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NORMAL TIMES
At
VOLUME 5
Central
State
Normal
LOCK HAVEN, PA., OCTOBER
School
14,1926
Annual
Conference
Brings 500 Guests
Four Students Enter Senior
Year—Miss Sue Northey New
Member of Faculty.
Central State Normal's new currieuluni, the .speeial third year of training for kindergarten teachers, under
Miss Sne Northey, a new member of the
faculty, began its flrst j'ear of existence this September. This is the special course so much discussed last fall,
whieh is to be operated in Lock Haven
Normal and in Loek Haven Normal only.
In addition to the many kindergarten
teachers now taking tlie first two years
of work, the regular two years of the
Group One curricula, four students have
enrolled as charter members, so to
speak, of the third year. These four
are Vivian Eberhart, Helen Marr, and
Helen Swartz, all graduates of Lock Haven Norm.'il, and Ursula Ryan, a graduate of Slippei'y Rock Normal School.
The work is well organized under Miss
Sue Northey. Miss Northey is a graduate of the Natioiuil Kindergarten College, Chicago, where she received her
baccalaureate degree after four years
of special preparation. She has followed this up with much graduate
study lieyond that required for her master's degree at Northwestern. Her experience has been wide; she has taught
in iSan Antonio, Texas; Youngstown,
Ohio; Washington, D. C ; Cleveland,
Ohio, and in state teachers' colleges iu
Illinois, Iowa, and Ohio.
(Continued on tiago 8)
Registration Exceeds Previous
Records
liOck Haven's ttit:il registration tliis
fall lias gone .about ten per cent, beyond that of last year. The total registration, nfter nil dujilications of names
have been carefully removed, is 425.
Must (if these registered the first registration day. The business of registration w;as never better managed. Once
tho stndents had paid their registration
fees and made out their formal cards
they were nearly through. Individuiil
programs were made out, personal conferences held with at least one member
of the faculty, aud the program card
checked aud ai)proved, in less than flfteen minntes. Very few of the students
—and they were those with complicated
credit problems—had to spend much
more time than that after passing the
bursar's table.
The faculty worked at registration
from nine in the morning until six that
evening. Classes began at nine on Tuesday niorning, September 14, and another
year of history begun. Late entrants,
comparatively few in number, were sent
to tho main olliee.
District Convention of P. S. E. A.—Mountain Arts
Join—Two State Superintendents Here
The second annual convention of the
central district of the Pennsylvania State
Educational Association, this year held
in conjunction with the conference of
the Mountain Arts Association, has
brought 500 distinguished guests to Central State. Two state superintendents,
the president of the state educational
association, an ex-governor of Pennsylviinia, and other notables are on the list
of speakers. The Normal School continues in active operation, but the student and the faculty are doing what
can be done to extend the hospitality
for which, it is hoped, this school is
known.
Dr. Cliarles E. Lose, former principal
of this school; Ex-Governor M.artin G.
Brumliaugh, now president of .luniata
College; Dr. Will Grant ('hambcrs, dean
of the graduate school at Penn State
and an alumnus of Central State, and
Dr. Frank G. Davis, of Bucknell's depaitment of educitiou, spoke at the
moiiiing and afternoon sessions on October 7. Dr. 11. B. HoUoway, superintendent of schools of the state of Delaware, was the speaker for the evening
session.
Friday's iiioniiug session brought to
the platform Dr. W. R. Straugliii, principal of Mansfield Normal School; Dr.
I'aul S. Leinbaeh, of Philadelphia, addressing tlic evening session. The afternoon was given to departmental meetings. Saturday morning Dr. Carroll
Champlin, of I'enn State's School of
Education, and Dr. .1. Herbert Kelly, editor of the School .lournal, spoke.
Mountain Arts Sessions
The ilountaiii Arts Association met
with the schoolmen in the general sessions. On Friday afternoon five group
meetings were held: In agriculture, art,
commercial, home economics, and industrial arts, and on Friday evening the
members of the association banqueted
at the New Fallon Hotel.
"Our Northern AUeghenies"
Superintendent Gu.y C. Brosius, of
Clinton County, presided at the opening
session, and introduced our farmer principal. Dr. Charles E. Lose, who gave a
typical Dr. Lose talk, full of the rustle
of woods and the murmur of streams.
Dr. Lose hns been back to the Normal
School many times f
NUMBER 1
Y
Twelve New Instructors Holding
Classes—All Sections Provide
Professors—School G r o w t h
Compels.
Twelve new instructors have to behas yet to deliver one that fails to grip come acquainted with the returning
Senior class. The growth of the school
his audience.
has made many additions to the faculty
His announced subject, "The Great necessary, in both the Normal School
Out-of-Doors," took in too much terri- and the Training School. Several of
tory. Dr. Lose confined it to our North- these instructors joined the staff at the
ern AUeghenies; not the AUeghenies of commencement of the summer session;
the geographers, but the AUeghenies of the others appeared on registration day
the hunter and the fisherman, the camp- this fall.
er, the man who really knows them.
Mr. Paul B. Dyck took up his work as
Through the four seasons of the year dean of men and director of health eduDr. Lose wove the magic thread of rec- cation for men at the commencement of
ollection. Ho drew picture after pic- the summer session. In addition he
ture of hillsides, trout-streams, drifting coached baseball during this .summer,
woodsmoke from eampfires, the pictures and has been molding a football team
since September 15. Mr. Dyck coached
he remembers so vividly, the sort of
teams and instructed in physioal edupictures which every out-of-door man cation in Northeast, Pa., and in Sherbrings back from the woods to make wood High School, Milwaukee. He is a
lovely the rest of his days.
graduate of Oberlin, and possesses his
master's degree from Columbia UniverDr. Brumbaugh on "Knowledge"
sity. Mr. Dyek's home is in Whitewater,
He was followed bj^ Dr. Martin G. Kansas.
Briimbnugli, president of Juniat.a ColMiss Elizabeth Eearick h.as also been
lege, who spoke on "The Varieties of
added to the staff of health education
Knowledge." Tliere is more to right con- instructors, and has been dividing the
duct than knowledge, Dr. Brumbaugh outside coaching activities with Miss
said; yet it is the conviction of the Dixon, both of whom ure firmly conscliooliiKHi that right conduct is a t least vinced of the value of athletics for every
based on knowledge. This conviction has one. Miss Rearick's home is in Dancolored educational thinking at .all times, ville, 111. She graduated ut Roekford,
just as it colored that of S(icr;ites: "Is 111., College for Women, and added her
it conceivable, Cehe.s, that an.v man gr.-iduate degree at Wellesley College.
Miss Rearick was a director of jihysiknowing the right should fail to do i t ? "
cal education at both of her Alma Maters
The liusiness of the primary grades following the cuiiipletion of her work
flrst of all is to train pupils to know there.
a few things clearly, to establish ac]\liss Fern Auiinou is associated with
curate fundamental perceptions, to teach Miss Whitwell in iiiiisie education here,
a few things exactl.y and not many things joining our faculty at the opening of
apiiroxiniately.
this session. Her home is Swayzee, Ind.,
The grammar glades can base on clear although she comes to ns from directing music in the schools of Evanston,
knowledge ;i knowledge of things in their
III. She has taught also in Wisconsin
relationships, a comprehension of things
aud iu Indiana. Her alma mater is the
in series, order, laws, so that a iiupil Western College for Women, at Oxford,
may see a fact clearly and also what O., and she has had graduate work at
goes before and comes after the f.act. Oberlin and at Northwestern, from tho
The high school's province is to develop latter of which she received her master's
the power to know analytically, so that degree.
the graduate may be able to take a fact
Another middle-westerner who has
•apart, understand it minutely, and re- joined us is Miss Beulah Dahle, who is
construct it from its parts.
succeeding Miss Deborah Bentley in
The duty of the college is to give ex- charge of the school's most important
haustive knowledge of some facts, to de- department, from many points of view:
nutrition, practical nutrition included.
velop the type of mind which seeks the
Miss Dahle lived in Mt. Horeb, Wiswhy of things, to create at least a few
consin. Both her undergraduate and her
men who can know one thing so well
gr.aduate degrees she received from the
that they can speak of it with authority. University of Wisconsin. She has fol"We need," said Dr. Brumbaugh near his lowed her profession in Minnesota, Utah,
conclusion, "We need a few men who South Dakota, and Michigan, coming to
(Continued on p a g e 5)
(Continued on I'age 10)
NORMAL
STEEPLE-CHASING IS
LOSE TO SMETHPORT
THE LATEST SPORT
IN RAGGED GAME
Long lines of ditches run across the
campus. From the lieating plant to the
training school, from the training scliool
to the main building, run six-foot
ditches, with bunkers of dirt on either
side. Day students and dorm students
clutch their hand-bagg.age, t.ake short,
skippy runs or long, loping runs, according to their nature, and sail gracefully
over, as gracefully as Nature permits.
To date no one has fallen short. I t
would not be wise. Seekers after wisdom are we, bnt nothing can convince
us that wisdom lies prostrate at the bottom of a ditch. We might be wiser
were we convinced; it is lietter that
wisdom lie prostrate there than that we
show it how. Perlunis if one of us could
find wisdom that w.ay tho rest of us
miglit take time enough to go around,
effectively if not athletically, over the
temporary bridges that have been provided. Any student should be wise
enough to know that steejile-ch.asing
ought to argue a horse.
The cause of it all is the determination of the Board of Trustees that the
Normal Scliool dormitories shall hiive
plenty of heat all througli the winter.
There has never been any cause for
complaint in that regard, but the steam
lines, laid a quarter of a century ago,
gave Dr. Armstrong, Mr. Bitter, Mr.
Hursh, and Belvie many anxious moments during the past winter. The sight
of a campus torn up to let a repair
man down to the pipes had occurred too
often to content any one. From now
on tliere will be no trouble.
A series of six-inch steel pipes are to
be laid in each ditch. They are to be
cased in a concrete tunnel, high enough
to permit a man to go all along the
pipe-lines, and to repair any break without delay for digging. The work is being pushed so that the campus may be
restored and ample heat ensured before
real winter weather reaches Lock Haven.
Three large new boilers are being installed in the heating-plant. The increasing size of the Normal Sehool has
worked the former boilers to capacity.
The new boilers, of the Oil City type,
one of them a high-pressure boiler, the
other two for low pressure, will be sufficient to provide steady heat with an
ample margin over any ijresent need.
New Courses Are Offered
Noticeable changes have taken place in
the courses of study offered in the State
Normal Schools. The English requirement in first semester has been reduced
from five to three hours, while iu the
second semester it is increased to three
hours. This makes a total of six hours
for the first year.
These changes also include many new
courses. Among these are English Literature, American Government, History
and Appreciation of Music, Principles
of Edueation, and Technique of Teaching. Many of these courses are required in the last four semesters of the
course of study for Group I I I .
The course in English Literature embraces the study of both early and late
writers. The study of modern authors
is to be emphasized. Much time is de-
A well-drilled team came down from
Smethport to open the Normal School
season, and tore it wide .apart. 32-0 was
the flnal score, due in part to rather
smart teamphiy of the visitors, but much
more to the fact that our team behaved
exactly like a team th.at had too little
opjiortunity to work together.
TIMES
played a h.ard giinie, better than ours,
and deserved to win by the wide margin.
It Wiis a hard blow for the Maroon team,
this loss, but it had its compensiitions.
It indiciited that the miiterial on the
field this season is the best we have had
out, individuiilly, since the re-birth of
footbiill here two yeiirs ago. Teamwork,
drill, smooth play that can come only
through drill—these were missing. Give
the teiim two more weeks under Coach
Dyek's direction and it will look like a
real team. Somehow, somewhere (though
not against St. Francis or Stroudsburg,
our two hiirdest gaines, wliich come next
on the schedule), we will break into the
win column before the final curtain of
the 1926 season.
On the first pla.v of the game the npstaters pulled the old sleeper trick.
Smith, hiding out along the sidelines,
got well ddwn the field without being
siiotted. and took a long forward pass
from Kolin. With no one in front of
liim he handled the ball carelessly, drojijiing it on our 15 yard line. The trick
The lineups:
is one that cannot be pulled against a
Smethport
Normal
seasoned team. I t caught ours, with its
few veterans and its lack of time for S. Scott
Nohm
preliminary training, sound asleep, and
Right Knd
rattled them to such an extent that three Stickles
Fitzsimmons, M.
touchdowns went over in the flrst jieriod.
Right Tackle
Bohn
Kolin scored after two more plays. McDermott
Riglit Guard
Long runs around end by Petruzzo
Miller
mainly put the ball over in a few more McCoy
Center
minutes for a second touchdown. Five
Barr
minutes liiter ii forward pass wiis tossed Sclioolmiistor
Left
Guiird
to Mundy, who stood across the goal
Sherkel
line unwatched, though two of our men Studholnie
Left Tiicklc
within ten yards were in position to hiive
Ne wm an
Larkin
covered him.
Left End
Tn the second period Clark intercepted
Mundy
McCloskey
a forward piiss and ran 25 yards for a
Quarterback
touchdown. The period ended with the
L. Petruzzi
Bowser
biill in the middle of the field. The
Right Halfback
Normal team had begun to pull together
Bauman
and were fighting harder and harder Biiuman
Left Halfback
from this time on. A forty-yard march
Ulmer
through the Smethport line went for Jones
Fullback
nothing when the whistle blew to end
the half.
Substitutions:
J. Petruzzi for L.
One of Ulmer's kicks was blocked during the third period, Smethport recovering on onr 25-yiird line. J. Petruzzo
made nine yards on a fake pass, and a
pass to Stickles took the ball over.
Bohn recovered a Smethport fumble in
the fourth period, staving off a possible
touchdown. Normal again got an offensive under way, carrying the biill
fifty-five yards without interruption, but
again the whistle halted our progress,
milking fruitless our best march of the
game.
There are no alibis for any game.
There could be none for this. Smethport
voted to the study of the works and lives
of Thomas Hardy, John Galsworthy, Bernard Shaw, Joseph Conrad, Arnold Bennett, and others. These men and their
writings are considered represen''ative
of the modern English literature. The
primary object of the course is to arouse
the student's thoughts on subjects that
he reads, and to discover his special interest in these fields. At the end of this
course the thoughts and ideas he has
gleaned from these readings will be presented i n written or oral form.
"Hansel and Gretel," an Operetta,
Is First Number—Cast of Six
Artists to Sing Fairy Story.
"Hiinsel iind Gretel," an operetta in
three acts, will open Lock Hiiven's 1926
concert soiison on Friday evening, October 20. The liresenting company includes Mary Potter, Sally Spencer, Mary
Korb, Mariii Allen, Theodore Webb, and
Charles (Jronhiim, iiU iirtists in their
own right.
Mary Potter, a soloist frequently with
the New York Symphony Orchestra, a
contralto with a voice of great natural
bciiuty, appears as the Witch in this
musical version of the old fairy story.
Siilly Spencer, like all the others of the
com]iany in being American by birth
iind triiining, a native of New York
State, will be the Hiinsel of tho operetta,
iind Mary Korb, born in Nowiirk, a pupil of Mme. Marcella Sembrich, a lyric
soprano, will sing Gretel's role.
Maria Allen will carry the dual role
of the Dewman and the Siindman. Miss
Allen is a southerner, from Atlanta,
Georgia, and owns a lovely lyric soprano.
Theodore Webb, the Broom-maker, has
a rich, resonant voice of .apparently unlimited capiicity.
The conductor is the Municipal Organist of Portland, Maine, and has also
been org.anist and instructor in music
at Dartmouth University. He is Charles
Cronhain, and will be known to many
music lovers as the one-time organist at
the
Lake Placid Club and the Director
Petruzzi, Hungerford for Kolin, Clark
of Music there.
for Mundy, Jones for Clark, Stravinski
The story of the opera is familiar to
for Studholnie, T. Scott for Stickles,
many.
I t is reproduced here, neverthePomeroy for Barr, Renninger for Nolan,
B. Fitzsimmons for Sherkel, Sherkel for less, so that the developing story of the
opera may be more easily followed.
M. Fitzsimmons, Barr for Fredericks.
The Story of "Hansel and Gretel"
Referee: Puterbaugh. Umpire: Ritter.
Hansel and Gretel have been left to
Head linesman: Shuey.
work in their cottage while their mother
Score by periods:
and father sell their brooms i n the
Smethport
20 6 6 0—32
neighboring villages. Work tires. They
Normal
0 0 0 0—0
start to frolic. At the height of their
Touchdowns: S. Scott, Kohn, Mundy, fun the mother enters, worn out, and
Clark, Stickles. Try for point: Mundy, unhappy because of her inability t o sell
2 out of 5.
her wai-es. She scolds the children
roundly, and sends them out into the
nearby forest to pick wild strawberries
European governments.
A sweeping for supper. Late that evening t h e fachange is the requiring of Educational ther returns, gaily bearing a basketful
Biology, a new course, from all first of dainties, having sold his brooms at a
good profit. The children have not reyear students in all groups.
turned. He is horror-stricken a t the
thought of their pitiful plight alone in
Robb School Fourth Grade Are the woods.
Preparing Play
The pupils of the fourth grade at Robb
School, taught by Josephine Guild, student teacher, under the supervision of
Miss Martha Lay, are preparing a play.
It will be given under the auspices of
the history department. The play is entitled "William Penn and His Treaty
With the Indians." I t calls for nine
major characters and several minor ones.
The young actors are planning to do
their own costuming.
In accordance with the other changes,
comes an important addition in the Social Study Department, which offers a
year's work in Political Science. The
course for the first semester is devoted
to the study of American Government,
while the second semester is taken up
Miss Dorothy Denniston is director of
with a comparative study of modern health education in Westfield, N. J.
Act I I : The children, roaming through
the wood heedless of direction or of
time, are overtaken by night i n the
dark forest, full, they believe, of fairies
and witches. The wind whispers and
moans. Shadowy bush and hollow take
on strange and fearful shapes. They
cower beneath a spreading tree, repeat
their usual bedtime prayer to the guardian angels, and, calmer in spirit, fall
ixsleep beneath a spreading tree.
Act I I I : At daybreak the children
awake. They notice a beautiful little
house built of all manner of good things
to eat. They begin to break off bits
(Oontinued on Page 8)
NORMAL
NORMAL TIMES
Normal Tinu's is iiubllHliort at Central State
Nornnil School, Loek Haven, I'ennsylvania, by
the Hoard of Editors of Normal Times.
The subscription rate to all aUlmni and undergraduates of the sclniol is 7,") cents.
BOARD o r EDITORS
Lenore Sharp, Rose Bower, Harriett Kelt,
David Ulmer, Elverda Richardson, Sterl Artley,
Hlaiiche Wilhl, Jlarijaret Sutton, Ella Mae Lilly,
Edward Sherkel, Marion Smith, Janet Stewart,
Mjiry Margnret .Vdams, MUdreil Stewart, Thomas
Ilosternian, Luey May Mltehell, Josephine Guild,
Reginuld Fitzsimmons, Ruth Jones.
Acceptanee for mailing? at speeial rate of
IKjstage iirovided for in section tlO.^, .\et of
October 8, lillT, authorized July 8, l»23.
Ot^TOBKR 14, 192(>
Editorials
US AND
Two Faculty Members Married
Iininodiiitely before the Smethport
giiiiic the meinbers who pliiyed on Normal's l!)25 squad met iiud elected Dave
irinicr, end on hist .voiir's varsity, who is
this yciir jilii.viiig at fullliiiek, ciiptain of
the tcitni for this season. There were
no other nomiiiiitioiis; the election was
unaiiiiiunis. It is ii tribute to Dave's
Hghting (|Uiilities, hia determination, and
his Iciidcrship, that his election wiis ii
foregone conclusion.
Iininediately after the conclusion of
the summer session two members of our
fiicult.y were niiirried. Miss Ethel Fuller, our librarian, has become Mrs. Walter Sadler, iind is now attending lowii
Stiite Universit.v. Miss Harriet Riiffle,
supervisor of penmiinship, niiirried Dr.
J . C. McCullough, il popular dentist of
Lock Haven, and is now hard at work
housekeeping in the city.
Faculty Enjoys Itself
On Siitiirdiiy evening, September 20,
1!)2G, Mr. Armstrong's residence Wiis' the
C. S. N. S.
scene of ii very enjo.yiilile and giiy party.
Like folk dancing.' See Miss Dixon.
At this time Mr. and Mrs. Armstrong
C. S. N. S.
iind their family received between fifty
The Y. M. C. A. seems to be taking on iind sixty members of the fiicult.y iind
new life this year. So fiir it hiis been their wives in iin inforinal reception and
ill! active factor in school life. That piirty.
is as it should be.
The evening was spent iu giimes and
il general good time, affording il splenC. S. N. S.
did opportunity for those present to beThe P. S. E. A. conference made one come acquainted with each other. Refeel that he Wiis moving among big freshments were served and when the
happenings. Its success will be a mark time Ciime to leave every one present
to shoot at for some time.
seemed to liiivc spent a verj' pleiisant
evening.
C. S. N. S.
A liirger enrollment tliiiu ever. A
Frank Armstrong at Bucknell
larger class headed for graduiition thiin
Friink Armstrong, son of our princitit any time in the school's history. A
training school that fills three fioors of Piil, hiis entered the freshman chiss at
cliissrooms, liirger b.y far thiin ever be- Bucknell Universit.y. He is now learning both from the Bucknell fiiculty and
fore. Prosperity!
from the Sophomore class, in the nianner
C. S. N. S.
of iill Freshmen. The latest news from
The Y. W. does iiioro than iiny other Lewisburg contains the inforniiitiou thiit
school club to make the girls feel iit he hiis been pledged to the Signiii Alpliii
home during the first few weeks. It Epsilon fraternit.v.
stages enough social aft'air,s to tiike
Gordon Titus, an ex-member of the
one's mind iiway from homesickness. By cliiss of 1926, is also in the freshman
the way, what hiis hiippened to Price and class iit Bucknell, and is ii Phi Gammii
Shake this fall?
iK'ltii pledge there.
C. S. N. S.
C. S. N. S.
Credit for the iiiieiiiug of this term so
smoothly, with few program clitinges iind
with no imiiortiiiit cbiss rcarrangeineiits,
opening of sections, etc., goes to Mr.
High. His experience resulted in accuriite anticipiition of conditions. If you
think thiit is easy, t r y to predict the
size of any group for next fall, and
see how fiir you miss it.
Contributors to This Issue
Normal Times acknowledges with
thtinks the following speciiil contributions to this issue: "Building a Name,"
Miiry Dw,yer; ".lust About Jerry," lone
Potter; "Our Own Little Diiiry," Ann
Onymous.
It isn't safe to wear your iiiitural expression around here these dii.ys; the
Art Club pledges have to make daily
sketches of anything that looks funny.
Y. W. C. A. WELCOMES
MANY N E W STUDENTS
OTHERS
Dave Ulmer Captain
Ciin you beat that concert course J
Get ill school! Ciinipaign for Home
scliool activit.v until you niiike it. But
limit your efforts, if you are one of
those uncoinfortilbiy gifted folk who can
make everything. Be contented with
two or three good clubs. If you niiikc
too many you crowd the other fellow
out.
8
TIMES
Taught in California
Dr. LeRo.v A. King, fonnerl.v jirincipiil of the training school in Lock Haven Normal School, who is now associiite
professor of education in the School of
Ednciition iit the University of Pennsylviiniii, pnt ill iin interesting summer this
year. He was ii member during the summer session of the faculty of the University of Californiii. He drove, with
Mrs. King, to the West Coast, and back
iigain at the close of the session, making a grand tour of country while so
doing. Dr. King spoke at the BellingIiiini, Wiishington, Normal School during
his swing homeward. Dr. Fisher, former priiicipiil at Bloomsburg Norniiil,
is head of the Wiishington school.
Y. W. S t a r t s Campaign in
Day Room
The first step towiird reorganization
of the Y. W. in the day room was taken
Thursda.y, October 7, iit a meeting in
the Y. W. rooms.
Bliinche Swope, day room representative on the cabinet, presided. After the
usuiil devotional service. Miss Rowe and
Connie Gilloegly, in sliort tiilks, encouraged dii.y room niembership and promised
the full co-operation of the dormitory
Faculty Elects Three
The Lock Hiiven briinch of the P. S. Y. W.
The mcnibcrshiii drive will continue
E. A., which comprises the meinbers of
the school faculty, hiive elected Mr. until Thursdii.v noon, October 14, iit
McDougall president for this coming which time recognition services will be
.vciir, i l r . Ulmer secretar.y, iind Dr. Arm- held.
strong delegiite to the state convention.
All three served in the same positions
liist year iilso.
Mr. Patterson Knows Music
Professor Patterson is putting his
Pastor Married a t Montgomery knowledge of music and his iibility to
Moatgoiiiery, Oct. -1.—Rev. ,J. A. IIow- sing to good use iu Lock Haven. He
ird, pastiir of the Presbyterian churches hiis sung for both the Kiwanis and the
it Montgomery iind Montoursville, who Rotary Clubs, has given several solos at
resides in Montgomery, and Miss Noruiii the Great Island Presbyterian Church,
King, of Montoursville, class of 1922, and has agreed to become leader of the
were united in marriage at 11 o'clock in choir of that church.
the local Presbyterian cliurch by the
Rev. Herbert Smith, of Muncy. The
MUSICAL ARTISTS
church was beautifully decoriited with
COURSE FOR 1926-1927
niiirigolds, zinnias and dahlias.
Operii—"Hiinsel and Gretel"—FriMr. Mendenhall, of Muncy, Wiis the
day, October twenty-ninth.
best man while a sister of the bride
attended as bridesmaid. The congregiiPrazer Gauge—.Scottish Baritone—
tioii of the Montoursville and the MontFriday, December tliird.
gomery Presbyteriiiii churches were inFlorence Macbeth—Coloratura Sovited.
prano.
Chicago Civic Operii
C o m p a n y — Friday, Jiinuiiry
After the ceremony the families went
twenty-eighth.
to Round Top Inn where tho bridiil dinner was served, after which Mr, and Mrs,
F r a n c i s MacMillen—Violinist—
Howard left for a motor trip through
Friday, March eighteenth.
the South.
As il welcome to the Juniors, the Y. W.
ciibiiiet giive a delightful tcii on September 14, from four to six o'clock. Miiry
Margaret Adams iiiiiilc ii cliiirniing hostess, wliile the other nienibers of the
cabinet iissisted in the serving. The
Big .Sisters brought their Little Sisters,
iind it took but ii short time for every
one to become iic(|u:iiiite(l.
Introductions were made aiiil friendships formed
over the teii cups.
On Saturday night, September 18, the
Y. W, giive il piirty in the gyninasiuni.
The receiving line grew until it extended iiround three sides of the gym.
Every one greeted every one else until
Iiiinds ached and faces grew tired from
smiling. Dr..Armstrong very kindly furnished iin orchestra so dancing beciime
the popular anuisement. Another interesting feature of entertainnieut Wiis a
biilloon race.
At nine o'clock every one joined in
the Grand March for refreshments, which
were ice creiini cones—chocolate, strawberry iiud Viinillii. The fellows who
dipped the ice cream insisted that some
of the people were "cheating on them"
and marching around twice, but they
were assured they must hiive been seeing double.
It Wiis a fine party and the Y. W.
should be thanked for scaring away the
homesick liliies on the flrst Saturday
night iiway from home and old friends.
The Y. W. officers iire;
Miiry Miirgaret Adams
President
Connie Gilloegl,v
Yice President
Evelyn Hetherlin
Secretary
Ruth Jones
Treasurer
Margiiret Wiimliiiugh
U. R.
Ethel Biiumgiirtuer
Social Service
Ruth Oechler
Social Chairman
Ciitherine Ortli
Ways iind Means
Alice Corb.y
Program Chairman
Margaret McCiiuley... . I'oster Chairman
Pearle M o o r e . . . .Posters iind Magazines
Violet Duck
Piiuiist
New Laundry Rises
The new liiiuulr.v building is more
than a promise. The old building, familiiir to miin.y generations of Nnrmal
students, has been torn down. Foundation walls for il new, much larger building of brick have been laid, iind piles
of wood for scafl'olding cover mueh of
the ground in the rear of the triiining
school just be.yond Mr. Htirsh's home.
The new laundry will be half again aa
large iis the old one. The liiundr.v miichinery will all be on the niiiin floor in
one very large room, arranged to save
waste time and steps. Inside the front
entrance will be ' a distriliuting room,
pliinned to serve a large number of students quickly; also an office for records,
etc.
On the basement floor there will be
rooms to which will be moved the steamfitting iind ciirpenter shops, which now
occupy the basement of the main building. During building operations all Normal students' liuiiidry-work is being done
in a Lock Haven Laundry.
Paul Voiiiidii is doing very well with
his correspondence course in the Teiiching of Public School Art. He hiis a pupii.
T
NORMAL
TIMES
New Tennis Court Completed
Normal
Welcome
Students
IKLIIIS KORNIIRl
to
Grugan^s Hardware
(Class '08)
Electric Heaters, Electric
Curling Irons, Electric
Irons, Alarm Clocks, Pen
Knives, Mops, Polish,
Double Sockets, etc.
H. M. G r u g a n
45-47 Bellefonte Ave.
Wiedhahn Jewelry Co.
117 East Main St., Lock Haven, Pa.
Established 1855
Everything
Guaratiteed
FINE JEWELRY and
SILVERWARE
C. S. N. S. RINGS
Many Play for Dances
The students are enjoying the social
diiiicing in the (Jyni, every evening iind
aiipreciate the pejipy music rendered by
some of the students.
The schedule of jiliiyers for the week
is as follows:
Monday—Florence Martin, Ijucile Ta.ylor
Tuesday—(irace Jenkins, Margaret Melvin
Thursday—Violet Duck, Helen Bengston
Friday—Keba .lohnson, Kdith Ho]ikins
Satiirdiiv—Orchestra
tages enjoyed by the persons who enjoy a Christiiin life. After the regular
prograni refreshments were served and
il social hour enjoyed.
A membership drive has just been
completed in which the dormitory boys
have answered 100%. The majority of
the day room boys have joined the organization.
L. A. L. Elects Officers
The milking of ii new tennis court b y
digging away some of the hillside on
the south side of the gymnasium has
been completed and the court is ready
for use.
Breaking the ground for the new
court was begun in the spring. The
work of getting it leveled off continued
through the summer months. Heretofore, the students who wished to play
tenuis could not all be accommodated
for there were only three courts available. With the addition of this new
court, however, more opportunity is afforded to engiige in the sport.
.'Vt the first regular nieeting of the
L. A. L. Society, held October 8, officers
for the school year were elected. They Room "X" Has Been Remodeled
are:
Owing to the crowded condition in the
Art Club Reorganized for the President
Kathleen Hendricks Science Department because of the reVice President
Vivian Eberhart quirement of Biology in all regular
Coming Year
Secretary-Treasurer
Mary Myers courses, Eoom "X" in the Training
Till' .\rt d u l l nieniliiMs reorgiinized for
School, has been remodeled so as to perthe coining .vear, Wednesda.y evening,
September 22. It was a ver,y minute
mit two classes to convene .at the s.ame
Glee Club Organizes
bunch tliiit collected. The niembers felt
time. The specimen cases have been
Tryouts for Olee Club were held the moved from the walls to the center of
the iibsence of the graduiited members
and of their former advisor. Miss Yale, week of September 27 and were carried the room thus dividing the space into
over until the following week. Miss
vor.y keenly.
two separate rooms birge enough to acWhitwell states that she has found some
The new oflicers elected at the close of
very promising material to work with comniodate two large classes. In this
the semester last year took their offices
iind is planning manj' interesting pro- way each class can work without disat this meeting, Ruth Jones conducted
grams which the club will participiite in turbing the other to any great extent.
the proceedings. The minutes were takthis year.
en by Ella Mae Lilly. Sterl Artley, vice
The club will meet as usual every
Jiresident, and Wilford Pomeroy, treaSaid the very young Junior to the comsurer, were iilso read.y to perform their Thnrsdiiy evening at 7:15 promptly.
duties if necessary.
A short progriim will be given by the petent Rose Bower, who looks as though
she might know the answer to anything
Jliss Yiile, through the president, ex- club in the auditorium on the evening
around here: "Say, what sort of stuff
of
Thursday.
October
7.
This
program
pressed her great eiijo.yment at having
do you have to do over in the trainiug
will
precede
t
h
e
one
arranged
for
the
worked with the Club iiud also her sincere wish thiit the members will strive convention of the Pennsylvania State school for this anticipation work, anyhow?"
to maintiiin and to advance the stand- Education Association.
ards and ideals of the Clnb.
Fine Wrist W a t c h Repairing
Parker, Wahl and
Waterman
Fountain Pens
New Fall
Models
Are Here for Your Choosing
Velvets, Satins, Patents,
Straps or Plain
Juniors Entertained by Seniors
The Senior class gave ii reception for
the .luniors, Saturday evening, in the
gym. Miiny alumni were present and
the faculty was well represented at this
important social giithering.
Kiirly in the evening a short prograni
was given. Joe Piiul, accompanied by
Josephine Guild, gave a violin solo.
Alice Hesser then sang most pleasingly,
"When the One You Love, Loves You."
At the close of the program, every
one joined in singing, "Bye, Bye Blackbird," "Let Me Call You Sweetheart,"
iind "i'oor Papa," led by Ann Fahlman.
The snappy music from the orchestra
then inspired the dancers to do their
best at the "Paul Jones." John Varner,
violinist; Albert Hoba, drummer; Paul
Vonada, sax-player, and Edith Hopkins,
pianist, furnished the music to which
the demure Juniors and the Seniors
(minus their dignity) paraded in the
grand march, which led to refreshments
consisting of glasses of cider and doughnuts with extra large holes in them.
ALUMNI:
DO IT N O W !
You know what student life is like. This is the only way
we have of reaching you. Fill out this coupon and send it in
to RUTH JONES, Business Manager, Normal School, Lock
Haven, Penna.
I enclose $.75 for one year's subscription to Normal Times.
(Or $1.50 for two years.)
Name
Class.
Address
Y. M. C. A. Gives Reception
KLEWAN'S
SHOE STORE
21 £. Main St.
The Y. M. C. A. cabinet gave a reception to the old and new members in
tho Y. M. G. A. rooms, Wednesday evening, September 26, 1926. The reception
was held in conjunction with tho regular meeting. Mr. Trembath was the
speaker. He gave a very straightforward talk which brought out the advan-
Send in a letter telling us all about yourself and about the
other Normalites you hear from.
NORMAL
TIMES
Annual Conference Brings 500 Guests
(Continued from Fage I)
can speak with authority to this nation
of gabblers."
Art Should Be Expression
Dr. W. (i. Chambers was the first
speaker to be introduced in the Thursday iifternoon session, by Supt. W. A.
Geesey, of Sunbury, who presided in the
absence of Supt. Dunlap, of Lycoming
County. Dr. Chambers' discussion of
"The Value of Art" emphasized its possibilities for developing the duiil nature
of the child simultaneousl,v; his physical or objective nature, and his psychological or subjective nature.
Dr. Chambers criticized the rigid formality of the earlier types of kindergarten procedures; the empliiisis should
always have been, as it increiisingly is
now, on the worth of all processes to
the child. He declared for a, saner use
of iirt in the schools, from the earliest
grades up, with less attentiou to the artproducts and more to the art-experience.
His conclusion wus that the spiritutil
Viilue of the experience in creating something as fiir as possible out of his own
creative spirit was far more beneficial
to the child than mere copying of the
work of another, even though that other
be a teiicher.
Remove Pre-School Handicaps
Miss Jessie Scott Himes, director of
primary education in our own school,
talked on the pre-school child, and gave
iin excellent presentation, very briefly,
of this most recent advent in education. She brought out the Viilue of preschool, kindergarten, training to many
children; to the child who lives in the
neglected home; to the child who enters
the first grade unable to make the necessary social adjustments, due to excessive
timidity, to a language hiiudicap, or to
many other common causes of early
backwardness; she pleaded that these
and other types be given the benefit of
pre-school training, that this glaring deficiency in most of our present school
systems be removed. Miss Himes' talk
received much favorable comment later
in the conversations that went on about
the auditorium and in the halls.
Traces the Guidance Movement
The development of the guidance
movement, an essential elemeut in modern secondary education, wus the burden of Dr. Frank G. Davis' address. Dr.
Davis is a member of the faculty of
Bucknell University's school of education.
Dr. Davis traced the history of tho
guidance iiioveinent, paying tribute to
its pioneer spirits. He wished to expand the concept of guidance beyond
t h a t of vocational guidance, with which
it appears, unfortunately, he said, to
have become somewhat synonymous. He
described briefly other fields in which
guidance is needed and should be afforded; moral guidance, scholiistic guid-
ance, etc. No secondary school system
should neglect its duty of offering to
imniiiture minds such direction iis will
entible students to choose wisely and well
when lii,yiiig the foundation for their
future citizenship.
State Superintendent H. B. llollowa.v,
from Deliiwiire, talked at the general session on Thursday evening on "What
Steps to Wheref" Diagramming hia tiilk
as he went, he built on the platform
blackboiird the kind of a Ladder to
Fame which the school must build.
da.v should be right spiritual forces;
for if the forces which aniniate men in
America today are wrong, the progress
of toinorrow for America must be swiftly downward.
Spirited Round Table
Preceding Dr. Straugliii's talk there
was il spirited round tiilile discussion, ii
feature saved from the schoolmen's conference out of which the present stiite
conference has grown. As usual opinions
were vigorously presented, points of view
opposed to points of view, b,y many of
the niembers as the.v felt moved, and
clearer understiiiulings iirrived at, even
though there were few complete iigreeuients. The value of examinations as a
basis for promotion received the variet.v
of opinions natural when contributed
by high school teiichers, large city superiutoii dents, county superintendents,
and others whose experiences varied as
widely. The problem of teacher-triiining for rural schools and the value educiitionally of institutes and association
nieetings both provoked animated discussion.
There can be no effective education,
he said, which is not solidly grounded
on the good health of the pupil who is
Iieing educated. All progress must be
held together and given direction by
faith iind by orgiinized education; lacking either there can be only fiiilure.
Given both, then the school must build
a ladder of good habits. The information which a pupil takes with him
into the world is of unquestionable value
from time to time, but the hiibits of
work, of thinking, of behavior, which
he hiis formed condition the results of
every effort to succeed. The real prodMountain Arts Register
uct of the schools for the pupils should
During the niorning the nienibers of
lie habits of thrift, self-reliance, hoiithe Mountain Arts Association, meeting
est.v, work, etc.
this year with the P. S. E. A. for the
Spiritual Force Determines Civilization flrst time, were registering in the NorWith Dr. Robb wielding the gavel, af- mal School liliriiry. Some seventy memter il short introductory session. Dr. W. bers of this iictive organization of teachR. Straughn, principal of Miinsfleld Nor- ers of practical and fine iirts attended
niiil School, gave ii masterly discussion the conference. .1. B. Payne, county
of "Controlling Forces of Civiliziition." vocational agent of Center County, genCivilization he defined as the sum to- eral chairniiin, was in charge of the regtal of huiuiin iichiovement at any one istration.
time. This sum total is the result of
Special Conferences
group effort, miiss adviincement. Group
Fridii.y
afternoon was given up to
effort, however, is and always hits been
determined by the nature and (luality group conferences by the P. S. E. A. jind
of the individual leadership of a few. the Mountain Arts Association. Five
And individual leadership inescapably sectional nieetings were scheduled for
is the outgrowth of the dominant spir- each, and a special nieeting of geograitual conditions, the resultant of the ph.v teachers was added.
strong spiritual forces, at work during
County Superintendents
the lifetime of the leaders.
Twelve coiiiit,y suporiiiteiulents attendEducation has always been interested 'ed their round table, of which Supt. T.
in getting the mtiss to move in the direc- S. Davis, of Blair County, was chairniiin,
tion in which educators believe it should aud Dr. Robert C. Shiiw, Deputy Supergo. It is but one, however, of the forces intendent of Schools, Wiis advisory memat work. The church is iinother, a force ber. The central theme for discussion
which hiis lent an initial impetus to all was the determination of what are funother niiijor organized forces, yet it is damentals in the elementary school subonl.y one of the spiritual forces which jects, and what might be done to secure
determine the direction of individual better results. The "Safety Education"
leadership wdiere it develops. Material movenient came in for brief consideraprosperity is not a force, he stated; tion.
our American civilization, just as that
Graded School Teachers
of Rome, will survive or perish in spite
The graded school section overflowed
of, not because of, material wealth. As the room for which it had originally
in all ages, the niiiss will move inevitably been scheduled, tind was triinsferred to
iis spiritual forces iniiiel it.
Shakespeare Hiill. Attcndiince iit this
It is the spirituiil force which car- meeting tripled expectations. Dr. Nelries il man or ii nation over any crisis. son P. Benson presided, and Dr. C. F.
Hence it should be the serious consid- Hobiui, of the state department, attenderation of every thinking man to see ed as advisory member.
to it, so far as he is capable, that the
The problem of securing iittention for
spiritual forces which animate him to- the individual child brought out sugges-
tions for speciiil teachers to coticli backward children, tempoiar.v demotions,
training in special-child study, departmental teaching, and limitiition of enrollments. Opposition to the lengthening of the school diiy developed. Short
hours crowded full will produce more
results than long hours for dawdling
work; this seemed to be the majority
ojiiuion. The value of visual education
properly conducted, and the diinger of
u n d e r d o i n g the necessary accompiinying
teaching, were discussed. The final discussion of the session hiid to do with
vitalizing piirent-teacher work.
Administrative Problems
The city iind borough superintendents,
ineeting in Room 25, with Supt. W. M.
Pierce, of Ridgway, iis chairman, threw
themselves into a lively discussion of
administriitive detiiils. The length of
the class period which results in most
efficient teaching, the proper size of
cliiss divisions for best results, the maximum length of the school day, the value
of intelligence tests in securing better
teaching, the improvement of tetiching
througii supervision; these were among
the (iuestious discussed by the thirty
who attended the conference.
Few Rural Teachers
Few ruriil teachers attended their sectional meeting, of which Miss Betty
Baird was chiiirman, iiiid Dr. ,L \V. Sweeney, Elk County's superintendent, advisory member. Consenuently the meeting adjourned after a very short session.
The High School Teachers
The high school teiichers met in the
auditorium, Mr, A. M. Weaver, formerly
principiil of Williamsport High School,
whose services to that city were recently rewarded by his election iis city superintendent, being chairmiin, and Dr.
J. N. Rule, of the state department, advisory niember.
There was some sentiment in favor of
milking Liitin a compulsory subject in
high schools, tho consensus of opinion
being, however, that it should be elective, but strenuousl.v urged upon those
who niiiy need it. Opposition was expressed to a course in general langUiige,
hirgely due to the vague nature of that
course in its present experimental shape.
E.xtra-curricular iictivities in high
schools need supervision, it was agreed,
but that supervision should not approiich complete direction. .Iust what
extra-curricular iictivities iire desirable
seemed to be a purely individual question, the iinswer to which must be determined by the community interests,
the interests of the teachers, etc. An interesting development grew out of the
discussion of commencement honoi'S,
when it became iipparent that in many
school systems something more than
scholastic rating was considered. No
school system failed to attach strong
NORMAL
TIMES
Annual Conference Brings 500 Guests
im])(irtiince to schohirsliiji, bnt in il number of them the generiil iittitude of students toward school life, their civic iind
social iittitudes, entered into the decision as to just who should receive
honors.
Demonstration Lesson
Prof. L, J. Ulmer, of the Normal
School fiiculty, taught a demonstriitioii
lesson in community geography to a
seventh grade chiss from the training
school, before fifteen visitors. The lesson was held in Room X of the training
school, and dealt with Clinton County
geography. Following the lesson Prof.
Ulmer answered many questions concerning his material and class procedures. There was sonic sentiment in
f.avor of affiliating with the National
Council (if Teiichers of (Jeographj-.
Dr. I'aul S. Eeiiibach gave an address
thiit hit hard certain present-day conditions, at the session of Friday evening,
with Dr, (i. D. Robb presiding. "We
should like to say that there is nothing
wrong with America," he said, "but that
is imiiossible to say when one faces the
un]ileiisant facts, and undesirable when
one realizes the gravity of the danger
America faces. The fundamental thing
wrong is the breakdown of the American home, which has substituted "Let's
Go!" for "There's No Place Like
Home."
There will be no improvement, he believes, unless somehow we can renovate
the faniil.v altar. There can be no substitute for religious training in a Christian home if we are to have Christian
citizenship. Wealth without work or responsibility, politics without principle,
pleasure without conscience, edueation
without character, science without huiiiiiiiitj', business without morality, religion without sacrifice or worship; that
is typically American, he asserted; and
in them lie the seeds of personal and
natiouiil degeneration, degredation, ruin.
Informal Reception
The Normal School held an informal
reception to its visitors in the gyniniisium following the general session. An
eight-piece orchestra provided music for
dancing. Refreshments were served in
a large booth partitioned off from the
dancing floor. Autumn leaves and other
fall suggestions were used in a simple
yet effeetive scheme of decorations.
Dr. Haas and President Dickey Absent
Both Dr. Francis B. Haas, state superintendent of public instruction, and
President Charles E. Dickey, head of the
stiite educiitional association, were compelled to cancel their engagements for
t h e S a t u r d a y moruing session. Import a n t work which could not bo postponed
kept Dr. H a a s at Harrisburg, while the
death of a n e a r relative compelled Presid e n t Dickey to forego his visit here.
addressed the body, presenting four elements of the present association program:
The raising of standards of
qualificiition, the maiutenance of ade(|uate salaries, fabrication of ii tenureof-office act thiit can be passed by
the legislature, and that will be fair
both to teachers iind to school boards,
and continued strengthening of the retirement s.vstem. The tenure question
was the one to wliich Dr. Kelley gave
major attention, outlining the admitted
evils of the present "hire and fire" system, but indicating the difficulties which
lie in the way of the men who would
draft an e(|uitiilile plan iicceptable to all
concerned.
Dr. Carroll Chiimpliii, formerly of
Californiii State Normal School, who is
Dr. Anderson's successor in the department of education at Penn State,
stressed piirticuliirly the student-iittitude
toward education. There can be no
terminus to the educator's endeavor to
know his own business, he maintained.
It is necessary to know the lifework of
early educators to iipprcciate the continuing work of their contribution to
educatioiiiil practice. It is equally necessary to keep abreast of the latest educational movements, in order to know
how progressive educators are .attempting to keep education breast to breast
with advancing social changes. Search
the old to hold fast to all it has of
good, tr.y the new for value and t r y to
improve ujioii it, and, best of all, try to
be original yourself; this wiis the core of
his message to teachers.
Dr. Pierce New President
The flnal session of the preceding afternoon, a business session, put through
much business in a short space of time.
A formal constitution was adopted to
govern the procedure of the Central
District. Dr. W. M. Pierce, superintendent of schools at Ridgway, was elected president of the association for the
coming year, and Supt. A. P . Akeley, of
Potter County, was chosen vice-president. An executive council, consisting
of the president of the general association iind the presidents of all the departmental organiziitions, was agreed
upon. Temporarily it was agreed that
the president iippoint one member from
each department, to act until next year's
meetings, when the departments can formall.y organize.
By no means all of the conference
inembers registered, as is usually the
case. On the oflieial register .are found
the names of perh.aps one-third of the
total number in attendance.
Huntingdon — County Superintendent
M. B. Wright, Assistant County Superintendent Frank Magill.
Bellet'onte—Mrs. Daisy B. Henderson,
II. C. Menold, Superintendent Arthur H.
Dr. J . H e r b e r t Kelley, executive secre- Sloop, Alberta M. Krader, Helen A.
t a r y of the state'educational association. Mackey.
Mt. Jewett—.\ssistiint County Superintendent I'. P, Barnhart, Principal Irvin Holmes.
Roaring Spring—Principal I. C. Mumniert.
Williamsport—Superintendent A. M.
Weaver, Principal J. E. Nancarrow, J.
Fred McMurriiy, Roland S. MiicLaren,
(Jeorge
Parkes, George C. Hosbauer, Mrs.
Harrisburg—C. K. lledden. Director of
Vocational Education; Francis E. Haas, Beuliih ilanley, Mabel Dunning, Alverna
Stiite Superintendent of Public Instruc- Wheeland, Beatrice Lewis, Mabel B.
tion; Robert C. Shaw, Deputy Superin- Deming, Helen M. Liiubach.
tendent; V. A. Martin, Vocational KduRenovo—Mary A. McCreii, Mary B.
cation Bureau; V. Valentine Kirby, Di- Serocca, Helen B. Summerson, A. Viola
rector of Art; J. 11. Kelley, editor Penn- Campbell, Christine Doebler, Charlotte
sylvania School Journal; Anna G. Green, Ostrom, P. E. Werner, C. C. Wandover,
Home Economics; W. B. Work.
Florence G. Herman, Ruth B. Foster,
State College—R. C. Weaver, Will Pearl Henderson, Blanche Bailey, Celia
Gnmt Chiimbers, T. P. North, Louise G. Schwiirtz, Robert Miller, Maude L. SanTurner, J . C. Ward, Jessie Haven, Edith ders, Margiiret O. Kyler, Mary U- MurPheasant, Mary Adams, Elizabeth M. phy, Ella G. Mulvihill, Clara Poorman,
Bowser, Piiuline Piickard, Sarah Gard- Bess K. Gordon, H. M. B. Weicksel, Suiierintendent F. A. Berkenstock, Minee
ner, Anne Creighton, Erma Miller.
Magill, Edna S. Bersanceney, Alice R.
Jersej' Shore—H. L. Schiiefer, K. D.
Brown, Dorothy H. Peck, Clara B. MacCarstater, J. F. Carson, Ruth Bardo,
Closkey, Minnie Stockton, Mary Dunbar.
Clara L. Johnson, Maud S. tJarman, EdNew Bloomfield—Assistant County Suna M. Rempe, Grace Startzel, Anna E.
Phillips, Mrs. Mary H. Hogue, Lydia C. perintendent A. E. Deckard.
Potter, Mary P. Ciirr, Ruth I. Snyder,
Alexandria—Mrs. Edward Hillyer.
Anna Johnson, M. Martha Hoffman,
Martinsburg—R. M. Biirtges.
Belle W. Shaffer, M. Lou Parker, Clare
St. Marys—County Superintendent J .
M. Stepp, Eliziibeth J. Robinson, Ruth
F. Crist, Ruth Peterman, Vinnie A. W. Sweeney.
Clearfield—Superintendent George E.
Zerfoss, County Superintendent W. P.
Trostle.
Sunbury—Snperintendent W. A. Geesey.
R i d g w a y — Superintendent W. M.
Pierce, C. M. Rosenberry, Superintendent B. 11. Kliinesniith, A. C. Nelson.
Mencer, .Jeanette Francis, EUnore BonSabinsville—Lyle M. Ferris.
nell, Principal Charles A. Schweuk, MarWellsboro—County Superintendent J.
garet Haas Schwenk, Ada Douty, Leroy
G. March, R. L. Butler.
Keiler, Mary Kerr, Belle Scliwer.
Covington—Assistant County SuperinWoolrich—Guy Kryder.
tendent E. E. Marvin.
Beech Creek—Charles Mapes, Flavia
Johnsonburg — Superintendent C. E.
Martz.
Wilson.
Tyrone—Anne Giiigery> Nelle Shiffler,
Anna R. Wilson, Kathryn Gearhart,
Lina Reese, Ethel Belle Gordon, Mary
Semple, Mary Hillyer, Gertrude Burket,
Grace Hoover, Geraldine Shilow, Alice
O. Krider, Mabel I. Flickinger, Margaret
Haver, Jennie Neff, Hazel Smith, Margaret Imliof, Dorothy Rupert, Carrie C.
.Jamieson, Clara Dittsworth, N. H. Ryan,
T. Clark Skelly, Superintendent W. W.
Eisenhart, Lillian M. Wilson, Lloyd E.
Howe, R. R. Abernethy, L. E. Guiser, C.
E. Ash, Evelyn Boyle, Caryl Oiites, M.
Pauline Weaver, J. H. Daniels, Nina
C. Lucas, Helen Andrews, Irma LeBaron.
Howard—Mary Hayes.
Salona—Ruth M. Holmes, Stella
Ricker, W. A. Snyder.
E.
Juniata—Catherine S. Wright, Superintendent C. 8. Kniss.
Gleasonton—Sue Kitchen.
North Bend—Sally B. Stuart, Amelia
Welsh, Lula Batdorf, Dorothy Cornelius.
Philipsburg — Betty Todd, Superintendent H. S. Althouse, Principal H. P.
Crain.
Wilcox—Assistant County Superintendent O. G. F. Boonert, Superintendent
Ross A. Snyder.
Williamsburg —Mrs.
berger.
Matilda
Snow-
Altoona—Principal George A. Eobb,
Secreary W. N. Decker, L. C. Smith,
Mary Pressler, H. E. McMahan, J . P .
Lozo, County Superintendent T. S. Davis,
H. C. Smith, W. H. Burd, Alberta Johns,
Florence Gray, Grace Swan, Zitella
Wertz, M. Florence Rollins, Maud Minster, Mildred Wieland, Charles C. Sadler, E. W. Shoenfelt, A. S. Brown, William A. Fickes, C. G. Plummer, S. W.
Hoover, C. S. Romig, C. N. Snyder, J.
Miller, Laura N. Eickabaugh, Margaret
Davis, J. N. Maddocks, Sylvester P .
Koelle, C. E. Whipple, G. K. Schwenker,
Mary Tressler, Marion Buehler, Mary
Downs, Harriet Carver, Erna Faust,
Marie Lintz, Ethel Henry, Marie Launer,
Zella Mortimer, Angela Unverzag, Helen
Walters, Betty Barker, Nellie Berg, Anna Maud Stiffler, Mary E. Phillips, Pauline Roffe, Rose Marie Garrety, Florence
B. Hair.
Nittany—County Superintendent F, G.
Hollidaysburg — Principal
Eugene
Rogers.
Robb, Rosalie Winslow, Josephine Moore,
NORMAL
Helen Decker, Hazel Krouse, Annie K.
Burket, Zoe OUa Wilt, Superintendent
C. V. Erdley.
Number of Training School and
City Supervisors Increased
The number of supervisors and teachFarwell—Dorothy Nuss, Mrs. Marion ers in the Training School and City
Loudenberg.
Schools has greatly increased this year.
Mansfield—Principal W. R. Straughn, Mr. MacDougiil stated that when he flrst
came here six years ago he had two suMansfleld Normal.
pervisors working with him, and now he
Wcstover—D. A. Yingling, Assistant has thirty-eight. This shows how the
County Superintendent.
school has grown.
Curwensville—Assistant County SuperThe Training School Supervisors a r e :
intendent B. C. High.
Sue Northey
Kindergarten
Pittsburgh—M. B. Wineland.
Laura Barkhuff
Grade I
Grade I I
Juniata—President M. G. Brumbaugh, Mabel V. Philips
Helen Lesher
Grade I I I
J u n i a t a College, Charles S. Kniss.
Bertha
M.
Rowe
Grade IV
Bellwood—F. A. Hamilton.
Ilaziel Linderman
Grade V
Mechanicsburg—G. A. Mincemoyer.
Edna H. Pollock
Grade VI
Johnstown—Superintendent 8. J. SlosAllen D. Patterson
son.
Director Junior High Sehool
DuBois—Superintendent W. C. Samp- Jessie Scott Himes
son.
Director Kindergarten aud Primary
Coudersport — County Superintendent
Education
A. P. Akeley, Superintendent F. E. Roy S. MacDougal
Kingsley.
Director Training School
Selma
Atherton
Emporium—County Superintendent O.
Primary and Elementary Art
E. Plasterer.
Bessie Baer
Lock Haven—County Superintendent
Junior High School English
G. C. Brosius, Superintendent N. P . BenMaloise Dixon
son, Principal J. P. Puterbaugh, Edna
Elementary and Junior High School
Rich, F. S. Pletcher, F. S. Knecht, VioHealth Education
let M. Brighton,
Nellie DuBois.. .Junior High Sehool Art
Lewistown—Prank D. Eohnier, George Paul B. Dyck
Health Education
W. Davis, John W. Brassington, Sara Homer H. Giige . . . . Foreign Languages
Ann Brunei', Dorothy J. Irvin, Eva M. Cornelia Gilkey
Science
Minick, Maude P. Billow, Julia B. CofIrene MacDonald
Librarian
fey, Stella B. Jenkins, Florence H.
Lilliiin Russell
Candor, Julia E. McCabe, Katherine McSocial Studies (Junior High School)
Nerney, Salome Harmon, Josephine M.
Levi J. Ulmer
Robb, Ada Frank, Ethel Sloteman, May
Junior High Sehool Geography
B. Hirlinger, Edna R. Nevel, Margaret
Ivah
N.
D.
Whitwell. .Elementary Musie
Bamberger, Marie Kean, Anna F. PackFern
Amnion,
.Junior High School Music
er, Euth A. Bote, Christine D. HaberThe City School Supervisors a r e :
stroli. Pearl M. Klapp, Mabel E. Singley,
Besse M. Bittner, Genevieve Stewart, Miirtha Laye
History and Georgraphy—Principal
Edna A. Cranee, Harriet P. White, Betty
Robb School
Baird.
Hazel Grey
First Grade, Robb
Flemington—Maude C. Floruss, Mrs..
Ethel Stoteman
Carroll All, Edna J. Burkhart, Julia H.
Reiiding and English, Eobb
Bower, Ilva M. Barrett, Marietta H. Best,
Anna
Packer
Art and Music, Penn.
Hazel B. Grey, Laura S. Morgain.
Florence Candor
Mahanoy City—Superintendent Joseph
Reading and English, Penn.
F. Noonan, Superintendent H. A. Oday.
Christine Haberstroth
History and Georgraphy, Penn.
Y. W. Plans for the Year
Mary Bryerton
First Grade, Penn.
The Y. W. C. A. plans for the coming
Salome Harman
year are as yet somewhat indefinite.
History and Music, Roosevelt
Miss Eowe, plans to follow the general
Katherine McNerney
program followed last year.
Second and Third Grades, Roosevelt
One meeting a month, it is planned, to
Florence Vande Boggart
have a member of the Faculty, talk to
First Grade, Roosevelt
the girls.
Edna Rich
Art and Music, Lincoln
One night a month is to be given over
Genevieve Stuart. .Second Grade, Lincoln
as a business meeting. This is to give
Bessie Bitner
Fourth Grade, Lincoln
every one a better idea as to the finanEsther Lowery
First Grade, Lincoln
cial standing of the organization and
Julia Coffey
just what business aetivities they are
Eeading and English, Lincoln
carrying on.
The other two meetings of the month
Mildred Stewart's mother would beare for the general discussion of topics lieve t h a t Normal was doing a lot for
interesting to tho organization. With her diiughter if she could see the inthis there will be the regular devotional dustrious girl going everywhere with her
services and short talks by the girls.
little broom.
TIMES
Building a Name
When you want to read a good story,
you pick up your favorite magazine, and
then you look for the name of an author whom you know writes good stories.
Or if you want to see a good movie,
you like to get one by an siuthor like
Emerson Hough or Curwood, with a good
actor like Tom Mix or Harold Lloyd—
somebody whose name is a guarantee
that it is all you should expect.
If it turned out to be poor, you'd be
awfully disappointed, and you wouldn't
have much faith in that name again. It
would have cheated you. But it isn't
often that you ever get disappointed in
a name that you have come to trust. The
men or women who have built up those
names so that you look for them as a
guarantee know that you do look for
their names, and trust them, and they
have to keep them up to standard. I t
pays them to do so. You wouldn't go to
see a show by an unknown actor, especially, or read a story by somebody
you'd never heard of. Of course you
would, occasionally—and if you liked
it, you would look for the same name
again, iind pretty soon that would be
another name that you eould trust.
freedom from the early Stone Age until
the present day. "The remiirkable t h i n g
about it," said Miss Dixon, "was the organization.
Everj'thing went along
evenly."
She also visited the educiitional building at the exposition and was interested
in the work done by the Philadelphia
school children along Health Education
lines. She also siiw some clever films
on dental hygiene work, which she would
like to bring here to start a campaign
in that work.
Psychology Clinic Opened
With the designation of Central State
Normal School as the state center for
Kindergarten Education by the Department of Public Instruction, Harrisburg,
several new courses are being offered to
meet this post-graduate curriculum. One
of these is the "Measurement and Treatment of Exceptional Children," taught
by Miss Merrills.
The course consists of a study of tests
and sciiles now standardized for measuring the abilities of children from
four to eight years of age. The charter members of this course aro Vivian
Eberhart, Helen Marr, Mary Myers,
Ursula Ryan and Helen Swartz. These
students will administer all typical tests
to the kindergarten group. Careful consideration will be given in order to ascertain early these exceptional children
and to give each special and suitable
care.
Then, because other people knew and
trusted that name, they'd go to that
show, or buy that magazine—and that
man's name has become a thing of real
value. But if he fell down once—no one
would trust him again. That's the way
it is with building a name and a repuA psychology clinic has been fitted up,
tation—it is worth a lot if you do it
on
the third floor east, to house this new
right. You've always got to live up to
curriculum
addition. It is equipped wdth
it, keep to the same high standards, but
such
tests
as the Stanford-Binet, Dewhen you get it, it's sure worth having.
troit Kindergarten, Wallin Peg Board,
Goddard Form Board, Manikin Testa,
Miss Dixon Gives Vacation
Ship Tests, etc. In addition, the psychExperiences
ology clinic will be used to further all
During the past term of sunimer psychology courses being offered.
school. Miss Dixon spent three days in
New York City. She visited the PhysiGym to Connect With Dorm
cal Education classes at Teachers' ColThe new fire-tower which is to conlege, Columbia. On one day they were nect the girls' dormitory with the gymhaving their annual summer festival. nasium is beginning to take shape. FounThis year every member of every class dation walls are being laid. The brickin Health Education work took part. work will start this coming week, the
The pageant portrayed all the different workmen report.
activities that come under Physical Edu^
The fire-tower will be uniform in
cation.
plan with those whieh connect both dorWhile Miss Dixon was visiting tliese
classes she was invited to join a class of
teachers who were studying the square
dance. It was taught by a woman whose
book on the dances, music and calls of
the square dance is the first of its kind
to be published.
Later in the summer. Miss Dixon visited the Sesqui-Centenuial Exposition
where she saw an immense pageant in
which several thousand people took part.
Three stages were used and the floor of
the stadium was utilized for such things
as chariot races, etc.
This pageant
traced the development of the idea of
mitories to the central building. Halls
will connect the first and second floors
with the main floor and with the balcony of the gymnasium, and staircases
will lead from all floors of both buildings to a ground-floor exit.
Several improved conditions will result from this addition to Normal's
plant. The gymnasium will be emptied
in less than half the time formerly necessary after a game. Girls coming from
gym classes will not have to pass through
the open air in reaching the dormitory.
There will be no exposure to unpleasant
weather.
NORMAL
Gym Program Is Full One
Athletics for girls iit t'eutral State
Normiil School have received an added
stimulus this year. Under the present
system the Seniors participate in hockey
during every cliiss period, while the
Juniors will have one period a week.
After Thanksgiving the Seniors will start
basketball and the Juniors will begin
volley ball. The Juniors will take up
basketball after Christmas.
By this
method every girl will take part in
some athletic game. The result will
mean more available material, greater
competition, and more general interest
manifested in the various games to be
held throughout the year.
At present the Juniors who have
passed the heiirt test given by Miss
Dixon are learning the rudiments and
rules of hockey in practice held outside
class period. Miss Dixon reports that
iin enthusiastic bunch of girls are reporting each afternoon when practice is
held. During one period a week the
Junior classes are priicticiug marching
in the auditorium. This is being done
to improve the inarching from chapel.
Posture tests have been given the
Seniors. Corrective work this year will
be taken care of during the regular class
period instead of outside class, as it
was last year. After the Juniors have
had their posture tests, their classes will
be the same as the Seniors.
I n connection with Junior Health Education classes, hygiene is being taught.
The girls are keeping scrapbooks along
with their notebooks. Anything of interest, such as quotations, picture, newsliaper clippings, etc., are used. Later
they will make charts, emphasizing
health habits, hygiene, exercise, and etc.
The Seniors in group three are tiikiug
il coaching course nnder the direction
of Miss Rearick, Theory of coaching,
practice in playing and actu.al coaching
is included in the course.
TIMES
JUST ABOUT JERRY
Jerry Gets a Telegram
Ten o'clock! Jerry bad just reiid her
assignment for Psychology the third
time without comprehending it, when a
knock sounded at the door and Sal entered with the iinnouncement that the
Dean wished to see J e r r y .
"At this hour! Betty think! W h a t
have I been doing lately? gasped J e r r y .
" I honestly can't think of ii .thing I've
done. Y^ou don't suppose I'm going to
be suspended or expelled or iinything
like that, do y o u ? "
. "It's a telegriim," said Sal.
"A telegram!" Jerry's face turned
piile and she left the room.
When she came back she had a queer
smile on her lips. " I was never more
frightened iu m y life," she said.
"What was the m a t t e r ? " breathed
Betty.
Jerry spread out a crumpled telegram
on her knee, and Betty read it over her
shoulder.
"William died of an overdose of
chloroform at t e n this morning. Funeral
tomorrow. Thomas."
"Thomas," explained Jerry, "is my
brother, and William, or Bill, iis we
called hiin, is our bull pup—the homeliest and worst-tempered dog that ever
lived,"
"But why in the world did he telegraph ' " queried Betty.
"It's il joke," said J e r r y . "Joking runs
iu the family. But listen—this dog h.as
east a shadow over my vacations for
nearlj' a year. He killed my k i t t e n ; he
wallowed in the rain and mud and came
in and slept on my best dress; he stole
the steak for breakfast, and rubbers
and door-mats for blocks around. Bill
was threatened with death several times,
but somehow he always pulled through.
A scheme of dividing the school into
And, Tom, knowing how I detested the
two teams for competitive games, etc., beast, thought it would be a good joke
is being seriously considered by the two to telegraph."
teachers. Under this scheme each group
"Did the Dean think thiit W^illiam was
would contain both Juniors and Seniors.
il relative?" asked Betty. "What did she
Chances for winning would be more even
say?"
iind the competition would be keener.
"She said, 'Come in, J e r r y dear.'
I n previous years the Junior class com(Usually
she frigidly ctiUs me Miss Stewpeted against the Senior class.
a r t ) . I opened the door with my knees
Thursday evening, immediately after shaking when I heard that 'Jerry deiir,'
dinner until study hour, beginners' chiss iind she took my hand and said, ' I am
in social dancing will be held under Miss sorry to have to tell you th.at I have
Dixon's supervision. Any one desiring heard bad news from your brother'."
to learn the art is welcome; but ac"Tommy?" I giisped.
complished dancers are asked to refrain
"No, William," she replied.
from using the gym that night.
"I was puzzled. I racked my brain
Miss Dixon is ready to organize a but couldn't remember iiny brother Wilclass in folk and natural dancing when liam."
the demand for such a class warrants its
"He is very ill," she went on. "Yes,
organization. Last year this class met I must tell you the truth—poor little
on Saturday afternoons, and that may William passed away this morning."
be the best time this year also.
Just then it flashed over me what it
All grades in the training school are meant. I was so relieved that I put my
using tho gymnnsium. In the first grade head down on her desk and laughed till
rhyinthic work is 1 eing given.
I cried; and she kept patting my hand.
Plans have been made to weigh and Well, then I didn't dare tell her, after
measure ciich child in the school once a she had expended all that sympathy, so
month. This will be done under Miss as soon as I could stop laughing, I
Dixon's direction with the nid of the raised my head and told her, trying not
to hurt her feelings, that William was
student teachers.
Altogether the work of the year in uot a brother, but just a sort of friend.
Health Education will play an impor- Then she asked if I wished to go home
for the funeral. I told her that I didn't
t a n t part in the school's activities.
think it would be best, and she Siiid
perhiips not. She said she was glad to
see me bearing up so bravely."
"Jerry, how could you let her think
i t ? " exclaimed Betty.
"How could I help i t ? " J e r r y demanded indignantly. "If you had a brother
like Tommy Stewart you'd know how to
symp.athize with me. I suppose I ought
to be griiteful to know that the dog is
dead, but I would like to have hiid that
news broken ii little less gently."
Jerry Stars in Psychology
Jerry's knowledge of Psychology was
not based entirely on the text, nevertheless her reputation in class was good.
She gained this reputation early in the
course. Professor Miirtin was lecturing
on the subject of sensation. He remarked that a person experiences all
sensiitions during the flrst few months
of infanc.y and that in after life there is
no such thing as a new sens.ation. Jerry
piped up, "Professor Martin, did you
ever shoot the chutes?"
The ice was broken and the class felt
at home. Thereafter Jerry was looked
upon as having a deeper insight into
Psychology than the others in the class.
Library Course Given to Juniors
The Ijibrary course is not a new thing
to students of C. S. N. S. However, the
course is being enlarged upon by the
new teacher. Miss MacDonald,. who is
the school librarian.
Miss Irene MacDonald received her elementary education in Portland, Maine,
getting her M. A. degree iit Teachers'
College, Columbia University. She took
library work at Simmons College. Miss
MacDonald taught at Foxcroft Academy,
and has been librarian at Brockton,
Massachusetts.
The object of giving a library course
to students of Lock Hiiven is to familiarize them with the resources and reference tools of the library, to en.able them
to handle their school work more intelligently and quickly.
The course aims to give the students
a working and teaching knowledge of
the necessary facilities such iis the card
catalog, encj'clopedias, dictionaries, indexes, year books, government documents, inagazines, iind special reference
books. I t also iiinis to instruct them
in the use, care and proper selection of
books.
Church Receptions Given to
Students
On October flrst, three of t h e leading
churches of the city gave receptions to
the students of C. 8. N. S.
Sixty-three young people gntliered at
the Presbyterian church for t h e games,
music iind refreshments which the church
provided. The party began with the
singing of peppy, popular songs, led by
Mr. Fredericks, Miss Ainmou and Reverend Parkhill sang a duet to the delight of their audience. This number
had not been planned for, b u t from all
reports it went over bigger than anything else.
There was certainly no ice to be broken at the Methodist church. Guessing
whether one was ii lizard or a giraffe,
and depending upon the rest of the comjiany to tell, was far from being solemn
and formal. After several exciting circle games the seventy-five Normal students pulled their chairs together and
joined in all kinds of songs, both old
and new. Then followed delicious refreshments, more singing a n d finally
"Good-Night Ladies."
A Backward Sociiil was the drawing
card for eight girls of the Reformed
church. Everything was done backward,
even to the way clothing Wiis worn. A
backw.ard spelling bee afforded a great
deal of amusement. After the serving
of refreshments the party broke up.
The I/utherau church
entertained
forty-three girls and fellows at a social
on September twenty-fourth. Speeches
by Bev. Steiii and Jlr. Shaffer, games,
songs and eats fllled out iin interesting program. Cars were sent for the
girls, and at the close of the evening,
returned them safely to the school.
Juniors Choose Representatives
The Junior Class met on September
21, 1926, for the purpose of electing its
representatives to the Student Council.
As a result of this ineeting, Julia Gibbons iind Agnes Gallagher have assumed
their councilor duties. They were presented to the girls and Mr. Armstrong
at the girls' meeting on Tuesday, September 28.
The duties of the council members are
to see that the rules and by-laws of the
school are carried out and to ;iid in the
discipline and routine of the school.
The entire council consists of the following girls: Eose Bower, President;
Esther Suavely, Vice President; Anna
Fleck, Secretary, Julia Gibbons iind
Agnes GiiUagher.
OPERETTA OPENS 1926
CONCERT SEASON KINDERGARTEN COURSE
(Continued from Pnge 2)
of the house and to eat them, when its
owner appetirs, a grisly witch, who entraps children by her spells, pops them
into her oven, and Later eats them. She
shuts Hansel in a sort of cage and feeds
him with sweets to fatten him; .also she
tries to get Gretel to bend down in front
of her oven, so that she m.ay be iible
suddenly to push her in. Gretel pretends to be unable to understand, and
when the witch bends down to show
her how, pops the witch into her own
oven. The father and mother burst in
upon the scene, and a chorus of thanksgiving winds up the play.
BEGINS FIRST YEAR
(Continued from Pngo 1)
The curriculum includes participation
iind observiition in the kindergarten, a
psychology course dealing with exceptional children, educational measurements, iind further courses in English,
hciilth, dramatic iirts, plays, and gaines
for the pre-school child.
At the completion of the third year
of work a Special Kiudergiirten Certiflcate will be iiwarded the graduates,
who sliould be and, it is felt, will be
better prepared for practiciil kindergarten teaching than iiny graduate of
the former two-year course.
NORMAL
Quality
Shoe Repairing and
Shoe ShiningJ. F. TORSELL
BELLEFONTE AVE.
D
AINTY SERVICE
ELICIOUS CANDIES
ELIGHTFUL SUNDAES
S)U3ar IBotol
At reduced rates to
C. S. N. S. Students
Use Eastman
OUR OWN LITTLE DIARY
Monday, October 4
Taught iigain today. The kids seemed
possessed.
Teaching isn't what it's
cracked up to be.
Went down town after shoes but they
don't have the kind I want, so I'll wait.
The trip down seemed endless. The
town must move further down the line
every day.
Gee, we have our places assigned in
the dining hall today. I hate the thoughts
of it. We have too much fun iit our
own tiible. I suppose they think we
won't eiit so much when we're in company.
Then I'm hostess, too! I like to e,at,
not work. Every time you t u r n around
some one wants something. Not crabbing or anything like that, but when
I eat with the crowd I usually manage
to get there flrst and pick my place.
Tuesday, October 5
Only had one cl.ass today. I t was
heaven, almost—but, darn it, t h a t class
came along about 4:10, just in time to
break up the afternoon. I never saw
such luck. That's because I'm Irish, I
suppose.
All Photos
Films
in the yellow
box.
'We sell them.
Leave your Blms
today—get y o u r
pictures tomorrow
The Swope Studio
School Essentials
Curlers
Hot Plates
Irons
Grills
Toasters
Fans
Chafing Dishes
Manicuring Sets
Pen Knives, Shears
Alarm Clocks
Safety Razors, Etc.
9
TIMES
We were to go out to play hockey, too,
but the rain put in an appearance, so
we stayed in the gym. I can't see that
game for some reason or other. Don't
know much about it yet, but from what
I do know, it isn't going over so big
with me.
Wednesday, October 6
If I don't soon get to see t h a t movie
I'll have a fit. All I hear is every one
raving about it and I can't p u t a word
iu edgewise all for the simple reason of
not having seen it. Why does the Y.
W. have to meet tonight? I feel it in
my bones that I'll miss that show and
that will be misery. Thought about cutting class and going, but bumped into
the teacher, so thought again and went
to class.
Had gym again at 4:10. I t rained, so
we stayed in once more. Wish I were
in the eight o'clock section. I t isn't my
fault t h a t I'm not.
Went to the Library and worked—no
foolin'! That's what I did. You can
do nothing else when Miss MacDonald
is there.
Thursday, October 7
Went to the movie at last. I t was
great. I was expecting more than I got
though. That's always the way when
you sit around and listen to the kids
talk about it. I'm awfaully p u t out to
think I missed that lecture tonight, by
the way.
We can tell you the most
beautiful way to say it
We Have Them
Had a gym class in the dorm about
0:1.5. I was the instructor. "Plump"
w.anted some reducing exercises. Boy, I
gave them to her! She quit the flrst
thing. Couldn't have thought mueh of
them. The student council must be giving us a rest. They didn't bother us
all the time we were out there. I blew
up il sack and burst it. What a crack
it made! The hall cleiired like magic.
You couldn't see any one for dust.
Friday, October 8
I'm hungry and I don't mean perhaps.
Something to eat is about as scarce as I
don't know what. All we've been doing
As a welcome to the Juniors, the cabiis loafing this whole evening. The lecnet gave a delightful tea on Sept. 14,
ture in the auditorium was good.
from four o'clock to six. Mary Margaret
To think they are having a dance in
Adams made a charming hostess, while
the gym without our being there. Our
the other members of the cabinet helped
window is a pretty good place to watch
serve the guests.
from though. Helen and I shoved my
The "Big Sisters" brought their "Litcot up. We were comfortable as long
as we were the only ones there. But the tle Sisters" and it did not take long for
next thing the gang piled in, and you'd every one to get acquainted. Introducthink we were pliiying "Three deep." tions were made and friendships formed
Never knew I could hold so many peo- over the tea cups and all the girls had
ple. The proctors must not have been the feeling that they already had made
on duty—eight in one room rarely a good start toward inaking friends for
gets by.
the year.
Saturday, October 9
On Saturday night, the 18th, the Y.
Got a box from home. We had a feed,
W. gave a flne party in the gymnasium.
and from the way I feel now 111 never
look a ham sandwich in the face again. The receiving line grew until it extendOur room is a wreck. I made coffee and ed around three sides of the gym, and
it was pretty good even if I do say it every one greeted every one else until
myself. Cups were scarce as usual. our hands ached and our faces were
tired smiling.
Helen and I shared one glass.
Went down to the football game. I
Dr. Armstrong very kindly furnished
didn't st.ay very long. Three touchdowns an orchestra, so, of course, dancing bein aliout fifteen minutes is too much ciime the popular amusement.
for me.
Totty called me up from home.
It
Another Interesting Feature Was
seemed so good to hear her talk. We
the Ballroom Race
talked a long time but I couldn't say
About nine o'clock everybody joined
now what it was all about. We sure
the Grand March for refreshments.
did cover territory though.
These were nice big ice cream cones—
Sunday, October 10
It's funny but instead of considering chocolate, strawberry or vanilla. The
Sunday the flrst day of the week I al- fellows who dipped the ice cream insisted that some folks were "cheating on
ways think of it as the last.
Another week gone and we're that t h e m " and marching around twice b u t
much nearer to going home. It's about they were politely assured that they
forty days now. That's not so bad! I were merely seeing double.
can remember when it was twice that.
I t was a fine party and we can thank
If it hadn't rained I'd have gone down the Y. W. for scaring away the hometo church. Our umbrellas are all out of sick blues on the first Saturday night
commission so I st.ayed away.
away from home and old friends.
Our supper wasn't so hot. I took down
The Y. W. C. A. Membership Drive
the jam that Mom sent me and t h a t
started on September 6.
added a little bit more to our "Bill AfThe first Vesper Service for which the
fair." I never s.aw a bunch get away
with so much to eat. Bet that poor Y. W. is responsible occurs on Ocwaitress has a path worn from our table tober 10th. This will be a pretty candle
service in recognition of the new memto the kitchen.
bers.
It's almost time to roll i n !
Kamp's Shoe Store
TITUS'
for the
Serve Dainty Lunches and Tasty
Sandwiches
Latest Styles in Footwear
Shaffer,
Candor & Hopkins
17 East Main Street
Guaranteed
CARLSON,
Hosiery
Florist
AT THE MONUMENT
Y. W. C. A, Party and Tea
The Y. W. C. A. has already made its
influence widely felt at C. S. N. S, this
year.
The oflicers a r e :
Mary Margaret Adams
President
Connie Gilloegly
Vice President
Evelyn Hetherland
Secretary
Ruth Jones
Treasurer
Margaret Wainbough
U. R.
Ethyl Bumgartner
Social Service
Ruth Oechler
Social Chairman
Catherine Orth
Waj-s iind Means
Alice Corby
Program Chairman
Margaret McCauley... ,Poster Chairman
Pearl Moore
Posters and Magazines
Violet Duck
Pianist
n o East Main Street
Delicious Sundaes made with She;ffer'a
White Deer Ice Cream
Enjoy a noonday luncheon j u s t off
t h e Campus.
We deliver Ice Cream or Lunches
to Normal Students a t 9:45 P. M.
10
NORMAL
Cornpliments of
"Bbe Cllnlon"
Restaurant-Delicatessen
Table Luxuries
312 Vesper St., Lock Haven
Bring your Kodak
Films to Us to Develop and Print.
We carry all sizes of
Films and Cameras
and Kodaks in stock.
Hilton & Heffner
Lock Haven's Leading Drug Store
TIMES
Many Ne^v Members
Added T o Faculty
(Continuecl from Tjige 11
US from the schools of Grand Rapids,
Michigan.
Miss Selmii Atherton arrived in time
to share the labors of the iirt depiirtment during the sumnier. She comes
from out where the Fiir West begins,
her home being in Minneapolis, Minn.
Both her undergraduiite imd her graduiite work was taken in Miiinesotii University. She has taught in school systems in South Dakota, Iowa, Wisconsin,
iUid Minnesota, Central State ttiking her
awii.v from LaCrosse, Wisconsin.
iin indication to our Alumni of his persoiiiility as they could ask for.
Miss Hiiziel Linderman, from the
schools of Dubuque, Iowa, is the new
training supervisor in the fifth grade.
New Hiimpton, Iowa, is her native heath,
lowii State Teachers' College the scene
of her undergraduate and graduate days,
iind the states of Iowa, South Dakota,
and Arkiinsiis hiive approved of her professioiiiil activities.
In the second grade, augmenting the
number of supervisors for Group One
Seniors, is Miss Miibel Phillips. Miss
Phillips was tiiken by Dr. Armstrong
from the Oil City, Pa., schools. By birth
iind educiition, however, she is from the
old Northwest Territory, her home being Bloomfield, Indiana, and Indiana
University her alniii mater. Miss Phillips' graduate work she obtained at Columbia Universit.y. She has taught in
Indiiiuii, Montana, and Pennsylvania.
Our new librarian. Miss Irene MacDouiild, represents the state of Maine
on our fiicult.y, her home being in Portbind. Her undergraduate work was given by Bates College, and her graduate
work was taken at Simmons College and
at Columbi.a University. She has taught
aud managed school library work in
Miiine and in Massachusetts, coming to
us from the schools of Brockton, Mass.
It should add value to our library work
Succeeding Miss Giles as supervisor of
here to have it under the direction of sixth grade work is Miss Edna Helen
one who is not only a trained librarian, Pollock, also a graduate of Iowa Stiite
but also acquainted iit flrst hand with Teachers' College, whose undergraduate
public school library problems.
days were followed by graduiitc work at
Another Teachers' College graduate on Columbia University. Her home is Libour faculty is Miss Nellie A. Dubois, of ertyville, Iowa, and she has taught iu
New Paltz, New Y'ork, who took both Iowa, Michigan, and Montana. Miss Polher undergraduate and her graduate lock is tiiken by us from Dillon, Monwork in the halls of Columbia. She has tana, State Teachers' College.
had high school and elementary school
To Miss Sue Northey has been entrustiirt work ill New Jersey, New York, and
ed the new third yeiir kindergarten curOhio, and previous to her work here
riculum, to shiipe it iind give it direcwith us was instructor in a r t in Ohio
tion during its foriniitive period. A
University.
graduate of the National Kindergarten
Increased Training School StatF
College, Chicago, with graduate degree
The iiicreiise in the size of the train- from Northwestern University, and a
ing school iind in the number of Seniors constant student of her work at other
taking practice teaching made necessary institutions, she hiis taught in Texas, Ilmany tidditions to the training school linois, Iowa, iind Washington, D. C. She
force of supervisors. Five instructors comes to us from Ohio State Teachers'
have been iidded, three of them to newly College, Bowling Green, Ohio.
creiited positions.
It is evident that Dr. Armstrong has
The principal of the Ford City High surveyed the entire North for his new
School, Mr. Alan Patterson, is the new faculty. His one ambition, he says himdirector of the Junior High School, suc- self, has been to provide every student
ceeding Miss Amy B. Roegge. Mr. Pat- who comes to this sehool with better
terson is a graduate of Grove City Col- prepiiration for classroom teaching thiin
lege, and holds his master's degree from iiny other norniiil school in the country
Columbia University. He has been elect- Ciin offer. If he ciin do thiit, he Siiid
ed to the Kiwanis Club of Lock Haven in chapel, he will feel that his labor hiis
since his arriviil, which is about as good licen justified.
IVe Serve the Ladies
Also
We invite the ladies to come to
our barber shop for their hair
cutting nnd trimming and permanent wiiving. We iire sjiecially equipped t o render a
prompt and satisfactory service. When J'OU or the children require tonsorial attention you will flnd us ready to
serve you. We have a chiirt
that shows the very latest
modes of bobbing, cutting and
trimming.
Come to the
Sanitary barber Shop
Hungry?
Satisfy It With
Good Food
Achenbaeh's
Arbor
Lunches
Candy
Fruit
Served
Ice Cream
Sodas
Susquehanna Avenue
LINTZ'S
Wearing
Apparel
at
Money Saving
Prices
Henry Keller's Sons
style
QuaUty
New Spring Styles in
Oxfords and Slippers
103 Main St., Lock Haven, Pa.
Lock Haven's Shopping
Center
We invite the Student Body to visit this store with a
feeling of freedom and under no obligation whatever to buy.
We appreciate your patronage and will serve you to the
best of our ability.
HOSIERY, Silk or Cotton—UNDERTHINGS—NECKWEAR
Complete Dry Goods Department
China—Houseware—Gift Department
Rugs—Draperies—Curtains
The Smith & Winter Department Store
NORMAL
Can You Feature This?
One of the little Presbyterian pastimes
at the recent reception to Normal students resulted in the horrific tale which
appears below. Every student present
was invited to ]>rovide iin adjective unlike any adjective given before the collector reached him. His adjective in its
turn was written in on a story which
had previously been prepared, with
blank spaces wherever an adjective eould
conceivably lie used. The flnal output
of this process of blind composition wiis
the following medley of surprises;
St. Francis College Crushed
Maroons
Ten times in succession the St. Francis College team tore through a hole in
Normal's line for touchdowns, while our
team was able to do little in the way of
a counter-offensive. A sixty-yard forward piiss, Kuntzler to Smith, featured
the game.
TIMES
enough to keep them out of the Stroudsburg game, however. The squad which
will be thrown against the Monroe County Normal team will be the best we can
put on the field.
No one expects the Stroudsburg game
to be a victory. Zip Loftus, fullback
here two years ago, plays the same position for Stroudsburg, who always have
a team that outclasses the other normal
schools of this state, and who have the
best team this year iu their history. The
Maroons will make the visitors feel that
they have been in a game; that is all we
ask of them. The lineup;
It cannot be said that the collegians
iit Loretto showed mueh in the way of
clever footb.all, inside stuff. Big and
powerful, straight line-plunging, most of
it througii a single weak spot in our
"A Foolish Story"
line discovered early in the game, was
St. Francis
Normal
"One green evening in rustic Septem- enough to give the St. Francis team a
Boyle
M. Fitzsimmons
wide
margin
of
superiority.
ber it became the bright pleasure of
Left End
some of the good members and the bad
The Lock Haven team was greatly outEnglesby
R. Fitzsimmons
teachers and officers of the woolly Great weighed. Their liick of football instinct
Left Tackle
Island Sunday School to entertain the contributed more than their liick of
Slatsinski
Miller
dumb Presbyterian young people of the weight, however, in paving the paths for
Left
Guard
silly Central State Normal School, hav- the St. Francis backs. Costly fumbles,
Bossert
ing obtained the ignorant consent of slow comprehension of signals, and in- Steele
Center
the clever President, capricious Dr. Arm- ability to take out interference marked
Bohn
strong, and of the faculty at their last our work. The team played pluckily, Sloane
Right Guard
exquisite session. They made the terrible gave wh,atever they had, but were made
Murphy
Sherkel
proviso that a beautiful chaperone should to look very bad at times.
Right Tackle
accoinpiiny the cold stndents. The queer
The most striking fciiture of the game A. Abies
Larkin
Miss Barkhuff, we are glad to note, is
was a long forwjird pass, Kuntzler to
Right End
here to perform that unusual pleasure.
Smith, which sailed forty yards through Kuntzler
Bauman
"Promptly at the bully time for which the air and made possible a further run
Quarterback
the goofy invitation had been given the of twenty yards. The work of Normal's Smith
Bowser
unique guests arrived, their crabby ends, who broke up most of the attempts
Left Halfback
faces aglow with frivolous expectation directed at them all through the game, McClister
McCloskey
and antiquated eagerness. They were until St. Francis backs practically
Right Halfback
met at the amazing entrance by a wild ceased to attempt end runs, was the L. Abies
Ulmer
receiving committee, consisting of the brightest spot in Normal's work. Dave
Fullback
horrible Mr. Speece with hia usual nutty Ulmer's punting was also a redeeming
Score by periods:
smile and dippy greeting. With him feature. It is not remarkable, but it is
St.
Francis
27 14 17 21—79
stretching out a crazy welcoming hand very satisfactory both in distance and
0
0 0 0— 0
was the marvelous Mrs. Salmon, dressed in difficulty of handling, and it is in- Normal
in an adorable red gown.
finitely better than anything developed
Touchdowns: McClister 3, Murphy 3,
Smith 2, L. Abies 1, A. Abies 1. Try for
"Among the folk who welcomed the last season.
point: Boyle 9 out of 10.
cute guests were genuine Mr. Parkhill,
Bauman and Larkin went out of the
Substitutions; St. Francis—Broetzel
his clumsy face radiant with peculiar game with minor injuries. Bauman's
smiles, and his odd eyes twinkling with ankle was injured after a few minute's for L. Abies, Kelling for Sloane, Tilden
Boyle,
happy merriment and dreary pleasure at of play in the first period. Larkin went for Slatsinski, Hopkins for
the scrumptuous thought of the perish- out with a bruised shoulder in the sec- White for McClister, Urban for Englesable evening before him. The quaint ond period. Neither injury is serious by, Hetrick for Steele, Sopora for Smith.
Lock Haven—Williams for Nolan, Nolan
Mrs. Parkhill, too, held out an elaborate
for Larkin, Fredericks for Bohn, Bohn
welcoming hand. She looked cunning
for Bossert, Bossert for Williams, Pomein a cuckoo dress made for this prehisroy for R. Fitzsimmons, Barr for Fredtoric occasion. She had a ludicrous time
Here's a word from
ericks, Renninger for Bauman.
Refparting with her two fickle children, but
eree : Phillips, W. and J.
finally satisfied them both with fresh
the W i s e :
kisses and ridiculous hugs, tucked them
into their petrified beds, and left the
pickled manse.
I t took a reporter on the Normal Times
staff to write down in cold p r i n t that
"Among the superb guests there was
Miss Himes wanted plenty of kindernoticed the ferocious Mildred Stewart,
gartens for the sake of the premature
with her mind full of red hot knowledge
school child.
" / ordered Normal
and a girlish appreciation of a hideous
evening such as this.
"Also present were the grotesque
Louise Cogswell, the fantastic Mabel
Klein, and the lazy Ruth Blumensohein,
all with snappy hearts full of the joy of
living. We might mention others of our
darling invited friends, and perhaps
speak of their scrappy characters, their
sheepish countenances, and their various
despicable attire, but the hotsy-totsy
evening advances, and our flighty friend,
the antediluvian Mrs. Fenton Fredericks,
and her skinny helpers will soon be calling us to their wrinkled repast down in
the cannibal social rooms.
"The pigeon-toed writer of this knockkneed story now finishes hor cross-eyed
task with very blind wishes for a stuckup evening and a sawed-o8f journey back
to the hammered-down Central State."
11
Normal Students Are Doing
Practice Teaching
students were assigned their practice
teaching work during the first week of
school. The assignments in the various
griides of both Training and City Schools
are;
Training School
Kiiidergiirten—Alice Holmberg, Lucile
Herritt, Betty Hubley, Martha Gaffney,
Miirgaret Creighton, Margaret Mortimer,
Helen Thornton, Dorothy Liimbert.
Grade I—Gertrude Kane, Graee Ott,
Anne Fahlman, Vera May Duke, Betty
Jordan, Mabel Kline, May Todhunter,
Nell Holton, Eunice Hoffman, Dorothy
Apple, Claudia Kelly.
Grade I I ^ E t h e l Wilson, Ethel Hartsock, Viola Statlor, Tilda Nelson, Mary
'iaymond, lone Potter, Mary Margaret
\dams, Beatrice Richardson, Alice Hosier, Pearle Moore, Lucile Herrington.
Grade III—Amelia Martin, Louise
"Cogswell, Marion Fry, Dorothy Reilley,
Lillian Mitchell, Alice Corby, Ruth Lusk,
Hazel McTavish.
Grade IV—Janet Stewart, Jo Paul,
Florence Ward, Betty Baird, Matilda
Snowberger, Esther Fulton, Charlotte
Knapp, Edith Sunberg, Kathryn Weidert.
Grade V—Margaret McHale, Louise
Escobar, Marion Smith, Anna Herchock,
Anna Fleck, Gertrude Lipez, Carrie Allen.
Grade VI—Heleu McCloskey, Margaret
McCauley, Margaret Dubler, Ruth Blumenschein, Mary Ruddy, Blanche Wahl,
Bessie Lipez, Mrs. Charles Kane, Mary
Kane.
Junior High School
Rhea Brungard, Wiletta Cummings,
Sarah Felix, Kathleen Hendrix, Ruth
Jones, Rose Bower, Amy Reese, Thomas
Larkin, Mildred Reiter, Margaret Kane,
Elverda Richardson, Harriett Kelt, Marie
McNeills, Lenore Sharp, Thomas Hosterman, Elizabeth McKee, Mildred Stewart, Edith Morrison, Gwendolyn Stringfellow, Helen Radowsky, Ruth Oechler,
Max Fitzsimmons.
City Schools
P r i m a r y Grades—Gene Asplund, Katherine Gallagher, Ethel Danbert, Margaret Sour, Mary Myers, Jeau Whitehead.
Intermediate Grades—Esther Snavely,
Connie Gilloegly, Evelyn Hetherlin,
Ruth Scliandelmeir, Mary Gordan, Faye
Bitner, Blanche Swope, Jo Guild, Margaret Spicer.
Times for the whole
Year.''
This is the Hunter's
Moon
STEVENSON'S
f
Are You Wise?
Hand in your subscription today
Sporting Goods Store
has complete equipment
for every hunter, every
fisherman—every player
of every autumn sport.
W i n t e r is g e t t i n g closer. Are you
r e a d y to g e t t h e most enjoyment
out of skiing, skating and hiking
over t h e snowy hills ?
NORMAL
12
Dining Room and Chapel
Seating Assigned
As is the custom every year, the students have been assigned to definite
seats in the dining room which they are
to occupy every day with the exception
of Saturday and Sunday. I n order that
the students may become acquainted
with each other, this arrangement will
be continued for nine weeks, when they
will again be changed and new table assignments made.
Teachers at Conference
iliss Minnie J . Merrells and Miss Sue
Northey were Lock Haven Civic Club
delegates at the recent State Federation
of Women's Clubs meeting in Williamsport.
TIMES
To cylCHENBACH'S for
The Senior members of t h e day room
gang are getting discouraged. None of
the Juniors are making enough noise
to qualif.v for the traditional championship award, the Junior Megaphone. Charlotte Knapp, last year's prize-winner, is
Notices were also posted on October likely to have it left on her hands.
6 concerning chapel seats. Miss Whitwell has spent a full week testing the
Ted Bray has done very well with his
voices. All sopranos aro now seated together, all second sopranos, and altos drawing of still lifes, such as trees. He
the same. From now on there will be is going in for iiction pictures next. He
plans to draw an action picture of a
no easy way t o avoid chapel cuts.
football player if he can get one to stand
still long enough.
Lewis Gage at Haverford
Mr. H. II. Gage recently returned from
a three-day t r i p to Philadelphia, where
Miss Mary Louise Giles, formerly sixth
he entered his son, Lewis, i n Haverford grade supervisor, is taking further
School.
graduate work this fall at t h e University of Pennsylvania.
Miss Gisetta Yale is gratifying a longstanding wish. She has opened a studio
Mr. Carroll All, of the Music Departin New York City, where her talent is
ment,
is taking advanced courses i n
being turned to its own development.
music a t New York University School of
Music.
Why did all tliose boys go loiiping out
of Pomeroy's window into the wet and Miss Deborah Bentley, dietitian here
stormy night? Is that the way to show for two .years, has opened a large t e a
good social training?
room in Minneapolis, Minn.
This Is the Plant
ENGRAVING
- PRINTING
All Under One Roof
Dinners
— Lunches
Wholesale
LOCK HAVEN, PA.
The home of
Hart Schaffner
& Marx
Clothes
Undivided Responsibility
HARRY H. WILSON
Alumni
NORMAL TIMES WANTS
TO BUILD A STRONG
ALUMNI DEPARTMENT
Especially
Solicited
Write for Price*
G R I T
P U B L I S H I N G
C O . , -Williamsport, Pa.
— Candies
and Retail Ice Cream
- BINDING
The Engraving of School and College Annuals
— Pastry
Send in news of your classmates and of others in the
C. S. N. S. family.
Send in anecdotes of your
days here.
Send them to
THE ALUMNI EDITOR
Normal Times
Lock Haven - - Penna.
Prieson's Pharmacy
M A K E OUR S T O R E YOUR
HEADQUARTERS FOR
B e a u t y Clays
Face Powders
Single Compacts
Double Compacts
Talcum Powders
Cold C r e a m s
Shampoos
Hair Nets
Tooth P a s t e
Tooth B r u s h e s
Soaps
Stationery
Films
Fountain Pens
Shaving C r e a m s
Razor Blades
Razors
Shaving B r u s h e s
P l a y i n g Cards, Etc.
We c a r r y t h e l a r g e s t stock of
Drugs in Clinton County.
L E T U S F I L L YOUR
PRESCRIPTIONS
Prieson's
Pharmacy
PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS
S. E . Corner Main a n d Vesper S t s .
At
VOLUME 5
Central
State
Normal
LOCK HAVEN, PA., OCTOBER
School
14,1926
Annual
Conference
Brings 500 Guests
Four Students Enter Senior
Year—Miss Sue Northey New
Member of Faculty.
Central State Normal's new currieuluni, the .speeial third year of training for kindergarten teachers, under
Miss Sne Northey, a new member of the
faculty, began its flrst j'ear of existence this September. This is the special course so much discussed last fall,
whieh is to be operated in Lock Haven
Normal and in Loek Haven Normal only.
In addition to the many kindergarten
teachers now taking tlie first two years
of work, the regular two years of the
Group One curricula, four students have
enrolled as charter members, so to
speak, of the third year. These four
are Vivian Eberhart, Helen Marr, and
Helen Swartz, all graduates of Lock Haven Norm.'il, and Ursula Ryan, a graduate of Slippei'y Rock Normal School.
The work is well organized under Miss
Sue Northey. Miss Northey is a graduate of the Natioiuil Kindergarten College, Chicago, where she received her
baccalaureate degree after four years
of special preparation. She has followed this up with much graduate
study lieyond that required for her master's degree at Northwestern. Her experience has been wide; she has taught
in iSan Antonio, Texas; Youngstown,
Ohio; Washington, D. C ; Cleveland,
Ohio, and in state teachers' colleges iu
Illinois, Iowa, and Ohio.
(Continued on tiago 8)
Registration Exceeds Previous
Records
liOck Haven's ttit:il registration tliis
fall lias gone .about ten per cent, beyond that of last year. The total registration, nfter nil dujilications of names
have been carefully removed, is 425.
Must (if these registered the first registration day. The business of registration w;as never better managed. Once
tho stndents had paid their registration
fees and made out their formal cards
they were nearly through. Individuiil
programs were made out, personal conferences held with at least one member
of the faculty, aud the program card
checked aud ai)proved, in less than flfteen minntes. Very few of the students
—and they were those with complicated
credit problems—had to spend much
more time than that after passing the
bursar's table.
The faculty worked at registration
from nine in the morning until six that
evening. Classes began at nine on Tuesday niorning, September 14, and another
year of history begun. Late entrants,
comparatively few in number, were sent
to tho main olliee.
District Convention of P. S. E. A.—Mountain Arts
Join—Two State Superintendents Here
The second annual convention of the
central district of the Pennsylvania State
Educational Association, this year held
in conjunction with the conference of
the Mountain Arts Association, has
brought 500 distinguished guests to Central State. Two state superintendents,
the president of the state educational
association, an ex-governor of Pennsylviinia, and other notables are on the list
of speakers. The Normal School continues in active operation, but the student and the faculty are doing what
can be done to extend the hospitality
for which, it is hoped, this school is
known.
Dr. Cliarles E. Lose, former principal
of this school; Ex-Governor M.artin G.
Brumliaugh, now president of .luniata
College; Dr. Will Grant ('hambcrs, dean
of the graduate school at Penn State
and an alumnus of Central State, and
Dr. Frank G. Davis, of Bucknell's depaitment of educitiou, spoke at the
moiiiing and afternoon sessions on October 7. Dr. 11. B. HoUoway, superintendent of schools of the state of Delaware, was the speaker for the evening
session.
Friday's iiioniiug session brought to
the platform Dr. W. R. Straugliii, principal of Mansfield Normal School; Dr.
I'aul S. Leinbaeh, of Philadelphia, addressing tlic evening session. The afternoon was given to departmental meetings. Saturday morning Dr. Carroll
Champlin, of I'enn State's School of
Education, and Dr. .1. Herbert Kelly, editor of the School .lournal, spoke.
Mountain Arts Sessions
The ilountaiii Arts Association met
with the schoolmen in the general sessions. On Friday afternoon five group
meetings were held: In agriculture, art,
commercial, home economics, and industrial arts, and on Friday evening the
members of the association banqueted
at the New Fallon Hotel.
"Our Northern AUeghenies"
Superintendent Gu.y C. Brosius, of
Clinton County, presided at the opening
session, and introduced our farmer principal. Dr. Charles E. Lose, who gave a
typical Dr. Lose talk, full of the rustle
of woods and the murmur of streams.
Dr. Lose hns been back to the Normal
School many times f
NUMBER 1
Y
Twelve New Instructors Holding
Classes—All Sections Provide
Professors—School G r o w t h
Compels.
Twelve new instructors have to behas yet to deliver one that fails to grip come acquainted with the returning
Senior class. The growth of the school
his audience.
has made many additions to the faculty
His announced subject, "The Great necessary, in both the Normal School
Out-of-Doors," took in too much terri- and the Training School. Several of
tory. Dr. Lose confined it to our North- these instructors joined the staff at the
ern AUeghenies; not the AUeghenies of commencement of the summer session;
the geographers, but the AUeghenies of the others appeared on registration day
the hunter and the fisherman, the camp- this fall.
er, the man who really knows them.
Mr. Paul B. Dyck took up his work as
Through the four seasons of the year dean of men and director of health eduDr. Lose wove the magic thread of rec- cation for men at the commencement of
ollection. Ho drew picture after pic- the summer session. In addition he
ture of hillsides, trout-streams, drifting coached baseball during this .summer,
woodsmoke from eampfires, the pictures and has been molding a football team
since September 15. Mr. Dyck coached
he remembers so vividly, the sort of
teams and instructed in physioal edupictures which every out-of-door man cation in Northeast, Pa., and in Sherbrings back from the woods to make wood High School, Milwaukee. He is a
lovely the rest of his days.
graduate of Oberlin, and possesses his
master's degree from Columbia UniverDr. Brumbaugh on "Knowledge"
sity. Mr. Dyek's home is in Whitewater,
He was followed bj^ Dr. Martin G. Kansas.
Briimbnugli, president of Juniat.a ColMiss Elizabeth Eearick h.as also been
lege, who spoke on "The Varieties of
added to the staff of health education
Knowledge." Tliere is more to right con- instructors, and has been dividing the
duct than knowledge, Dr. Brumbaugh outside coaching activities with Miss
said; yet it is the conviction of the Dixon, both of whom ure firmly conscliooliiKHi that right conduct is a t least vinced of the value of athletics for every
based on knowledge. This conviction has one. Miss Rearick's home is in Dancolored educational thinking at .all times, ville, 111. She graduated ut Roekford,
just as it colored that of S(icr;ites: "Is 111., College for Women, and added her
it conceivable, Cehe.s, that an.v man gr.-iduate degree at Wellesley College.
Miss Rearick was a director of jihysiknowing the right should fail to do i t ? "
cal education at both of her Alma Maters
The liusiness of the primary grades following the cuiiipletion of her work
flrst of all is to train pupils to know there.
a few things clearly, to establish ac]\liss Fern Auiinou is associated with
curate fundamental perceptions, to teach Miss Whitwell in iiiiisie education here,
a few things exactl.y and not many things joining our faculty at the opening of
apiiroxiniately.
this session. Her home is Swayzee, Ind.,
The grammar glades can base on clear although she comes to ns from directing music in the schools of Evanston,
knowledge ;i knowledge of things in their
III. She has taught also in Wisconsin
relationships, a comprehension of things
aud iu Indiana. Her alma mater is the
in series, order, laws, so that a iiupil Western College for Women, at Oxford,
may see a fact clearly and also what O., and she has had graduate work at
goes before and comes after the f.act. Oberlin and at Northwestern, from tho
The high school's province is to develop latter of which she received her master's
the power to know analytically, so that degree.
the graduate may be able to take a fact
Another middle-westerner who has
•apart, understand it minutely, and re- joined us is Miss Beulah Dahle, who is
construct it from its parts.
succeeding Miss Deborah Bentley in
The duty of the college is to give ex- charge of the school's most important
haustive knowledge of some facts, to de- department, from many points of view:
nutrition, practical nutrition included.
velop the type of mind which seeks the
Miss Dahle lived in Mt. Horeb, Wiswhy of things, to create at least a few
consin. Both her undergraduate and her
men who can know one thing so well
gr.aduate degrees she received from the
that they can speak of it with authority. University of Wisconsin. She has fol"We need," said Dr. Brumbaugh near his lowed her profession in Minnesota, Utah,
conclusion, "We need a few men who South Dakota, and Michigan, coming to
(Continued on p a g e 5)
(Continued on I'age 10)
NORMAL
STEEPLE-CHASING IS
LOSE TO SMETHPORT
THE LATEST SPORT
IN RAGGED GAME
Long lines of ditches run across the
campus. From the lieating plant to the
training school, from the training scliool
to the main building, run six-foot
ditches, with bunkers of dirt on either
side. Day students and dorm students
clutch their hand-bagg.age, t.ake short,
skippy runs or long, loping runs, according to their nature, and sail gracefully
over, as gracefully as Nature permits.
To date no one has fallen short. I t
would not be wise. Seekers after wisdom are we, bnt nothing can convince
us that wisdom lies prostrate at the bottom of a ditch. We might be wiser
were we convinced; it is lietter that
wisdom lie prostrate there than that we
show it how. Perlunis if one of us could
find wisdom that w.ay tho rest of us
miglit take time enough to go around,
effectively if not athletically, over the
temporary bridges that have been provided. Any student should be wise
enough to know that steejile-ch.asing
ought to argue a horse.
The cause of it all is the determination of the Board of Trustees that the
Normal Scliool dormitories shall hiive
plenty of heat all througli the winter.
There has never been any cause for
complaint in that regard, but the steam
lines, laid a quarter of a century ago,
gave Dr. Armstrong, Mr. Bitter, Mr.
Hursh, and Belvie many anxious moments during the past winter. The sight
of a campus torn up to let a repair
man down to the pipes had occurred too
often to content any one. From now
on tliere will be no trouble.
A series of six-inch steel pipes are to
be laid in each ditch. They are to be
cased in a concrete tunnel, high enough
to permit a man to go all along the
pipe-lines, and to repair any break without delay for digging. The work is being pushed so that the campus may be
restored and ample heat ensured before
real winter weather reaches Lock Haven.
Three large new boilers are being installed in the heating-plant. The increasing size of the Normal Sehool has
worked the former boilers to capacity.
The new boilers, of the Oil City type,
one of them a high-pressure boiler, the
other two for low pressure, will be sufficient to provide steady heat with an
ample margin over any ijresent need.
New Courses Are Offered
Noticeable changes have taken place in
the courses of study offered in the State
Normal Schools. The English requirement in first semester has been reduced
from five to three hours, while iu the
second semester it is increased to three
hours. This makes a total of six hours
for the first year.
These changes also include many new
courses. Among these are English Literature, American Government, History
and Appreciation of Music, Principles
of Edueation, and Technique of Teaching. Many of these courses are required in the last four semesters of the
course of study for Group I I I .
The course in English Literature embraces the study of both early and late
writers. The study of modern authors
is to be emphasized. Much time is de-
A well-drilled team came down from
Smethport to open the Normal School
season, and tore it wide .apart. 32-0 was
the flnal score, due in part to rather
smart teamphiy of the visitors, but much
more to the fact that our team behaved
exactly like a team th.at had too little
opjiortunity to work together.
TIMES
played a h.ard giinie, better than ours,
and deserved to win by the wide margin.
It Wiis a hard blow for the Maroon team,
this loss, but it had its compensiitions.
It indiciited that the miiterial on the
field this season is the best we have had
out, individuiilly, since the re-birth of
footbiill here two yeiirs ago. Teamwork,
drill, smooth play that can come only
through drill—these were missing. Give
the teiim two more weeks under Coach
Dyek's direction and it will look like a
real team. Somehow, somewhere (though
not against St. Francis or Stroudsburg,
our two hiirdest gaines, wliich come next
on the schedule), we will break into the
win column before the final curtain of
the 1926 season.
On the first pla.v of the game the npstaters pulled the old sleeper trick.
Smith, hiding out along the sidelines,
got well ddwn the field without being
siiotted. and took a long forward pass
from Kolin. With no one in front of
liim he handled the ball carelessly, drojijiing it on our 15 yard line. The trick
The lineups:
is one that cannot be pulled against a
Smethport
Normal
seasoned team. I t caught ours, with its
few veterans and its lack of time for S. Scott
Nohm
preliminary training, sound asleep, and
Right Knd
rattled them to such an extent that three Stickles
Fitzsimmons, M.
touchdowns went over in the flrst jieriod.
Right Tackle
Bohn
Kolin scored after two more plays. McDermott
Riglit Guard
Long runs around end by Petruzzo
Miller
mainly put the ball over in a few more McCoy
Center
minutes for a second touchdown. Five
Barr
minutes liiter ii forward pass wiis tossed Sclioolmiistor
Left
Guiird
to Mundy, who stood across the goal
Sherkel
line unwatched, though two of our men Studholnie
Left Tiicklc
within ten yards were in position to hiive
Ne wm an
Larkin
covered him.
Left End
Tn the second period Clark intercepted
Mundy
McCloskey
a forward piiss and ran 25 yards for a
Quarterback
touchdown. The period ended with the
L. Petruzzi
Bowser
biill in the middle of the field. The
Right Halfback
Normal team had begun to pull together
Bauman
and were fighting harder and harder Biiuman
Left Halfback
from this time on. A forty-yard march
Ulmer
through the Smethport line went for Jones
Fullback
nothing when the whistle blew to end
the half.
Substitutions:
J. Petruzzi for L.
One of Ulmer's kicks was blocked during the third period, Smethport recovering on onr 25-yiird line. J. Petruzzo
made nine yards on a fake pass, and a
pass to Stickles took the ball over.
Bohn recovered a Smethport fumble in
the fourth period, staving off a possible
touchdown. Normal again got an offensive under way, carrying the biill
fifty-five yards without interruption, but
again the whistle halted our progress,
milking fruitless our best march of the
game.
There are no alibis for any game.
There could be none for this. Smethport
voted to the study of the works and lives
of Thomas Hardy, John Galsworthy, Bernard Shaw, Joseph Conrad, Arnold Bennett, and others. These men and their
writings are considered represen''ative
of the modern English literature. The
primary object of the course is to arouse
the student's thoughts on subjects that
he reads, and to discover his special interest in these fields. At the end of this
course the thoughts and ideas he has
gleaned from these readings will be presented i n written or oral form.
"Hansel and Gretel," an Operetta,
Is First Number—Cast of Six
Artists to Sing Fairy Story.
"Hiinsel iind Gretel," an operetta in
three acts, will open Lock Hiiven's 1926
concert soiison on Friday evening, October 20. The liresenting company includes Mary Potter, Sally Spencer, Mary
Korb, Mariii Allen, Theodore Webb, and
Charles (Jronhiim, iiU iirtists in their
own right.
Mary Potter, a soloist frequently with
the New York Symphony Orchestra, a
contralto with a voice of great natural
bciiuty, appears as the Witch in this
musical version of the old fairy story.
Siilly Spencer, like all the others of the
com]iany in being American by birth
iind triiining, a native of New York
State, will be the Hiinsel of tho operetta,
iind Mary Korb, born in Nowiirk, a pupil of Mme. Marcella Sembrich, a lyric
soprano, will sing Gretel's role.
Maria Allen will carry the dual role
of the Dewman and the Siindman. Miss
Allen is a southerner, from Atlanta,
Georgia, and owns a lovely lyric soprano.
Theodore Webb, the Broom-maker, has
a rich, resonant voice of .apparently unlimited capiicity.
The conductor is the Municipal Organist of Portland, Maine, and has also
been org.anist and instructor in music
at Dartmouth University. He is Charles
Cronhain, and will be known to many
music lovers as the one-time organist at
the
Lake Placid Club and the Director
Petruzzi, Hungerford for Kolin, Clark
of Music there.
for Mundy, Jones for Clark, Stravinski
The story of the opera is familiar to
for Studholnie, T. Scott for Stickles,
many.
I t is reproduced here, neverthePomeroy for Barr, Renninger for Nolan,
B. Fitzsimmons for Sherkel, Sherkel for less, so that the developing story of the
opera may be more easily followed.
M. Fitzsimmons, Barr for Fredericks.
The Story of "Hansel and Gretel"
Referee: Puterbaugh. Umpire: Ritter.
Hansel and Gretel have been left to
Head linesman: Shuey.
work in their cottage while their mother
Score by periods:
and father sell their brooms i n the
Smethport
20 6 6 0—32
neighboring villages. Work tires. They
Normal
0 0 0 0—0
start to frolic. At the height of their
Touchdowns: S. Scott, Kohn, Mundy, fun the mother enters, worn out, and
Clark, Stickles. Try for point: Mundy, unhappy because of her inability t o sell
2 out of 5.
her wai-es. She scolds the children
roundly, and sends them out into the
nearby forest to pick wild strawberries
European governments.
A sweeping for supper. Late that evening t h e fachange is the requiring of Educational ther returns, gaily bearing a basketful
Biology, a new course, from all first of dainties, having sold his brooms at a
good profit. The children have not reyear students in all groups.
turned. He is horror-stricken a t the
thought of their pitiful plight alone in
Robb School Fourth Grade Are the woods.
Preparing Play
The pupils of the fourth grade at Robb
School, taught by Josephine Guild, student teacher, under the supervision of
Miss Martha Lay, are preparing a play.
It will be given under the auspices of
the history department. The play is entitled "William Penn and His Treaty
With the Indians." I t calls for nine
major characters and several minor ones.
The young actors are planning to do
their own costuming.
In accordance with the other changes,
comes an important addition in the Social Study Department, which offers a
year's work in Political Science. The
course for the first semester is devoted
to the study of American Government,
while the second semester is taken up
Miss Dorothy Denniston is director of
with a comparative study of modern health education in Westfield, N. J.
Act I I : The children, roaming through
the wood heedless of direction or of
time, are overtaken by night i n the
dark forest, full, they believe, of fairies
and witches. The wind whispers and
moans. Shadowy bush and hollow take
on strange and fearful shapes. They
cower beneath a spreading tree, repeat
their usual bedtime prayer to the guardian angels, and, calmer in spirit, fall
ixsleep beneath a spreading tree.
Act I I I : At daybreak the children
awake. They notice a beautiful little
house built of all manner of good things
to eat. They begin to break off bits
(Oontinued on Page 8)
NORMAL
NORMAL TIMES
Normal Tinu's is iiubllHliort at Central State
Nornnil School, Loek Haven, I'ennsylvania, by
the Hoard of Editors of Normal Times.
The subscription rate to all aUlmni and undergraduates of the sclniol is 7,") cents.
BOARD o r EDITORS
Lenore Sharp, Rose Bower, Harriett Kelt,
David Ulmer, Elverda Richardson, Sterl Artley,
Hlaiiche Wilhl, Jlarijaret Sutton, Ella Mae Lilly,
Edward Sherkel, Marion Smith, Janet Stewart,
Mjiry Margnret .Vdams, MUdreil Stewart, Thomas
Ilosternian, Luey May Mltehell, Josephine Guild,
Reginuld Fitzsimmons, Ruth Jones.
Acceptanee for mailing? at speeial rate of
IKjstage iirovided for in section tlO.^, .\et of
October 8, lillT, authorized July 8, l»23.
Ot^TOBKR 14, 192(>
Editorials
US AND
Two Faculty Members Married
Iininodiiitely before the Smethport
giiiiic the meinbers who pliiyed on Normal's l!)25 squad met iiud elected Dave
irinicr, end on hist .voiir's varsity, who is
this yciir jilii.viiig at fullliiiek, ciiptain of
the tcitni for this season. There were
no other nomiiiiitioiis; the election was
unaiiiiiunis. It is ii tribute to Dave's
Hghting (|Uiilities, hia determination, and
his Iciidcrship, that his election wiis ii
foregone conclusion.
Iininediately after the conclusion of
the summer session two members of our
fiicult.y were niiirried. Miss Ethel Fuller, our librarian, has become Mrs. Walter Sadler, iind is now attending lowii
Stiite Universit.v. Miss Harriet Riiffle,
supervisor of penmiinship, niiirried Dr.
J . C. McCullough, il popular dentist of
Lock Haven, and is now hard at work
housekeeping in the city.
Faculty Enjoys Itself
On Siitiirdiiy evening, September 20,
1!)2G, Mr. Armstrong's residence Wiis' the
C. S. N. S.
scene of ii very enjo.yiilile and giiy party.
Like folk dancing.' See Miss Dixon.
At this time Mr. and Mrs. Armstrong
C. S. N. S.
iind their family received between fifty
The Y. M. C. A. seems to be taking on iind sixty members of the fiicult.y iind
new life this year. So fiir it hiis been their wives in iin inforinal reception and
ill! active factor in school life. That piirty.
is as it should be.
The evening was spent iu giimes and
il general good time, affording il splenC. S. N. S.
did opportunity for those present to beThe P. S. E. A. conference made one come acquainted with each other. Refeel that he Wiis moving among big freshments were served and when the
happenings. Its success will be a mark time Ciime to leave every one present
to shoot at for some time.
seemed to liiivc spent a verj' pleiisant
evening.
C. S. N. S.
A liirger enrollment tliiiu ever. A
Frank Armstrong at Bucknell
larger class headed for graduiition thiin
Friink Armstrong, son of our princitit any time in the school's history. A
training school that fills three fioors of Piil, hiis entered the freshman chiss at
cliissrooms, liirger b.y far thiin ever be- Bucknell Universit.y. He is now learning both from the Bucknell fiiculty and
fore. Prosperity!
from the Sophomore class, in the nianner
C. S. N. S.
of iill Freshmen. The latest news from
The Y. W. does iiioro than iiny other Lewisburg contains the inforniiitiou thiit
school club to make the girls feel iit he hiis been pledged to the Signiii Alpliii
home during the first few weeks. It Epsilon fraternit.v.
stages enough social aft'air,s to tiike
Gordon Titus, an ex-member of the
one's mind iiway from homesickness. By cliiss of 1926, is also in the freshman
the way, what hiis hiippened to Price and class iit Bucknell, and is ii Phi Gammii
Shake this fall?
iK'ltii pledge there.
C. S. N. S.
C. S. N. S.
Credit for the iiiieiiiug of this term so
smoothly, with few program clitinges iind
with no imiiortiiiit cbiss rcarrangeineiits,
opening of sections, etc., goes to Mr.
High. His experience resulted in accuriite anticipiition of conditions. If you
think thiit is easy, t r y to predict the
size of any group for next fall, and
see how fiir you miss it.
Contributors to This Issue
Normal Times acknowledges with
thtinks the following speciiil contributions to this issue: "Building a Name,"
Miiry Dw,yer; ".lust About Jerry," lone
Potter; "Our Own Little Diiiry," Ann
Onymous.
It isn't safe to wear your iiiitural expression around here these dii.ys; the
Art Club pledges have to make daily
sketches of anything that looks funny.
Y. W. C. A. WELCOMES
MANY N E W STUDENTS
OTHERS
Dave Ulmer Captain
Ciin you beat that concert course J
Get ill school! Ciinipaign for Home
scliool activit.v until you niiike it. But
limit your efforts, if you are one of
those uncoinfortilbiy gifted folk who can
make everything. Be contented with
two or three good clubs. If you niiikc
too many you crowd the other fellow
out.
8
TIMES
Taught in California
Dr. LeRo.v A. King, fonnerl.v jirincipiil of the training school in Lock Haven Normal School, who is now associiite
professor of education in the School of
Ednciition iit the University of Pennsylviiniii, pnt ill iin interesting summer this
year. He was ii member during the summer session of the faculty of the University of Californiii. He drove, with
Mrs. King, to the West Coast, and back
iigain at the close of the session, making a grand tour of country while so
doing. Dr. King spoke at the BellingIiiini, Wiishington, Normal School during
his swing homeward. Dr. Fisher, former priiicipiil at Bloomsburg Norniiil,
is head of the Wiishington school.
Y. W. S t a r t s Campaign in
Day Room
The first step towiird reorganization
of the Y. W. in the day room was taken
Thursda.y, October 7, iit a meeting in
the Y. W. rooms.
Bliinche Swope, day room representative on the cabinet, presided. After the
usuiil devotional service. Miss Rowe and
Connie Gilloegly, in sliort tiilks, encouraged dii.y room niembership and promised
the full co-operation of the dormitory
Faculty Elects Three
The Lock Hiiven briinch of the P. S. Y. W.
The mcnibcrshiii drive will continue
E. A., which comprises the meinbers of
the school faculty, hiive elected Mr. until Thursdii.v noon, October 14, iit
McDougall president for this coming which time recognition services will be
.vciir, i l r . Ulmer secretar.y, iind Dr. Arm- held.
strong delegiite to the state convention.
All three served in the same positions
liist year iilso.
Mr. Patterson Knows Music
Professor Patterson is putting his
Pastor Married a t Montgomery knowledge of music and his iibility to
Moatgoiiiery, Oct. -1.—Rev. ,J. A. IIow- sing to good use iu Lock Haven. He
ird, pastiir of the Presbyterian churches hiis sung for both the Kiwanis and the
it Montgomery iind Montoursville, who Rotary Clubs, has given several solos at
resides in Montgomery, and Miss Noruiii the Great Island Presbyterian Church,
King, of Montoursville, class of 1922, and has agreed to become leader of the
were united in marriage at 11 o'clock in choir of that church.
the local Presbyterian cliurch by the
Rev. Herbert Smith, of Muncy. The
MUSICAL ARTISTS
church was beautifully decoriited with
COURSE FOR 1926-1927
niiirigolds, zinnias and dahlias.
Operii—"Hiinsel and Gretel"—FriMr. Mendenhall, of Muncy, Wiis the
day, October twenty-ninth.
best man while a sister of the bride
attended as bridesmaid. The congregiiPrazer Gauge—.Scottish Baritone—
tioii of the Montoursville and the MontFriday, December tliird.
gomery Presbyteriiiii churches were inFlorence Macbeth—Coloratura Sovited.
prano.
Chicago Civic Operii
C o m p a n y — Friday, Jiinuiiry
After the ceremony the families went
twenty-eighth.
to Round Top Inn where tho bridiil dinner was served, after which Mr, and Mrs,
F r a n c i s MacMillen—Violinist—
Howard left for a motor trip through
Friday, March eighteenth.
the South.
As il welcome to the Juniors, the Y. W.
ciibiiiet giive a delightful tcii on September 14, from four to six o'clock. Miiry
Margaret Adams iiiiiilc ii cliiirniing hostess, wliile the other nienibers of the
cabinet iissisted in the serving. The
Big .Sisters brought their Little Sisters,
iind it took but ii short time for every
one to become iic(|u:iiiite(l.
Introductions were made aiiil friendships formed
over the teii cups.
On Saturday night, September 18, the
Y. W, giive il piirty in the gyninasiuni.
The receiving line grew until it extended iiround three sides of the gym.
Every one greeted every one else until
Iiiinds ached and faces grew tired from
smiling. Dr..Armstrong very kindly furnished iin orchestra so dancing beciime
the popular anuisement. Another interesting feature of entertainnieut Wiis a
biilloon race.
At nine o'clock every one joined in
the Grand March for refreshments, which
were ice creiini cones—chocolate, strawberry iiud Viinillii. The fellows who
dipped the ice cream insisted that some
of the people were "cheating on them"
and marching around twice, but they
were assured they must hiive been seeing double.
It Wiis a fine party and the Y. W.
should be thanked for scaring away the
homesick liliies on the flrst Saturday
night iiway from home and old friends.
The Y. W. officers iire;
Miiry Miirgaret Adams
President
Connie Gilloegl,v
Yice President
Evelyn Hetherlin
Secretary
Ruth Jones
Treasurer
Margiiret Wiimliiiugh
U. R.
Ethel Biiumgiirtuer
Social Service
Ruth Oechler
Social Chairman
Ciitherine Ortli
Ways iind Means
Alice Corb.y
Program Chairman
Margaret McCiiuley... . I'oster Chairman
Pearle M o o r e . . . .Posters iind Magazines
Violet Duck
Piiuiist
New Laundry Rises
The new liiiuulr.v building is more
than a promise. The old building, familiiir to miin.y generations of Nnrmal
students, has been torn down. Foundation walls for il new, much larger building of brick have been laid, iind piles
of wood for scafl'olding cover mueh of
the ground in the rear of the triiining
school just be.yond Mr. Htirsh's home.
The new laundry will be half again aa
large iis the old one. The liiundr.v miichinery will all be on the niiiin floor in
one very large room, arranged to save
waste time and steps. Inside the front
entrance will be ' a distriliuting room,
pliinned to serve a large number of students quickly; also an office for records,
etc.
On the basement floor there will be
rooms to which will be moved the steamfitting iind ciirpenter shops, which now
occupy the basement of the main building. During building operations all Normal students' liuiiidry-work is being done
in a Lock Haven Laundry.
Paul Voiiiidii is doing very well with
his correspondence course in the Teiiching of Public School Art. He hiis a pupii.
T
NORMAL
TIMES
New Tennis Court Completed
Normal
Welcome
Students
IKLIIIS KORNIIRl
to
Grugan^s Hardware
(Class '08)
Electric Heaters, Electric
Curling Irons, Electric
Irons, Alarm Clocks, Pen
Knives, Mops, Polish,
Double Sockets, etc.
H. M. G r u g a n
45-47 Bellefonte Ave.
Wiedhahn Jewelry Co.
117 East Main St., Lock Haven, Pa.
Established 1855
Everything
Guaratiteed
FINE JEWELRY and
SILVERWARE
C. S. N. S. RINGS
Many Play for Dances
The students are enjoying the social
diiiicing in the (Jyni, every evening iind
aiipreciate the pejipy music rendered by
some of the students.
The schedule of jiliiyers for the week
is as follows:
Monday—Florence Martin, Ijucile Ta.ylor
Tuesday—(irace Jenkins, Margaret Melvin
Thursday—Violet Duck, Helen Bengston
Friday—Keba .lohnson, Kdith Ho]ikins
Satiirdiiv—Orchestra
tages enjoyed by the persons who enjoy a Christiiin life. After the regular
prograni refreshments were served and
il social hour enjoyed.
A membership drive has just been
completed in which the dormitory boys
have answered 100%. The majority of
the day room boys have joined the organization.
L. A. L. Elects Officers
The milking of ii new tennis court b y
digging away some of the hillside on
the south side of the gymnasium has
been completed and the court is ready
for use.
Breaking the ground for the new
court was begun in the spring. The
work of getting it leveled off continued
through the summer months. Heretofore, the students who wished to play
tenuis could not all be accommodated
for there were only three courts available. With the addition of this new
court, however, more opportunity is afforded to engiige in the sport.
.'Vt the first regular nieeting of the
L. A. L. Society, held October 8, officers
for the school year were elected. They Room "X" Has Been Remodeled
are:
Owing to the crowded condition in the
Art Club Reorganized for the President
Kathleen Hendricks Science Department because of the reVice President
Vivian Eberhart quirement of Biology in all regular
Coming Year
Secretary-Treasurer
Mary Myers courses, Eoom "X" in the Training
Till' .\rt d u l l nieniliiMs reorgiinized for
School, has been remodeled so as to perthe coining .vear, Wednesda.y evening,
September 22. It was a ver,y minute
mit two classes to convene .at the s.ame
Glee Club Organizes
bunch tliiit collected. The niembers felt
time. The specimen cases have been
Tryouts for Olee Club were held the moved from the walls to the center of
the iibsence of the graduiited members
and of their former advisor. Miss Yale, week of September 27 and were carried the room thus dividing the space into
over until the following week. Miss
vor.y keenly.
two separate rooms birge enough to acWhitwell states that she has found some
The new oflicers elected at the close of
very promising material to work with comniodate two large classes. In this
the semester last year took their offices
iind is planning manj' interesting pro- way each class can work without disat this meeting, Ruth Jones conducted
grams which the club will participiite in turbing the other to any great extent.
the proceedings. The minutes were takthis year.
en by Ella Mae Lilly. Sterl Artley, vice
The club will meet as usual every
Jiresident, and Wilford Pomeroy, treaSaid the very young Junior to the comsurer, were iilso read.y to perform their Thnrsdiiy evening at 7:15 promptly.
duties if necessary.
A short progriim will be given by the petent Rose Bower, who looks as though
she might know the answer to anything
Jliss Yiile, through the president, ex- club in the auditorium on the evening
around here: "Say, what sort of stuff
of
Thursday.
October
7.
This
program
pressed her great eiijo.yment at having
do you have to do over in the trainiug
will
precede
t
h
e
one
arranged
for
the
worked with the Club iiud also her sincere wish thiit the members will strive convention of the Pennsylvania State school for this anticipation work, anyhow?"
to maintiiin and to advance the stand- Education Association.
ards and ideals of the Clnb.
Fine Wrist W a t c h Repairing
Parker, Wahl and
Waterman
Fountain Pens
New Fall
Models
Are Here for Your Choosing
Velvets, Satins, Patents,
Straps or Plain
Juniors Entertained by Seniors
The Senior class gave ii reception for
the .luniors, Saturday evening, in the
gym. Miiny alumni were present and
the faculty was well represented at this
important social giithering.
Kiirly in the evening a short prograni
was given. Joe Piiul, accompanied by
Josephine Guild, gave a violin solo.
Alice Hesser then sang most pleasingly,
"When the One You Love, Loves You."
At the close of the program, every
one joined in singing, "Bye, Bye Blackbird," "Let Me Call You Sweetheart,"
iind "i'oor Papa," led by Ann Fahlman.
The snappy music from the orchestra
then inspired the dancers to do their
best at the "Paul Jones." John Varner,
violinist; Albert Hoba, drummer; Paul
Vonada, sax-player, and Edith Hopkins,
pianist, furnished the music to which
the demure Juniors and the Seniors
(minus their dignity) paraded in the
grand march, which led to refreshments
consisting of glasses of cider and doughnuts with extra large holes in them.
ALUMNI:
DO IT N O W !
You know what student life is like. This is the only way
we have of reaching you. Fill out this coupon and send it in
to RUTH JONES, Business Manager, Normal School, Lock
Haven, Penna.
I enclose $.75 for one year's subscription to Normal Times.
(Or $1.50 for two years.)
Name
Class.
Address
Y. M. C. A. Gives Reception
KLEWAN'S
SHOE STORE
21 £. Main St.
The Y. M. C. A. cabinet gave a reception to the old and new members in
tho Y. M. G. A. rooms, Wednesday evening, September 26, 1926. The reception
was held in conjunction with tho regular meeting. Mr. Trembath was the
speaker. He gave a very straightforward talk which brought out the advan-
Send in a letter telling us all about yourself and about the
other Normalites you hear from.
NORMAL
TIMES
Annual Conference Brings 500 Guests
(Continued from Fage I)
can speak with authority to this nation
of gabblers."
Art Should Be Expression
Dr. W. (i. Chambers was the first
speaker to be introduced in the Thursday iifternoon session, by Supt. W. A.
Geesey, of Sunbury, who presided in the
absence of Supt. Dunlap, of Lycoming
County. Dr. Chambers' discussion of
"The Value of Art" emphasized its possibilities for developing the duiil nature
of the child simultaneousl,v; his physical or objective nature, and his psychological or subjective nature.
Dr. Chambers criticized the rigid formality of the earlier types of kindergarten procedures; the empliiisis should
always have been, as it increiisingly is
now, on the worth of all processes to
the child. He declared for a, saner use
of iirt in the schools, from the earliest
grades up, with less attentiou to the artproducts and more to the art-experience.
His conclusion wus that the spiritutil
Viilue of the experience in creating something as fiir as possible out of his own
creative spirit was far more beneficial
to the child than mere copying of the
work of another, even though that other
be a teiicher.
Remove Pre-School Handicaps
Miss Jessie Scott Himes, director of
primary education in our own school,
talked on the pre-school child, and gave
iin excellent presentation, very briefly,
of this most recent advent in education. She brought out the Viilue of preschool, kindergarten, training to many
children; to the child who lives in the
neglected home; to the child who enters
the first grade unable to make the necessary social adjustments, due to excessive
timidity, to a language hiiudicap, or to
many other common causes of early
backwardness; she pleaded that these
and other types be given the benefit of
pre-school training, that this glaring deficiency in most of our present school
systems be removed. Miss Himes' talk
received much favorable comment later
in the conversations that went on about
the auditorium and in the halls.
Traces the Guidance Movement
The development of the guidance
movement, an essential elemeut in modern secondary education, wus the burden of Dr. Frank G. Davis' address. Dr.
Davis is a member of the faculty of
Bucknell University's school of education.
Dr. Davis traced the history of tho
guidance iiioveinent, paying tribute to
its pioneer spirits. He wished to expand the concept of guidance beyond
t h a t of vocational guidance, with which
it appears, unfortunately, he said, to
have become somewhat synonymous. He
described briefly other fields in which
guidance is needed and should be afforded; moral guidance, scholiistic guid-
ance, etc. No secondary school system
should neglect its duty of offering to
imniiiture minds such direction iis will
entible students to choose wisely and well
when lii,yiiig the foundation for their
future citizenship.
State Superintendent H. B. llollowa.v,
from Deliiwiire, talked at the general session on Thursday evening on "What
Steps to Wheref" Diagramming hia tiilk
as he went, he built on the platform
blackboiird the kind of a Ladder to
Fame which the school must build.
da.v should be right spiritual forces;
for if the forces which aniniate men in
America today are wrong, the progress
of toinorrow for America must be swiftly downward.
Spirited Round Table
Preceding Dr. Straugliii's talk there
was il spirited round tiilile discussion, ii
feature saved from the schoolmen's conference out of which the present stiite
conference has grown. As usual opinions
were vigorously presented, points of view
opposed to points of view, b,y many of
the niembers as the.v felt moved, and
clearer understiiiulings iirrived at, even
though there were few complete iigreeuients. The value of examinations as a
basis for promotion received the variet.v
of opinions natural when contributed
by high school teiichers, large city superiutoii dents, county superintendents,
and others whose experiences varied as
widely. The problem of teacher-triiining for rural schools and the value educiitionally of institutes and association
nieetings both provoked animated discussion.
There can be no effective education,
he said, which is not solidly grounded
on the good health of the pupil who is
Iieing educated. All progress must be
held together and given direction by
faith iind by orgiinized education; lacking either there can be only fiiilure.
Given both, then the school must build
a ladder of good habits. The information which a pupil takes with him
into the world is of unquestionable value
from time to time, but the hiibits of
work, of thinking, of behavior, which
he hiis formed condition the results of
every effort to succeed. The real prodMountain Arts Register
uct of the schools for the pupils should
During the niorning the nienibers of
lie habits of thrift, self-reliance, hoiithe Mountain Arts Association, meeting
est.v, work, etc.
this year with the P. S. E. A. for the
Spiritual Force Determines Civilization flrst time, were registering in the NorWith Dr. Robb wielding the gavel, af- mal School liliriiry. Some seventy memter il short introductory session. Dr. W. bers of this iictive organization of teachR. Straughn, principal of Miinsfleld Nor- ers of practical and fine iirts attended
niiil School, gave ii masterly discussion the conference. .1. B. Payne, county
of "Controlling Forces of Civiliziition." vocational agent of Center County, genCivilization he defined as the sum to- eral chairniiin, was in charge of the regtal of huiuiin iichiovement at any one istration.
time. This sum total is the result of
Special Conferences
group effort, miiss adviincement. Group
Fridii.y
afternoon was given up to
effort, however, is and always hits been
determined by the nature and (luality group conferences by the P. S. E. A. jind
of the individual leadership of a few. the Mountain Arts Association. Five
And individual leadership inescapably sectional nieetings were scheduled for
is the outgrowth of the dominant spir- each, and a special nieeting of geograitual conditions, the resultant of the ph.v teachers was added.
strong spiritual forces, at work during
County Superintendents
the lifetime of the leaders.
Twelve coiiiit,y suporiiiteiulents attendEducation has always been interested 'ed their round table, of which Supt. T.
in getting the mtiss to move in the direc- S. Davis, of Blair County, was chairniiin,
tion in which educators believe it should aud Dr. Robert C. Shiiw, Deputy Supergo. It is but one, however, of the forces intendent of Schools, Wiis advisory memat work. The church is iinother, a force ber. The central theme for discussion
which hiis lent an initial impetus to all was the determination of what are funother niiijor organized forces, yet it is damentals in the elementary school subonl.y one of the spiritual forces which jects, and what might be done to secure
determine the direction of individual better results. The "Safety Education"
leadership wdiere it develops. Material movenient came in for brief consideraprosperity is not a force, he stated; tion.
our American civilization, just as that
Graded School Teachers
of Rome, will survive or perish in spite
The graded school section overflowed
of, not because of, material wealth. As the room for which it had originally
in all ages, the niiiss will move inevitably been scheduled, tind was triinsferred to
iis spiritual forces iniiiel it.
Shakespeare Hiill. Attcndiince iit this
It is the spirituiil force which car- meeting tripled expectations. Dr. Nelries il man or ii nation over any crisis. son P. Benson presided, and Dr. C. F.
Hence it should be the serious consid- Hobiui, of the state department, attenderation of every thinking man to see ed as advisory member.
to it, so far as he is capable, that the
The problem of securing iittention for
spiritual forces which animate him to- the individual child brought out sugges-
tions for speciiil teachers to coticli backward children, tempoiar.v demotions,
training in special-child study, departmental teaching, and limitiition of enrollments. Opposition to the lengthening of the school diiy developed. Short
hours crowded full will produce more
results than long hours for dawdling
work; this seemed to be the majority
ojiiuion. The value of visual education
properly conducted, and the diinger of
u n d e r d o i n g the necessary accompiinying
teaching, were discussed. The final discussion of the session hiid to do with
vitalizing piirent-teacher work.
Administrative Problems
The city iind borough superintendents,
ineeting in Room 25, with Supt. W. M.
Pierce, of Ridgway, iis chairman, threw
themselves into a lively discussion of
administriitive detiiils. The length of
the class period which results in most
efficient teaching, the proper size of
cliiss divisions for best results, the maximum length of the school day, the value
of intelligence tests in securing better
teaching, the improvement of tetiching
througii supervision; these were among
the (iuestious discussed by the thirty
who attended the conference.
Few Rural Teachers
Few ruriil teachers attended their sectional meeting, of which Miss Betty
Baird was chiiirman, iiiid Dr. ,L \V. Sweeney, Elk County's superintendent, advisory member. Consenuently the meeting adjourned after a very short session.
The High School Teachers
The high school teiichers met in the
auditorium, Mr, A. M. Weaver, formerly
principiil of Williamsport High School,
whose services to that city were recently rewarded by his election iis city superintendent, being chairmiin, and Dr.
J. N. Rule, of the state department, advisory niember.
There was some sentiment in favor of
milking Liitin a compulsory subject in
high schools, tho consensus of opinion
being, however, that it should be elective, but strenuousl.v urged upon those
who niiiy need it. Opposition was expressed to a course in general langUiige,
hirgely due to the vague nature of that
course in its present experimental shape.
E.xtra-curricular iictivities in high
schools need supervision, it was agreed,
but that supervision should not approiich complete direction. .Iust what
extra-curricular iictivities iire desirable
seemed to be a purely individual question, the iinswer to which must be determined by the community interests,
the interests of the teachers, etc. An interesting development grew out of the
discussion of commencement honoi'S,
when it became iipparent that in many
school systems something more than
scholastic rating was considered. No
school system failed to attach strong
NORMAL
TIMES
Annual Conference Brings 500 Guests
im])(irtiince to schohirsliiji, bnt in il number of them the generiil iittitude of students toward school life, their civic iind
social iittitudes, entered into the decision as to just who should receive
honors.
Demonstration Lesson
Prof. L, J. Ulmer, of the Normal
School fiiculty, taught a demonstriitioii
lesson in community geography to a
seventh grade chiss from the training
school, before fifteen visitors. The lesson was held in Room X of the training
school, and dealt with Clinton County
geography. Following the lesson Prof.
Ulmer answered many questions concerning his material and class procedures. There was sonic sentiment in
f.avor of affiliating with the National
Council (if Teiichers of (Jeographj-.
Dr. I'aul S. Eeiiibach gave an address
thiit hit hard certain present-day conditions, at the session of Friday evening,
with Dr, (i. D. Robb presiding. "We
should like to say that there is nothing
wrong with America," he said, "but that
is imiiossible to say when one faces the
un]ileiisant facts, and undesirable when
one realizes the gravity of the danger
America faces. The fundamental thing
wrong is the breakdown of the American home, which has substituted "Let's
Go!" for "There's No Place Like
Home."
There will be no improvement, he believes, unless somehow we can renovate
the faniil.v altar. There can be no substitute for religious training in a Christian home if we are to have Christian
citizenship. Wealth without work or responsibility, politics without principle,
pleasure without conscience, edueation
without character, science without huiiiiiiiitj', business without morality, religion without sacrifice or worship; that
is typically American, he asserted; and
in them lie the seeds of personal and
natiouiil degeneration, degredation, ruin.
Informal Reception
The Normal School held an informal
reception to its visitors in the gyniniisium following the general session. An
eight-piece orchestra provided music for
dancing. Refreshments were served in
a large booth partitioned off from the
dancing floor. Autumn leaves and other
fall suggestions were used in a simple
yet effeetive scheme of decorations.
Dr. Haas and President Dickey Absent
Both Dr. Francis B. Haas, state superintendent of public instruction, and
President Charles E. Dickey, head of the
stiite educiitional association, were compelled to cancel their engagements for
t h e S a t u r d a y moruing session. Import a n t work which could not bo postponed
kept Dr. H a a s at Harrisburg, while the
death of a n e a r relative compelled Presid e n t Dickey to forego his visit here.
addressed the body, presenting four elements of the present association program:
The raising of standards of
qualificiition, the maiutenance of ade(|uate salaries, fabrication of ii tenureof-office act thiit can be passed by
the legislature, and that will be fair
both to teachers iind to school boards,
and continued strengthening of the retirement s.vstem. The tenure question
was the one to wliich Dr. Kelley gave
major attention, outlining the admitted
evils of the present "hire and fire" system, but indicating the difficulties which
lie in the way of the men who would
draft an e(|uitiilile plan iicceptable to all
concerned.
Dr. Carroll Chiimpliii, formerly of
Californiii State Normal School, who is
Dr. Anderson's successor in the department of education at Penn State,
stressed piirticuliirly the student-iittitude
toward education. There can be no
terminus to the educator's endeavor to
know his own business, he maintained.
It is necessary to know the lifework of
early educators to iipprcciate the continuing work of their contribution to
educatioiiiil practice. It is equally necessary to keep abreast of the latest educational movements, in order to know
how progressive educators are .attempting to keep education breast to breast
with advancing social changes. Search
the old to hold fast to all it has of
good, tr.y the new for value and t r y to
improve ujioii it, and, best of all, try to
be original yourself; this wiis the core of
his message to teachers.
Dr. Pierce New President
The flnal session of the preceding afternoon, a business session, put through
much business in a short space of time.
A formal constitution was adopted to
govern the procedure of the Central
District. Dr. W. M. Pierce, superintendent of schools at Ridgway, was elected president of the association for the
coming year, and Supt. A. P . Akeley, of
Potter County, was chosen vice-president. An executive council, consisting
of the president of the general association iind the presidents of all the departmental organiziitions, was agreed
upon. Temporarily it was agreed that
the president iippoint one member from
each department, to act until next year's
meetings, when the departments can formall.y organize.
By no means all of the conference
inembers registered, as is usually the
case. On the oflieial register .are found
the names of perh.aps one-third of the
total number in attendance.
Huntingdon — County Superintendent
M. B. Wright, Assistant County Superintendent Frank Magill.
Bellet'onte—Mrs. Daisy B. Henderson,
II. C. Menold, Superintendent Arthur H.
Dr. J . H e r b e r t Kelley, executive secre- Sloop, Alberta M. Krader, Helen A.
t a r y of the state'educational association. Mackey.
Mt. Jewett—.\ssistiint County Superintendent I'. P, Barnhart, Principal Irvin Holmes.
Roaring Spring—Principal I. C. Mumniert.
Williamsport—Superintendent A. M.
Weaver, Principal J. E. Nancarrow, J.
Fred McMurriiy, Roland S. MiicLaren,
(Jeorge
Parkes, George C. Hosbauer, Mrs.
Harrisburg—C. K. lledden. Director of
Vocational Education; Francis E. Haas, Beuliih ilanley, Mabel Dunning, Alverna
Stiite Superintendent of Public Instruc- Wheeland, Beatrice Lewis, Mabel B.
tion; Robert C. Shaw, Deputy Superin- Deming, Helen M. Liiubach.
tendent; V. A. Martin, Vocational KduRenovo—Mary A. McCreii, Mary B.
cation Bureau; V. Valentine Kirby, Di- Serocca, Helen B. Summerson, A. Viola
rector of Art; J. 11. Kelley, editor Penn- Campbell, Christine Doebler, Charlotte
sylvania School Journal; Anna G. Green, Ostrom, P. E. Werner, C. C. Wandover,
Home Economics; W. B. Work.
Florence G. Herman, Ruth B. Foster,
State College—R. C. Weaver, Will Pearl Henderson, Blanche Bailey, Celia
Gnmt Chiimbers, T. P. North, Louise G. Schwiirtz, Robert Miller, Maude L. SanTurner, J . C. Ward, Jessie Haven, Edith ders, Margiiret O. Kyler, Mary U- MurPheasant, Mary Adams, Elizabeth M. phy, Ella G. Mulvihill, Clara Poorman,
Bowser, Piiuline Piickard, Sarah Gard- Bess K. Gordon, H. M. B. Weicksel, Suiierintendent F. A. Berkenstock, Minee
ner, Anne Creighton, Erma Miller.
Magill, Edna S. Bersanceney, Alice R.
Jersej' Shore—H. L. Schiiefer, K. D.
Brown, Dorothy H. Peck, Clara B. MacCarstater, J. F. Carson, Ruth Bardo,
Closkey, Minnie Stockton, Mary Dunbar.
Clara L. Johnson, Maud S. tJarman, EdNew Bloomfield—Assistant County Suna M. Rempe, Grace Startzel, Anna E.
Phillips, Mrs. Mary H. Hogue, Lydia C. perintendent A. E. Deckard.
Potter, Mary P. Ciirr, Ruth I. Snyder,
Alexandria—Mrs. Edward Hillyer.
Anna Johnson, M. Martha Hoffman,
Martinsburg—R. M. Biirtges.
Belle W. Shaffer, M. Lou Parker, Clare
St. Marys—County Superintendent J .
M. Stepp, Eliziibeth J. Robinson, Ruth
F. Crist, Ruth Peterman, Vinnie A. W. Sweeney.
Clearfield—Superintendent George E.
Zerfoss, County Superintendent W. P.
Trostle.
Sunbury—Snperintendent W. A. Geesey.
R i d g w a y — Superintendent W. M.
Pierce, C. M. Rosenberry, Superintendent B. 11. Kliinesniith, A. C. Nelson.
Mencer, .Jeanette Francis, EUnore BonSabinsville—Lyle M. Ferris.
nell, Principal Charles A. Schweuk, MarWellsboro—County Superintendent J.
garet Haas Schwenk, Ada Douty, Leroy
G. March, R. L. Butler.
Keiler, Mary Kerr, Belle Scliwer.
Covington—Assistant County SuperinWoolrich—Guy Kryder.
tendent E. E. Marvin.
Beech Creek—Charles Mapes, Flavia
Johnsonburg — Superintendent C. E.
Martz.
Wilson.
Tyrone—Anne Giiigery> Nelle Shiffler,
Anna R. Wilson, Kathryn Gearhart,
Lina Reese, Ethel Belle Gordon, Mary
Semple, Mary Hillyer, Gertrude Burket,
Grace Hoover, Geraldine Shilow, Alice
O. Krider, Mabel I. Flickinger, Margaret
Haver, Jennie Neff, Hazel Smith, Margaret Imliof, Dorothy Rupert, Carrie C.
.Jamieson, Clara Dittsworth, N. H. Ryan,
T. Clark Skelly, Superintendent W. W.
Eisenhart, Lillian M. Wilson, Lloyd E.
Howe, R. R. Abernethy, L. E. Guiser, C.
E. Ash, Evelyn Boyle, Caryl Oiites, M.
Pauline Weaver, J. H. Daniels, Nina
C. Lucas, Helen Andrews, Irma LeBaron.
Howard—Mary Hayes.
Salona—Ruth M. Holmes, Stella
Ricker, W. A. Snyder.
E.
Juniata—Catherine S. Wright, Superintendent C. 8. Kniss.
Gleasonton—Sue Kitchen.
North Bend—Sally B. Stuart, Amelia
Welsh, Lula Batdorf, Dorothy Cornelius.
Philipsburg — Betty Todd, Superintendent H. S. Althouse, Principal H. P.
Crain.
Wilcox—Assistant County Superintendent O. G. F. Boonert, Superintendent
Ross A. Snyder.
Williamsburg —Mrs.
berger.
Matilda
Snow-
Altoona—Principal George A. Eobb,
Secreary W. N. Decker, L. C. Smith,
Mary Pressler, H. E. McMahan, J . P .
Lozo, County Superintendent T. S. Davis,
H. C. Smith, W. H. Burd, Alberta Johns,
Florence Gray, Grace Swan, Zitella
Wertz, M. Florence Rollins, Maud Minster, Mildred Wieland, Charles C. Sadler, E. W. Shoenfelt, A. S. Brown, William A. Fickes, C. G. Plummer, S. W.
Hoover, C. S. Romig, C. N. Snyder, J.
Miller, Laura N. Eickabaugh, Margaret
Davis, J. N. Maddocks, Sylvester P .
Koelle, C. E. Whipple, G. K. Schwenker,
Mary Tressler, Marion Buehler, Mary
Downs, Harriet Carver, Erna Faust,
Marie Lintz, Ethel Henry, Marie Launer,
Zella Mortimer, Angela Unverzag, Helen
Walters, Betty Barker, Nellie Berg, Anna Maud Stiffler, Mary E. Phillips, Pauline Roffe, Rose Marie Garrety, Florence
B. Hair.
Nittany—County Superintendent F, G.
Hollidaysburg — Principal
Eugene
Rogers.
Robb, Rosalie Winslow, Josephine Moore,
NORMAL
Helen Decker, Hazel Krouse, Annie K.
Burket, Zoe OUa Wilt, Superintendent
C. V. Erdley.
Number of Training School and
City Supervisors Increased
The number of supervisors and teachFarwell—Dorothy Nuss, Mrs. Marion ers in the Training School and City
Loudenberg.
Schools has greatly increased this year.
Mansfield—Principal W. R. Straughn, Mr. MacDougiil stated that when he flrst
came here six years ago he had two suMansfleld Normal.
pervisors working with him, and now he
Wcstover—D. A. Yingling, Assistant has thirty-eight. This shows how the
County Superintendent.
school has grown.
Curwensville—Assistant County SuperThe Training School Supervisors a r e :
intendent B. C. High.
Sue Northey
Kindergarten
Pittsburgh—M. B. Wineland.
Laura Barkhuff
Grade I
Grade I I
Juniata—President M. G. Brumbaugh, Mabel V. Philips
Helen Lesher
Grade I I I
J u n i a t a College, Charles S. Kniss.
Bertha
M.
Rowe
Grade IV
Bellwood—F. A. Hamilton.
Ilaziel Linderman
Grade V
Mechanicsburg—G. A. Mincemoyer.
Edna H. Pollock
Grade VI
Johnstown—Superintendent 8. J. SlosAllen D. Patterson
son.
Director Junior High Sehool
DuBois—Superintendent W. C. Samp- Jessie Scott Himes
son.
Director Kindergarten aud Primary
Coudersport — County Superintendent
Education
A. P. Akeley, Superintendent F. E. Roy S. MacDougal
Kingsley.
Director Training School
Selma
Atherton
Emporium—County Superintendent O.
Primary and Elementary Art
E. Plasterer.
Bessie Baer
Lock Haven—County Superintendent
Junior High School English
G. C. Brosius, Superintendent N. P . BenMaloise Dixon
son, Principal J. P. Puterbaugh, Edna
Elementary and Junior High School
Rich, F. S. Pletcher, F. S. Knecht, VioHealth Education
let M. Brighton,
Nellie DuBois.. .Junior High Sehool Art
Lewistown—Prank D. Eohnier, George Paul B. Dyck
Health Education
W. Davis, John W. Brassington, Sara Homer H. Giige . . . . Foreign Languages
Ann Brunei', Dorothy J. Irvin, Eva M. Cornelia Gilkey
Science
Minick, Maude P. Billow, Julia B. CofIrene MacDonald
Librarian
fey, Stella B. Jenkins, Florence H.
Lilliiin Russell
Candor, Julia E. McCabe, Katherine McSocial Studies (Junior High School)
Nerney, Salome Harmon, Josephine M.
Levi J. Ulmer
Robb, Ada Frank, Ethel Sloteman, May
Junior High Sehool Geography
B. Hirlinger, Edna R. Nevel, Margaret
Ivah
N.
D.
Whitwell. .Elementary Musie
Bamberger, Marie Kean, Anna F. PackFern
Amnion,
.Junior High School Music
er, Euth A. Bote, Christine D. HaberThe City School Supervisors a r e :
stroli. Pearl M. Klapp, Mabel E. Singley,
Besse M. Bittner, Genevieve Stewart, Miirtha Laye
History and Georgraphy—Principal
Edna A. Cranee, Harriet P. White, Betty
Robb School
Baird.
Hazel Grey
First Grade, Robb
Flemington—Maude C. Floruss, Mrs..
Ethel Stoteman
Carroll All, Edna J. Burkhart, Julia H.
Reiiding and English, Eobb
Bower, Ilva M. Barrett, Marietta H. Best,
Anna
Packer
Art and Music, Penn.
Hazel B. Grey, Laura S. Morgain.
Florence Candor
Mahanoy City—Superintendent Joseph
Reading and English, Penn.
F. Noonan, Superintendent H. A. Oday.
Christine Haberstroth
History and Georgraphy, Penn.
Y. W. Plans for the Year
Mary Bryerton
First Grade, Penn.
The Y. W. C. A. plans for the coming
Salome Harman
year are as yet somewhat indefinite.
History and Music, Roosevelt
Miss Eowe, plans to follow the general
Katherine McNerney
program followed last year.
Second and Third Grades, Roosevelt
One meeting a month, it is planned, to
Florence Vande Boggart
have a member of the Faculty, talk to
First Grade, Roosevelt
the girls.
Edna Rich
Art and Music, Lincoln
One night a month is to be given over
Genevieve Stuart. .Second Grade, Lincoln
as a business meeting. This is to give
Bessie Bitner
Fourth Grade, Lincoln
every one a better idea as to the finanEsther Lowery
First Grade, Lincoln
cial standing of the organization and
Julia Coffey
just what business aetivities they are
Eeading and English, Lincoln
carrying on.
The other two meetings of the month
Mildred Stewart's mother would beare for the general discussion of topics lieve t h a t Normal was doing a lot for
interesting to tho organization. With her diiughter if she could see the inthis there will be the regular devotional dustrious girl going everywhere with her
services and short talks by the girls.
little broom.
TIMES
Building a Name
When you want to read a good story,
you pick up your favorite magazine, and
then you look for the name of an author whom you know writes good stories.
Or if you want to see a good movie,
you like to get one by an siuthor like
Emerson Hough or Curwood, with a good
actor like Tom Mix or Harold Lloyd—
somebody whose name is a guarantee
that it is all you should expect.
If it turned out to be poor, you'd be
awfully disappointed, and you wouldn't
have much faith in that name again. It
would have cheated you. But it isn't
often that you ever get disappointed in
a name that you have come to trust. The
men or women who have built up those
names so that you look for them as a
guarantee know that you do look for
their names, and trust them, and they
have to keep them up to standard. I t
pays them to do so. You wouldn't go to
see a show by an unknown actor, especially, or read a story by somebody
you'd never heard of. Of course you
would, occasionally—and if you liked
it, you would look for the same name
again, iind pretty soon that would be
another name that you eould trust.
freedom from the early Stone Age until
the present day. "The remiirkable t h i n g
about it," said Miss Dixon, "was the organization.
Everj'thing went along
evenly."
She also visited the educiitional building at the exposition and was interested
in the work done by the Philadelphia
school children along Health Education
lines. She also siiw some clever films
on dental hygiene work, which she would
like to bring here to start a campaign
in that work.
Psychology Clinic Opened
With the designation of Central State
Normal School as the state center for
Kindergarten Education by the Department of Public Instruction, Harrisburg,
several new courses are being offered to
meet this post-graduate curriculum. One
of these is the "Measurement and Treatment of Exceptional Children," taught
by Miss Merrills.
The course consists of a study of tests
and sciiles now standardized for measuring the abilities of children from
four to eight years of age. The charter members of this course aro Vivian
Eberhart, Helen Marr, Mary Myers,
Ursula Ryan and Helen Swartz. These
students will administer all typical tests
to the kindergarten group. Careful consideration will be given in order to ascertain early these exceptional children
and to give each special and suitable
care.
Then, because other people knew and
trusted that name, they'd go to that
show, or buy that magazine—and that
man's name has become a thing of real
value. But if he fell down once—no one
would trust him again. That's the way
it is with building a name and a repuA psychology clinic has been fitted up,
tation—it is worth a lot if you do it
on
the third floor east, to house this new
right. You've always got to live up to
curriculum
addition. It is equipped wdth
it, keep to the same high standards, but
such
tests
as the Stanford-Binet, Dewhen you get it, it's sure worth having.
troit Kindergarten, Wallin Peg Board,
Goddard Form Board, Manikin Testa,
Miss Dixon Gives Vacation
Ship Tests, etc. In addition, the psychExperiences
ology clinic will be used to further all
During the past term of sunimer psychology courses being offered.
school. Miss Dixon spent three days in
New York City. She visited the PhysiGym to Connect With Dorm
cal Education classes at Teachers' ColThe new fire-tower which is to conlege, Columbia. On one day they were nect the girls' dormitory with the gymhaving their annual summer festival. nasium is beginning to take shape. FounThis year every member of every class dation walls are being laid. The brickin Health Education work took part. work will start this coming week, the
The pageant portrayed all the different workmen report.
activities that come under Physical Edu^
The fire-tower will be uniform in
cation.
plan with those whieh connect both dorWhile Miss Dixon was visiting tliese
classes she was invited to join a class of
teachers who were studying the square
dance. It was taught by a woman whose
book on the dances, music and calls of
the square dance is the first of its kind
to be published.
Later in the summer. Miss Dixon visited the Sesqui-Centenuial Exposition
where she saw an immense pageant in
which several thousand people took part.
Three stages were used and the floor of
the stadium was utilized for such things
as chariot races, etc.
This pageant
traced the development of the idea of
mitories to the central building. Halls
will connect the first and second floors
with the main floor and with the balcony of the gymnasium, and staircases
will lead from all floors of both buildings to a ground-floor exit.
Several improved conditions will result from this addition to Normal's
plant. The gymnasium will be emptied
in less than half the time formerly necessary after a game. Girls coming from
gym classes will not have to pass through
the open air in reaching the dormitory.
There will be no exposure to unpleasant
weather.
NORMAL
Gym Program Is Full One
Athletics for girls iit t'eutral State
Normiil School have received an added
stimulus this year. Under the present
system the Seniors participate in hockey
during every cliiss period, while the
Juniors will have one period a week.
After Thanksgiving the Seniors will start
basketball and the Juniors will begin
volley ball. The Juniors will take up
basketball after Christmas.
By this
method every girl will take part in
some athletic game. The result will
mean more available material, greater
competition, and more general interest
manifested in the various games to be
held throughout the year.
At present the Juniors who have
passed the heiirt test given by Miss
Dixon are learning the rudiments and
rules of hockey in practice held outside
class period. Miss Dixon reports that
iin enthusiastic bunch of girls are reporting each afternoon when practice is
held. During one period a week the
Junior classes are priicticiug marching
in the auditorium. This is being done
to improve the inarching from chapel.
Posture tests have been given the
Seniors. Corrective work this year will
be taken care of during the regular class
period instead of outside class, as it
was last year. After the Juniors have
had their posture tests, their classes will
be the same as the Seniors.
I n connection with Junior Health Education classes, hygiene is being taught.
The girls are keeping scrapbooks along
with their notebooks. Anything of interest, such as quotations, picture, newsliaper clippings, etc., are used. Later
they will make charts, emphasizing
health habits, hygiene, exercise, and etc.
The Seniors in group three are tiikiug
il coaching course nnder the direction
of Miss Rearick, Theory of coaching,
practice in playing and actu.al coaching
is included in the course.
TIMES
JUST ABOUT JERRY
Jerry Gets a Telegram
Ten o'clock! Jerry bad just reiid her
assignment for Psychology the third
time without comprehending it, when a
knock sounded at the door and Sal entered with the iinnouncement that the
Dean wished to see J e r r y .
"At this hour! Betty think! W h a t
have I been doing lately? gasped J e r r y .
" I honestly can't think of ii .thing I've
done. Y^ou don't suppose I'm going to
be suspended or expelled or iinything
like that, do y o u ? "
. "It's a telegriim," said Sal.
"A telegram!" Jerry's face turned
piile and she left the room.
When she came back she had a queer
smile on her lips. " I was never more
frightened iu m y life," she said.
"What was the m a t t e r ? " breathed
Betty.
Jerry spread out a crumpled telegram
on her knee, and Betty read it over her
shoulder.
"William died of an overdose of
chloroform at t e n this morning. Funeral
tomorrow. Thomas."
"Thomas," explained Jerry, "is my
brother, and William, or Bill, iis we
called hiin, is our bull pup—the homeliest and worst-tempered dog that ever
lived,"
"But why in the world did he telegraph ' " queried Betty.
"It's il joke," said J e r r y . "Joking runs
iu the family. But listen—this dog h.as
east a shadow over my vacations for
nearlj' a year. He killed my k i t t e n ; he
wallowed in the rain and mud and came
in and slept on my best dress; he stole
the steak for breakfast, and rubbers
and door-mats for blocks around. Bill
was threatened with death several times,
but somehow he always pulled through.
A scheme of dividing the school into
And, Tom, knowing how I detested the
two teams for competitive games, etc., beast, thought it would be a good joke
is being seriously considered by the two to telegraph."
teachers. Under this scheme each group
"Did the Dean think thiit W^illiam was
would contain both Juniors and Seniors.
il relative?" asked Betty. "What did she
Chances for winning would be more even
say?"
iind the competition would be keener.
"She said, 'Come in, J e r r y dear.'
I n previous years the Junior class com(Usually
she frigidly ctiUs me Miss Stewpeted against the Senior class.
a r t ) . I opened the door with my knees
Thursday evening, immediately after shaking when I heard that 'Jerry deiir,'
dinner until study hour, beginners' chiss iind she took my hand and said, ' I am
in social dancing will be held under Miss sorry to have to tell you th.at I have
Dixon's supervision. Any one desiring heard bad news from your brother'."
to learn the art is welcome; but ac"Tommy?" I giisped.
complished dancers are asked to refrain
"No, William," she replied.
from using the gym that night.
"I was puzzled. I racked my brain
Miss Dixon is ready to organize a but couldn't remember iiny brother Wilclass in folk and natural dancing when liam."
the demand for such a class warrants its
"He is very ill," she went on. "Yes,
organization. Last year this class met I must tell you the truth—poor little
on Saturday afternoons, and that may William passed away this morning."
be the best time this year also.
Just then it flashed over me what it
All grades in the training school are meant. I was so relieved that I put my
using tho gymnnsium. In the first grade head down on her desk and laughed till
rhyinthic work is 1 eing given.
I cried; and she kept patting my hand.
Plans have been made to weigh and Well, then I didn't dare tell her, after
measure ciich child in the school once a she had expended all that sympathy, so
month. This will be done under Miss as soon as I could stop laughing, I
Dixon's direction with the nid of the raised my head and told her, trying not
to hurt her feelings, that William was
student teachers.
Altogether the work of the year in uot a brother, but just a sort of friend.
Health Education will play an impor- Then she asked if I wished to go home
for the funeral. I told her that I didn't
t a n t part in the school's activities.
think it would be best, and she Siiid
perhiips not. She said she was glad to
see me bearing up so bravely."
"Jerry, how could you let her think
i t ? " exclaimed Betty.
"How could I help i t ? " J e r r y demanded indignantly. "If you had a brother
like Tommy Stewart you'd know how to
symp.athize with me. I suppose I ought
to be griiteful to know that the dog is
dead, but I would like to have hiid that
news broken ii little less gently."
Jerry Stars in Psychology
Jerry's knowledge of Psychology was
not based entirely on the text, nevertheless her reputation in class was good.
She gained this reputation early in the
course. Professor Miirtin was lecturing
on the subject of sensation. He remarked that a person experiences all
sensiitions during the flrst few months
of infanc.y and that in after life there is
no such thing as a new sens.ation. Jerry
piped up, "Professor Martin, did you
ever shoot the chutes?"
The ice was broken and the class felt
at home. Thereafter Jerry was looked
upon as having a deeper insight into
Psychology than the others in the class.
Library Course Given to Juniors
The Ijibrary course is not a new thing
to students of C. S. N. S. However, the
course is being enlarged upon by the
new teacher. Miss MacDonald,. who is
the school librarian.
Miss Irene MacDonald received her elementary education in Portland, Maine,
getting her M. A. degree iit Teachers'
College, Columbia University. She took
library work at Simmons College. Miss
MacDonald taught at Foxcroft Academy,
and has been librarian at Brockton,
Massachusetts.
The object of giving a library course
to students of Lock Hiiven is to familiarize them with the resources and reference tools of the library, to en.able them
to handle their school work more intelligently and quickly.
The course aims to give the students
a working and teaching knowledge of
the necessary facilities such iis the card
catalog, encj'clopedias, dictionaries, indexes, year books, government documents, inagazines, iind special reference
books. I t also iiinis to instruct them
in the use, care and proper selection of
books.
Church Receptions Given to
Students
On October flrst, three of t h e leading
churches of the city gave receptions to
the students of C. 8. N. S.
Sixty-three young people gntliered at
the Presbyterian church for t h e games,
music iind refreshments which the church
provided. The party began with the
singing of peppy, popular songs, led by
Mr. Fredericks, Miss Ainmou and Reverend Parkhill sang a duet to the delight of their audience. This number
had not been planned for, b u t from all
reports it went over bigger than anything else.
There was certainly no ice to be broken at the Methodist church. Guessing
whether one was ii lizard or a giraffe,
and depending upon the rest of the comjiany to tell, was far from being solemn
and formal. After several exciting circle games the seventy-five Normal students pulled their chairs together and
joined in all kinds of songs, both old
and new. Then followed delicious refreshments, more singing a n d finally
"Good-Night Ladies."
A Backward Sociiil was the drawing
card for eight girls of the Reformed
church. Everything was done backward,
even to the way clothing Wiis worn. A
backw.ard spelling bee afforded a great
deal of amusement. After the serving
of refreshments the party broke up.
The I/utherau church
entertained
forty-three girls and fellows at a social
on September twenty-fourth. Speeches
by Bev. Steiii and Jlr. Shaffer, games,
songs and eats fllled out iin interesting program. Cars were sent for the
girls, and at the close of the evening,
returned them safely to the school.
Juniors Choose Representatives
The Junior Class met on September
21, 1926, for the purpose of electing its
representatives to the Student Council.
As a result of this ineeting, Julia Gibbons iind Agnes Gallagher have assumed
their councilor duties. They were presented to the girls and Mr. Armstrong
at the girls' meeting on Tuesday, September 28.
The duties of the council members are
to see that the rules and by-laws of the
school are carried out and to ;iid in the
discipline and routine of the school.
The entire council consists of the following girls: Eose Bower, President;
Esther Suavely, Vice President; Anna
Fleck, Secretary, Julia Gibbons iind
Agnes GiiUagher.
OPERETTA OPENS 1926
CONCERT SEASON KINDERGARTEN COURSE
(Continued from Pnge 2)
of the house and to eat them, when its
owner appetirs, a grisly witch, who entraps children by her spells, pops them
into her oven, and Later eats them. She
shuts Hansel in a sort of cage and feeds
him with sweets to fatten him; .also she
tries to get Gretel to bend down in front
of her oven, so that she m.ay be iible
suddenly to push her in. Gretel pretends to be unable to understand, and
when the witch bends down to show
her how, pops the witch into her own
oven. The father and mother burst in
upon the scene, and a chorus of thanksgiving winds up the play.
BEGINS FIRST YEAR
(Continued from Pngo 1)
The curriculum includes participation
iind observiition in the kindergarten, a
psychology course dealing with exceptional children, educational measurements, iind further courses in English,
hciilth, dramatic iirts, plays, and gaines
for the pre-school child.
At the completion of the third year
of work a Special Kiudergiirten Certiflcate will be iiwarded the graduates,
who sliould be and, it is felt, will be
better prepared for practiciil kindergarten teaching than iiny graduate of
the former two-year course.
NORMAL
Quality
Shoe Repairing and
Shoe ShiningJ. F. TORSELL
BELLEFONTE AVE.
D
AINTY SERVICE
ELICIOUS CANDIES
ELIGHTFUL SUNDAES
S)U3ar IBotol
At reduced rates to
C. S. N. S. Students
Use Eastman
OUR OWN LITTLE DIARY
Monday, October 4
Taught iigain today. The kids seemed
possessed.
Teaching isn't what it's
cracked up to be.
Went down town after shoes but they
don't have the kind I want, so I'll wait.
The trip down seemed endless. The
town must move further down the line
every day.
Gee, we have our places assigned in
the dining hall today. I hate the thoughts
of it. We have too much fun iit our
own tiible. I suppose they think we
won't eiit so much when we're in company.
Then I'm hostess, too! I like to e,at,
not work. Every time you t u r n around
some one wants something. Not crabbing or anything like that, but when
I eat with the crowd I usually manage
to get there flrst and pick my place.
Tuesday, October 5
Only had one cl.ass today. I t was
heaven, almost—but, darn it, t h a t class
came along about 4:10, just in time to
break up the afternoon. I never saw
such luck. That's because I'm Irish, I
suppose.
All Photos
Films
in the yellow
box.
'We sell them.
Leave your Blms
today—get y o u r
pictures tomorrow
The Swope Studio
School Essentials
Curlers
Hot Plates
Irons
Grills
Toasters
Fans
Chafing Dishes
Manicuring Sets
Pen Knives, Shears
Alarm Clocks
Safety Razors, Etc.
9
TIMES
We were to go out to play hockey, too,
but the rain put in an appearance, so
we stayed in the gym. I can't see that
game for some reason or other. Don't
know much about it yet, but from what
I do know, it isn't going over so big
with me.
Wednesday, October 6
If I don't soon get to see t h a t movie
I'll have a fit. All I hear is every one
raving about it and I can't p u t a word
iu edgewise all for the simple reason of
not having seen it. Why does the Y.
W. have to meet tonight? I feel it in
my bones that I'll miss that show and
that will be misery. Thought about cutting class and going, but bumped into
the teacher, so thought again and went
to class.
Had gym again at 4:10. I t rained, so
we stayed in once more. Wish I were
in the eight o'clock section. I t isn't my
fault t h a t I'm not.
Went to the Library and worked—no
foolin'! That's what I did. You can
do nothing else when Miss MacDonald
is there.
Thursday, October 7
Went to the movie at last. I t was
great. I was expecting more than I got
though. That's always the way when
you sit around and listen to the kids
talk about it. I'm awfaully p u t out to
think I missed that lecture tonight, by
the way.
We can tell you the most
beautiful way to say it
We Have Them
Had a gym class in the dorm about
0:1.5. I was the instructor. "Plump"
w.anted some reducing exercises. Boy, I
gave them to her! She quit the flrst
thing. Couldn't have thought mueh of
them. The student council must be giving us a rest. They didn't bother us
all the time we were out there. I blew
up il sack and burst it. What a crack
it made! The hall cleiired like magic.
You couldn't see any one for dust.
Friday, October 8
I'm hungry and I don't mean perhaps.
Something to eat is about as scarce as I
don't know what. All we've been doing
As a welcome to the Juniors, the cabiis loafing this whole evening. The lecnet gave a delightful tea on Sept. 14,
ture in the auditorium was good.
from four o'clock to six. Mary Margaret
To think they are having a dance in
Adams made a charming hostess, while
the gym without our being there. Our
the other members of the cabinet helped
window is a pretty good place to watch
serve the guests.
from though. Helen and I shoved my
The "Big Sisters" brought their "Litcot up. We were comfortable as long
as we were the only ones there. But the tle Sisters" and it did not take long for
next thing the gang piled in, and you'd every one to get acquainted. Introducthink we were pliiying "Three deep." tions were made and friendships formed
Never knew I could hold so many peo- over the tea cups and all the girls had
ple. The proctors must not have been the feeling that they already had made
on duty—eight in one room rarely a good start toward inaking friends for
gets by.
the year.
Saturday, October 9
On Saturday night, the 18th, the Y.
Got a box from home. We had a feed,
W. gave a flne party in the gymnasium.
and from the way I feel now 111 never
look a ham sandwich in the face again. The receiving line grew until it extendOur room is a wreck. I made coffee and ed around three sides of the gym, and
it was pretty good even if I do say it every one greeted every one else until
myself. Cups were scarce as usual. our hands ached and our faces were
tired smiling.
Helen and I shared one glass.
Went down to the football game. I
Dr. Armstrong very kindly furnished
didn't st.ay very long. Three touchdowns an orchestra, so, of course, dancing bein aliout fifteen minutes is too much ciime the popular amusement.
for me.
Totty called me up from home.
It
Another Interesting Feature Was
seemed so good to hear her talk. We
the Ballroom Race
talked a long time but I couldn't say
About nine o'clock everybody joined
now what it was all about. We sure
the Grand March for refreshments.
did cover territory though.
These were nice big ice cream cones—
Sunday, October 10
It's funny but instead of considering chocolate, strawberry or vanilla. The
Sunday the flrst day of the week I al- fellows who dipped the ice cream insisted that some folks were "cheating on
ways think of it as the last.
Another week gone and we're that t h e m " and marching around twice b u t
much nearer to going home. It's about they were politely assured that they
forty days now. That's not so bad! I were merely seeing double.
can remember when it was twice that.
I t was a fine party and we can thank
If it hadn't rained I'd have gone down the Y. W. for scaring away the hometo church. Our umbrellas are all out of sick blues on the first Saturday night
commission so I st.ayed away.
away from home and old friends.
Our supper wasn't so hot. I took down
The Y. W. C. A. Membership Drive
the jam that Mom sent me and t h a t
started on September 6.
added a little bit more to our "Bill AfThe first Vesper Service for which the
fair." I never s.aw a bunch get away
with so much to eat. Bet that poor Y. W. is responsible occurs on Ocwaitress has a path worn from our table tober 10th. This will be a pretty candle
service in recognition of the new memto the kitchen.
bers.
It's almost time to roll i n !
Kamp's Shoe Store
TITUS'
for the
Serve Dainty Lunches and Tasty
Sandwiches
Latest Styles in Footwear
Shaffer,
Candor & Hopkins
17 East Main Street
Guaranteed
CARLSON,
Hosiery
Florist
AT THE MONUMENT
Y. W. C. A, Party and Tea
The Y. W. C. A. has already made its
influence widely felt at C. S. N. S, this
year.
The oflicers a r e :
Mary Margaret Adams
President
Connie Gilloegly
Vice President
Evelyn Hetherland
Secretary
Ruth Jones
Treasurer
Margaret Wainbough
U. R.
Ethyl Bumgartner
Social Service
Ruth Oechler
Social Chairman
Catherine Orth
Waj-s iind Means
Alice Corby
Program Chairman
Margaret McCauley... ,Poster Chairman
Pearl Moore
Posters and Magazines
Violet Duck
Pianist
n o East Main Street
Delicious Sundaes made with She;ffer'a
White Deer Ice Cream
Enjoy a noonday luncheon j u s t off
t h e Campus.
We deliver Ice Cream or Lunches
to Normal Students a t 9:45 P. M.
10
NORMAL
Cornpliments of
"Bbe Cllnlon"
Restaurant-Delicatessen
Table Luxuries
312 Vesper St., Lock Haven
Bring your Kodak
Films to Us to Develop and Print.
We carry all sizes of
Films and Cameras
and Kodaks in stock.
Hilton & Heffner
Lock Haven's Leading Drug Store
TIMES
Many Ne^v Members
Added T o Faculty
(Continuecl from Tjige 11
US from the schools of Grand Rapids,
Michigan.
Miss Selmii Atherton arrived in time
to share the labors of the iirt depiirtment during the sumnier. She comes
from out where the Fiir West begins,
her home being in Minneapolis, Minn.
Both her undergraduiite imd her graduiite work was taken in Miiinesotii University. She has taught in school systems in South Dakota, Iowa, Wisconsin,
iUid Minnesota, Central State ttiking her
awii.v from LaCrosse, Wisconsin.
iin indication to our Alumni of his persoiiiility as they could ask for.
Miss Hiiziel Linderman, from the
schools of Dubuque, Iowa, is the new
training supervisor in the fifth grade.
New Hiimpton, Iowa, is her native heath,
lowii State Teachers' College the scene
of her undergraduate and graduate days,
iind the states of Iowa, South Dakota,
and Arkiinsiis hiive approved of her professioiiiil activities.
In the second grade, augmenting the
number of supervisors for Group One
Seniors, is Miss Miibel Phillips. Miss
Phillips was tiiken by Dr. Armstrong
from the Oil City, Pa., schools. By birth
iind educiition, however, she is from the
old Northwest Territory, her home being Bloomfield, Indiana, and Indiana
University her alniii mater. Miss Phillips' graduate work she obtained at Columbia Universit.y. She has taught in
Indiiiuii, Montana, and Pennsylvania.
Our new librarian. Miss Irene MacDouiild, represents the state of Maine
on our fiicult.y, her home being in Portbind. Her undergraduate work was given by Bates College, and her graduate
work was taken at Simmons College and
at Columbi.a University. She has taught
aud managed school library work in
Miiine and in Massachusetts, coming to
us from the schools of Brockton, Mass.
It should add value to our library work
Succeeding Miss Giles as supervisor of
here to have it under the direction of sixth grade work is Miss Edna Helen
one who is not only a trained librarian, Pollock, also a graduate of Iowa Stiite
but also acquainted iit flrst hand with Teachers' College, whose undergraduate
public school library problems.
days were followed by graduiitc work at
Another Teachers' College graduate on Columbia University. Her home is Libour faculty is Miss Nellie A. Dubois, of ertyville, Iowa, and she has taught iu
New Paltz, New Y'ork, who took both Iowa, Michigan, and Montana. Miss Polher undergraduate and her graduate lock is tiiken by us from Dillon, Monwork in the halls of Columbia. She has tana, State Teachers' College.
had high school and elementary school
To Miss Sue Northey has been entrustiirt work ill New Jersey, New York, and
ed the new third yeiir kindergarten curOhio, and previous to her work here
riculum, to shiipe it iind give it direcwith us was instructor in a r t in Ohio
tion during its foriniitive period. A
University.
graduate of the National Kindergarten
Increased Training School StatF
College, Chicago, with graduate degree
The iiicreiise in the size of the train- from Northwestern University, and a
ing school iind in the number of Seniors constant student of her work at other
taking practice teaching made necessary institutions, she hiis taught in Texas, Ilmany tidditions to the training school linois, Iowa, iind Washington, D. C. She
force of supervisors. Five instructors comes to us from Ohio State Teachers'
have been iidded, three of them to newly College, Bowling Green, Ohio.
creiited positions.
It is evident that Dr. Armstrong has
The principal of the Ford City High surveyed the entire North for his new
School, Mr. Alan Patterson, is the new faculty. His one ambition, he says himdirector of the Junior High School, suc- self, has been to provide every student
ceeding Miss Amy B. Roegge. Mr. Pat- who comes to this sehool with better
terson is a graduate of Grove City Col- prepiiration for classroom teaching thiin
lege, and holds his master's degree from iiny other norniiil school in the country
Columbia University. He has been elect- Ciin offer. If he ciin do thiit, he Siiid
ed to the Kiwanis Club of Lock Haven in chapel, he will feel that his labor hiis
since his arriviil, which is about as good licen justified.
IVe Serve the Ladies
Also
We invite the ladies to come to
our barber shop for their hair
cutting nnd trimming and permanent wiiving. We iire sjiecially equipped t o render a
prompt and satisfactory service. When J'OU or the children require tonsorial attention you will flnd us ready to
serve you. We have a chiirt
that shows the very latest
modes of bobbing, cutting and
trimming.
Come to the
Sanitary barber Shop
Hungry?
Satisfy It With
Good Food
Achenbaeh's
Arbor
Lunches
Candy
Fruit
Served
Ice Cream
Sodas
Susquehanna Avenue
LINTZ'S
Wearing
Apparel
at
Money Saving
Prices
Henry Keller's Sons
style
QuaUty
New Spring Styles in
Oxfords and Slippers
103 Main St., Lock Haven, Pa.
Lock Haven's Shopping
Center
We invite the Student Body to visit this store with a
feeling of freedom and under no obligation whatever to buy.
We appreciate your patronage and will serve you to the
best of our ability.
HOSIERY, Silk or Cotton—UNDERTHINGS—NECKWEAR
Complete Dry Goods Department
China—Houseware—Gift Department
Rugs—Draperies—Curtains
The Smith & Winter Department Store
NORMAL
Can You Feature This?
One of the little Presbyterian pastimes
at the recent reception to Normal students resulted in the horrific tale which
appears below. Every student present
was invited to ]>rovide iin adjective unlike any adjective given before the collector reached him. His adjective in its
turn was written in on a story which
had previously been prepared, with
blank spaces wherever an adjective eould
conceivably lie used. The flnal output
of this process of blind composition wiis
the following medley of surprises;
St. Francis College Crushed
Maroons
Ten times in succession the St. Francis College team tore through a hole in
Normal's line for touchdowns, while our
team was able to do little in the way of
a counter-offensive. A sixty-yard forward piiss, Kuntzler to Smith, featured
the game.
TIMES
enough to keep them out of the Stroudsburg game, however. The squad which
will be thrown against the Monroe County Normal team will be the best we can
put on the field.
No one expects the Stroudsburg game
to be a victory. Zip Loftus, fullback
here two years ago, plays the same position for Stroudsburg, who always have
a team that outclasses the other normal
schools of this state, and who have the
best team this year iu their history. The
Maroons will make the visitors feel that
they have been in a game; that is all we
ask of them. The lineup;
It cannot be said that the collegians
iit Loretto showed mueh in the way of
clever footb.all, inside stuff. Big and
powerful, straight line-plunging, most of
it througii a single weak spot in our
"A Foolish Story"
line discovered early in the game, was
St. Francis
Normal
"One green evening in rustic Septem- enough to give the St. Francis team a
Boyle
M. Fitzsimmons
wide
margin
of
superiority.
ber it became the bright pleasure of
Left End
some of the good members and the bad
The Lock Haven team was greatly outEnglesby
R. Fitzsimmons
teachers and officers of the woolly Great weighed. Their liick of football instinct
Left Tackle
Island Sunday School to entertain the contributed more than their liick of
Slatsinski
Miller
dumb Presbyterian young people of the weight, however, in paving the paths for
Left
Guard
silly Central State Normal School, hav- the St. Francis backs. Costly fumbles,
Bossert
ing obtained the ignorant consent of slow comprehension of signals, and in- Steele
Center
the clever President, capricious Dr. Arm- ability to take out interference marked
Bohn
strong, and of the faculty at their last our work. The team played pluckily, Sloane
Right Guard
exquisite session. They made the terrible gave wh,atever they had, but were made
Murphy
Sherkel
proviso that a beautiful chaperone should to look very bad at times.
Right Tackle
accoinpiiny the cold stndents. The queer
The most striking fciiture of the game A. Abies
Larkin
Miss Barkhuff, we are glad to note, is
was a long forwjird pass, Kuntzler to
Right End
here to perform that unusual pleasure.
Smith, which sailed forty yards through Kuntzler
Bauman
"Promptly at the bully time for which the air and made possible a further run
Quarterback
the goofy invitation had been given the of twenty yards. The work of Normal's Smith
Bowser
unique guests arrived, their crabby ends, who broke up most of the attempts
Left Halfback
faces aglow with frivolous expectation directed at them all through the game, McClister
McCloskey
and antiquated eagerness. They were until St. Francis backs practically
Right Halfback
met at the amazing entrance by a wild ceased to attempt end runs, was the L. Abies
Ulmer
receiving committee, consisting of the brightest spot in Normal's work. Dave
Fullback
horrible Mr. Speece with hia usual nutty Ulmer's punting was also a redeeming
Score by periods:
smile and dippy greeting. With him feature. It is not remarkable, but it is
St.
Francis
27 14 17 21—79
stretching out a crazy welcoming hand very satisfactory both in distance and
0
0 0 0— 0
was the marvelous Mrs. Salmon, dressed in difficulty of handling, and it is in- Normal
in an adorable red gown.
finitely better than anything developed
Touchdowns: McClister 3, Murphy 3,
Smith 2, L. Abies 1, A. Abies 1. Try for
"Among the folk who welcomed the last season.
point: Boyle 9 out of 10.
cute guests were genuine Mr. Parkhill,
Bauman and Larkin went out of the
Substitutions; St. Francis—Broetzel
his clumsy face radiant with peculiar game with minor injuries. Bauman's
smiles, and his odd eyes twinkling with ankle was injured after a few minute's for L. Abies, Kelling for Sloane, Tilden
Boyle,
happy merriment and dreary pleasure at of play in the first period. Larkin went for Slatsinski, Hopkins for
the scrumptuous thought of the perish- out with a bruised shoulder in the sec- White for McClister, Urban for Englesable evening before him. The quaint ond period. Neither injury is serious by, Hetrick for Steele, Sopora for Smith.
Lock Haven—Williams for Nolan, Nolan
Mrs. Parkhill, too, held out an elaborate
for Larkin, Fredericks for Bohn, Bohn
welcoming hand. She looked cunning
for Bossert, Bossert for Williams, Pomein a cuckoo dress made for this prehisroy for R. Fitzsimmons, Barr for Fredtoric occasion. She had a ludicrous time
Here's a word from
ericks, Renninger for Bauman.
Refparting with her two fickle children, but
eree : Phillips, W. and J.
finally satisfied them both with fresh
the W i s e :
kisses and ridiculous hugs, tucked them
into their petrified beds, and left the
pickled manse.
I t took a reporter on the Normal Times
staff to write down in cold p r i n t that
"Among the superb guests there was
Miss Himes wanted plenty of kindernoticed the ferocious Mildred Stewart,
gartens for the sake of the premature
with her mind full of red hot knowledge
school child.
" / ordered Normal
and a girlish appreciation of a hideous
evening such as this.
"Also present were the grotesque
Louise Cogswell, the fantastic Mabel
Klein, and the lazy Ruth Blumensohein,
all with snappy hearts full of the joy of
living. We might mention others of our
darling invited friends, and perhaps
speak of their scrappy characters, their
sheepish countenances, and their various
despicable attire, but the hotsy-totsy
evening advances, and our flighty friend,
the antediluvian Mrs. Fenton Fredericks,
and her skinny helpers will soon be calling us to their wrinkled repast down in
the cannibal social rooms.
"The pigeon-toed writer of this knockkneed story now finishes hor cross-eyed
task with very blind wishes for a stuckup evening and a sawed-o8f journey back
to the hammered-down Central State."
11
Normal Students Are Doing
Practice Teaching
students were assigned their practice
teaching work during the first week of
school. The assignments in the various
griides of both Training and City Schools
are;
Training School
Kiiidergiirten—Alice Holmberg, Lucile
Herritt, Betty Hubley, Martha Gaffney,
Miirgaret Creighton, Margaret Mortimer,
Helen Thornton, Dorothy Liimbert.
Grade I—Gertrude Kane, Graee Ott,
Anne Fahlman, Vera May Duke, Betty
Jordan, Mabel Kline, May Todhunter,
Nell Holton, Eunice Hoffman, Dorothy
Apple, Claudia Kelly.
Grade I I ^ E t h e l Wilson, Ethel Hartsock, Viola Statlor, Tilda Nelson, Mary
'iaymond, lone Potter, Mary Margaret
\dams, Beatrice Richardson, Alice Hosier, Pearle Moore, Lucile Herrington.
Grade III—Amelia Martin, Louise
"Cogswell, Marion Fry, Dorothy Reilley,
Lillian Mitchell, Alice Corby, Ruth Lusk,
Hazel McTavish.
Grade IV—Janet Stewart, Jo Paul,
Florence Ward, Betty Baird, Matilda
Snowberger, Esther Fulton, Charlotte
Knapp, Edith Sunberg, Kathryn Weidert.
Grade V—Margaret McHale, Louise
Escobar, Marion Smith, Anna Herchock,
Anna Fleck, Gertrude Lipez, Carrie Allen.
Grade VI—Heleu McCloskey, Margaret
McCauley, Margaret Dubler, Ruth Blumenschein, Mary Ruddy, Blanche Wahl,
Bessie Lipez, Mrs. Charles Kane, Mary
Kane.
Junior High School
Rhea Brungard, Wiletta Cummings,
Sarah Felix, Kathleen Hendrix, Ruth
Jones, Rose Bower, Amy Reese, Thomas
Larkin, Mildred Reiter, Margaret Kane,
Elverda Richardson, Harriett Kelt, Marie
McNeills, Lenore Sharp, Thomas Hosterman, Elizabeth McKee, Mildred Stewart, Edith Morrison, Gwendolyn Stringfellow, Helen Radowsky, Ruth Oechler,
Max Fitzsimmons.
City Schools
P r i m a r y Grades—Gene Asplund, Katherine Gallagher, Ethel Danbert, Margaret Sour, Mary Myers, Jeau Whitehead.
Intermediate Grades—Esther Snavely,
Connie Gilloegly, Evelyn Hetherlin,
Ruth Scliandelmeir, Mary Gordan, Faye
Bitner, Blanche Swope, Jo Guild, Margaret Spicer.
Times for the whole
Year.''
This is the Hunter's
Moon
STEVENSON'S
f
Are You Wise?
Hand in your subscription today
Sporting Goods Store
has complete equipment
for every hunter, every
fisherman—every player
of every autumn sport.
W i n t e r is g e t t i n g closer. Are you
r e a d y to g e t t h e most enjoyment
out of skiing, skating and hiking
over t h e snowy hills ?
NORMAL
12
Dining Room and Chapel
Seating Assigned
As is the custom every year, the students have been assigned to definite
seats in the dining room which they are
to occupy every day with the exception
of Saturday and Sunday. I n order that
the students may become acquainted
with each other, this arrangement will
be continued for nine weeks, when they
will again be changed and new table assignments made.
Teachers at Conference
iliss Minnie J . Merrells and Miss Sue
Northey were Lock Haven Civic Club
delegates at the recent State Federation
of Women's Clubs meeting in Williamsport.
TIMES
To cylCHENBACH'S for
The Senior members of t h e day room
gang are getting discouraged. None of
the Juniors are making enough noise
to qualif.v for the traditional championship award, the Junior Megaphone. Charlotte Knapp, last year's prize-winner, is
Notices were also posted on October likely to have it left on her hands.
6 concerning chapel seats. Miss Whitwell has spent a full week testing the
Ted Bray has done very well with his
voices. All sopranos aro now seated together, all second sopranos, and altos drawing of still lifes, such as trees. He
the same. From now on there will be is going in for iiction pictures next. He
plans to draw an action picture of a
no easy way t o avoid chapel cuts.
football player if he can get one to stand
still long enough.
Lewis Gage at Haverford
Mr. H. II. Gage recently returned from
a three-day t r i p to Philadelphia, where
Miss Mary Louise Giles, formerly sixth
he entered his son, Lewis, i n Haverford grade supervisor, is taking further
School.
graduate work this fall at t h e University of Pennsylvania.
Miss Gisetta Yale is gratifying a longstanding wish. She has opened a studio
Mr. Carroll All, of the Music Departin New York City, where her talent is
ment,
is taking advanced courses i n
being turned to its own development.
music a t New York University School of
Music.
Why did all tliose boys go loiiping out
of Pomeroy's window into the wet and Miss Deborah Bentley, dietitian here
stormy night? Is that the way to show for two .years, has opened a large t e a
good social training?
room in Minneapolis, Minn.
This Is the Plant
ENGRAVING
- PRINTING
All Under One Roof
Dinners
— Lunches
Wholesale
LOCK HAVEN, PA.
The home of
Hart Schaffner
& Marx
Clothes
Undivided Responsibility
HARRY H. WILSON
Alumni
NORMAL TIMES WANTS
TO BUILD A STRONG
ALUMNI DEPARTMENT
Especially
Solicited
Write for Price*
G R I T
P U B L I S H I N G
C O . , -Williamsport, Pa.
— Candies
and Retail Ice Cream
- BINDING
The Engraving of School and College Annuals
— Pastry
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C. S. N. S. family.
Send in anecdotes of your
days here.
Send them to
THE ALUMNI EDITOR
Normal Times
Lock Haven - - Penna.
Prieson's Pharmacy
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PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS
S. E . Corner Main a n d Vesper S t s .
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