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Harvey A. Andruss Libron
eioomsbure Btote College
Bloomsbjrg, PA 17815

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>>

THE

19

«

3 2

OBITER

JOHN

ALBERT HALL
Editor

CATHERINE HOFF SMITH
Business

Manager

O B •r

^

^^

IQ
VOLUME XVI
Published by the

»

of

Teachers College
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania « «

Bloomsburg State
»

SENIOR CLASS

FOREWORD
Cf)

HE

Three Musketeers:

I

Porthos,

Athos and Aramis, with the swashbuckling D'Artagnan, have ridden the

down upon

path of centuries, charging

the evils of a socially insalutary world,

fighting against odds that four

men

as

individuals could not hope to cope with,

but winning, always winning,
strength of their

in

own immortal

the

shib-

boleth, "All for one and one for all."

the Class of 1932 spreads itself

As

through the
it

many communities which

has been preparing to serve,

ries

with

service

it

it

car-

the same purpose of fidelity,

and fellowship, which has char-

acterized the

work

of

its

people in this

college.

D'Artagnan,

the

young

Gascon,

crossed his sword with the Three Inseparables in a sacred pledge

Today we may

ago.

that

still

years

motto of Porthos, Athos, Aramis,

and D'Artagnan, and

live as

in the full significance of

un

many

do honor to

et

they lived

"Tous pour

un pour tous."

\

Table of Contents
I
Book

I

Le College

The College
Administration

L' Administration

Book

II

Les Classes

Classes

Seniors

Juniors

Sophomores
Freshmen

Book

III

L'Athletisme

Athletics

Co-ed Athletics

L'Athletisme

Feminin

Book IV
Drama and Music

Le Theatre et
La Musique

Book
Organizations

V

Les Organizations

Publications

Le Journalisme

Fraternities

La Fraternite

Societies

Les Organizations
Sociales

Book VI
Features

Les

Nou veautes

DEDICATION
Professor

Howard
C/N

Fowler Fenstemaker
Fenstcmaker came to

Mr.

1926,

Bloomsburg

work

to organize the

eign languages.

During the

in for-

six years

he

has been here, Mr. Fenstemaker has put

department on

his

advanced the
its

field

sound

a

basis

and has

modern languages

of

to

present high status at the college.
It

has been said that in the short time

he has been

a

member

of the faculty here,

Mr. Fenstemaker has taught

majority of

a

This ver-

the courses in the curriculum.
satility has

brought him into close con-

tact with the student body, and his good-

natured

humor and

co-operation with

student enterprises have

all

made him many

friends on the campus.
In the story of this book,

and

his

fellowship.

spirit

Four men stood together

for one and one for

of frateruite

who

D'Artagnan

comrades symbolize the

has been

we
a

all.

In the

offer this

same

volume



of
all

spirit

to one

true comrade and friend.

SCENES

^.\.>:^^>v^

-**/

1.,.

THE COLLEGE

ADMINISTRATION

DR.
^^'T~^R. FRANCIS

\9

B.

FRANCIS

B.

HAAS became president of the Bloomsburg State

Teachers College in the
progress has been

made

summer

Since that time rapid

under

also in

his supervision,

developing

this progress

is its

own

testimony to

his

is

Dr. Haas the esteemed president of the college

burg, but he

is

also

tion.

at

Blooms-

leader in educa-

was

Prior to his acceptance of the presidency at Bloomsburg, he

State Superintendent of Public Instruction, and he

of the Pennsylvania State Educational Association,

man

as a

is

at present the

as

has

work.

only

recognized throughout the state

not

a fine profes-

To anyone who

on the part of both faculty and students.

been at Bloomsburg

Not

of 1927.

at the college

only in improving the physical plant, but
sional spirit

HAAS

well

as

head

the chair-

of the committee for formulating the ten-year education program in

the state.

Everywhere he

is

recognized

as a

broad-minded, far-seeing

educator.

Dr. Haas has given
1932 Obiter.

The

friendly advice and

The

his fullest

co-operation in the publication of the

staff takes this

opportunity to thank him for

sympathy with our various demands.

Class of 1952 wish to express appreciation to Dr.

friendship and co-operation in carrying out class projects.
to have been students at
will try to

make

his

Bloomsburg during

his

Haas for

We

are

happy

administration, and

the high professional and social standards

helped us to reach here the guiding principles of our

his

we

which he has

lives.

Tucnty-two

Degrees and Positions
Graduate, School of Pedagogy, Philadelphia; Temple University, B.S.; University of
Pennsylvania, M.A.; Temple University, Ph.D.
Director, Administration Bureau,
sylvania;

Deputy

Department of Public Instruction, Harrisburg, Penn-

State Superintendent of Public Instruction; State Superintendent of

Public Instruction; President of Bloomsburg State Teachers College; President of the

Pennsylvania State Education Association.

Message
Congratulations to the class of 1932.

and our faculty that you

will "carry

I

express the full confidence of our trustees

on" the traditions that

are

Bloomsburg.

Sincerely yours.

^v:^&**
Tu

cnty-fbree

C<? t^^^^*^

WILLIAM
Dean

^

f

^EAN

SUTLIFF

is

B.

SUTLIFF

of Instruction

native of Luzerne County, Pennsylvania.

a

J

Having exhausted the patience of a series of teachers in the oneroom school near his home at Town Line, he was considered ready
fur high school work. Huntington Mills had a well-organized academy
at that time with the unique distinction of having a graduate of Harvard
at its head. Here he discovered the existence of such extraordinary things
I

as

Latin, Algebra, and Plane Geometry, and noted that English Literature

could become

a task.

After several years of

this

diversion someone suggested a trial of

County Superintendent's Examinations.
teaching

a

one-room country

This was such

school.

that a serious purpose of trying to find
able to the children landed

From

him

in the

how

work

Sutliff spent

many years

as

knew he was

pleasant experience

a

make teaching more valuBloomsburg State Normal School.

at the

Columbia Universit}% and receiving
events worth noting.

he

to

there to Lafayette was a natural step.

in 1898, doing graduate

Mr.

The next thing

his

Graduating

at Lafayette

University of Pennsylvania and

master degree

at

Lafayette were

an instructor in mathematics at Blooms-

became Dean
of Instruction. This was in 1922. When the Normal School became
Bloomsburg State Teachers College the enlarged work of the Dean's office
burg.

During the administration of Dr. Charles

continued to be

Dean
of Dr.

his

work.

Sutliff has served as teacher

J. P.

Riemer, and

Welsh, Dr. D.
is

now

Fisher he

J.

and dean during the administration

Waller, Dr. Charles Fisher, Dr. G. C. L.

serving under Dr. Francis B. Haas.

member of the Kiwanis Club of Bloomsburg and an
honorary member of the Bloomsburg State Teachers College chapter of
Kappa Delta Pi, Dean Sutliff has made himself many friends in the town
As an

active

of Bloomsburg and on the campus.

Tuciily-foiir

Dear Class op
The dean

will surely miss the class of '32.

point five and

we have
tennial.

we

1932:

two point students

all

been getting ready to graduate
Well, here they

feel that

they are

all

George.

are,

first in

honor of George Washington's Bi-Ccn-

them had

the hearts of

youth each one of you may be

ever loyal to the

of

to be prepared in

worthy of the benevolent smile of our

While none of you can be
a leader of

a class in

Some

we get a flock of one
away they go. For four years

Just about the time

nicely catalogued,

community you

serve,

first in

all

first

two

years,

but

President.

your countrymen, we trust that

the hearts of those

and true to the highest

whom

ideals of the profession

of teaching.

W.

Twenly-fiie

as

you teach, be

B. SuTLir F, Diciii of lustruclioii.

MARGUERITE W. KEHR,
Dean

To THE

oF

Ph.D.

Women

Class of 1932:

Commencement

is

a

time for looking back and

this

book

will

mean much

to

you be-

you remember. Work and play, activities serious and frivolous, friendcause it
oneself and the world we live in, struggles and victories, plans and
about
discoveries
ships,
goodly proportion of fun, with enough darkness to heighten by
a
future,
hopes for the
will help

contrast the brightness

Commencement,



these

as its

make up

name

implies,

the kaleidoscopic pattern of college
is

also a

time for looking forward.

life.

We who

have

that
followed your progress through college shall miss your presence here and we hope
the
yourselves
against
measure
to
forth
you
go
As
alumni.
as
often
you will return

demands of

=^

life

we wish you

that real success

which

satisfies

the heart.

Tuenly-six

JOHN
Dean

"I

am happy

C.
of

KOCH
Men

to have the opportunity to extend congratulations and best

good wishes

members of the graduating class of 1932. They have succeeded in making a fine
impression in the life of Bloomsburg and, unquestionably, that impression will be continued and maintained in the various communities with which the 1932 graduates will

to the

be associated in the future.

"In conclusion,

Obiter

would

like to

pay especial tribute to the editorial

for the earnest and conscientious

this fine year

Twenty-seven

I

book."

work

staff

of the 1932

which characterized the production of

warn
The Faculty
H. A. Andruss
Director, Dcpiir/ mnit of Coimncrce
University of Oklahoma, B.A.; Northwestern University,

M.B.A.

Mrs. LuciLii

Baker

J.

Training Teacher, Grade

III

Western State Teachers College, Gunnison. Colo.,
A.B.

Edna

Barnes
7V-V/

J.

Siipenisor, Grades
'^'estern

State

Teachers

College,

Macomb,

HI..

Columbia University, M.A.

B.Ed.; Teachers College,

Thornley

\V.

Booth

Hciil/h Education
Graduate, Int. Y. M. C. A. College, Springfield,
Mass., B.P.E.,

M.A.

Dorothy

Breitenbecher

S.

Assistant Librarian
Cornell University, B.S.

Maud Campbell
Education
Drake University, Des Moines, Iowa; Chicago University, Ph.B.; Graduate Work, Columbia University, M.A.

Helen

F.

Carpenter
IV

Training Teacher, Grade

Graduate, State Normal School, Bloomsburg; State
Teachers College, DeKalb, 111.; Teachers College,
Ct)lumbia University, B.S., M.A.

Blanche

E.

Cathcart

Superiisor, Primary Grades l-lll
Teachers College, Columbia University,

B.S.,

M.A.

Tut'nty-eig/jt

Graduate Eastern State Normal School (Maine);
University of Maine, A.B., M.A.; Graduate Work,
Boston University, Rutgers University.

Robert

Clark

E.

Voice
Conservatory of Music; University of
Iowa, Private Instruction; Chicago Musical College;
Operatic Dramatics with Mr. Lutl.er and Victor
Herbert, New York City.

Simpson

Howard

Fenstemaker

F.

Foreign Languages, Social

Sfiiclies

School, Bloomsburg; Uni-

Normal

Graduate, State

versity of Michigan, A.B.;

Graduate Work, Uni-

versity of Pennsylvania.

John
Ps ycholog

Fisher

J.

Mcasiircincitfs

V,

Goshen College, Goshen, Ind., A.B.; Indiana UniM.A. Harrison Fellow, University of Pennsylvania; Graduate Work, Columbia University.

versity,

;

Anna

Garrison

Training Teacher, Grade

V

Gr.idu.ue State Normal School, Bloomsburg; Columbia University, B.S., M.A.

D.

S.

Hartline
Science

Graduate, State Normal School, West Chester;
Lafayette College, A.B., A.M.; Graduate Work,
University of Heidelberg, Germany; University of
Bonn, Germany; New York University.

May

Hayden

T.

Director Kindergarten, Primary Education
High School and Junior

College,

Edmonton, Alta.;
Colum-

State College, Pullman, Washington, B.A.;
bia University,

M.A.

Edna

J.

Hazen

Director hiternndiate Education
Graduate State Normal School, Edinboro; Student
Allegheny College, MeadviUe; Teachers College,
Columbia University, B.S., M.A.

Twciity-niiie

Margaret Hoke
Department of Commerce
Hood

College; Johns

anon

Valley

Hopkins University, B.S.; LebM.A.; Graduate Work in
Commerce, Columbia University.
College,

Alice Johnston
Oral Expression
Park College, Mo., B.L.; Columbia University,
M.A.; Graduate Work, University of Wisconsin,

Columbia University, University

ot Micliigan.

Maude Kavanagh
Eilucat'ion
Graduate, State Normal School, River Falls, Wis.;
Columbia University, B.S., A.M.; Graduate \Cork,
University of Chicago, Columbia University.

Marguerite W. Kehr
Dean of Women,

Social Stmlics

University of Tennessee, B.A.; ^^ellesley College,
M.A.; Cornell University, Ph.D.

Mrs. Etta H. Kei ler
Training Teacher, Grade VI
Graduate, Normal
vania

M.A.;

State

Sciiool,

College,

Graduate

Bloomsburg;

Pennsyl-

Columbia University,

B.S.;

Work, Clark

University,

New

York University.

George

J.

Keller

Art
Graduate,
State
Normal School, Bloomsburg;
Teachers College, Columbia University, B.S.; Graduate Vt'ork, Bucknell University.

Maude

C.

Kline

Nurse
Jefferson Hospital, Philadelphia, Registered
ate

Gradu-

Nurse.

John
Dean

C.

Koch

of Men, Director of Secondary

Education
Bucknell University, A.B., A.M.; Graduate Work,

New York

University.

Tfjirty

Graduate, Trenton, N. J., Normal Scliool; University of Pennsylvania, B.S., M.A.; Graduate
Work, University of California.

Lucy

McCammon

Health Education
State

Teachers

College,

Springfield,

Mo.,

A.B.;

Columbia University, M.A.

Teacliers College,

Pearl

Mason

L.

Librarian

Simmons
Columbia

College,

Boston,

B.S.;

Graduate Work,

University.

Nell Maupin
Social Stiiilics

Peabody Teachers College,
Iowa City, M.A., Ph.D.

Mrs.

John

B.S.;

K.

State

University,

Miller

Director School of Mnsic, Piano, Violin
Pupil of Dr. MacKenzie,

Henry Shradieck, Fran/
Damowski, Madame

Kneisel, \C'aldemar Meyer, A.

Hopekirk, Ida Blakeslee, Busoni.

Harriet M. Moore
Public School Music
Graduate, State Teachers College, Kirksville, Mo.;
Bush Conservatory, Chicago, Mus.B.; New York
Unl\'ersity,

M.A.

S.

Mabel Mover

Training Teacher, Grade

II

Graduate, State Normal School, Bloomsburg; Bucknell University, B.S. in Education; Graduate Work,
ibid.

Marguerite Murphy
Commerce
State Normal School, B.S.; Teachers ColColumbia University, M.A.

Illinois
lege,

Thirty-one

State Teachers

Work,

College,

University

I-

dinboro, B.S.;

Graduate

Pennsylvania

Pittsburgh,

of

State College.

Lillian B,

Murray

Health Education
Morningsidc College, Sioux City, Iowa, B.A.; University of Iowa; University of Colorado; Harvard
University;

New York

E.

University,

M.A.

H. Nelson

Director of Health luhuatio/i
Graduate, State Normal School, bloon1^burg; University of Michigan, A.B.; Harvard University.
Ed.M.; Graduate Work, New York University.

Thomas

P.

North

Education
Pennsylvania State
University, Ph.D.

College,

Jessie A.

B.S.;

M.S.;

Cornell

Patterson

Public School Music
Ohio University, Athens; Obcrlin Conservatory;
DePauw University, A.B.; Graduate Work, New
York University.

Ethel A. Ranson
Mathematics
University of

Illinois,

A.B.;

Columbia University,

A.M.

Edward A. Reams
Social Studies
Kansas Vi'esleyan, A.B.; Columbia University, A.M.;
Graduate Work. University of Southern California.

Earl N. Rhodes
Director of Teacher Training
Graduate, State Normal School, Ypsilanti, Michigan; University of Chicago. Ph.B.; Columbia University, A. M.; Graduate Work, Clark University,

Columbia University.

Thirfy-tu'O

Colorado State Normal School, Gunnison, Pd.B.;
Western State College, A.B.; Graduate Work, Columbia University.

Helen M. Richards
Eriglishj

Handwriting

Graduate. State Normal School, Bloomsburj^; Pennsylvania State College, B.A.

D. H. ROBBINS
DircctoY of Rural Education
Bucknell Uni\'ersity, A.B.; University of Pennsylvania, A. M.; Graduate Work, Columbia University,

New York

University.

Mary

E.

Roe

Health Education
University of Texas, M.D.

H. Harrison Russell
Geography
iHinois State
versity.

Normal

University, B.Ed.; Clark Uni-

A.M., Ph.D.

Ethel

Shaw

E.

English
Graduate, Normal School, New Britain, Conn.;
Teachers College, Columbia University, B.S.; Graduate Work, ibid; Oxford University; Columbia
University,

A.M.

S.

I.

Shortess

Science
Albright

College,

A.B..;

University

of

Pennsyl-

vania, M.S.

Ermine Stanton
Training Teacher^ Grade
Graduate,
B.S.

Ttjirty-tljvvc

Pratt

Institute;

I

Columbia University,

W.
Dean of

B.

SUTLIFF

l/jsfrucfiofi, Mafhcniai'i

Graduate, State Normal School, Bloom 'iburg; Lafa>ette College, A.M.; Graduate VC'ork, University
ot

Pennsylvania, Columbia University.

Ward

Irma

Dietitian^ 'Nutrition
University of Minnesota, B.S.; Graduate

Samull

Work,

ibid.

Wilson

L.

English
Buc knell University, B.S.; Columbia University,
M.A.; Graduate Work, Harvard University.

Grace Woolworth
Training Teacher, Kindergarten
Graduate, State Teachers College, Nebraska; University of Chicago, Ph.B.; University- ot California;

Columbia University, M.A.

Rachel
Assistant

Dean

S.

of

Turner
Women, English

(Leave of absence for year)

Ohio Wesleyan University, A.B.; Graduate Work,
Grove City College, Columbia University.

Administration

Mr. N. T. Englehart

Mr. C. M. Hausknecht

Snlicrhitcudcnt
Gvoitiiiis

Mrs.

iiiiil

Anna

J.

Knight

Secretary to Business Manager

Miss

Aula Holter
Bookkeeper

Miss

Business

Manager

Bi(ilthn\^\

Ethel Wilson

Clerk, Business Office

Miss bi AiRiei

E.

Evirly

Clerk, Retail Store

Mr. K. a.

Hartman

Receirijtg Clerk

Mrs. Elizabeth O. Guinard
Secretary to President

Miss

Gertrude Andrexps

Secretary to

Dean of Instruction

Mr. Earl N. Rhodes
Director of Tcaclwr Training

Miss

Florence Fest

Secretary to Director of Tcac/jcr Training

Thirty-four

Co-operative Teachers

---------._--.------------------------------------------_..
----------------__
----------------------------------->_
---------.-.....-_
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------.--.---------------------------BLOOMSBURG HIGH SCHOOL

Harriet Carpenter, B.S.
Elizabeth Clark, A.B.
Ruth Dreibelbis, A.M.
J. Claire Gift, B.S.
L. P. Gilmore, A.B.
Esther Girton, A.B.
Harry J. Hartley, A.M.
Vera Kadel, A.B.

Social Studies

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

French

Social Studies

English
Science

English

Social Studies

Ross Kistler, B.S.
Mrs. Harriet H. Kline
Robert H. Mercer, B.S.

Latin
Science

English

Mathematics

Harold Miller
Maree H. Pensyl

Geography

Social Studies

BLOOMSBURG ELEMENTARY

Evelyn Bomboy
Lillian B. Buckalew
Pauline S. Harper
Mary C. Kline
Miriam R. Lawson, B.S.
Elsie M. Lewis

Annie

S.

-

-

-

-

-

-

Mausteller

Minnie Penman
Ruth E. Pooley
Lois A. Remley, B.A.
Ethel Searles

Helen Vanderslice

Anna Wendel

-

Grade
Grade
Grade
Grade
Grade
Grade
Grade
Grade
Grade
Grade
Grade
Grade
Grade

V
II

IV
III

VI
1

III

IV

V
II

IV
II
I

BERWICK ELEMENTARY

Grace H. Brandon
Caroline Elder, B.S.

Ruth Harris
Leila Lehman

Anna M. Schvceppenheiser
Amy B. Smethers
Jessie B.

Zimmerman

Grade
Grade
Grade
Grade
Grade
Grade
Grade

V
V
IV
VI
VI
IV

V

RURAL

Nettie Hile

Mary

K.

Bessie L.

Thirty-fitc

Hagenbuch
Mordan

Grades I-VIII
Grades I-VIII
Grades I-VIII

Community Government Association

OFFICERS

Henry

J.

Warman

-

Fredkrick T. Jaeein

Vice President

Sarah Lentz

-

William Thompson

Henry

J.

President

Secretary

Treasurer

Warman

President

'

I

HE

Community Government

Association, consisting of

all

members

of the stvident body and faculty, was organized during the second
semester of 1927.

Realizing that in order to have true

stitution of professional education such as this, there

administration

as

parties gathered

in

an in-

must be unity of

well as definite co-operation, a group of representative

and drew up

a

constitution of

community government.

That principle of government, which Lincoln has
as

harmony

so deftly described

"government of the people, by the people, and for the people," has

reached a stage of development in

this last

year that has inspired the con-

fidence of the entire student body.

A

well-established principle loses

management, thus we

may

live

and develop

little

feel that the principle

in the

forthcoming

ground through change of
of

community government

years.

Thirfy-six

Student Council
Student Council administers
THE
composed of
Association which

all affairs

is

the college.
lates policies in

It

all

makes suggestions

regard to

all

Government
members of
administration and formu-

of the Student

students and faculty

to the

matters relative to student

activities.

During the past year the Council and Association did very commendwork in making Homecoming Day and Alumni Day such decided
Other features of the past year's work are evidenced in the
successes.
policy drawn up for awarding honors for extra-curricular participation,
able

and

new

in the

rules

The members

and regulations for freshman customs.

of the council are elected by the

classes,

the day students

and the boarding students. It is required that all students elected to this
body have better than an average rating. In addition to the student rep-

Women,

Dean of
Men, and the Director of Teacher Training are automatically members of
the council, which in all consists of twenty-two men and women.
resentatives, the

Dean

of Instruction, the

The Student Government
thus has a voice in

Sl.iii.liiiK.

I..-ri

(Jillow.

Sitting

UiKlit— MdiTis
Ilai-tinaii.

Aiipii'iiiaii,

Alex

Grarp

of

Association through

its

the

Student Council

matters of student concern and welfare.

Ili'IIiivcn.

Prfif.

Knili Siiiidi. \\'
— Tlumiiis

Kuth

Thirly-H'ic'i

I..

all

Dean

C'allt'iuler.

Sliepella.

Itlioatlfs.

Dr. Kelir. Dt-sila J"Iim.

William Creascy.
William Thompson, Sarah

T.entz.

Ilr,

Iloitry

Roe.

Siitliff.

I.iirna

Warmjlii, Frrderii-k

Jalliii.

Diiiii

Women's Student Government Association
The Governing Board

--------------------------------------------OIIICERS

LoRNA GiLLOW
IvA Jenkins

Mabel Rinard
Jessie Laird

Secretary

Assistant Secretary

Helen Smith

THE

President

Yicc President

Governing Board

consists of representatives

Junior, two-year and four-year Senior classes.

ex-ofScio.

Waller Hall.
committees:

The Board makes and enforces
In addition to

its

Treasurer

from the Freshman, Sophomore,
of Women are members

The Deans

regulations pertaining to

executive and judicial

work

it

all conditions in
functions through these

The Finance Committee under

the direction of Helen Smith collects and disburses
makes out and keeps the budget for the year.
2.
The Fire Drill Committee with Lois DeMott as chairman of the Fire Commissionregulates and supervises fire drills in the dormitory.
3.
The House Committee, headed by Ruth Lewis, regulates and reports conditions of
1.

the funds, and
ers

the halls, press-rooms and lavatories.
4.

The

Social

events vital to the
5.

Cawley
6.

Committee, with Gertrude Oswald

life in

as its

chairman, plans tor social

the dormitory.

The Freshman Advisors' Committee composed of six members, with Mary Mcas chairman, provides for the welfare of the new girls when they enter college.
The Customs Committee, with Dorothy J. Jones as present chairman, interprets

and regulates customs for Freshmen.

Thirty-eight

Men*s Student Government Association
Executive Council

""PHE
-*

Executive Council of the Men's Student Government Association

makes and enforces

gestions to the
all

body of the

violations of rules

men and

rules relative to

and has

much

This judicial body takes care of

do with the general care of fresh-

to

their conduct.

Election to this body

is

represent the will of each
tory, as well as the

With
tion has

association.

Freshman customs and makes sug-

through popular vote.

class,

a

various

members

boarding section, and floor in the dormi-

day student group.

the capable assistance of Professor

become

The

power

ship to good advantage

in the school

among



the

John C. Koch, the organiza-

and has developed

men

a closer relation-

of the school.

Prof. Koch. Yoziink, Wanbaugli. Duslmnko. Yiiretski. (lutUT,
li> Uiglit
Sitting— Kudawski, Jones, Thompson, Shepella, CoursQn, Tiii-se.

Stauiling, Left

Thirty-iiinc

THE CLASSES

enior CIs^iass
OFFICERS
Saul Gutter

James

J.

Sarah

John

C.
C.

-

President

-

Johns

Vice President

-

Zimmerman
Adamson

Secretary

Treasurer

-

Nelson
Adihor

Prof. E. H.

A FTER

a

few years of

associations that liave

meant much

to us,

many

prescribed classes in methods and subject matter, a Httle experience
in the practical side of teaching,

tance of education,

we have come

For some of us

burg.

and

it

a

growing

impor-

sense of the real

to the end of our last year at

Blooms-

has been a long grind; others have the desire to

again experience the pursuit for knowledge and cultural education in this
institution,

but

a responsibility

we

prepare to leave with

born of

a realization

a

deep feeling of responsibility

of the

work

that

go out to pass on to others that which has been given to

As

now

ours as

we

we

en-

us.

rather inexperienced and entirely unsophisticated freshmen

tered Bloomsburg, each as an individual.
ciated through

common

interests.

Freshman Kid Party and the

class

After

a

time

we became

Various social events had

of influence on our cultural growth.

Hop

is

Probably we

shall

asso-

a great deal

never forget the

dances which began with the Freshman

and ran with amazing speed up through the Sophomore Cotillon,

the Junior Prom, and finally, the Senior Ball.

For/y-tu'o

Saul Gutter

James

And now we come
feel that

within our

J.

Sara Zimmerman

Johns

to the stage for

class are

who have

earned the respect and gratitude of us

shown

C.

Adamson

Treasurer

which we have been preparing.

members who

to the field of education. Those

John

Secretary

Vice PrciiJent

President

will

make

We

real contributions

served as our class officers have

all;

their

their fitness for leadership in the line of

work

as leaders

here has

work which they have

chosen.

As we withdraw from

the ranks of the students to

of an ever-increasing and faithful alumni,

we wish

become members

to express our true

appreciation of the friendly counsel, co-operation, and effort of the
faculty, and to thank particularly
this year as

Furty-three

our faculty advisor.

Mr. Nelson, who has worked with us

m
JOHN

C.

AdAMSON
Mahanoy City

Four-Year Secondary

Nature Study Club (1,2); Class Treasurer (3,4).

Catherine M. Albertson
Two- Year Rural
^.

Travel Club;

//

/

Symphony

Marjorie

Nescopeck
Orcliestra.

S.

/ Two- Year Intermediate

Allen
Locust Township

Athletics.

Lesta Applegate
Two-Year Rural

MiUviUe

Athletics; Rural Lite Club.

forty-four

t;

'T'

Frances A. Arasin
Two- Year

Simpson

Intermediate

Athletics; Lantern Club.

Ida a.

Arcus
Bloomsburg

Four- Year Secondary
Athletics

(1,

2);

bloomsburg Players

Junior
(1.

2,

Class
?.

"Skidding";

Play

4); Alpha Psi

Omega

(4); Kappa Delta Pi (4).

Margaret

E.

Arnold

Two-Year Intermediate
Y.

W.

Hudson

C. A.; Athletics.

Woodrow W. Aten
Two-Year Rural
President Rural Life Club.

ffiity-fiie

Mifflinvill

s
Two- Year

Intermediate

Athletics; Y.

V.

Shickshinny

C. A.; Nature Study Club.

Reta T. Baker
Two-Year Primary
Travel Club;

Symphony

Nescopeck
Orchestra.

Vera G. Baker
/Two- Year Primary
First

Tunkhannock

Aid Club; Baton Club.

Donald E. Bangs
Two-Year Rural
Nature Study Club; Rural

Rohrsburg
Lite Club.

Forty-iix

Monica M. Barauskas
Two- Year Primary
W.

Athletics; Y.

Shenandoah

C. A.; Lantern Club.

Kathryn M. Benner
Two- Year

Athletics; Y.

ing Club;

W.

C, A,; Y.

I

I

W.

C. A. Cabinet; Read-

Women's Student Government

Mae
Two- Year

Lewistown

Intermediate

E.

Berger
Bloomsburg

Intermediate

Lantern Club; Geography Club; Y.

W.

C. A.

Gladys R. Boyer
Two- Year
Y.

>

t'orty-sei'en

W.

Rural

_-

Association.

Pillow

C. A.; Athletic Club; Rural Life Club.

\

m
Mary M. Bray
Two- Year Primary

Nanticoke

Y. U'. C. A. Cabinet; Athletics.

V
Louise M. Breisch

r^

Two-Year Primary

Catawissa

Tra\el Club; Lantern Club; Library Club.

\

Helen

«»».

L.

Brennan

Two-Year Primary
Y.

W.

Shamokin

C. A.

Mary Catherine Brennan
Two-Year Primary
Lantern Club; Y.

Centralia
VC'.

C. A.

V.

Forty-eight

Elizabeth M. Brooks
Four- Year Secondary
•:

r

Girls'

Mu

Chorus

(2, 3);

Lewisburg
Bloomsburj; Players (2,

3,

4);

Phi Sigma; Maroon and Gold Staff (2, 3).

Robert A. Brown
|

Four- Year Secondary

Columbia

Basketball

(I, 2. 3); North H.ill Student Government (3); Bloonisburg Players (I, 2); Tennis TeaW
(I. 2,

4); Y. M. C. A.

3,

(2, 5, 4);

(2, 3);

Men's Glee Club

Double Quartet.

%

^-

Ida M.

Two- Year
Girls'

4

Bubb

Intermediate

Berwick

Chorus; Travel Club.

Grace W. Callender
Four- Year Secondary
President

Day

Girls' Association;

Berwick
Corresponding Sec-

Pi; Gamma Theta Upsilon; FreshAdvisor; President Nature Study Club; Nature
Study Club (2, 3, 4); Debating Team (1, 2, 5);
Geography Club (4); Student Council (3, 4); Maroon and Gold Reporter; Philosophy Club; Phi

retary

Kappa Delta

man

Lambda;

L.
Foriy-iiiiic

Athletics.

WiLHELMINA M. CeRINE
Two-Year Intermediate
Y. «'. C. A.; Athletics.

Scranton

Fifty-one

Fifty-two

^j?s«^i^ARY
Two- Year Primary
[.v^y-;JJ^.

E.

Davis

^flSj^'t^

C. A.; Athletic Cltib; Rural Life Club,

Morris

DeHaven
Hanover

Two-Year Intermediate

Student Council; Y. M. C. A.; Bloonisburg Players

Nature Study Club; OsiTrR

Staff.

C-

Lois M.

\

DeMott

Four- Year Secondary.

Millville

3, 4)'; Debating Team (1, 2, 3);
4); Junior Chss Way "Skidding";
Social Editor Maroon and Gold (3); Associate Kditor
Obitfr; Student Council; Women's Student Governing Board (3); Secretary Kappa Delta Pi (4).

Girls'

Chorus (1.2,

Athletics (I, 2,

5,

A

Almeda

L.

Derby

Two-Year Primary
Athletics; Y.

Fifty-three

W.

Scranton
'

C. A.

X

Eleanor D. Devine
Two-Ye.ir Primary

Mt. Carmel

Y. VC. C. A.; Lantern Club.

Marie
T

I.

Devine

,

„;^3rene

Helen Draina

Two- Year Primary

Ashley

f'

i

Lantern Club; Atlile;;^J5C*'. C. A.; Senior Play
I

"Beggar on Horseback/'

^
Betty

Dunnigan

J.

Two- Year Primary
Y.

W.

Ha:^eton

C. A.

£.

H

/

!

\

Frank Dushanko
Four-Year Secondary
Nature Study Club
Staff

i i.»titi.uii-,^?

(1. 2.

4); Maroon and Gold

3,

(2); Bloomsburg Players

Team

C);

^S;'restli^\g

Team

M. C. A. (4):
Phi Lambda (4); Nortli Hall Council; Kappa Delta
(2); Track

C. C.

(I,

2); Y.

Pi (3, 4).

A
Jemima Eltringham
Two- Year

Intermediate

Lantern Club; Girls' Chorus; Fire

Fifty- five

Mt. Carmcl
Official.

1

LORNA M. GiLLOW
Preston

Four- Year Secondary

Bloomsburg Players (1, 2, 5, 4); Athletics (I, 2, 3,
4); Nature Study Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Women's Student Government Association (2, 4); President W. S.
Recording Secretary (3);
,G. A. (4); Kappa Delta Pi
Kappa Delta Pi, Historian (4); "B" Club (3, 4);
Community Government Association (4); Vice President Junior Class; Chairman Freshman Advisory



Committee.

(

Beatrice E. Girton
Four- Year Elementary
Athletics

(1, 2,

3,

4); "B" Club (2,

Bloomsburg
3,

4); Library

Club (4); Philosophy Club.

I

Louise R. Gori
Two- Year
Y.

W.

Intermediate

C. A.

Dorothy M. Gorrey
Four- Year Elementary
Athletics (1, 2, 4);

"B" Club (4); Philosophy Club

(3); Library Club (4).

fifty-

Bloomsburg

)
Mary Rita Guman
Two- Year Elementary
:^
^

Mahanoy City

Transfer from Millersville; Y.

Bloomsburg

W.

C. A.; Athletics;

Players.

\

/
Saul Gutter
Four-Year Secondary

Plymouth

J
Cl^ss

Historian

(1,

2,

3);

iMaroon and Gold Staff (1,

dent Council (4)

;

2,

Senior
3,

Class

President;

4): North Hall Stu-

"Beggar on Horseback."

Elizabeth A. Hafer
Two-Year Intermediate
Reading Club;

Girls'

Muncy

Chorus; Athletics.

Sixty

John
i^

A.

Hall

Bloomsburg Players
4),
"'Chimes of
(2,

3,

\

West

Four- Year Secondary
(1, 2,

President

3,

(4);

%^7
Pittstot]

4); Alpha Psi Omega
Editor 1932 Obiter;

Normandy"; "The Copperhead"; "Skidding"; "Dear Brutus"; "Beggar on Horseback"; Play
Tournaments (1, 2); Maroon and Gold (1, 2);
Men's Glee Club (2, 3); Band (5); Phi Sigma Pi
(3, 4); Football
<1, 2, 3, 4); Letternian's Club
(2, 3. 4); Chairman Grievance Committee (3).

Ann

p.

Two-Year Intermediate
Y.

W.

Harris
Taylor

C, A.; Bloomsburg Players; Athletics; Social

Control Committee; Waller Hall Social Committee.

Sixty-one

V

Ezra W. Harris
Bloomsburg

Four-Yejr Secondary
Symphony
(2, 3);

OrcliL-stra

(I, 2, 3,

4); Maroon and Gold

Lantern Club (3); Student Government (3);

Kappa Delta

Pi

4); Fire Committee

(3,

(3);

Com-

mittee on Social

Awards (4); Chairman Committee

on School

(3).

Spirit

Naomi Ruth Harris
Two-Year Intermediate
Lantern Club; Y.

W.

Exeter

C. A.; Athletics.

Dorothy N. Hartman
Two- Year Primary

Danville

Reading Club; Day
burg Players; Day

Girls' Social

Girls'

Gerald

C.

Committee; Blooms-

Governing Board.

Hartman
Catawissa

Four-Year Secondary
Sketch Club

(1);

Baton Club

(3); Library Club (4);

(2);

Lantern Club

Kappa Delta Pi

(3, 4).

Sixty-fu'O

Mrs. Sarah
Two- Year

E.

Hartt

Intermediate

Bloomsburg

,A\Travel Club.

Margaret M. Hendrickson
Two- Year Primary
Lantern Club; Y.

Danville

W.

C. A.

\
Alys Henry
Two- Year Intermed

Nature Study
Gold

Staff;

Club;

Mixed

Chorus;

Maroon

Treasurer of Sophomore Club;

Government (2);

Baseball;

and

Student

Assistant Football

Man-

ager (1); Football Manai;er (2).

Wilbur

J.

Hibbard
Wanamle

Four-Year Secondary
Men's Glee Club

Quartet

(4);

Vice President

,

tion

(3);

(3, 4),

(I. 2, 1. 4), President

Dance Orchestra
(4);

President

Student Government

(4); Double

M. C. A.

V.

(i);

North Hall AssociaPhi Sigma Pi

(3);

Treasurer (4)

A

Gertie R. Hornberger
Two-Year Primary
Athletics;

Shamokln

Lantern Club.

Ann L. Ho wells
Two-Year Intermediate
Y.

W.

C.

A.;

Athletics;

Taylor
Freshm.in

Advisory

Com-

mittee; Supervisor.

Sixty -four

Minnie

Howeth

E.

Baltimore, Md.

Four-YcJi- Elementary
Bloomsburg Players
{},
l-^

ding";

2,

(1,

4); Athletics (1,

2,

3.

Play

Brutus";

"Dear

"^'^'Gamma Tail Sorority

Alpha

4);

Omcg.i

Psi

3); Junior Class Pl.iy "SkiJ-

Phi

Tournaments;

(2, 3).

'.^

Marie

Hoy

S.

Ashley

Two- Year Primary
Y. \V. C. A.; Transfer from StroudsLiurg.

Clarence

L.

Hunsicker-^
LehightoA^

Tour-Year Secondary
Men's Glee Club (3, 4); Phi Sigma
4);

Gamma

ketball

Manager

(4);

C. A. Cabinet

Phi

Lambda

Pi Secretary

(3,

Theta Upsilon (4); Manager Varsity Bas-

(2, 3.
(2,

1);

J.

V.

Basketball

(3);

Y. M.

4); Nature Study Club (1, 2);
Lcttermcn's Club

(4).

Marie G. Hunsinger
Two- Year Primary
Library Club.

L

Si.\>y-fiic

Mitllinville

'

T«o-Yc.ir Intermediate
Reading Club; Y.

W.

Forty Fort

C. A.; Girls' Chorus: Athletics.

Desda E. John
Four-Year Secondary
Girls'

Chorus

(1, 2, 3);

Phi

(1, 2, 3, 4)

Bloomsburg
,

Treasurer (3, 4)

;

Athletics

Student Council (4); Obiter Staff (4);

Gamma Tau

Sorority {1, 2).

Dorothy Jenkins Jones
Two-Year Primary

1

Kins;ston
Chairman

Y. ^'. C. A.;

Lantern Club;

Customs;

Chorus; "B" Club.

Girls'

I

rcsliman

Elizabeth H. Jones
Plymouth

Two-Ye.ir Primary
Girls'

Chorus; Secretary Girls' Chorus; Y.

W.

C. -^.j.—

Dining Rt)om Committee Chairman; Athletics.

h

•:

Ruth

E.

Jones

Two-Ycar Intermediate

Scr.inton
'^

Athletics.

\

Margaret V. Kane
Two- Year

Intermediate

Athletics; Athletic Club; Y.

Sixty-scicn

Ccntralia

W.

C. A.

Anthony

E.

Kanjorski
Glen Lyon

Four- Year Secondary

Nature Study Club (1); Phi Lambda; Basketball (1,
2, 3, 4); Captain J. V. Basketball (3), Coach (4);
Football (2,

4); Wrestling (2); Lettcrinen's Club,

3,

President

(4).

Phyllis M. Keirnan
Dickson City

Two-Year Intermediate

-

Y.

W.

C. A.; Athletics

/

Ethel M. Keller
Berwick

r/Four-Year Secondary
First

Club

(1, 2, 3, 4); Secretary

Aid Club (1); Athletics

Sophomore
(3,

Players

Class;

Maroon and Gold

4); President

(3,

3);

(2,

"B"

"B" Club (3); Bloomsburg

4); Girl Scouting

(4).

Helen M. Keller
Miftlinburg

Four- Year Secondary
Athletics
Players

(1,
(1,

2,

2,

3,
3,

Nature Study Club

4);

"B" Club (4); Bloomsburg

4);

Maroon and Gold

(1, 2);

Phi

Lambda

(2,

(2.

3,

3);
4).

Sixfy-eighf

Muncy

Four- Year Secondary
Gcogi-.iphic Society {\, 2,

3,

-t )

;

Valley

Club (5).

Philosorliy

I;

Marjorie

F.

Kilcullen

Olypliai

Two-Year Intermediate
Y.

W.

*

C. A.

\:^

k

I
'^

Blanche

I.

Kostenbauder
BlQomsburg\

Two-Year Intermediate
Athletics; Y.

W.

0d

\

C. A.

-.„.-•/

Oliver H. Krapf
Lehigluon

Four-Year Secondary
Sympliony Orchestra
(2, 3,

4), President

S(a7j-«;»;c

(1);

M.lroun

.ind

Gold

Staff

4); Nature Study (2, i,y^,\_^M. C. A. (2,
(3); OBirrll

(4).

5,

Rhea
Two- Year

A.

LaFrance
Meshoppen

Intermediate
'^".

Athletics; Girl Scouting; Y.

Nature

Players;

Government

Study

Club;

C. A.; Bloomsburg

"^"omen's

Student

Association.

•^n^'

\

Jessie F. Laird
Picture Rocks

Four- Year Seconder)Nature Stud\- Club
(I,

2,

3,

ciation

(1, 2, 3,

Athletics

(4);

4); Bloomsburg Players

Women's Student Government Asso-

4);

(1,

2,

"B" Club

3);

(4);

Committee (2); Grievance Committee
(4); Dining Room Committee (1, 2, 3, 4); Phi

Social Control

Lambda

(2,

3,

S.

4).

Irma Lawton

Two- Year Rural
Geography Club;

Millville
Girls'

Chorus;

Chairman House Committee.

Rural

Lite

Club;

i

I

Se twenty

Two-Year Rura
Athletics; Rural Life

Club

Emma May Lehman
Wilburton

Two-Year Intermediate
Lantern Club; Y.

W.

C. A.

^
Harriet A. Levan
Two-Year Rural

x

Rural Life Club.

Gwendolyn
Two- Year Primary
Y.

Scirnty-oitc

W.

C. A.

\\

Locust Township

E.

Lewis
Frecland

Scienty-thre

Joseph D. McFadden
Hazleton

Four- Year Secondary
Football (1); Baseball (I);

Maroon and Gold; Omega

Chi, Treasurer (1); Phi Sigma Pi (3, 4).

Alice Lucille
<

McHose

Two- Year Primary
Y.

W.

Hazleton

C. A.

Eleanor Irene Materewicz
Two- Year Primary

Glen Lyon

i

Athletics; Y. VC. C. A.; Lantern Club.

Severtty-foHT

Seienly-fiie

Bernard

E.

Mohan

Four- Year Secondary
Baseball

(;,

3,

Centralia

4).

/
Ellen
T

L.

Monroe

St'lffiiy-seicn

Sketch Club; Geographic Society
C. A.

(2,

3,

4);

(2.

3,

4);

Y. M.

Advertising Manager junior Class

Play.

Genevieve M. Omichinski
Two-Year Primary
Y.

v.

C. A.; Lantern Club; Athletics; Fire Otiicial.

Ramona
/

Glen Lyon

H. Oshinski

Two-Year Intermediate
Y.

W.

Ranshaw

C. A.

Gertrude

E.

Oswald

Two-Year Primary
Y.

W.

C.

Chairman
Y.

W.

A.;
Social

Girls'

Scranton
Chorus;

Bloomsburg Players;

Committee; Fire

Official;

Athletics;

C. A. Cabinet.

Si-iefity-fig/jt

Seieniy-nine

r

Eixhly

Helen

Rekas

F.

Berwick

Four- Year Secondary
'

Gcosr.ipIiic Society

(1, 2,

1,

4); Athletic Club (2);.

Athletics (I, 2): Lnntern Club (1).

^.

Theron
Two- Year
li.tnd;

Rhinard

Intermediate

'>\

Berwick \

Nature Stud\- Club.

Hope
Two- Year

G. Richards

Intermediate

Y. \V, C. A.

Eighty-one

R.

El)sburg

George

Rinker

S.

Picture Rocks

Four-Year Secondary
Y. M. C. A.

(1.

Players (I. 2,

3,

2,

4);

}), President

Good

Club (1); Cross Country
',

(I,

(1, 2, 3.

3,

4), Vice President

4); Track (1,2,

3,

4); Lantern Club

(3);

Community Gov-

4); Lettermen's Club (I, 2,
2,

(4); Bloomsburg

English Club (1); Sketch

ernment (4).

Eldora
r

B.

Robbins
MiUville

Four-Year Secondary
Rural Life Club

(1, 2);

Athletics (2); Library

Gamma

Geographic Society

(1, 2);

Club (4); Girl Scouting (4);

Theta Upsilon (4).

Ivor L. Robbins
Shickshinny

Four-Year Secondary
Nature Study Club

Lambda

(1, 2, 3, 4), President

(1, 2. 3, 4), President (2, 3, 4);

Cross Country (1); Kappa Delta Pi (5,

(2); Phi

Track (1);
4); Maroon

and Gold Reporter (1), Assistant Editor (2), Editorin-Chief
tee

(3);

Chairman Student Awards Commit-

(4); Obiter

Staff.

Eighty-two

Eighly-jour

Four-Year Secondary
P.S.D. School of Mines, B.S. in Mining Engineering,

Rapid

City,

Bloomsburg,

S.

D.;

Assistant

Coach of

Football,

19.11.

\

Mercedes
Two- Year

E.

Shovlin
Mt. Carmel

Intermediate

Governing Board; Athletics.

'

/^

^
Verna Pauline Showers
Two- Year

AM
Milton

Intermediate

Reading Club; Athletics; Women's Student Govern-

ment Association.

Margaret N. Shultz
Four- Year Secondary

Bloomsburg

Geographic Society; Health Club; Athletics; Athletic
Club; Lantern Club.
;

Eighty-five

Two- Year Primary
i'u

Scranton

Athletics; \£'onien's Student
Fire Official; Y.

V.

Government Association;
OsirrR

C. A.;

Staff;

[

Philosophy

Club.

H. Edmond Smith
Bloomsburg

Four- Year Secondary
Bloomsburg Players

Kappa Delta
4)

;

Obitfr

Pi

(1, 2);

(4);

Sketch Club

Symphony Orchestra

(I,

2,

5

(I, 2,

)

;-

3

Staff (4).

/

Grace Ruth Smith
Sunbury\

Two-Year Primary

Student Council; Reading Club; Athletics. 'A

Michael
Two- Year

Intermediate

Football; Y.

Eighty-seven

P.

M.

C. A.

Sopchak
Simpson

Seymour Stere
Millville

Four- Year Sccondarj'
Secretary Student Government;

Football;

^'restling

(2); Nature Study Club; Junior Class Play "Skid-

ding"; Bloomsburg Player

(3).

Ruth Anna
Two-Ycjr Primary

Stine
Paxinos

Lantern Club; Athletics.

Eighty-eight

Two- Year
,i\Y.

\i'.

Intermediate
C. A.; Lantern Club.

..u^
Louise G. Strunk
Two-Year Intermediate

Kingston

Lantern Club; Girls' Chorus.

Carolyn Sutliff
Two-Year Intermediate
Y.

W.

C. A.; Athletics.

Enid

S.

Talcott

Two-Year Rural
First

T

Eighfy-nine

Shickshinny

Aid Club; Rural

C-Zii

Shickshinny
Life Club.

m^^
Daniel

E.

Thomas

Four-Year Secondary
Football
3,

(1, 2,

5,

Edwardsville

4); Basketball

(2); Track

4), Captain (2, 3); Baseball (1, 2.

men's Club

(I, 2, 3, 4),

burg Players

(2,

5);

2,

(1, 2,

4); Letter-

Vice President (2); Blooms-

4); Men's Glee Club (1, 2, 3);

(1, 2, 3,

Y. M. C. A. (1.
tary

5,

3,

4). Vice President

( 1 )

,

(4); Sophomore Vice President; Social Control
mittee (3); Social Committee (4); Alpha Psi

Cheer Leader

Secre-

Chairman of Deputations Committee

(1, 3);

Com-

Omega;

"Skidding"; "Dear Brutus."

Muriel E. Thomas
Two-Year Intermediate
~;;r

Lantern Club; Fire
Girls'

Official; Supervisor;

Glen Lyon
W.

Y.

C. A.;

Chorus; Athletics; Governing Board,.

/

Helen M. VanBuskirk
'

Two-Year Intermediate

Kingston

Bloonisburg Players; Student Government.

Mary
Two- Year

A.

Vollrath

Intermediate

Nanticoke

i

I

Y.

W.

C. A.; Athletics.

Ninety

Ruth

L.

Wagner
Bloomsburg

Four-Ye;ir Elementary
Girls'

(1, 2, 3, 4), Presideni

Chorus

Pliycrs

2,

(1,

3,

"Beggar on Horseback"; Alpha

Gamma Tau

(1); Bloomsburg

4); Junior Class Play "Skidding";
Psi

Omejja (4); Phi

(2)

Mary M. Walsh
Two- Year Primary
Lantern Club; Library Club.

Ninety-one

Centralia

William Gordon Wanbaugh
Columbia

Four- Year Secondary

Franklin and Marshall Academy; Basketball (1,2, 5),
Captain (3); Tennis (1, 2, 3); Bloomsburg Players
(3, 4): North Hall Executive Committee (3, 4);
Lettermen's Club (1, 2, 3), President (4); Phi Sigma
Pi (2, 3), Secretary (4); Vice President Freshman
Class; Treasurer Sophomore Class; Alaroon and Gold;
Student Director of "Skidding"; Cap and Gown

Committee

(4)

Henry

J.

Warman
Scranton

Four-Year Secondary
f/

Foobail

(1, 2, 3),

4); Track

Captain (4); Basketball
Men's Glee Club (1,

(1, 2);

Bloomsburg Players
Class:

(1, 2, 3); President of

President of Junior

Class;

(1, 2,
2,

3,

3,

4);

Sophomore

Secretary Student

Government Association (2); Vice President Student
Government Association (3), President (4); "Skidding"; "Chimes of Normandy"; Vice President North
Hall Student Council;

Campus

Crooners.

Leo Washeleski
Two-Year Intermediate

Kulpmont

Nature Study Club.

Nilie/y-tu'O

Arlene

p.

Werkheiser

Four- Year Secondary
Girls'

Chorus

(1,

2,

Athletics (1, 2); Phi

.

Bloomsburg
3,

4); Secretary Junicr Class;^

Gamma Tau

(1, 2).

m,l

\

Alma E. White
Two- Year
Lantern

Intermediate
Athletics;

Club;

v

\\
Frackville \

Symphony

Bloomsburg Players; Supervisor,

Orchestra;

Fire Orticial.

Virginia R. Zeigler
Herndon

Two-Year Rural
Athletics; Y.

W.

C. A.; Rural Life Club.

':0

L-

'Nintfty -three

Nitifly-foiir

Ke^ristratiun

!);i,\.

Kcception to Freshmen
Customs.

V. \V. and V. M.
—^Beeiiininof Freshman
TliankMrixiii^' Hecess.
24
a — Vaeation landed.
21—Christmas Ket-ess.
2 — End nf Recess.
2(i

January

19—('lo«e

of First Semester.
-Mid-Ye;ir Dance.
2H— Easter Vacation.
M— End of Vacation.
HI— College Party,
2()

Miuch
April

May

n^
24

— Freshman

Hop.

—Clas-ses Over.

1929-1930
September Hi— Uegistiation
:i I

November

l(i

)

|)a\

ColleRe Dane
-All-College Halluweeii Party.
Honiet'oniins Day (Bhiomsbur?
Stroutlsburp).

October


—Tlianksgiviiis Kecfs
Kecess.
¥,iu\
— Christ as \'aratiim

defeated

23

Decemljer

1

i>f

'21

January

Til

(i—

A'acation Ended.

25 -End of First Seme stcr.
SI- All-Collese Danee.
All-Culle(re Nisht.

May
Septeml)er
October

Xovemlier

H—
Soplioiniire Cotillion.
22
25 —Classes Ended.
1930-1931
2 — Ref?istratiiiii l)a>.
-Hallowe'en I'arty.
llloom.sliurg
H — HonieeoniiiifT Day
;)1

2(1

December

Keeess Ended.

1

2.'i—

January

2i
2

of Vaeation.
of Semester.

—Close

—Mid-Year I'arty.
-Easter Vaeation.
—Vaeation
Junior

p'aided.
Cla.^s I'lay
IT!l
.lunior rroiii.
1.)
-Athletie BalHiliet.
ti

May

Christnia.s \'aeation.

— End

')

17

April

defeated

(

Sliippensburg).
Thankstiivinp: Kecess.

T
\

("Skiddihg"

23- Class-work Ended.

1931-1932
September
October

November

M--Kegi.*:tration Da>
19
.\ll-College Entertainment.
31- Hallowe'en Party.
(1— Dramatic Fraternity I'lay



("Dear

Bru-

tus").

14— Hometoming Day
2.')-

(Bloomsburj-Strouds

burg- Tie).
-Thank.sgiying Recess.

,

— End of Recess. Concert.
--.Men's Glee Club
19 —Senior Informal Dance.
23 Christinas Recess.

30

December

+



January

Recess Ended.

i

-End (if First Semester.
Mid-Vear Party.
la-Senior Cla.ss I'l.iv ("Beggar on HorseHi-

22

Marcli

back").
19

April

May-

4
6

—Easter Vacation.

— Vacation Ended.
—Girls' Clionis Concert

7— .\tbletie

and Dance.

Banquet.

Cominunit\' Government Spring

—May Day.
13 — Men's Glee Club Concert.
19- -Senior Ban<|uet.
20 —Cla.ss-work Ended.
20 —Senior
— .^luniid Day.
7

11

Ball.

21

22

— Baccalaureate

23— Ivy Day.
23—Class Niglit.

L
Nine/y-flie

24

Sermon.

—_=—-<

—Commencement— 10:00

A. M.

Dance.

§BM\

.

Third Rww. Lefl !( Ki^hl
Matlifws.


Row— Betttrly.

Second Row

Giliimrf,

— lUiHois.

.Iiuh's.

HarOo, SrliuylHr. Xinis,

F^ans. Applcinnn,

]'.*'rk.

K.-H.-.v.

lU-iij:.

Wulie. Uarlmaii.
Ilidlay.

I,;i\vsoii,

Ittiscli.

('iithl*ert,

Oshornp.
First

Yi-»iiy,

(Utrriiian.

Jenkins,

Mi-Ciiwify.

('raveling.

L:iiidis,

Ludwig.

Junior Class

THERE

is

no doubt that the Junior Class

ganizations of the college.
in 1929 our history has been a

is

one of the most active or-

Since the beginning of our collegiate career

happy and

successful one.

Although we were a little bewildered by the maze of new methods and
customs which confronted us in our Freshman year, under the capable
leadership of Miss Patterson, we soon recovered our balance and became
active in school

sored a

life.

Last year, under Doctor North's direction,

Sophomore Cotillon that

will be

remembered

Charlls

F.

Hensley

in years to

we sponcome.

lvr;niSR,

lleiislui,

I'rul".

Fiu^U'inaUt'i-.

Sitting— Lewis, Williams.

B^a^le. Cuurst-n,

l*!iuliis,

(iriffitlis,

Tr...v.

r-.Tiiinger,

Yarctski,

Greco.

our Junior year, has been perhaps our happiest one. In all
The membership of all of
phases of college life Juniors have starred.

But

this,

campus include many Juniors and, in
rating has been such that many have been made

the musical organizations on the
addition, our scholastic

members of honorary

fraternities.

Instead of producing the habitual

Drama we departed from tradition to
Not a
glorious Junior Prom ever sponsored.
Junior

has been the result of the level-headed

concentrate on the most
little

wisdom of our

of our achievement
advisor,

Mr. Fenste-

maker.

With much

anticipation and

some regret we await the

hope, most successful lap of our collegiate journey.

Mary McCawli
Sccrc/:iry

Nincly-iiiiie

v

William Jamls
Tnumin-r

last

and,

we

Ruth Applfman

Benton

Kappa

Thomas

Coursf.n

S.

Larksvillc

Delta Pi; Girls* Chorus: Student Council; Day Students* Official

Alpha

I'si

ball;

Haskethall;

Board.

Xoith Hall Student Council.

Girls'

Athletics;

Wm. Edgar Artman
Phi Si^nia Pi: Gamma

Theta Upsilon GeoBloomsburg Players; Junior

frraphic Society;

Manager

Yeagcrtown

Charli

Oniejra

;

Bloomsburg Players; FootBaseball; Phi Sigma Pi;

N. Cox

s

Bloomsburg

Band: Symphony Orchestra: Football; Men's

;

Glee Club; Baseball.

Basketball.

Edna G. Crlveling

Bloomsburg
Girls* Athletics:

(ieoffrapliic Stx-iety;

Zela N. Bardo

Millville

Nature

Study Club.

(reoffrapliic StK'iety.

James Gordox Cullln

Thomas

Bloomsburg

H. Beagle

Double Quartet;
Bloonisburp Players.

Men's Glee Club;

and Gold Band

:

Maroon

ball.

Bernice

Melba

C.

Beck

HOVX'AKI) R. Bl

Muncy

Clul);

RM.NGI

I'lii

Valley

Lambda.

Mit^bnviile

K

Helen

Wallace

Betterly

Bloomsburg

Berwick

E.

Derr

Jerseytown

Society; Wrestling.

Grace A. DuBois

Bloomsburg

Girls' Athletics;

Frances
E.

Deppen

K.

Library Club.

Gc
BloiHosburg Players: Band: Men's Glee Club;
Symphony Orchestra.

Mary

Danville

Millville

G. Bi ndek

Nature Study

Cuthbert

E.

Geographic Society; Nature Study Club.

Geofrrapbic Society; Girls' Athletics; Gamma
Tbeta Upsilon; "B" Club; Kappa Delta Pi;
Bloonisburp: Players.

LaRue

Berwick

Geographic Society; Men's Glee Club; Foot-

Geographic Society.

Evans

L.

Bloomsburg

President of Girls' Chorus; Bloomsburg Play-

"New Lady Bantock"; Alpha Psi Omega;
Kappa Delta Pi; "Dear Brutus"; Accompa-

ers;

Alpha Psi Omega: "New Lady Bantock";
Maroon and Ciold Staff: Bloomsburg Players;
(iirls" Athletics: "Dear Brutus"; President of

Double Qu;irtel:

nist

Tiirls"

Athletics.

-B" Club.
Rai ph

F.

Evans

\C'ilkes-Barre

Men's Glee Club; V. M.

Mildred A. Busch
Geograpln'c S Chib; Kappa Delia

Bloomsburg
;

Athletics:

Girls'
I'i;

li.imma

Tlieta

'"B"

Up-

Anna

L.

Fowler

Sewing Club:

silon.

Chester W. Byers
Football;

Baseball:

C. A.

Northumberland
Wrestling;

Geographic

Berwick
(iirls'

Chorus;

Athletics.

(iirls'

Fred W. Fov^ler

Espy

Cross Country; Geographic Society.

So<.'iety.

Karl

Walter

S.

Chesney

Mt. Carmel

L.

Getz
;

Junior Chamber of Commerce.

Bloomsburg

Symphony Orchestra; Maroon and Gold Orchestra
Men's Glee Club
Band
Double
;

;

Quartet.

Ouc Hundred

Dorothy

Gilmore

E.

Bloomsburg

Blooiiisburj; Players; Girls' Chorus.

Frank

Chamber

Thomas

J.

Maroon

and

Gold

Girls'

Griffiths

Albert

Centralia

Society; Assistant
Foolbnll; Wrestling;; V. M. C. A.

G.

Dorothy

Junior

Staff;

of Connnerce.

Geographic

Thomas

J.

Jones

Berwick

Chorus; Sewing

Baseball;

Haddock

Hazel

F.

Kelfer

Bloomsburg

Berwick
Geographic

lub; Girls' Athletics.

Kafka

J.

Girls* Athletics; V.

of

(

Nature Study Club; Cross Country; Phi Lambda; Y. M. C. A.

Manager of

Hartman

Manager

K;ippa

Bloomsburg

G. Gri:co

Football;

Athletics; Governingr Bojird;
Delta ri; Maroon and Gold Staff.

Girls'

W.

C. A.

Society

Student Council.

Laura G. Kelley
Athletics;

Girls'

Hartman

ViDA H.

Bloomsburg

Nortii umber land

Debating

Team;

Student

Council; Kappa Delta Pi; "B" Club.

Geographic Society.

Eva C. Krauss
Jamfs W. Hartzel

Almcdia

Girls" Athletics;

Bloomsburg

"B" Club; Y. W.

C. A.

Geographic Society; Junior Chamber of Commerce.

Milton

Krauss

L.

Bloomsburg

Bloomsburg Players; Tennis.

Charles

Hensley

F.

Wilkes-Barre

Geographic Society; President of Sophomore
Class; President of Junior Class; Phi Sigma
Pi; Kappa Delta Pi; Gamma Tbeta Upsilon.

Clarissa

B.

Hidlev

Emily

Lois

Berwick

E.

Hileman

Girls' Athletics;

Mcchanicsburg

Lawson

Bloomsburg

Geographic Society: Kappa
Delta Pi; "B" Club; Gamma Theta Upsilon;
Bloomsburg Players.
Girls'

Literary Club; Clotliing Club.

Dorothy

A. Landis

Junior Chamber of Commerce.

Athletics;

Bloomsburg

"B" Club.

William

E.

Letterman

Bloomsburg

Maroon and Gold Orchestra: Symphony Or-

James

L.

chestra;

Hinckley

Berwick

Men's Glee Club;

Double Quartet;

Campus Crooners: Band.

Geographic Society.

John
>X'iLBUR

How'lr

Berwick

Men's Glee Clul); Footbiill; Basketball Double
Quartet: Manager of Tennis; Community Government.
;

Woodrow W. Hummel

V. Lewis

Hanover

Baseball: Mauiiger of Football; Pbi Sigma Pi;
Bloomsburg Players.

Pearl

S.

Mary

G.

Ludwig

Bloomsburg

Bloomsburg

Nature Study Club; Geographic Society; Student Council; Band; Gamma Theta Upsilon.

McCawley

Symphony Orchestra:

Exeter
Girls' Athletics;

Kappa

Delta Pi; "B" Club; Girls' Chorus; Governing
Board.

William

L.

James

Bloomsburg Players: Maroon and Gold Staff;
Phi Sigma Pi; Kappa Delta Pi; Class Treasurer.

Oirc

Hundred One

^;^

Newport

Daniel

L

J.

Malone

Cumbola

Football; Basketball.

ri

W. C. A.: Girls' Athletics; Kappa Delta
Pi; Geographic Society; Library Club.
Y.

June

Mensch

R.

Bloomsburi;

Bloonisburg Players: Girls' Atlilctics; Reading: Club
Geographic Society.
;

Irene A. Naus
Girls'

Gold

Alex

J.

Shepela

Newport

Basketball: Student Council; North Hall Student Council.

Rock Glen
Travel Club;

Atiiletics;

Maroon and

Staff.

.Arthur H. Snyder

Danville

Geographic Society.

Camp

Martha H. Oberman
Bloomsburg Players: Girk'

Hill

Walter H.

Athletics.

Stier

Wilkes-Barre

Men's Glee Club; Phi Sigma

Charlotte

E.

Osborne

Kingston

"B" Club: Nature Study
Club; Phi Lambda: Kappa Delta Pi; V. W.
Athletics:

Girls'

C. A.

Robert

B.

Pi.

Parker

iMillville

Maroon and GoUl Orchestra: Symphony Orchestra; Campus Crooners; Double Quartet:
Men's Glee Club: Band; Phi Sigma Pi; I'ennis.

Stanley

John

Rock Glen

Bloomsburg Players; Cross CountiT; Track

Bloomsburg

Q. Timbrell

Berwick

Geographic Society; Student Council: Band.

Clair

Allen W. Parr

C. Strausser

CJeographic Society; Men's Glee Club; Philosophy Club.

E.

Troy

West Hazleton

Geographic Society: Wrestling; Cross Country; Baseball.

(Captain).

Theodore
Charles

Kaska

Paulus

B.

S.

"^'hiti

night

Bloomsburg

Nature Study Club.

Manager of Football; Geographic Society;
Bloomsburg Players: Nature Study Club.
James H. Williams
Miles

B.

Old Forge

Potter

Edwardsville

President of Freshman Class; Bloomsburg
Players; Men's Glee Club; Football.

Football: Baseball; V. M. C. A.: Philosophy

Club: Phi Sigma Pi.

Helen M. Wolfe
Marian

C.

Pyle

West Chester

Nature Study Clul): Junior Chamber of Commerce: Girls' .Mliletics.

Pauline

Reng

C.

Girls' Athletics;

pa Delta

Shickshinny

Girls'

Espy

Glee Club.

Walter Yaretski

Newport

Football; Basketball: Bloomsburg Plaj'ers;
Baseball; North Hall Student Council.

"B" Club: Travel Club; Kap-

Pi; Philosophy Club.

Vivian A.

Carl G. Rigcs

Northumberland

Maroon and Gold Staff; Bloomsburg Players;
Kappa Delta Pi; Debating Team: Phi Sigma
Pi; Philasophy Clul>;
Y. M. C. A.

Sympliony

Yeany

Bloomsburg

Symphony Orchestra; Girls' Chorus; Girls'
Athletics; Junior Chamber of Commerce; Maroon and Gold Staff.

(_)rcliestra

Leo V. YozviAK

Charles

S.

Rovenolt

Symphony Orchestra: Band; Rural

Turbot\ille
Life Club.

Hanover

Football; Phi Sigma Pi; President of Bloomsburg Players: Y. M. C. A.; Student Council;
Connnunity Government Basketball.
;

Out- Hniuhcil Tito

SOPHOMORES

^p^^^^»
Third Row. Left to Riglit



Lentz, Foote. Savage, Quick. Wfllivi-r. Singli-man. Ciir\vr>o'l.
Taylor. Sutliff.
Row— Barba, Ryan, Klingerman. Sliuman. Yeager, Eyer, Featlier, Blair, Marsliman.
First Row O'Hara, Bailiff, Knauss, Hiukle, Acker.

Second



Sophomore

Class History

Joseph Gribbon

---------_---_.---.
-------------------

TN September,

1930, a

OFFICERS

Alfred Vandling

Mark Peiffer
Thelma Knauss

President

Yjcc President
Secretary

Treasurer

crowd of green freshmen, with the characteristic
bewildered expressions on their faces, began their college careers in
this institution.
After sufficient time for becoming acquainted was al-*-

lowed, the
ing

as

officers

and advisor were

elected,

and the

class

began function-

an organization.

1

.

--»! ^^'

Alfred Vandling
President

Mark

Plifflr

Vice President

One Hundred four

f^

^ ^

/^

f>

ors/^f^r>(f^

I" Kifilil— Kvaim.-lisUi. IUni|.. \V....U'utk, r:irlricli;r. U.mw. llinrj-. Delln
Iliitlrm, Ki-eler. Eiiti'iliiiH, Kitchen, Kiircliiifi-.
Viih'iite. SihiMiIri-, Kiiigsliliry. Van Sickle, Roberts, SliilBe, Miller. Yuinij;,
MiiMli. Hiiw
Mlielleiilierger, Gennurin, Kuckle, Hartnian. Jilttiu.
Turse, Brewiiigton, Harvey, Thompson, IViffer, \anilling, Grlbbon, Jones,
Front

HiH-k

Enw.

(III.-.-,

l..'fl

rliiiilziiiski,

How —

Creaky. Sliellhammer, Watkins.

The most oustanding event of that first year,
Kid Party, was the Freshman Hop. It was one of
of the year and everywhere

it

In September, 1931, the
divided body

—some

as

mores organized early

The

big affair for

was acclaimed
class

two-year

them

this

success than the

Freshman Hop.

^

Otic

Hinuhed Fin

huge

seniors, others as

hilarious

success.

returned to school, but

this

time

as a

sophomores. The sopho-

year was the Sophomore Cotillion which

Valentine Dance.

as a

Secretary

from the

in the year.

was carried out

Thelma Knauss

a

aside

the best attended dances

...«•

Joseph Gribbon
Treasurer

This event was an even greater

Hazleton

Acker

Priscilla

"B" Club: Women's Student Government Association

:

Bloomsburg
Junior

Athletics;

Girls'

Clinnil)er

of

Com-

merce; Maroon and Gold.

Dramatic Club.

Simpson

Frances A. Arasin

Bloomsburg

Elbert Ashviorth

Charles Enterline

Miriam Eroh
Y.

Men's Glee Club.

Dunmore

Thalia Barbra

Milton

Nature Study Club.

Girls' Athletics; l.anterTi Club.

Girls'

Maude Mae Edwards

Glee Club; "B" Club; Maroon and Gold

W.

Ncscopeck
A.

C.

Larry Evangelista

Hazleton

Dramatic Club; Football.

Staff.

Esther Evans

Nora M.

Vandburg
Junior Chamber of

Bailife

Maroon and Gold StafT;
Commerce; Girls' Athletics.

Girls'

Bloomsburg

Glee Club.

Jean Mae Ever

Berwick

Dramatic Club.
Benton

Arden H. Blain
Junior Chamber of

('(ininierce.

Grace

Feather

V.

Pottstown

Junior Chamber of Commerce; Dramatic Club;

Jenkintown
Edith Blair
Junior Chamber of Conimerce; Girls' Athletics.

Girls' Athletics.

Grace

E.

G. Brewington
Junior Chamber of Commerce.

WooDROW

Glee Club; Dramatic Club.

Benton

Roy

S.

Garman

Nature Study

Cluii

Forest City
;

Treverton

Chamber

Junior

Frank Chudzinski

Bloomsburg

Foote

Girls'

of

Commerce;

Band; Or-

chestra.

Track.

Catawissa

William Creasy
Symphony Orchestra.

James A. Gennaria
Band Orchestra.

Bloomsburg

;

Dunmore

Joseph Gribbon
Shickshinny

Bernice Cur'scood
Dramatic Club.

Esther

E.

Dagnell

Mainville
Girls' Athletics.

Bloomsburg

Mercedes Dean

W.

Freeland

Commerce; Treasurer.
Maroon and Gold Staff;
of

Elizabeth
Y.

S.

W.

Hake

Atlantic City

C. A.

ELvtoon H.

Hartman
Chamber

of

Shickshinny

Commerce,

RivNOLD Harvey

Broadway

Lantern Club; Nature Study Club.

Nature Study Club.

Muncy

Mary DeWald
Y. W. C. A.

LoRAiNE Henry
Y.

Madelyn Dunkelberger
Glee Club; Y.

Sophomore Class;

.luiiior

C. A.

Gene DellaCroce

Girls'

Chamber

Baseball.

Library Club; Lantern Club;

V.

President.

W.

Berwick
C. A.

W.

Walter

Wilkes-Barre

C. A.

G.

Hiney

Berwick

Maroon and Gold Orchestra.

One

tin 11 J re J Six

Marion

Berwick

Hinkle

E.

Junior Cliamber of Commerce; Girls'
ics; Maroon and Gold; Official Board.

Atlilet-

John Krepish
Junior Cliarnhcr of Commerce.

White Haven

Elizabeth Krumanocker

Donald

C.

Howfr

Bloomsburg

V.

W.

C. A.; Girls' Athletics.

Men's Glee Club.

Olwyn
Robert Hutton

Bloomsburg

I'ictiirc

Nature

Club;

Bloomsburg

Frederick Jaffin

Football; Basketball; Maroon and Gold Staff:
Vice President. Community flovcrnment As-

Edmund Jenkins
Dramatic Club; .Alpha

Psi

Sarah E. Lentz
ManMin and

I'lii

Bloomsburg
Ciold

Student Council;

;

Dramatic Club; Secretary,

Girl.s'

Glee Club; Girls' Ath-

Scranton

Stanton Lillibridge
Junior Chamber of Commerce.

Scranton

Althine Marshman

OmcRa.

D. Jones

Baseball; Men's Glee Club; President, Bloomsburs Players; V. M. C. A. Cabinet; Alpha Psi Omega; Treasurer, LetterFootball;

man's Club.

Berwick

Roland Karachner

Danville

E.

Matha

Sayre

Bloomsburg

Ronald Keeler
President, Geography Club;

Maroon and Gold

Girls'

.\thlelics;

Treasurer,

Junior Chamber of Commeri-c.

Adele Metz

Shamokin

Girls' Athletics;

Geography Club; Baud; Orchestra.

Freehnd
Girls' Ath-

letics.

Georgia

Jones

Smithport

Nature Study Club; Phi Lambda;

Dramatic Club;
J.

Rocks

Club;

letics.

sociation.

Dorothy

Study

Lambda.

Geography Club.

Aldwin

K. Laird

Dramatic

Juidor Chamber of Commerce.

Kerr Miller

Milton

Y. M. C. A.; Junini"

Chamber of Commerce.

StalT.

Kenneth Miller
Berwick

Sheldon Kingsbury
Men's Glee Club;
Quartet.

A.

Lewisburg

Basketball.

Band; Orchestra; Double

HowER Kitchen
Football; Basketliall; Junior

Genevieve Morgis
Junior Chamber
Bloomsburg

Chamber

of

ics;

Y.

W.

Glen Lyon
of

Commerce;

C. A.

Com-

merce.

Dunmore

Margaret O'Hara
Girl.s'

Eleanor Klingerman
Junior Chamber of Commerce; Girls'

Girls' Athlet-

Athletics.

Mainville
Athletics.

Treverton

John W. Partridge
Philosophy Club; Band.

Thelma Knauss

Nazareth

Glee Club; Junior Chamber of Commerce; Debating Club; Maroon and Gold; Women's Student Government Association.
Girls'

Arthur Knerr

Hazleton

Junior Chamber of Conmierce; Y. M. C. A.;
Dramatic Club.

Mark Pitfeer

MifflinviU.

Band.

Florence Reese
Junior Chamber

Mt. Carmel
of

Commerce.

Mildred M. Quick
HovpARD Kreitzer
Football; Maroon and Gold.

Otif HttnilrcJ Seicn

Mechanicsburg

Dramatic Club: Maroon and Gold: Girls'
Junior Chamber of Commerce.

letics;

.\th

Mary Ruth Rische

Bloomsburg

Dramatic Club.

Mary

Taylor

E.

Harrisburg

Dramatic Club; Women's Student Ctovernment
As.so<-iation.

Arden

B.

Roan

Espy

Nature Study Club.

Emmanuel Thomas

Hanover Township

V. M. C. A.

Donald Ruckle
Football:

Bloomsburg

Basketball;

Junior

Cbamber

of

Commerce.

William H. Thompson

Scranton

Football; Men's Glee Club; Dramatic Club; Y.
M. C. A.; Baseball; Community Government

Dorothy Runvan

Bloomsburg

Assot'iation.

Lantern Club; Library Club.

Rocco Turse
Dunmorc

Anna Ryan
Philosopby Club;

Football; Junior

Hazleton

Cbamber

of

Commerce.

C.irls' .\tliletics.

Berwick

Pearl Savage

Clayton Schlatterbach
Symphony Oi-cliestra; Band.

Ernest Valente

Hazleton

Basketball.

Junior Cbamber of Commerce.

Dalt

Alfred

L.

Vandling

Dramatic Club;

Mifflinvllle

Debating

Club;

Geography

Club.

Bolish Schrader

Newport Township

Oral Expression Cluli; Nature Study Club; Y.
M. C. A.

Dorothy Semic

MifflinviUe

L.

Strawberry Ridge

Shellenberger

Dramatic Club; Men's Glee Club.

Freda Shuman
Junior Chamber of Commerce.

Hazleton

Warren Watkins

Catawissa

Ruth Welliver

Clara Singleman

Berwick

Junior Chamber of Commerce.

Mainville

Gladys

Wenner

Girls'

Dramatic Club; Y. W.

Veale

Baseball.

Baseball.

P.

Ellen

Library Club.

Athletics.

Carmen Shellhammer

John

Geographic Society.

Steelton

Junior Chamber of Commerce; Y. \V. C. A.;
C;irls'

Catawissa

Robert Vansickle

Berwick

Glee Club.

Pittston

Gerald M. Woolcock

C. A.

MiUviUe

Geographic Society.

Shamokin
Harriet Spotts
Maroon anil Gold; Juidor Chamber of Commerce.

Junior Chamber of Commerce.

Harriet Sutliff
Girls'
letics.

Berwick

Louise Yeager

Bloomsburg

Glee Club; Dramatic Club; Girls' Ath-

William Young

Hanover Townsliip

Football; Y. M. C. A.; Lettermen's Club.

One

Hunitriil FJ^ht

FRESHMEN

Freshman Class

-----------------------------------OFFICERS

John Beck
John McHugh
John McGrew
Charlotte Hochberg

""The

Freshman

class, as

green and benighted

as

is

self-assured

group looked very promising.

launched

October, when the

Kid Party was staged

gymnasium. There,

in

the

in the ab-

The

-^1^

MjH

Secretary

Treasurer

usually expected, was

gathered together from every direction in September.

in

Presidciif

Vice President

first

This large,

was

class project

'j^.

^B

sence of the critical eyes of up-

perclassmen, the Freshmen were

themselves



just little kids, eat-

"ng lollypops and playing

"Lon-

don Bridge."
John Beck

When

the class meeting was

pmuhut

John McHugh
vuc Pn-uJcnt

One Hmuht'ii Ten

held, the officers

were selected to control the

destinies of the group.

Scarcely had the verdant newcomers become acclimated
ordeal of initiation into college life began

—customs.

This

test

when

the

of sports-

manship continued until Christmas because of the tragic outcome of the

Freshman-Sophomore

football contest.

The Freshman Fiop was

a

huge

success.

That never-to-be-forgotten

event was managed very capably by the "baby"

The Freshmen

are represented in

all

class.

the outstanding organizations of

the college: musical, dramatic, literary and athletic.

It

is

not only in

these fields that the first year students are

outstanding

progress,

but

many

of

making

them have

attained high scholastic rating.

The

past year has been one of great pleasure to the

Freshman

class,

responsibilities

hold.
Charlotte Hochblrg
TrciiiJircy

One

HiitiilrcJ Elcirii

which eagerly looks forward

to the

and joys that future years are sure to

Ahearn

Ashland

BrrniA M. Allln

Alderson

Mary

C.

Ellen A. Anderson

Clark

Anna

Arnold

B.

Bertha

Wyomissing

New

Arey

Joseph R.

Jerseytown

Astleford

E.

Hazleton

Luzerne

Austin

F.

Charles G. Baker

-

-

Louise H. Balcomb

Alice

Barrall

L.

John

T. Beck

Alma

B.

Dorothy

Martha

Homer

R. Berninger

-

Bixler

S.

Hflen

Culp

F.

Howard

E.

DeMott

Mildred

E.

Deppe

John

E.

Dovle

Freeland

F.

Phyllis

Drake

Shamokin

John

Drennan

J.

E.

Blackburn

Wanamie

Frances

E.

Shamokin

John

Early

Genevieve

P.

Bowman

-

James A. Boylax

John

Boylan

I.

-

Dorothy

Helen

A. Brace

G. Bray

Thelma

a.

Bredbenner

Louise K. Brislin

Mary

L.

Walter

Buckley
B.

Buggy

Elynor G. Burke

Mary

E.

Burns

-

Margaret M. Busch

John

J.

Butler

-

Florence M. Byerly
Esther R. Carichner

Mary M. Carl

Anthony F. Carroli

-

E.

Ruth

Buttonwood
Carbondale
-

Dymond

MifflinviUe

Enders

-

Thelma

F.

Evans

Gap

Howard

E.

Fauth

Locust

Gap

Frederick A. Fa's cett

Sarah

E. Fisher

Hazleton

Ruth

R.

Freeland

Shamokin
Pittston

Slatington

Red Lion

-

Espy
Selinsgrove

Flanagan

Plymouth
Bloomsburg

David W. Faust

Washing ton ville

Watsontown

Lauretta M. Faust

Ruth

P.

Fowler

Leila Irene Frederick

Helen

Wyomissing

Mary

Pennsburg

Furman

Northumberland

Catherine A. Gallagher

Sherndon

Blanche M. Garrison

Danville

Larue Elthea Gass

Anna M. Gearheart
Esther

B.

Gearhart

Mihon

-

Frey

I.

E.

Berwick
-

Dunmore

Mt. Carmel

Berwick Co.

-

Mildred M. Ford

Mt. Carmel

Hughestown

Millcrsburg

Madeline D. Fiorini

Wyoming

Luzerne

Dallas

West Nanticoke

Edwards

L.

Mifflinville
-

Locust

Bloomsburg

Plymouth
Mt. Carmel

Bloomsburg

Locust Gap

Elizabeth T. Boyle

A.

C.

Treverton

Dry

Charles

Inez

Berwick

-

Donaldson

Margaret

Edward

\C''yoming

Sugarloaf

Bloomsburg

Deppen

S.

Muncy

Bloomsburg

Ringtown
Shenandoah

Marion DeFrain

Shamokin

-

Wilkes-Barre

Dean

Bixler

ToscA BORSI

West Nanticoke

Davis

P.

Walter M. Bond

Lewisburg

Davis

P.

Mildred

Bohr

Lewisburg

Albert R. Davis
Joseph

Bloomsburg

Wilkes-Barre

Harold M. Danowski

Bennett

ED>jrARD P.

-

A. Criswell

I.

J.

Parsons

Dorothy

Rita A.

MifBinville

-

Elizabeth, N.

Jr.

Edutn R. Creasy

Mirtlinville

Hunlock's Creek

Conte,

E.

Corrigan

E.

Thomas

Wilkes-Barre

-

Berriman

E.

Bitetti

F.

-

Elle

Forty Fort

Scranton

Benscoter

E.

Bloomsburg

Dickson City

Mabel Frances Belles

Lucy

-

Beddoe

Eleanor

Albany

Anthony

-

-

Girardville

Berwick
Paxicicos

Berwick

Sunburv

One

Hitniht'd

Tnehe

Violet C. Gemberling

Blanche

Herndon

Gething

A.

Lykens

Alda M. Giannini

Vi^'yoiiiing

Irlnl Mary Giglr

-

Bloomsburg

-

Lucille M. Gilchrist
A.

EUPHEMIA GiLMORE

-

Acnes M. Glessnlr
Rosebud Goldir

June

R.

Good

John

J.

Gress

Dilys

E.

Jay

Hagenbuch

p.

S.

-

Arthur H. Harhison
Gerald

Wesley Knorr

Roman

Martha

Kris'.llr

F.

Edna

Lamoreau

Bloomsburg

Lois E.

John

Anna Mary
Ruth M.
Dorothy

Sandy Run

Albert A. Hayes
Stanley

Berwick

Heimbach

P.

Evelyn M. Heiser

Mt. Pleasant Mills

Dorothy N. Heller
Harold

Herman

Berwick
-

C.

Irene

Ernest

L.

Catawissa

Leiser

Pittston

Alden Station

Frances L Litzenberger

Walnutport

Pauline M. Long

Briar Creek

Lula Irene Lyons

Millville

Anne M. McGinley
Betty

J.

Pittston

John

J.

Centralia

McGoldrick

L.

John

Dun more

McHugh
McGrew

Mahanoy Plane
Scranton

Elmer

McKechnie

Berwick

Hirsch

Taniaqua

Albert A. Makowski

Glen Lyon

Hochberg

J.

Hazleton

Emily A. Malkames

Mary N. Maloney

Anna M. Homiak
Hornung

Ranshaw

Mae

A.

-

Alice U.

Florence

Thomas

C.

Houser

Ashland
-

Ho« ell

J.

Frank Hudock

Hummel

Bessie

M.

Mary

G. Irwin

Ruth

L.

-

Jackson

Fred W. Jacobs

James

J.

Bernard

L.

J.

-

Jones

Kafchinski

Eugene M. Keeper
Kelly

One Hundred Thirteen

Shepptown

E.

Hazleton

Ruth

Maust

Sunbury

A.

Frack\ille

Taylor

E.

Berwick
-

Fae Mlixeel

Unora

B.

Benton

Calvin W. Menges

Veda

K.

Watsontown

Mericle

-

Helen H. Merrill

Kenneth

C.

Scranton

Amos

G. Miller

Lucille

E.

Miller

George H. Minnich

Bloomsburg
Light Street

Merrill

Middlesworth

E.

Bloomsburg
Espy

Mandenhale

Lena

Edwardsville

Plymouth

Marr

"VC'apwallopen

Selinsgrovc

Kulpmont

Josephine A. Markovich
F.

Laketon

Slatington

Marchetti

Martha

Lost Creek

Hazleton
Lost Creek

Mantz

S.

Florence

Sheatown

Espy

Jenkins

Marjorie

J.

Freeland

Line

Penbrook

James

Bloomsburg

Pottsville

Charlotte

L.

Lewisburg

-

Lewis

Mildred M. Hollenbauch

Mary

Shenandoah

Jr.

Higgins

E.

Elvira

J.

Bloomsburg

Lesser

E.

Beaver Springs

Dorothy M. Hewitt

Nan

Glen Lyon

-

Henrie

C.

Alice M.

Greenville

Lu/crne
Lli/abeih, N.

William G. Lentz

Alderson
-

Berwick

LaBrutto

Lawson,

Rohrsburg

Laura M. Hauze

Berwick

Laubach

T.

Hartman

A.

Bloomsburg

Krlischlr

Santina
A.

Bloomsburg
Atlas

-

Walter Kritzberger

Philadelphia

Bloomsburg

L.

Adelaide C. Hausch

Helen

-

Koropchak

D.

C.

Kingston

Harter

C.

Plymouth

Sam Krauss

Slatington
-

Columbia

Rosina Kitchner

Catherine

Tower City

Hake

Bloomsburg

y

Kitch

C.

Locust Gap

Kulpmont
-

Clyde

Bloomsburg

Berwick

Griemth

Elizabeth

Coma

Lake

Rostand Klll

-

Bloomsburg
Troxlerville

Shamokin
Mifflinville

Hazleton

Annf

Monachan

E.

Gerald

Moorl

R.

Ccntralia

Canaan, Conn.

-

Velma M. Mordan
Forest R.

Morgan

Robert

Morgan

P.

Orangeville
-

Erma M. Mover

Mary

Mover

K.

Phyllis

Michael Skerel

Duryca
Shcppton

Bruno

Harold

J.

Matilda

O'Brien

Locust

-

-

Josephine

E.

Paczkowski

Glen Lyon

-

Plains

Arthur W. Pattison
Mary D. Pavlik

Plymouth

Camilla D. Pennica

Stephen

T. Pltrilla

Andrew

P.

Elizabeth,

-

Keiser

Montgomery
Berwick

-

Greensburg

Simpson

-

Lenore D. Potter
Michael F. Prokopchak

Martha

Wcatherly
Berwick

Bloomsburg

Smith

E.

Violet L Snyder

Berwick

C. Strien

-

Catherine

C.

Strunk

Raymond Stryjak
John J. Stush -

Clara Vanderslice

Marion VanHorn
George W. VanSickle
Joseph

Kenneth

-

Edna M. Wagner

Dallas

Emily D. Wagner

Orangevillc

-

Wiconisco

A. Roberts

Flora A. Robinholt

Bloomsburg

-

Hunlock's Creek

Charles W. Rokosz

Rough
Nevin W. Rovenolt

Berwick

Isabell

Elizabeth

Row

Samuel

J.

Daniel

C. Sallitt

Margaret

-

R.

-

Sandbrook

Dorothy M. Schild
Francis D. Sell

Berwick
Williamsport

Bloomsburg

Mary

-

E.

Sarah A. Williams

Edward

R.

Williams

Marvin G. WojciK

Wolfson
Grace Worrall
Gerald

J.

Bloomsburg

Huntington Mills
Catawissa
Excelsior
-

Bloomsburg
Hazleton

-

Lost Creek

Shamokin

Drums
Pittston

Kingston

Hudson
Shamokin
Forest City

Scranton

Shamokin

Turbotville

Stephen A. Wozney

Bloomsburg

Anna Mae Wright

Factoryville

John H. Yeager
Louise C. Yeaney

Bloomsburg

Ranshaw

Sacus

Danville

Beech Haven

F. \'isotski

Lorene G. Wildoner

Remllv

Excelsior

Plymouth

Betty Vanderslice

Hudson

L.

Plymouth

Louise Timbrell

Siiamokin

A. Rembis

Bloomsburg

John W, Utz

Reed

Esther

-

Thomas
Charles Glenn Thomas
Nelson A. Thomas

Sunbury

Anna

Nanticoke

J.

Catawissa

1.

-

Alexander Swalinski

Raup

William

Ashland

-

-

Harriet A. Stier

Emma

Taylor

Watsontown

Grace Radel
L.

Northumberland

-

Walsh
Amelia A. Wary
Kathryn E. Wenner
Mary L. Wildoner

Robert

Montandon

-

William G. Strouse

Old Forge

Mt. Carmel

Anne M. Quiglev
L.

J.

Chinchilla

Dorothy J. Phillips
Lawrence V. Piatt
Geraldine Pomeroy
D. Potson

N.

Hazel Brook

Pltro

Adeline M. Pfeiffer

Andrew

Gap

Luzerne

Olash

E.

Swoyervillc

Wilkcs-Barre

Evelyn Mae Smith
E. Smith

Gertrude

W'llkes-Barre

-

Hanover Township

-

Joan

Ashland

Scranton

Novak

A.

Benton

Sunbury

Slater

Pittston

Locust Gap

Frederick C. Nyhart

S.

Sites

Mary A. Stahl Elmer W. Stewart

Pittston

-

Clarence

Berwick

Shannon

Margaret M.

Bloomsbur^

Newman

E.

L.

Plymouth

Simpson

Naomi May Mvers
Marv K. Naples
Martina E. Neiss

Eleanor

Lewisburg
Milton

Swoyervillc

-

Shanno

J.

Louise A. Shipman

Paul Mudrick

Claire M. Musgrave

Alice

Treverton

-

Charles A. MuNsoN
Sabina C. Murzenski

Anthony Shakofski

Wilkes-Barre

Catasaqua

Taylor
Littlestown

Frank

L.

Zadra

John Zavarich
Frank T. Zubris

Northumberland

Hazleton

Freeland

Shamokin
Sheatown

One HiinihcJ Fourteen

ATHLETICS

''*»,

THORNLEV W. BOOTH
<^^N
In

a

1926 Mr. Booth came here to assume the position of mentor of college

comparatively short time he brought Bloomsburg to the fore

colleges,

and

in

1928 he placed

a

athletics.

the teachers

cage team on the floor that swept everything before

to climb to the mythical teachers college championship.
a

among

determined squad of smooth-working, fast-passing floor

This was not enough.

men

it

In 1931

again carried off the honors

and re-ascended to the championship.

Many

powerful athletic aggregations have contributed to the fame of Bloomsburg

in the past six years

under the

been in basketball alone.

skillful

considerable history for Bloomsburg.

One Hundred Fifhcn

guidance of Coach Booth, but their success has not

Football, baseball, track, and cross-country teams have

made

Top

lln\\\

I.rfl

f,.

Kl.L;lir

SIiivli.

i;rr.-n,

Kir.-|M-ll.

Unrkl.',

.M;ilni„-,

]>;i|in\v>ki.

Miiiiii.k.

H;irri-<.ii,

N..\;ik,

n;ivi^.

Dreiinan.





Third Row
Second Row
Wozuey,
Front Row

Kafcliinski. Ri-ett. Long. Williams. Jones, Toniig. Sopehak. Morgniis. Line. Thomi>son.
Coach Booth, (Jrittiths (Assistant Mana;:erl, Pen-h, Kreitzer, Kitch. Kanjorski, Wjuman (Captain).
Turse, .Tiirtin. Rndawski. Xozviiik, Evanirt-lista (Assistant Slauager), Shedd (Assistant Coach).
Kelly. Beck, Byers, Thomas, Lewis (Manager), Potter, Cox, Hall, Cullen.

Football

THE
a

1931 football team sailed through
record of which

spirit characterized the

With

we

all

may

a difticult

be proud.

schedule this

Throughout the

fall

and chalked up

entire season a fighting

play of the team even in the face of the most difficult odds.

the call for candidates,

a

squad of forty-four

Coach Booth, ably

men through

assisted

men

turned out for the team.

by Mr. Edward Shedd, put the

a rigorous pre-season

conditioning to have

them ready for the long grind before them.
Eleven Icttermen from the squad of the preceding year

were the nucleus of the team.
evidenced such

spirit

and

However,

ability that

new men

several

they were able to

climb to varsity ranks.

Captain
of

the

Warman

season

led his

teammates into the

with Kutztown,

October

Maroon and Gold came through with
Kutztown's early touchdown on a long
real fighting spirit of the

of touchdowns on a

a

first

and the

32-6

victory.

pass roused the

Bloomsburg machine, and

series

bucks, literally swept the

game

3rd,

a flurry

of off-tackle thrusts and cross-

Kutztown

defenders off their

feet.

Oitc

Hundred

Sixteen

On

"Jack" Long

'Nick" Rudau'ski

Frank Purch

Halfback

Fullback

GitavJ

the following Saturday, Bloonisburg invaded Millcrsvillc territory with the de-

termination to chalk up another victory.

Millersville,

however, put up

a

strong fight

and after the visitors scored in the second period and converted the "try-for" into
point, counteracted

on

a long pass, tying the score 7-7.

two determined teams fought

out to

it

a

For the remainder of the game,

neither side being driven into danger-

a stand-still,

ous territory.
Mansfield, remembering

a

sorrowful occasion two years before, when the Maroon and

Gold broke up an otherwise successful Homecoming Day,
was prepared to do or die. Nothing daunted, the Bloomsburg aggregation carried
tory.

Good

honors with

off the

interference

and

field

a

12-0 vicsupple-

generalship,

mented by superior driving power, were the big factors of
the Bloomsburg offense.

An

from California

aggressive club of boys

arrived a

week

Olympus.

later to

T. C.

S.

do battle with Bloomsburg on Mt.

Maroon and Gold fans were a bit dubious about
The West-Staters had a well-

the results of the game.

earned reputation

as a fighting,

charging team, and

a

num-

ber of Bloomsburg boys were not expected to appear in the
line-up because of injuries sustained in the preceding game.

Twenty-two husky boys ran out
Bloomsburgites to begin

Omc Huttdrcd

Scicir/ctti

a

before a throng of loyal

long drawn-out contest.

When

"Bud" Morgan

'DiNNv" Thomas

"Jack" Hall

Fullback

Halfback

Center

the smoke of battle had cleared and the teams had left the
the realization that

The

state

field,

fans suddenly

two powerful driving teams had fought each other

awoke

to a scoreless

champions from Lock Haven administered Bloomsburg's

to

tie.

defeat of the

first

After scoring two touchdowns in the first half on powerful off-tackle thrusts,
season.
Wepsic, of Lock Haven, almost walked through the line, but Rudawski, hefty fullback
and star "ball-tosser," having recovered from a broken leg, was back in the line-up, and
Bloomsburg opened up with a shower of passes. Jaftin, picking his way among Lock

Haven's backfield defense, grabbed

a ball

out of the

Maroon and Gold

the only

The second
,,

^^^^

^^^^H
^^^^^

%
!^

air

defeat of

and squirmed over the

line for

score of the game.

Bloomsburg was

strong Shippensburg eleven.

at the

The game, played

hands of the
at

Shippens-

burg, was characterized by the spirit of an inexperienced

group of boys who would not admit defeat.
sity

men

juries,

and substitutions were frequent.

man on
tioned,

did not appear in the line-up at

Six regular varall

because of in-

Practically every

the squad, with the exception of those already

saw action

in this

game.

pensburg almost entirely. The
struggle with

a score

The day belonged

final whistle closed the

men-

to Ship-

unequal

of 30-0.

The fact that the Maroon and Gold colors had been hauled
down by Shippensburg the Saturday preceding served as an
incentive to defeat Stroudsburg.

The game was scheduled

One

HiinJrctI Eigblccn

Maxk." Wakman

"IjoAm

for

Homecoming Day, and what day

"Tony" Kanjorski

SopciiAK

Tackle

could better serve Bloomsburg in recovering her

Stroudsburg, having defeated Shippensburg, was favored to win,

dignity and reputation.

but fans reckoned without the pride of
dreds of alumni.

"

Halfback

Quarterback

Rudawski

a

Bloomsburg team who were to play before hun-

carried the pigskin over for a

point by placement in the early part of the game.
score in the same period

on

a

series

Stroudsburg

of passes and line thrusts.

speedy halfback, skirted ends and picked holes to no

avail.

man, but to no

avail.

to find

room

for a shifty backfield

A

Captain Warman, our quarterback,
lated for the fine

work of

his

team.

is

The

to be congratu-

Bloomsburg

spirit

never

during the entire season.

Though

eight lettermen will be lost to the team next year

through graduation, namely:

Rudawski, Thomas, Warman,

Hall, Kanjorski, Sopchak, Perch, and Morgan, a fine team

is

expected to be built around the material remaining from this
year's varsity.

Those lettermen of
year are:
Jaffin,

team who

will be

back next

Captain-elect Yozviak, Byers, Kreitzer, Wozney,

Turse, Pattison, Kitch, Cox, Jones, Kafchinski, Kelly,

Young, and Drennan.

0)ic

this year's

Hundred Nineteen

retaliated

and

the extra
tied the

Thomas, Bloomsburg's

charging

game.

close of the

failed

touchdown and made

line strove

mightily

score remained tied to the

f^taTiiJiiig.

Left to Kight

——HunsickHr

Sitting

iMaiiagprt. Melliigh. Kaf«'liinski. Malone. Heed. Coach liooth.
Yozviak, Rudawski. Yaretski, Warmaii.

'U'asbeleski,

Basketball

NE\'ER

in the history of

finer fighting spirit

"Nick" Rudawski, who

Bloomsburg has

a

Maroon and Gold cage team displayed

than that which characterized the basketball season

a

this year.

has been acting as captain, proved himself an excellent guard

and forward, having played these two positions interchangeably throughout the season.

"Walt"

Yarctski, flashy forward, and Leo Yozviak, an excellent guard, exhibited a determi-

nation and staying power that did

much

for the success of

the team.

Kafchinski, the lanky boy from Scranton, showed real

form

in the center position.

tional results

\\"e

look forward to excep-

from "Cobby" next year when

a

season's

experience, coupled with his speed and head-work,

make him

the mainstay of

a

will

well-balanced team.

Washeleski, Carr, Jaffin and Reed complete the squad

which Coach Booth

says

is

the "grittiest" club that he

has ever had the pleasure of coaching.

The
from

fact that the

last

year

is

team has very

a definite

little

varsity material

handicap to any team.

Oiic

(

11

Con-

Hundred Tuenty

'Hank"

'Nick" Rudawski

'<('ar.\l.\n

Guinii

GniirJ

sidering this disadvantage vinder

they made

a fine

record for themselves and their

fessor Nelson, faculty
efficient

manner

which the boys were working, we can honestly say that

in

Alma

Mater.

One

which they handled the

season.

30

B.

S.

T.

B.

S.

T. C.

26

Shippensburg

B.

S.

T. C.

28

E. Stroudsburg

44

B.

S.

T. C.

22

Shippensburg

28

B.

S.

T. C.

34

Lock Haven

37

B.

S.

T. C.

22

Indiana

21

B.

S.

T. C.

22

Miilersville

25

16

Indiana

.32

B.

S.

T. C.

39

Lock Haven

35

B.

S.

T. C.

31

Mansfield

27

HiiHilrt'il

Tucuty-one

credit

is

due Pro-

manager, and Clarence Hunsicker, student manager, for the highly

VARSITY GAMES
C

Much

WMKa^^^
1931 Baseball
Thomas Kirker

Captain, 193

Nicholas Rudaw

1

Captain, 1932

ski

"Nick" Ruda»ski
Captain It ^2

"YY/ INNING

four games and losing three, our 1931 baseball team had

most successful

season.

ing Seminary, our old

rivals,

fast nine

won by

one run.

fine playing, this time

The
was

a

exciting ten-inning

game with

a

Wyom-

hard fought one, but Captain Kirker 's

At Shippensburg they

again displayed some

winning by the score of 12-7.

The

fine pitching

of Lewis Creveling, backed up by the heavy slugging of "Nick" Rudawski,

"Joe" Yockabonis,
1931

"Tam"

make

a successful season.

After winning the
streak of three games.

won

Kirker, and "Frankie" Colder, helped to

the last

first

two games of

the year, the

However, they were not

team had

a losing

to be discouraged for they

two games from Mansfield and East Stroudsburg by repeating

the tactics used in the beginning of the season.

Bloomsburg had some exceptionally
Creveling, Rudawski, and Slominski.

ber of

last year's

players

fine ball players in Kirker,

With

the return of a large

Bloomsburg should have

a

Yock,

num-

very successful season

again in 1932.

One

1

r

HutiJrcil Tuciity-two

SUMMARY
Wyoming Seminary

6

Shippensburg

7

2

E. Stroudsburg

7

T. C.

6

Shippensburg

S.

T. C.

1

Mansfield

8

B.

S.

T. C.

10

Mansfield

8

B.

S.

T. C.

4

E. Stroudsburg

3

B.

S.

T. C.

7

B.

S.

T. C.

12

B.

S.

T. C.

B.

S.

B.

.

I*ft to Uiflit— Coach Booth,
Hartinan, VanDiue.

Stnniliiig.

SpiitPd, Left to RiL'lit

Owe HintJrfJ Tncnty-tbrce

— rreveliiigr.

Troy,

Mor^'iiii.

Griljlwn.

Shuuinski,

Tot-kabouis.

Wilson. Riiihi\\ski. Gohler.

'U'litkiii':.

12

Perch.

Shellhammcr, Vahmtc

Lewis. T.arotski.

Staiulins

— rrof.

KikIi

Parker. Waub!niy;li, Krowii. ll:iki-r (Mumigerl, Huw.t (Assistant Managt'i).
Front Row Faust, Sutliff (Captain), Kraoss.

(L'ujicIi).



Tennis

THE

Team

1931 Tennis Team, captained by "Bobby"

went through an undefeated
Krauss, Faus, and
brand of court play that drew a

SutllfF,

Wanbaugh, Brown,

season of nine intensely interesting matches.

Parker, with the redoubtable Sutliff, exhibited

a

throng of admiring spectators.
the skillful guidance of Professor John C. Koch, who has many times proved
mastery of the game, the quintette carried off the honors in every scheduled engagement. Although fair play and true sportsmanship characterized their play during the entire season, the boys lost no
opportunity to take advantage of weaknesses of the oppos-

Under
his

ing players.

SCHEDULE
Mansfield

1

Stroudsburg
Wyoming Seminary
Shippensburg
E.

St.

Thomas

College

2

4

MiUersville

3

Mansfield

2

Stroudsburg
Wyoming Seminary

E.

MiUersville

1
1

cancelled

Bloomsburg
Bloomsburg.
Bloomsburg
Bloomsburg
Bloomsburg
Bloomsburg
Bloomsburg
Bloomsburg
Bloomsburg
Bloomsburg

5

6

4
5

6

cancelled

One Huiuht'd Tnenty-foiir

Couch

Uiiiliiwski,

Itoutli.

ItinkiT.

I'iirr,

llaiiin.

Track

FOR

the

last

few years track has been more or

Only once each year have the

less a

neglected sport at Bloomsburg.

Bloomsburg men defended

competition against other teachers colleges of the

state.

their colors in track

and

field

Indications are that there are

better things to come.

Great interest was aroused

in

our college

year

last

when only four men

state meet at West Chester and took fourth place while competing against

teams from the other teachers colleges.

These four men,

Allen Parr, Nicholas Rudawski, George Rinker and

Baum, took

three

first

places

and one second

Edward

in the

weight

and distance events.

The

present team

are looking

West Chester meet and

Relay Carnival of
a

coached by Edward Shedd.

forward with great expectations to

ing at both the

With

is

interest in track

number

and

the Shippensburg

that of other sports.

field

events in our

of meets scheduled for teachers

colleges, track will rise to a level of

One HuiulnJ Tuoity-fne

show-

'32.

growing

college and a great

a fine

We

importance equal to

entered the

much

larger

Pctrilla, Sell, Eiiiktr.

I'iiir.

J'ru.\

.

K,

Cross-Country
CROSS-COUNTRY,
showing
sport in 193

footed

in

2.

1931.

At

an almost entirely neglected sport

Because of this success,

the hilly

George Rinker, Francis

October

2

5

the score of 34-21.

With

a

growing

number

different times during the year there

men pursuing

trail.

squad to seven members, namely:

On

a larger

Sell,

at

were

Bloomsburg, made
of

men came

as

many

a fine

out for the

as fifteen fleet-

Rigorous training and keen competition cut the

Allen Parr, Clair Troy, Stephen

Petrilla,

James Karns,

and Jack Early.

our squad met California on our home track and defeated them by

The team

also

won

over Shippensburg by the score of 40-15.

interest in this sport

and the establishing of

a definite

schedule of

meets the teachers' colleges will look forward to the cross-country season with increasing enthusiasm.

Oiif Hiniihril

Tuorty-us

.slilliclNi^,

l..'n

1..

liiKliI

— Alll.iMii

Sitting— Ruckk-,

(.M;ili:iKi'n,

Kit._'lu'n.

11..U.-II.

Viilfiite,

Perch.

Wiiriiill

li.

i.,:i,'h

l.n

Shiikofsky.

Junior Varsity Basketball

ALTHOUGH
.

not consistently in the winning column, the Junior- Varsity must be

given credit for the splendid manner in which they performed.

the Varsity has

drawn

heavily to

fill

its

From

this

group

vacant ranks.

PERSONNEL
Frank Perch
Daniel

Thomas

Thomas Coursen

Kerr Miller

S.

Krauss

A. Shakofsky

J.

Kelly

T. Howell

D. Ruckle

Ernest Valente

H. Kitchen

SUMMARY
T. C.

IS

Bloomsburg High School

B. S. T. C.

25

Shippensburg

19

S.

T. C.

20

Coal Township

23

B. S.

T. C.

.25

B.

B.

S.

B. S. T.
B.

S.

C.

T. C.

One Hundred Tuenty-seien

26
.23

Wanamie

Bears

24

29

Lackawanna Shops

41

Mansfield

14

CO-ED ATHLETICS

Top

^

f^

fh

f^

(^

^

Id UiKlit— Ix'wis. Itusi.-li. Miss McCjiiiiiuuu. Miss Miirray, Girtoii, McConuick.
Middle Row McL'awley. Beck. Liiwson. Kelley, Keller. Myers.
Front Row Laird, Osborne, Reug, Betterly, Keller, Giltow, Jones.

Uitw. L.ft





B

Girls*

Club

-------------------------------------OFFICERS

Mary Betterly

Charlotte Osborne

Helen Keller
Pauline Reng

THE "B"

Club, although

by fostering

"B" Club

girl

is

both.

is

a relatively

new

organization, functions in

and promoting school

spirit.

The prime

Secretary

Treasurer

a real sense

requisite of a

sportsmanship.

they have acquired.

minor

it

girls' athletics

Both numerals and

team sports such

President

Vice President

letters are

A

girl

awarded to the

owning

as basketball,

a

swimming; and two hundred

must have an "A"

this she

additional three hundred points entitles a girl

This year the club spent

a

according to the number of points
in

hockey, volleyball, and baseball; two hundred points in

sports such as hiking, tennis, and

Aside from

letter

girls

must have earned two hundred points

week-end

at a

in

points in either or

both sportsmanship and posture.

An

to a chevron.

cottage along Fishing Creek.

Miss

McCammon

and Miss Murray, sponsors of the club, chaperoned the troupe.

0»c

HiiiitttcJ

Thirty

PERSONNEL
Priscilla

Acker

Dorothy

J.

Mary McCawley

Jones

Thalia Barba

Ruth Jones

Melba Beck

Ethel Keller

Ruth Myers

M.iry Betterly

Helen Keller

Charlotte Osborne

Mildred Busch

Laura Kelley

Edith Peterson

Lorna Gillow

Eva Krauss

Pauline

Grace McCormick

Reng

Beatrice Girton

Jessie Laird

Anna Ryan

Dorothy Gorry

Emily Landis

Mary Vollrath

Dorothy Hileman

Lois

Anna Wagner

Lawson

Marjorie Lewis

Senior Girls* Basketball
SENIOR Basketball opened

with the

game being played January

first

25, 1932.

From

the beginning and throughout the entire tournament the games were very well played

and were marked by good sportsmanship, clear thinking, and hard work.

There were eleven regular teams entered

in the

tournament.

Due

to the epidemic,

Frosh substitutes were found to be very valuable.

The

following,

among many

others, deserve credit for their outstanding playing dur-

ing the season:

Marion Hinklc

Helen

Ann Wagner

Hazel Keefer

Blanche Kostenbauder

Mary

Almeda Derby

Genevieve Morgis

Mildred Busch

Eleanor Materewicz

VoUrath's team, having not

Each team deserves

0«t' llundrcd T/jirfy-oiie

lost a

game

credit for helping to

for the season,

make

won

J.

Smith

Vollrath

the championship,

the tournament

a success.

^p^fi^
Freshman

Girls* Basketball

A T the beginning of the basketball season one hundred
^

i

five girls reported for practice,

and twenty-

which was held from three

to

five-thirty o'clock

on Tuesday and Thursday afternoons. The ma-

jority of these girls

were experienced players, but about one-third of

them had never handled
into

"A" and "B"

a basketball before.

The

players were divided

groups, according to their former experience in

playing the game.
Miss

Murray coached both

of these groups and, aided

enthusiasm and co-operation of the
ball players.
at the

developed some

This was especially true of the "B" group.

fine

real basket-

who

Girls,

beginning of the season had no conception of basketball tech-

nique, were, at the end of the
called forth the

At

girls,

by the

first

envy of many "A"

semester, playing basketball that
players.

were

these practice periods, during the first semester, teams

formed and managers and captains were
ticed together,

elected.

The teams prac-

and with the help of Miss Murray, developed team

plays to be used in the tournament.

The tournament was organized and ready
of the second semester.
teams.

There were eight "A" teams and

Each team played every other team

were marked by the strong competitive

manship of the

girls.

Some

refereeing and umpiring.
as officials in the

to start the first

of

spirit

in its class.

week

five

"B"

The games

and the excellent sports-

them gained valuable experience by

However, upperclass

girls

generally acted

tournament.

One Humlrcd Thirly-two

US'

MUSIC

AND DRAMA

R esume
AV/ITH

the rapid development of the extra-curricular

system has come
in the

corresponding interest and activity

a

drama and music.

cron cast

Omega

Bloomsburg,

at

when

the national

installed the

Alpha Omi-

Six years ago,

chapter of the Alpha Psi

it

gave the college

definite

a

foundation upon which to build dramatic activity.
fraternity has progressed in

many

ways, but

its

This

most

re-

cent achievement has been the successful installation of a

high school one-act play tournament
in the college season

program.

progress of dramatic work,

standard of plays produced.

A

an annual event

as

concrete example of the

itself,

the raising of the

is

Barrie's

"Dear

Brutus," and "Beggar on Horseback," by those well

known

playwrights, Connelly and

Sir

James

Kaufman were

the outstanding

productions of the year.

Development

in

musical activity has paralleled that in

The Maroon and Gold Band

drama.

has

become

a large,

active organization in this past year and proved their ability to furnish

concert.

high

class

The symphony orchestra

along the same

Om- HniidreJ

Thirty-thr.

made

first

annual

rapid strides

has

become even

the campus, and the Girls'

Chorus im-

proved the quality of
difficult to

has

The Men's Glee Club

line.

more popular on
found

entertainment in their

its

keep

work

its

to such an extent that

membership

to

normal

it

size.

was

The Bloomsburg Players
OFFICERS

Leo Yozviak

---------------.-

President

(Vice President to be elected)

Grace Foote
William James

'HE Bloomsburg

'

I

-

-

Players,

tions in the college,

now

-

-

-

Secretary

Treasurer

-

one of the most prominent organiza-

was organized

Since that time the club

in 1924.

has been a laboratory for those desiring training in dramatic productions.
It

is

open to students

who are

interested in educational dramatics as a

form

of activity.

At

the meetings each

directed by

members of

Tuesday evening,

tively discussed.

is

presented.

is

offered at the

construc-

is

of these plays are later given public appearance.

Each year the club presents for the public
as a

Criticism

and the technique of the action and staging

Many

and

the club under the direction of the Director of

Dramatics, Miss Alice Johnston,
close of the play

a one-act play, staged

at least

one long play,

as

well

play tournament of three one-act plays.

Members of
ments,

may

the club, after meeting

be admitted to the Alpha

Dramatic Honor Fraternity, Alpha

all

national and local require-

Omicron Chapter

Psi

of the National

Omega.

One Hutldrcd Thirty-four

g

n

Bloomsburg Players
PERSONNEL
Priscilla

Acker

Charlotte Hochberg

Mildred Quick

Ida Arcus

Minnie Howeth

Maryruth Rishe

Bertha Astleford

William James

Carl Riggs

Edgar Artman

Edmund

George Rinker

Jack Beck

Aldwin Jones

Melba Beck

Ethel Keller

Mary

Jenkins

John Shellenberger
Claire Singleman

Helen Keller

Evelyn Smith

Betty Brooks

Rostand Kelly

Seymour

Elynor Burke

Arthur Knerr

Raymond

Howard

Milton Krauss

Harriet Sutliff

Betterly

Berninger

Stere

Stryjak

Eleanor Clapp

Jessie

Thomas Coursen
Gordon Cullen
Bernice Curwood

Olwyn
Lois

Tom

Sarah Lentz

Alfred Vandling

Dorothy Lewis
Ruth Lewis

Anne Wagner
Emily Wagner
Ruth Wagner
Gordon Wanbaugh
Alma White
Mary Louise VC'ildoner

Davis

Lawrence Evangelista
Jean

Mae Eyer

Laird

Laird

John Lawson

Lawson

Mary Taylor
Daniel Tliomas

William Thompson
Helen VanBuskirk

Grace Feather

Ernest Line

Grace Footc

Georgia Matha

Kathryn Fritz

June Mensch

Grace Gallagher

Gerald Moore

John A. Hall

Harold Morgan

Walter Yaretski

Anne Harris
Dorothy Hartman

Martha Oberman
Harold O'Brien

William Young

Irene Hirsh

Gertrude Oswald

Sara

Lenore Potter

One Hundred Tbhty-fiie

Leo Yozviak

Zimmerman

By AURANIA ROUVEROL

Presented by Junior Class of 1931
Cast of Characters
Hardy
Judge Hardy
Marion Hardy

Laura Shuliz

Mrs.

Henry Warman
Ruth Wagner

Wayne Trent
Andy Hardy

John Hall
Daniel

Aunt Milly
Grandpa Hardy
Estelle Hardy Campbell
Myra Hardy Wilcox

Lois

Seymour

James Johns

production of the Junior play was considered by those "on the inside"

a victory in co-operation as a successful play, for

tators that the Junior class do

The

more than

it

play was one of the most comic comedies ever presented

as juniors are

The comedy

is

supposed to

one of modern

as

much

proved to some skeptical spec-

criticize.

considered one of the best productions ever given by

mature

Stere

Minnie Howeth
Ida Arcus

Oscar Stubbins

THE

Thomas
DeMott

a

at

Bloomsburg, and

group of students

so naively

is

im-

be.

The Hardys have numerous

life.

squabbles both inside

and outside the family, and they do plenty of skidding before circumstances bring their
difficulties to a "live-happily-ever-after

Judge Hardy
his defeat

is

ture,

who

Marion wins for

on her father's

politics

is

being played against him, and

At

side.

herself the

who

is

a

woman's

place

secondary plot

a

Stubbins' proposal Marion runs for the state legisla-

in the

Wayne

Trent, her fiance,

home.

Myra and Estelle, Marion's two married siscome home; one because her husband is always after

in the affairs of

leave their husbands and

pleasure, the other because her
tion, Mrs.

is

born politician, elec-

a

undying admiration of Oscar Stubbins,

and thus brings down upon her head the indignation of
believes that

There
ters,

"Dirty"

re-election.

almost certain, until his daughter, Marion, herself

is

tioneers for him.
politician

up for

conclusion."

husband always

Hardy, indignant because

Estelle

sticks at

To

home.

complicate the situa-

and Myra have come home "packs her bag

and leaves."
In the end, of course, everybody

The awakening seems
Milly,

who

to

have done

all

reconciled, and things end happily for everyone.

persons concerned some good, including

decides to bob her hair and get a job in Chicago, and

adolescent attitude turns into one of

The

is

pompous

Andy, whose

Aunt

carefree

adult importance.

play was an evening of fun for both the audience and the players.

Miss Johnston,

who was

the director of the play, deserves

much

of the credit for

its

success.

One

Hnitilrcd Thirty-six

Dear Brutus
Presented BY Alpha

Psi

Omega, 1931

------------------------------------------------------------------...---Cast of Characters

Alice Dearth

Minnie Howeth

Lady Caroline

Eleanor Ciapp

Mabel Purdie

Mary

Joanna

Frances

Lob
Matey
Purdie

Edmund
Rostand

"Dear Brutus"

is

Kathryn Fritz

To

is

John Hall

an unusual story revolving about the question of the "second chance."

The theme underlying
Brutus,

Kelly

Ruth Lewis
Daniel Thomas

Margaret

Dearth

Evans
Jenkins

Thomas Coursen

Mrs. Code

Cody

Betcerly

it

we

find in Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar

not in the stars but in ourselves that

say that a play of Sir James Barrie

to describe one in any other

way

is

is

we



" "the fault, dear

are underlings."

whimsical

is

to be definitely absurd.

to be singularly trite, but to try

The atmosphere,

the characters,

the abstract thought, the subtle meanings and the development of a unique idea through-

out the play carry the amazed audience through

ending

is

writer of classics.

One Hutidrcd

a series of

neither climatic nor unusually surprising, but

T/jirty-seien

it

The

unexplainable emotions.

expresses

all

the power of

a

true

High School Play Tournament
''T'HE Second Annual Play Tournament, sponsored by
Alpha
the success
this year

Psi

Omega Dramatic Honor
deserved

it

and

set a

when

five

the

Fraternity, earned

high schools competed

standard for dramatic achievement that

assures the future success of this purposeful undertaking.

The aim
ment
in the

as

of the fraternity in developing this tourna-

an annual event

high school.

is

That

to stimulate interest in dramatics
this objective has

been well inter-

preted was evidenced by the enthusiasm and co-operation
of the participants.

It

is

interesting to note that three of the plays presented

were under the direction of alumni members of the
ternity,

mond

fra-

and that the winning play was directed by Ray-

T. Hodges of the class of 1930.

In addition to the inscribed silver loving cup presented
to the

winning

cast of

North Scranton Junior High

School,

the outstanding player in each of the other casts received
a

bronze medal significant of dramatic achievement. Those

One HiinilnJ Thirty-eight

receiving these medals were:

Mary

Flaherty, of

Hughes-

town; Mary E. Nesh, of Sunbury; Robert Lewis, of Lake

Township; and Elmira Haney, of Scott Township.
plays presented were

The

"The

Patriot Girl," directed

by Raymond T. Hodges, North Scranton Junior High

"The Mayor and

School;

tion of Richard

S.

the Manicure," under the direc-

A. Abbott, Sunbury High School;

"Wurzle-Flummery," with Robert
School, directing;

Sutliff,

"The Dear Departed,"

Laketon High

directed

by Miss

Mathilda Mensch, Scott Township High School, and "Good
Medicine," presented under the direction of Miss Helen
Jenkes,

It

Hughestown High

is

hoped that

Bloomsburg may find
this

School.

in succeeding years
it

possible to enter

high school play tournament.

^

One Hundred Thirty-n

more alumni of

competing

casts in

Maroon and Gold Symphony
Orchestra
'

I

HERE

is

no organization on the campus that can com-

Symphony Orchestra

pare with the
tradition.

and

is

It gives

welcoming

the

prestige and

salute to

new

regimes

the last to glorify the departing ones.

When

formal occasions seem to demand the

of an overture, or

when

pleasure of guests,

it is

plays itself into the

Composed

Howard

the banquet hall

then that the

moods of

of students

pretation, and led

is

stateliness

spread for the

Symphony Orchestra

the college.

who are interested

in

music inter-

by the enthusiastic conductor, Professor

Fenstemaker, the orchestra, 'season by season, adds

new honors and achievements

A

in

novelty

this

to

its

name.

year has been the special dining-room

orchestra organization for the purpose of entertaining
guests.

One Hundred Forty

Violin

Violin

Karl Getz

Alma White

Edmund Smith

William Creasey

Ezra Harris

John Yeager
Thelma Evans

Alfred Miller

Harold Henrie
Sccuin/ Violin

Mae Mantz

Piano

Carl Riggs

Reta Baker

Catherine Albertson

Thomas Howell

Mildred Hollenbaugh

Westley Knorr

Lorene Wilkenson
Flute
Clarinet

Walter Hiney

Donald Hower
Nevin Rovenolt
Albert Makowski
James

J.

Truni [)ct
Charles Rovenolt

Calvin Menges

Johns

Horn
Clayton Schlotterbeck

One HuiiJnJ

I'ovty-one

The Maroon and Gold Band
OTARTING

with

a

veteran personnel that had

history for itself last year, the

burst into prominence early this

Maroon and Gold Band

fall as

one of the outstand-

ing musical organizations on the campus.
has

grown

A

steadily

Its

popularity

with the succeeding months.

plan was successfully carried out this year whereby

free instruction

not

made

as yet

in cases

was given to men of the college who had

mastered the technique of their instruments, and

where the students owned no instruments, the plan

provided for the purchasing of them through co-operation
of the school and student.
has

made

The

resulting influx of students

the organization one of the largest at B.

The members
both Professors

S.

T. C.

of the band have been fortunate to have

Howard Fenstemaker,

of our

own

faculty,

and Mr. Russell Llewellyn, of the Berwick High School
faculty, to lead and instruct

them

in their

musical enter-

prise.

The Band

has functioned at

more than

a

few

athletic

events, and has been highly instrumental in the reviving of

school spirit at our college this year.

One Hnuilred Forfy-tuo

Tnniipc/s

William Letterman
Charles Rovenolt
Calvin Menges
James Gennaria
Robert Morgan

Artman

Charles

Theron Rhinard
Saxophone
Bennett

Dry

Howard Berninger
Andrew Potson
Daniel

Sallitt

Horn
Gerald Woolcock
Bliss

Elmer McKcchnie

Clarinets

.

Karl Getz
James J. Jones
Nevin Rovenolt

Michael Skerel
Albert Makowski

John Partridge

Thomas Hartman
Alto

Woodrow Hummel
Trombone
Chester Hess

Roland Karchner
Cynibals

John Yeager

Drums
Lawrence Piatt

Roy Garman

One Hundred forty-three

Piccolo

Thomas

Beagle

Chorus

Girls*

OFFICERS

Frances Evans

Ruth Wagner

-

Harriet Sutliff

Desda John

----------------

Yice President

-

-

Vrcydciit

Secretary

Treasurer

'~|~'HE Girls' Chorus this year gave two fine concerts; one
in the fall

and one

Under

in the spring.

the expert

direction of Miss Jessie A. Patterson, this group of
singers presented a Christmas

hem," an
this

group.

Cantata entitled, "In Bethle-

ideal vehicle for the fine

blending of voices of

December nineteenth, by

program committee,

this

fifty-

request of the chapel

program was again presented for

the edification of the student body.

At

the time of going to press, the chorus was in re-

hearsal for the presentation of "Spring Rapture,"

vey B. Gaul.

It

was expected that Mr. Edison Harris,

former Bloomsburg man, would

group of songs.
in the

Allentown

by Har-

assist

Mr. Harris, who

is

a

with an interesting

now

teaching music

schools, has a well-earned reputation as

an experienced singer of

real talent.

Qjie Hu/ulrt'J Forty-four

Thelma Evans

Gertrude Tannery

Marjorie Sandbrook

Jemima Eltringham

Dorothy Jean Jones

Louise Strunk

Grace Foote

Dorothy Jenkins Jones

Arlene Werkheiser

Irene Hirsh

Gladys Wenner

•Elizabeth Jones

Desda John

Vivian Yeany

Gertrude Strien

Thelma Knauss

Edith Peterson

Harriet Styer

Rachel Miller

Helen Wolfe

Ruth Maust

Harriet

Alice Kimbel

Ruth Wagner

Irma Lawton

Mary McCawley

Thalia Barba

Jean Lewis

Lucy

Sarah Lentz

Elizabeth Hafer

Gertrude Oswald

Margaret

Dorothy

Gil more

Ruth Appleman
Lois

DeMott

Sutliflf

BItctti

Sites

Frances Evans

Josephine Pack

Louise Timbrell

Esther Evans

Helen Piatt

Sara

Florence Isaacs

Muriel

Thomas

Ida

Zimmerman
Bubb

Madalyn Dunkleberger

Top

Uijw.

IM
I.ffI
riiill.

Wpuner,

lathi

i:iiiiiii;liain,

E

Hi'

iT.Mu

.MiiusI,

Row— Evans,

Jones. Oswald. I.pwis. Knaiiss. Lawton. Peterson. Miss Patterson iDireetor}. Kiniltell. Paek
Diinkelberger, Fowler. .Tones. Saiuibrook,
First Kow Appleman, Werklieiser. Lewis, Strehi. .Tohn, ,Toiies, Yeaiie.v. Mrt'a\\le.v. Ilirseli. Fraiieis. Isaaes
Seconrt



Strunk. Absent

One HiinJrcJ

Forfy-fiie

— Ruth

Wagner.

Men*s Glee Club

---------------------OFFICERS

Harriet M. Moore
Wilbur J. Hibbard

Wilbur L. Hower
John Shellenberger

Thomas Beagle

-

-

Karl L. Getz
Robert Parker
Sheldon C. Kingsbury

T^HE

-

-

Vice President

-

-

-

-

-

Director
President

Secretary-Manager
Treasurer
Librarian
Pianist

Publicity Director

Men's Glee Club of 1931-1932

is

considered by

music lovers to be the best the college has produced.
Because of the untiring efforts of Miss Harriet M. Moore,
the club has been able to raise the calibre of

The
It

its

productions.

Formal Concert was an outstanding

Fall

success.

was composed of ensemble songs, numbers by the double

quartet, selections

instrumental
sea

by "The Campus Crooners," and

The ensemble numbers ranged from

solos.

chanteys to operatic excerpts, and were

produced.

several

all

equally well

quartet's contributions were of a

The double

more humorous nature, while "The Campus Crooners" sang
their versions of popular songs.

The Spring Concert was
program; the

first

in the

nature of

a

two-part

part consisted of club singing, double

quartet numbers and trio songs, and the second part was
in the

form of

patra."

The

a skit.

It

solo parts

was

a

vocal comedy-farce, "Cleo-

were ably handled, and the choral

work was very good.

One Hundred Forty-six

First

Elbert

Tenor

First Bass

Ashworth

Cox
Heimbach

Howard Berninger

Charles
Stanley

Karl Getz
Rostand Kelly

Sheldon Kingsbury

William Letterman
Stephen Petrilla

Elmer McKechnie
William Reed

Stanley Strausser

Henry Warman

Wilbur Hibbard

Second Tenor

Second Bass

Robert Brown
Gordon Cullen

Thomas

Beagle

Wilbur Hower
Clarence Hunsicker
Albert Makowski
Walter Stier

Aldwin Jones
Wesley Knorr
Alfred Miller

John Shellenberger
James Williams

William Thompson

Double Quartet
Karl Getz

Wilbur Hibbard
Sheldon Kingsbury

William Letterman
Robert Brown
Robert Parker

Thomas

Beagle

Wilbur Hower

Frances Evans, Accompanist

T.iji

Tirst

l!,,w,

].!<

li,

Ilijilit

I'l-trilhi,

Ashwunh.

lr.:is.v,

Seconil Row— HimsickPr. Parker. Beniincer. Letterman,
Row—Thompson, Jones, Williams, Shellenberger, Hibbard,

One Hundred Forty-seien

CulliJi.

Brown.

Stitr.

Wuriiiaii.

Beaslp, Gptz. Knorr, Ree.l (ox
Hower, Miikowskl, IIeimi)acli

McKechnie

I

ORGANIZATIONS
*

\T»

T'

^-^i^

PUBLICATIONS

John

A.

Hall

Catherine Hoff Smith
Business

Editor-in-Chief

Manager

The 1932 Obiter
As

other volume of the Obiter has
a

we

the class of 1932 waves a last farewell to Bloomsburg,

new

and another graduating

college year

Graduation

itself

not

is

that indefinite goal that
are certain things

may make

come forth

It

to

edition

With

is

merely one step more toward

remember



thought

in

this

of years ago entitled the annual, Obiter

The 1932

is

the sixteenth

to reach.



a

new

thought.

In passing there

certain things that the years

mind, the

Dictum

staff

of a

—"Spoken by

volume of the Obiter.

has passed through sixteen stages of development.

new touch

to carry the record of

class.

we some time hope

we want

us forget.

a finale.

find an-

Each year

number

the way."

The book
is

added

Each publication becomes the actual

a

ful-

fillment of an editor's dream, and the product of a hard-working staff.

One Hjindred

Fifty

^^^^^
Ideas are born, studied, selected and, in the majority of cases, discarded.

Others develop and are embodied
definite end,

and that end

is

in the book.

carried

work

is

toward

a

perfection.

In the editing of this book ten people

The work,

All

worked long and

on under the direction of John A. Hall,

faithfully.
editor,

and

Catherine Hoff Smith, business manager, demanded the co-operation of
the entire staff.

The members

DcMott, Ivor Robbins, Alvina
Morris

DeHaven and Desda

of this staff are
Picarella,

the publication of the 1932

One Hundred

Fifty-one

— Desda

Helen Smith, Oliver Krapf,

Obiter

many

people whose help has

possible.

Li-n lu RiBlil
Ulivrr Kni|if. lOilijniiid Siiuiii, Morris ilfHiivm.
John. Alvina Picarella, Lois DeMott, Catherine Smith, Ivor Robbins (absenti

SLiiMliiiB.

Spjitert

Smith, Lois

John.

In closing, the staff wishes to thank the

made

Edmond

J.

George Brueckmann,

William

Jr.

L.

James

Business Ma/iager

Editor-hi-Chicf

Maroon and Gold

THE "Maroon

and Gold," the student newspaper, has made vast

ing the goal of

all

fearlessly facing

newspapers

—printing

all

strides

the news of interest to

an editorial policy for the betterment of

its

toward reach-

its

readers,

and

community's environ-

mental conditions.

The 1931-32 edition, under the guidance of its editor-in-chief, J. George BrueckJr., made its appearance bi-weekly, and was increased in size and number of columns.

mann,

Its entire

content was the product of student

effort,

and was supported by student sub-

scription and state appropriation, carrying no advertismg.

The "Maroon and Gold"

offers the students of the college a

journalistic ability, and acts as a training school for those
visors or sponsors of school papers

who

for expressing

care to act as ad-

and journals when they enter the teaching profession.

There were many students connected with the

"Maroon and Gold," but

medium

who might

staff of

the 1931-32 edition of the

those whose names appear on the present staff are the

members

carried the paper to the close of a successful season.

A

large portion of the success of the paper has been due to the sympathetic and untiring

^

efforts of Professor

Samuel L. ^'ilson, Chairman of the Faculty Committee on School

Publications, and the hearty co-operation and support of Dr. Francis B. Haas.

Otic

Hundred Fif/y-luo

-------------------------------------------------EDITORIAL STAFF

Charles

F.

Hensley

Managing Editor

Howard Kreitzer
Saul Gutter
IvA Jenkins

Sports.

Editor

Literary Editor
Social Editor

CirW

Marion Hinkle
Irene Nauss

Sports Editor

Exchange Editor

Feature Writers
Thalia Barba

Sarah Lcntz

Betty

----------------

Row

MANAGERIAL STAFF

Frank J. Greco
Alfred L. Vandling

Office Manager
Make-up Editor

Reporters
Charlotte Osborne

Harriet Spotts

Margaret Sandbrook

Mildred Busch

Helen Merrill

Nora

Fay Meixell

Joseph Gribbon

Lawrence Piatt

Bayliff

John Gress

Ronald Keeler

Faculty Committee
Prof.
Prof. L. B. Clark

Tt.p

i:..w
Biij-lift.

Front

OiH-

Hundred

I'inll.

S.

L. Wilson,

Miss E. E.

lii.-\i|.-ki.

I-;.l\\iii-iK.

I^ri-ilz.-i-.

(iirss.

Chairman

Shaw

Ilr. ...,

Miss P. L.

l:r..|i. Kjii:

,

llrii~h-\,

.1

Sputts. Keeler.

Row— linrlia,

Fifty-tllue

Quick, Yeiiny, Lentz, Jenkins, Knanss, Betterly, Osborne, Snndbrook.

fs,

Mason

c;rihtiiii.

i;iiittT,

FRATERNITIES

Alpha

Omega

Psi

OFFICERS

John

A.

I

President

Thomas Coursen

Treasurer

Katharine Fritz

Secretary

Miss Alice

'

---------------------------

Hall

Johnston

Director

HE Alpha Psi Omega, national honorary fraternity, was organized for
the purpose of providing an honor society for colleges

extensive
States

work

in dramatics.

and Canada

a

Players

fraternity

keenly
Barrie's

is

this

The

letter,

superior

work

in

dramatics and

significance of the fraternity

by the

fraternity,

are in-

who have
is

being

qualified

felt

Sir

more
James

was one of the best

college.

which the fraternity began

means of keeping the alumni members

fraternity and the college.
at the

United

and college theater.

"Dear Brutus," presented by the

The news
a

colleges of the

year because of the various projects carried out.

plays ever produced

been

among

comprised of those members of the Bloomsburg

who have done

for membership.

provides

are doing

bond of fellowship and contact for those who

terested in play production

The

It

which

The alumni

to publish last year, has

in close contact

association

second annual banquet, held at the Elks'

with the

was well represented

Home

on the College

Homecoming Day.
The members

of the Bloomsburg Chapter have

maintain the high standards and
have had the opportunity

this

worked

faithfully to

ideals of the national organization.

They

work with two very capable

direc-

year to

One HutiJreJ

Fifty-six

tors

—Miss Marjorie Keith

Stackhouse, a guest director, and Miss Alice

Johnston.

This year seven

new members have been

and others have quaHfied and

initiated into the fraternity,

will be initiated before the

end of the term.

PERSONNEL
Minnie Howeth

Ida Arcus

Ruth Wagner

Millie

Frances Evans

Daniel

Mary

Edmund

Betterly

Rabb

Thomas
Jenkins

John A. Hall

Thomas Coursen

Aldwin Jones

Katharine Fritz

Kappa Delta

Pi

----------------------------OFFICERS

Frank Perch
Margaret Swartz
Grace Callender
Lois

DeMott

Ezra Harris

PresiJciit

Vice President

Corresponding Secretary
Rcconiing Secretary

GAMMA BETA chapter of Kappa Delta

Pi,

Treasurer

the most outstanding fra-

Bloomsburg February 21, 1931. Since that time the active membership has grown from
twenty-five to forty, excluding those persons who dropped active membership upon graduation from college.
ternity in the field of education, was installed at

The purpose of Kappa Delta Pi
scholastic standards among teachers.

is

It

to foster high professional and

upholds the highest

ideals,

en-

courages fellowship and scholarship, and inspires teachers to excell in edu-

The fundamental requirement of

cational work.

for

membership

is

the national chapter

that students be in the upper quartile of their college

classes.

A

unique feature of Kappa Delta Pi is its Laureate chapter. This is
composed of prominent educators elected to membership by the fraternity. At present such personages as Dorothy Canfield Fisher, John Dewey,
William Kilpatrick, and William Bagley are included.

The

first

year of

Gamma

Beta chapter has been one of starting the

new

organization and planning activities for the future.
due in this respect to Dr. Fi. Harrison Russell, the local
sponsor, and to Frank Perch, the president.

machinery of

Especial credit

a

is

The most outstanding event

of the year was the first anniversary meetby the Founders' Day celebration, February 13, 1932. Dr.
A. L. Hall-Quest, who installed the chapter, was present and gave two
addresses, one to the student body in the chapel, the other at the fraternity
banquet in the evening.
ing, observed

meeting eight new active members were initiated into the fraternity as well as three honorary members, who were. Dr. James N. Rule,
State Superintendent of Public Instruction; Dr. J. Herbert Kelley, Executive Secretary of the Pennsylvania State Education Association; and our
own Dean of Instruction, W. B. SutliflF. The other two outstanding
honorary members are Dr. Francis B. Haas and Dr. D. J. Waller, Jr.

At

this

One HiiiuhtJ

Fijiy-eight

ACTIVE MEMBERS
Ruth Appleman

Lorna Gillow

Ida Arcus

Gerald Hartman

Charlotte Osborne

Zela Bardo

Charles Hens ley

Frank Perch

Melba Beck

Ezra Harris

Miss Ethel Ranson, (Faculty)

Mildred Busch

William James

Pauline

Grace Callender

Iva Jenkins

Carl Riggs

Mary McCawIey

Reng

DeMott

James Johns

Ivor Robbins

Frank Dushanko

Laura Kelly

Dr. Harrison Russell, (Faculty)

Frances Evans

Lois

Anna Erwin

Dr. Nell Maupin, (Faculty)

Lois

Lawson

Mary Schuyler

Alumni and Extension Shtdenfs

Who

Edmond Smith

Are Active Members

Ray Appleman

Marion Marshall

Warren

Harriet Carpenter

Claude Miller

Margaret

Bculah Fairchild

Margaret Swartz

Stella

Honorary Members
Dr. Francis B. Haas
Dr. D.

J.

Top Row

Waller



Mr.

W.

Who

C. Ulshafer
L.

Lewis

M. Murray

Are Not Alumni

B. Sutliff

Dr. James N. Rule

Dr. Herbert Kelley

Prof. "Wilson. Prof. FisUer. HartniHii, Smitli. Diislmnko. James, Ht-nsley, Kij,'«s. Uubhiiis.
Middle Kow Kflly, Rfiie, Ilr, Maupin. Mt'Cawley, Arcus, Miss Barnes. Appleman, Evans, Beck, Schuvlt-r. Bardo,
Busch. Lawson. Jenkins, Osborne.
Front Row Dr. Russell, Miss Ranson, Perch, Callender, Giltow. Harris, Dr. Haas, Prof. Andruss.

One iiundrcJ




fijty-nine

Prof. E. A.

Reams, Sponsor

Oliver Krapf

President

Clarence Hunsicker

Secretary

Wilbur Hibbard

Treasurer

Dr. T. P. North, Sponsor

OliviT Kriipf, Prt'sirlent

'HE

'

Phi Sigma

Pi, a national,

honorary professional fraternity for

men

I

was

installed at the College April 26, 1930.

It

is

founded upon

a basis

of superior scholarship and with the determination of advancing educational ideals.

among men

It strives to

promote

close fellowship

and

social relations

of like ideals.

PERSONNEL
Honorary Members
Dr. Francis B. Haas

William Evans

Dr. Carl L. Millward

Henry Klonower

Faculty Mcvibct
Dr.

Thomas

P.

Edward A. Reams

North

George Keller

L. P.

Gilmore

Acliic Members

Wilbur Hibbard

Carl Riggs

Clarence Hunsicker

Thomas

Walter

Joseph D.

Stier

S.

Robert

B. Parker

Coursen

Miles B. Potter

McFadden

Leo V. Yozviak

William Gordon Wanbaugh

John V. Lewis

William E. Artman

James

Alfred L. Vandling

William H. Young

J.

Johns

John A. Hall

Charles F. Hensley

One Hundred Sixty

Aim.

David H. Baker

Edgar Richards

Nicholas VanBuskirk

Thomas T. Henry

Frank

Thomas

Oliver H. Krapf

John H. Taylor

W. Kurtz

J.

Colder

J.

Maynard

Kirker

J.

Pennington

Clarence R. Wolever

Robert

William M. Jones

James Williams

Arthur C. McKenzie

Theodore B. Morrissey

George A. Mathews

Samuel

Sutliff

Daniel R. Delmane

Arthur

Jack E. Morris

F.

McLaughlin

Charter Members

David Baker

Samuel Kurtz

Gordon Wanbaugh

Oliver Krapf

Thomas Henry

Clarence Wolever

Clarence Hunsicker

Theodore Morrissey

William Jones

Wilbur Hibbard

John Morris

Edgar

Dr.

Owe Hum! re J

Thomas

Sixty -one

P.

North

Prof.

Edward A. Reams

E. Richards

John Taylor

Gamma

Theta Upsilon
OFFICERS

Charles

F.

Hensley

William

E.

Artman

Melba

C.

Alfred

L.

---------

Beck

Vandling

-

-

Dr. H. Harrison Russell

-

-

-

is

Geography

on the campus.

Geography Club of the

mal University, Normal,

Illinois, a

Illinois State

leges scattered over a

wide

area,

in Illinois,

It

is

in teachers col-

in the

formation

national in scope, having chapters

Iowa, Missouri, Pennsylvania, and Texas.

The purpose

of the fraternity

is

to further professional

interest in geography, to strengthen student
sional training, to

raphy

Nor-

but with similar objectives,

brought about associations which resulted
of this fraternity.

It

club somewhat like our

Other clubs situated

Society.

Sponsor

-

the latest of the pro-

fessional fraternities to appear

originated in the

Secretary

Treasurer

-

-

/~>AMMA THETA UPSILON

Vice President

-

-

-

President

and profes-

advance the professional status of geog-

as a cultural

and practical subject for study and

investigation, and to create

furthering study in the

and administer

field

a

loan fund for

of geography.

One

w

Hutttired Sixty-two

The Delta Chapter
stalled

of

Gamma

Theta Upsilon was

on the college campus October

16, 193

1.

It

in-

affords

an opportunity for both extra-classroom participation in
geography, and for social comradeship.

The chapter
tivities

of the Geographic Society, and endeavors to aid

members of
will

has accepted the responsibility for the ac-

the society to reach a point of efficiency

make them

eligible for the fraternity.

Actiie Members
Zela

which

Ailin'ittcd

February, 1932

N. Bardo

Frank Perch

Grace Callander

Eldora Robbins

Charter Members

William E. Artman

Woodrow W. Hummel

Melba C. Beck

Lois

Mildred E. Busch

H. Harrison Russell

Charles F. Hensley

Alfred L. Vandling

Honorary Member
Admiral Richard E. Byrd

One Huttdrcd

Sixty-three

Lawson

SOCIETIES

w.

y.

A.

c.

OFFICERS
Mildred Dimmick

Prciiilciit

Madalene Carle

Vice President

Kathryn Benner
Alice Rowett

Secretary

Treasurer

HE work of the Y. W. C. A. during the past year has been built around

'

I

two

"Y" grow and

definite aims: to give each girl a desire to see the

to afford an opportunity to help in carrying out that desire.

Through

an unusually large membership and with the splendid help of the faculty
advisors, Miss
its

Mason and Miss Hazen,

place on our

On

campus

registration

day

as the

last

the association has been able to hold

center of Christian activity.

mittee, in co-operation with the Student

the

new

Government

The "Y"

students in getting settled.

C. A. welcome

com-

Association, aided

also sponsors social activi-

the pre-Thanksgiving formal dance was a success in every way.

ties;

The
ways
and

W.

September the Y.

in

real

meaning of the Y. W. C. A. has been developed through the

which each

girl has

been helped in building her moral standards

Varied programs, including interesting addresses by faculty

ideals.

members, discussions by the
"sings" have

made

girls

the 'weekly

on everyday questions, and informal

Wednesday meetings of

great value.

In

conjunction with the campus Y. M. C. A. several interesting Sunday
afternoon meetings and morning watch services at Christmas and Easter
time, were held.

In an effort to

grow through contact with

the other

Christian organizations of the country, the Bloomsburg chapter has been

represented at the annual Spring Cabinet
field State

Teachers College and the

Thus another year

—Training Conference

Summer Conference

has passed in the Y.

W.

through

a

Mans-

at Forest Park.

C. A. at Bloomsburg, each

year marking an advancement toward that goal
life

at

— "To

realize full creative

growing knowledge of God."

Out' Hinitlrt'il Sixfy-six

Bctliia Allen

Florence Gruver

Mae Mantz

Louise Balcomb

June Rose Good

Miss Pearl L. Mason

Alma

Agnes Glesser

Eleanor Materewica

Ikiidoe

Kathryn licnncr

Mary Guman

Helen McDonald

Dorotliy Brace

Ann

Lucille

Mary Bray

Naomi

Helen Brennan

Marian Hauze

Louise Brislin

Miss

Dorothy Connors

Loraine

Congctta Contini

Lois

Dorothy Criswcll

Evelyn Heiser

Edith Peterson

Helen Gulp

Nan

Venita Pizer

Mercedes Deanc

Charlotte Hochberg

Marion DcFrain

Alice

Almcda Derby

Mary Irwin

Lillian

Thelma Dcrr

Florence Isaacs

Alice

Eleanor Dcvine

Mary Jenkins

Esther Saylor

Mildred Dimmick

Helen Elizabeth Jones

Sara Schilling

Betty Dunnig.in

Phyllis Keirnan

Mary Schuyler

Ruth Enders

Elizabeth

Thelma Evans

Martha Lachowicz

Muriel

Mary

Rhea LaFrance

Mary Walsh

Lauretta Foust

Emily Landis

Hazel Walter

Mary Furman

Anna Mary

Kathryn Wenner

Helen Gateman

Gwendolyn Lewis

Grace Worrall

Dilys Griffith

Frances Litzenberger

Emily Zydanowicz

Alice Eves

Standing. Lclt (o

Otn- Hiniilrvil Si\fy-scten

Itray,

Genevieve Morgis
Genevie Omichinski

Hazen

J.

McHose

Jeanne Morgan

Harris

Edna

Ramona Oshinsky

Henry

Gertrude Oswald

Heppe

Higgins

Catherine Quirk

Hope Richards

Hornung

Ki;;Iil- -Isajies.

—Miss Hazen,

Sitting

Harris

Catherine Strunk

Krumanocker

Leiser

Pelprson, E. Jones.

Roberts

Rowett

SLliii.vh-r,

Dimmick, Rowett, Bemier,

iMiss

Thomas

Liimli;

Mason.

C

y.

M.

C.

A.

OFFICERS

George

S.

Rinker

Wilbur Hibbard
Miles

B.

--------------------------

Vice Prcsidciif

Potter

Carl G. Riggs

'T~'HE development of
growth

in

PresiJcitf

interest in the Y.

membership.

the organization since

first it

M. C. A.

is

Scrrrfary

Trcauncr

evidenced by the

This year marlis the largest enrollment of

became

a

part of the extra-curricular

life

of the college.

To

help raise the ideals of the

men

students and promote fellowship

between students and faculty, the "Y" meets every Wednesday evening.
Frequently services arc held on Sunday afternoons
the Y.

W.

C. A.

conference that has to do with

is

its

represented at every convention and

district.

Besides this, in order to keep

touch with other chapters of the College

Associations, delegates are sent to

Each semester there
the Y.

M.

conjunction with

C. A.

The Bloomsburg Y. M.

in

in

or the Y.

W.

many

Young Men's

Christian

conventions throughout the

are several social gatherings sponsored

state.

by either

C. A.; sometimes both unite to hold parties for

Hallowe'en or Valentine's Day.

One Hundred

Sixty-eight

PERSONNEL
Adam

Schlauch

Daniel Sallitt

Heimbach

Stanley

Clyde Kitch

Francis Sell

Frank Chudzinski

Ernest Line

Bolish Schraeder

Roy Evans

Aldwin Jones

Clarence Slater

Ralph Evans

Oliver Krapt

John Stush

Howard Fauth

John

John Gress

Gerald Moore

Edmund Smith

Thomas

Robert Morgan

Daniel

James Gennana

Bruno Novak

John Utz

Wilbur Hibbard

Glenn

Clarence Hunsicker

Andrew Petro

Ernest Valente

Artliur Harrison

Michael Prokopchak

Edward Williams

Rcnald Harve)'

Miles Potter

Thomas Howells

Charles Hensley

WiMiam Reed

Kenneth Miller

Eugene Keefer

Ardin Roan

Steven Petrilla

Howard Kitchen

George Rinker

Frank Zadra

Morris

DeHaven

Griffith

Walter Kritzberger

Ivor Robbins
Prof. E.



.Seatt'il

One Hundred

— Miles

Si\tv-n'ttu^

Frank Zubrls

Roupe

R. L.

Thomas

Alfred Vandling

Oman

Arthur Knerr

Slaiiiling
Oliver
Tliunias.

William Thompson

McHugh

Carl Riggs

H. Nelson

Knipf, Aldwin Jones, Prof. Shortcss iSinmsnr), Williimi

Poller, (ieorge Uinker (President), Carl Riy^s.

'riniiiipson,

I'liirt'

Iliinsieker.

Diiniel

The Lettermen*s Club
OFFICERS

---------------------------

Nicholas Rudawski

Anthony

Kan.jorski

Clair Troy

John Lewis

"VV 7 ITH

the idea in

President

Vice President

mind

that the Lettermen's

Secretary

Treasurer

Club should be one of

the most important organizations on the campus, a group of progressive individuals set about reorganizing the

Men's "B" Club of

last

year and drew up a constitution of requirements, activities and purposes
that put

it

A man
obtained

on

a

sound

basis.

automatically becomes

a letter

athletic policy.

a

member

of the club

according to the standard of requirements

At

when
set

he has

up

the present time there are forty-four active

in the

men

in

the club, exclusive of alumni.

One

of the outstanding achievements of the organization has been

the successful handling of the high school basketball tournament, the

proceeds of which are used to buy sweaters for

and gold keys for the graduating

Homecoming Day
This year, the "B"

is

a

of the club

seniors.

big day for practically every organization.

men were

and were of singular help

new members

in

successful in adding

much

to the

program,

welcoming home the Alumni.

One Hundred Svfcnfy

The Geographic Society

...-.....-----------....
OFFICERS

Mildred Busch

Alfred Vandling
Lois Lawson
William Edgar Artman

FOR

number

a

to

Secretary

Treasurer

of years the Geographic Society has been one of the

foremost extra-curricular activities on the campus.

promote

PirsiJoif

Vice President

interest in geographic interpretation

by

It

was organized

activities

such

as dis-

cussions of geography observed in local communities or in travel, illus-

trated talks on imaginary journeys and accounts of current events inter-

preted from the geographic point of view.

Thursday

The

society meets each

afternoon during the extra-curricular period to participate in

one of these

activities.

It

has endeavored, through

programs, to foster

its

knowledge of the relationship which exists between the fields of
geography and other subjects, such as history, economics, sociology,
civics and world problems.
a better

Field trips have had a very definite place in the
zation.

Each semester the club,

as a

program of the organi-

group, has gone to several local places

Bloomsburg
Brick Plant, the Bloomsburg Water Works, the Magee Carpet Company,
These local
the York Silk Mill and the Letterman Baking Company.
business interests very generously furnished competent guides who most
of geographic interest.

The

society has recently visited the

ably explained the departments and activities of the various plants.

In

each case the finished product was traced from the raw material through
the manufacturing processes

market.

down

to the

commodity

that was ready for

These explanations proved very beneficial from

point of view in that they

made

possible a co-ordination

a

geographic

between industry

and geography.
It

had been

a

tradition of the society to take

trip

during the month of

day

trip to study

May

each year.

Kitchen Creek

Falls

Last

its

May

most extensive

field

the club took an

all-

and the physiography of that region.

Since the Delta Chapter of the geographic professional fraternity.

Gamma

n

Theta Upsilon was

Society has

become

installed

on our campus, the Geographic

a local stepping stone to this national organization.

One Hundred

Screnty-tito

First Seiiicsfer
Mildred Busch
Alfred Vandling
Lois

Lawson

Oman

Roy Evans
Vida Hartman

Glenn

Charles Hensley

Arthur Snyder

Margaret Shultz

W. Edgar Artman

James Hinckley

John Timbrell

Zela Bardo

Woodrow Hummell

Clair

Melba Beck

Robert Hutton

Gerald Woolcock

Mae Berger

Roland Karchner

Edward Williams

Grace DuBois

Ronald Keeler

John

Troy

Shaflfer

Inez Keller

Second Sfmi'iter
Ronald Keeler

Frederick Fawcett

June Mensch

Woodrow Hummell

Fred Fowler

Helen Pekas

Mildred Busch

Vida Hartman

Glenn Thomas

Mrs. Hartt

Emmanuel Thomas

W. Edgar Artman

Albert Hayes

Alfred Vandling

Zela Bardo

Charles Hensley

Edward Williams

Melba Beck

James Hinckley

Mary Schuyler

Wallace Derr

Robert Hutton

John Shaffer

Grace DuBois

Fred Kester

George Strouse

Anna Erwin

Lois

Clair

Troy

Nearvln Wojcik

Roy Evans

David Faust

One HuiiJnJ Serenh

Lawson

-lhr,-e

Nature Study Club
Motto:

"Through Nafnrc

to

God"

OFFICERS

-------------------------

Howard DeMott
Edward Bohr

Vice

Walter Bond

PresiJriif
Presii/ciif

Secrefary-Treasurer

Prof. Hartline

Sponsor

who

'~j"^HIS organization provides an excellent opportunity for those

wish to study nature

program makes

special use of the

These outdoor

ment.

in nature's great

of natural interest

makes

Actual working with nature forms

love of
all

all

outdoors.

It

activity

supplemented by reports on subjects

the weather

nothing can take the place.

The

outdoor opportunities of our environ-

activities are

when

schoolroom.

a

inside

work

necessary.

factor in education of which

The Nature Study Club

cultivates a great

works, not only to provide present knowledge for

members, but to develop the power and love of observance by which

knowledge may be gained

later in life.

Often the

"Eats, hikes" play an important part in this organization.

members spend

a half

day

in the

open observing natural phenomena and

then after cooking and eating an outdoor dinner, turn to the stars

as a

subject for the stories that only the sponsor, Professor Hartline, can

tell

in his

inimitable style.

The Phi Lambda (Nature Study) Fraternity
club.

the

It

home

is

limited to fifteen active

of Professor Hartline.

is

an inner circle of this

members and meets once

The

a

month

fraternity makes possible a

at

more

intensive study of nature than can be undertaken in the club.

Over night
through

a coal

trips to places of natural interest in

mine, over

a state forest reserve,

nature study are some of the high lights of

Central Pennsylvania,

and

all

day

trips for

this organization.

Our Unihlral

St'iru/y-foiir

Clark Arnold

Charles Entcrline

Nola Paden

Mabel

Madelyn Giorini

Charles Paulus

LaRue Bender

Blanche Gething

Camille Pcneca

Edward Bohr

Alda Gianini

Andrew Potson

Walter Bond

Jay Hagenbach

Michael Prokopch.ik

Tosca Borsi

Helen Hartman

Arden Roan

John Boylan

Reynold Harvey

Ivor Robbiiis

Mary Buckley

Frank Hudock

Charles Rogosz

Walter Buggy

Ruth Jackson

Betty

Edwin Creasy

Roman Kropechak

Margaret Sandbrook

Edna Crevcling

Edna Lamareaux

Louise Shipman

Frank Chudzinski

Olwyn

Hester Slusser

Rita Dean

John Long

Bolish Schraeder

Howard DeMotc

Althine Marshman

Raymond

Belles

Laird

McGrew

Row

Stryak

Alec Swalinski

Mildred Deppe

John

Edward Doyle

Veda Merickle

George Van Sickle

Kenneth Merrill

Joseph Bisotski

Paul Mudrich

John Zavarich

Dranc

Phyllis

Jack Early

Bruno Novak

Row— Keefer. Miller, Gress,
Row—Bender. Wilkinson,

R-iek
Midtlle
i'l-orit

One

Row — Draxnc.

IliintlrcJ Sfiriify-fire

Prokopchak. VanSickle, Koaiie. Diislinnko, Bixler. Carroll. Swalinski.
riiiUips. Betetti, Buckley, Baer, Snyder, Marshnuin, Sandbrook, Kohluns,
Ceceini, Callender. Long. Chevitski, Trof. Hartline, Osborne, CrevelinB.

The Rural

Life

Club

OFFICERS

WOODROW AtEN
Irma Lawton

Helen

Piatt

-------------------

Prcsiilfllf

Vice President
Secretary

Charles Artman

'HE purpose of

'

the Rural Life

Club

is

Treamrer

to discuss rural

I

life

conditions and problems which are faced by rural

During

communities.

the year the following problems

have been debated and discussed:

"The Care of

the School-

room," "Consolidation," "Parent-Teacher Association,"
"Scouting

in

School," and

a

Rural Community, "Music

many

in

the Rural

others of equal importance.

Meetings are held every Thursday afternoon, and every-

one interested

is

invited to come.

One

Huiiiltt'J Seienty-six

PERSONNEL
Harriet Levan

Lesta Applegate

Charles

Irma Lawton

Artman

Lawton

Homer Artman

Lois

Woodrow Aten

Blanche Mordan

Donald Bangs

Esther Pealer

Gladys Boyer

Helen Piatt

Florence Byerly

Pauline Rombcrger

Mary Davis

Hazel Small

Frances

Adam

Dymond

Schlauch

Sara Fisher

Ruth

Ruth Haggy

Myrtle Wagner

Stine

Virginia Zciglcr

Third Uow,

Second

Row— Mordan.
First

Q»c

Row —

Hniuircii Scirnty-scictt

Left to RiKht

— Zeinler,

Lawton, Roniberaer.

SmalL Wat'ner. IlaBU.v. KanRs. Lovan, Boyor. Applcfati-, Davis,
Artman, Stlilaucli, Piatt, Atcn, Lawton, Artman, Prof. Robliins.

Tealer.

llynioiul

North Hall Student Government Association
OFFICERS

Alex Shepella

Thomas Coursen
"^'iLLiAM

-...-..
-_..-.
--------------

Vice Prcsidciil

Thompson

Aldwin Jones

T70UNDED on true educational principles and
administration, the

developed into

a

Prcsit/ciif

Secretary

Treasurer

nurtured by an

efficient

North Hall Student Government Association

permanent, progressive organization.

has

The members of

organization are very thankful to the administration for the privi-

this

leges

accorded them.
the bi-monthly meetings the students have an opportunity to

At

discuss matters relative to the progress of the association.

This principle

of free speech has contributed greatly to the development of the organization.

Socially, the association
initiation of the

is

indeed very prominent.

Freshmen, which

is

more informal

again furnished

th-j

events,

we

fall

sponsored by the members of the

council, creates enthusiasm in the hearts of
to the

The annual

recall the

all

upperclassmen.

Shifting

"smokers" where the freshmen

entertainment with the "assistance" of the upper-

classmen.

To

the

members who

leave

we wish

the best of luck and success.

One

Hiintlriil Siteiily-iij^ht

John Adanison
John Beck

Walter Kritzberger

William Thompson

John Lewis

John Lawson
John Long

LaRuc Bender

Stanton Lillibridgc

Rocco Tursc
John Utz

Robert Brown

Ernest Line

Ernest Line

John

John Butler

Albert Makowski
Daniel Malonc

Gordon Wanbaugh
Henry Warman

Kerr MoUer

Henry

Walter Washelcski

Bernard

Edward Williams

Robert Morgan
George Minnich

Bixlcr

McHugh

John Carr
Frank Chudzinskt
Thomas Coursen
Fr;ink Dushanko
Harold Danowski

Cornelius

Joseph Davis

John Partridge

Harold Morgan
Gerald Moore
Bruno Novak
Robert Parker

James Williams
Walter Yarctski

McFadden

Joseph

McHugh

Russell Miller

Mohan

Albert Miller

William Young
Leo Yozviak

Harold O'Brien
Stephen Petrilla

Arthur Pattison

John Drennan

Frank Perch

Frank Zadra
James Boylan

Larry Evangclista

Andrew Petro

John Boylan

Kennetli Roberts

Ralph Evans
William Furlani

Miles Potter

Anthony

Charles Rokosz

Michael Prokopchak

Thomas

William Reed

Walter Chesney
Anthony Conte

Morris

DcHaven

Griffiths

John Hall
Stanley

Heimbach

Charles Paulus

Carroll

Donald Potson

Adam

Schlauch

Daniel Sallitt

John Deppen
Gene DellaCrocc

John Schaeffer

George Rinkcr

Carl Riggs

Francis

Sell

Wilbur Hibbard
Frank Hudock

Ivor Robbins

Howard Fauth

Anthony Shakofski

Nicholas Rudawski

Clarence Hunsicker

S.imucl Sacus

John Gress
Frank Geroski

Walter

Fred

Bolisli

Jafiin

Schraedcr

Josepii

Gribbin

Michael Skerel
Stier

Raymond

Stryjak

William James

Alex Shepella

Saul Gutter

Aldwin Jones
Eugene Keefcr

Joseph Slominski

Arthur Harrison

John Stush
Michael Sopchak

Clarence Slater

Charles Hensley

Clair

Bernard Kafchinski

Alcksander Swalinski

James Johns

Alfred Vandling

Anthony Kanjorskl

Daniel

Albert Kafka

Leo Washelewski

Clyde Kitch

Emanuel 1 homas

Arthur Knerr

One Hnmlnd

Scicnty-iiiiw

Thomas

Oliver Krapf

Troy

Marvin Wojcik
John Yeagcr

Chamber

Junior

oF

Commerce

OFFICERS

Joseph Gribbin

Gerald Harter
Elvira James

Dorothy Semic

.-...--------------------------

\'nc President

-

Prof. H. A. Andruss

'

I

'HE Junior Chamber

of

Commerce, composed of

Commercial Teacher Training Department,
its

existence.

Through

President

this

medium, student

is

Secretary

Treasurer

Sponsor

the students of the

in the

interest in

second year of

commercial work

in the high schools has been developed.

The major

interest of the organization

is

sponsoring the state com-

mercial contest for high schools, offering competitive examinations in
typewriting, shorthand, bookkeeping, business mathematics, and business law.

At
in the

various intervals throughout the year, the

operatmg of the numerous inachincs

resentatives of the

in

members

modern

are instructed

business

by rep-

manufacturing companies.

The organization

is,

however, not without

its

social side.

Among

the various activities of the club are picnics, dances, and other entertain-

ments of

a varied nature.

Our Hundred Eighty

PERSONNEL
Ellen C. Anderson

Laurence M. Piatt

John Krepich

Margaret M. liusch

Adeline M. Pfeiffer

Stanton K. Lillibridge

John

Geraldine Pomeroy

Georgia E. Matha

Butler

J.

Daniel C. Sailitt

Adeile A.

Anthony E. Conte
John S. Deppen
Howard E. Fauth

Eleanor L. Shannon

Isaac K. Miller

Clarence

Genevieve G. Morgis

Ruth R. Flanagan

John W. Utz

Mildred M. Quick

Clara C. VandersHce

Donald A. Ruckle

Irene

Frederick

I.

Helen

Frey

I.

M

Lucille

Gilchrist

John Gress
Gerald Harter
Stanley P.

Heimbach

Martha

S.

Slater

Smith

E.

Louise C.

Yeany

Nora M.

Bayliff

Florence C. Pieri

Pearl L. Savage

Dorothy A. Semic

Arden H. Blain

Freda H. Shuman

Edith M. Blair

Harriet K. Spotts

Woodrow

Ruth K. Welliver

G. Brewington

Harold Henrie

Maude M. Edwards

Louise Yeager

Mildred M. Hollcnbaugh

Grace V. Feather

Walter

Jacobs

Joseph Gribbin

Frank

J.

James

Elwood H. Hartman

James

W.

Marion

Emily A. Landis

Fred

W.

Elvira

J.

Rosina Kitchener

John W. Knorr
Santina

F.

La Brutto

Erma M. Moycr

A.

ilitndrcil

Eighty-one

E.

Hinkle

Hower Kitchen

Mary

S.

J.

Chesney

Greco
Hartzel

Mathews

Eleanor E. Klingerman

Vivian A. Ycany

Thelma

Irene Giger

Arthur

One

Metz

Esther T. Carichner

L.
J.

Knauss

Knerr

^^^^
Debating Club
UNAVOIDABLE

obstacles prevented the functioning of the debates with Mansfield,

Clarion and Shippensburg this year, but

it

is

expected that the regular season of

debating will be scheduled again next year.

The schedule

for 1931, Including dual debates with Mansfield, Clarion and Shippens-

burg, was on the question: "Resolved, That the tendency of the
date in chain stores

is

detrimental to the best interests of the

retail business to consoli-

American public."

Blooms-

burg was represented by Catherine H. Smith, Thelma Knauss, Alfred Vandling, and Paul
Baker on the affirmative

side;

and by Grace Callender, Lois DeMott and Carl Riggs on

the negative side.

Receiving the favorable decision of the judges on both

sides of the question in the

debates with Mansfield, Bloomsburg unfortunately lost to Shippensburg and Clarion.

Although two of the three dual debates were
not to be questioned.
Professor

Reams of

tive teams and deserves

The work was

of

a

lost,

the debating ability of our team was

high collegiate calibre.

the Social Studies department coached both affirmative and nega-

much commendation

for the excellent

Grace Callender and Lois DeMott, both members of the

work

of his club.

class of 193 2,

completed their

third year of college debating with the close of the 1931 season.

Top
Bottom

"^

Bow— Prof. Reams. Vandling. RigKS.
Row— DeMott, Calleuder, Smith, Kiiuuss.

One HitudrcJ Eighty-two

Day

Girls*

Governing Board

-------------------------OFFICERS

Grace Callender
Louise Yeager

Ruth Appleman
Sara Zimmerman

THE

official

board of the day

social, house,
class.

Since the

stitution.

It

PrcsiJciif

Vice Praidcnt

girls

is

made up of

Secretary

Treasurer

the officers, the chairmen of the

and customs committees, and two representatives from the freshman

last

two

years

it

has been an active organization, having adopted a con-

has regular meetings once a week.

At

the beginning of the school year

it

holds a picnic to introduce the officers to the freshmen and to acquaint the frcshmeft with
the rules of the organization.

The functioning committees
The

social

committee, which plans

The house committee, which
day

girls'

arc:

all

social events in

acts as a police force

girls participate.

and reports on conditions

rooms.

The customs committee, which makes and

One

which the day

Hittuircil Eighty-three

enforces freshman customs.

in the

FEATURES

SNAPS
«

«

HUMOR

ADVERTISING

>>

One Huuilrcd

Eig/j/y-scirit

©USH'S
QUALITY CANDY SHOP
ICE CREAM PARLOR
and TEA ROOM
#
Quality and Clecmliness Are
First

Our

Thoughts

We Serve —
French

Ice

Cream

Sherbets and Ices

Chocolates, Bon-Bons
Brittles

Cakes,
Eclairs

and Taffies

Cream Puffs
and French

JOHN BUSH,
112 East Main Street

Pastries

Inc.
BLOOMSBURG

One Hinuln-J

Eighty-eight

One

Humirt'il Eighty-nine

The

First

Bank

National

Bloomsburg, Pa.

3 Per Cent Paid on Savings Accounts
Resources $1,800,000.00

George
c. c.

L.

Low

President

housenick

Yicc Prciidcnt

Fred Holmes

Cashier

RlTTER^S

Glutz

P.

Glutz,

"You know,

Everything for

the

worker, was

research

talking to a fellow boarder.
I

love to explore the dark depths

of the mysterious, to delve into the regions of
the

School arid Office Use

unknown,

"May

I



fathom the unfathomable

to

help you to some of this hash," in-

terrupted the landlady.

Stationery

Magazines

Blank Forms

Typewriters

Office Supplies

Paper Specialties

Governor Franklin Roosevelt tells of a young
navy ensign who was set at the task of determining the ship's position. Five minutes after
his report was delivered, the captain sent for
him.

"Young man,"
move your cap.

said the officer seriously, "re-

We

are

now upon

a

hallowed

spot."

Lending Libvnvy of Best Books

"Beg your pardon. Captain?"
"Yes,

sir,"

said

the captain.

calculated accurately
in

MAIN STREET

"-^

we

are

"If you have

now

right

smack

the middle of Westminster Abbey."

BLOOMSBURG

Ouv Huuihed

Niticfy

One

liuiuircil Nhfc/y-otic

Seniors/
Alumni

Join Your

The annual dues of

$1.00 will admit you to the

Alumni Dinner and
you to

Association

a year's

will

also

entitle

subscription

to the

Alumni Quarterly
This magazine, which appears four times
will

keep you informed

as to

classmates and the events

a year,

the doings of your

which

are taking place

on the campus.

All Dues. Should Be Sciif to

F. H.

West Fifth Street

JENKINS, Treasurer
BLOOMSBl RG,

PA.

0}3C

Hundred Nincty-tuo

Mr. Capone

—"So

from California
you

a

cent?"

to

you traveled

New York

and

all
it

the

way

didn't cost

One

Hiniilrcit Niiu-ly-fii'c

pjSODUCTION
Compliments

and
Best Wishes
of

The

Magee Carpet Company
Bloomsburg, Pa.

t
a

-^
i

One

Hit 11 J red Nhiefy-six

Passerby

Corner Confectionery

—"Here's

must be tough

Leonard and Main Streets

Beggar

—"Yeah,

money out

of

a

quarter, poor man.

It

to be crippled."

my

used

people

but

cup when

I

to

steal

was blind."

Sodas

Magazines
Ice

Cream

"Signs of prosperity

all

lie

about us every-

where," began the orator.

A Good

Place to Eat

"Yes," shouted the scoffer, "and

and

Fred R. Hippensteel

and

lie

An

auto saves you lots of time,
Says hurtling Charlie Mark,
Who spends about an hour a day
Just finding spots to park.

Clothier

Always Reliable
Barber
top,

bloomsburg,

lie

lie."

sir.

— "Your

— "No,
Patron

pa.

hair

Have you
it

is

getting very thin on

tried our
isn't

new

hair tonic?"

that."

A Nation-Wide Institution

J.

C. Perniey Co.^ Inc.
DEPARTMENT STORES
Bloomsburg, Pa.

Our Nation-wide Buying Power Gives You
Unexcelled Saving Power
Ready-to-Wear

Clothing

Shoes

Furnishings

Piece

Notions

Dry Goods

Goods

Accessories

Luggage

Providing for the Whole Family

One

Hiinilrcd Niiicty-nien

DEPRESSION DAYS

The

what the deuce did you do

Perkins,

Capitol

witli th.u

box oi ciyar butts?

Aw! Who's

lioardin'?

num-

just 1lm\c us your name, \-our telephone

THEATRE

Good

ber and your address.

day!

Yeah, Gertie, and they say that
tbcy

ain't

!

Congratulations

"The
general."

to the

Ain't

it

depression

or

No,

I

guess

it

awful?
is

a

wholesome

will

you allow

good conference

table,

Have you any two-pants

thing

in

us

on

awful

per-

this

Mr. Epstein?

suits?

He's celebrating because he just got
'S

Chicago

all

— Henry Ford.

How much
fectly

CLASS OF 1932

at

thought that was animals.

ain't that.

in

— they pay
— something —only

money

with species

their teachers

Extends Heartiest

any

got

a

job.

life!

and wishes them good
luck on their journey

through

hfe

years roll

by

as

the

J,

E,

ROY^

B. S. T. C.

Jewelry

KODAKS
Developing and Printing

One

of the

Optometrist

Publix
Compliments of

Thcatvcs

The White

Milling Co.

BLOOMSBURG,

Lloyd K. Hause, Manager

Ei'crythiiig in

I'A.

I'liiiiv iiiid

Vccd

One

llmijitil Nitu'/y-cight

One Hundred Nincly-ninc

p HOTOGRAPHERS
220

West 42nd Street

New York

City

^ Completely equipped

to render the

highest quality of craftsmariship

and

an expedited service on both personal
portraiture

and photography

for College

Annuals

Official Photographer to the

1932

^

OBITER

Tuo Hundred

Visitor

— "So

it

was the

to steal

desire

that

No. 711711

GEORGE
G.

brought you here."

—"Naw,

what's

a

guy going

E.

ELWELL

EDWARD ELWELL

to

hook around here?"

GEORGE

ELWELL & SON

E.

For Years the Headquarters of
Kindly explain how you have banked $600,000

two

in

Why

your Honor,

Little

Johnny

ranged for

Teachers College Students for

years.

me

to

I

use Liscerine

teacher

—"Could

to be let alone here?

around enough

at

Tooth

it

Paste.

All Kinds of Printed Matter

be ar-

Class and Society Printing

I'm ordered

Anything That Can Be Made

home."

on

Cook
out of

— "If

my

a

Printing Press

Engraied Work a Specialty
you're not going to

fire

me

get

kitchen."

40

WEST MAIN STREET

Costumes
Compliments of

an d

Academic Caps and

A.

W. DUY,

Sr.

Gowns
On

a Rental Basis

PURSEL

F. P,

WAAS & SONS

Department Store

123 South 11th Street

Featuring the Latest in

PHILADELPHIA, PA.

COSTUMERS TO THE NaTION

Tuo Hundred One

DRESSES

HOSIERY

SHOES

YOUR FIRST STOP
At

the Foot of the Hill

HARTER'S
CANDIES

SODAS

LIGHT LUNCHES

Tuo

Ilnndrcil Three

,^NTOIN
3

VER two thousand Annuals

in

the past

eleven years have selected Canton

engravings coupled with the Canton
plan of building a distinctive Annual within
Its

budget. Ask any editor or manager

about their experience with Cc
ton Service. The Canton Er
graving

and Electrotype

Company, Canton, Ohio.

«

Two Hundred Four

Krauss Confectionery

and Grocery

ICE

CREAM

CANDIES

The Taste Telia

CREAM

ICE

SOFT DRINKS
Hair Dressing

Eyebrow Arching
Massage

Facials

Used by

Permanent Waving

Marijiello

B. S. T. C.

Beauty Shoppe

Bertha Stauder
104 East Main Street

When

you

are

hungry
Typical Green Frosh

stop in and try our

Miss

Light Lunches

— "Have you

any scent-

ed stationery?"

Eyerly

— "Yes.

How much

you

do

want?"

TEXAS QUICK LUNCH

T. G. F.

.

.

at the

Foot of

tl.K

"I don't

want any.

I

just

want

to smell it."


".



Special pennission of the copyright oiinen.

Hill"

In philology class

Mr. Wilson went back into

"Beowulf" and brought out the queer use of

Compliments of

vocabulary, indicating such terms

as

"whale-

road" for "sea," "travel-wood" for "ship,"

USTIG^S
BLOOMSBURG,

He

then gave the

lar to those

he had given.

PA.
Upon

Five

etc.

few modern words and

asked them to transpose them into terms simi-

grinned

Tuo Hnndn-d

class a

the
a

word "encyclopedia,"

little,

Saul Gutter,

and produced "paper-crutch."

The College Barber Shop

Moyer

Bros.,

Inc.

Ray Harley
Bloomsburg's Leading

Drug Store

".

.

.

at the

Foot of the Hill"

Meet your

LOUIS BERNHARD,

Sr.

fountain

.

.

friends at our
.

WATCHES, DIAMONDS,
JEWELRY, WATCHMAKING,

ENGRAVING,
JEWELRY REPAIRS

Your
Prescription Druggists

First

National Bank

Buildiii;^

BLOOMSBURG,

Since 1868
PA.

UNDERWOOD'S
She (her
just

sit

iirst

time

at

here and drink

it

tlie

seashore)

— "Let's

For

in."

all

Flowers
EVERYTHING SUITABLE
L'l-NVOI

"And what have you
"That

I

done,"

St.

Peter said.

should admit you here?"

H.

"I published the yearbook," the editor said,

"Of my
St.



college

& C. Cut-Rate

for one long year."

Peter sighed and shook his head.

And gravely touched a bell.
"Come in, poor thing, and select
You've had your share of

— Apologies

your

The
h.irp.

store

where you save on Patent

Medicines, Toilet Articles, and Candies.

hell."

to the "PiliiiUi.'

HOLLINGSHEAD & CHRISTIAN
144 E.

Main

St.

BLOOMSBURG,

PA.

Tuo

Iliittilred

Six

Two

HuiiJreJ

Seieii

Bart Pursel,

TONGUE

Sr.

Kitch's Kollege

TVC'ISTER

Kluck Klothes.

Clothier atid Cleaner
Don't forget, we are below
the Square

Father

Son



Father

Full Line of Men's Dress

and

Work

—"Why were you kept

"I didn't



know where

in at

school?"

the Azores were."

"^'ell. in the future, just

remember

where you put things."

Clothes
Another:

READY-TO-WEAR SUITS

The

Made

to

Thus

seething sea ceaseth.

the seething

sea sutficeth us.

$12.50 to $22.50

Order $22.50

A
Cleaning, Altering, Pressing

daily tabh)id for children only

make

to

appearance

its

soon.

is

scheduled

Item

in

the

Patbfiiiiltr.

Repairing
for Both

Men and Women

"How

soon

will

I

know anything

after

I

come out of the anesthetic?"
Careful, Efficient

Work done

in

our

own plant

North Branch

a

"Well," replied the doctor, "that's expecting
good deal from an anesthetic."

Makers of the

Cover
for

Safe
Reliable
Service

Bloomsburg, Pa.

1932

OBITER

KiNGSPORT, TeNN.

Tuo Hundred

Eight

Let us repair for that hard

Just Comfortably Off

campus wear

Main

Street

WOLFE
Shoe Repairing Shop

Tasty Tea

IRON STREET

156

BLOOMSBURG,

Main Street

Room

PA.

HOME BAKING

.IfeAKER

and

HOME COOKING
A Specialty

Home for Funerals

Bloomsburg, Pa.

NOSE WIPIN' FREE
An

Hartman,

Prop,

LEADER STORE

CO.

Mrs. Pearl

enterprising youngster had started

a

new

His business card gives the following

business.

information:

Mr. Gerald Allen,

J.

K. L. M.

Jr.

Personal Escorter

Store of Quality

Tots and Kiddies took to school

and returned,

prompt
if

in perfect condishin

John W.

received that way.

Knies, Manager

Military discipline.

Rates

2 5c a

week.

No

conversashin.

Refined
extra

charge for nose wipin.
All

I

ast

is

J.

a trial.

— Wall

T.

McKENZIE

Street Jonnuil.

Justice of the Peace
"Yes, Robert, 'amo'
ing

'I

love.'

Now

is

the Latin

word mean-

what word suggests

its

oppo-

site?"

"Reno."

Tuo Hundred Nine

Boitoii Transcript.

Farmers' National Bank Building

n

MOKE

HESS
And

S^

Patent Medicines

Goods

Toilet

O P

Billiard Parlor

REA & DERICK, Inc.

Bloomsburg, Pa.

Candy

Sodas

Cigarettes

Cigars

9

TABLES

Marietta Dress Shops

DRESSES
Wm.

J.

For All Occasions

Hess, Proprietor

Pbonc 182- J
FOOTBALL YELLS
Onions!

Look

Carrots!

at all those

Cabbage!

empty

Hit the crowd, you lazy

Cop

the coin,

Shakespeare!

Bart Pursel,

Beets!

seats!
fellers

you ticket sellers.
Swinburne!
Shelley!

Dollar

Jr*

Dry Cleaner

Keats!

Swell the tiny gate receipts!

The absent-minded

professor

school one morning and said,

John.

How's your father?"

met

his

son in

"Good morning,
American Boy.

Men's Suits

$1.00

Overcoats and Topcoats

$1.00

50c

Men's Pants

W. McK. REBER

$1.00

Ladies' Dresses
Ladies' Coats (no extra

Hardware

charge for fur)

$1.00

Sporting Goods
BLOOiMSBURG, PENNA.

BERWICK, PENNA.

106 East

Main Street

BLOOMSBURG,

PA.

Two

Hiimircil

Ten

Two

Hiiiiilnil Elficn

Engraving * IP tinting * ]E)indin:
A COMPLETE PRINTING PLANT
ALL UNDER ONE ROOF

'»=

:l3.
11^

E

^^

"i

\

^^

School and College Engraving
^HIS

is

the Fiftieth Anniversary Year of the establishment

of Grit's publishing, printing

one

rating

of the marvels of the printing world.

and standing

highest business

are entirely

ideals,

to

The

and engraving business.

story of Grit's early struggles reads like a romance.
is

Specialists

due

excellence

to
of

Its

success

Grit's financial

adherence

to the

product and

to

progressive management.

T PUBLISHING CO,
Williamsport, Penina.

Makers

of

the

1932 OBITER

Two Hnudrcd Tuclve

Tuci

Iliniilifil

Thirteen

Bloomsburg Bank-^

Columbia

Columbia County

Largest

s

Co.

Trust

Bank

YOUR BUSINESS SOLICITED
A

OCULIST?

A

liis

a

achievements.

"I'm

a

self-made man, that's what

man!" he

self-made

"You knocked
quiet voice

utf

am

I

kick in the pants.

young man



iiave both.

work too soon," came

—"And

— "Very."

last
is

my

Hudson

boy

really try-

let

him

T/nn\-Dispatcb.

will

college professor says that civilization will

40,000 years.
it

School

begin?

— "What
Teacher

— "My
Schoolboy

That's nice.

And



cr,

when

Thonias/ou Times.

arc

willing

and wouldn't care
is

a

to

let

bygones be bygones

how much

the youth of to-

relief

day got

all

he should go and

Slav.

map?"

yours

way

Ric/jiiioihl

he needs
face the

a

We

.

much as
why not

from the corner.

Anxious Mother

Stern

in the

Still,

said.

A

Teacher

western educator declares the college stu-

dent doesn't need direction so

bore had been talking for hours about

rid of the

dead languages,

if

they only

wouldn't murder the one we have now.
girl's

face after looking

at
tuii

Dos-

Ihr.ilJ.

day.


\

Sign in Oslo store window:

Americans understood.

English spoken.

Montreal

Star.

Speaking of unemployment, the average
las

12,000,000,000 brain

cells.

man

Life.

Tuo

lluiuircd I'ourtccn

Ttio

HumlnJ

Fifteen

cj^cknowledgment

is

exceedingly difficult to write an acknowledgment that covers the

ITwork

of four professional yearbook companies and the different de-

partments of the school administration, without separating them definitely

from

the fine co-operation of the students.

^ To

many

the

organizations and classes on the campus,

we

express our

heartiest appreciation for their definite aid in helping us to build this

There

annual.

are

many we would

mention personally

like to

if

space

would permit.

^ We
ing

are particularly grateful to

Company,

for his expert

White Studio of

New York

McConnell, of the Kingsport

Harry

J.

W.

Herb.

work

W.

Lyon, of the Canton Engrav-

for the fine

work

Press, for his

Company,

in

photography; Mr.

work

A.

Mr.

Annual Department of

the

for his friendly assistance and hearty co-opera-

tion in the printing and binding of this book, and to the

engravers, whose

J.

artistic cover; to

unique and

Kiessling, Superintendent of the

Grit Publishing

out the book; the

in helping to lay

in this

book

is

its

own example

many

printers and

of their ability and

service.

^ We
ups;

also

Dean

Haas for

wish to thank Professor Wilson
Sutliff

in the

helped us with the write-

and Miss Andrews for the use of the

his friendly

who assisted

who

advice and the use of the

Obiter

class records;

office;

typing; Miss Eyerly, for her co-operation

Dr.

Mrs. Guinard
in

making the

mail available for the Obiter staff; Miss Mason, for the use of the Library
files,

and Mr. Hausknecht and Mrs. Knight of the Business Office for

many services

rendered and for the use of the

office

equipment.

John

A. Hall,

Catherine Hoff Smith.

Tuo Hundred

Sixteen

Tuo HnnAreJ

Sereiitccii

Tiio Hundred Eighteen

MAKERS OF THE

1932 OBITER

Photography by

The White
New York

Studio
City

Engraved by

The Canton Electrotype & Engraving
Canton, Ohio

Printed and

Bound by

Grit Publishing

Company

WiLLIAMSPORT, Pa.

Cover by

KiNGSPORT Press, Inc.
KiNGSPORT, TeNN.

Two Hundred

Nineteen

Co.

L'ENVOI

THE

Three Inseparables

—Porthos, Athos and Aramis, with
first

they cried "All for one

have represented

Romance and Fellow-

the dashing D'Artagnan, since

and one for
ship.

Together they made their way against obstacles they sepa-

With

rately feared.

others found
since

all,"

Dumas

it

a

mad

idealism they fought against evils

The youth

safer to ignore.

has

found

in these

every generation

in

gay young blades something to

admire, to emulate, and to dream on.

Even today, while

a

mechanistic world writhes in the throes

of a great financial depression, the youth of today feels the same
thrill

and the same exciting

The Three Musketeers have

desire.

subtly formed the background of our

life here.

under our names and achievements, we have seen

And now

as

we

leave,

we

take with us

In these pages,
their shadows.

more than our technical

At Bloomsburg our

training that makes us teachers.

characters

have been permeated by the Idealism, the good Fellowship, the
Steadfastness that
fight our

make

way against

we have been and

us

men and women

memory of what
what we will be, we salute

the cardinal's guards.

as a

pledge of

Porthos, Athos, Aramis and the

eager and able to

In

young Gascon, D'Artagnan.

^

i

Tiio Hundred Tucuty

J!f'

Media of