORMAL
The Connecticut
Mutual Life Insurance
Company
The Connecticut Mutual
Life Insurance contract
is especially valuable to
teachers.
That is why many of the
C. S. N . S. faculty and
alumni are Connecticut
Mutual policy holders.
A postal card will bring any
information you desire
HARRY R. ZIMMERMAN
Williamsport Man Lectures
on Birds
The science laboratory was filled with
a group of nature enthusiasts on May 21
to hear Mr. Rishel, of the science department of the Williamsport High
.School, lecture on birds. He brought
with him sixty beautiful slides, showing
birds, their nests, and their young.
Many of his slides showed remarkably
the work that nature has done in protecting birds in providing colorings that
are almost invisible against their usual
background. One in particular, showing a woodcock on his nest, surrounded
by grasses, kept many of the students
guessing so hard that the,y had to be
shown wdiere the woodcock left off and
the grasses began.
Many of tho traits of our common
birds were described so interestingly
t h a t the time had more than passed before any of the audience had become
aware of it.
Special Agent
LOCK HAVEN, PA.
The best of success
to you C. S. N. S.,
throughout 1923.
l]IIII]||||||||||l1lll[lllillllllM.IIIIIII[llllllll|[[||[|lll[lllllll[l|1lillllllllllll[[llllllllllllillllll[|[[lllltll
Fredericks
Pharmacy
The Cut Rate Druy Store
WIDMAN & TEAH
C o r n e r Bellefonte A v e .
and C h u r c h St.
Whitman's
and
Belle-Meade
Candies
Dormitory Concentration
Oh, girls, what will I write for Normal
Times? I'm getitng so tired of racking
my brain, trying to be original; why
doesn't Mr. Trembath give us a week's
rest?—Well, I'll never get it done this
way, so help me, Cassius. Let me think
—^yes, I'll write up the Junior Prom.
"The Juniors tried mighty hard to
please the stately—"—Oh, girls, wasn't
it a scream the way the girls tried to
arrange a cut-in dance so they could
meet that good looking fellow from
State. I'm glad the.v didn't, though, for
I hate cut-in dances. Let's see: where
did I leave off? Oh, yes.
"The Juniors tried mighty hard to
lilease the stately Seniors by putting
the Prom over wdth a bang." I don't just
like the way that sounds, but I'm just
too weary to think any more.
"The gj-m was beautifully decorated
wdth the .lunior colors, and—" Did you
hear about the Glee Club banquet? Miss
Shaw has rented the Country Club for
Thursdaj- night, and I know we're going to have a circus. Isn't Miss Shaw a
dear? She always knows what the girls
wdll like. Well, I guess I had better
get busy.
"Part of the bag was furnished by
the orchestra, wdiich proved to bo satisfactory to all." Oh, kids, did you notice
that violinist.' I almost forgot to dauce
once when we passed the orchestra.
Dear, dear, my mind is wandering, aud I
siui]dy cannot get down to work. Well,
one inight as well keep at a task until
it is finished.
"The faculty were all watching from
the sidelines." I do think that girl with
the old-fashioned red dress looked perfectly stunning. The lace insertion just
put all the finishing touches to it. That
reminds me, I have to go to the dressmakers right this minute. I'll finish
this now and run.
"
looked more beautiful than the
gj-ni has ever looked." —-My, what's the
use! I can't study, so I'm not going
to try.
I wonder if Marg is still cross at me;
wait just one minute, and I'll run and
see. Surely some one else will write
up this old dance.
TIMES
OBSERVATION TOWER^
Edythe Morrall hunting Junebngs in
her bed. Not that she is afraid of them;
she just wants to make sure they are all
comfy.
Miss Rowe enjoying senior privileges,
sitting on the east campus Monday night
of the last week.
The " % % ! ! / ? * ! ! * / * ! ! ! " of the girl
wdio found out a t the last minute that
she was overcut.
Esther Carlson receiving six Junebngs
in a tiny pink basket from Ruth Morrall, while Helen Thall slyly tenants her
bed with them, and Winnie Patterson
opens her wdndow so they can all
come ill.
Memory books flying all about first
floor, second floor, third floor, library,
classroom. Pop's office.
"Won't you
please write iii my book?"
Miss Avery being kept busy saying,
"That's fine!'' to all who enter her
quarters with a sigh of relief and a
"Thank goodness, another one over."
Ann Kennedy, in kindergarten music
period, "Now, children, let's all sit up
like men and sing like birds."
Last week of school. Dust cloths flying; brooms wdiisking; even furniture
being washed. Mother is coming down
for Commencement.
Wonder if she
really thinks the room is always kept
that way? Wonder if she really swallows all that daughter tries to feed her?
She looks as if she did, of course—-but
uKither is a good .•,port herself, you know.
Mr. High, bucking into an empfj- chair,
during iirifhiiietic class, and murmuring,
"Pardon me."
Hetty Staver feeling abused, because
she "just leaned" against the dayroom
partition, and the darn thing went over.
Mr. Ulmer, confessing that the day
was a drowsy one—after the discussion
of the cabbage butterfly had put him to
sleep.
Marty Cnnneen thinking herself a
high-grow, bccau.so she can call all the
trees on the campus by their first names.
Roll call at table D3: "Grace! Miss Ingalsby I Schooley! Wardrope! Cherry,
Helen! Marie! P i p ! Luck!"
The effect of chocolate pic on the girl
ndio did not know it was on the seat
in the telephone booth.
The reason wdiy Helen Cherry was
picked for the p a r t of Prehistoric Man.
Katherine Brosius punctuating Main
street by making a dash after a fivedollar bill.
Caroline Mnllison's poetic fancy: she
likens a .spring flower, in drawing class,
to a spring from a curtain rod, f r instance.
Ann Peters removing tho tail from
the Baltimore Oriole.
Ann Kennedy borrowing a pair of earrings suitable for the dance.
Hilda Leathers planning to take life
seriously, if she ever gets in practice.
Seniors frjdng to keep up the air of
importance wdiile showing pop and mom
around.
H , G., and A., passing themselves out
the front door as seniors, but having less
luck on the way back.
The senior class race, trying to get
iu iifter the movie and before Oi.lO. Too
bad fhey last so long.
Grace Hoover entertaining friends
with the story of fhe Old L she intends to enter whenever she has
$2.00 and a black silk dress.
Outdoor Meet Won by 1924
Baseball far throw—Staver, '24; first;
Russell, '23, second; Coppersmith, '24,
third. Distiince, 124 feet, 9 inches.
Standing broad jump—Staver,
first;
Ashe, second; Kessinger, third. Distance, 6 feet 8% inches.
100-yiird dash—Staver, first; Ashe, second ; Kessinger, third. Time, 13 3-5
seconds.
Basketball far throw—^Leathers, '23,
first; Morr.all, '24, second; Thall, '24,
third. Distance, 57 feet 5 inches.
Running hop, step and jump—-Ashe,
first; Landis,'24, second; Coppersmith,
'24, third. Distance, 24 feet, 1 inch.
Relay race—Won by 1924.
I'oint tofal for meet—1924, 35; 1923, 28.
The Field Day events, which took place
on the afternoon of Memorial Day, were
carried off by the Junior Class, mainly
through the efforts of Hetty Staver, who
placed first in five of the seven events
on the card. Edith Ashe took the hop,
step, and jump with 24 feet 1 inch. Hilda
Leathers easily won the basketball far
throw, her toss of 56 feet 4 inches being at least two feet beyond her nearest
competitors. The 50-yard dash, the baseball far throw, the 100-yard dash, the
sf.anding broa'"' iump, the bean bag rela.y, all went fo Hetty Staver, for the
juniors, Edith Ashe and Kathryn .Stangel
usually being just behind her.
Lydia Custer eliminated Edythe Morrall from the girls' singles in the tennis
fournainent, 10-8, 7-9, 6-4; while Ernest
Schrot and Vic Haney were staging ii
hectic match of the north court, Schrot
emerging finally with 11-9, 7-9, 6-2. Almost every game of the first two sets
went fo deuce a number of times, and
there were fev\ points that were not won
only after long rallies. Schrot easily
disposed of Herbster in love sets in
the finals, Herbster having earlier eliminated Warren McCart.v. Lydie Custer
suffered a reversal of form in the finals,
and went down to defeat in straight sets.
MEET SCORES:
50-yiird dash—Staver, '24, first; Ashe, '2.3,
second; Kessinger, '23, third. Time, 7
seconds.
The picture of the senior class which
.appears in this issue and all th e pictures in this year's Praeeo, were taken by
G. A. B R I O N
Photographer
ai South Fairview Street
I.OCK HAVEN
School Photography si Specialty
Xhiil orders for duplicates of all pictures taken tliis year will he promptly
fllled.
Good school positions go to applicants
whose pliotogrnphs are good. Invest in
a Brion photograph. Special riites to
summer students.
8
NORMAL
TIMES
'21. Eva Belle Lovell, Williamsport.
'21. Rev. Jacob Getz, Williamsport.
'21. Helen E. Loose, 1511 Sixteenth
avenue, Altoona.
'21. Alice Bowser, Lock Haven.
J. Buell Snyder, Pittsburgh.
'22. Alfhea Beery, 213 Ninth avenue,
Carrie Kuluis Lytle, Cherry Tree. Juniata.
Fred L. Balfour, 221 North Ninth
'22. Helen Wiilters, Altoona.
Indiana.
'22. Elizabeth M. Bowser, Loek Haven.
Alma Wenker Smith, Lock Haven.
'22. Alice Martin, Johnstown.
I'earl Reed Kelly, Galeton.
'23. Hester Liddle, Williamsport.
Hazel Shanno'i Thompson, Brad'23. Beryl Erne.sf, 112 Eighth avenue,
.luniata.
Elizabeth Walters Raub, Brad-
(vlLUMNI N E W S
'13. Edith Brungard is teaching in the
'01.
public schools of Vandergrift, Pa. Gene'03.
vieve Stewart is teaching at Braddock.
'03.
'16. Mrs. A. Harvey (Mary A. Clark) street,
'03.
is living a t Johusonburg.
'03.
'18. William Ganiposki is teaching in
'03.
the junior high school at Farrell.
'20. Lillian Garbrick, a graduate from ford.
'03.
the commercial departnient, is a stenographer in the treasurer's oflice of Penn ford.
State.
'03. Pearl North Staley, K n a p p Creek,
'21. Eleanor Troutman happened into N. Y.
Lock Haven on May 16, and could not
'03. Lucy Patton Miller, Perryopolis.
resist the tempf.ation to visit with her
'04. Anna Mufliy, Howard.
Bittersweet sisters. Obey that imiiulse
'05. Christine Eadie Riehens, Lock
whenever it strikes you.
Haven.
Almeta Bixel, '21; Sylvia Claster, '22;
'06. Dr. David W. Thomas, Lock
Priscilla Williams, '21, and Frank Rishel, Haven.
'19, came back here to attend the Junior
'06. Mrs. David W. Thomas, Lock
Prom May 19.
Haven.
'09. Twila Belknap is teaching a sec'Ofi. Edna D. Rich, 67 North Fairview
ond grade in Coudersport.
street. Lock Haven.
'21. Violet Smith sj.ent May 19 with
'07-'08. Mary R. Stouck, Lock Haven.
her sister, Flossie, a junior here.
'08. William 6. Miller, Berlin.
'22. B e t t y Bowser i.< visiting May
'08. John S. Walkey, Lock Haven.
Green, haying just completed .a year of
'08. Maude C. Floruss, Flemington.
successful work in the high school at
'OS. Crease Hanna Avery, Troy.
Hazlehurst.
'08. Belle Hoover Wurste/, Williams'21. Ruth Roto has ended her year's port.
work in the schools at Farrandsville,
'08. Lou Eiiierj' Mervine, Loek Haven.
and is back at her home in Dunnstown.
'OS. Nolle Wolfe Ingraham, Jersej'
'17. Mrs. C. D. Howenstine (Myrtle Shore.
Reynolds) is living at Charleroi.
'OS. Mabel E. Knecht, Lock Haven.
'17. Mrs. A. Stewart (Idona Bartley)
'OS. Estella Wagner. T,ock Haven.
lives at Grindstone.
'OS. Emily Leitzell
Otway, Lock
'21. Mildred Moyer, of Jersey Shore, Haven.
who has been teaching at Woodlawn,
'OS. George E. Long, Howard.
spent a few days before Commencement
'08. H. M. Grugan, Lock Haven.
visiting friends in the dormitory.
'08. J. W. Paul, 634 Louisa street,
'20. Florence Holmberg, a teacher at Williamsport.
Norristown, visited with the present Bit'11. Edith Weber, Howard.
tersweets on May 26, and attended their
'12. .losephinc Muffiy, Howard.
banquet.
'12. Lauretta Weber, Howard.
'19. Amj' Burgland, of •lohnsonburg,
'13. Harold Duinm, Mackeyville.
visited the dorms on Tuesdaj-, Maj- 29.
'1.3. Edith Chilcott Owens, PhilipsIf you were not back to Commence- burg.
ment this year, you most certainly
'13. Matilda
Hostetter
Livingston,
missed the time of your lives. More than Johnstown..
'13. Caroline Hostetter Wilson, Johnsthat, you missed the one best chance of
the year to get in touch wdth some of town.
'13. Oidielia Haupt Shall, Milesburg.
the old crowd. How many of your
'14. Mabel Hafner Johnston, Woolfriends are in the list below? These
were all back this year, and others, too; rich.
'14. Cora Luse, Center Hall.
but these were all Normal Times' busy
'14. Isabel Rowe Bradford, Center
little reporter could identify. Make up
your mind now to be back on the Hall.
'15. Marion Barnes Davis, Coalport.
grounds wdien June, 1924, rolls round:
'15. Kathryn Ward, DuBois.
'80. W. J. Weaver, Beaver Falls.
'16. Elizabeth A. Kyle, Mackeyville.
'82. J. S. Cranmer, Williamsport.
'17. Mertie Esjiigh Miller, Greens'83. B. B . Harrison, Boalsburg.
burg.
'83. Charles S. D.avis, Steelton.
'17. Marion Harper Barrett, Irvona.
'83. Anna Kolbs Shoem.aker, Lock
'17. R. Bruce Stover, Lock Haven.
Haven.
'18. W. Cecil Davhs, Coalport.
'83. J. C. McAllister, Ridgway.
'18. Anna Simonton Miller, Altoona.
'88. J. E . Hall, Fleming.
'IS. Bessie M. Grant, Galeton.
'96. Mrs. Frank M. Wilson, Loek
'18. Fay Stover, Bhuic'.iard.
Haven.
'IS. Ada Fnlton Lytcl, Glen Richey.
'97. W a r r e n M. Smith, Lock Haven.
'IS. L. Ruth Garstater, Mill Hall.
'96. Dessie Stiver Piiinter, Mill Hall.
'18. Isabel C. Ha.yes, Mackeyville.
'97. I . T. Parsons, Lock Haven.
'19. Elliz.abefh O'Shea, Irvona.
'98. Homer Graffius, Woodland.
'19. Elizabeth N. Taylor, Mackeyville.
'98. Mina B. Barrows, Williamsport.
'19. Mary Ellen Carstater, Mill Hall.
'98. Ada Gruver Munro, Lock Haven.
'19. Ruth Walters, Altoona.
'99. Frances Bartholomew Knights,
'19. Ella M. Kennedy, Scranton.
Williamsport.
'20. Rebecca C. Kilborn, Camp Hill.
'99. E . G. Knights, Williamsport.
'20. Esther Stopper, Williamsport.
'01. W. P. Cornely, Madera; Vida
'21. Pauline Ott, Williamsport.
Cornely, Madera.
Us and Others
MAY VISITORS
Mrs. Joseph Mallison, St. Marys.
Bernard Reilly, Johnsonburg.
Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Peters, Dorothea
and Bobby Peters, Katherine Hoover,
Annabel and Marjorie Cowdick, all of
Clearfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hile, Mr. and
Mrs. .Tames Hile, Vera and Edith Clark,
and Mildred Dietrick, all of Pleasant
Gap.
Mrs. George Burf, Harold Burt, Gordon A'alentine and little Bertha Moran,
of Roulette.
Mrs. George Thomiison and Anna June
Thompson, of Altoona.
Prof. D. S. Hartline, head of the department of science at Bloomsburg.
Mr. and Mrs. James Myers, John
Mj'crs aud Raymond Wallace, of Bellwood.
Marian Ward, Williamsport.
Al.ys Dolau, Bellwood.
Helen Loos, Newdierry.
Leotta Caldwell, Flemington.
Mr. and Mrs. .Tohn Edglej- and Sherman Edgley, of Altoona.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Haney (yep, our
Joe!) of Loganton.
Lulu Mulheran, St. Marys.
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Kilmer, Irene Waite
and Beatrice Metzger, of Williamsport.
Myrtle Seylor, Salona.
Dr. and Mrs. Spackman, Mrs. Strickland
and Kathleen Strickland,
Clearfield
Count.v.
A'irgiuia Hainilton, Pittsburgh.
Mary Shade, Clearfield.
Mrs. Flora B. Custer, Johnstown.
Mrs. L. R. Robb, Altoona.
Ida Mac Dittmar, Williamsport.
Evelyn Harris, South Williamsport.
Lillian Coffey, James Curran, Clarence
McGarvey and Gerald Renshaw, Renovo.
Hester Liddle, '23, Williamsport.
Mrs. George Williams, Howard.
Mrs. P. G. Lee, Irvona.
Mrs. A. E. Barrett, Bernice Barrett
and Leslie Nearhof, of Bellwood.
Ruth Turle.v, Irvona.
Helen Dittmar took Leah Hile home
with her May 5. They took in the
Willhamsport lilirary, so that Leah would
not get homesick.
Belville Cree visited his mother, who
is ill fhe Masonic Home in Elizabethtown, on Tuesday, May 8.
Blanche Smart, the fisherwoman of the
da.v room, spent a recent week-end
in the trout streams near home. The
fish are still there.
Gretchen Williams and Alva Schooley
attended the Junior Prom at State College.
Helen Gregory made a number of new
ncquaiiifances at the senior dance. Af
the rate she is writing letters, she will
soon be broke again.
The few who wondered how Miriam
Decker attained such a remarkable stand
of corn in such a short time, on her
garden iiafch down back of Mr. Ulmer's
home, investigated. They found each
cornstalk carefnll.v propped in place with
stones. They say they do it that way
ill Montgomery.
Grace Hoover entertained Ruth Donovan and Sadie Zimmerman a t her home
in Kylertown over the week-end of
May 5.
Dr. .Siiia Stratton, of the State Department, addressed tho boys iu the Y. M.
C. A. rooms and the girls in the chapel,
in a series of lectures extending through
the week of M.ay 1. Dr. Stratton's engagement has recently been announced.
Marie Howe, who had to leave us at
the first of the term, has recovered from
her operation for appendicitis.
Ann Petes, Alice Ryan and Lucile
Burnham were guests of Elinora Bonnell
af Jersey Shore recently.
It isn't good for Martha Fillman to
spend too much time at home. She came
back on May 13 wdth her arm in a sling.
Miss Ritter is back ou the job, after
wliiif she calls a fen-day recovering-fromEaster vacation.
Laura Hanes, of St. Marys, a former
junior this year, has started in with the
Bell Telephone Coinpany there.
Helen Kinney spent May 19, etc., with
Ethel Darby at Clearfield.
"Skinney"
did not forget fo look uj) our old friends
Tribley and Lorraine.
Iva Liviugsfon attended a dance a t
the Phi Gamma Delta house at Bucknell on May 12.
We hope that Miss Love will like C. 8.
N, S. as well as we like her. We appreCi.'te her efforts to make tverything iu
tho dining-room attriictive.
Mr. and Mrs. Drum entertained the
faculty .at a 5 o'clock tea on Friday, May
11. Mary Mowrer, Miirtha Dice and Mildred Fickes assisted the hostess in serving.
Helen Gregor.v spent Maj' 12 in Williamsport with Alva Schooley. Helen recovered sufflciently after several days to
start writing to Cornell.
Miss Groff motored to Lancaster on
May 12, to visit her mother and sisters.
Warren McCarty, lit the request of the
class in geography methods, gave a short
talk on the customs of the people of
France, giving first hand iuformation
that he had acquired during his service
in tlie World War.
Miss Butler gave the sehool a shock
early in May, wdien she drove up to the
front door in a shiny new sport model
Maxwell, in wdiich she had invested her
own good money. She seems to have
fired of buying street cars for the S. T.
Coiniiaii.y. "Say, Miss Butler, c'n I hookey
on behind?"
Mr. Ulmer in his Ford and Mr. Gage
in his shiny new Dodge took the school
gardening class on a jaunt to State College on Thursday niorning. May 31.
Catherine Cooper, Miriam Decker, Clarence Thompson, Warren McCarty, Ernest
Schrot, William Skelton, Ivan Mechtly
and Stephen Rydesky went along. The
gardeners took in the dairy, the prize
cattle and fhe experiment .station. Mr.
Gage found his way to the library, and
waited peacefully there for the rest of
the party.
At
VOLUME 1
Central
State
Normal
LOCK HAVEN, PA., JUNE
School
6,1923
NUMBER 13
1923 Graduates at Gayest
Commencement
y
1923, Hail and Farewell!
Rollicking Alumni Day!
Chuckling
Class Day!
Solemn Commencement
Day, when the tears are too near the
surface for smiles to be entirely certain ! Dad, mother, and all the folks
back to see their boy, their girl, in the
scenes of wdiich they have talked so
much.
Teachers standing about the
halls, trying to pass over wdth a hastily
formed, half hearted jest, the very real
heartache t h a t they feel in themselves
and sense in the senior who has paused
for .a last contact. Mother, father, coming up to miiet some one on the faculty,
half with a desire to see in the flesh one
who has existed only as a naiiie, half in
the hope of hearing something more to
add to the i'.ride in their own graduate,
a. pride that; they cannot entirely conceal, thougli it lies too deep for expression. Seniors a r m in arm, hanging about together, as if trying to postpone the parting.
Sudden unbidden
tears, hastil.v concealed by an averted
head—or by iflight. There is nothing like
Comineucem^'^t Season, in this or any
other great American school.
It was a gre.""',t class, this class of 1923,
a class that canie ver.y close to the hearts
of those who knew them and worked
with them- Classes do have personality,
individi;'.,lity; aud this class was ono in
vvl'-t'se accomiilishments it was easy to
-'take warm pride, one that measured up
to all t h a t a school could ask, scholastically, athletically, humanly—especially
humanly.
And it was fitting that such a class
should have almost perfect Commencement weather. None of the gusty showers or continuous downpours tliat have
marred so many Commencements here!
Instead, steady sunshine, warmth, days
perhaps a trifle too hot, but cool June
nights, with a hardworking moon. From
the night of the Junior Play until the
Commeucement Day exercises were over,
there was not a discordant note, not a
flaw in a well planned and gloriously
executed program of the week.
With the departure of the big delegation that went off on the Fliers on
Tuesda.v afternoon, an unaocustonied
quiet settled down over the big building, a quiet that was rather hard to bear.
It was almost as though Aliiia. Mater,
having kept up her smile until she waved
away the last of her children, had turned
back to her empty home and her heartache. Other chihlren she has, yes; but
fhe eldest have started off to make their
fortunes; their places are empty; they
will not be filled. Their footsteps have
worn griioves in her stair-treads; their
rollicking hands have left marks in tiieir
old rooms, in her halls. A slinky chairarm, a scuff on some varnish that should
{Continued on page 2)
Commencement
Class Day Exercises
Alumni Day Doings
On Tuesda.v niorning a t 10:00 came
the parting of the ways. All the rest
of Commencement Week is pure fun,
but there is no trace of rollicking spirits
anywhere in the poignancy of Comnienccment Da.y. The parting is too
iinmiiient; for the first time it becomes
a tangible thing.
Class da.y exercises were better this
.year, from the standpoint of both spectutors and graduates, than they have
ever been, in recent luemory, at least.
Informality, fun, ease of manner and
cleverness in speech, marked the afternoon program out under the frees of
the west campus.
I t was a solemn audience that filled
the auditorium.
The Commencemeiit
hush was so real that i t could almost
be touched. It did not disappear as
the exercises went on, but grew and
grew. Sylvia Breth did beautifully with
her oration pleading for more kindergartens in Pennsylvania.
Gwendolyn
Glise upheld the reputation she has
made for herself by her effective delivery of an exposition of the purel.y
practical values of art education as it is
now given in the schools. Frederick
Hunter's talk on the worth of the pla,y
siiirit ill school work was interesting
even to the somewhat jaded ears of the
faculty.
Gertrude Harper traced the
growth of the Junior High Sehool movement from its inception to the complaint
of Dr. Eliot, of Harvard, back in 1888,
to its rapid burgeoning in Pennsylvania
af this time, and closed with a strong
appeal that the type of school be further encouraged, because of its unique
suifabilit.y to the educational requireiiients of adolescent bo^-s and girls. The
orchestra played from time to time.
Ernest ,Schrot 'in a speech as short as
it was sincere gave to the school 192.'i's
class meinorial, a standard motion picture niachinc: "And may you have as
much ,id.y in using it as we have had in
giving it to yon," It was almost over.
For the school Mr. Drum accepted
the gift, and then presented tho class
for its diplomas to Williain Keiiier, vice
president of the Board of Trustees, acting in behalf of the Hon. M. B . Rich,
who is ill. Dr, J, A. Foberg, director
of mathemafics in the state department,
delivered the commencement oration,
advising the graduates of the practical
principles iind ethical ideals that they
ought to follow.
The planting of the ivy, with President Frederick Hunter, of the class of
I92.'i, as the speaker, started off the afternoon. An informal band then lead
the graduates, in cap and gown, in a
picturesque parade across fhe campus
to the place of the class day exercises.
Principal W. N. Drum aud Mr. Gage
leading the class. The ivy oration was
given by Mercella Burf; tlie class oration, b.y Fred H u n t e r ; the history, by
Gertrnde Hiirper, the wdll, hy Grace Russell; the prophecy, b.v Gwcndolj-n Glise;
and file presentations, b.v Kay Cawley
and Jean Hahn. The senior mantle was
passed down to the Juniors by President
Hunter, and was received for them by
Helen Dittmar, president of the junior
class.
At 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon t h e
big doings coinmenced to occur fast a n d
furious. The seniors tore open the .afternoon wdth a costume parade that h a d
class. Ted Schreiber led the van, in
Colonial uniform, followed by tho Spirit
of '76, carried off by Steve Bydesky,
Ernie Schrot and Guy Luck, with verisimilitude, eclat, and all that sort of thing.
In the line were also Bill Skelton's Zobo
band and Happy Sissler's Ukelele (Juartet, all setting the time for a weird
crowd of marchers, costumed in fhe outfits of all seasons and none, t h a t
stretched along the west campus from
the main entrance to the tennis courts
and half way back again. Following the
seniors came the alumni, who stuck faitlifuU.v despite the senior quickstep until
the line turned into the dormitories for
a jamboree, and who rejoined them when
they came out and paraded over to the
athletic field.
The orchestra struck up, A song, it
matters not what. Then the slow processional, up the aisle, out through the
swinging doors, out the ni.ain hall—^the
last time—an attempt to hold together—then a dash for one's room, to
win back the control which tradition says
must be ours wdien we say the hardest
of words.
After a while, back again. Some of
the good-byes are said; many more are
just handgrips, more eloquent than the
words that stick in tho throat. Then
the trolley; the t r a i n ; the hills of Loek
Hiiven fading, blurred; home.
(Continued on pag:e 2)
The spirit and finish of the day's program caused Mr. Drum to sa.v that he
had never .^een at C. S. N. S, a class day
performance that approached this iu
qualify, and thiit he recollected none as
good iin.vwhere else.
Giving Kindergarten Publicity
There is ju.sf one kindergarten iu Lock
Haven, and flint is t h e only one in a
radius of thirfj- miles. At the last
nieeting of the International Kindergarten Union, wdiich Miss Hinies attended as the represent.itive of this
school, the tremendous strides that the
kindergarten movement has recently
made fired all delegates wdth enthusiasm,
and caused a desire to spread the idea
from now on wdth almost a missionary
spirit.
Miss Hinies and Mr. McDougall arc
undertaking fo spread local interest in
kindergarten work, so as to innltiply
the number of children who are receiving the undoubted tremendous benefits
of well managed kindergartens. Through
pulilicity work, convcrsiitions, posters,
nnd personal letters they aud their committee, niiide up of group I students,
they hope to promote kindergarten activity in as m.'iny schools as can be
reached.
The sunimer session kindergarten, to
be operated in connection with this summer session, is benefitting particularly
by this publicity campaign; it will in
its turn be an active agent in creating
interest in new communities in kindergartens and kindergarten ways.
Dr. David W. Thomas, '00, iiumediatel.y
turned loose a prograiu of stunts into
which, despite the heat of the afternoon, alumni of all cliisses entered like
the good sports for which C. S. N. S.
has been noted. Newspaper races were
won by Mrs. Hazel Shannon Thompson,
'0.'!, Dr. W. P. Comely, '01, and R. Bruce
Stover, '17. Cracker-eating contests were
carried off b.v Principal W. N. Drum and
Homer Grattius, '98. The treat of the
afternoon, however, was the indoor baseball game, wdiich the senior boys had
their hands full in wdniiiug from an
nlumni team of wdiich fifty per cent used
to live in the east dormitory, the final
tally being 7-0,
Prof. All, of the Music department,
called the sharps and flats. Some of his
decisions were rather sour, but t h a t
was due, naturall.v, to the failure of
the managers to iirovide him with a
certified pitclipipc. Prof. Ulmer furnished the fielding feature of the afternoon; disguised as a senior, he handled
every ball that came into right field perfectly. None came there. Ted Schreiber's earnest efforts at third base were
so energetic that he was moved to second,
where he had fewer chances to jilay
hopscotch with the ball, and where first
base was in firing distance. Con Cornely's pitching, for the alumni, had
much of the snap t h a t used to characterize i t back in '01, when Normal used to
have some real ball teams. Had he been
provided wdth something smaller th.an
the sperical beanbag wdth which indoor
baseball is played, his fielders might
have had less to do—^for which t h e y
would have been grateful. Smiles Balfour's home run was tho longest hit
of the game! it traveled all around the
field, info the coal pile back of the
(Continued on pagre 2)
NORMAL
Alumni Day Doings
(Continued from pagre 1)
heating plant, and up on the railroad
track back of third, before it caught up
to him—and then he was sitting down.
Mrs. "Bill" Shannon Thompson's speed
on the base paths brought cheers from
the scorekeeper and others. Mrs. Lib
Eaub's work in right field was notabl.y
peaceful, wdiile over in left Mrs. Lue.y
Miller cavorted like another T.y Cobb;
she eould field and she could throw.
The game lasted two innings onl.y, but
those two innings contained as much
action and perspiration as any big
league full strength contest. If you don't
believe it, ask them who acted aud perswcated.
Runs scored: Alumni, Con Corncl.v, '01,
p, 1; Mrs, Bill Thompsou, 'O.S, 2b, 1;
Chunk Grafius, '98, c, 2; Mrs. Lib Raub,
'03, rf, 1; Smiles Balfour, '0,1, ss, 1 (home
r u n ) ; Mrs. I'earl Staley, '03, cf, 0; Barca
Snyder, '01, l b , 0; Pep Smith, '97, lib, 0;
Mrs. Lucy Miller, '0.1, If, 0.
Seniors: McCarthy, c, 1; Rydesky, p, 2;
Thompson, l b , 1; tSehroiber, 21), 1;
Schrot, ss, 1; Luck, ,1b, 1; Hunter, If, 0;
Skelton, cf, 0; Ulmer, rf, 0,
CLASS OF 1908 PROGRAM
At 4:00 a pleasing program was rendered by the class of '08 on the west
campus. I t included a reading by Mrs.
A. F. Stock, vocal solos b.v Mrs. H. B.
Otway and Mrs. G. T). Mervine, and a
piano solo by Miss Estella R. Wagner.
Dr. Thomas, '06, presided, and gave .an
excellent talk, as did also Dr. M. E. McAllister, '83, of Ridgway. Mrs. P . E.
Kamp, '20, and Miss Mabel E. Kneclit,
'08, acted as accompunists for the soloists and fur the communit.y singing,
wdiich was led b.v Miss Mar.v M. Shaw,
of the facult.v.
THE ALUMNI BANQUET
The largest alumni attendance in
many years enjoyed the alumni banquet
on Saturday evening. Nearly two hundred newly made or more accustomed
alumni sat around the tables in the dining room, decorated for the occasion
with green branches and pink carnations, their colors standing out against
the white trelliswork that carried them.
Three unusual talks featured the toast
list. Principal W. N. Drum defended
vigorously the management of this school
against the charge of extravagance implied in the King report on normal
schools. He said that it was well understood among the members of the commission headed by King that a comparison of figures at this time could not
be an.vthing but unfair, because all the
normal schools had passed under state
control so recently that those wdiich had
been very badly run down a t the time
the .state took control are still laboring under the neces.sity of spending
much mone.v in putting the pli.vsical
plant of the schools into decent shape.
Those schools wdiich had been prosperous
before state control showed to better
advantage than those which had been
unable, under former fln.ancial conditions, to keep up with repairs.
Certain items in wdiich Lock Haven
led the rest of the state Mr. Drum offered no apologj' for. He said that so
long as it could bo done, he proposed
to keep on offering to the students that
attend this school the best paid faculty,
the best living facilities, and the best
dining room nieiiu in the stiite. He criticized the King report principiill.y in
that it did not attempt to discover wliiit
each iKirmtil scliool got for the mone.v
if spent; hence if fell short wdien if atfenipted to indicate or imply injudicious
expenditures, in that it had not really
studied the expenditures at all.
Dr. Charles Davis, '83, superintendent
of schools in Steelton, opened the eyes
of nian.v of the alumni to the big differences iu purpose, methods, and aims
of instruction in the normal schools of
toda.y and formerly. The normal schools
of Peniis.vlvania have become reasonably
efficient professional schools for the first
time in this state, he said; and the practical proof of their efficiene,y is tluit
school superintendents of schools now
go fo the normal schools frying to secure their graduates, whereas not long
back fhe norinal graduate was barred
from many school systems by Board of
Education rules until she could prove
b.y several years of teaeliing that she
was of some use as a teacher.
Dr. Davis then launched into an explanation of the offer of reappointment
made by Governor Pinchot to Dr. Fiuegaii, declared its terms humiliating and
incomprehensible, and urged the passage
of a resolution requesting that Dr. Finegan be reappointed inimediatel.v.
Dr. Davis' resolution was vigorously
discussed, and passed the alumni association with but two dissenting votes.
It was forwarded to fhe Governor immediately. (Subsequent events indicate that
the Governor is independent in his
thinking—so far as the men and women
vifall.y interested in the schoiils are concerned.)
The third feature of the program of
toasts was the reading of a clever poem,
written for the occasion by Williiim J.
Weaver, '80, of Mill Hall, and full ot
local allusions.
Other speakers were Mrs. E. E. Adams,
'83; Fred Balfour, '03; John S. Walkey,
'08; Mrs. Edward Livingston, '13; and
Miss Eniil3' Brown, of the graduating
class.
THE ALUMNI DANCE
Immediately following the banquet,
the alumni dance began in the gymnasium, wdiich had been beaufifull.y decorated ill green and white. About 12i)
cduples made good use of the program
(if seventeen dances, while many more
gathered around the edge of the floor
to reminisce and to enjoy Dr. Tliomiis'
concoction of punch. The L.yric Orchestra furnished the music here as well as
at the banquet.
ELECTION OF OFFICERS
All former officers of the iiluiuni association were re-elected by acclamation.
Dr. Thomas wdll servo another terra as
president; J. S. Cranmer, '82, of Williamsport, vice president; Miss Helen
Harper, '02, of Bellefonte, second vice
president; Miss Edna D. Rich, '06, of Lock
Haven, secretary; George A. Mincemoyer,
Mechanicsburg, treasurer. The Executive
Committee will .agiiin consist of Hon.
Ives L. Harvey, '98, Bellefonte; I. T.
Parsons, '97, Lock Haven; Mrs. Christine
E. Riehens, '05, Lock Haven; Mrs. G. D.
Mervine, 'OS, Lock Haven; Williain P .
Cornely, '01, Madera; and J. Buell Snyder, '01, of Perryopolis.
TIMES
Commencement
1923, Hail and Farewell!
(Continued from pagre 1)
Gradually the ache fades, 1923. Time
is kind. But so was Alma Muter, 1923.
Your feet and hands these years have
worn theinselves into her structure and
into her heart. She cannot now leave
y o u ; ever, wherever and however you
stand or fall from now on, she stands
there or falls with you. Nor can you
leave her. Every old school is hallowed
with memories of the boys and girls who
roughened its stnirfreads and scarred all
its newnesses. You can never grow up
awa.v from old C. S. N. S. Some day,
when yon arc tired of all the dignity
that ma.v be thrust upon you, slip away;
slip back to the old normal; feel yourself, nlmost as you enter her doors, shedding the years that will elapse, and becoming again just what you were when
you played and worked and were
obedient or disobedient as the spirt
moved .vou, or you moved your spirit,
back in the days wdien we first learned
to love you more than a little. Goodbye, 1923; good luck; may every school
bell make you think again of Alma
Mater!
(Continued from pagre f)
have been new, a tree they planted, a
gift they gave, a little ivy struggling up
il wall, to show that they had been here.
It is these that give the touch of saintliness that clings to old schools; i t is
such tokens thiif are fhe proud gray
hairs and workworn fingers, hairs turned
gra.y and fingers worn iu loving service,
of Alma Mater.
She would not have you back again,
1923. She is as proud of you and as certain of .your success as you can ever be.
She wants you to staid out, to struggle,
to win if you can, and to fiiil if you
must, if you but fail trying. She wants
.you fo go, for your sake. If she grieves,
it is just because these old days have
been sweet to think upon. Go out smiling, 1923. Goodbye; conu back soon.
Junior Class Colors
/
The junior class held a meeting in the
chiipel on Tuesday, May 8, for the purpose of selecting class colors. Green
and wdiite were the colors approved by
fhe niiijorit,v vote, from a list of several combiniitions submitted by the color
committee.
The Best of Luck to You, 1923
Agnew, Esther, Mill Hall
Armour, Beatrice, Jeanette
Anderson, Lelia, Clearfleld
Ash, Edith, Mill Hall
Barefoot, Edythe, Alum Bank
Be.as, Florence, Johnstown
Betteus, Gladys, Flemington
Bretll, Sylvia, Clearfield
Brown, Emil.v, Betula
Brumbaugh, Ethel, Altoona
Brungard, Mildred, Lock Haven
Burt, Marcella, Eoulette
Campbell, Catherine, Loek Haven
Carlson, Esther, Kersey
Cawdey, Catherine, Scranton
Crider, Ethel, Lock Haven
Chapel, Ina, Austin
Chapel, Inez, Austin
Cooper, Catherine, Loganton
Coyle, Elsie, Johnstown
Custer, Lydia, .lohnstown
Decker, Miriam, Montgomery
Delevett, Edna, Bellwood
Dice, Martha, Newberry
Doerr, Eleanor, Loganton
Donovan, Ruth, Jerse3' Shore
Fickes, Mildred, Altoona
Fritz, Evelyn, McElhiiftan
Funk, Loretta, Falls Creek
Furst, Elsie, Mackeyville
Gallagher, Rosella, Renovo
Gates, Elizabeth, Renovo
Glise, Gweldolyn M., Lock Haven
Green, May, Utahville
Hafner, Estella, Woolrich
Hahn, Janefta, Altoona
Harper, Gertrude, Irvona
Holly, Christine, Ceres, N. Y.
Hoover, Graee, Kylertown
Howard, Augusta, Altoona
Hunter, Frederick, Beech Creek
Ingalsby, Willma, Bradford
Ishler, Grace, Center Hall
Johnson, Hazel, North Bend
.lohnson, Nellie, Laurelton
Kennedy, Anne, Scranton
Kessinger, Dorothea, Mill Hall
Kinney, Helen, Bodine
Kintner, Louise, Mill Hall
Leathers, Hilda, Howard
Lee, Ethylene, Irvona
Liddle, Hester, Williamsport
List, Amelia, Irvona
Lord, Bernice, Emporium
Luck, Guy, Benfer
McDonald, Dawson, Hout zdale
ifaiitle, Helen, Jersey Shore
Marcy, Walter, Monroeton
May, Helen, Westport
7\IcCarty, Warren, Sprotki
McCliutick, Caroline, Salona
McClintock, Estella, M ill Hall
McLean, Mary, Mill H^r'1
Mechtley, Ivan, Tylersvilfe
Miller, Glenn, Lamar
Miller, Margaret, Williamsport.
Moran, Marie, Genesee
Morrall, Ruth, Northumberland
Mowrer, Mary, Watsontown
Neve], Edna B., Lock Haven
Newcomer, Zelma, Williamsport
O'Shea, Grace, Irvona
Parsons, Helen, Lock Haven
Peters, Amy, Clearfleld
Pletcher, Flora, Howard
Powers, Mary, Mill Hall
Purvis, Dorothy, So. Williamsport
Richardson, Louise, Loretto
Ricker, Genevieve, Salona
Ricker, Viola, Lock Haven
Robb, Eleanor, Altoona
Russell, Grace, Genesee
R.vdesk.y, Bridget, Austin
R.vdesk.y, Stephen, Austin
Scantlin, Ruth, Blanchard
Sclireiber, Vincent, Kersey
Schrot, Ernest, Clearfleld
Shank, Verna, Orviston
Sissler, Jean, Altoona.
Skelton, William, Philipsburg
Smith, Marie, Smethport
Sn.vder, Thelma, Renovo
Somerville, Christine, Beccaria
Stangel, Catherine, Wilcox
.Strii.yer, Florence, Johnstown
Summers, Lucretia, Philipsburg
Thompson, Clarence, Howard
Thompson, Mary, Altooua
Katherine, Tribley, Clearfield
Wheeland, Cleta, DuBois
Wise, Annie, Williamsport
Zimmerman, Sadie, Nesquehoning
f
NORMAL
NORMAL TIMES
Teacher Training Plan Renewed With City
The outstanding feature of the monthNormal Times is published at Central State
Normal School, Lock Haven, Penna,, by the ly meeting of the Lock Haven Board
Board of Editors of Nornial Times,
The snbscription rate for this year is $1.50, of Education on Tuesday night, June 5,
Address all eonimunieations to Amy Peters, Busi- was the renewal of the agreement enness Mantiifer, C, S, N, S., Lock Haven, I'enna,
Edltor-ln-Clilef
Gertrude Harper
Assistant Editor
Sylvia Breth
Alumni Editor
Louise Richardson
Associate Editors—Esther Agnew, Evelyn Fritz,
Graee Ishler, Bernice Lord, Jean Halm, Mabel
Iloni, Emily Brown, Gladys Bettens, Theodore
Schreiber.
Business Manager
Amy Peters
Associate Managers—Amelia List, Marie Smith,
Neta White, Julia Coffey, Frieda Staiman,
Velma Ridge, Grayce Coppersmith, Ina Chapel,
Ruth Malone, Catherine Cooper, Louise Kintner,
Marie Moran, Guy Luck,
Faculty Manager
T, W, Trembath
/
/
J U N E 6, 1923
A Word for Your Private Ear
Normal Times has labored through its
first year. It has been .a good paper;
you know it has. I t has covered everything, important and unimportant, and
played it up iu good, breezy fashion, so
that every friend of this school has been
able to get something more than just
all the news—they have been able to get
the inside spirit, the "feel" of the
school.
Y'ou seniors who have just gotten
away from us, you know that this has
been no easy matter. You know how
much hard labor has gone in to doing
this. You know what our ambitions
have been—and will be. You know how
much we hope Normal Times will mean
to the school. You know now, just
as you knew on C o m m e n c e m e n t
Day, how much the school means to
you. Don't let Normal Times fall down
for lack of your support. Don't let
the school fall away from you. Borri'W,
if you have to, the last sum you may
ever have to borrow, from the folks, and
send your subscription in to me now.
Don't postpone doing i t ; if you put it
oflf until next pay day, sad experience
says that the chances are ten to one you
will never send it in. If you can't get
the money, drop me a card anyhow, telling me to send the paper and where to
send it. I've trusted you before; guess
I can do it again.
You alumni, whom I may not know so
well, and with wdiom I cannot be so famiUar: Glance a t the alumni column of
this paper.
Then glance over the
news—listen: wdiat do you come back
to reunions for?
Isn't it to hear
about the folks in your own class
first of all'.' And, next, to get the latest
news about old Central State and how
she is weathering along? Normal Times
wdll bring just that right to your door
ever.y other week all through the year.
Obey that impulse!
Normal Times will iippear lo times
next .year, starting the first week in
October. Send me $1,50, and you can
hold all fifteen of those reunions wdthout leaving home. It wdll also appear
four times during the sumnier session.
Add 25 cents to the other rate, and we
wdll start you with the first issue.
Do it now!
T. W. TREMBATH,
C. S. N. S.
Sylvia Breth and Blanche Smith gave
readings iu chapel on May 30, the Gettysburg address. In Flanders Field, and
Memorial Da.v being their selections of
suitable material.
TIMES
The Junior Play
A comfortably filled house greeted the
junior players in their finished production of "A Single Man," the first event
of the Commencement Week. The comedy situations wore cleverly brouglit out,
with a finish in action which speaks
well for some treats during 192-1. The
lure of the vamp wdio fries and cannot
catch the aft'ectious of the desirable
bachelor around whom the play centers; the baby ways of fhe precocious
sub-deb wdio does without t r y i n g ; the
quiet dignity of the faithful secretary,
who conceals her own affection, until
she finds it returned; all were done
with a smoothness that the plot hiirdl.v
warranted.
Albert Eberl.y, as Robin
Worthington, the much sought bachelor,
was excellent, and made as much of liis
characterization as ,Iulia Coffej- made of
hers. Her "straight" acting came close
to tlie professional; there is talent in
this young person. Lucille Burnham
was a perfectly natural toniboy-growiiigup; and Alice Ryan brought down the
house at times with her energetic comedy vamping.
In the lesser parts, Sall.v Hann.a as
Robin's sister-in-law gave a creditable
performance; and Carl Hayes entered
into his role wdth more sincerity than
perhaps any member of the cast. Isabella Wabsdii, as Lady Cottrell, Victor
Hauey as Dickie Cottrell, Edythe Morrall as Bertha Sims, Ruth Kangsford as
Robin's housekeeper, and Ann Peters as
the iMrlor-miide, rounded out a capable
cast.
tered into by the Lock Haven school
authorities and the normal school, whereb.V members of the senior class in the
normal school may receive practice
teaching training in the public schools
of the city. There was no alteration in
the plan followed last year.
Dr. Benson, superintendent of the
schools of Lock Haven, had earnestly dosired that tho compensation paid to the
training teachers by the normal school
should be increased, so that these teachers nught be able to take summer fraining courses, improving themselves as
teacliers, a n d , particularly as training
teachers. His request had much to commend i t ; if would have brought about a
highly desiralile situation from all
angles; but in view of the present situation financially in the state it was impossible for the normal school to offer
more than it had offered last year. Mr.
Drum and Mr. McDougall did offer to
the city the services of the measurements
courses in the norinal school, so that
without expense to the city other than
the cost of materials an exhaustive survey of the intelligence might be made. Such a survey would
involve, should the city have to undertake it independently, an outlay of not
less than five thousand dollars. This
offer was not accepted at this meeting,
but is under Dr. Benson's adviseinenf.
Senior.s Finding Schools
Ifs acceptance or rejection will not now
Through the aid of fhe C. S. N. S,
iiffecf the teiicher fraining that this Placement Bureau, luaiiy of the graduschool can now offer to all who enroll. ates of this year's class have alread.y
It is a matter for hearty self-con- been placed in schools. In fhe rush of
gratulation t h a t the very cordial rela- the Commencement season jt has been
tionship between the two school systems impossible f i interview more than a
ill this city is to be continued. The nor- fraction of the class, but the results
mal school interests could ask nothing indicated thtit the high standard of work
better from the city school superintend- insisted on at this school is wduning the
ent, school board, and teachers, than fhe confidence of school superintendents.
The following have made definife confriendliness and effectiveness of fhe cotracts :
operation during 1922-23.
Lucretia Summers, Camden, N. J.;
Amy Peters, Sylvia Breth, Leila AnTwelve Honor Teachers
derson, Clearfield; Eleanor Robb, State
Cenfral State Normiil is proud of
('ollege; Ruth Scantlin, Blanchard;
twelve teachers, "who have shown special
Elizabeth Gates, Marcella Burt, Hazel
aptitude iu the handling of chililren
.lohnson. Emporium; Eth.vleue Lee,
and subject matter, to whom have been
Amelia List, Irvona; I n a Chapel, Inez
iiwarded honors in teaching for the secChapel, Austin; Grace Ishler, Grace
ond semester of this year.
Hoover, Tyrone; Mary Thompson, J e a n
In group I the honors went to Anne Sissler, .Tanetta Hahn, Mildred Fickes,
Kenned.v, Scranton; Jean Sissler, Al- Gertrude Harper, Gwendolyn Glise, Altoona; Lucretia Summers, Philipsburg; tooua ; Mar.v Mowrer, Watsontown;
and Bridget Rydesky, Austin.
Bridget Rydesky, Marie Moran, Russell
Ill the intermediate group they were City; Mary McLean, Mary Powers, Mill
awarded to Gwendolyn Glise, Lock Hall; Stephen Rydesky, Weedville; WilHnveu; Inn Chapel and Inez Chapel, liam Skelton, Clearfleld; Nellie .lohnAustin, aud Edith Ashe, Mill Hall.
son, Laurelton ; Catherine Cooper, LogniiThe .lunior High honors were carried fou; Edith Ashe, Ethel Crider, Hilda
off b.v May Green, Utahville; Gertrude Leathers, Genevieve Eieker, Esther HafHarper, Irvona; Glenn Miller, Lamar, ner, Bellefon+e; Florence Beas, Florence
and Fred Hunter, Beech Creek.
Stra.yer, Johnstown; Martha Dice, Zelma
Newcomer, Williamsport; May Green,
The seventh and eighth grade pupils Roseland; Loretta Funk, Daguseahonda;
from, the training sehool gave a dram- Edith Morrall, Northumberland; Grace
atization of Hawthorne's tale of Feather- O'Shea, Pittsburgh; Christine Summertop, in the chapel period on Friday ville, Beccaria; Ivan Mechtly, Blaine
morning, Ma.y 25. Maria Reish, Merrill City,
Grimm, Charlotte Hanna, Thelma Zeigler, Blanche Smith, Kenneth Eberhart,
Eiiiil.y Brown read Guest's poem. ToFloyd Harmon, Georgia Hursh and Hilda morrow, at Vespers, May 29, Alice Kunes
Croak were in t h e cast.
played Souvenir. Hazel Johnson led.
Normal Times Staff Work
to Be Easier
The Normal Times staff next year will
not have to work under the difficulties
that have hampered this year's staff.
Mr. Drum lias consented to fit up a room
so that the work of handling the papers,
f.vpiug fhe material, etc., may be accomplished without all the delay that
has been unavoidable this year. Typewriters, filing boxes, tables, etc., will be
provided, so that the papers need be
handled once only iu the process of
turning copy into t.vped form for the
printer. Mr. Treinbath says t h a t this
will make it possible for the 192-1 staff
to be in control of the process from
start to finish. This year's staff exclaims, in heartfelt chorus, "Pretty soft!"
Baccalaureate Sermon
Rev. William E. Harr, pastor of the
First Reformed Church, delivered au inspiring message to the inembers of the
graduating class in the presence of an
as.seinbl3- ot reliitiyes and friends that
filled the auditorium. He pleaded for
worship, prayer, brotherhood, ideals,
and service in the spiidts of the graduates, aud particularly for that larger
brotherhood that will nipe out all differences of race, caste, creed, or class
iu unselfish service. Rev. Edward Crumbling delivered the benediction.
Girls' Council Members Chosen
Due fd Mary Hile's decision not to return until the second term next year,
the Junior girls at their meeting on
Ma.v 23, faced the necessity of choosing
two members to act wdth Alice Wieseu
as the senior representatives ou the student council next year. Blan.die Smith
and Grayce Coppersmith were fhe final
selections, after close balloting. They
were chosen from the list of all students
having an average grade of 2 or better
for their junior year.
Preceding the election Mr. Drum spoke
of fhe value of student government to
fhe scliool, and of the many privileges
which student councils had wou for the
girls that previous normal school generations had not enjoyed. Mary Mowrer
and Martha Dice, graduating members
of this year's council, also spoke, telling of wdiat help membership on the
council and the exiicriences that go with
it had been to them.
Alice Wieseu wdll be president of the
new council, Blanche Smith vice president, and Grayce Copiiersniith secretary.
Coming Scrubs Observe
Teaching
The junior chiss met with Mr. McDougall, director of the training school,
on Tuesday, May 15, to get their teaching assignmeufs for next fall. The assignments are being made much earlier
this year than has been the custom.
Tliere has been heretofore too much of
a break at the beginning of the fall
term. It has taken the new scrub faculty several weeks to get themselves adjusted, find out how the training teachers wdsh their classes to be handled, etc.
This year each student assigned for
teaching in the fall will have ample opportunity to observe the work of the
class in wdiich she is to teach, thus making the transition from junior student
to senior teacher easier both for the
pupils and for the training teachers.
NORMAL
TIMES
Annual Junior Prom
Drawls Crowd to
Gym—Some Time!
The iinnual Junior Prom was held in
the "gj'in" on Saturday evening. May
19. The junior class did themselves
proud iu providing a royal good time
for all of its guests.
The receiving line was exceptional,
headed by Mr. Drum, and ending wdth
Miss Yale and Mr, High—but oh, those
.lunior go-betweens! Miller's Serenaders
furnished the music for tho dancing,
and surpassed themselves.
Punch, wdth an unusual kick (don't
misunderstand us) was one of the most
popular features of the evening. Worn
out by all the attentions it received, it
ran out before the evening was half
over.
The headlights of the decorations
would have furnished excellent material
for a moonlight waltz, had there been
occasion for one.
Guests were present from State College, Bucknell, and all the surrounding
places, whence guests can usuall.y be
obtaineil. Rah, rah. State! Only thirtynine were able to come over for the affair, due to the number of similar fetes
in progress over there that night; but
they were a select lot, say those who
selected—and distributed—them.
Anyway, there never was a man like
my man! On wdth the danee—Root a
toot, toot, Bing! Bang!
Tlie committees in charge were:
Refreshments—^Mary
Hile,
Lucille
Burnham, Be Music—Ruth Langsford, Jo Sweeny,
Marion Wilson, Alice Kunes, Julia Coffey.
Decorations—Cleouii Coppersmith, Victor Haney, Carl Hayes, Catherine Devereux, Edith Burgeson.
Cloak — Caroline
Mallison,
Naomi
Simar, Mildred Ericson.
Y. W. Senior Farewell
The Senior Farewell exercises of the
Y. W. C. A. were held on Wednesday
evening. May 30, with Gertrude Harper
in charge. The usual devotional exercises were held, after which each senior
told what Y. W. had meant to her during her days a t C. S. N. S. The meeting
closed with the forming of the friendship circle and the singing of fitting
hymns. It was hard to sing with the
lump in one's throat.
The seniors held a classmeetiug on
Ma.v 14 to make final selection of a
senior memorial.
The Graphoscope
Junior motion picture camera was the
almost uniinimous selection. Now we
hope that wc can keep i t busy.
The Dramatic Club held a picnic in tlie
boys' glen on May 22, combining a
howling good time, eats, and the initiation into membership of Lucile Burnham, Neta White, Julia Coffey, Sara
Hanna, Marie Crain, Helen Buffington,
Alice Ryan, Mar.v Hile, Edythe Morrall,
Carl Hiiyes, and Victor Haney. Everything was successful except Marey's coffee.
The Naturalist's Club lias unanimously
cho.sen twelve new members, wdio were
initiated May 25,
The delectable
dozen are Ruth Summersgill, Margaret Larkin, Helen Thall, Naomi Simar,
Helen Nace, Ann.a Mao Landis, Beatrice
VanZandt, Blanche Smith, Hetty Staver,
Florence Smith, Caroline Mallison and
Amy Bilker,
The seniors have been holding daily
class meetings to prepare for the music
of Commencement and Class Da.v.
Two members of the Y. W. will go to
Eagles Mere as representatives of this
scliool during the week of June 19. They
arc Blanche Smith and Beatrice Van
Zandt.
A deiiion.stratidii of the moving picture
miicliiiie that the seniors are presenting
to the school as their griiduiifion ineniorial was given to the seniors iu the
liiborator.v of the training school on
May 1-1, I t was this demonstration that
convinced the seniors that they could
make no more fitting gift. The school
heartily agrees. Three cheers for 1923.
Wednesday, May 10, was the birthday
of two members of the faculty. Miss
Vale and Miss Himes. Miss Yale received a flower and postcard shower
from students who appreciate what she
has done for them. The Arts Club presented her with a box of cand.v. The
junior and senior members of group one
presented Miss Himes with a be.autiful
bouquet in appreciation of the great
help she has been to them.
Quite a few nienibers of the scrub
faculty have said good-by to lesson pliius
and will renew their acquaintance with
the first semester's work, interrupted for
them early last January.
Miss Butler gave C. S. N. S. a g r e a t
surprise when she drove up to the door
in her new car instead of arriving via
the trolley. The students are all willing to be properly gratful if she will
The old infirmarj- is no more. The let them try out the riding quaUties of
rear room has been fitted up with com- her sporty new Maxwell.
fortably upholstered chairs, a reading
The Naturalist Club planted a young
table, and all other conveniences as a beech tree on the campus a t 6 o'clock
rest room for the Normal School faculty; iu the morning on May 2. Who says
wdiile fhe front room has been equipped that the organization is not wide awake?
as an office for Miss Florence Love, the
A new yictroha has been placed iu the
new dietician.
auditorium.
The 9:20 a r t class is rejoicing that
The girls of the Naturalist Club raided
110 more lesson plans have to be written Woolworths on Saturday, May 16, for
this term. The students cannot quite ten-cent straw hats, in whieh tn go hikunderstand such an abrupt ending to ing over to the reservoirs back of Castheir round of pleasure, unless the book tanea. Many of the club are unlikely
room has run out of supplies; surely ever to forget the t r i p ; they were inMiss Yale is still bountifully supplied duced to sample the roots of the JackMr, Drum, Mr, High and Fred Hunter wdth ideas.
in-the-pulpit.
motored fo Windber recently, wdiere Mr.
Innovations continue to be made in
The moving picture machine, which the
Drum delivered the commencement ad- the dining room since the arrival of Miss
senior class has presented to the school
dress.
Love. There is a greater variety of as its class memorial, was given a thorCommencement addresses were given eats, and these are seasoned just right— oui;h tryout on Monday niglit. May 28,
by Mr. Trembath at Hazlehurst, McKean as Mary Mowrer said, "Nearly a s well wdien five reels of Mr. and Mrs. Johnas I could do." Moreover, on Sunday son's hunting adventures in Borneo were
County, and Benezette, Elk County.
The students of Mr. McDougall's there are fiowers on the table, apple shown in the auditorium to the entire
school efficiency classes had the jileasure blossoms, lilacs, etc.; and an early ar- student body. It somehow did not seem
of going to the exhibitions of school rival on the table was strawberry short- like C. S. N. S. to sit there and be
work in the public school buildings of cake. All we can say is, we like living watching movies affer 9 o'clock at night.
Loek Haven on May 29. There was much on Love.
It does the juniors a lot of good to sit
work on exhibition that was t r u l y reVesper services on May 20 were con- back and anticipate getting the most
markable. The exhibitions surely gave ducted by Emily Brown. They con- out of that ra,achine next year. If the
evidence of the peak of efficiency that sisted entirely of singing.
idea of a meinorial is to keep memories
has been attained by the local schools
alive pleasantly, the seniors have surely
The boys' dormitory was almost deunder Dr. Benson.
hit the nail on the head in their choice.
serted on May 12 and 13, when most of
The senior members of the students' the boys, with Mr. High, went on a
Miss Rowe and the student teachers
councils, accompanied by Mr. Drum, fishing and camping trip to Stevenson's in the intermediate group gave the pupils
Miss Yale, Mr. Sullivan and Mr. Martz camp, a few miles northwest of Renovo. of the fourth and fifth gr.ades a picnic in
were served a chicken dinner at the Nit- The boys went by train to Whetham, the normal glen on Thursday afternoon,
faii,y I n n on Thursday evening. May 31. and hiked from there to the camp, a May 31. The pupils of the sixth grade
The councils' members are Mary Mowrer, distance of fourteen miles. Naturally, were out picnicking with Miss Hagan and
Martha Dice, Mildred Fickes, Stephen they enjoyed the trip, but they are say- the teachers of that grade the following
ing very little about the weather.
Rydesky, Guy Luck and Ivan Mechtly.
afternoon.
The Dramatic Club at its last meeting
elected the followdng to office for next
.vear: Sara Hanna, president; Isabel
Watson, vice president; Edith Morrall,
sccrefar.v-frcasurer,
GRADUATES (
i
NORMAL
Banquets, Picnics,
Etc., Eases Parting With 1923
SHAKE'S PICNIC
The main thing ,at Shakespeare's picnic was the good time idea; and with
all the weiuers, the browned marshmallows, bananas, peanuts, coffee, cake,
pickles of all nationalities, etc., and the
gaines and races a good time was the
one thing that everyone had nothing
else but, to quote Mr. O. Roy Cohen,
the negro interpreter.
At the business session, Cleona Coppersmith was elected president for next
semester; Edith Burgeson, vice president ; Catherine Deveraux, secretary;
Naomi Simar, treasurer; Beatrice Van
Zandt, editor of As You Like I t ; Caroline Mallison, monitor; and Veronica
Cuneo, pianist.
BITTERSWEETS BANQUET
The members of the Beta Sigma Chi
sororit.y held a reunion banquet at the
New Fallon House on the evening of
May 26. Emily Brown and Ruth Langsford entertained the Bittersweets with
several readings, and Miss Shaw accompanied Marie Crain while Marie rendered several of her favorites.
The guests were: Kay Cawley, Jean
Hahn, Mary Thompson, Anne Kennedy,
Emily Brown, Helen Kinney, Jean Sissler, Marie Crain, Frances Cook, Marian
Wilson, Julia Coffey, Neta White, Ruth
Langsford, Alice Ryan, Ann Peters, Lucille Burnham, Joanna Sweeney; Miss
.lessica Aver.v, Miss Mary Shaw, Miss
Gisetta Yale, of the faculty; Florence
Holmberg, '21, and Mary Sherman, of
Norristown; Sara Petermiiu and Eleanor
Troutman, both of '21; and Marian
Buehler, '22.
R. O. L.'S GO ON PICNIC
The Rho Omega Lambda sorority gave
their seniors a farewell sendoff at a
picnic on the old Normal school
grounds, up on the hill back of the
present school. Miss Shaw, Miss Groff,
Miss Raffle and Mrs. Gage, all honorary
members, were among those present,
those "among whom they were among
which" being the entire senior and
junior membership of the sorority. Special unmcntioned features of the afternoon were the endurance
contest,
staged by Hilda Leathers and Leila Anderson, who carried fhe lemonade between them for a mile up the boys' glen
•lES O F 1923
TIMES
and ton miles back; and Betty Gates
Pageant by SS Class
exhibition of leap-frogging, even though
No, sister, that headline does not indishe did sit on Sal's neck and dislocate cate Sunday School Cla.ss, it represents,
her disposition.
for headline purposes, Mr. Sullivan's Social Studies Class, and believe me, Al,
ALPHA SIGMA TAU RISE EARLY
that is no Sundii.y School picnic.
The girls of the Alpha Sigma Tau
That class staged a "Pageant of Ansorority put themselves in the place of
Prehistoric Man on Tuesday morning. cient Civilization" in chapel on TuesMay 24, wdien they left the Normal at day, May 29. The pageant was written
5:30 in the morning, to wander out and staged b.y a hhstory class in the
into the woods for their breakfa.st. Ex- Eureka High School, in California.
perience quicki,y taught luckless ones
The bill of f a r e :
that thin twigs might be easy to cut, but Mother of Civiliz.ation, ,Margaret Larkin
that they usually failed to hold the Spirit of 1923
Mary Hile
sandwich meat just at the point when Herald
Veronica Cuneo
it was well roasted; with the use of Pages
Frances Cook and Neta Kelsey
bab.y planks came success and peace. Al- Prehistoric Man
Helen Cherry
most—not quite—all the girls were able Egypt
Catherine Deveraux
to rouse themselves at t h a t unheard of Babylon
Cleona Coppersmith
hour, and turned up a t the cookfires Assyria
Sara Gardner
with healthy appetities and color.
Phoenicia
Isabel Watson
Judea
Caroline Mallison
MISS SHAW DINES GLEE CLUB
Rome
Alice Kunes
"Come on, girls: three cheers for Miss
Persia
Anna Mae Landis
Shaw!"
Greece. .Bertha Burt, I n a Kilmer, Grayce
Having brought the Glee Club to a
Coppersmith.
pitch of perfection that no normal school
glee club has previously reached, Miss
High School Teachers Meet
Shaw topped off a. year of heartily apHere for Annual Conference
preciated efforts by issuing the invitaThe annual conference of the high
tion that brought out the above shout.
On Thursday evening. May 24, she enter- school teachers of Central Pennsylvania
tained the entire club a t a dinner at was held in the Normal School audithe Lock Haven Country Club. The torium ou Friday and Saturday, May
fields, the wondering brook, the chat- 4 and 5. A large number of teachers,
tering of the birds and of the porch- nearly 200, came here from high schools
loads of excited girls, the afternoon of in Lycoming, Center, Clinton, Bradford,
cards or unrestrained visiting and wan- Clearfield, Tioga, Potter and Blair Coundering about, the chicken dinner, the ties.
dancing afterward. Well, we could not
The principal speakers for the conhave forgotten Miss Shaw anyhow, and ference sessions were Dr. Edward Rynow we double couldn't!
nearsou, iirincipal of the Fifth Avenue
In addition to the members of the High School, of Pittsburgh, and Dr,
Glee Club, Miss Shaw entertained Mrs. George 8, Counts, in charge of the work
Calvin Armstrong, Mrs. G. H. Troxell, in secondary education at Yale UniverMrs. Philip Kift, Miss Hazel Kift, Mrs. sity.
Ella Peck, Mrs. Harr,v Sleicher, Miss
On Friday •n'ening, between the speakMuriel Sleicher, Miss Geraldine Lock- ers' addresses, the Normal School Glee
hart, Miss Gisetta Yale, Mrs. W. N. Club sang twice, and was heartily enDrum, Mrs. Philip Kamp, and Miss Lu- cored, as was also the Varsity Quartet,
cille Maillard.
which sang two of its humorous numbers.
The Saturday session of the conferTliere was great excitement wlicn the ence was given over to round table disnames of those receiving, as the result cussion of submitted questions, and to
of this year's work, Zaner Method departmental meetings.
Teachers' Certificates was posted. It is
This appearance of the glee club was
a cause for some congratulations that its first, locally. Its two numbers, "The
fifty-two members of the class received Sweet Little Girl With the Quaint Squeethe reward, which is to be won only by gee," and "When Twilight Weaves Its
highly meritorious perforinance. Twen- Gentle Spell," have just aroused our apty-two others received the lower, yet petities for more. And that quartet,
still commendable. High Sehool Zaner wdth its "T\Vo Clocks" and "The Lady
certificate.
Bug," was certainly jim-dandy.
Recital of Piano
and Vocal
Pupils Pleases
Mr. All's private pupils in piano and
two of the girls who have been taking
vocal training from Miss Shaw gave
a very enjoyable recital in the auditorium on Tuesday evening. May 15. A
good sized audience heartily applauded
the work of the performers, some of
whom were from the training school,
some students here, aud some residents
of Lock Haven.
The iirogram:
1. Merrymaking
Arnstein
Kirby O'Connell.
2. Dance of the Bears
Schutte
Sarah Wiiinger,
3. Twilight
Friml
N.arcissus
Nevins
Marguerite Fishburne.
4. Musette and Tambourine
Wachs
Veronica Cuneo.
5. Song Without Words. .Eschaikowsky
Alta Campbell.
6. I Know Where a Garden Grows..
Dinsmore
From the Land of the Skyblue
Water
Cadman
Marie Crain.
7. Morning Mood (From the Peer
Gynt Suite)
Grieg
Bertha Baer and Hazel Berry.
8. Bereuse from Pocelyn
Goddard
Gavotte
Wright
Hazel Barrett.
9. Serenade
Pierne
By Moonlight
DeKoven
Bertha Baer,
10. Gavotte and Musette
Soro
Etude Melodique
Rogers
Marguerite Burner.
11. The Last Rose of Summer
Moore
A Song of Sunshine
Turner-Maley
Alice Kunes.
12. Etude Op. 25, No. 1
Chopin
Le Coucou
Daquin
Impromptu
Reinhold
Vonda Johnston.
On Tuesday evening. May 29, Mr. Ulmer's methods class in science went
over to the training sehool laboratory
to study the construction and workings
of the radio instruments there. They
heard a lecture on life saving, broadcasted for Boy Scouts from the station
at Schenectady.
NORMAL
Glee Club Concert Is
Credit to C. S. N. S.
Once they promised to sing in the
"gym," a t a Saturday evening fracas,
and they did—not. Once again they were
promised a trip awaj' to sing, aud they
got it>—not. All through the year they
have kept us worked up to concert pitch
in anticipation, and t h a t anticipation
has been rewarded. The Glee Club has
appeared on its own stamping grounds
at last; and there is no room for choosing adjectives to describe their work:
they were—Good. It is hard, hard luck
for the school that the fates interferrcd
and broke up the trip out of town, for
that club would have reflected unlimited
credit on the institution t h a t claimed
it for its own.
Space at this time prevents proper accounting for the songs of the evening.
Only the program can be given but let
us say once more that that club did
honor to Miss Shaw, to the school, and
to every member wdio took part.
The program:
Row, Row Us Swdft
Cauipano
Ave Maria
Franz Abt
When Twilight Weaves
Branscombe
Glee Club.
Forget-Me-Not
On the Twig of a Chestnut Tree
Robinson
Varsitj- Quartet.
The Snow
Edward Elgar
Glee Club.
Readings, The Pudding, and The
Diary of a Stomach
Emily Brown.
Kodak
The Camera Unive?'sal
lYemember that the name
Eastman designates a Superior Product, and that we
carry at all times a complete
line of Eastman Photographic Supplies and
Cameras
TIMES
"Hiawatfia's Wedding Feast"
CLINTON T R U S T CO.
LOCK HAVEN, PA.
Capital $200,000
Surplus
$80,000
Designated Depository
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
City of Lock Haven.
Lock Haven School District.
Central State Normal School.
3% I N T E R E S T P A I D ON SAVINGS DEPOSITS
The Sweet Little Girl and the Quaint
Squeegee
Warner
The Elephant and the Chimiianzce
Hattic L. Sims.
Wake, Miss l i n d y
Warner
Glee Club,
Two Clocks
Rogers
Mighty Lak a Rose
Nevin
Varsity Quartet.
Goodnight, Goodnight, Beloved. .Pinsuti
Stand Up and Cheer (A Parody on
Alouette)
Glee Club,
Miss Shaw and Mrs, P. R. Kamp, who
have faithfully attended every rehearsal,
and whose acconipanimcnts had much to
do with the excellence of the work of the
club, were presented wdth flowers by
the members of the cluii.
Normal Times Staff Chosen
for 192.3-24
The board of editors of Normal Times
has elected its successors for next year
from a list of junior candidates submitted bj' Mr. Trembath, the faculty advisor, and recommended by him as well
able to handle the editorial task with
complete success. Those chosen were:
Marie Crain, Albert Eberly, Helen Nace,
Cleona Coppersmith, Grayce Coppersmith, Edith Burgeson, Neta White,
Velina Ridge, Lucille Burnham, Frances
Cook, Mary Hile, Helen Ditfmar, Ciitherine Devcreux, Sara Gardner, Frieda
Staiinan, Helen Bufliiigfon,
Blanche
.Smith, Leah Hile and Ruth Langsford.
Not all of these may serve, but next
year's board will be chosen from them.
At a staff meeting to be held soon the
editor-in-chief and others of the major
positions will be filled by vote of this
board.
They will work wdth the iiresent board
on this and the subsequent issues this
j'car. They wdll have to do some clever
thinking, in the opinion of the school,
if they are to t u r n out a better paper
than this year's has been; but that
thinking they are fully capable of doling, is the opinion of the junior class.
Wild Life in L. H.
On a beautiful evening iu May—^May
24, fo be exact—^several of the modest
students from the east dorm were wandering around the streets of the metroiiolis, wdien they saw a gray streak
giving an almost successful exhibition
of disappearing around a corner. They
set sail after the streak, rounded the corner, and saw the gray backhand stubby
legs of away from its bushy tail down the
center of Main street. The boys followed in hot pursuit, but it was not until Ted Schreiber tripped, fell, and lit
right on the wild animal that they were
able to bring it to a stop.
After binding it tail and foot, the
happy infants returned to C. S. N. S.
with their prey. For several days they
kept it in the dorm, feeding it little
by little, and getting it fairl5' tame;
tame enough, at any rate, that Mr. Ulmer was willing to come and take it over
to his home wdth little opposition. May
they both live happy ever after!
SAVE TIME—SAVE STEPS—SAVE MONEY
GO T O
Honest Value
Good Service
Hilton & Heffner
DRUGGISTS
5-10-25 and Variety
Toys and Games
Party Favors
Candy
Notions
Senior Privileges Again
Senior privileges went into effect Monday, May 21. Many of the seniors are
inclined to complain that they do not
have a sufficient nuniber of special
rights; the juniors are not unanimously
of the same opinion. One-half hour extra on the campus nights is not much
unless you are fhe ono that has to come
ill a half hour early.
The special privileges granted this
year are as follows:
Campus iiriyilege until 8:00.
Down town privilege two nights a
week until 9:;i0.
Campus rights during quiet hour.
Ifauce iu fhe gym Thursday evening.
Right to use both campuses.
Right fo use the main entrance.
Senior picnic" indvilege.
Arbor made open territory to boys.
1 m
The GRIFFITH Store
Stationery
Office Supplies
School Supplies
House Furnishings
Hiawatha's AVedding Feast, a cantata
written liy Samuel Coleridge Taylor, the
famous negro composer of London, was
beautifully presented by the Lock Haven
Community Choral Club in the Normal
School auditorium on Friday night. May
11. The music, with its true Indian
rhythm, was particularly lovely. The
club brought out well in its interpretation
the touch of pathos t h a t runs through
the whole cantata. Mr. Gordon Curtis,
of the Cornell University Glee Club, carried the tenor solos to the delight of his
iiudience. It was something of a blow
to niiiny of the young dreamers in the
audience when the aunouneement was
made privately that he was engaged to
he married immediately after graduation, and that he was sailing for India
as .a missionary.
Before the cantata Miss Sara Gabriel
read the portion of the poem that dealt
with the wedding feast, interpreting the
personalities of the Indian characters admirably.
At the close of the program the club
presented to Miss Shaw, our music department head, who has lead the Choral
Club throughout this, its first year, a
sapiihirc and diamond bar pin as a token
of their esteem.
An unexpected addition to the program
provided the audience wdth one of the
best and longest laughs Normal School
.audiences have enjoyed in many a moon.
While Miss Gabriel was reading the lines
of the poem, and just as she arrived at
this "lagoo! Here's lagoo come among
us!" a large gray cat sauntered across
the platform, sat down beside her, and
mewed loudly for attention. I t was several ininutos before the audience could
quiet itself sufficiently to let Miss
Gabriel go on.
Hardware
Camp Supplies
Hosiery
Millinery
cTMEMBER OF CONSOLIDATED MERCHANTS SYNDICATE
An Association of Merchants Operating Over 900 Stores
I
Avis Measurement Work
The educational ineasuremeuts class,
under the direction of Mr. McDougall,
has been giving special diagnostic and
general measurement tests in the .schools
at Avis during the year. Fourteen members of the class have participated iu
fhe adminisfration of the tests, which
have included general intelligence measurements and diagnostic tests in reading, spelling, and arithmetic. The tests
were scored by the whole class, and
at the close of the period of testing a
recommendatory diagnostic report, including the list of specific difSculties discovered and the means of correction, was
sent back to the principal of schools.
NORMAL
The Connecticut
Mutual Life Insurance
Company
The Connecticut Mutual
Life Insurance contract
is especially valuable to
teachers.
That is why many of the
C. S. N . S. faculty and
alumni are Connecticut
Mutual policy holders.
A postal card will bring any
information you desire
HARRY R. ZIMMERMAN
Williamsport Man Lectures
on Birds
The science laboratory was filled with
a group of nature enthusiasts on May 21
to hear Mr. Rishel, of the science department of the Williamsport High
.School, lecture on birds. He brought
with him sixty beautiful slides, showing
birds, their nests, and their young.
Many of his slides showed remarkably
the work that nature has done in protecting birds in providing colorings that
are almost invisible against their usual
background. One in particular, showing a woodcock on his nest, surrounded
by grasses, kept many of the students
guessing so hard that the,y had to be
shown wdiere the woodcock left off and
the grasses began.
Many of tho traits of our common
birds were described so interestingly
t h a t the time had more than passed before any of the audience had become
aware of it.
Special Agent
LOCK HAVEN, PA.
The best of success
to you C. S. N. S.,
throughout 1923.
l]IIII]||||||||||l1lll[lllillllllM.IIIIIII[llllllll|[[||[|lll[lllllll[l|1lillllllllllll[[llllllllllllillllll[|[[lllltll
Fredericks
Pharmacy
The Cut Rate Druy Store
WIDMAN & TEAH
C o r n e r Bellefonte A v e .
and C h u r c h St.
Whitman's
and
Belle-Meade
Candies
Dormitory Concentration
Oh, girls, what will I write for Normal
Times? I'm getitng so tired of racking
my brain, trying to be original; why
doesn't Mr. Trembath give us a week's
rest?—Well, I'll never get it done this
way, so help me, Cassius. Let me think
—^yes, I'll write up the Junior Prom.
"The Juniors tried mighty hard to
please the stately—"—Oh, girls, wasn't
it a scream the way the girls tried to
arrange a cut-in dance so they could
meet that good looking fellow from
State. I'm glad the.v didn't, though, for
I hate cut-in dances. Let's see: where
did I leave off? Oh, yes.
"The Juniors tried mighty hard to
lilease the stately Seniors by putting
the Prom over wdth a bang." I don't just
like the way that sounds, but I'm just
too weary to think any more.
"The gj-m was beautifully decorated
wdth the .lunior colors, and—" Did you
hear about the Glee Club banquet? Miss
Shaw has rented the Country Club for
Thursdaj- night, and I know we're going to have a circus. Isn't Miss Shaw a
dear? She always knows what the girls
wdll like. Well, I guess I had better
get busy.
"Part of the bag was furnished by
the orchestra, wdiich proved to bo satisfactory to all." Oh, kids, did you notice
that violinist.' I almost forgot to dauce
once when we passed the orchestra.
Dear, dear, my mind is wandering, aud I
siui]dy cannot get down to work. Well,
one inight as well keep at a task until
it is finished.
"The faculty were all watching from
the sidelines." I do think that girl with
the old-fashioned red dress looked perfectly stunning. The lace insertion just
put all the finishing touches to it. That
reminds me, I have to go to the dressmakers right this minute. I'll finish
this now and run.
"
looked more beautiful than the
gj-ni has ever looked." —-My, what's the
use! I can't study, so I'm not going
to try.
I wonder if Marg is still cross at me;
wait just one minute, and I'll run and
see. Surely some one else will write
up this old dance.
TIMES
OBSERVATION TOWER^
Edythe Morrall hunting Junebngs in
her bed. Not that she is afraid of them;
she just wants to make sure they are all
comfy.
Miss Rowe enjoying senior privileges,
sitting on the east campus Monday night
of the last week.
The " % % ! ! / ? * ! ! * / * ! ! ! " of the girl
wdio found out a t the last minute that
she was overcut.
Esther Carlson receiving six Junebngs
in a tiny pink basket from Ruth Morrall, while Helen Thall slyly tenants her
bed with them, and Winnie Patterson
opens her wdndow so they can all
come ill.
Memory books flying all about first
floor, second floor, third floor, library,
classroom. Pop's office.
"Won't you
please write iii my book?"
Miss Avery being kept busy saying,
"That's fine!'' to all who enter her
quarters with a sigh of relief and a
"Thank goodness, another one over."
Ann Kennedy, in kindergarten music
period, "Now, children, let's all sit up
like men and sing like birds."
Last week of school. Dust cloths flying; brooms wdiisking; even furniture
being washed. Mother is coming down
for Commencement.
Wonder if she
really thinks the room is always kept
that way? Wonder if she really swallows all that daughter tries to feed her?
She looks as if she did, of course—-but
uKither is a good .•,port herself, you know.
Mr. High, bucking into an empfj- chair,
during iirifhiiietic class, and murmuring,
"Pardon me."
Hetty Staver feeling abused, because
she "just leaned" against the dayroom
partition, and the darn thing went over.
Mr. Ulmer, confessing that the day
was a drowsy one—after the discussion
of the cabbage butterfly had put him to
sleep.
Marty Cnnneen thinking herself a
high-grow, bccau.so she can call all the
trees on the campus by their first names.
Roll call at table D3: "Grace! Miss Ingalsby I Schooley! Wardrope! Cherry,
Helen! Marie! P i p ! Luck!"
The effect of chocolate pic on the girl
ndio did not know it was on the seat
in the telephone booth.
The reason wdiy Helen Cherry was
picked for the p a r t of Prehistoric Man.
Katherine Brosius punctuating Main
street by making a dash after a fivedollar bill.
Caroline Mnllison's poetic fancy: she
likens a .spring flower, in drawing class,
to a spring from a curtain rod, f r instance.
Ann Peters removing tho tail from
the Baltimore Oriole.
Ann Kennedy borrowing a pair of earrings suitable for the dance.
Hilda Leathers planning to take life
seriously, if she ever gets in practice.
Seniors frjdng to keep up the air of
importance wdiile showing pop and mom
around.
H , G., and A., passing themselves out
the front door as seniors, but having less
luck on the way back.
The senior class race, trying to get
iu iifter the movie and before Oi.lO. Too
bad fhey last so long.
Grace Hoover entertaining friends
with the story of fhe Old L she intends to enter whenever she has
$2.00 and a black silk dress.
Outdoor Meet Won by 1924
Baseball far throw—Staver, '24; first;
Russell, '23, second; Coppersmith, '24,
third. Distiince, 124 feet, 9 inches.
Standing broad jump—Staver,
first;
Ashe, second; Kessinger, third. Distance, 6 feet 8% inches.
100-yiird dash—Staver, first; Ashe, second ; Kessinger, third. Time, 13 3-5
seconds.
Basketball far throw—^Leathers, '23,
first; Morr.all, '24, second; Thall, '24,
third. Distance, 57 feet 5 inches.
Running hop, step and jump—-Ashe,
first; Landis,'24, second; Coppersmith,
'24, third. Distance, 24 feet, 1 inch.
Relay race—Won by 1924.
I'oint tofal for meet—1924, 35; 1923, 28.
The Field Day events, which took place
on the afternoon of Memorial Day, were
carried off by the Junior Class, mainly
through the efforts of Hetty Staver, who
placed first in five of the seven events
on the card. Edith Ashe took the hop,
step, and jump with 24 feet 1 inch. Hilda
Leathers easily won the basketball far
throw, her toss of 56 feet 4 inches being at least two feet beyond her nearest
competitors. The 50-yard dash, the baseball far throw, the 100-yard dash, the
sf.anding broa'"' iump, the bean bag rela.y, all went fo Hetty Staver, for the
juniors, Edith Ashe and Kathryn .Stangel
usually being just behind her.
Lydia Custer eliminated Edythe Morrall from the girls' singles in the tennis
fournainent, 10-8, 7-9, 6-4; while Ernest
Schrot and Vic Haney were staging ii
hectic match of the north court, Schrot
emerging finally with 11-9, 7-9, 6-2. Almost every game of the first two sets
went fo deuce a number of times, and
there were fev\ points that were not won
only after long rallies. Schrot easily
disposed of Herbster in love sets in
the finals, Herbster having earlier eliminated Warren McCart.v. Lydie Custer
suffered a reversal of form in the finals,
and went down to defeat in straight sets.
MEET SCORES:
50-yiird dash—Staver, '24, first; Ashe, '2.3,
second; Kessinger, '23, third. Time, 7
seconds.
The picture of the senior class which
.appears in this issue and all th e pictures in this year's Praeeo, were taken by
G. A. B R I O N
Photographer
ai South Fairview Street
I.OCK HAVEN
School Photography si Specialty
Xhiil orders for duplicates of all pictures taken tliis year will he promptly
fllled.
Good school positions go to applicants
whose pliotogrnphs are good. Invest in
a Brion photograph. Special riites to
summer students.
8
NORMAL
TIMES
'21. Eva Belle Lovell, Williamsport.
'21. Rev. Jacob Getz, Williamsport.
'21. Helen E. Loose, 1511 Sixteenth
avenue, Altoona.
'21. Alice Bowser, Lock Haven.
J. Buell Snyder, Pittsburgh.
'22. Alfhea Beery, 213 Ninth avenue,
Carrie Kuluis Lytle, Cherry Tree. Juniata.
Fred L. Balfour, 221 North Ninth
'22. Helen Wiilters, Altoona.
Indiana.
'22. Elizabeth M. Bowser, Loek Haven.
Alma Wenker Smith, Lock Haven.
'22. Alice Martin, Johnstown.
I'earl Reed Kelly, Galeton.
'23. Hester Liddle, Williamsport.
Hazel Shanno'i Thompson, Brad'23. Beryl Erne.sf, 112 Eighth avenue,
.luniata.
Elizabeth Walters Raub, Brad-
(vlLUMNI N E W S
'13. Edith Brungard is teaching in the
'01.
public schools of Vandergrift, Pa. Gene'03.
vieve Stewart is teaching at Braddock.
'03.
'16. Mrs. A. Harvey (Mary A. Clark) street,
'03.
is living a t Johusonburg.
'03.
'18. William Ganiposki is teaching in
'03.
the junior high school at Farrell.
'20. Lillian Garbrick, a graduate from ford.
'03.
the commercial departnient, is a stenographer in the treasurer's oflice of Penn ford.
State.
'03. Pearl North Staley, K n a p p Creek,
'21. Eleanor Troutman happened into N. Y.
Lock Haven on May 16, and could not
'03. Lucy Patton Miller, Perryopolis.
resist the tempf.ation to visit with her
'04. Anna Mufliy, Howard.
Bittersweet sisters. Obey that imiiulse
'05. Christine Eadie Riehens, Lock
whenever it strikes you.
Haven.
Almeta Bixel, '21; Sylvia Claster, '22;
'06. Dr. David W. Thomas, Lock
Priscilla Williams, '21, and Frank Rishel, Haven.
'19, came back here to attend the Junior
'06. Mrs. David W. Thomas, Lock
Prom May 19.
Haven.
'09. Twila Belknap is teaching a sec'Ofi. Edna D. Rich, 67 North Fairview
ond grade in Coudersport.
street. Lock Haven.
'21. Violet Smith sj.ent May 19 with
'07-'08. Mary R. Stouck, Lock Haven.
her sister, Flossie, a junior here.
'08. William 6. Miller, Berlin.
'22. B e t t y Bowser i.< visiting May
'08. John S. Walkey, Lock Haven.
Green, haying just completed .a year of
'08. Maude C. Floruss, Flemington.
successful work in the high school at
'OS. Crease Hanna Avery, Troy.
Hazlehurst.
'08. Belle Hoover Wurste/, Williams'21. Ruth Roto has ended her year's port.
work in the schools at Farrandsville,
'08. Lou Eiiierj' Mervine, Loek Haven.
and is back at her home in Dunnstown.
'OS. Nolle Wolfe Ingraham, Jersej'
'17. Mrs. C. D. Howenstine (Myrtle Shore.
Reynolds) is living at Charleroi.
'OS. Mabel E. Knecht, Lock Haven.
'17. Mrs. A. Stewart (Idona Bartley)
'OS. Estella Wagner. T,ock Haven.
lives at Grindstone.
'OS. Emily Leitzell
Otway, Lock
'21. Mildred Moyer, of Jersey Shore, Haven.
who has been teaching at Woodlawn,
'OS. George E. Long, Howard.
spent a few days before Commencement
'08. H. M. Grugan, Lock Haven.
visiting friends in the dormitory.
'08. J. W. Paul, 634 Louisa street,
'20. Florence Holmberg, a teacher at Williamsport.
Norristown, visited with the present Bit'11. Edith Weber, Howard.
tersweets on May 26, and attended their
'12. .losephinc Muffiy, Howard.
banquet.
'12. Lauretta Weber, Howard.
'19. Amj' Burgland, of •lohnsonburg,
'13. Harold Duinm, Mackeyville.
visited the dorms on Tuesdaj-, Maj- 29.
'1.3. Edith Chilcott Owens, PhilipsIf you were not back to Commence- burg.
ment this year, you most certainly
'13. Matilda
Hostetter
Livingston,
missed the time of your lives. More than Johnstown..
'13. Caroline Hostetter Wilson, Johnsthat, you missed the one best chance of
the year to get in touch wdth some of town.
'13. Oidielia Haupt Shall, Milesburg.
the old crowd. How many of your
'14. Mabel Hafner Johnston, Woolfriends are in the list below? These
were all back this year, and others, too; rich.
'14. Cora Luse, Center Hall.
but these were all Normal Times' busy
'14. Isabel Rowe Bradford, Center
little reporter could identify. Make up
your mind now to be back on the Hall.
'15. Marion Barnes Davis, Coalport.
grounds wdien June, 1924, rolls round:
'15. Kathryn Ward, DuBois.
'80. W. J. Weaver, Beaver Falls.
'16. Elizabeth A. Kyle, Mackeyville.
'82. J. S. Cranmer, Williamsport.
'17. Mertie Esjiigh Miller, Greens'83. B. B . Harrison, Boalsburg.
burg.
'83. Charles S. D.avis, Steelton.
'17. Marion Harper Barrett, Irvona.
'83. Anna Kolbs Shoem.aker, Lock
'17. R. Bruce Stover, Lock Haven.
Haven.
'18. W. Cecil Davhs, Coalport.
'83. J. C. McAllister, Ridgway.
'18. Anna Simonton Miller, Altoona.
'88. J. E . Hall, Fleming.
'IS. Bessie M. Grant, Galeton.
'96. Mrs. Frank M. Wilson, Loek
'18. Fay Stover, Bhuic'.iard.
Haven.
'IS. Ada Fnlton Lytcl, Glen Richey.
'97. W a r r e n M. Smith, Lock Haven.
'IS. L. Ruth Garstater, Mill Hall.
'96. Dessie Stiver Piiinter, Mill Hall.
'18. Isabel C. Ha.yes, Mackeyville.
'97. I . T. Parsons, Lock Haven.
'19. Elliz.abefh O'Shea, Irvona.
'98. Homer Graffius, Woodland.
'19. Elizabeth N. Taylor, Mackeyville.
'98. Mina B. Barrows, Williamsport.
'19. Mary Ellen Carstater, Mill Hall.
'98. Ada Gruver Munro, Lock Haven.
'19. Ruth Walters, Altoona.
'99. Frances Bartholomew Knights,
'19. Ella M. Kennedy, Scranton.
Williamsport.
'20. Rebecca C. Kilborn, Camp Hill.
'99. E . G. Knights, Williamsport.
'20. Esther Stopper, Williamsport.
'01. W. P. Cornely, Madera; Vida
'21. Pauline Ott, Williamsport.
Cornely, Madera.
Us and Others
MAY VISITORS
Mrs. Joseph Mallison, St. Marys.
Bernard Reilly, Johnsonburg.
Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Peters, Dorothea
and Bobby Peters, Katherine Hoover,
Annabel and Marjorie Cowdick, all of
Clearfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hile, Mr. and
Mrs. .Tames Hile, Vera and Edith Clark,
and Mildred Dietrick, all of Pleasant
Gap.
Mrs. George Burf, Harold Burt, Gordon A'alentine and little Bertha Moran,
of Roulette.
Mrs. George Thomiison and Anna June
Thompson, of Altoona.
Prof. D. S. Hartline, head of the department of science at Bloomsburg.
Mr. and Mrs. James Myers, John
Mj'crs aud Raymond Wallace, of Bellwood.
Marian Ward, Williamsport.
Al.ys Dolau, Bellwood.
Helen Loos, Newdierry.
Leotta Caldwell, Flemington.
Mr. and Mrs. .Tohn Edglej- and Sherman Edgley, of Altoona.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Haney (yep, our
Joe!) of Loganton.
Lulu Mulheran, St. Marys.
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Kilmer, Irene Waite
and Beatrice Metzger, of Williamsport.
Myrtle Seylor, Salona.
Dr. and Mrs. Spackman, Mrs. Strickland
and Kathleen Strickland,
Clearfield
Count.v.
A'irgiuia Hainilton, Pittsburgh.
Mary Shade, Clearfield.
Mrs. Flora B. Custer, Johnstown.
Mrs. L. R. Robb, Altoona.
Ida Mac Dittmar, Williamsport.
Evelyn Harris, South Williamsport.
Lillian Coffey, James Curran, Clarence
McGarvey and Gerald Renshaw, Renovo.
Hester Liddle, '23, Williamsport.
Mrs. George Williams, Howard.
Mrs. P. G. Lee, Irvona.
Mrs. A. E. Barrett, Bernice Barrett
and Leslie Nearhof, of Bellwood.
Ruth Turle.v, Irvona.
Helen Dittmar took Leah Hile home
with her May 5. They took in the
Willhamsport lilirary, so that Leah would
not get homesick.
Belville Cree visited his mother, who
is ill fhe Masonic Home in Elizabethtown, on Tuesday, May 8.
Blanche Smart, the fisherwoman of the
da.v room, spent a recent week-end
in the trout streams near home. The
fish are still there.
Gretchen Williams and Alva Schooley
attended the Junior Prom at State College.
Helen Gregory made a number of new
ncquaiiifances at the senior dance. Af
the rate she is writing letters, she will
soon be broke again.
The few who wondered how Miriam
Decker attained such a remarkable stand
of corn in such a short time, on her
garden iiafch down back of Mr. Ulmer's
home, investigated. They found each
cornstalk carefnll.v propped in place with
stones. They say they do it that way
ill Montgomery.
Grace Hoover entertained Ruth Donovan and Sadie Zimmerman a t her home
in Kylertown over the week-end of
May 5.
Dr. .Siiia Stratton, of the State Department, addressed tho boys iu the Y. M.
C. A. rooms and the girls in the chapel,
in a series of lectures extending through
the week of M.ay 1. Dr. Stratton's engagement has recently been announced.
Marie Howe, who had to leave us at
the first of the term, has recovered from
her operation for appendicitis.
Ann Petes, Alice Ryan and Lucile
Burnham were guests of Elinora Bonnell
af Jersey Shore recently.
It isn't good for Martha Fillman to
spend too much time at home. She came
back on May 13 wdth her arm in a sling.
Miss Ritter is back ou the job, after
wliiif she calls a fen-day recovering-fromEaster vacation.
Laura Hanes, of St. Marys, a former
junior this year, has started in with the
Bell Telephone Coinpany there.
Helen Kinney spent May 19, etc., with
Ethel Darby at Clearfield.
"Skinney"
did not forget fo look uj) our old friends
Tribley and Lorraine.
Iva Liviugsfon attended a dance a t
the Phi Gamma Delta house at Bucknell on May 12.
We hope that Miss Love will like C. 8.
N, S. as well as we like her. We appreCi.'te her efforts to make tverything iu
tho dining-room attriictive.
Mr. and Mrs. Drum entertained the
faculty .at a 5 o'clock tea on Friday, May
11. Mary Mowrer, Miirtha Dice and Mildred Fickes assisted the hostess in serving.
Helen Gregor.v spent Maj' 12 in Williamsport with Alva Schooley. Helen recovered sufflciently after several days to
start writing to Cornell.
Miss Groff motored to Lancaster on
May 12, to visit her mother and sisters.
Warren McCarty, lit the request of the
class in geography methods, gave a short
talk on the customs of the people of
France, giving first hand iuformation
that he had acquired during his service
in tlie World War.
Miss Butler gave the sehool a shock
early in May, wdien she drove up to the
front door in a shiny new sport model
Maxwell, in wdiich she had invested her
own good money. She seems to have
fired of buying street cars for the S. T.
Coiniiaii.y. "Say, Miss Butler, c'n I hookey
on behind?"
Mr. Ulmer in his Ford and Mr. Gage
in his shiny new Dodge took the school
gardening class on a jaunt to State College on Thursday niorning. May 31.
Catherine Cooper, Miriam Decker, Clarence Thompson, Warren McCarty, Ernest
Schrot, William Skelton, Ivan Mechtly
and Stephen Rydesky went along. The
gardeners took in the dairy, the prize
cattle and fhe experiment .station. Mr.
Gage found his way to the library, and
waited peacefully there for the rest of
the party.
Media of