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State Normal School, Bloomsburg
A CENTURY OF TEACHER EDUCATION AT BLOOMSBURG
The Senior Member
Looks
at Public
of the
Board
of Presidents
Higher Education in the State
After
40 Years
Pennsylvania State Colleges
in
By
HARVEY
President,
Public Higher Education
education in
of higher
Pennsylvania, with specific reference
to State Colleges, must consider at
A
least
history
two historical factors.
Colleges and universities began as
academies, seminaries, or institutes
sponsored by the various religious
groups who came to a colony where
religious toleration existed.
In time,
these early academies became colTheir origleges and universities.
inal purpose of training ministers for
the various church groups was broadened on the assumption that what was
good for the shepherd was good for
the flock.
The requirements
for admission and
for attending private colleges
were relatively high, and were only
waived for sons and daughters of
costs
ministers or missionaries. This early
start of private colleges gave status.
Thus the general opinion that private
education was better than public education.
It was assumed that since
there was a direct outlay for tuition,
private education was worth more.
The second factor affecting the
development of the State Normal
Schools (1911), now State Colleges,
was the fact that they were, by law,
part of the public school system.
Public Schools in Pennsylvania began, as in England,
as
“pauper”
schools. As early as 1790, there was
a provisional law which read: “The
legislature shall provide by law for
the establishment of schools throughout the state in such a manner that
the poor may be taught gratis”; included was the clause, “As soon as
conveniently may be.” James Pyle
Wickersham
writes,
“Such a system
of class education necessarily failed
in a state where the
doctrine
of
equality had always been strongly
held.” He further states that, “The
idea that public schools should be
open alike without disrimination or
partiality to all children of all classes and condition of men” continued
with the passage
of
the
Public
School
Law
of
1834.
(James Pyle
Wickersham, Superintendent
mon
Schools
in
of
Com-
Pennsylvania
from
1866 to 1881, also was associated with
what is now Millersville State College.)
The early Normal Schools, sometimes organized on a county basis,
were operated for short periods of
time; finally, after 1857, they were
authorized by the State. These two
historical factors, namely, the status
created by the early beginning of
A.
ANDRUSS
Bloomsburg State College
private colleges and universities under
church sponsorship, and the identification of the Normal Schools with
the public schools which were organized for the poor, continue to linger in
the minds of the citizens of Pennsylvania.
It is against this background that
educators of other states question,
and sometimes are amazed by the reof
luctance of the Commonwealth
Pennsylvania to educate as large a
number of its young people beyond
the age of eighteen years as is done
by many other states in our country.
On the other hand, it can be argued,
and with basis, that the western migration, after 1800, caused populations
first to organize territories, and then
And at this time, except for
states.
a few mission schools, originally organized for Indians, the newer states
had a clean slate. Since there was
no private higher education, they
were forced to provide Universities,
Land-Grant Colleges, Normal Schools,
and later, State Teachers Colleges.
However, it must be urged that only
an increase in public higher education
enable the Commonwealth
of
Pennsylvania to realize its responsiwill
in providing opportunities of
higher education for all worthy youth.
Otherwise Pennsylvania will continue
bilities
to lag.
After Forty Years
Pew people remember that
der Dumas wrote a sequel
best-selling
novel,
MUSKATEERS.
entitled
The
THE
Alexanhis
to
THREE
second
book,
TWENTY YEARS AFTER,
continues the story of D’Artagnon and
his three companions. It suffered the
fate of most sequels in that it was
never as well known as the original.
Twenty years ago a doctoral
dis-
attempted to
sketch
the
“Development of Pennsylvania State
Teachers Colleges as Institutions of
Higher Education (1927-1948).”
sertation
The authoi
the dissertation is
the task of giving
his impressions of the last forty years
of the development of the institutions
now known as the Pennsylvania State
Colleges.
These comments are personal in nature, and limited in scope
by the observation, philosophy, and
memory of one man. Particular attention is given to the second score of
years (1948-1968), although the general framework is that of the original dissertation.
Certainly, the State Superintendent
of Public Instruction, as the Chief
School Officer of the Commonwealth
of
now undertaking
of Pennsylvania, has had a marked
from the
effect on the transition
State Normal School, to State Teachers Colleges, to State Colleges, and
now a period in which at least one
of the institutions has become a university.
Superintendents of Public Instruction
The State Normal Schools, according
law, were part of the public school
system of Pennsylvania. Their original purpose was the education and
These institutraining of teachers.
tions were the outgrowth of efforts of
the County Superintendents to increase
the period of training and the educateachers.
tional background of the
to
After 1920, the certincation of teachers came under state control. Therefore, the State Superintendent of Public Instruction was in a powerful position.
While
it is
very difficult to evaluate
the influences of the chief public school officer of Pennsylvania on
the institutions which were originally
Normal
Pennsylvania
the
State
Schools, a few impressions will serve
the
of
to indicate the importance
InState Superintendent of Public
struction.
all of
When these institutions became
State Teachers Colleges in 1927, the
Superintendent of Public Instruction
was Dr. John A. H. Keith, formerly
Principal of the Indiana State Normal
School. His experience, as a member
of the faculty of Columbia University,
as head of a campus training school
at DeKalb, Illinois, and as President
oi a college at Oshkosh, Wisconsin,
fitted him for the administration of
the Pennsylvania State Teachers Colleges.
The building oi several campus laboratory schools during his administration is a reflection of his interest in the student-teaching activity.
Many of the decisions made during
his administration regarding the organization of student government associations and the operation of college
bookstores are still in effect. Faculty
policies, such as salary
schedules,
leaves of absence every third summer with pay, and sick leave policies,
were originally developed during the
administration oi Dr. Keith.
Under the administration of Dr.
James N. Rule, the difficult problems of trying to adjust the institutions to decreased state appropriations were faced, and the first system of student fees for instruction
was inaugurated. Salary schedules
(Continued on page five)
Dr.
Andruss Announces Retirement
Dr. Harvey A. Andruss, President
Bloomsburg State College since
August 1939, announced his plans for
retirement dating from September of
1969, during the mid-year commencement exercises held at the College on
His
Wednesday. January 22. 19G9.
thirty years of service as President
has seldom been equalled in the col-
of
leges and universities of the nation,
and has only been approached at
Bloomsburg by that of Dr. David J.
Waller. Jr., who served as Principal
Normal
State
of the Bloomsburg
School for two periods totalling 27
years. Before coming to Bloomsburg
as head of the Business Department
in 1930, Dr. Andruss was for three
years in charge of the Accounting Department at Indiana State Teachers
College which is now Indiana University of Pennsylvania.
the
Commonwealth
He has served
of Pennsylvania a
total of 43 years.
A
native of Texas, Dr. Andruss was
raised and educated in the state of
Oklahoma. He earned the Bachelor
of Arts degree at the University of
Oklahoma, the Master of Business Administration degree at Northwestern
University, and the Doctor of Education degree at The Pennsylvania State
University. His service to education
spans a period of 46 years, including
four years as a teacher and administrator in the public schools of Oklahoma, as a special lecturer at some
of the nation’s leading
universities,
and as the author of a number of text-
books which have been widely used in
business education.
During his Presidency, a number of
significant changes took place in all
phases of the academic and physical
aspects at Bloomsburg State College.
Bloomsburg, as a teachers college,
granted only the Bachelor of Science
degree in education until 1960.
It
now grants the Bachelor of Arts
degree in Business
Administration,
the Master of Education degree, and
recently authorization has been received to grant the Master of Arts
degree in certain fields.
Dr. Andruss, in cooperation with the
college Board of Trustees, developed
the first approved campus plan for a
Pennsylvania State College. In the
past 10 years, a continuous building
program has been under way at
Bloomsburg. The present and proposed building program at the college will
cost more than $40,000,000.
During his administration, the enrollment at the college increased almost seven times. The total enrollin September 1969 will probably
exceed 4.500 students including 3,700
undergraduates.
Accomfull-time
panying the increases in student enrollments, there has been a corresponding increase in faculty and noninstructional personnel.
On his retirement. Dr. Andruss can
look back with pride to the facilities
and opportunities in higher education
that B.S.C. has made available to the
students of the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania.
157
COMMENCEMENT
forty-two seniors and
fifteen graduate students were awarded degrees at the mid year commenBloomsburg
cement exercises
of
o’clock
State College held at two
Wednesday afternoon. January 22, in
One hundred
Auditorium.
Dr. Harvey A.
Andruss, president of the College for
the past thirty years, delivered the
charge to the graduates.
The following seniors were graduated with academic honors: Summa
cum laude (3.75 to 4.0) Galen Quick,
3618 Old Berwick Road, Bloomsburg;
Bachelor of Arts degree in Arts and
Sciences with a major in English, 3.84;
Judith DeFant. Hazleton, Bachelor of
Science degree in Special Education
with a major in mental retardation,
3.79; magna cum ladue (3.60 to 3.75)
Betty
McCutcheon,
Conyngham,
Bachelor of Science degree in Business Education, 3.63; Linda L. Heckman, Boyertown, Bachelor of Science
degree in Elementary Education, 3.62;
Cum laude (3.50 to 3.60) Barbara A.
Masich, Sixth avenue, Berwick, Bachelor of Science degree in Business
Education, 3.56; C. Donnell Walther
Kelly, Sunbury, Bachelor of Science
degree in Elementary Education, 3.53: Charlotte Tourney, Newark, Del.,
Bachelor of Science degree in Business Education, 3.50.
Dr. John A. Hoch, dean of instruction. presented the candidates to Dr.
Andruss, who conferred the degrees.
The presentation of the diplomas was
made by the various divisional direc-
Haas
—
—
tors.
Presentation of the seniors to be
honored was made by Charles M.
Brennan, advisor to the senior class,
Presentation of awards was made by
Elton Hunsinger, dean of students.
James Creasy,
ter of
ed.
Education degrees were award-
WELCOME ALUMNI TO
SPRING ARTS FESTIVAL
GRADUATE AT
MID-YEAR
ness Education, thirty-eight in the
Division of Elementary Education,
fifty-one in the Division of Secondary
Education, thirteen in the Division
of Special Education, thirteen in the
Division of Arts and Sciences, and
one public school nurse. Fifteen Mas-
assistant to the presi-
commencement marand William Decker, chairman
Department of Music, was the organist.
Dr. Andruss also gave the
dent, served as
shall,
invocation.
Diplomas were presented to twenty-six seniors in the Division of Busi-
The Community Government Assoc
and the Spring Arts Festival
committee welcome the Alumni to the
ciation
events of the 1969 Festival. We regret
that The Quarterly will reach you
after some of the events have taken
The program includes;
March 10— Paul Engle, poet director of the Program for International
place.
—
Writing.
—
—
10 a.m. Projection Room Andruss
Library. Topic “Poetry and People.”
2:00 p.m. Projection Room Andruss Library. Informal meeting with
poetry and creative writing classes.
8; 15 p.m.
Haas Gallery. Topic
“The Writer in Today’s World.”
M^rch 13— Exhibition of paintings
—
—
—
—
•
by Simmie Knox.
—
March 13 Maroon and Gold Band,
Symphonic Band Concert. 8:15 p.m.
Haas Auditorium.
March
Company.
April
—
25 Pennsylvania
Ballet
8:15 p.m. Haas Auditorium.
18 Gallery talk by Simmie
—
Knox, artist from Wilmington. Delaware, whose painting will be on exduring the festival period.
April 24. 25, 26 Bloomsburg Players “My Sister Eileen.”
8:15 p.m.
hibit
—
Haas Auditorium.
May 1— Bloomsburg
State
College
Concert choir, Sacred Service
bv
Earnest Bloch. 8:15 p.m., Haas Auditorium.
COL.
EISENHOWER TELLS
OF WHITE HOUSE YEARS
“From
the hurly-burly of politics
I
have beer a part of for the past two
weeks to the relative calm of an academic institution and the orderly
manner of the students at Bloomsburg
State College
air.”
Col.
is like
John
S.
a breath of fresh
D. Eisenhower,
prefaced his talk at the twenty-second annual Conference for Teachers
and Administrators at BSC in Haas
Auditorium.
Dr. C. Stuart Edwards, conference
chairman, introduced Col. Eisenhower, who spoke to a packed auditorium
of teachers, adminisrators and students on “The White House Years.”
Published quarterly by the Alumni Association of the Bloomsburg State College, Bloomsburg, Penna.
17815.
Second-Class Postage Paid at Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania.
Send P.O.D. Form No. 3579 to the ALUMNI OFFICE, BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE,
—
BLOOMSBURG, PENNA.
MARCH,
1969
17815
Page one
A HUNDRED YEARS OF TEACHER
EDUCATION AT BLOOMSBURG - 1869-1969
The basis for teacher education at
Bloomsburg was laid by chance in
the autumn of 1867 when the then
Superintendent of Public Instruction,
T. P. Wickersham, passed through the
town by train and saw the newly
on the hill
erected Carver Hall
“ablaze with light.” The location of
a new Normal School in the Sixth
District was under consideration; so
Wickersham returned to Bloomsburg,
addressed a meeting of the citizens,
and said that the Literary Institute
location would be ideal for a State
Normal School. The Board of Trustees
concurred, and on March 9, 1868, the
following
resolution
was
adopted;
“Resolved that the Trustees of the
Bloomsburg Literary Institute agree to
establish in connection with the same
‘A State Normal School’ ...”
Establishment of the Normal School
necessitated the erection of a dormitory, and plans for the building were
submitted by Principal Carver on
April 15, 1868, which called for an estimated cost of $36,000. The laying of
the cornerstone on June 25, 1968, was
a memorable occasion. Prayer was
offered by D. J. Waller, Sr.; Governor Geary laid the cornerstone and
made an appropriate address. Other
participants
included
Superintendent
Wickersham, Principal Carver, and
the Honorable William Elwell, President Judge of the County Courts.
Early in February 1869, the trustees
requested that a committee be appointed under the Act of 1857 to consider chartering the Literary Institute
as a State Normal School. On February 18, the committee examined facilities and the proposed curriculum
and the next day submitted a favorable report
and
recommendation.
Thus February 19, 1896 can be considered the birthday of Teacher Education at
Bloomsburg, although the
proclamation of the State Superinten-
dent was signed and sealed three days
later, and the first prospective teachers were not enrolled until September.
At first the curriculum consisted of
the traditional high school subjects
supplemented by courses in the methods of teaching. Normal School students did not even have to be
high
school graduates. But, as time went
on, the required terms were increased
from 21 to 42 weeks, high school graduation was made an admission requirement, and “professionalized content” courses were introduced.
A
Model School was opened relatively
early in the program and existed in
various locations until the opening of
the
Benjamin
Franklin
Training
School in 1930.
The Literary Institute and State
Normal School continued to perform
its dual function of college preparation
Page two
and teacher training until after its
purchase by the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania in May 1916 after three
years of negotiation. From this time
on until 1960 its purpose was wholly
First,
ihe preparation of teachers.
for the elementary school only, and
later for teachers of junior and senior
high school. Since 1960, non-professional degrees in Arts and Sciences
have been authorized, but eighty-five
percent of the college’s enrollment is
the four teacher education curriculums.
still in
A
change
in
name, the privilege
to
grant degrees, and the mandate to
train high school teachers was dramatically announced by Principal Reimer at a faculty-student party in May,
From that date, the name of
1927.
the institution was to be Bloomsburg
State Teachers College.
In many ways the history of an institution and its functions reflect the
personalities and leadership of the
men at its head. With rare exception
Bloomsburg has enjoyed enlightened
and progressive leadership from the
indomitable Henry Carver, who starts
ed the Normal School movement, to
Harvey A.
the present President,
Andruss.
Carver was followed by
two short-term Principals, Charles G.
Barkley and John Hewett, each of
whom served a year. Hewett was
succeeded by T. L. Griswold, who
served four somewhat controversial
and stormy years.
In 1877, at a low point in the schools
morale and prestige, D. J. Waller,
Jr., assumed the Principalship and
lifted the facilities and the curriculum
to a new and more progressive plane.
Waller served until his appointment
in 1890 to the State Superintendency
and retur-ned in 1906 to serve through
the maturation of its teacher educathe
tion programs and its sale to
State, retiring in 1920. Judson Welsh,
a Bloomsburg graduate, succeeded
Waller in 1890 and served until Waller’s return in 1906, his tenure marked particularly by the addition of several buildings to the
campus.
most and major changes have taken
place.
Not only was the program for business teachers inaugurated and it and
all other areas consistently strengthened dux-ing these years, but the special challenge of World War II was
met and the survival of the college assured. With only a handful of women
as a nucleus in teacher education,
Andruss assured the use of facilities
and the maintenance of faculty by obinstructional
taining
assignments
from the Navy in its V-5 and V-12 programs. Thus, the plant and faculty
were intact to service not only the
post-war flood of ex-G.I.’s, but even
to instruct several sections of Penn
State freshmen. The years that followed have shown this same foresight
and dedication to the future of the
college.*
In the Centui-y
has progressed
past
Bloomsburg
the education of
teachers from high school level work
to the extension of the preparation
time to one to two to three to four
yeai's, and from the preparation of elemenary teachers only thi-ough the
training of special education teachers,
speech correctionists, teachers of business subjects, as well as those of
practically all the academic areas of
the junior and senior high school program of studies. In fact, the enroll-
ment
in
in
Masters
Degree piograms
alone in the various areas of teacher
education now
exceeds
the
total
student body of the institution in
some years past.
From meager
instruction in high
school subjects and a token exposure
to methods, the College’s curriculum
has evolved to the point where almost
half of its program is in general education of high qualilty liberal ai-ts
character, a little less than one-fourth
devoted to pi’ofessional education
carefully planned and culminated by
a semester of full-time student teaching in one of a hundred schools
and the rest, some 42 or more ci'edits,
devoted to a major in the students’
—
—
chosen field of specialization, whether
elementary education, Business education, secondary education, or spec-
Waller was succeeded in turn by
Charles H. Fisher (1920-1923), G. C.
L. Reimer (1923-1927), and Francis B.
in
Haas
of the past decade
can serve as indicators of things to
come, and if the ferment of change all
around us in the world have meaning
(1927-1939), the latter leaving
the Presidency to become Superintendent of Public Instruction.
Haas
holds the distinction of being the last
Principal of Bloomsburg and the first
President of the College.
During the Haas tenure, in 1930,
Harvey A. Andruss joined the administrative staff to organize the Division
of Business Education.
He succeeded from this to become Dean of Instruction, and later, in 1939, Px-esident of the College. Under this ad-
minisration, the longest presidential
tenure in the college’s history, the
ial education.
If the changes
for education, the outlook at the beginning of the second century of teacher education at Bloomsburg
looms
even more exciting, challenging, and
rewarding than the hundred years
which have passed.
GIVE TO THE LOYALTY
FUND
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Hit lUruuiriant
1900—Lena Kitchen Bateman, ElMichigan.
1902—Ruth Hall Harris. Lansford.
well,
Pa.
1902— Rev. P. P.
Fritz,
Nashville,
Tenn.
1906—
1904— Alvirda Davenport, Plymouth,
1907—
Pa.
Pastorious,
O’Hara
Ethel
Scranton, Pa.
Helen L. Roat (Mrs. Albert
Harrison) Titusville, Fla.
1909 Sue A. Bennett (Mrs. H. S.
Leathers), Knoxville, Pa.
Frances
1909—Joseph B. Gordon,
O’Neill
1925— Donavan, Samuel J. Steiner.
1913— Ruth Fox (Mrs. Eugene W.
Fegley*. Pittsburgh, Pa.
1916 Marjorie
RumKingsbury
mage, Nanticoke, Pa.
Abbye Roberts, Plymouth, Pa.
1926 Josephine
Gavey
Swithers,
Glen Lyon, Pa.
1928 Rachel Klapp Woody, Forty
Fort, Fa.
1931 Ruth Snyder Clifford, Lewistown, Pa.
1931 Mary Rosanski Draper, Plymouth, Pa.
1936 Joseph F. Visotski, Mt. Carmel, Pa.
1945— Sarah Hummel (Mrs. Charles
J. Shaffer), Bloomsburg, Pa.
1957— Kathryn Crew Woyniec, Williamsport, Pa.
1942 Jemima
Mt.
Eltringham,
Carmel, Pa.
1951—James L. Whitney, Mt. Carmel, Pa.
1957 Mrs. Helen Brown, Oley, Pa.
—
—
—
—
—
—
also pianist for years for the
Alex-
ander Orchestra.
She played the organ in many area
theatres, and last played at the Capitol, Bloomsburg, until the organ was
removed several years ago. She had
also played dinner music for diners
at Rock’s Steak House some years
ago.
J.
J. Atlee
5,
Atlee Cr.vder,
’09
Cryder, Bloomsburg R. D.
well known attorney, died Janu-
ary 15 in the Boone Nursing Home,
Eyersgrove, after an illness of more
than three years.
He was born in South Centre Town-
home.
He was born September 7, 1879 in
Mahoning township. He was graduated from Bloomsburg Normal Schooi
1900 and taught in
Keller
the
School, Mahoning township, and Mt.
Zion School. He retired a number of
in
years ago.
He was a member of St. Peter’s
Lutheran Church, Gro vania; Danville
Lodge IOOF and Montour township
fire
company.
He served several
terms as a Mahoning township area
school director.
Grace Housel Church ’03
Mrs. Grace G. Church, eighty-four,
Bloomsburg, one of the area’s most
widely known and talented musicians,
December
MARCH,
1969
21 at the
Bloomsburg
Company.
Anna Rusk Fitzpatrick,
Anna Rusk (Mi’s. Paul J.
’16
Fitzpat-
Avenue, Lancaster,
December 26,
suddenly
1968, at St. Joseph’s Hospital, LanShe held a Master’s degree
caster.
from Catholic University, Washington, D. C., and was formerly librarian at the Graduate School of Nursdied
Pa.,
ing, Catholic University.
is survived by her husband, who
a Professor Emeritus of Catholic
University, and is widely known as an
antiquarian and writes on historical
She
is
subjects.
ship and lived all his life in that area.
A member of the Mifflinville United
Methodist Church, he was a graduate
of Bloomsburg Normal School, Syracuse University and the University
of Pennsylvania Law School.
He was a member of Knapp Lodge
462 F. and A. M. for over 50 years;
—
2 at his
retired in 1956.
rick), 617 College
She was a member of the First
Church of Christ, and the widow of
Ned F. Church who died fifty-three
years ago.
Margaret Oliver Walton, ’10
Mrs. Margaret O. Walton, seventyeight, 335 East Second Street, Ber-
Guy A. Mowery,
Guy A. Mowery, eighty-nine, Danville R. D. 4, died Monday, December
died
years he also grew turkeys for the
local market.
His death severed a marital union
He was a memof fifty-three years.
ber of Lightstreet Methodist Church,
Oriental Lodge, F. and A. M., Caldwell Consistory and Lightstreet Fire
—
’00
For many
letics.
She was an accomplished musician
and was well known in the Bloomsburg area as a theatre organist and
Columbia County Bar Association,
Elks Club and Caldwell Consistory.
During his career he was solicitor for
several townships and served in legal
capacities for the county.
At one
time he taught for a three year period in the Berwick school system.
Carrie Flick Redline ’99
Mis. Carrie S.
eightyRedline,
died
seven, Bloomsburg R. D.
5,
Monday, December, 16 at the home of
her daughter, Mrs. H. C.
Shuman.
Mi's. Redline was born June 16, 1881,
in West Liberty Township, Montour
County. She resided at Bloomsburg
R. D. 5 for the past 40 years and was
a life member of the Order of Eastern Star, Chapter 228, Berwick.
He
Hospital.
wick, died December 13 in Berwick
Hospital.
She was born in Berwick
and lived in that community her entire life.
She formerly taught in the
West Berwick school system.
She was an active member of Bower Memorial United Methodist Church
and of the Chancel Choir of the
church for many years. She was also
a member of a circle of the church;
WSCS and the 20th Century Club;
Cup Chapter of Delphians
Daughters of the American Revolution; Berwick Garden Club; Eastern
Star, where she was a past matron,
and past high priestess of the Order
of White Shrine of Jerusalem.
Council
Active in community service,
was a
board
stine’s
’17
resident of 262 Madison Street, Wilkes-Barre, died Thursday, November
7.
Born in Wilkes-Barre, she was educated in the city schools and was a
graduate of Bloomsburg State College.
Miss Search received a master’s degree in education from the University
of Toledo.
Miss Search taught school in the
for
Toledo
elementary schools in
more than 40 years, retiring six years
ago and returning to Wilkes-Barre.
She was a member of the Memorial
Presbyterian Church, and its women’s
Association.
member
iliary,
tion
She also was an active
Army Aux-
of the Salvation
having participated in Salva-
Army community
projects.
Helen Knouse Long, ’18
Mrs. Helen K. Long, 350 Center
Street, Bloomsburg died November
Her hus3 at Bloomsburg Hospital.
band, Sheldon C. Long, died September 3, 1967.
She was born in Benton and was a
graduate of Benton High School and
Bloomsburg Normal School.
She was
teacher,
having
a retired school
taught for many years, some of whicli
were spent in New Jersey.
she
member and
chairman of the office of volunteers of the
Berwick Red Cross and won the award
as the Berwick Woman of the Year
foi 1963; Berwick Historical Society,
and secretary of the Meadowbrook
Sunday School Association of Fleckenlife
Margaret E. Search,
Miss Margaret E. Search, a retired
Toledo, Ohio, school teacher and a
Grove.
Falla Linville Shuman, ’19
Mrs. Falla L. Shuman, Catawissa,
died in Geisinger Medical Center on
December 29, of complications. She
had been in ill health for the past
five months and hospitalized on several occasions.
She
was born August
9,
1899
in
Philadelphia and had been tax collec-
Carl G. Wanich, ’12
G. Wanich, seventy-four, of
Lightstreet, retired teacher and widely known area resident, died in the
Bloomsburg Hospital October 27. He
began a successful teaching career
in New Jersey, then continued in the
Center Junior High School, where he
Carl
built
many programs,
including ath-
tor for Catawissa Borough for the
past seven years.
A charter member of the Catawissa
Chamber of Commerce, she was a
member of St.
John’s
Lutheran
Church; Lutheran Church Women;
Delta Society; Order of Eastern Star,
Catawese Chapter; Welfare Board;
Bloomsburg Hospital Auxiliary and
Page three
Quakertown.
Catawissa Hose Company Auxiliary.
Church
Deborah Williams Griffith, ’25
Mrs. Walter R. Griffith, sixty-two,
Crestwood R. D. 2, Bloomsburg, was
found dead November 25 at her residence when her husband returned
home from work. She had been in ill
health for the past year and one half.
A
She was born in Taylor, Pa.
State
graduate of the Bloomsburg
College, she received her Master’s
Degree at Columbia University. For
a number of years she taught at the
Ben Franklin Training School at the
Lois Laubach Webster, ’38
Mrs. Lois L. Webster, 54, a school
teacher at Lewisburg Area Junior
High School, died October 26. She
was born March 21, 1916 at Terre
She resided with her
Haute, Ind.
family for a time at Pittsburgh before
moving to Berwick as a young girl.
Mrs. Webster was graduated with
School.
honors from Berwick High
She received a Bachelor of Education
degree frfom Bloomsburg State Coldegree from
lege and a Master’s
Bucknell University.
College.
of Christ,
faculty consists of 144 w'ho have been
at the college for a period of one to
five years, sixty-five from six to ten
years, twenty-one from eleven to fifteen years, six from sixteen to twenty years, and eight who have been
at the college twenty-one years or
longer.
TWO
BUILDINGS TO
BE DEDICATED
An important feature of Alumi Day.
Saturday, April 26, will be the dedication of tw'o new buildings on the
well Hall,
Mrs. Maude F. Fahringer, ’26
Mrs. Maude Fenstermacher Fahringer, eighty, Pine Street, Catawis-
January 3 at the Bloomsburg
Hospital. She was born in Catawissa
and taught school three years in Montour County, five years in Rupert, one
year in Mifflinville and thirty-two
sa, died
years in Catawissa.
She was a devout member of St.
John’s Lutheran Church, Catawissa,
a member of the Lutheran Church
Women and had taught a Sunday
School Class. She was a member of
the Retired
Teacher’s Association,
Auxiliary of the fire company and
Auxiliary of the Bloomsburg Hospital.
Grace Neyhard Stranger,
’28
Mrs. Grace Neyhard Stranger, sixty-one, died December 10 at her home
in Clayton, N. J., after a long illness.
Seh was born September 16, 1907,
in Bloomsburg. She began her teaching in Rush Township. Two years later
she went to Clayton, N. J., and had
taught in the public schools of Clayton since that time.
She was a member of the Methodist
Church and active in the work of the
church.
Dorothy Colley Brewington, ’29
Mrs. Dorothy C. Brewington, sixty,
Third Street, Benton, died unexpectedly at her home Thursday, November 7. She had been in ill health since
sustaining a heart attack on July 29.
She was born in Sugarloaf Township and was the widow of Howard
S.
Brewington.
former
Columbia
County sheriff and Benton cafe owner.
She had spent most of her life in
She taught school for eigh-
Benton.
teen years, the last ten years in the
fifth
grade
in
Benton
elementary
school.
She was a member of Benton Christian Church,
the
Columbia-Montour
Teachers Association, the
Pennsylvania State Education Association and
the National Educational Association.
Howard O. Waite, ’36
Howard O. Waite, Quakertown, Pa.,
died Tuesday, May 7, 1968. He was
born
in Hazleton and had taught at
Quakertown High School for 11 years
before joining the Atlas
Overhead
Door Co., Quakertown. The deceased
was a member
Page four
of the
First United
INSTRUCTORS HAVE WIDE
RANGE IN PREPARATION
A substantial increase in the salary
scale of faculty members of Bloomsburg State College is revealed in a
report covering the 1963-64 and the
1968-69 college years.
During the five year period, the
low' salary was increased frfom $5,680 to $6,910, an increase of $1,230.
At the same time, the high salary
scale increased from $9,720 to $15,820 for an increase of $6,100.
In the same period it is also interesting to observe the high degrees of
faculty members earned in states and
In the 1963-64 college year,
nations.
with 128 faculty members, the degrees
were earned in a total of 17 states
During
and the country of Hungary.
the present college year, of the 244
faculty members the highest degrees
w’ere earned in thirty-four states and
the countries of England, Spain and
Cuba.
In both the college years of the
the
led
comparison, Pennsylvania
other states with 90 degrees earned
in that state in the 1963-64 period and
117 represented in the 1968-69 group.
placed
In both periods, New York
second, 14 in 1963-1964 and 24 in the
present period.
The average age of faculty members
in the comparison is very close. In
ranged
the 1963-64 period, the ages
from 23 to 66 years old with an average of 41.27 years, while the 1968-69
year has a range of ages from 24 to
65 years with an average age of 41.18
years.
During the earlier period the average mean salary for nine months, excluding the administrative field, was
and for the present period, excluding the administrative fees, the
average mean salary is $11,190. Including adminisrative fees, the comparison is $7,866 against $11,303.
$7,777
Today’s faculty at BSC is made
up of forty-tw'o full professors, 105
associate professors, seventy-three assistant professors, and twenty-three
instructors.
In an analysis of their
educational backgrounds, this group
is made up of seventy-one members
who have received their Doctor’s degree, 167 who have
earned
their
Master’s degree, and six who have
been awarded a Bachelor’s degree.
In an additional
breakdown of
years of service at BSC, the present
One building is Elnamed after a distinguish-
BSC campus.
ed Bloomsburg family, closely connected with the history of the College
This is
through three generations.
the
across
the men’s dormitory,
street from Long Porch.
The other is the Hartline Science
Hartline
the
Hartline was for
many years the head of the Science
Mrs. Hartline was a
Department.
member of the faculty, and their son,
Dr. H. Keffer Hartline, ’20. was a
recent recipient of the Nobel Prize
in Medicine.
The principal speaker at the dedication ceremonies will be Dr. Edward
Center,
family.
named
after
Mr. D.
S.
Ford MacNichol, Jr.
Dr. MacNichol was appointed Director of the National Institute of NeurBlindness
and
Diseases
olgical
(NINDB) and Acting Director of the
newly-formed National Eye Institute
A few weeks
in September, 1968.
later, Congress changed the Institute’s
name to the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Stroke.
He received the AB degree in physics ffrom Princeton University in
He was a graduate student at
1941.
the Eldredge Reeves Johnson Foundation of the University of Pennsylvania from 1947 to 1948; and he received the Ph.D. Degree in biophyin
sics from Princeton University
sity in 1952 under the supervision
of Dr. H. K. Hartline, who received
the Nobel prize in Physiology and
Medicine in
From
1967.
1941 through 1946, Dr.
Nichol was a staff
member
of
Macthe
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Radiation Laboratory. After receiving his Doctorate, Dr. Mac NichHopkins
ol remained at the Johns
University, where he became a professor of biophysics.
Known internationally for his research on the physiology of the eye,
Dr. MacNichol has published scientific papers on the electi-ophysiology of
eyes
invertebi-ate
Veitebrate and
and on the measurement of pigment
in single vertebrate photoreceptors.
Further details of the dedication
cex-emonies will be released later.
NEW MEMBERS OF FACULTY
Mrs. Jacqueline B. Rube, Assistant
Professor of French, B.A., M.A., University of Wisconsin.
Nancy E. Gill, Instructor in English,
B.A., M.A., Washington State
University.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
AFTER 40 YEARS IN
PENNSYLVANIA STATE
COLLEGES
(Continued from front cover)
were either frozen, or in some cases
discounted at the rate of 10'.( or more
from the adopted schedules, and
summer sessions were expected to be
self-supporting, insofar as the student
fees were to cover the faculty salarIn addition, numerous attempts
ies.
were made by the private colleges
to restrict the area of teacher training of the State Teachers Colleges.
For instance, one proposal was made
Colleges
Teachers
that the State
would train only elementary teachers and secondary teachers in such
special fields as Business, Music, and
Art, whereas the private universities
would train secondary teachers of
academic subjects, and the graduate
work would be allocated to three universities of Pennsylvania. This effort
was defeated by the astute administrative abililty of Dr. Rule, and should
not go unnoticed.
Dr. Lester K. Ade came upon the
scene from the Presidency of the New
Haven
State
Teachers College,
and
with his experience as Dean of West
Chester State Teachers College, and
his connection with the Muncy Normal School, a period of building expansion began.
The first General
State Authority Program resulted in
building and expansion in the State
Teachers Colleges which was unparalleled until that time. Attention was
given to removing of fire, safety, and
health hazards in the older buildings;
curriculums were revised; and a degree of uniformity
was developed
among the fourteen institutions. Numerous publications regarding public
schools, as well as the curriculums oi
were distributed, and
unusual pericd of growth was
State Colleges,
this
followed by the liquidation of the first
General State
Authority
Program
with the paying off of the outstanding
bonds during the administration of
Governor Edward Martin.
With the beginning of the adminis-
Governor Arthur H. Jamwho appointed Dr. Francis B.
Haas as State Superintendent, we had
tration of
es,
a four-term (more than sixteen years'
administration of one well versed in
state government.
Dr. Haas
had
been a member of the Department,
of Public Instruction in the Teacher
Bureau, had a first-hand knowledge
of teacher certification and finance,
and had served twelve years as President
of
Bloomsburg State College.
He brought
to the Office of the State
Superintendent a range of experience
and abililty which has not been paralleled
up
to this time.
While there was a very evident policy on the part of the governors of
Pennsylvania during this period to
limit the functions of State Teachers
Colleges to that of the education of
MARCH,
1969
teachers, there was also a seeming
reluctance to grant them the opportunity to offer the curriculums leading
to the Master’s degree. The influence
of the private colleges through representatives on the State Council of
Education was very evident during
But there was some inthis period.
crease in faculty salaries, and in an
effort to reduce the amount of political influence on appointments, a prooverlapping
for
vision was made
terms for members of the Board of
remembered
It must be
Trustees.
that World War II intervened during
this period, and it was proposed that
some of the colleges be closed, or
converted to other uses.
This was a period of consolidation
of the gains previously made, rather
than launching into new areas. During this period, the faculties of the
State Teachers Colleges were organized as an association which sponsored the first legislation governing salqualifications,
rank,
aries, faculty
promotions, and, in subsequent years,
leaves of absence and sick leave.
The period of greatest development
in recent years was launched during
the administration of Dr. Charles H.
Boehm, who came to the State Supof
erintendency from the position
County
Bucks
of
Superintendent
Schools. In the short period of less
than two terms, Dr. Boehm was responsible for the changes in the name
State
of State Teachers Colleges to
Colleges, the broadening of the curri-
culum
to
cover Bachelor degrees in
the fields of Arts
and Sciences, the
launching of graduate programs leading to the degree of Master of Education, and the present or second General State Authority Building Prog-
ram.
All of this indicated that the
of Pennsylvania was
interested in expanding the fourteen
state-owned institutions to serve 100,000 or more students.
With the appointment of Dr. David
Kurtzman as State Superintendent,
Commonwealth
greater emphasis is being given to
planning and budgeting. To some extent, this is made necessary by the
change of the fiscal year of the Commonwealth from a biennial to an annual basis. Faculty salaries have
been augmented on three occasions
by two increments by action of the
Executive Board of the Commonwealth.
Increases in student fees
along with increases in appropriations
are other evidences of the concern of
the present administration with fiscal
and budgetary affairs. An association of alumni has been set up on a
state- wide basis, and the overall organization of trustees, faculty, alumni,
presidents, and students is now known
as the Association of State College Organizations. Much is expected of this
group.
advanced degrees, can be viewed in
terms of seven-year cycles:
1913—This is the date when the
purchase of the several Normal
Schools began.
—
1920 Most of the present institutions
had become the property of the State
admissions
and, for the first time,
were uniform. Curriculums were required to be similar, if not uniform,
and for seven years this continued
until in
1927
—the
Schools
name
the
of
to State
was changed
Normal
Teach-
Four-year curriculums
ers Colleges.
leading to the degree of Bachelor of
Science in Education were inaugurated; however, the two-year and later
the three-year curriculums were continued until
1934 In this year the two-year and
three-year certificate holders walked
in the commencement procession for
the last time with the four-year gradThis
uates who received degrees.
pericd of transition from a State Teachers College (in name) to a State
Teachers College (in fact) continued
—
until
.
1941—when America went to war,
and many of the colleges were rapidly
denuded of their male population. Replacing students who were in the Armed Services were many men in uniform. At Bloomsburg, for example,
a thousand people learned to fly, and
deck officers and other personnel also
were trained. After World War H, a
new post-war period was in full swing
by
—
1948 the returning G. I.’s came to
the State Teachers Colleges in large
numbers since federal legislation provided educational advantages at low
At this time, freshmen
tuition rates.
admitted to Pennsylvania State College (now University) attended classes
for one year at a State Teachers College and then went on to the mother
This was a
institution.
pericd of experimentation
tion. Then
seven-year
and transi-
—
1955 marked a milestone in the attitude of the Commonwealth of Penn-
Teachers
sylvania toward its State
Colleges. Construction since 1925 had
old
consisted mainly of renovating
buildings and adding a few other neccampus
essary buildings, including
laboratory schools. In this year, the
State seemed to reach the' decision
that it must expand its own public
higher institutions, and the second
General State Authority program began. This period of expansion in plant
was followed
1962
in
—with the beginning of graduate
programs leading to the Master’s degree and the admission of students
who, at the end of four years, would
Every Seven Years
receive the Bachelor of Arts degree.
(The name of the schools had been
changed in 1960 from State Teachers
Colleges to State Colleges.)
This process of slow development
from
two-year
certificate-granting
schools to four-year degree-granting
colleges, and now the rapid development of graduate institutions granting
State
Certainly the alumni of any
College can, in the not too distant future, envision the change in name of
their Alma Mater to that of a State
1969— What can we expect
this
year?
Page
five
University.
We
in
Stages of Development
are able to make certain com-
ments and possibly hint at certain
seven-year
conclusions when these
stages of development are viewed in
relation to the following five educaand
tional factors: 1) Organization
Control, 2) Financial Support, 3) Students, 4) Faculty, and 5) Curricular
Offerings.
Organization and Control
The organization and control of the
Pennsylvania State Teachers Colleges,
for the first twenty-one years of thenexistence, changed only to the extent
that provision was made for overlapping terms for the members of the
Board of Trustees. Originally, the
Governor appointed the Trustees with
During
the approval of the Senate.
this period, in the counties in which
the colleges were located, chairmen of
the political party in power had great
influence in suggesting, urging, or, in
fact, nominating persons appointed to
Sometimes
the Boards of Trustees.
the senator of a local district also had,
and in fact still has, the veto power
in this area.
For these and other reasons, various proposals have been made to constitute
a new policy-making body for
fourteen institutions, known as the
State Board of Regents, Trustees, or
Directors, which would limit the fourteen local Boards of Trustees to a
consultative or advisory basis. At the
same time, it was recognized that
there was a need for greater autonomy at the local level. For too long
the State Colleges have been subject
to the same budgeting,
purchasing,
and other administrative procedures
developed over a period of time for
prisons, hospitals, or mental institutions. Since students provide the fees
in an increasing amount for instruction, housing, food, and medical services, the State Colleges cannot be
administered in the same way as institutions for inmates, patients, and
prisoners. Little or no progress has
been made in developing new organizational and control patterns for the
State Colleges in the last forty years.
This is a matter of prime concern, as
these fourteen institutions are serving
fifty or sixty thousand students, and
all
will
probably double in enrollment in
the next decade.
Financial Support
The increasing reliance on local fees
collected from students is the chief
characteristic of the financial basis
of operation.
Only recently has the
State appropriated more money than
the institutions have collected from
students under one guise or another.
A general guideline or polilcy needs
to be developed so as to determine the
portion of the total cost to be borne
by the students, with the remainder to
be appropriated by
the
Commonwealth. Probably, auxiliary
enterprises, including food service and resi-
dence
hall
maintenance,
should
be
self-supporting.
All future arrangements should keep
Page
six
mind the economic level of the famfrom which the students of State
ilies
Colleges come. Consideration should
also be given to the funds available
in the form of loans and scholarships
or grants-in-aid for all college studThe recent forty percent inents.
crease in student fees ($250 to $350)
at State Colleges, with a corresponding reduction in state appropriations
requested by the institutions, cannot
be continued as a device for balancing
the State’s General
Fund Budget.
Students
A
more or less uniform statement
for admission of students to the State
Normal Schools was formalized in
1920.
It was reviewed again in 1927,
and the admission policy continued to
attract greater attention; but numbers
had been limited by the capacities of
Rank in high school
the colleges.
graduating classes and college board
scores seem to indicate that the abilities and achievements of the students
admitted to the Colleges have been
slowly improving. Five or six times
as many applications are received as
the number of places available for the
entering freshman classes. Academic
and graduation requirements have
been gradually improved; and the student-teaching experience in the senior
year has moved from the campus to
cooperating public schools located, in
many cases, beyond the commuting
area of the college.
With the great pressure for admitting increasing numbers of students
to public institutions of higher education, the balance between the number
of students and the number of available faculty can only be maintained
on the basis of a reasonable studentfaculty ratio. This means restricting
the enrollment of students, or overloading the faculty either by increasing class sizes or by increasing the
number of classes. These choices must
be considered along with a program
for new buildings, which is usually
delayed beyond the planned completion dates.
Sometimes plans
for a building procoordinated with the
concurrent completion of classrooms,
dining halls, and dormitories. There
have been attempts to accomodate an
ever-increasing number of students in
or near the towns in which the colleges
are located, through the building of
private dormitories, and, in
a few
cases, private dining halls.
Faculty
With the growth in enrollment, the
number of faculty has increased more
rapidly than the number of students.
This increase has also been marked
by an improvement in the degree-holding status of the faculty. In other
words, there are more who hold the
doctor’s degree, and fewer holding just
bachelor’s degrees. The present law
provides standards for academic rank.
Accrediting agencies evaluate the institutions in terms of the degrees held
by faculty members and their graduate preparation along with teaching
and/or related experience, which is
required for employment and promo-
gram are
not
tion.
In the 1967-68 college year, there
were 659 Professors,
1,149 Associate
Professors, 995 Assistant Professors,
and 491 Instructors in the Pennsylvania State College system. The last
the
Faculty
basic amendment of
State College Salary Act was approved July 30, 1963, and since that time
there have been upward revisions of
the salary schedule by the Executive
Board of the Commonwealth. Although
in each session of the legislature the
Pennsylvania
State
Association of
College and University Faculties, has
caused a bill to be introduced to in-
crease salaries, Pennsylvania ranks
high only in salaries paid to Instructors. Needed improvements in salaries are overdue.
Another problem is that when
increases have been granted in the
past they have become effective so
late in the academic year that while
providing more compensation for faculty members employed the previous
year, they have not been available to
attract new faculty members at the
time when the employment process is
in full swing.
With budgets in the process of being
reviewed, and in many cases reduced
in amount, either in terms of dollars
available or number of new employees
allowed, adminisrators are left with a
great number of vacancies to fill even
after the college year is opened. This
means that there is a difficult choice
between filling positions with applicants who are available late in the
spring or summer for the academic
year beginning in September, or leaving the positions vacant until likely
This
candidates can be considered.
results not only in vacancies, but also
in the employment of many temporary
faculty members who are deficient in
the amount of teaching or related exSomeperience required by
law.
times the temporary appointments
amount to ten percent or more of the
Delay in making new apfaculty.
pointments means choosing between
or
reducing
expected
enrollment,
creating a faculty overload by accepting a pre-determined number of students, then not being able to employ
the authorized number of faculty.
Curricular Offerings
The transition from the two-year
enrollment curriculum to the four-year
baccalaureate degree program was
made by authorizing a new grade of
teaching certificates which permitted
the student to teach in the elementary
schools at the end of two years of preparation, but required the earning of
a certain number of semester hours
sessions,
of credit during summer
through extension courses, or in some
other part-time manner.
Later the
level of preparation for those beginning to teach in
the
elementary
schools was raised to three years. The
general effect was to expect a certificate holder eventually to
earn a
Bachelor’s degree and become eligible
for the issuance of a college provisional certificate.
The same procedure was followed
when the four-year level of prepara-
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
tion
leading
to
a Bachelor’s degree
and the college provisional certificate
were made the requirements for all
teachers on both the elementary and
Within a certain
scondary levels.
number
of years following his gradua-
tion, an alumnus of a State College,
in addition to his teaching, must earn
twenty-four semester hours of credit
to qualify for a permanent teaching
certificate.
Master of Education
Since the
degree began to be offered by the
State Colleges, a great preponderance
of public school teachers have chosen
to earn the additional semester hours
along with a thesis, or other requirements, to receive a Master’s degree.
The net result is that all the State
Colleges offer a Bachelor of Science in
Education degree in the elementary
and most of the secondary subject
matter fields; and almost all offer
the Master of Education degree in
certain specified areas. Some are now
offering the Master of Arts degree in
subject matter fields.
This is a far cry from the threeyear Normal School that would accept
students from eighth grade, and graduate them in three years with a normal school diploma, or high school
graduates who would complete the requirements in two years. All of the
colleges are now accredited by the
Middle States Association of Colleges
and Secondary Schools, the National
Council for Accreditation of Teacher
and the Pennsylvania
Education,
State Board of Education.
Summary
Broad generalizations are difficult
since there are many exceptions. However, one cannot avoid having impressions spanning four decades; the
State Normal School, the State Teachers College, the State Colleges, and
instituthe emerging multi-purpose
tions as universities.
While there has been a decided improvement among students, faculty,
and curricular offerings, there has
been a lag in the State’s financial support; although support has improved
in recent years, this area needs further attention. Unless larger amounts
of money are available in the form
of
increased State appropriations,
more students cannot be accomodated. If these increased appropriations
are to be made effective for educational purposes, the influence of the
governing bodies, be they known as
Trustees,
Regents, Visitors, Overseers, or Directors, must be limited to
the development of policy.
The organization and control of
Pennsylvania State Colleges has not
changed in any perceptible degree in
the last half-century; though the matter of organization and control has received some attention in the last decade, attempts at change have been
more or less unsuccessful.
Overlapping terms for members of the
local Board of Trustees are only partially successful, since the filling of
vacancies has sometimes been delayed to the point that the majority of
MARCH,
1969
the Trustees can be appointed by an
The continued
Incoming governor.
influence of the county chairman of
the party in power still causes the political affiliation of the Trustees to be
one of the determining factors in their
appointment.
Growth
in
in
numbers
presents
also
<
lltanJz tyau
The following are the names, not
previously reported, of those who have
contributed to the Loyalty Fund up to
preserving or improving
a qualilty of instruction in present and
proposed curricular offerings. Graduate programs leading to the Master
of Arts, Master of Education degrees,
along with transfers of two-year graduates from the Community Colleges
may result in greater enrollments in
the junior and senior years.
The Pennsylvania State Colleges
have made remarkable progress in
the last four decades, and they now
outstanding
the
represent one of
groups of institutions of higher educaUnited States.
tion in the eastei'n
December
They have better students, better facilities, and better offerings than ever
F.
problems
before.
Forty years ago even the most opprophet hardly would have
timistic
envisioned the threshold of the future
faced by Pennsylvania State Colleges
in the nineteen seventies.
The Commonwealth is fortunate in
having fourteen such institutions in
which its youth may be educated.
CROSS COUNTRY
BSC—30
BSC—40
BSC— 38
BSC—41
BSC—40
Kutztown
Lock Haven
Susquehanna
BSC—Cheyney
BSC— 15
BSC— 19
26
15
17
Millersville 18
Kutztown 15
(forfeited by Cheyney)
Kings 45
Luzerne Co. Community
College 40
FOOTBALL
BSC— 13
BSC— 24
BSC— 13
BSC—
BSC— 13
BSC— 34
BSC— 24
BSC— 14
Lock Haven
27
Mansfield 6
Susquehanna
West Chester
East
13
41
Millersville 21
Cheyney 12
Kutztown 12
Stroudsburg 70
GOLF
(Quadrangular Meet)
Mansfield 6
BSC 12
BSC—6 1-2 East Stroudsburg 11 1-2
Kings 4 1-2
BSC— 13 1-2
RECEIVE
WORD DEATH
DR., MRS.
RUSSELL
Dr. H. Harrison Russell, for many
years a valued member of the Bloomsburg State College faculty, died on
September 6 at the age of eighty-six
at a nursing home at Petone, HI, following a stroke. Mrs. Russell died
in her sleep at the nursing home in
the spring of 1967, about two months
after the esteemed
couple entered
the home.
Both Dr. and Mrs. Russell took an active role in community lilfe while residents of Bloomsburg.
31,
1968.
We want
to ex-
press the thanks of your Board of
Directors for your loyal cooperation.
Ex-Faculty Margaret E. Waldron.
Non-Grad
Francis X. Antonelli
1900—
—
—
1897
1898
Mrs. Thomas York.
Charles H. Weaver, Mrs.
S.
L. Richards.
Mrs. Anna S. Rubrecht, S.
B. Landes.
1901 Mrs. A. T. Lowry, William R.
Lams.
1903—H. Walter Riland, Howard K.
Houtz.
1905
Mrs. Sue T. Beaver, Rowland
Hemingway.
1906 Mrs. H. J. Schuchart, Mrs. J.
C. Shawfield, Mrs. John Lyons, Mrs.
1909—A. Frantz.
Harry
Mrs. Helen M. Hemingway,
Ralph Howell, Mrs. H. M. Chisholm, John Dano.
1908
1911— Mrs. C. Oliver Moore, Florence G. Beddall, William Ranch.
Mrs. P. W. Mann, Mrs. G. G.
Reichley, Walter C. Welliver.
1910 Mrs. Herbert
Edwards,
G.
Mrs. Thomas Otwell, Mrs. Lee A.
1907
Mi’s.
Perry.
Mrs. Earl H. Cortright, Mrs.
Ella Buffington, Donald
F.
Ikeler,
Mrs. E.
J.
Robinson, Mrs. Chase M.
Herrick.
1912 Mrs. E. B.
Landis,
Clinton
Fisk Brill, Mrs. Walter Elison, Harold
N. Cool, Clarence E. Barrow.
1913 Frank B. Cotner, Mrs. Mary
D. Comerford, Dr. Kimber C. Kuster,
Catharine P. Boyle, Kathryn Malloy,
Jacob F. Wetzel.
1914 Osborne C. Dodson.
1915 Dr. C. L. Hosier, Mrs. George
Moore.
1916 Mrs. John G. Hopkins,
Jr.,
Mrs. Laura Brundage, Mrs. Shirley
Robbins, William A. Thomas, Mrs.
Rachel Cappello, William D. Taylor.
1917 Mrs. W. C. Carter, Mrs. Alice
Tiffany Gardner, Mrs. Lena Fischer,
Nan R. Jenkins,
Dr. J.
Loomis
Christian, Ruth Smith.
1918 Mary M. Gillespie, Mrs. Ruth
Mason Ancker,
Griffith, Mrs. W.
1921—
Mame C. Richardson, Mrs. Clyde J.
Blecker.
1919
Mi’s. J. F.
Labach, Hurley O.
Alma R. Bachman, Mrs.
Margaret S. Brock, Edna F. Maurer,
Patterson,
Olive O. Robinson, Mrs. Helen W.
Mainwaring, Margaret T. Reynolds.
1920 Mi’s. Grayce
M. Newhart,
Mrs. Chester E. Vastine, Mrs. Ralph
W. Morgan, H. Keffer Hartline, Lawrence V. Keefer, Mrs. William R.
Turner, Mrs. Clarence E. Barrow,
Mrs. Myron F. Garney.
Anna L. Swanberry, Mrs.
Mary Sue Shaler, Mrs. Ralph Moser,
Mrs. A. C. Sutcliffe, Mrs. Mary D.
Strieker, Mrs. Raymond R.
Moyer,
Mrs. Lillian N. Yerkes, Grace Grif-
Page seven
Dr.
1928 Mrs. F. P.
Pretty leaf,
1929—
Margaretta
M. Bone, Mrs. Louise B.
Stevens, Mrs. Herbert Kneller, Mrs.
Gladys H. Lyon, Mrs. Thomas HanReilly,
Mary A.
lon, Mrs. Edna
Laird, in memory of Rachel Klapps
Woody, Mrs. Charles D. Blair.
1931—Mrs. John D. Taylor, Mrs. Anthony Walaitis, Mrs. Alfred E. Cox,
Mrs. Margaret E. Watkins.
1932—John D. Taylor, Mrs. Earle
1930
Charles, Mrs. Walter J. Gordon, Loretta
A. Fleming, Anne H. Morgis,
1933—
Karleen M. Hoffman, Mary Frances
Morton.
Mrs. Cyril P. Lewis,
Mrs.
1935—Y. Castor, Mrs. Robert Stover,
Esther
John J. Wilkes, Mrs. Frank Castor.
1936—Dr. Chester C. Hess, Dorothy
M. Gorrey, Mrs. John E. Wise, Ezra
Harris.
1937— Mrs. Benedict A. Stein.
1934 Mrs. Joseph C. Conner, Gene1938—
vieve G. Morges, Mrs.
Morris A.
Greene.
Mrs. Roderick Hines, Mrs.
Helen Markley, Mrs. Helen B. Cimbala.
Mrs. Kenneth
R.
Malick,
Mrs.
Harold Wertman, Mrs. Verna
1940—
E. Jones.
Mary E. Palsgrove, James
L.
Marks, Donald A. Watts.
Anne Curry, Robert H. Hill,
Willard S. Kriegh, Mrs. Nicholas M.
Cassano, Aerio M. Fetterman.
Willard
A.
Christian,
Jr.,
Frank Brink, Benjamin J. Stodt,
Minnie M. Hahn, Mrs. Ronald R.
J.
Guttendorf, Col. Victor
Ferrari,
J.
Margaret L. Deppen.
Mrs. Fay G. Clark.
1941
Howard
J. Williams,
Eshmont, Mrs. John H.
James H.
Peter J.
Uhl,
Jr.,
Deily, Jr.
Mrs. John W. Thomas, DomR. Pino, John W. Betz,
Mrs.
Willard B. Fritz, H. Burnis Fellman,
Howard W. Brochyus, Bertha A. Hindmarch, Mrs. M. Levitt.
1943 Mrs. Lee C. Brown, Philip R.
Yeany, Robert C. Zimmerman, Mrs.
H. Burnis Fellman, Bernard M. Pufnak.
1942
inic
Page eight
Wayne Von
Stetten,
Dr.
Emory
R.
Stanley.
1951—Leonard E. Grechoski, RobMrs. Wesley D. Castner,
1952—L. Hoar, Robert E. Montague,
Donald
Henry C. Talarsky, Mrs. Josephine
ert Balent,
Chevalier.
Mrs. Beverly C. German, Ed-
ward
Harry Dickstein.
1939
Mrs. Lois W. Farr, Mrs.
1947—
Jeryl
F. Moyer.
John W. Thomas, Joseph J.
Barchock, Vincent F. Washville, Mrs.
Joseph R. Kula.
1948 Paul N. Baker, Jr., Mr. and
Mrs. Frank W. Dudzinski, John F.
Magill, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Harry E.
Reitz, Jr., Mrs. John R.
Schieber,
1949—
Mrs. Vincent F. Washville, Mrs. Sol
Bones, Mrs. John S. Keenan.
Ruth I. Bath, Richard E.
Grimes, John M. Purcell, Mr. and
Mrs. Wilmer F. Nester, Dr. Eugene
Nuss, Mrs. Pauline L. Schueler,
M.1950—
John H. Reichard, Francis J. Radice,
1944
Mrs. Marie K. Harris, Mrs.
E. C. Giere, Edna S. Harter, Mrs.
Martha Y.
Sweppenheiser,
A. P.
Jones, M. Jane Fuller.
1924— Mrs. LaRue Drake, Ann J.
1923
Jarrett, Mrs. Lillian D. Kline.
Mrs. Leroy Bugbee, Mrs.
Herbert Laise, Mrs. Emily L. Roberts, Mrs. Ruth J. Kissinger, Mrs.
E.
Adelene
Ruth Jenkins Harris,
Swineford, Mrs. Laura H. Eberhard,
Max E. Long, Olga A. Nelson, Mrs.
Charles F. Johnson, Jr., Mrs. R. W.
McLaughliln, Mrs. George Reger,
Mrs. Mary L. O’Connell, Mrs. James
Mrs.
Poust,
P. Brussberg, Pearl
1927—H. Greenly.
Rhoda
1925 Mrs. Nelson Y. Lewis, Mrs.
Margaret Price Miller.
1926 Mrs. Robert Dwyer.
Mrs. Willard L. Bowman,
Mrs. Isadore Spitz, Catherine M.
Dean, Mrs. Cyril J. Sweeney, Mrs.
W.
1962—
—
1922—
fiths.
T. Wassel.
Viola
M. Blue,
C.
W. Trout-
Babcock, Andre
Vanyo, Mrs. Henry McLaughlin.
1953 Mrs. Alfred S. Massilio, Clyde
C. Adams, Dr. David N. Newberry,
Edwin L. Pauzer, Mrs. C. W. Trout1955—
Dr. William H. Stontenburgh,
man,
Richard
C.
Shirley M. Carmody,
Knause.
1954 Mrs. Nancy Phillips, William
E. Nunn, Jerome Kopec, Mrs. Ann
G. Anerweck, Feme Soberick Kro-
man,
James
R.
the.
Thomas E. Persing, Mrs.
John Shirey, Joseph J. Shemanski,
Mrs. Charles Brehm, Jr., Mrs. Joseph
H. Heard, Mrs. Johanna Roskoski.
1956 David M. Cole, Mrs. Thomas
1958—
E. Persing, Mr. and Mrs. John Churney, Eleanor Hess Austin, Mrs. Vincent Dalta, Lake L. Hartman, John
E. Shaffer, Jr.
1957 Donna R. Wilcox, Mrs. MariBoychuck,
Daniel
lyn J. Rozelle,
William E. Dupkanich, Mrs. William
P.
Mrs.
Theodore
D. McFeeley,
Smith, George J. Back, Jr.
Mrs. Margaret Ann Wightman,
Alfred F. Miller, Jr., C. J. Spentzas,
Rev. Donald S. Nice, George T. Herman, Albert L. Heller, Mrs. Joseph
N. Correo, Mrs. Helen Kerstetter.
1959—Kenneth A. Swatt, Ronald P.
Davis, John Fenner, Mrs. Rose Ann
Radzinski, Mrs. A. B. Fishel, Mrs.
Fred D. Delia, Mx's. Charles C. James,
Mrs. Margaret Price, David L. Barnhart, Joseph J. Kessler, Otto H. Donar, Ronald P. Davis,
Mrs. James
Gustave, Mrs. James C. McGlade, Jr.
1960— Fred Ballentine, Jr., Mrs. Eugene Hankee, Lt. Col. Paul H. Kellog,
Elizabeth B. Puckey, Lawrence M.
Troutman, Dale A. Krothe, James J.
Peck, Mrs. Ruth L. Kessler, John Dinich, Victor A. Miller, Gary F. Anderson, John E.
Benfer,
Mrs. John
Lindner, Jr., John R. McCarthy.
1961 Mrs. Richard W. Thomas,
Albert C. Cecco, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
D. Edwards, Albert W. Dazley, Ray
L. George, Mrs. Douglas Yohe, Sr.,
Mrs. Douglas B. Knorr, Mrs. Rudy
Harrer, Mrs. Martin R. Knorr.
—
Mrs. Bruce Kindt, Jr., Mrs.
Patrisian, Mrs. Jane Anne
Foltz, Glenn H. Gruber, Gary R.
Kahler, Mrs. Anthony Cicero, Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph A. Enney, Mrs. Paul
C. Boyer, John T. Kovich, Paul C.
Boyer, Thomas J. McHugh, Clyde
G. Baker, Thomas J. McHugh.
1963 Sterling R. Smith, Mrs. Marjorie B. Krapp, Mrs. Kenneth DeFancis, Mrs. Christine E. Haehnel,
Mrs. James L. Hart, Donald B. Hawthorne, Jr., Mrs. Richard C. Scarese,
Mrs. Donald A. Murray, Gerald E.
Malinowski.
1964 Mrs. Betsy R. Graybill, Mrs.
Dolores F. Mays, Mrs. Karen N.
Rosenberger, Edward A. Wallish, E.
Edward Sill, Karen L. Haywood, Mrs.
Robert J. Couture, John J. Rankin,
C.
Jr., John R. Schneider, Sandra
Thornton, George A. Weigand, Raymond G. Bradish, Mrs. Ronnee J.
Moyer, Joan M. Dahlhausan, Mrs.
John E. DeFinnis, Mrs. George F.
Miller, Ralph V. Carlone, Walter E.
Gatchell, Ann M. Hocker, Donald T.
Watkins, Richard C. Scorese, Kenneth
R. Miller, Helen M. Sobota, Robert
H. Hensley, Dorothy P. Eisenhart.
1965 James M. Sahaida, Robert M.
Farina, Randolph S. Kurzinsky, Mrs.
Dona E. Maier, Jerome J. Lanuiti,
John R. Klees, Jr., Glenn R. MorriReidinger, Joseph
son, Edward A.
Stevens, Allyn E. Hostetter, Mrs. Judith Borowski, Peggy J. Walter, Kathy
J. Woodring, Thomas J. Kaczmarek,
Robert E. Barfield, Mrs. Charles M.
Robert
Plummer, George F. Miller, Wayne
L. George, Mrs. Francis A. Pineino,
Betty J. Girven, Charles A. Moleski.
1966 Lola M. Hunsinger,
Audrey
M. McClure, John S. Mulka, Thomas
H. Diehl,
Rosemary A. Fogarty,
Darryl W. Lanning, John W. Kerlish,
Barbara L. Robison, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry L. Spering, Peggy J. Walter,
Kathy J. Woodring, Larry L. Edwards, George J. Machinchick, Mrs.
William H. Scheirer, Mrs. John F.
Makoravitz, David C. Beishline, Mrs.
Frank J. Mika, Barbara L. Robinson, Joseph P. Fizzari, Mary
E.
Croughn, Judith E. Mann, Susan C.
Hammerquist, Rita C. Bradish, Mrs.
Michael J. Farrell, William H. Hoffman, James H. Misirian, Jr.
1967 Ronald R. Jackson, Linda B.
Johns, Suzanne R. Reiff, Mrs. Mary
Gifford, Sharon A. Mac Quiston, LeRoy F. Ritmiller, Jr., Cheryl Berninger, Robert F. Hally, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank G. Kline, Philip D. Landei's,
Michael V. Mellinger, Mrs. Joyce A.
Mordan, Mr. and Mrs.
Mai'k
R.
Moyer, Jr., William L. Solava, Diane
M. Butera, John B. Caldwell III,
P'rank V. Gilotti, Sara Ruth Hoffecker,
Mi's. P. Frank Ricci, Mrs. Malina E.
Savage, Mrs. Richard Wilcox, Mrs.
Thomas J. Kaczmarek, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward B. Kern, Sylvia M. Plotts,
Mrs. Thomas Joxdan, Stephen
G.
Korol, Mrs. B. Edward
Marquardt,
Pati'icia
E.
Szymanck, Joan E.
Mitchell, Samuel J. Haixd, Judith A.
Heffelflnger, Charles E. Wagner, Mx s.
(Continued on page sixteen)
-
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR
F.
II.
Fenstemaker T2
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Grace Foote Conner,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Terms expire
PRESIDENT
Howard
F. Fenstemaker
242 Central Road
’12
18
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Term
expires 1970
J.
Furgele
Term
1971
Dr. William L. Bitner
33 Lincoln Avenue
Glen FaUs,
New York
Elizabeth H. Hubler
SECRETARY
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie
509 East Front Street
Berwick, Pennsylvania 18603
205
’35
III
37 N.
Kimber C. Kuster T3
West Eleventh Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Dr.
140
Deily, Jr. ’41
Bausman Drive
John Thomas ’47
68 Fourth Street
Hamburg, Pennsylvania 19526
Earl A. Gehrig ’37
Robin Lane, Sherwood Village
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Clayton H. Hinkel
Volume LXX, Number
Riland,
1891
A
recent letter from Mrs. Norwood
Fleck, R. D. 4, Danville, states that
while visiting the Johnstown Lutheran
Home she met Mrs. Frona Schrader
Bennett ’91, who is 98 years of age.
As far as we know, Mrs. Bennett is
Blooms-
burg.
1900
Minnie E. Ent (Mrs. Ross Marley)
lives at the Bond Hotel, 357 Second
Street, St. Petersburg, Fla.
33731
11
dale, N. Y.
1
March, 1969
Warwick Avenue, Scars10583
Etta Schatzel (Mrs.
lacher) lives at R. D. 2,
therly, Pa.
—
W. H. HorBox 13, Wea-
18255.
1905
Representative: Vera Hemingway Housenick, 503 Market Street,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Mrs. Blanche Miller Grimes is living at the U. S. Naval Home, 24th
and Grey’s Ferry Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. 19146
Class
1902
1906
Jenunie Rosenstock (Mrs. D. C.
Francisco) is living at A-7,
Belle
Grove Trailer
Park,
Brandenton,
D.
Champlin,
627
West
Fairmount Avenue, State College, Pa.,
16801, recently spent 33 days in Florida.
Dr. Champlin, former member
ol the faculty at
the Pennsylvania
State University, is busy with speak-
Florida. 33505
1903
Class
MARCH,
Representative:
1969
H.
’40
Leonard Street
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
224
expires 1970
the oldest living graduate of
’34
West Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
’29
110
Term
’48
102
Lancaster, Pennsylvania 17603
TREASURER
1969
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
12801
McKnight Street
James H.
Terms expire
Millard Ludwig
Center and Third Streets
Millville, Pennsylvania 17846
Gordon, Pennsylvania 17936
expires 1970
expires 1970
Glenn A. Oman ’32
1704 Clay Avenue
Scranton, Pennsylvania 18509
Mrs. Verna Jones '36
West Avenue, Apartment C-4
Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087
’52
Colonial Farm Box 88
R. D. 1, Glen Mills. Pa. 19342
Term expires 1970
Term
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Col. El wood M. Wagner ’43
643 Wiltshire Road
State College, Pa. 16801
VICE PRESIDENT
Dr. Frank
—
’34
Walter
Carroll
ing engagements, and also writes a
column for the Centre Daily Times.
The Hicksville High School Alumni
Association, Hicksville, N. Y., has established an annual scholarship for a
worthy Hicksville High School graduate.
This is to be known as the
Mabel R. Farley Scholarship. Miss
Farley was Principal of the Hicksville High School for a number
ol
years, and is held in high esteem by
the Alumni Association and by residents who knew her.
1907
Class Representative:
Edwin M.
Barton, 353 College Hill, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
Blanche Hoppe (Mrs. Herbert M.
Chisholm) lives at 44B Linden Avenue,
Page nine
She writes
Springfield, N. J. 07081.
that a group of members of the class
of 1907 started a round robin, which
has been maintained for sixty-one
years.
The original group included
sixteen members; the following are
still
living:
Mrs.
Edna
Chisholm,
Brundage Pentecost, Alma Noble
Hensler,
O’Brien
Leiby, Margaret
Ella A. Best, Bessie Taylor Cogswell,
Gertrude Vance Barber and Caroline
Muth Rose.
1908
Florence G. Beddall is living at
248 W. White Street, Summit Hall,
Pa.
1909
Representative:
Class
Bloom
Diehl, 627
17821
W.
Fred
Street, Danville, Pa.
1910
Class
Representative:
Robert
E.
Metz, 23 Manhattan .Street, .Ashley,
Pa. 18706
Patterson, 315 West Street,
burg, Pa. 17815
Pa. 17821
We are very sorry to learn that A.
K. Naugle, always an active member of the Alumni Association, has
recently suffered a stroke. Mr. and
Mrs. Naugle live at 119 Dalton Street,
Roselle Park, N. J. 07204
1912
Howard F.
Representative:
Central
Road,
Fenstemaker, 242
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Ruth Kendall (Mrs. Edgar B. Landis) lives at the Elm Tree Apartments, Garmington, Connecticut.
06032.
1914
Representative: J. Howard
Deily, 518 West Third Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Hazel Wayne (Mrs. Grover Shoemaker) lives at 150 Scott Avenue,
Bloomsburg, Pa.
is
No.
living at
3,
Class
Creasy,
Leroy W.
Berwick Road,
Representative:
3117
Old
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Harry
Bloomsburg,
Class Representative: Mrs.
Cole, 100 Leonard Street,
Pa. 17815
Mary (Dresse) Strieker, McClure,
Pa., is teaching in the Eastern York
ninth
This is her
School District.
year in this position. She has previously taught in Altoona, Dauphin,
Beaver Springs,
and
Harrisburg,
Beaver Township, McClure, Pa.
and Margaret Swartz
1923
mond
Mrs. RayFriar Road,
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Representative:
Class
P.
Sherwood
Kashner,
Village,
Street, Millville, Pa. 17846
is
now
San
living at 2404 Loring
Diego, Cal. 92109
1931
Representative:
1924
Class Representative: Edward F.
Ridge Avenue,
Schuyler, 236 West
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Earl J. Brotherston, former member of the Class of 1924, will be remembered as an outstanding athlete.
He later transferred to Western MichMich.,
igan University, Kalamazoo,
A
and received his degree in 1927.
Alumni Magrecent issue of the
azine has the following:
Earl J. Brotherston ’27 this spring
became the first individual person
ever to be honored by the Boyne
City, Mich. Rotary Club since the
organization began annual testimonBrotherston, a teacher
ial dinners.
at Boyne City for 41 years, served 25
football
and basketball
years as
athletic director.
Mary Eisenhower (Mrs. Leroy
Bugbee), 557 Charles Avenue, KingsPa., 18704, is Dean of Girls at
Wyoming Seminary, Kingston, Pa.
Bloomsburg
for
forty
moved to Milton in January.
Mr. Cromis was with the Metropolitan
Life Insurance Company for thirtyseven years. The Cromises marked
years,
fiftieth
wedding
anniversary
January 16. They have three children: Mrs. Bruce (Dortohy) Losch,
Washingtonville;
Mrs.
Robert W.
(Helen) Warrington, Harrisburg and
Mrs. James A. (Allene) Krum, State
College. There arc six grandchildren
and two great grandchildren.
their
1918
Representative:
J.
1925
1933
Representative:
Miss Lois
Lawson,
644
East Third
Street,
Bloomsburgfi Pa. 17815
Claire
Representative:
Esther
Evans McFadden (Mrs. Joseph), 154
East Fifth Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
Class
17815
1935
Representative:
Class
154
East 4th
William I.
Blooms-
Street,
burg, Pa. 17815
1936
Kathryn
Representatives:
Vanauker (Mrs. Nicholas Moreth) 34
Class
Linden Road, Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey 07432. Co-chairmen: Ruth Wagner (Mrs. Laurence Le Grande) 126
Oak Street, Hazleton, Pa. 18201 and
Mary Jane Fink (Mrs. Frederick McCutcheon) Maple Avenue, Conyngham,
Pa. 18219
1937
Class Representatives: Mr. and Mrs.
Earl A. Gehrig 110 Robin Lane, Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Earl T. Hunter has been appointed as General Manager of OperaCompany,
Reading
tions for the
Reading Terminal, Philadelphia. He
started with the Reading Co. as a
Brakeman and was employed
in various train service positions. In 1957
he joined the executive group of the
Company as assistant superintendent,
Philadelphia Division, and later became Superintendent of the Philadelof
superintendent
phia Division,
transportation and manager of operations.
17801
1938
1926
Marvin M.
Wapwallopen, Pa. 18660
Class Representative:
Bloss, R. D.
and
Street,
Class
Reed,
now
retired
J.,
Class Representative:
James B.
Davis, 333 East Marble Street, Mechanicsburg, Pa. 17055
125
17815
is
Luther W.
Bitler, 117 State
1934
Edna S.
Representative:
Class
Harter, R. D. 1, Nescopeck, Pa. 18623
Class Representative: Pearl Rader
Bickel, Masser Street, Sunbury, Pa.
Allan
L.
Cromis, Mahoning Manor, R. D. 1,
Milton, Po. 17847
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Cromis, who
Page ten
1930
Representatives:
Karleen M. Hoffman has
from teaching in Newark, N.
1921
Cleve-
1917
Class
Lebo) Nelson Stauffer, 88 John St.,
(Arline)
Kingston, Pa. 18704. Mrs.
Parish
Frantz) Walter Covert,
20
Street, Dallas, Pa. 18612
Class
ton,
1916
Laura Welch Brundage
in
Class Representatives: Mrs. (Elsie
1920
coach and
1915
Class Representative: John H. Shuman, 368 East Main Street, Bloomsburg. Pa. 17815
had lived
1929
Class Representative: Miss Catherine A. Reimard, 335 Jefferson St.,
WMU
1913
Class Representative: Dr. Kimber
Kuster, 140 West 11th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Sylvia Gross Freeman, 168 Centre
Street, New Rochelle, N. Y. 10708
Class
poems.
1922
Class Representative: Pearle Fitch
Danville,
Street,
Diehl, 627 Bloom
22431 Fairlawn Circle
land, Ohio 44126.
songs, and has published three books
of
1919
1911
Class
Blooms-
2,
Class Representative: Paul G. Martin,
710
1939
1928
Class Representative: Mrs. Ralph
Dcndler, 1132 Market Street, Berwick, Pa. 18603
Arthur
Callender
(Mrs.
Phyllis
R.
Michael), Oak Haven,
D.
3,
Shickshinny, Pa. 18655, has been honored by having her name included in
the fifth edition of the Dictionary of
She has
International Biography.
taught in Berwick and In the Northwest Area Schools, Luzerne County.
She is also a teacher of piano, organ,
theory, and voice. She Is the writer
of several hundred hymns and gospel
East Third Street, Blooms-
burg, Pa. 17815
Willard A.
Christian, Jr., 803 Logue Street, Williamsport, Pa. 17701
1940
Class
Representative:
Class Representative: Clayton II.
Hinkel, 224 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1941
Representative:
art Edwards, R. D. 4,
Pa. 17815
Class
Dr.
C.
Stu-
Bloomsburg,
Mr. and Mrs. William A. Konrad
(Irene Diehl) are now living in Caracas, Venezuela, where the former Is
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
employed by the Creole
Petroleum
Corporation. Their address is Creole
Petroleum Corporation, Apartado 889,
to
Previous
Caracas, Venezuena.
moving to Venezuela, Mrs. Konrad
was Dean of the Nancy Taylor Secretarial School.
James H. Deily, Jr., 37 North Bausman Drive, Lancaster, Pa., has
been elected senior vice president and
trust officer of the Lancaster County
Farmers National Bank, Lancaster.
Deily served as vice president and
trust officer of the Bloomsburg BankColumbia Trust Company from 1963
to 1965. He has been a banker since
1944, when he joined the staff of
Farmers Bank and Trust Company,
Lancaster, known as Lancaster County
Farmers Bank since its consolidation
with The Lancaster County National
Bank in 1963.
Deily is a former instructor in the
School of the American Institute of
Banking, a member of the Pennsylvania Bankers Association, trust division, and has lectured in the PBA
trust school at Bucknell University.
He holds pre-standard and standard
certificates in the School of the AmHe is
erican Institute of Banking.
Lancaster
the
also a member of
Chamber of Commerce, the Lancaster County Bankers Association, the
Hamilton Club and Conestoga Country Club in Lancaster.
1942
Class Representative: Mrs. Ralph
165
(Jean Noll),
H. Zimmerman
Pa.
Kready Avenue, Millersville,
17551
1943
Elwood M. Wagner, BSC graduate and holder of the local alumni
Award, has
Distinguished Service
been named professor of Air Force
aerospace studies at The Pennsylvania State University, and has come to
the University from Wiesbaden, Germany, where he was assigned to HeadCol.
quarters,
United States Air
Force,
Europe.
He entered
after
State
the Air Corps in 1943
graduating
from
Bloomsburg
College where he majored in
busmess education. He attended flying school and was then assigned to
the
China-Burma-India Theatre where
he flew 444 combat missions in the
Battle of Burma and the “Hump.”
Requesting release from active duty
Wagner attended grad-
where he worked
uate
the
University
of
in a private school in Philadelphia. In 1947,
he re-entered the Air Force as a regular officer and held various staff
school
at
positions until 1951 at which time he
was assigned to the University of
Pennsylvania to complete his work to-
ward a master’s degree.
His mas-
ter’s degree in education was awarded in 1951.
Colonel Wagner then was assigned
to Air Force ROTC at Ohio
State
University as an assistant professor
of air science. He was then assigned
to Japan and subsequently to Hawaii
MARCH,
1969
Ser-
Statistical
1949
Representative:
Richard E.
Grimes, 1723 Fulton Street, Harrisburg, Pa. 17102
The addresses of many members of
Your class
the class are unknown.
representative requests that, if you
have a new address, or know of one,
please send it to him or to the Alumni
Class
After attending the Air Force ComColonel
and Staff College,
Wagner was assigned to the Pentagon
as a Data Systems Analysis Staff
mand
In 1964, he was ordered to
Officer.
the Industrial College of the Armed
pursued
concurrently
Forces and
graduate studies at the George Washwhere he was
University
ington
awarded a master of science degree in
Office.
Dr.
Emory
Street,
New
Main
R. Stanley,
81
Milford, Pa., 18834, is
business administration.
After this schooling. Col. Wagner
was assigned to Wiesbaden where he
remained for three years prior to his
assignment to the University.
During this tour there he held a job
unique for a military man. He was
Education,
Dependents
director.
Headquarters United States Air Force
In this position he was
in Europe.
responsible for the operation of 100
schools located in eight countries, requiring 2,000 teachers and supporting
personnel to educate 45,000 pupils.
Col. Wagner’s decorations include
the
the Distinguished Flying Cross,
Air Medal and the Air Force Com-
Dunham. They have two
mendation Medal.
Originally from Hamburg, Pa., the
courses.
now
resides at 643 Wiltshire
in State College, with his wife.
Colonel
Road
Kay, and son.
1944
Representative: Mrs. (Poletime Comuntzis) Carl Demetrikopoulos. Friar and Robin Lanes, Sherwood
Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
No formal reunion plans are being
made for this year. We will probably join with 1945 next year.
Florence Faust Yeany, 1000 Butler
Avenue, Ambler, Pa., 19002, is teaching business subjects in the Upper
Moreland High School, Willow Grove,
Pa.
Class
1945
Mary Lou
Class Representative:
John, 257 West 11th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1946
Anastasia
Representative:
Pappas (Mrs. John Trowbridge), 102
VV. Mahoning Street, Danville, Pa.
Ethelda M. Klingaman (Mrs. Robert L. Smith) lives at 2707 Keswick
Court. Wilmington, Del. 19808
Class
.
Wanda Kehler
mann>
(Mrs.
Mark
J.
Edel-
lives at 719 Centre Street, Ash-
land. Pa. 17921
in 1946, Colonel
Pennsylvania while teaching
in
vices.
1947
Robert L.
Bunge, 12 West Park Street, Carroll
Park, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
Representative:
Dawn Eshelman
(Mrs. Eugene B.
North Palesades Drive, Signal Mountain, Tennessee 37377.
McCord)
is
living at 417
1948
Class
Representative:
Harry G.
John, Jr., 425 Iron Street, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
William M. Troutman, Pennfield
Manor, Apt. C-16, 2700 Elroy Road,
Hatfield, Pa. 19440, is Director of
Secondary Education for the North
Penn School District, Lansdale, Pa.
Assistant Superintendent and Adminthe
of Federal Funds
for
istrator
Ridge School District.
Dr.
Stanley received his Master’s and
Doctor’s degrees at the Pennsylvania
State University.
Dr. Stanley is
L.
married to the former
Sai’ah
Blue
sons.
Robert W. Pick, R. D. 5 Danville,
has been appointed cashier of the
First National Bank of Danville, Pa.
He has been associated with First
National since 1951.
He holds a standard certificate
from the American Institute of Banking, and has
graduate
completed
He
is
a
member
of the offi-
board and trustee of the United
Methodist Church of Rushtown and
treasurer of the Danville Chapter of
Red Cross. He served with the U.S.
Navy in the Pacific in the last World
cial
War.
Dr. Eugene M. Nuss, USAID, El
Salvador, care American Embassy,
San Salvador. El Salvador, C.A., is on
leave from the University of Bridgeport, and is helping to organize teacher-training programs for El Salvador.
1950
Class Representative: Jane Kenvin
(Mrs. George Widger), R. D. 2, Catawissa, Pa. 17820
James H. Boyle, 38 Ski Hill Drive,
Bedminster, New Jersey, has been
elected a member of the Board of
Directors of Ortho Pharmaceutical
Corporation,
Raritan.
Mr. Boyle
joined Ortho in 1951 as a Salesman
in the Harrisburg area and was later
transferred to Washington, D. C. In
1956 he was appointed Regional Diagnostic Representative. Mr. Boyle later became Eastern Divisional Manager of the newly formed Diagnostic
Division. Since 1963 he has held his
present position of National
Sales
Manager of Ortho Diagnostics.
While a Divisional Manager, Mr.
Mr. Boyle was a three-time winner of
the President’s Trophy and was Ortho
Diagnostics’ first recipient of the Ortho Distinguished Contribution Award.
Mr. Boyle was made a member of
Kappa Delta Pi, national honorary
educational fraternity. He is also a
member of Sales Marketing Executives International American Association
of Blood Banks, and the Elks.
He
and his wife the former Miss Susan
’50
Dreibelbis
have two children,
Mary Sue, 14 and Elizabeth Ann, 9.
1951
Class Representative: Dr. Russell
C. Davis, Jr., Sullivan County Com-
Page eleven
munity College, South Fallsburgh, N.
sities,
Y. 12779
lanova.
George D. Donachy, a native of
Northumberland, and former head
coach there, resigned his post as superintendent
of
schools
of
Stratford,
N. J., effective February 1. For the
past three years he has neen superintendent of the Stratford Schools, and
has been associated with schools in
New Jersey for the past twelve years.
Following graduation from Bloomsburg State College, Donachy became
the first elementary supervisor of the
former Northumberland Area Joint
Schools, now a part of the Shikellamy
district.
1952
Class Representative:
Francis B.
Galenski, 350 South York Road, Hatboro, Pa. 19040
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred S. Marsilio
(Mary Elizabeth Patton ’53) are living at 8415 Thornton Road, Lutherville, Maryland. 21083
Penn State and
including
Vil-
He was
the only teacher in
Pennsylvania in 1966 to be awarded a
three-year
graduate fellowship to
study at the university of his choice.
One of the grants he received was
from the Lehigh Valley Heart Association.
1956
Class Representative: Dr. William
Bitner, III, 33 Lincoln Avenue, Glen
FaUs, N. Y. 12801
Larry Fiber, an associate professor
of business education at Shippensburg
State College, has published an article
in the Spring, 1968, issue of The Observer, a publication of the New Jersey
Business
Education
Association.
Fiber’s article, “Effective Public Relations
for
Business
Education,”
stresses a triangular approach to business education public relations program involving educators, students
and business and professional organizations.
1953
Class Representative: John S. Scrimgeour, 411 East 3rd Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Donald Blyler lives at R. D. 2,
Bloomsburg, Pa. He is teaching at
the Shikelammy High School, Sun-
Rodney Kelchner has been appointed acting dean of men at Mansfield
State College during the absence of
Dean William Hurley, who was grants
ed a leave of absence in order to
study at Indiana University in Bloom-
bury.
ington, Indiana.
Class Representative:
William J.
Jacobs, Tremont Annex Apartments,
2 West Main Street,
Lansdale, Pa.
Class Representative:
William J.
Pohutski, 544 Oakridge Drive, North
Plainfield, N. J. 07606
Thomas L. Ohl, now a member of
the BSC faculty, lives at R. D. 2,
Bloomsburg, Pa. He had been teaching in the South Eastern School District, York, Pa.
He taught mathematics and science at
Kennard Dale
High School. He also coached J. V.
football and was head of the Department of Mathematics. His wife is the
former Cecile Yeakley, a graduate
of Susquehanna University.
Mr. and
Mrs. Ohl have three children.
1955
inger, 302
19312
Arnold Gar-
Greene Road, Berwyn, Pa.
Dr. Thomas
Persing,
associated
with Allentown School District for
about 15 years, has moved to Wyomissing Hills, Berks County.
Dr. Persing is assistant superintendent of schools in the Wyomissing
Area School District. Since beginning
his job there in September, he has
been awarded his doctorate in educational administration
from Lehigh
University.
While with Allentown School Disthe taught chemistry and biology
in the public schools.
He coached
rict,
football, wrestling, and track, and
also served as a defensive line coach
for Muhlenberg College. He was also
on the faculty of the Pennsylvania
University Center.
Before earning his doctorate, he received a master’s degree in arts at
Lehigh. He is a major in the U. S.
Marine Corps Reserve, with Headquarters and Supply Company,
4th
Service Battalion, Freemansburg.
He is a member of Phi Delta Kappa,
the National Education Association,
the Pennsylvania State Education Association, the National Biology Teachers Association, the American Association of School Administrators, the
Pennsylvania Association of School
Administrators, and national and state
supervision and curriculum organizations.
He has received a number of fellowships to study at various univerPage twelve
1958
..Class
Representative:
Danville, on September 20,
They are parents of another
son, Mark Stephen.
the former Sherry
of Danville.
Mrs. Barnhart is
Kostenbauder ’59,
Robert S. Asby, 21 Lehigh Street,
Shavertown, Pa., is associated with
P. John Hagan, M. D. in the combined practice of Otology (diseases and
surgery of the ear) and Audiology
(evaluation and rehabilitation of hearing loss.)
Mr. Asby was formerly Director of
Audiology and Speech Therapy ait the
Geisinger Medical Center where he
has been located for the past seven
years.
Mr. Asby holds Bachelor of Science
and Master of Science Degrees in Audiology and Speech Pathology and has
achieved Certification by the American Speech and Hearing Association.
He has attended Bloomsburg State
College, the University of Maryland
and West Virginia University and has
taken post graduate course work at
the Pennsylvania State University,
University of Denver, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, University
Miami, Walter Reed Army Hospital, the University of Maryland and
of
the
1957
Class Representative:
1968.
Veterans Administration,
Wash-
ington, D. C.
1954
19446
Center,
Raymond
Hargreaves, 37 Dell Road, Stanhope,
N. J. 07874
Carl E. Shively has recently completed requirements for the Ph.D.
degree in Bacteriology and Biochemistry at St. Bonaventure University. Dr.
Shively has taught in
public
the
schools of Pennsylvania and New
York., at Cortland
College,
State
Cortland, N. Y., and is now assistant
professor in the Biology Department
at Alfred University.
He, his wife
(the former Sylvia K. Brocious), of
Sunbury, Pa., and their three children, reside at 28 Chapel Street, Almond, N. Y. 14804.
1959
Class Representative: William F.
Swisher, Box 245, Cincinnatus, N. Y.
14340
Clarence B. Barnhart, R. D.3, Woodland Drive, Spring Grove, Pa., received his Master of Education in geography from BSC in August, 1968. He is
teaching 8th grade social studies (history and geography) in the Spring
Grove Jr. High School. Mr. and Mrs.
Barnhart are parents of a son, Todd
Kevin, born at the Geisinger Medical
Prior to holding a staff position at
Geisinger Medical Center, Mr.
Asby was employed as a County
Speech and Hearing Therapist and
served as Consultant to a Crippled
private
Children Clilnic, and to a
medical practice. He has served as
a college instructor and has been a
program participant at various state
and national meetings.
the
Dolores Wanat Palladino is living
at 10 Welsley Lane, Smithtown, N. Y.
11787
Mary Jane Whalen (Mrs. Frank
A. Rowland) lives at 1018 West 19th
Street, Hazleton, Pa. 18201
R. Francis Buck, R. D.l, Stevens,
is head teacher in the Denver Elementary School of the Cocalico School District, Denver, Pa. He
has the degree of Master of Science
Pa., 17578
from Syracuse University.
Mary A. Shuletsky (Mrs. Charles T.
Jenson), 1952 Crandall Circle, Salt
Lake City, Utah.
Filomena L. Crocomo (Mrs. James
McGlade, Jr.) is living at 1828
Highland Street, Allentown, Pa. 18104
C.
F. Swisher, Bloomsburg
and widely known in local
scholastic, collegiate and
amateur
sports in this area, has been awarded a Master of Arts in Education De-
William
native
gree by Colgate University, Hamilton,
N. Y. Swisher is presently principal
of the Cincinnatus, N. Y.,
Central
School, a position he has held for the
past two years.
Prior to that time the educator was
a sixth grade teacher and basketball
coach in Hamilton, N. Y., 1959-62 and
from then until 1956, when he ac-
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
cepted a post in Cincinatus, was elementary principal and guidance counselor in Mt. Upon Central School.
1960
James J.
Representative:
Class
Peck. 335 Red Coat Lane, Wayne, Pa.
19087
Thomas
Stover has been appointed
to the position of director of continu-
ing education at Rochester Business
Stover will have responsiInstitute.
bility for all facets of the continuing
education program; industrial relafaculty
registration,
tions, student
supervision and curriculum develop-
ment.
Following his graduation from BSC,
Stover took additional graduate study
In addition
at Syracuse University.
public school teaching experience
Bainbridge, Mr., New York and
Syracuse, N. Y., he has also held positions in the areas of inventory control,
and
adjustment,
insurance claims
personnel supervision.
Stover joined the Rochester Business Institute in September, 1967 as
an admissions counselor. He resides
at 11 Kathy Wrive, Pittsford, N. Y.,
with his wife and two children.
to
in
William J. Yurkiewicz of the biology
department at Millersville State College has an article in a recent Annals
of the Entomological Society of America: Glass Fiber-Silica Gel Sheets
for Inert Phospholipid Fractionation.
1961
Represetnative:
Edwin C.
Class
Ruser, R. D. 1, Box 145-C. Bechtelsville, Pa. 19505
Joan C. Bugel (Mrs. Edward T.
Sarisky) lives at 88 Ross Hall Boulevard, Piscataway, N. J. 08854
Rudy
Marion
Schaffroth
(Mrs.
Harrer) reports her address as Cedar
Hill Road. R. D. Ambler, Pa. 19002
Beatrice H. Fought (Mrs.
Roberts) lives in Benton. Pa.
E.
L.
in
served
He previously
Vietnam. He has an M. S. degree
from the Wright-Patterson Air Force
Base, Ohio, through the Air Force
Institute of Technology program. Captain O’Donnell’s wife is the former
Mary Downey, of Shenandoah, Pa.
mand.
Carimar Shultz To wanda, Pa. 18848
Joseph A. Enny, 320 Hazlett Road.
Castle, Delaware, 19720, is currently an agent with the State Farm
Insurance Company. Married to the
former Dorothy M. Anderson, also
from the class of ’62, they have a
Deborah
daughter,
old
four year
Lynne.
This past May,
earning the
Career Achievement and Convention
Awards, Joe and Dot were participants in State Farm’s National Convention in Montreal, Canada with expenses paid by the Company.
Dot does secretarial work in Joe’s
office,
and Communicative Disorders at The
University of Wisconsin,
has been
granted a tw o year leave of absence
from his position to pursue research
on the mechanics of respiration. Hixon
has assumed an appointment as Research Fellow in Physiology, Harvard
r
University School of Public Health,
Boston, Massachusetts, where the research is being conducted. Support
for his work is being provided through
a special research fellowship
from
the Department of Health, Education,
and Welfare.
Dr. Hixon, his wife
(the former Suellen Smith) and their
two children, are residing at 243 Daniels Street, Franklin, Mass.
after
and some substitute teaching.
Joe has been a teacher in the Mount
three
Pleasant School District for
years.
During that tenure he produced
three
state
championship
swimming teams plus one Blue Hen
Conference track championship team.
1963
MARCH,
1969
Spain.
Karen D. Supron (Mrs. Vincent
Serafino)
is
living
gard
Street, Apt.
Virginia. 22312
J.
BeaureAlexandria,
4939
at
201,
Margo Bolig Brabson lives at 324
Central Drive, Lansdale, Pa. 19446
at
Karen Homan Rosenberger lives
Buc-Le Farm. R. D. 2, Coopers-
burg, Pa. 18036
Walter E. Catchell. 2820 Chichester
Ave., Apt. D-5, Boothwyn, Pa. 19061,
was married June 30, 1968 to Miss
Marie Boulden.
sics
at
He
Chichester
is
teaching Phy-
High
School,
in
Boothwyn, and also coaches baseball.
He has been doing graduate work at
West Chester, U.C.L.A. and Temple
University.
Edward Azary
is
currently
com-
Philosophy
degree in bio-chemistry at the University of Western Ontario in Canada.
Since graduating from BSC where
he majored in physical sciences and
mathematics, he has studied under
Research and Teaching Fellowships
Alberta
at both the Universities of
pleting
his
Doctor
of
Class
Representative:
Pat Biehl
(Mrs. Ronald Cranford), 206 North
lltli Street, Sunbury, Pa. 17801
Claire (Dilley) Dale lives at 3618
East Altadena,
Phoenix,
Arizona.
and Western Ontario.
85028
Miss Charlene Rae Ammon, Baltimore, Md., became the bride of John
.
M. Brown (Mrs. Donald A.
Murray) lives at 158 North Ewing
Irene
Avenue,
Louisville,
Kentucky.
40206
Captain Richard K. Maurey has
been graduated from the Air University’s Squadron Officer School, at
Maxwell Air Base, Alabama. He has
been reassigned to Tinker Air Force
Base, Oklahoma.
1964
Representative:
Ernest R.
Holly
Glen Road,
52-B
Somerville, N. J. 08876
Janice Aemens DeFinnis and her
husband. Capt. John DeFinnis are
living in Columbia, South Carolina.
Capt. DeFinnis, a graduate of Temple University School of Dentistry, is
stationed at Fort Jackson.
Before
moving to South Carolina, Mrs. DeFinnis had been teaching in CheltenClass
Shuba,
ham
2
Township.
Patricia
Conn., and
M.
Lello,
Greenwich,
Robert J. Couture, of
were married Feb-
Springfield. Mass.,
They are now living
17, 1968.
1519 Hinman Avenue, Evanston,
111. 60201.
Mrs. Couture is teaching
fourth grade in Evanston, and her
ruary
at
husband
is
Midwest Sales Manager
and Engineers maga-
for Contractors
zine.
Captain William K. O’Donnell has
arrived for duty at Wiesbaden Air
Base, Germany. He is a ground electronics engineer, and is assigned to a
unit of the Air Force Logistics Com-
to
summer
New
1962
Richard
Representative:
Class
Lloyd, 6 Farragut Dr., Piscataway,
N. J. 08854
Associate
Dr. Thomas J. Hixon,
Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine
the
during
participate,
Univerof 1968, in Faireld
sity’s Institute for Advanced Study in
chosen
Mr. and Mrs. Frank D. Lapos (Mary
Lou Buck ’64) live ta 51 Jupiter Point
Road, Groton, Conn. 06340. Mr. Lapos,
teacher at Ledyard High School, was
1965
Class
Representative:
1156 County
N, Y. 14564
ler,
George Mil-
Road No.
8,
Victor,
Eugene McGovern, Jr., Baltimore,
Md. in a ceremony performed December 14, at St. Joseph’s Church,
Coraopolis.
The bride is a graduate of Indiana
University of Pennsylvania and is affiliated with
sorority, and
Delta Omricron, music
Alpha Sigma Alpha,
She is employed by
social sorority.
the Baltimore County Board of Education.
The bridegroom is a member of
Phi Sigma Pi, professional honorary
fraternity. He too is employed by the
Baltimore County Board of Education.
Lt. and Mrs. Francis A. Pineno announce the birth of a son, Christian
Francis.
Mrs. Pineno, the former
Joanne Nelson, taught second grade
in Kingston, Pa., and Virginia Beach.
Lt. Pineno, a 1965 graduate of Penn-
sylvania State University, is serving
with the U. S. Navy aboard the aircraft carrier U.S.S. Forrestal, currently on duty in the Mediterranean.
The address of Lt. and Mrs. Pineno
is 1872 First Colonial Road, B-4, Virginia Beach, Va. 23454
Miss Dawn Ensley, Bloomsburg,
and Wayne Paxton Michael, Berwick,
were married December 21 in the
First English Baptist Church, Bloomsburg, by the Rev. Vincent Siciliano.
The bride is an elementary teacher in
Berwick schools. Her husband graduated from Berwick High School and
Page
thirteen
He
State University.
quality control supervisor at Berwick Fabricating Plastics Division.
Pennsylvania
is
St. Paul’s Church, Scranton, was
the setting on Thanksgiving morning
for the wedding of Miss Mary Faith
Walsh, Scranton, to Robert Wayne
Snyder, Catawissa.
The bride graduated from St. Paul
High School and Marywood College
and is a teacher in Selinsgrove
schools. Her husband, a graduate of
Catawissa High School and BSC, did
graduate work at Towson State College, Towson, Md. He is a teacher in
South Williamsport High School. Mr.
and Mrs. Snyder are living at 234
Vine Street, Milton, Pa.
Dona Searfoss Meier
White Haven, Pa.
1,
lives at R. D.
18661.
George F. and Molly Clugston Mil’64.
are living at 1156 County
Road No. 8, Victor, N. Y. Mr. Miller
is head of the Mathematics Depart-
ler,
ment
in the
Victor Central
Mrs. Miller taught
tor for three years.
George
Jr.,
born November
Andrew Kacyon, Andover,
Putteney
Corning,
Street,
Schools.
grade in VicThey have a son,
first
13, 1968.
3-D,
West
N.
Y.,
chemist for Ann Page at
Horseheads, N. Y.
14830, is a
18643
Henry L. and Mary Sipe Spering
are living at R. D. 2, Little Elk Lake,
Springville. Pa. 18844. Mary is teaching in the Elk Lake Joint Schools and
Henry is a graduate student at BSC.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald DiPaolo
(Al-
berta Harabin) are living at
2131
South Fountain Street, Allentown, Pa.
18103
Mr. and Mrs. Roy C. Bowen
Miss
Jane
Louise Hartzel, Wapwallopen. to Robert LaPorte Garrison,
Nescopeck.
was solemnized August 24 in United
Church of Christ, Berwick. The bride
graduated from Newport Township
High School and was a laboratory
technician at Kirby Health
Center,
Wilkes-Barre.
Her husband is a
member of the science department at
Valley Forge Junior High School. He
is also assistant basketball and baseball coach.
Mr. and Mrs. Garrison
of
are living at Apt. N-301,
Courts, Audubon, Pa. 19407
Audubon
Larry E. Drum is currently enrolled at the Lutheran Theological Seminary at Gettysburg, Pa., pursuing a
course of studies that will lead to a
Bachelor of Divinity degree.
Charles
W.
Werner,
R.
D.
5,
Bloomsburg, has assumed his duties
Page fourteen
Greensburg, Spring Mills and ThomasHe graduated
ville, Pennsylvania.
from Spring Grove High School in
York County and attended York Junior College and received his Bachelor
of Science degree in speech correc-
Pa. 19401
tion from Bloomsburg State College
in May, 1966. During the 1966-67 college year, he had a year of graduate
study as a recipient of a U. S. Office
of Education Grant to graduate students in speech pathology. He contin-
ues graduate work during the current
college year.
Werner was a speech correctionist
in schools of Snyder County for two
years prior to coming to Columbia
County, and also worked as counselor
and assistant camp director for the
Pennsylvania Society
for
Crippled
Children and Adults in various sum-
mer programs.
Susan K. Louchs (Mrs. Michael
J.
Farrell), lives at 6 Vinsmith Avenue,
Aston Manor, Chester, Pa. 19014. She
and Mr. Farrell are teaching at the
DelaSchool,
Ridley Senior High
ware County.
Scheirer
were
married
August
19,
1967 at St. Luke’s Lutheran Church,
Scheirer,
a
Allentown, Pa.
Mr.
graduate of Millersville State College,
at
Tulpehocken High
is teaching
School, Bernville, Pa., and Mrs. Schgrade
in
eirer is teaching third
Reamstown, Pr. They are living at
214 Springside Drive, Shillington, Pa.
27, 1967.
Mark R. Moyer and Bonnie Brandon Moyer are living at the Audubon
Court Apartments, C-104, Audubon.
Upper Darbv,
Edward B. Kern
and Sandra K Burkhardt. Montgomery, were married June 15 at St.
John Evangelical Lutheran Church
has
Mrs. Kern
in Montgomery.
taught at the Williamsport School of
Commerce and is now secretary to
the Vice-President of Harleco Division, American Hospital Supply Corporation, Philadelphia. Mr. Kern has
been in the Coast Guard Reserve and
is now a field agent for the Internal
Revenue Service, Philadelphia. They
are living at 8125 West Chester Pike,
Aut. C-4, Upper Darby, Pa. 19082
The marriage of Miss Nickola J.
Hoosty, Arlington, Va., to Alan J.
Oram, Arlington, took place November
30 in St. Mary’s R. C. Church, Berwick.
The couple reside at Apt. 12, 500
S. Walter Reed Drive, Arlington, Va.
The bride is teaching seventh grade
life science classes in Fairfax CounThe bridegroom, a graduate
ty Va.
of Berwick High School and Mt. Saint
Mary’s College in Maryland, is a
third year medical student at George
Washington School of Medicine, Washington, D. C.
Thomas H. Diehl, 138 Bainbridge
Street, Sunbury, Pa., 17801, is coach-
Donald and Brenda Crebs Ulrich
are living at 100 Market Street, Lewisburg, Pa. 17837.
Don is teaching
fourth grade science at the Mifflinburg Elementary School. Mifflinburg,
Pa.
ing track and basketball in the Shikellamy School District, Sunbury.
West
Joseph A. Cortese
is living at 18
5th Street, Hazleton, Pa. 18201
1967
1968
Representative:
Robert T.
Lemon, Meadowvale Apt. No. 12, 903
Quarry Road, Harve de Grace, Md.
Class Representative: Thomas W.
Free, R. D. 1, Box 34, Kintnersville,
Pa. 18930
21078
Edward and Elizabeth Beck Marquardt are living at 420 East Philadelphia Avenue, Boyertown, Pa. Both
are teaching in that area.
(Sal-
Adams) are living at 3 Patrician
Lane, Orangewood Park Apts., Levittown, Pa. Roy is teaching at Del
Haas High School.
ly
The marriage
Northumberland, Pa. 17857. Mr. and
Mrs. Guthrie were married August
Anne M. Michelson and William H.
1966
Class Representative: Anthony
J.
Cerza, 180 Mason Street, Exeter. Pa.
Deborah L. Hile (Mrs. Russell W.
Guthrie), lives at 630 Prince Street,
as speech correctionist in the Benton
Orangeville
area,
area,
Millville
area, Orangeville, Centre and Lime
Ridge Schools.
Born in Pottstown, Werner attended elementary schools in Annville,
Class
Machel V. Mellinger and Karen J.
Salliday, ’68, were married August 10.
1968 at St. Peter’s Lutheran Church,
North Wales, Pa. Mrs. Mellinger is
teaching in the elementary grades at
the Allen Road School in North Syracuse, N. Y. Mr. Mellinger is a doctoral candidate at Syracuse, majoring
in Botany.
Their address is B-35,
Apt. 5, New Slocum
cuse, N. Y. 13210.
Heights,
Syra-
Judith Vineski (Mrs. Michael Brozowski( 230 Redington Avenue. Troy.
Pa.. 16947,
is
teaching
advanced
mathematics at the Troy Senior High
School. She had previously taught in
Wilkes-Barre City School District. Her
husband is serving in the U. S. Army.
Marilyn Ann Yeager (Mrs. David
L. Houck) lives at Apt. 12-J, Graduate Circle Apartments, University
Park, Pa. 16802
In a recent ceremony in Ss. Peter
and Paul Church, Plains, Miss E.
Kathleen Fedin was married to Stanley Thomas Pacewicz, Plymouth.
The bride was graduated from Berwick High School and BSC and is a
social studies teacher. Her husband,
a graduate of Plymouth High School,
attending
Electronic
Computer
Programming Institute.
He served
in Okinawa for two years with the
Army. He is employed at Gent-J
is
Manufacturing
Co.,
proprietor of Bull
Plymouth, and
is
Run Restaurant and
Tavern.
In a
ceremony performed November
First
Presbyterian
United
Church, Berwick, Miss Gail Patricia
Wagner became the bride of Terry
30
in
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
William Robinson, Danville R. D. 4.
The couple reside in Bethel, Conn.
The bride is a teacher in the Bethel
Her
Public Schools, Bethel, Conn.
husband is teaching in the schools
of New Milford, Conn. He is a member of the 399th Civil Affairs Group,
U. S. Army Reserves, Danbury, Conn.
Thomas Sipe is teaching at Del
Haas High School, Levittown, Pa.
His address is Kenwood Court Apartments, Apt. C-14, Haines Road, Levittown, Pa.
Thomas Taber,
751 Belvedere Ave-
nue, Plainsfield, N.
Bernardsville, N. J.
J., is
teaching in
M. Betsy Spering, Box 592, Richboro, Pa., is teaching fifth grade in
the North Penn School system in
Montgomery ville
Charles Mowery, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Doyle Mowery. Bloomsburg, enlisted in the U. S. Navy and is taking
his training at Great Lakes. His address is B44 54 18 Co. 741 USNTC.
Great Lakes, 111. 60088.
First United Methodist Church, Berwick, was the setting August 17 for
the marriage of Miss Jean Ann Dunn,
Berwick to Carl G. Sponenberg, Berwick.
The couple reside at 214 W.
Chapel Street, Canastota, New York.
Mrs. Sponenberg was graduated
from Berwick High School in 1964 and
Bloomsburg State College in 1968,
Her husband, also a graduate of Berwick High School in 1964, received his
B.S. Degree in music from Wilkes
College in 1968. Both have accepted
positions
New
as
teachers
at
Canastota,
Chillisquaque Presbyterian Church
the setting on August 3 for the
marriage of Miss Connie Joan Geiser,
Pottsgrove to James Edgar Clewell,
Danville R. D. 1. The bride formerly
taught in Milton schools. She is teaching this year in Danville. Her husband, a graduate of Milton
High
School, will graduate from Penn State
University in 1969. He was employed
at Milton Steel and Supply Co., before
entering college. He is now serving
in the National Guard Unit, Milton.
Mi-, and Mrs. Clewell are living at
was
584
West Third
Bloomsburg.
Street,
Donald E. Houck, R. D. 4, Bloomsburg, is working in the BSC Business
Office as Budget Analyst.
The Obiter would like to know the
addresses of Betsy Davis, Anne E.
Clemens, and Steven L. Zeigler. Their
yearbooks are being held for them,
but the books must be claimed by
May,
1969.
S.
Benyo has had an
arti-
cle published in the December issue
of Philadelphia Magazine
on
the
eighth annual Grand Prix of the United States for Formula One for the
World’s Championship of Drivers held
at Watkins Glen,
York, in early
New
October. Benyo is presently employed as Associate Editor of the Carbon
County Times-News
was formerly editor
and Gold.
&
of
Record,
the
and
Maroon
Paul M. Allen, presently employed
as sports editor of the Carbon County
Times-News & Record, is spending
much of his free time doing public
relations work for the Pocono International Raceways, Inc.
MARCH,
1969
riage of Miss Bonita Marie
Berwick Christian Church was the
marriage of
Miss Emily V. Cook, Berwick, to W.
John Strong, also of Berwick.
The
bride graduated from Berwick High
School and ICS and has been employed at Berwick Bank. Her husband
graduated from Berwick High School
and BSC. and will teach in Coates ville.
setting recently for the
Rev. and Mrs. Michael KlinofT, of
Nanticoke, announce the marriage of
their daughter Karla,
to
Charles
Howard Bowman, 3d, Williamsport.
The marriage was solemnized in the
Covenant-Central Presbyterian Church
of Williamsport on August 18.
The bride is a graduate of West
Pittston High School and Bloomsburg
State College.
Mr. Bowman is a
Bloomsburg State College,
a member of the Naval Reserve, and
senior at
will pursue
graduate
Princeton Seminary.
studies
at
Uram,
of
Gerald Thomas Anderson,
Mrs. Anderson teaches in
Hazleton. Her husband, a graduate
of Berwick High School and East
Berwick,
Berwick.
to
Carolina University, is employed as
teacher and head basketball coach
at St. Gabriel’s High School, Hazleton. He is a second lieutenant in the
Pennsylvania Army National Guard.
Rear
The couple reside at 722
North Church Street, Hazleton.
Barton
Miss Joan Muriel Thrasher became
the bride of Roger Howell Zeisloft
on October 5, at St. Paul’s Episcopal
Church, Montrose. The former Miss
Thrasher attended Bloomsburg State
College and Syracuse University. She
is a sister of Pi Beta Phi Sorority.
Mr.
Zeisloft
graduated
from
Bloomsburg State College and is a
member of Beta Sigma Delta Fraternity.
He is presently employed at
Gunning-Bedford High School in Newark, Delaware, as a business educa-
S.
Watts
is
living in Apart-
3306 Paxton Street, Harrisburg, Pa. 17111
ment
106
,
In a recent ceremony at First Lutheran Church, Watsontown, Miss Kay
was
Watsontown,
Elinor Bowman,
married to Gary Lloyd Laidacker,
The bride’s
Watsontown R. D. 1.
father, the Rev. Harry S. Bowman,
officiated.
The bride was graduated from
Warrior Run High School and attends
BSC. She will be employed by the
Sullivan Review, Dushore. Her husband, a gradutae of Warrior Run
High School and BSC, teaches in the
Sullivan County School District. Mr.
living in
and Mrs. Laidacker are
Eagles Mere.
Miss Linda Lou Wallace, Riverside,
and Joseph Martin Gerst, were married in a ceremony at Pine Street
Lutheran Church, Danville.
The bride graduated from Danville High Schol and Mansfield State
College where she was a member of
Alpha Sigma Tau. She teaches the
third grade at New Berlin schools.
Her husband, a graduate of Danville
High School and BSC where he was
a member of Sigma Iota Omega fraternity, is special education teacher at
Mifflinburg High School.
Miss Ruth Gordner, Orangeville
R. D.l, was married to Douglas F.
Kahler, Bloomsburg, recently.
The ceremony was performed
in
the chapel of the U. S. Naval Base,
Gulfport, Miss. The bride was grad-
All Saints’ Episcopal Church, Herwas the setting June 5 for the
marriage of Miss Elizabeth Heyward
uated from Millville High School and
BSC. She is teaching in the Loyalsock Township High School, Williams-
James Harold
Neiswender, Palmyra, R. D. 1. The
bride graduated from Hershey High
School and frfom Meredith College.
Her husband, a graduate of Palmyra
High School, Hershey Junior College
port.
and Bloomsburg State College,
employed as a graduate assistant
BSC. He is an Air Force veteran.
Miss.
shey,
Constable, Hershey, to
Richard
Joseph R. C. Church, Berwick,
the setting July 6 for the mar-
York.
tion teacher.
Geraldine R. Welker (Mrs. Ronald
L. Hubler) lives at 603 1-2
Dorey
Street. Clearfield, Pa. 16830
St.
was
is
district.
third class petty officer serving with
the U. S. Navy Seabees in Gulfport,
at
United Methodist Church, Orangewas the setting on August 10
for the marriage of Miss
Beverly
Jane Evans, Orangeville R. D. 2, to
Roddy Allen Fisher, R. D. 3.
The
bride graduated from Central High
School and is employed at the Ames
Snack Bar.
Her husband teaches
English in the Northern Tioga School
ville,
Her husband was graduated from
Bloomsburg High School and Stevens
Trade School, Lancaster.
He is a
NAMED TO FACULTY
The following BSC graduates have
of
been appointed to the
faculty
Kutztown State College:
Miss B. Renee Paul, ’47, Assistant
Professor of Special Education.
A.,
M.
Lehigh University.
Harry Humes,
64,
M.F.A.,
English.
North Carolina.
Samuel E. Keiser,
English.
Instructor
University
'63,
in
of
Instructor in
Page
fifteen
HAVE LONG BEEN
SERVING COLLEGE
35
bread
administrators each have
a total of ten years or more of service
at Bloomsburg State College and a
combined total of 155 years of service
Nine
BSC
at the college.
They are Boyd F. Buckingham,
director of Development and Public
Martin,
G.
Relations (1953); Paul
business manager (1950); Dr. John A.
Hoch, dean of instruction (1946): Dr.
Harvey A. Andruss, president of
Bloomsburg State College (1930); Dr.
Royce O. Johnson, director of elemenE.
Russell
tary education (1958);
Houk, director of athletics (1957);
Thomas A. Gorrey, superintendent of
buildings and grounds (1958); Dr. C.
Stuart Edwards, director of secondary
education (1958); and Dr. Donald D.
Rabb, chairman of biology depart-
ment
of the
ten years
college.
or more of service at the
They are: Dr. Bruce E. Adams (1956);
Mae
Beckley (1943); Mrs.
(1958); Miss Beatrice Engelhart (1956); Dr. Ralph S.
Herre (1947);
Clayton
H.
Hinkel
(1947); Warren I. Johnson (1955); Dr.
Harold H. Lanterman (1946); Miss
Mary E. Macdonald (1949); Mrs. Margaret McCern (1954); Miss M. Beatrice Mettler (1939); Nelson A. Miller
(1953); Dr. Francis J. Radice (1957);
Miss Gwendolyn Reams (1954); Kenneth A. Roberts (1958); Dr. Martin
A. Satz (1958); Tobias F. Scarpino
Mrs. Iva
Virginia A.
Duck
(1958); Dr. Gilbert W. Selders (1957);
Dr. John J. Serff (1955); Dr. Cecil C.
Seronsy (1953); Dr. William B. Sterling
George B. Stradtman
(1947);
(1955); Dr. E. Paul Wagner (1950);
Mrs. Elizabeth B. Williams (1952);
and Miss M. Eleanor Wray
(1957.)
ADDRESSES WANTED
Robert S. Probert ’68, Harry J.
Drennan, Jr., ’50, Carole L. Miles ’67,
Paul R. Styer ’63, Mary Bogenrief
Seely ’00, Edith O’Neill Killgore ’21,
Gloria J. Rogers ’62, Philip A. Denite
’67, Barbara A.
James ’62, Helen
Baldy Bachman ’02, Elizabeth Waring Colvin ’03, Muriel Jones Peffer
T8, Jennie Leone West ’41, Robert
Fisher ’62, Dale Bittenbender ’65.
Elaine Reifsnyder Bower ’61, Mary
Ann Alarcon (Mrs. Donald W. Donnelly) ’51, Dorothy Dildine ’62, Benjamin Wilson ’61, Edgar Berry ’54,
Judith G. Dampman ’64, Ruth Richards Hadyson ’26, Margaret Fitzsimmons Baltinghouse ’52, Mrs. John
Bower ’04, Margaret Mary Ward ’29,
Mrs. Edward Krajnik ’49, Joseph W.
Johnston ’59, John W. McCarkill ’64,
Keith L. Kramer ’64, Paul R. Brosious
’64.
Edward Brower
’59,
Mary W. Walsh
Griselda Davis Jacobus ’04, Sister M. Cletus Kriedler
’24,
Letha
’59,
Crispell
Schenck
Darrell Frey
Page sixteen
’34,
’64,
Edna Keim
Norma
R.
J.
Ethel
’64,
T5,
Reiss
’65. Daniel P. McGrew ’51, Irene W.
O’Donnell ’56, Herman H. Howard,
Jr., ’59, Nelson K. Turanica ’66, Donno K. Ritter, ’65, Mrs. Kay Reber
Kimmel ’68, Neil J. Mussolline ’66,
Larry H. Ruckle ’66, Ann G. Shep’62,
herd ’68, Gordon F. Williams
Roger G. Fitzsimmons ’61, Marjorie
Ann Genneck (Mrs. Thomas Stover)
’61, Joanne M. Kaczmarek
Masanotti Kallander ’42.
’63,
Adrian
THANK YOU
Members
members
who have had
faculty
Ruth C. Zeller
Helen Berry
Quinn ’22, Muriel E. Reese ’30, Nellie
Maslusky Gibbons ’31, Stanley C.
Krzywicki, ’48, Mary G. Aimers ’38,
Ruth Paul Jones ’55, Lorraine Riofski ’66, Mrs. Margaret J. May ’62.
Raymond E. Hendershot, Jr., ’61,
Grace T. McGeehan ’61, Joseph A.
Dellegrotto ’64, Henry E. Fetterman
(1957).
Other Veteran
There are 25 other
BSC
’64,
M. Henry ’06, Grace
Alice M. Sweet ’20,
’54,
White-
(Continued from page eight)
Barbara D. Lemon, Emerson J.
Schnable, Sharon A. McQuiston, ErnPoploskie,
C.
John
est A. Cole,
Leatrice Sunaska, William F. Skinner, Donald E. Ulrich, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert F. White.
L.
1968 Joyce E. Brobst, Roger
George, Catherine A. Kosloski, Rosemary B. Lubinski, Mrs. John Strong,
Mrs. John S. Mulka. Harold J. Albertson, Richard J. Keefe, James L.
Poechmann, Lisbeth D. Copes, Linda
K. Dietz, Louis J. Guarino, Palma A.
Katharina M. Amacher,
Terruso.
—
Z. Heupcke, Dawn S. SchulMrs. Theresa A. Fasnacht, Elaine
M. Strong, Richard Yost, Marguerite
Pinter,
A.
N. Bradwell, Elizabeth
Mary E. Phillips, Raymond B. Wolverton, B. Edward Marquardt, Marjorie Lynn Malick, Joseph D. Perilli, Mary L. Steffen, John J. Ondish,
Carol R. Gesalman, Mrs. Ronald L.
Hubler, Charles J. Miskar, Jr., Mrs.
Orwilda L. Shoemaker, Ronald E.
Hock, John S. Woytovich, Mrs. C.
Philip Moser, Lawrence F. Faran.
Renee
tin,
BSC OFFERS EUROPEAN
TOURS FOR CREDITS
The seventh annual European
Cul-
ture Tour sponsored by Bloomsburg
State College will be conducted this
summer from June
This
study
30, to
August
11.
be devoted
economics, sociology,
project
recorded history. The effort will be
to understand the great trends
that are shaping the world. All students, whatever their major fields of
interest, will benefit frcm personal
contacts with other civilizations and
made
The overall goal is ur.dei'standing ... a prime requisite for
the educated citizens of tomorrow’s
world.
A total of six credit hom-s (graduate
or undergraduate) may be earned by
participants who, in the judgment of
cutlnres.
the director and deans of the CoUege,
qualify on the basis of their academic
achievement and personal characteristics.
The countries in which the area of
study will be conducted include DenGermark, West Germany, East
many, Austria, Italy, San Marino,
England.
Switzerland. France, and
Students will see many points of interest in these countries and will have
observe
many
opportunities
to
Europe’s famous culture areas.
Attendance at plays and musical
performances will provide a cultural
view of the life of Europe on an informal level. The effort will be made
to provide opportunities for meeting
Europeans at student get-togethers,
swimming parties and folk-lore entertainment. Housing will be in Univertourist
sity residnces and standard
hotels.
STUDY IMPROVEMENT
BSC COMMUNICATIONS
IN
The Board
of Trustees and the adState
Bloomsburg
of
continuing their study
and efforts to improve lilnes of communication in order to keep abreast
of the rapid growth of the entire college community and to accomodate
ministration
College are
all
concerned.
ACTING DIRECTOR OF
PLACEMENT AT COLLEGE
Thomas
A. Davies has been appointdirector of placement at
Bloomsburg State College. Davis joined the BSC faculty in 1964 as an assistant professor of education with the
responsibilities of supervising student teaching. In August 1967, he was
appointed assistant director of admissions
ed
acting
.
will
Western
European countries, including two
weeks at Oxford University. The program director is Dr. Edson J. Drake,
Dr. Marguerite Kehr, former Dean
Women at BSC, is now located at
3824 Vanderbilt Drive, Lake Charles,
Louisiana 70601, where she is living
with her sister, Mrs. George W. Sev-
associate professor of history at the
ier.
to the poliltics,
history, and culture of nine
of
college.
This European study project has
been planned so that students can
review at first hand the remarkable
metamorphosis of post-war Europe.
In the political sphere they will study
governmental systems, shifts in the
world power structure and the Communist posture. Economic aspects
will stress the common market, coof
labor
operatives, and the role
against a background of 2,000 years of
Arthur Schlesinger,
Jr.,
noted his-
and adviser to assassinated
President John F. Kennedy, spoke to
a large audience Thursday evening
.January 9, in Haas Auditorium at
Bloomsburg State College.
His address entitled “Illusion and
torian
Realty in Foreign Policy” chronicled
emergence of the United States
and Soviet Russia as world powers in
the
the decade following
World War
II.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
ALUMNI WEEK-END
FRIDAY, APRIL
25
Dinner for the Class of 1919
Bloomsburg Players
— “MY SISTER EILEEN"
A
ALUMNI DAY
SATURDAY, APRIL
Dedication cf
Two New
26
Buildings
Class Reunions
Meeting of Board of Directors
ALUMNI LUNCHEON
Annual Meeting
Bloomsburg Players
If
ycu expect
to attend the
of
-
Alumni Association
MY
SISTER EILEEN”
Alumni Luncheon, please send reservations by
April 15.
More
ed
in the
detailed information regarding time
and place
cf events will
College Letters, to be mailed early in April.
DON’T FORGET THE LOYALTY FUND!
be includ-
12
Fensteuaker
242 Central Road
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania
Mr. Howard F.
Entered As Second Class Matter
August 8, 1941 at the Post
Office at Bloomsburg, Pa.
Under the Act of March 3, 1879
17815
LOYALTY FUND-THIRD YEAR
When
the final figures for the
paign were available, the grand
first
two years
total for the
of the Loyalty
period wos $20,608.82.
Fund Cam-
Up
to
Dec-
31, 1968, additional contributions had brought this total up to $25,641.27.
shall need a little less than $5,000 by October 1 to maintain an annual aver-
ember
We
With the continuing support
age of $10,000.
yand
of the Alumni,
we hope
to
go be-
that goal.
The money received during
the second year made possible the granting of
the broadcasting of athletic events, and lettering to be placed
Funds have also been set aside to provide for the
on the new buildings.
radio station on campus. Also, a tree-planting project is
installation of an
underway, to provide for the planting of trees and shrubbery where new buildings have been completed.
six scholarships,
FM
The
$2.00 contributed by a graduate in any one year will entitle the
membership privileges in the Alumni Association for one year;
any amount in excess of the $2.00 will be put into the Loyalty Fund for proYour Board of Directors will be glad
jects approved by the Board of Directors.
io consider any suggestions as to the manner in which the funds may be used.
first
graduate to
full
Active members of the Alumni Association will be admitted free to the
Alumni Luncheon on Alumni Day, on presentation of their paid-up membership
card.
Please make your checks payable to the B.S.C. Alumni Association and
return with the coupon below. Your contribution will be acknowledged.
Sincerely yours,
PRESIDENT
TO BE DETACHED, FILLED OUT, AND RETURNED
Signature
Name
while
.
in
college
Address
(street)
Zip Code
(town)
If
above address
'
<
;
1
o[
is
graduation
new check here
n
Amount
Mail checks to Alumni Office, Box 31, B.S.C.
To
insure tax deductions, make checks payable to
B. S. C. ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
n
William A. Lank. President of the Board of Trustees,
Volume
LXX
Number
2
and
retiring President
JUNE
Harvey A. Andruss
1969
THE PRESIDENT SPEAKS TO MEETING OF THE
GENERAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
COLLEGE COMMONS
APRIL
26,
1969
TO THE
3.
FACULTY DINNER
MAY
is a substantial span
time in anybody’s life, and after
more than forty years in Pennsyl-
Four decades
of
vania’s State Colleges, I am naturally
tempted to look backward. Though
it has been said that we talk about the
of time when we have nothing
else to talk about, there is value as
well as satisfaction in recalling the
past.
So let us only glance back at where
we have been to credit those to
passage
whom
credit
is
due, but let us look
forward in terms of where we are now
and where we want to go.
Someone has said that the Andrusses
are a State College family. The father
and mother of Mrs. Andruss were both
graduates of the old Indiana State
Teachers College; in fact, he was the
first trustee to be appointed from outside the town of Indiana. My brotherin-law, the husband of my wife’s twin
sister, was for twenty-five years Dean
of
at
to
Men
and, later. Dean of Instruction,
Shippensburg State College. I came
Pennsylvania from Illinois in 1926
and joined the faculty of the then InFour
diana State Normal School.
years later, I moved to Bloomsburg.
Since I have mentioned my wife, let
me say this before I turn to other
matters: No man can succeed without
a good wife. I have been particularly
fortunate. Since she grew up near a
college campus, my wife played college girl in the classrooms before she
went
to public schools. Over the decades, her kindness, sympathy, sense
of social values and unwavering loyalty to Bloomsburg State College, its
President, and its students has been
most noteworthy.
debt before
I
acknowledge
this
all.
There have been many changes
in
the State Colleges over the past fortythree years, and though almost all of
them can be pin-pointed as progressive, there are certain general attitudes on the part of the public (i. e.,
taxpayers, citizens, and
politicians)
that still prevail and color comments
that are made from time to time.
1. Since public education in Pennsylvania in the lower schools was meant
for “paupers,” or children of the poor
who were unable to attend private
schools, the general consensus is that
private education is better because it
costs more.
2. Since the normal schools were an
extension of the State public school
system, and were one-purpose
institutions originally for training only ele-
mentary school teachers, they became
known as
little
institutions
to
train
10,
1969
teachers of little children.
Since these colleges are all state
institutions, they are supposed to be
Even though all of them
educate teachers for elementary and
in
curriculums
secondary schools,
such areas as art, physical education,
and business were established in only
some of these colleges. While the fourteen institutions have uniform control
the same.
the form of state appropriations,
budgets, and salary schedules, each
is affected by the region within a fiftymile radius of the college. As these
regions differ, so do the colleges, particularly in the kind and type of day
and commuting students which they
in
background
general
With these
statements and the perspective of
more than forty years, we can look
forward with some hope that:
FIRST
—
All of these colleges will
in fact as
time become universities
well as in
name. To become universithey must have graduate
ties in fact,
schools, and offer curriculums leading
more professions than that of teaching.
This does not mean that all of
them will be renamed or reborn overnight. Up to the present time, the redesignation of a State College as a
University has been a result of a political, or more euphemistically, legislaThis process seems to
tive process.
grow out of getting a Senator, or a
powerful member of the House of Representatives, appointed to the College
to
Board
of Trustees,
sponsor
special
and then have him
legislation,
or
a
change of name, rather than relying
upon the State Board of Education for
developing a plan for what the college
has to do to become a university.
after the name “University” is
authorized, increased financial
support must be given for libraries, laboratories, and faculty salaries (this
last, so as to be competitive in the
educational market.) They will need
forward-looking
administration
a
which tries to offer Pennsylvania’s
youth an opportunity for an education
which will make them more useful
members of society, as leaders in the
community, and at the same time, increase their earning power so that
they will be able to pay taxes to the
state which made such growth and
as
development possible.
So far
Bloomsburg is concerned, the oft-quoted advice that one should “Be not the
first by whom the new is tried, nor the
last to lay the old aside” seems to be
sound and appropriate.
Even
The problems involved
development of a second, or
upper, campus at Bloomsburg, not the
least of which is the number of students enrolled, will be met and solved.
Access is important; Roads to and
from this campus must be of sufficient
width to accomodate traffic to a campus accomodating 6,000 or more students in a town where the present population, including resident and college
students, is only 10,000. The kind and
the
type of building to be constructed onl
the upper or new campus will require
consideration. Dividing physical and
recreational activities into intra-mural
and inter-collegiate programs
may
seem
attract.
in
—
SECOND
in
simple, but the overlapping of
classes in physical education, recreational facilities for all students, team
and practice areas, and competition
in inter-collegiate sports will need to
be given careful consideration. Shall
we have only living accomodations for
students on the upper campus, that is
to say, shall we build only dormitories
and dining halls in this area, or
shall classrooms and laboratories also
be provided? Access to Interstate 80
through Buckhorn, as well as LightFinally,
street, is most important.
will
some
facilities
need
to
be dupli-
cated?
THIRD
—
Overdue
administrative
at
take
place
Bloomsburg in terms of an undergradschool,
a
uate school, a graduate
school of education, and a school of
business, with a dean at the head of
each, along with a vice-president in
reorganization
will
charge of instruction.
FOURTH
— Earlier
faculty recruit-
ment, a necessity, will become easier.
At the present time, 161 of a Bloomsburg faculty of less than 250 have
served the college for less than five
years, and of this group, almost ten
percent are lacking in the amount of
teaching and/or related experience required by law for appointment. Since
the State Colleges have been growing
at a rapid rate in recent years, requiring greater numbers of faculty in
a competitive marketplace, we must
develop new procedures to meet today’s needs. State Colleges cannot be
operated on the same basis as hospitals, prisons, and mental institutions.
This is true of budgeting., purchasing,
and the appointment of non-instructional employees as well as
Finally, legislative
faculty.
ments are necessary
hiring
enact-
to provide facwith greater assurance of continuous employment (tenure) than now
(Continued on page twelve)
ulty
Alumni Day
Mrs. Vera Hemingway Housenick.
class of 1905. who has devoted a full
and active life to church and civic
activities and who has been a loyal
supporter of her alma mater and a
member of the board of directors for
over thirty years, most of it as secretary, was awarded the Distinguished
Service Award of Bloomsburg State
College Alumni at its annual dinner
who will
coming autumn, was com-
retire this
A.
Andruss,
the association for his two
score years of service— thirty as presiby
dent in a resolution presented
Clayton H. Hinkel, and was made a
life member of the association.
mended by
—
In an address “Looking Forward,”
he envisioned the progress, demands
and problems of the future in the life
of the institution and expressed gratitude to the founders and contemporaries at the college, the residents and
business of the community, churches,
regional school districts, trustees, faculty, college employes, state superin-
tendents and graduates.
Dr. Kimber C. Kuster is chairman
of the committee on alumni awards
and the presentation to Mrs. Housenick
was made by Edward F.
Schuyler.
A resident of Bloomsburg since 1897
when she came here with her family
from Carthage, Mr., Mrs. Housenick
graduated from Bloomsburg High
School in 1903 and the Bloomsburg
Normal School
in 1905. After teaching
a year in Mifflinville and three in Atlantic City, she became the bride of
the late Charles C. Housenick and has
since resided in this community.
A member of the Presbyterian
Church since 1897, she taught church
school for a number of years, was the
first women named to the board of
deacons and the second woman selected for the board of trustees. She has
held many offices in women’s associations and is a charter member of the
Study and Service Literary Club and
Delta Literary Club.
She is a member of the Bloomsburg
Hospital Auxiliary, on the board of
directors of the Public
Library,
a
founder and directors of the Bloomsburg Chapter of the American Red
Cross for over forty years, on the
committee that founded the Columbia
County Council of Girl Scouts and its
second commissioner and early in the
present centery worked for the suffrage for women.
Given an ovation by the graduates,
Outstanding
Mrs. Housenick in her response said
She
she was “proud and humble.”
recalled she started in War I days
and asserted that ‘‘It is a poor citizen who cannot be counted upon when
needed.” She served as alumni secretary under Bruce Albert, Dr. E.
Nelson, Fred
sent president,
II.
W. Diehl and the
Howard
F.
pre-
Fenste-
maker.
meeting
Dr. Harvey
Is
Reminiscing, she recalled there
less than 500 students when she
were
was enrolled
at
Bloomsburg Normal.
She spoke of the
fitting dedication
of the science center to the Hartline
family, recalling that
Prof. D. S.
Hartline was the instructor of
Dr.
Kuster and the later had been a teacher of the present head of the science
department, Dr. Donald D. Rabb.
‘‘Each has given inspiration to others.”
graduate school.
The year immediately ahead will
find 4,000 full and part time students
enrolled and this will require the adding of thirty-five to forty faculty members.
One of the great problems in
securing faculty is that in the past
and at the present time college head
has
to
search for
teachers
without
knowing how much money will be
available to pay them. “ You can’t
run a college this way,” he declared.
Many of the students today receive
aid through grants, employment and
scholarships. There are more sources of aid but, he pointed out, there are
also more students.
During the meeting the 762 graduates of the past year were voted into
association. The roll call of reunion
classes concluded the session.
Renamed
to the board of directors
three-year terms
were Millard
Ludwig, Mrs. Joseph C. Conner, Dr.
Kimber C. Kuster, John Thomas and
Clayton H. Hinkel.
Earl A. Gehrig reported that during
the year ending March 31 the receipts
from alumni dues and contributions to
the loyalty fund were $13,000, the best
since the program was initiated four
years ago. There is $43,000 in trust
for scholarships and $152,000
in the
McNinch fund for student loans. During the past year there were thirtytwo regular and eleven temporary
loans from the fund and there will be
$25,000 available in the coming year
tor
for
new
loans.
Dr. Andruss paid tribute to his
wife for her contributions through the
years.
He spoke of
more than two
the
changes
in
his
in state
score years
college education, said that all of the
state colleges will in time become universities in name and touched on the
rapid growth of the local college.
He said each institution is different
because of the region which is serves
and that “what Bloomsburg has achieved is the result of the region sending good people to the school who have
gone out to do good things.”
Dr. Andruss spoke of the fact that
bids are to be opened for the new field
and gymnasium, first major
development on the upper campus,
and of the utility lines that will have
house
be placed in that area.
The future will bring the need for
reorganization, with vice presidents
and deans of the colleges of arts and
science, business, education and the
to
CLASS REUNIONS
Reunions are the reason for alumni
day and there were some outstanding
get-togethers of BSC grads during
the spring festivities that was blessed
with exceptionally fine weather.
Among those on campus were Eva
Mrs. Nellie
Faust McKelvy, 1892;
Schweppenheiser Worman, Danville,
1903; Mrs. Lillian Buckalew Rider,
Mrs.
1904; Edwin M. Barton, 1907.
Clyde S. Shuman, whose husband was
a member of the class of 1906 was a
guest. These and others of the early
the
luncheon
classes who were at
were recognized by Howard F. Fenstemaker, president of the general
body.
1909
The oldest class in reunion was
1909. They joined the class of 1919 at
the dinner in the College Commons on
Friday night, and had a busy day on
Saturday. Ten persons were present.
1914
Three persons from the class of
1914 were present at the activities on
Alumni Day.
The honor
1919
class in
reunion,
1919,
had an outstanding weekend, opening
with a dinner at College Commons on
Friday evening, at which the general
BSC Alumni
Association was host, and
following with a breakfast
the
at
Hotel Magee and then activities on
campus as the “old grads” marked
the numerous changes of the past half
century.
Forty-eight were present.
Published quarterly by the Alumni Association of the Bloomsburg State College, Bloomsburg, Penna. 17815. Second-Class Postage Paid at Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania. - Send POD. Form No. 3579 to the ALUMNI OFFICE, BLOOMSBURG STATE COL-
LEGE, BLOOMSBURG, PENNA.
JUNE,
1969
17815
Page one
Class of 1924
of 1924 had one of the
largest turnouts and one of the most
weekend.
the
active programs of
There were eighty-five to dinner Friday night at the Hotel Magee, fiftythree at the breakfast and sixty-three
at the general alumni luncheon. The
class gave $152 to the BSC loyalty
fund.
In addition to the always interesting
roll call of Friday night, color slides
of the forty-year reunion were shown
by Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Laise, Little
Neck, N. Y. Also shown were films
of an African safari taken by Mr. and
Mrs. R. Wayne McLaughlin, Staun-
The class
Va.
Mrs. S. L. Wilson, whose husband
ton,
was
the class advisor,
was guest
of
honor on Friday evening.
Frank Buss, Wilkes-Barre, presided
at the breakfast. William Partridge,
Bethlehem, made the class report at
the general meeting.
Members came
from
California,
New York, New Jersey, Virginia,
Washington, D. C., and from all sections of Pennsylvania.
There were student guided campus
tours during Saturday morning.
Ninety-six participated in the reunion.
Class of 1929
The
of ’29 had a splendid
turnout
of
sixty-five.
When introduced at the general meeting they
waved paper flowers and reported
they were the “flower children” of
their generation.
Fifty-seven members were in attendance for the fortieth year reunion.
class
Class of 1934
The class
had forty back
year reunion and
topped
day with a dinner
on Saturday evening in the Keystone
room, Briar Heights Lodge.
for the
of
1934
thirty-fifth
off a busy
Class of 1939
The thirty-year
class,
1939,
had
twenty-eight participating in a memorable day climaxed with a get together late Saturday afternoon at the
home
of
Mrs.
and then dinner
Ruth
in the
Dugan Smeal,
Rainbow room
at the Elks.
Class of 1944
The class of 1944 was graduated during the World War II years and was
small.
Classes of that period were
reported planning a get together for
the spring graduate festivities next
year.
The class
Class of 1949
of 1949 had a fine repre-
sentation of some three score. In addition to participating in the general
festivities they had an enjoyed dinner
on Saturday evening at the Blooms*
burg American Legion.
Class of 1954
The class of 1954 marked its fifteenth year reunion with a delightful
get together, dinner and program at
the Bloomsburg Moose on Saturday
evening after participating in activities on the campus through the day.
Twenty-eight members were pres-
Page two
Three Buildings Dedicated
The new classroom building now
under construction on the BSC campus on a site between Haas Auditorium and Andruss Library will be named the Bakeless Center for Humanities, William A. Lank, president of the
board of trustees announced at the
dedication ceremonies, in the auditorium, for the Hartline Science Center and the El well Residence Hall.
The new building, scheduled for
completion in May of 1970 will be
named in honor of a family long identified with the institution of higher
learning. The late O. H. Bakeless was
one of the beloved “Old Guard” of
Two of his
Bloomsburg Normal.
children, John Bakelsss, author, journalist and historian and Mrs. Katherine Bakeless Nason, hold the Meritorious Service Award of the Alumni
Association.
“Unless a large portion of our ordinary citizens and our leaders in in-
who
families
contributed much to the school. ReinCollege
of
hold Schultz, president
Council, represented the Community
Government Association.
Then came the presentation of the
keys, the acceptance by Dr. Andruss
and then the acceptance of the buildings by Lank. Dr. Andruss, who has
announced his retirement in the coming fall, expressed thanks to the many
who have contributed to the advancement of the College. It was noted that
the lecture hall in the science center
has been named for Dr. Kimber C.
Kuster, former head of the science
been named for two
department.
Dr. MacNichol paid tribute to Dr.
Hartline who was his instructor while
pursuing graduate studies.
He commented that “one
marks of a great teacher is
of the
that he
honored famililes, Dr. and Mrs. H.
Keffer Hartline, New York City, the
former a Nobel prize winner in
science, and G. Edward Elwell Jr, of
able to inspire his students towards
careers in which they will use their
talents to the fullest. Keffer Hartline
has done this.”
Dr. MacNichol went on to state that
Dr. Hartline is a living example of the
effectiveness of inspiring our young
people with the curiosity about the
universe and everything in it.
“It is the citizen through his representatives in Congress who makes
It is the teacher
the final decision.
who inspires others to research and
teaching to push forward the frontiers
of knowledge or to have an interest in
and understanding of our complex
society, with its expanding population
diminishing natural resources, prob-
Bloomsburg.
lems
program the Maroon
and Gold Band entertained with a
concert. The Rev. Dr. Frank W. Ake,
wealth enough to have all our citizens
The imhealthy and well-satisfied.
portance of a well-educated citizenry
cannot be overestimated. Decisions
will be wise only if those who will
make them totally understand their
implications. We must have informed citiznes if we are to survive as a
dustry and Congress obtain a broad
scientific education which will enable
to understand the major issues
of our complex, technological society
and reach wise decisions, we are in
them
serious trouble,” Dr. Edward F. MacNichol, Jr., director, National Institute of
Neurological
Diseases
and
Stroke, asserted in his address at the
dedication convocation of the science
center and residence hall.
In attendance were members of the
Prior to the
pastor of the Wesley United MethoChurch, gave the invocation and
Dr. John A. Hoch, dean of instruction,
introduced guests.
Sen. Preston B. Davis predicated a
great future for Bloomsburg State
dist
College.
John Mowery, Burean of
State Colleges and Universities, said
tha there have been 500 projects of
the General State Authority in the
past twenty years totalling
a half
billion dollars.
George Hemingway, vice president
council, said
problems between
College and town have been satisfactorily resolved from time to time by
meeting and discussing the matters
and said this method can be employed with profit by other groups. Howard F. Fenstemaker, president of the
graduate body, said the buildings have
of
ent at the reunion.
Class of 19G4
The class of 1964 had a get-together
at 5:30 P. M. at the Elks Club. This
was followed by a dinner and dance.
A
large
number
activities.
participated in
the
is
of air
and water pollution and
nation.”
The benediction was by Rev. Joseph
T. Kofchok, pastor of St. Columba’s
Catholic Church.
HSC STUDENTS WIN
FORENSIC AWARDS
Tim Shannon, Bloomsburg State
College, won a gold medal with a ratextemperaneous
in
ing of superior
speaking in Pi Delta Kappa’s NationArizona
al Forensic Competition at
State in Tempe, Ariz. There were 220
competing in the division.
Another BSC student, Karl Kramer,
was awarded a certificate in excellance in discussion with over 166 participants. BSC was one of 186 colleges
and universities competing in the national event.
ADDRESSES WANTED
Edward
L. Yost 1922
John J Ilonelnicky 1929
Evelyn M. Keefe 1969
T1IE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
/
lj(U4-
*lltanJz
Contributions to April
1.
1969
opchak,
1903— $100.00 Westinghouse)
1904—
1890 Myrtle Swartz Van Wie.
1905—
1901— Gertrude Follmer Lowry.
<
1906— L. Ray Hawk.
1907—
Mrs. Harry E. Rider.
Jesse Y. Shambach.
1909— Dr. Carroll D. Champlin.
Mrs. Ada M. Bittenbender,
Mrs. Helen M. Hemingway, Mrs. Albert Henseler.
1911—Mrs. G. G. Reichley, Fred W.
W. Milton Brown. Edward
Eisenhauer, Mrs. H. N. Lake.
R.1913—
B.
1910 Sara F. Lewis, Mrs. F.
Stieg,
1914—I. Burton Shuman.
Mrs.
Diehl,
Mrs. Fred W.
1916—
Glenn
W. Hasbrauke.
Mrs. E. F. Sorber, Mrs. Clar1917—
Harry
Mrs.
J.
ence J. Tallman,
Diehl, Mrs.
Wright, Elizabeth Sturges.
Mrs. J. A. Gossman, Mrs. Alfred W. Sturman.
1919— Mrs. William
S. Prizer,
Mrs.
H. L. Mensinger.
Edwin
—James
S. Heller.
Mrs. George M. Griffith, Mrs.
J. S. Wiant, Harold J. Pegg, Helen
Miles
P. Ruddy, Vida E. Edwards,
1918
Walter
S.
Bruno
A.
1943
1948
1944
JUNE,
1969
Assistant
Jr.,
Clarence Gourley,
Director of Admissions. B. SC., Slippery Rock State College; M. Sc., Indiana University of Pennsylvania.
Robert L. Rosholt, Professor and
Chairman,
Department
of
Political
Science. B.A., Luther College, Decof
University
orah, Iowa; M.A.,
of
Minnesota;
Ph.D.,
University
Dominic W. Flamini,
Associate
Professor of Psychology. B.A., Juniata College; M.Ad., Temple University; Ph.D., University of Oklahoma.
Joseph T. Skenan, Associate Professor of Economics. B.A., Syracuse
University; Fulbright Scholar, Louvain University; Diploma in German,
Heidelberg University; Ph.D., Georgetown University.
J. Weston Baker, Assistant Professor of Business Education.
B.Sc.,
University of California at Berkeley;
M.Sc., Washington State University.
Mary A. Tolan, Acting Dean of
Women. B.Sc. State University College at Geneseo, N. Y.; M. Sc., State
University of New York at Albany.
Burton Reese, Assistant Professor
of Physical Education. B.Sc., M.Ed.,
Stroudsburg State College.
Russell C.
Brachman.
Charles Brennan.
1956—
1954 Mrs.
Lawrence
Anenveck,
Mrs. Michael Homiak. Sheldon N. Erwine, Mrs. R. B. Hollingsworth, Mrs.
Charles Brennan.
1958—
1955 Jacob E. Slembarski,
June
C. Lukac.
Charles V. Kiviatkowski, Mrs.
Peter S. Pennington, Curtis R. Eng-
F. Long.
Mrs. F. S. Reese, Mrs. Bernard Burnat, Mrs. J. L. Cohen, Mrs.
Alberta Green, Marian E.
Young,
Mrs. Andrew J. Brennan, Mrs. Alfred
E. Cox, Caroline E. Petrullo, Mrs.
Eugene Hayes, Mrs. William Hester,
Mrs. Foster L. Carter, Mrs. Fanny
E. DeMott, Lottie Miller, Mrs. Ernest
Stackhouse, Mrs. Raymond Swallow.
1930 Mrs. W. C. Symons.
1931 Elizabeth Hubler.
versity.
Minnesota.
Mrs. Eloise N. Fasshauer.
Frederick D. Young, Jr., (In
memory of Katherine
McDonald
1953— Edward F. Messa.
Young),
1951 Mrs. Edwin J. Hulzter, Parents of Mrs. Jack Harner (in memoriam), C. J. Persing.
U. Grant Ewell, Mrs.
1957
Nancy E. Gill, Instructor in English.
B.A. and M.A. Washington State Uni-
Mrs. Clyde C. Deels..
1950
1952
NEW MEMBERS OF
THE FACULTY
James J. Dormer.
Mary Louise Madl.
A. Reimard, Mabel G. Decker, Mrs.
Elizabeth
Rentschler,
H.
George
Steele Aurand, Mary Hess, Grace B.
McCoy, Mollie Jeremiah Payne, Elsie
M. Pfahler, Mrs. Robert B. Penman,
Mrs. Elizabeth Eltringham, Mrs. W.
D. Powell, Mrs. Paul Bredbenner,
Olive O. Robinson, Mrs. Catherine
Wilkinson, Alma L. Bachman, Mrs.
William Brock, Anna N. Conboy.^Mrs.
George M. Kunkel, Mrs. Eva F. Ellis.
Mildred E. Stover, Mrs. Wesley E.
Davies.
1920 Mrs. Roy O. Frey, Mrs. Foster L. Pannebaker, Mark H. Bennett.
1921 Warren L. Fisher.
tob.
1929
Chesney.
Novak,
1939 Mrs. Clifford R. Young, Isaiah D. Bomboy, Edith May Eade,
Col. Victor J. Ferrari, Mrs. Claude
Zehner.
1940 Clayton H. Hinkel.
1942 Bertha A. Hindmarch, Jack
L. 1949—
Mertz, Howard W. Brochyus.
lish.
Freyermuth, Mary E. Learn.
1924 Mrs. Helen L. Noakes,
Mrs.
Arline J. Banker, Mrs. George Reger,
Mi's. Burdella Honeywell. Mrs. Charles H. Roberts, Mrs. Grace W. Beers.
1925 Pearl Poust, Helen V. Cashmareck.
1927 Mrs. Earl McCloughan.
1928 Margaret L. Lewis, Mrs. Charles D. Blair, Mrs. Miltona B. Kline-
Mrs. Russell
O’Connell.
Pollock.
F. Ralph Dreibelbis, Catherine
1923 Joseph Zelloe, Mis. Frances
F. Harrell, Rev. Raymond Edwards,
Alice Shipman Edwards, Mrs. Ann F.
J. Johns,
Michael
Prokopchak.
1938 John F. Hendler, Mrs. FlorR.
Mrs.
Ellen
ence S. Wallace,
1935
FACULTY— George G. Stradtman.
MATCHED GIFTS— Michael Prok-
—
1932
F. 1934—
Todd.
James
George W. O’Connell,
Mrs.
Harold J. Steltz, James H. Vowler,
Jr., Dorothy Jean Cooper.
1959 Otto H. Donar, Larry A. Fisher, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence B. Barnhart, Donna M.
Hutchinson,
Mrs.
Richard Moore, Rev. Ray W. Schloyer, Mrs. Sandra P. Brown, Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas J. Fleck.
1960 Paul T. Paliscak, Mrs. Robert
E. Bucher, James H. Williams.
19G1 Thornton Grove, William
S.
Morgan, Marian L. Huttenstine, Mrs.
John J. Seksinsky.
1962 Jon E. Reese, Mrs. Charles
H.1967—
Evans, Jr., Gerald J. Wright, D.
James Donald.
1963 Mrs. Henry
Benscoter,
F.
John J. McCoy.
1964 Shirley E. Kline,
Roger S.
Schropp, Mrs. James R. Woods, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard P. Dopovic, Robert
A. Mayefskie, Richard N. Faust.
1965 Mrs. Richard N. Faust.
1966 Victor R Campbell, Barbara
A. Urbas, Jack L. Keller, Robert J.
Bicombe, James L. Derr.
Mary S. Gifford, Richard R.
Leonovich, Patricia Conwell, David
J. Hollingshead, Mrs. Alan M. Schwartz, Kenneth H. Mertz, Charles E.
Wagner, Raymond L. Kunkel, Jr.,
—
Judith A. Yarnall, Barbara Sabulski.
1968 Mr. and Mrs. Arthur A. Steiner, Caroline S. Taby, David W. Bowen, Cherie
E. Vaughn. Ruth A. Slon-
READING CONFERENCE
Dr. Paul Witty, professor emeritus,
Northwestern University
and Dr.
Russell Stauffer, professor of psychology and director of the
Reading
Clinic, University of Delaware, delivered the feature addresses
at
the
Fifth Annual Reading Conference held
on the Bloomsburg State College campus Friday and Saturday, March 28
and 29. Group demonstrations for the
first session 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. on Fri-
day were conducted
in the
Benjamin
Franklin building.
Dr. Gilbert Selders, professor of
education at BSC, served as overall
chairman of the session. Dr. Gilbert
Schiffman,
Prince George County
Schools, Upper Marlboro, Md., showed
films on “Teaching Dyslexic Children’’
which was followed by a discussion
period.
The main speaker for the general
was Dr. Witty, whose topic
was “Reading for the Gifted and
Creative Student.” Dr. Harvey A.
session
Andruss, president of BSC, spoke at
this session.
Dr. Charles Carlson,
director of graduate studies, BSC,
served as chairman.
The featured speaker for the general session Saturday morning was
Dr. Stauffer, who spoke on “What is
the Future in Early Reading?”
Dr.
John A. Hoch. dean of instruction, addressed this group.
aker.
1969
Frances Demnicki,
T. Yockey, Daniel D. Nester.
Gregory
Send your check for your contribuLoyalty Fund.
tion to the 1969
Page three
iltt
Miniumum
1911—Mrs. Margaret Simmons Yost,
Hazleton, Pa.
—
1891 Mrs. Fiona Schiader Bennett,
Home, JohnsAllegheny Lutheran
town, Pa. October 10, 1968.
1929 Mildred Ruck Tippins, Fort
Atkinson, Wis.
1929— Margaret Anstett (Mrs. Edward Heltzer), Kingston, Pa.
1928 Nicholas! Polanesky Philadelphia, Pa.
1950 Leo J. McDonald, Ringtown,
Pa.
1909 Emma Eaton (Mrs. William
Purego), Dallas, Pa.
1914 Edward Bringenberg,
West
Hazleton, Pa.
1909 Frances W. Garrison (Mrs. C.
H. Danforth),
Stanford
University,
—
—
—
—
—
—
,
California.
Dr. Adelaide Ellsworth Weston ’94
Dr. Adelaide (Ellsworth)
Weston,
95, of 516 Spring Street, Jamestown,
N. Y., a well known physician in Jamestown for many years, died November 11 1968 in W.C.A. Hospital.
Dr. Weston was born December 25,
North Moreland
Township,
Wyoming County, Pa., the daughter
of Chester L. and Susan White Ells1872,
in
worth, both of pioneer stock.
Her
progenitors were of English extraction, tracing their ancestry to
Sir
John Ellsworth of England, of the
time of Edward III. The line in this
country began with
the
Winsor,
Conn., colony in 1635, from which they
migrated to northeastern
Pennsylvania.
After several years of teaching in
public schools,
she
entered
the
Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, from which
she received her degree in medicine.
She served as intern in the Woman’s
Hospital of Philadelphia and later did
postgraduate work at University of
Michigan.
She was connected with
the State Hospital in Warren, Pa. for
a number of years.
In 1923 she was married to
Dr.
Paul G. Weston, and with him came
to Jamestown where
both
doctors
practiced for many years. He died in
Dr. Weston was a
of the
Association,
the
Medical
Society,
Medical Society,
Voters.
Dr. Weston was a devoted member
of St. Luke’s Episcopal Church and a
few years ago provided funds for remodeling, repairing the bell tower and
electrifying the carillon of bells.
She was well traveled, a patron of
he arts and helped many young peo
I
Page four
Association of
University
Women;
the Mozart Club; and the boards of
Agnes Home and Warner Home.
The Chautauqua County Medical
the
Society honored her with a citation
for 50 years devoted service in the
profession.
The Woman’s Medical
College also gave her a citation for
her 50 years in medicine.
Clara Cougliliu Iloselle
’06
Mrs. Clara C. Roselle, 78, of 90
Yeager Avenue, Forty Fort, passed
away January 6 at her home after a
week’s illness. Born in Luzerne, she
was educated in the borough schools
and was a graduate of Bloomsburg
State College. Mrs. Roselle taught in
the elementary department of
the
Courtdale and Kingston schools and
was a teacher in the Forty Fort
School District from 1942 until retiring in 1959.
A resident of Forty Fort 48 years,
she was a member of Forty Fort
Methodist Church and the Official
Board. Mrs. Roselle was serving as
secretary of the Commission of Missions of the church and belonged to
(he Harmony Bible Class, the WSCS
and Adult Fellowship. She was a
member of the Forty Fort Women’s
Christian Temperance Union and the
Retired Teachers Association of Luzerne County and Pennsylvania.
Catherine Jameson Burr ’ll
Mrs. Ralph Burr, a Danville native,
was
killed
instantly
March
4
when
she was struck by a car while crossing a street in Troy, Pa.
Mrs. Burr, the former Catherine
Jamieson of Danville, reportedly was
watching a car approaching from another direction when she was struck
by a car. Mrs. Burr was the widow
of Ralph Burr, a prominent Troy
banker and since her husband’s death
had resided with a sister, Mrs. John
Colwell, also of Troy, her only sur-
member
and various other medical organizations.
She was also on the medical
staffs of W.A.C. Hospital and Jamestown General Hospital.
She served for several years on the
welfare board under the former Mayor Samuel A. Carlson and was an
early president of
the
League of
Women
Jamestown Branch, American
tion;
vivor.
1939.
American Medical
New York State
Chautauqua County
pie to educations.
Her proteges included the fields of music, medicine,
dentistry and law.
She added much to the cultural life
of Jamestown. She was a member of
the Fortnightly; Jamestown Chapter,
Daughters of the American Revolu-
Myra
S.
Sharpless
’30
Miss Myra S. Sharpless, a devoted
teacher in Columbia County schools
for thirty-eight years thirty-five of
those in the Bloomsburg Junior High
School died unexpectedly at Bloomsburg Hospital at
Saturday,
7:30,
March 1 from a heart attack.
She was a graduate of the Bloomsburg High School and the Bloomsburg
State College and took graduate work
at the Pennsylvania State University.
She started her teaching career in
Scott Township High School, now part
of Central Columbia, and three years
—
—
was named to the faculty of the
Bloomsburg district.
She was a member of the Wesley
United Methodist Church and the Pals
later
Sunday School Class of that congregation and often a teacher of that
class.
Other affiliations were the
Woman’s Society of Christian Service
of her church, the Daughters of American Colonists, the Bloomsburg Busiess and Professional
Women, the
and the handicraft class.
AAUW
Aula Hoiter Harman
Mrs. Aula Frances Harman, seventy-one, of 124 East
First
Street,
Bloomsburg, was dead on arrival at
Bloomsburg Hospital February 22'. She
was born October 28, 1897, in Mifflin,
Pa., and had been employed as bookkeeper-accountant at BSC for thirtyseven years. She was retired.
She
was a member of St. Matthew Lutheran Church.
Kathleen M. Jones T3
Miss Kathlene M. Jones, died on
April 17 in Wilmington Medical Center, Del.
Born in Berwick, she was
a daughter of the late Henry E. and
Laura Krug Jones. She graduated
frfom Berwick High School at the age
of sixteen.
She received a BA from
Bloomsburg State College and an MA
from New York University.
She was principal at the Fourteenth
Street School, Berwick, until her retirement ten years ago.
She had
taught at
ten years.
New
Castle, Del., the last
Dean D. Oliver ’15
Dean D. Oliver, seventy-two,
169
South Maple avenue, Kingston,
died
recently at Nesbitt Memorial Hospital at Kingston where he had been a
patient for ten days.
He was born in Sweet Valley, son
of the late Franklin and Lillian Bronson Oliver.
He was a resident of
Kingston for forty-three years. Oliver
operated the Franklin Oliver and Son
General Store in Kingston. He was
employed by the Hobart Manufacturing Company of Ohio for some time
and operated the Hurry Back Coffee
Shop,
Kingston,
for
twenty-three
years and retired in 1955.
He was a member of Sweet Valley
Christian Church and attended Kingston United Methodist Church.
He
was a member of Sylvania Lodge 363
of Shickshinny, member of Keystone
Consistory of Scranton
Irem
and
of Wilkes-Barre.
He was a
veteran of World War I, a member of
American Legion Post 396 Kingston
and of the Last Man’s Club of the
Temple
Legion post.
Gerald C. llartman ’32
Gerald Clayton Hartman,
fiftyeight, Catawissa, chief administrator
of the Som hern Columbia School District and widely known in the fields of
education and music died Wednesday,
April 16 in
Bloomsburg Hospital.
in ill health for some
He had been
time but carried on his school duties
months.
He was born January 9, 1911, son
of Emanuel and Martha Clayton Hartuntil recent
T1IE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
man who reside in Catawissa.
A member of Catawissa Lodge
F. and A.M., he was also affiliated
with the Royal Arch Chapter 178 of
which he was a past presiding officer, and Caldwell Consistory, where
he was long choir director of holder
ol the Meritorious Service Award for
his contributions to this Scottish Rite
Body.
Professionally he was affiliated with
School
the American Association of
Administrators; the Pennsylvania Association of the Chief School Administrators; associate member of the
Pennsylvania School Boards AssociaPennsylvania State
tion, Inc.; the
Education Association; National Education Association; Susquehanna Valley Reading Council and president of
the Susquehanna Valley Elementary
Supervisors.
He was a member of the Catawissa
High School Alumni Association and
in recent years in recognition of his
contributions that bcdy presented him
with a chair.
In
the years
when Catawissa had
a Rotary he served a term as president. He was a charter member of the
Catawissa Chamber of Commerce.
Throughout his life he was active in
the St. John’s Lutheran Church. Catawissa, where he served as choir director and organist for the past twelve
years. For much of his life he gave
other churches of the area the benefit
of his musical talent and for a substantial period
was organist
of First
Church,
Bloomsburg.
Presbyterian
and First Methodist Church, Berwick.
For many years he taught a Sunday
School class in his home church.
He was a graduate of Catawissa
High School, the Bloomsburg State
Teachers College, received his Master
of Education Degree at Bucknell University and his music degree at Susquehanna University.
In addition he took graduate work
at the Pennsylvania State University.
His career as a teacher was launched in the Millville schools and he
started his educational career in his
home community
in 1935.
1904—Bessie Derr (Mrs.
Skea), Lake Forest, Illinois.
Norman
Ethel Creasy Wright ’09
Mrs. Ethel Louise Creasy Wright,
Bloomsburg, died Tuesday, April 8 at
two o’clock at the Bloomsburg Hospital where she had been a patient one
week.
She was born in Bloomsburg, a daughter of the late Clifton and May
Wells Creasy.
She graduated from
Bloomsburg Normal School in 1909
and Dickinson Seminary, Williamsport, in 1910.
She was a member of Wesley United Methodist Church, Friendship Sunday School Class, WSCS and Alumni
Association of BSC. She was a former member of Fort McClure Chapter DAR and the Ivy Club.
Her husband, Dennis Daniel Wright of the
class of 1911 died in 1945.
JUNE,
1969
TESTIMONIAL TO
1)11. ANDRUSS
WEDDINGS
349
1962
Barbara Jean Kolet and John Anthony Nied, February 14. Barbara teaches English in Danville, Pa., JunHigh School and her husband is
ior
librarian there.
1963
Darlene F. Scheidt, Pottstown, and
Mr. Derkits is a
Robert Derkits.
with
auditor
supervisory
the
U.
S.
General Accounting Office. Mrs. Derkits is an instructor with the Federal
Government. Address; 6209 N. 22nd
Arlington, Virginia 22205.
St.,
Suzanne Halkyard and Thomas L.
Logan. March 15. Suzanne was graduated from BSC summa cum laude,
and holds memberships in eight national honor societies. She is a graduate of Lankenau Hospital School of
Nursing, Philadelphia, has done graduate work in nursing at Teachers College. Columbia University, New York
City; and post graduate work at BSC.
Her husband is a physics teacher and
head basketball coach at Towanda
Area High School. The couple plans
to live in Towanda. Pa.
1966
Larry E. Drumm and Bonnie Ann
Brobst ’69, January 25. Address: 2145
N Street NW, Washington, D. C. Larry
is
serving a one-year internship at
Augustana Lutheran Church and is
employed by the Lutheran Cooperative Parish in Washington; he is a
third-year student at the
Lutheran
Theological Seminary in Gettysburg.
1968
Edward
Shepperson and
Dorothy Jane Kessler ’68. Dorothy
Charles
is
teaching in the Bloomsburg School
Ned is employed at Kawneer.
They reside on R. D. 1 Bloomsburg.
Kathy Jane Reimard ’69 and Douglas Clark Hippenstiel. April 12.
The
groom is a teacher in the Danville
Senior High School.
E\elyn K. Fedin, Berwick and Stanley T. Pacewicz, Plymouth. The bride
is a social science
teacher.
Mr.
Pacewicz is proprietor of the Bull Run
Restaurant and Tavern. Address: 174
East Main Street, Plymouth.
Linda K. Dietz, Riverside, Pa., and
Jay L. Bush, Pittsburgh, April 12.
Linda is teaching mathematics at the
Gettysburg High School. Address: 211
North Washington Street, Gettysburg,
District;
Pa.
1969
Jacqueline
Washburn
and
Jack
Fisher, January 25. Jacqueline teaches second grade at Berwick.
Linda Jane Frye and Edward RobThe groom is employed by
Highway Department.
Betty Louise Seidel
Doyle
and
Frederick Dietz, January 25. Betty
teaches in the Panther Valley School
ert Hess.
the State
The couple lives in Lansford.
Gloria Jean Janasik and Lt. (jg>
Gerald Anthony Gurick. Mrs. Gurick
is a substitute teacher in the Beeville
School District. The couple resides at
District.
Blueberry
78102
Hill
33,
Beeville,
Texas.
Dr. Harvey A. Andruss, who has anhis retirement in the coming
fall after thirty years as president of
Bloomsburg State College, was honored at a testimonial dinner at Briar
Heights Ledge that was sponsored
jointly by the Business Division faculty of the College; Phi Omega Pi.
the national honor society in business
education and Phi Beta Lambda, the
student organization of the Business
nounced
Education Department.
Dr. Andruss, associated
with
the
local institution of higher education
for two score years, was the first head
Education Departof the Business
ment, a post he occupied prior to becoming dean of instruction and then
dead of instruction and then president.
Over a hundred attended.
The invocation was given by James
Creasy, assistant to the President and
a
member
faculty.
of the Business Division
Following the dinner Dr.
Emory W.
Rarig, Jr., director of the
Business Education Division,
intro-
duced special guests present, including Charles Henrie and Earl Gehrig,
Dr.
former BSC faculty members.
Rarig also read telegrams and letters
from Dr. S. Lloyd Tourney and Dr.
Thomas Martin, former division directors and from Walter Rygiel, for-
mer member.
The first speaker presenting a testimonial to Dr. Andruss was Dr. WilSupervisor
of
liam Selden,
State
Business Education, Department of
Public Instruction, and a graduate of
BSC..
The second testimonial to Dr. Andwas given by Dr. Rarig H.
Cowley, ‘‘Name a great American
college or university and you will find
russ
commanding leader or
who held its presidency,” as
in its history a
leaders
an indication of truth describing BSC
and its president, Dr. Andruss.
Following Dr. Rarig ’s address, a
a portable typewriter was presented to the guest of honor to “assist
him in his asserted ambition to do a
great deal of writing and traveling in
the near future.”
gift of
Robert Goralski,
NBC news
corres-
pondent, was the guest speaker at a
dinner given by President and Mrs.
Harvey A. Andruss, Bloomsburg State
faculty
members and
and board of trustee
members and their wives in the College
Commons Saturday evening,
March 15. Goralski spoke on “The
Changing World and the Challenge to
College,
for
their wives,
U. S. Leadership.”
Bloomsburg State
College, in
the
proposed outlays for colleges compared with estimated
expenditures
for the current year, will get an increase from the 1968-69 budget figure
of $3,237,000
1970.
to
$5,344,000
for
Page
1969-
five
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR
H. F. Fenstemaker ’12
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Grace Foote Conner,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Terms
Howard
P. Fenstemaker T2
242 Central Road
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Term
expires 1970
Colonial
R. D.
1,
Term
El wood M. Wagner
’43
Dr. William L. Bitner
33 Lincoln Avenue
Glen Falls,
expires 1970
SECRETARY
New York
III
12801
Elisabeth H. Hubler
’35
expires 1970
TREASURER
205
’29
McKnight Street
Gordon, Pennsylvania 17936
James H.
37 N.
Deily, Jr.
’41
Bausman Drive
Lancaster, Pennsylvania 17603
Earl A. Gehrig ’37
Robin Lane, Sherwood Village
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
110
Term
expires 1970
Glenn A. Oman ’32
1704 Clay Avenue
Scranton, Pennsylvania 18509
Terms
expire 1972
Millard Ludwig ’48
Center and Third Streets
’52
88
Mills, Pa. 19342
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie
509 East Front Street
Berwick, Pennsylvania 18603
Term
Term
expire 1971
643 Wiltshire Road
State College, Pa. 16801
Farm Box
Glen
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Mrs. Verna Jones ’36
18 West Avenue, Apartment C-4
Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087
Col.
VICE PRESIDENT
Dr. Frank J. Furgele
—
’34
Pennsylvania 17846
Millville,
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
102
’34
West Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Kimber C. Kuster T3
West Eleventh Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Dr.
140
John Thomas ’47
68 Fourth Street
Hamburg, Pennsylvania 19526
Clayton H. Hinkel
’40
Leonard Street
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
224
expires 1970
Volume LXX, Number 2 — June, 1969
1890
Commonwealth
The Honorable James H. J. Tate, Mayor, City of Philadel
phia; The Rev. Robert J. Marshall,
President, Lutheran Church in America: The Rev. William
A.
Janson,
P. Shafer, Governor,
Frona Schrader Bennett, 98 years
Miss Eleanor Hayman, a guest at
the Lutheran
Home, Germantown,
celebrated her one hundredth birthday on April 8, 1969. Many friends
joined with her to celebrate the oc-
of Pennsylvania:
age, a guest at the Allegheny Luther-
casion.
President, Southeastern Pennsylvania
Synod of the Lutheran Church in
America; The Honorable Richard S.
Miss
Hayman was
born April
8,
1869, in Catawissa, Pa.
For 45 years
she taught in elementary grades and
high schools in Pennsylvania, retiring
in 1932.
Since 1897 she has been a
member of the Turbotville Lutheran
Parish, Turbotville, Pa.
At the age
of 80 she came to live
at Lutheran
Home.
Greeting cards poured in by the
hundreds and special messages were
received from: President and
Mrs.
Richard Nixon: The Honorable Robert
Finch, Secretary of Health. Education
and Welfare: The Honorable Raymond
Page
six
Sweiker, United States Senator.
Mrs. Verna Jones brought remarks
representing the alumni of Blooms-
burg State College,
Miss Hayman’s
alma mater.
We
an Home, Johnstown, Pa.
of
have
since been informed that Mrs. Bennett
died October 10 1968.
1903
Class
Ililand,
Representative:
dale, N. Y.
Mary
II.
Walter
Warwick Avenue, Scars-
11
.
10583
A. Good, former
member
of
the Bloomsburg faculty, is a guest at
the Creveling Convalescent Home, 321
East Fifth Street Berwick, Pa.
1905
Miss Eleanor Hayman, born in Catawissa, Pa., April 8, 1869, is a guest at
the Lutheran Home in Germantown,
Pa.
1891
The March number of the Quarterly
had a statement concerning Mrs.
Representative: Vera Hemingway Housenick, 503 Market Street,
Class
Bloomsburg,
I*a.
17815
1907
Class Representative:
Edwin M.
Barton, 353 College Hill, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
TIIE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
1909
Class
Diehl,
Fred
Representative:
Bloom
(!27
W.
Street, Danville, Pa.
17821
1910
Class Representative:
Robert E.
Metz, 22 Manliatton Street,
Ashley,
Pa. 18700
1911
Class Representative:
Diehl, 027
Pa.
Bloom
Pearle Fitch
Danville,
Street,
17821
1912
Representative:
Howard F.
Fenstemaker,
242
Central
Road,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17821
Class
1912
Class Representative: Dr. Kimber
Kuster, 140 West 11th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17821
The lecture room in the recently
dedicated Hartline Science Center has
been named the Dr. Kimber C. Kuster
Hall. He was formerly Chairman of
the Science Department at BSC.
served for twenty-five years on the
Overbrook Avenue, Shavertown, Pa.
Secretary: Gertrude
Gordon
18708.
Davies, 60 East Overbrook Avenue,
Shavertown, Pa.
Out-of-state Classmates back for the
reunion were: F. Ralph Dreibelbis,
422 West Highland Avenue, Wooster,
Ohio 44691; Ruth Doyle Moore, 336
Bender Avenue, Roselle Park, N. J.
07204; Eva Ferguson Ellis, 2764 Fed-
State
eral Street, Camden, N. J. 08105; Betty Steele Aurand, 4200 Cathedral Avenue N. W., Washington, D. C. 20016;
Olive Robinson, 1117 Morningside Avenue, Schnectady, N. Y. 12308; Frances E. Kinner, 3204 Verdun Avenue,
End well, N. J. 13760; Margaret Summers Brock, Rosenhayn, N. J. 08352.
Representative:
J. Howard
West Third Street, Blooms-
Deily, 518
208 East
burg, Pa. 17815
Main
Street,
Blooms-
1917
Class
Representative:
Cromis, Mahoning Manor,
Milton, Pa. 17847
Allan
L.
R. D. 1,
1918
Class
Representative:
Claire
J.
Patterson, 215 West Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Mr. and Mrs. J. Rutter Ohl, 25 East
Eleventh street, Bloomsburg, observ-
ed their golden anniversary at an
open house at their home. Mrs. Ohl
is a native of Lake Township, Luzerne
county. The former Edna Davenport,
she is the daughter of the late Mr.
and Mrs. Dana Davenport.
Mr. Ohl, son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Ohl, was born in Hemlock township. He is now retired after thirtysix years as a mail carrier in Blooms-
burg.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Ohl are members
Matthew Lutheran Church. Mrs.
Ohl was organist at the church for
thirty-one years and later served in
ol St.
the same capacity
at
St.
Peter’s
Church, Riverside, for four and onehalf years. She is currently organist
at United Church of Christ, Bloomsburg, where she has served for five
years. Their son, John, class of ’41,
is professor of English at Highland
Park Junior College in Michigan. They
have two grandchildren.
1919
Class Representative:
Miss Catherine A. Reimard, 235 Jefferson St.,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Miss Reimard requests her classmates to furnish her with information
such as change of address, marriages,
deaths, etc.
At the class meeting on Alumni Day
the members of the class contributed
S65 to the campus tree and shrubbery
program.
JUNE,
1969
Mrs.
Edwards
Mr. and
vention.
were a two-week evangelistic team
in Puerto Rico, and in the summer of
1967 he attended Mansfield College,
Oxford, England.
Mrs. Edwards, the former Alice
Shipman ’23, served seven years as a
member of the Executive Board of the
Woman’s American Baptist Home Society.
The Edwardses have a son, Robert,
who with his wife and children live at
Centerreach, Long Island, N. Y.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwards are living
at 2024 Old
Berwick Road, Espy.
Class Representative:
Edward F.
Schuyler, 236 West
Ridge Avenue,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1921
1925
Mrs. Harry
Cole, 100 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
1922
Class Representative: John H. Shu-
man,
of
1924
Representative:
Leroy W.
Road,
3117
Old
Berwick
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
Creasy,
burg, Pa. 17815
1915
Managers of the New York
Convention,
several
Baptist
years on the Executive Committee,
and finally as President of the ConBoard
1920
Class Representative:
1914
Class
The following officers were elected:
President: Wesley E. Davies, 60 East
Edna
S.
Representative:
Class
Harter, R. D. 1, Nescopeck, Pa. 18623
Ruth Hutton, DSA, 'Mrs. W. Mason
Aucker) 5124 45th Street, Washington, D. C., 20016, is chairman of the
Competition
Scholarship
Sculpture
(Washington Chapter National Society
She is preparof Arts and Letters).
ing new works for a coming sculpture
exhibition! September 6) at the Willilam Penn Memorial Fine Arts Museum, Harrisburg.
1923
mond
RayRoad,
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Mrs.
Representative:
Class
P.
Sherwood
Kashner,
Village,
125
Friar
17815
The Rev. Raymond H.
Edwards,
D.D., semi-retired Baptist pastor
living in
Bloomsburg, has
been
now
The Rev. and Mrs. Edwards are
special representatives of the Missionaries and Ministers Benefit Board of
Convention,
Baptist
the American
working four months of the year in
Delaware
and
Bickel,
17801
Representative: Pearl Rader
Masser Street, Sunbury, Pa.
Charles J. Daly was recently named
head basketball coach at Boston College.
A native of Kane, Pa., Daly
played his high school basketball in
that community under Dr. C. Stuart
Edwards, now Director of the Division
of
Secondary
Education
at
Bloomsburg State College. He attended St. Bonaventure for a year and
then transferred to Bloomsburg State
where he was a court star under
Coach Harold Shelley.
Following his
graduation
from
Bloomsburg, he taught and coached at
Punxsutawney High School where he
remained several years before going
to Duke University as freshman basketball coach.
He was later named
assistant basketball
coach
at Duke prior to his
pointment at Boston College.
Bubas
to
Vic
new
ap-
act-
ing as supply pastor of the First Baptist Church, Milton.
Pennsylvania,
Class
West
Virginia.
He is a native of Bloomsburg, attended public schools in Bloomsburg,
and was President of the Class of 1923
at the Bloomsburg Normal School. He
was later graduated from Bucknell
University and Colgate-Rochester Divinity School.
For the past forty years, has served in the State of New York, concluding with a 31-year pastorate at the
First Baptist Church, Ossining,
last
June. While in Ossining, he served
seven years as a member of the Village Recreation Commission, and two
years as its chairman, and was for
six years Chairman of the Ossining
Voluntary Ambulance Corps. He was
also President of the
Community
Council and Phelps Memorial Hospital Chaplains’ Association.
During his ministry in Ossining, he
Abbye Roberts
Bet Mar Nursing
is
a patient at the
in Plymouth,
Home
Pa.
Mr. and Mrs. David T. North, formerly of Bloomsburg, are making
their home in Fargo, N. D., where he
is in research as a radiation biologist
with a government laboratory connected with the Department of Agriculture
and Mrs. North is teacher of nutrition
in University of North Dakota.
They are also in business with “The
Burlap Bag” an art gallery and boutique, which specializes in handmade
lounging outfits, caftans and hostess
gowns, water colors, miniatures, ceramics, woodcuts and photos.
Mr. North is an active photographer
and has had a number of exhibits of
his work.
Mrs. North, the former
Barbara Bundens, is a member of the
Fargo-Moorhead Junior League which
does much volunteer service in the
community.
The present
Russell Looker
address of
is 6
the Rev.
Street,
West Water
Lock Haven, Pa. 17745
1926
Class
Representative:
Marvin M.
Page seven
2, Wapvvallopen, Pa. 186G0
Ralph
Class Representative: Mrs.
BerDendler, 1132 Market Street,
wick. Pa. 18G03
Bloss, R. D.
1957
William A. Griffiths has been promoted to assistant professor at the
State University of New York Agricultural and Technical College at Alfred.
Professor Griffiths is a member of
the faculty of the Secretarial Science
Department at Allred State College.
received an associate degree in
business administration from Keystone Junior College in 1959 and went
on to obtain his B.S. in business education at Bloomsburg State College.
Currently, he is completing requirements for his master’s at Alfred Uni-
He
versity.
Professor Griffiths is married to the
former Lyn Thomas of Eastchester,
N. Y. They have two children and
reside at Jericho Hill in Alfred Station.
1928
Mrs. (Elsie
Nelson Stauffer, 88 John St.,
(Arline
Mrs.
Kingston, Pa. 18704.
Parish
20
Frantz) Walter Covert,
Street, Dallas, Pa. 18612
Eleanor Sands Smith, Market Street,
Benton, Pa., 17814, who is remembered by her classmates for her ODE to
BLOOMSBURG, set to music by Ella
Sutton, and performed at our graduation ceremonies in 1928, and who was
poetry editor of the Maroon and Gold,
has kept her constant tempo and concern with her art through literary
publications, and especially as poetry
Morning Press of
editor for the
Bloomsburg, for the past thirty years.
She has reviewed poetry for several
manuscripts
poetry journels, edited
for the Falmouth Publishing Company,
participated in poetry readings before
the Poetry Society of America, New
York, and in 1938 gave a reading before an audience at Bloomsburg State
College, where she received a citation
for her work with Unicorn, a magazine of Verse, which she edited. She
is the author of two books, “St. MarClass Representatives:
Lebo)
tin’s
Summer,” and “Everywhere
Is
Mis. Smith
Here and Lonesome.”
was a recipient of a Pennsylvania
Poetry Society award last year.
At the 40th anniversary dinner of
the class she composed a ballad, honoring her class. This piece was reminiscent of Francois Villon’s ‘‘Where
Are The Snows of Yesteryear.”
She
promised to give a repeat performance at our 50th reunion!
1929
Walter M. Siesko has retired and is
living at Apt. 901, The Cambridge,
1221
Massachusetts Avenue, N.W.,
Thirteen years ago she returned to
teaching and last year, when her husband retired, they went to California.
She is teaching third grade at the
present time.
Among those present on Alumni
Day was Dorothy L. Schmidt.
Miss Schmidt, who was appointed
in 1937 by the former Board of ForPresbyterian
eign Missions of
the
Church, U.S.A. and assigned to Japan,
is a professor in the Tokyo Woman's
Christian College, where she teaches
English, serves as advisor to a group
of juniors, and does evangelistic work
through the city churches.
When Miss Schmidt first went to
Japan she taught at Hokusei Gakeun,
a girls’ high school and junior college
in Sopporo.
When the war made it
necessary to leave Japan, she was
Philippines
to
transferred to the
to teach English at Silliman UniverShe had taught
sity, Dumaguete.
there for only three weeks when the
Pearl Harbor attack made it necessary to flee into the mountains.
She
was later taken prisoner by the Japanese and spent three years in various
interment camps.
As soon as possible after the war
she returned to her work at Hokusei
Gakuen, where she was Head of the
Education Departments until 1953
when she was transferred to Tokyo.
From 1954 until 1968 Miss Schmidt
taught English at Meiji Gakuin UniApril
versity, until her transfer in
1968 to her present position as Professor of English in the Tokyo Women's
Christian College.
Miss Schmidt, who is from ScranBloomsburg
is a graduate
of
ton,
State College.
In 1937 she received a
Master’s Degree
in
Religious Educa-
(now
Seminary
tion from Biblical
The New York Theological Seminary),
New York City.
1930
Class
Representatives:
and Margaret Swartz
Luther W.
Bitier, 117 State
Street, Millville, Pa. 17864
1931
Representative:
James B.
Class
Davis, 333 East Marble Street, Mechanicsburg, Pa. 17055
Dr. Chester C. Hess was appointed
to the Board of Trustees of Woodville
State Hospital by Governor Raymond
P. Shafer.
Woodville Hospital is a
the
state mental hospital serving
mentally ill of Allegheny County.
Dr. Hess is a medical doctor and
has practiced in the South Hills section of Pittsburgh for the past twenty-eight years.
He and his family
reside at 1066 Bank Street, Bridgeville. Pa.
15017.
Class
Representative:
Miss Lois
Lawson,
644
East Third
Street.
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
The address of Sister M. Gervoise
(Mary M. Walsh) is Sisters’ of I.H.M.
She received her Bachelor’s and Masdegrees at Penn State University.
She is married and has one son and
42,
three daughters.
Page eight
Philadelphia,
Pa.
1934
Class
Representative:
Esther
Street,
154
Pa.
Bloomsburg,
17815
Arden H. Blain, 200 Horace Mann
Avenue, Red Lion, Pa., 17356, is a
member
of the staff of the
Red Lion
Area School.
1935
Reed,
William I.
East 4th Street, Blooms-
Representative:
Class
154
burg, Pa. 17815
Dr. Howard E. DeMott, Professor
of Biology at Susquehanna University,
was recently honored for twenty-one
years of service to that institution.
Dr. DeMott holds the M. S. degree
from Bucknell University, and the
Ph.D. from the University of Virginia.
1936
Kathryn
Representatives:
Vanauker (Mrs. Nicholas Moreth) 34
Linden Road, Ho-IloKus, New Jersey 07432. Co-Chairmen: Ruth Wagner (Mrs. Lawrence Le Grande) 126
Oak Street, Hazleton, Pa. 18201 and
Mary Jane Fink (Mrs. Frederick McCuteheon) Maple Avenue, Conyngham,
Pa. 18219
Class
1937
Class Representatives: Mr. and Mrs.
Earl A. Gehrig, 110 Robin Lane, Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1938
Class Representative: Paul G. Martin,
East Third Street, Blooms-
710
burg, Pa. 17815
1939
Representative:
Class
Willard A.
Christian, Jr., 803 Logue Street, Williamsport, Pa. 17701
Harriet L. Kocher, P. O. Box 181,
Springfield, Va., 22150, is
Secretary
College
of the
All
Pennsylvania
Alumni Association of Washington, D.
and Joseph A. Kulech ’49 is Treas-
C.,
urer of the organization.
Both are
of the Executive Committee.
The association held its annual Citation Luncheon on Saturday, February 1. The recipient of the 1969 was
Dr. Calvert N. Ellis, President Emeritus of Juniata College. The late Dr.
Francis B. Haas, President of BSC
from 1927 to 1939, received this honor
members
1952.
in
1940
Ilinkel,
Representative:
224
Leonard
Clayton
Street,
II.
Blooms-
burg, Pa. 17815
Ruth E. Boone McSweeney is living at 1660-A Wilikina Drive, Wehia-
wa, Hawaii 96786.
1941
Representative:
art Edwards, R. I). 4,
Pa. 17815
Class
Dr.
C.
Stu-
Bloomsburg.
1942
Representative:
Zimmerman (Jean
Class
II.
Krcady
Eleanor Zydonowicz Cooke, 1536 S.
State Street, Space 62, Hamet, California, sends her greetings
to
her
classmates. After graduation,
she
went to teach in Detroit, Michigan.
2240 South 71st Street.
East Fifth
Class
1932
1933
ter’s
Evans McFadden (Mrs. Joseph),
Avenue,
Mrs. Ralph
Noll),
Millersville,
165
Pa.
17551
1943
With a view to providing a continuous educational opportunity for college students in the Hartford area. Dr.
Arthur C. Banks, Jr., President of
Greater Hartford Community College,
announced the appointment of Bernard Pufnak as the new Director of
TIIE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
the Summer School. Mr. Pufnak has
been teaching for many years in the
Hartford school system and also at
Central Connecticut State College. In
addition to his new duties, he is currently head of Secretarial Studies at
He is a member of the
the college.
Eastern Business Teachers’ Association. the Connecticut Business Educaveteran of
tion Association, and a
World War II and the Korean War.
With his wife and family, he resides
Newington, Conn.
at 82 Elton Dr.,
06111.
1944
Representative: Mrs. (Poletime Comuntzis) Carl Demetrikopoulos. Friar and Hobin Lanes, Sherwood
Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
('lass
1945
Class Representative: Mary Lou
John, 257 West 11th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1946
Anastasia
Representative:
Pappas (Mrs. John Trowbridge), 102
W. Mahoning Street, Danville, Pa.
Class
1947
Bunge,
Robert L.
Representative:
Class
12
YVest
Park
Street.
Carroll
Park, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1948
Harry G.
Representative:
Class
John. Jr., 425 Iron Street. Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
1949
Class Representative: Richard E.
Harris1723 Fulton Street,
burg, Pa. 17102
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kulick are
living at 1542 North Danville Street,
Mrs. Kulick is
Arlington, Virginia.
the former Irene Kornaski ’43.
Grimes,
1950
Class Representative: Jane Kenvin
(Mrs. George Widger), R. D. 2, Catawissa, Pa. 17820
Rod Morgans, a veteran of regional football coaching ranks, has submitted his resignation as head grid
coach at S. Williamsport High School.
Morgan, an exponent of the single
wing formation, piloted the Mounties
for fourteen seasons. He will become
assistant principal of South Williams-
Katherine McDonald Young, wife of
Frederick D. Young, Jr., 7511 Lawrence Road, Dundalk, Maryland, and
daughter of Anthony McDonald, ’21,
1968.
Pa.,
died
She attended
November
BSC
2,
in 1948-49.
1951
Class Representative: Dr. Russell
C. Davis, Jr., Sullivan County Commuity College, South Fallsburgh, N.
Y. 12779
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin J. Hutzler
(Marie Mattis ’51) are living at 3419
Clearfield, San Antonia, Texas. 78230.
1952
Class Representative:
Francis B.
Galenski, 350 South York Road, Hatboro, Pa. 19040
1953
Class Representative: John S. Scrimgeour, 411 East 3rd Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1954
Class
JUNE,
Representative:
1969
19446
William
J.
His memberships include the Middle
State Association of Collegiate RegisOfficers, the
trars and Admissions
Garinger, 302 Green Road, Berwyn, Pa.
National Council of Measurements in
Education, and the National Association of Student Personnel Administra-
19312
ors.
1955
Class Representative: Arnold
1956
Representative:
Class
William
Dr.
The Bloomsburg Area School Disthas hired Dr. John N. Magill, Jr.,
as curriculum coordinator and assist-
Bitner, III, 33 Lincoln Avenue, Glen
Falls, N. Y. 12801
Larry R. Fiber, Hirwon Drive, R.
rict
Shippensburg, Pa. 17257, was
awarded the Doctor of Education
degree by New York University on
February 25, 1969. Dr. Fiber’s disseroi
tation was entitled "The History
Business Education in the Public SecHe
ondary Schools of New Jersey.”
earned the Bachelor of Science degree
lrom Bloomsburg State College in
1956, the Master of Education degree
from Rutgers University in 1958, and
Education degree
the Specialist in
from Rutgers in 1962.
in
Dr. Fiber began his teaching
New Brunswick Senior High School,
New Brunswick, N. J. In 1951 he became Chairman of the Business Education Department at Franklin High
School, Somerset, New Jersey.
He
joined the Business Education Department at Shippensburg State College.
Shippensburg, Pa., as an Associate
Professor in 1966.
Dr. Fiber is a member of the honorary fraternities Delta Pi Epsilon,
Kappa Delta Pi, and Phi Delta Kappa. He is a life member of the National Education Association and a
member of the American Vocational
Association, National Business Educa-
rict.
D.
33,
tion Association, American
Association of University Professors,
Penn-
sylvania Education Association, Eastern Business Teachers
Assn.,
Vocational Administrators of Pennsylvania. New Jersey Business Education Association,
and Pennsylvania
Business Education Association.
1957
Class
Representative:
William J.
Pohutski, 544 Oakridge Drive, North
Plainfield, N. J. 07606
1958
Class
port High School next year.
Centralia,
Jacobs. Trcmont Annex Apartments,
Lansdale, Pa.
2 West Main Street,
ant superintendent for the school distDr. Magill was supervising principal at Fleetwood Area Schools and
He
is a native of Luzerne County.
served with the Paratroops during
World War II which interrupted his
education at BSC.
He has since served as a science,
was a
social studies teacher and
supervising principal at Black Creek
Township and
later
degree at Penn State
in 1953
ied for his doctorate at
1963 and 1964.
Union
Blan
at
Schools in Perry County.
his
Dr. Magill obtained
masters
and stud-
Penn
State in
John J. Schaefer, 4 Citadel Drive,
Jackson, N. J., 08527, has received the
M. A. degree in Business Education
at Rider College, Trenton, N. J.
1959
William F.
.Class Representative:
Swisher, Box 215, Cincinnatus, N. Y.
14340
In September 1966, Moritz L. Schultz
was appointed Chief Audiologist of the
Rehabilitation Center for Children and
Adults in Palm Beach, Florida, where
he initiated a new program in clinical
audiology
the first in Palm Beach
and surrounding counties. Prior to
—
was the
to Florida, Morey
Geisinger
senior audiologist at the
Medical Center for 6 years.
He was the recipient of an Office
of Vocational Rehabilitation grant for
graduate study at the Penn State University where he received a Master’s
moving
degree
in
Audiology in 1963.
In 1967 he served as Chairman for
the Committee on Audiological Standards with the Florida Speech and
Hearing Association and
last year he
editor of the Association
year term of office. He is
was elected
Raymond
Representative:
for a 2
two
member
Hargreaves, 37 Dell Road, Stanhope,
also
N. J.
Speech and Hearing Association and
07874
Appointment of Paul H. Anderson,
Trenton, N. J., as registrar of Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa., has been
announced. Mr. Anderson has been
the registrar at Trenton State College.
with that institution since
1961, first as an assistant registrar
and assistant to the president and for
the past two years as the registrar.
He has also served as the assistant
director of the New
Jersey
State
He has been
Scholarship Commission.
A
native of
Maple Shade, N. J., he graduated
from Cheltenham High School, Elkins
Park, Pa., in 1954 and from Bloojisburg State College in 1958
After a
year of study at Drew University, he
earned a master’s degree in educational measurements at Southern Illinois University and is now a candidate
for the Doctor of Education degree at
Rutgers University.
.
a
of
the
American
holder of the Certificate of Clinical
Competence in Audiology.
Morey is married to the former
Barbara Lentz (BSC 1957) and they
reside in Palm Beach Lakes South
with
their
three
school-aged
daugh-
ters.
Earl C. Levengood is Program Coordinator of Business Sciences, with the
rank of Associate Professor of Business Administration and Secretarial
Science, at
the
Tompkins-Cortland
Community College, 176 Main Street,
Groton, N. Y. 13073. He has previously taught at the State University of
New York at Cobleskill and at the
Corning Community College.
1960
Class
Representative:
James J.
Peck, 335 Red Coat Lane, Wayne, Pa.
19087
Page nine
James
manager
J. Peck, formerly district
of Atlantic Richfield Co., at
Springfield, Mass., has been named
The
manager at New Haven, Conn.
Springfield district serves western
portions
of
Massachusetts
and New
Hampshire and all of Vermont. The
New Haven district serves southern
Peck, of 58 Oakland
Connecticut.
Street, Wilbraham, Mass., 01095, joined Atlantic Richfield in 1961 as a marketing trainee at Reading, Pa., followed by assignments as assistant to the
vice president of marketing and service station development coordinator.
He was named Springfield district
manager last year. He is a native
of Pottstown, Pa.
Dr. William J. Yurkiewicz, associate
Millersville
professor of biology at
State College, has written more than
twenty scientific articles since receiving the PhD from Penn State in 1965.
Many of the papers were co-authored
by students from the biology departat Millersville who had worked
closely with Yurkiewicz in special research projects.
1961
Edwin C.
Representative:
Class
Kuser, R. D. 1, Box 145-C, Beehtelsville, Fa. 19505
Philip S. Houser, 1272 Oxford Road,
Somerville, N. J., 08876, is Principal
of the Randolphville School in Piscatoway, N. J. He received his M. A.
ment
degree from Seton Hall University in
1965 and his 6th year level in Guidance in 1967, also from Seton Hall.
His wife is the former Joyce Morgan,
’61.
Mr. and Mrs. Houser have a son
and a daughter.
Mrs. Jane Reinaker Wilhour, Assistant Professor of Education and PsySt.
chology at Lindenwood College,
Charles, Missouri, has been named as
the 1968 Outstanding Young Educator
in Missouri by the Missouri Jaycees.
Mrs. Wilhour received her local and
state award for her excellent effort in
the St. Charles City School Title III
Project, which consists of conducting
workshops in the St. Charles area.
Her efforts have resulted in new
school organization and curriculum
and parochial schools
in the St. Charles area. Mrs. Wilhour
has a Master of Arts degree in Education from East Tennessee State University, and is working for her docShe
torate at St. Louis University.
and her husband, Russell, reside at
209 Cole Boulevard, St. Charles, Mo.
lor both public
1962
Class
Representative:
Richard
Lloyd, 6 Farragus I)r., Fiscataway,
N. .1. 08854
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Little
(Kay Gaglione ’61) are living at 16
York
19803.
Little
Road,
Wilmington,
Delaware,
They have three children. Mr.
was recently elected to the
Delaware House of Representatives.
He manages an investment business
and teaches at Deleware Technical
Community College. Since his graduation, he has been Secretary of the
Sunbury Y. M. C. A. and taught at
Fage
ten
Brandywine High School.
1964
Representative:
Class
Robert and Nancy (Sarisky) Pelak
are now living at 38 Marriewold Lane
Robert reN., Monroe, N. Y. 10950.
ceived the degree of Master of Arts
from Indiana University in 1967, and
is teaching chemistry at Spring ValMr. and Mrs. Pelah have
ley, N. Y.
a son, Robert Allen Pelah.
1963
Pat Bielil
Representative:
Class
(Mrs. Ronald Cranford), 206 North
11th Street, Sunbury, Fa. 17801
Dr. Herbert A. Leeper Jr., of Lewistown R. D. 3, was awarded the
degree of doctor of philosophy at the
January graduation at Purdue UniDr.
versity at West Lafayette, Ind.
Leeper received his bachelor’s degree
in speech correction from Bloomsburg
State College, and received both his
master’s and doctoral degrees from
Purdue University. His dissertation
was “Pressure Measurements of Articulatory Behavior During Alterations
He has joined the
of Vocal Effort.”
staff of The Jewish Hospital of St.
Louis as a speech pathologist in the
division of speech pathology, department of otolarynology.
Ronald T. Walters received a Master’s Degree in Business Education at
the March, 1969, commencement at
Colorado State College, Greeley, Colo.
John W. Knorr, Willingboro, N. J.,
formerly of Bloomsburg, received the
degree of Master of Arts in Business
Education on January 26 at Rider
College in Trenton, N. J. He received his BS degree in general business
education at BSC in 1963 and is a
teacher in the schools in the Willingboro area.
Robert L. Evans has been named
Law Enforcement
Coordinator
of
Training for the University of Geor-
Mr.
gia’s Institute of Government.
to his new position from
Washington, D. C., where he served
with the Federal Bureau of Investigation from 1961 with responsibility for
a variety of investigations including
matters of national security and covering such areas as anti-trust, Federal
Evans comes
Tort Claims Act and government employees security.
A native of Shamokin, Pa., Mr.
Evans will be responsible for coordinating various law enforcement training programs throughout Georgia and
Mr.
the Southeastern United States.
from
Evans has earned
degrees
Bloomsburg State Teachers College
and from Dickinson School of Law at
Carlisle,
Pa.
Mrs. Joan Boner Shultz, Easton R.
D. 1 and formerly of Reading, received a master of arts degree in business
education from Rider College, Trenton, N. J. She obtained her bachelor’s
degree in 1963 from Bloomsburg State
College. For the past six years she
has taught at the Easton Area High
School and worked part time at the
Northampton County Area Community
College.
Shuba,
1
Ernest
R.
Gaston Avenue, Raritan, N.
08869
J.
Marie Osinski Vouakes, 275 Prospect
Street, East Orange, New Jersey, is
enrolled in the graduate division at
BSC.
Paul L. Conard has been appointed
campaign chairman of the 1969 heart
fund campaign in Columbia county.
He has been associated with the
heart cause in varying capacities for
three years.
A resident of Bloomsburg for the last twelve years, he
has been assistant manager
at
Bloomsburg State College
five years.
a member of St. Matthew
Lutheran Church, treasurer of Church
Council and Sunday school superintendent, and teacher. He is also a member of Bloomsburg Jaycees a past president of that organization and presently state director; member board
of directors and treasurer for Columbia-Montour Home Health
Services
He
is
vice
president
of
Columbia
County Big Brothers and a PIAA offiInc.;
cial for 15 years.
Conard, thirty-five, was named the
of
town’s Outstanding Young Man
1966-1967.
He was selected for the
1968 Edition of “Outstanding Young
Men
of America.”
Conard is a graduate of Turbotville
High School and Bloomsburg State
College. He served with the U.S.M.C.
in Korea and is married to the former Elizabeth Ann Menges, Turbotville.
Mr. and Mrs. Conard are the parents
of three daughters and reside
on
Country Club Drive.
Shirley E. Kline, P. O. Box 128, McClure, Pa., 17841, is now teaching in
the dependent schools at Ramey Air
Force Base. Puerto Rico. Miss Kline
had previously been teaching in the
Mifflin County School District, Lewistown, Pa.
1965
George MilRoad No. 8, Victor,
Class Representative:
1156 Countv
N. Y. 14564
ler,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry W. Ravert are
Road, Camp
residing at 626 Erford
Pa. 17011
Hill,
Thomas
J. Kaczmarek and his wife
Pat Zehner Kaczmarek ’67, are living at 830 High Street, Williamsport.
Pa. 17701
1966
Class Representative: Anthony J.
Cerza, 180 Mason Street, Exeter, Fa.
18643
James Derr is head teacher of
School,
Ringing Rocks Elementary
He is currently enPottstown, Pa.
in the graduate program
West Chester State College.
rolled
at
1967
Robert T.
Representative:
Lemon, Meadowvale Apt. No. 12, 903
Quarry Road, liarve dc Grace, Md.
Class
21087
Raymond
C.
Zindel,
Jr.,
of
944
Willopenn Dr., Southampton, Pa., has
been commissioned a second lieuten-
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
ant in the U. S. Air Force upon graduation from Officer Training School at
Lackland AFB,
Lieutenant
Texas.
Zindell, selected for OTS through competitive examination, is being assigned to Webb AFB, Tex., for pilot training.
The lieutenant, a graduate of
W. H. Tennent Senior High School
in
Johnsville, Pa., earned his B. S. Ed
degree from Bloomsburg State College.
Kathryn Ann Apple (Mrs. B. Frank
Ricci)
Road,
lives at Apt. C-6, 315
Festerville. Pa. 19048
Edward
B.
Kern are
Pike,
19082
Steele
and Sandra Burkhart
West Chester
living at 8125
Apt. C-4, Upper
Darby,
Pa.
at Special Children’s Center, Ithaca,
New York. She lives at 7 Candlewyck Park, Apt. C-4, Ithaca.
1968
Class Representative: Thomas W.
Free, K. 1). 1, Box 34, Kintnersville,
18930
Mrs. Judith Konsur Kelley, Susbeen
quehanna, Pa., has recently
named a Peace Corps Volunteer. She
and her husband will be teaching in
Their
provincial schools in Peru.
Care of Peace
overseas address:
Corps Director, American Embassy,
Lima, Peru.
Stanley Kucharski, former flanker
and defensive back at Bloomsburg
State College, has been signed by the
Atlanta Falcons of the National Football League as a free agent, according to Jan Van Duser, public relations
director of that organization.
Kucharski, who is a teacher, football coach, assistant basketball and
track
coach
at
Manville
High
School, Manville, New Jersey, indicated the Falcons have openings in
their defensive backfield unit and that
they are interested in him at a safety
position. Kucharski, whose 1967 brilliant college career was cut short by
a knee injury, signed a year ago with
the Green Bay Packers as
a free
agent.
Stan was hampered by his
knee in the early summer training
sessions and
was released.
Theresa Pavone Fasnacht lives at
Manor Apartments, E-9,
the Country
Levittown, Pa. 19056.
1969
The United States Air Force announces the selection of Gary Reichenbach into its Officer Training
School Program as a communicationsElectronics Officer.
Reichenbech, who is a January ’69
graduate of Bloomsburg State College,
Earth and Space Sciences Dept., made
application for the Air Force
OTS
program
in November of 1968 under
the new officers selection priority
that allows men without an engineering degree to apply for scientific and
engineering fields, based on their test
JUNE,
He
1969
report to Lackland
AFB,
where he will begin the 3-
will
Texas,
years ago as a teacher at State Teachers College, Bloomsburg, Pa., she
didn’t w'ant to vegetate so she came
to Florida with plans to establish a
month training program. Upon completion of training, he will be commissioned a second lieutenant, and will
then report to Keesley AFB, Miss., for
44 weeks of electronics school before
assuming his duties as a communications-electronics officer.
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Reichenbach, Bloomsburg.
but she
a related line appealed to her, “just a little
something to keep mind and time occupied.”
The antique business itself was too
complicated. It would mean a store,
Airman Thomas R. Bender Jr., 420
Avenue E, Riverside, Pa., has com-
and lots of
inventry, bookkeeping
other involvements.
Miss Ranson’s older sister had a
pleted
basic
training
Lackland
at
AFB. Texas. He has been assigned
to Chanute AFB, Illinois, for training
weather service.
in
Mary Gifford received her master’s
pathology
from
degree in speech
Ohio University in December, 1908.
She is presently a speech therapist
I‘a.
scores.
Charles G.
burg,
school.
is
Mowery,
Blooms-
of
storekepeers
attending
He graduated from Blooms-
burg High School
1964
in
and from
BSC
He entered the service
in 1968.
on December 5, 1968. His address is
B445418 USN. Class 56902, U.S. Naval
Supply School. Bldg 381, U.S. Naval
Base, Newport, R. I. 02840
Second Lieutenant Willard F. Kelchner III, Beach Haven, Pa., has
completed operational readiness training at
Vandenberg AFB,
Calif.,
for
Minutemar.
Weapon System.
Lieutenant Kelchner is being assigned to Malmstrom AFB. Mont., for
duty with a unit of the Strategic Air
Command. He was commissioned
upon completion of Officer Training
School at Lackland AFB, Texas.
the
FORMER RSC: FACULTY
MEMBER KNOWN AS
HAVILAND LADY’
‘Tittle
business.”
Her experience
liked antiques.
was
nil
Something
in
“Ranson White” Haviland and
was having trouble replacing broken
set of
pieces. That’s all it took to give the
retired teacher her idea, and a busi-
nes was born.
Little did she dream that her noninvolvement enterprise would become
is now the largest private Haviland collection in the world. Nor did
she think she would be doing a mail
order business that extended around
the globe.
Starting with just a few pieces of
Haviland the collection now can be
counted in the thousands. She has
waist
wall-to-wall Haviland almost
what
high in her home.
She converted her carport into a
storage room, then built a room to the
back to her house.
The collection
spilled out to her garage and finally
took over a little house at the bacx
oi her property.
Haviland and Co.,
New York
City,
American,
day to the Orlando woman.
Every
day the mails are filled with requests
for pieces to match
specific
sets.
Miss Ranson uses Arlene Schleiger’s
four books on Haviland as a refeience, but they contain only 200 pat-
Miss Ethel A. Ranson, for many
years a valued member of the faculty
of the Bloomsburg State College, and
terns.
with numerous friends in this area,
attained international fame as
"The Haviland Lady” of Orlando,
Fla.
She now does an international
business in Haviland china with re-
PLAN FOR SEVEN NEW
BUILDINGS AT COLLEGE
has
gard
to
replacements
in sets
self owns the largest
tion of Haviland.
and her-
private collec-
She has been the subject of a number of interesting
and informative
articles.
The most recent was published in the Orlando, Fla., Sentinel,
with illustrations in color.
It was
written by Virginia Loog and a copy
was sent to us by Ed. E. Hippensteel,
Orlando, and a native of this section.
The article follows:
The legend of The Haviland Lady
has become a part of the fabric of
Orlando. It’s woven from bridge
club gatherings, parties,
from all
events over the past
have brought
women
15
years that
together.
When
broken, when a guest comments on a china pattern, discussion
centers on ‘‘The woman with all the
china” who can finish out a set or has
the replacement for a treasured broken saucer.
When Ethel A. Ranson retired 15
a dish
is
oi
refers people every
The first in a series of three planning conferences for seven new buildings which are to be constructed on
the campus
of
Bloomsburg State
College was held in the Alumni Room
at the college.
The seven projects include a classroom building, two residence halls
for women, two residence halls for
men, a dining room-kitchen, and a
maintenance building-garage.
Five of these structures are to be
located on the upper campus, formerly the Bloomsburg Country Club and
the other two, a classroom
building
and a dormitory for 300 women are
to be located on the lower campus.
The estimated construction cost is $9,738,600, according to Boyd F. Buckingham, Director of Development at
BSC.
The primary purpose of the preplanning
conference
was
to
gather
and discuss information regarding the
proposed site of each building and the
availabililty of necessary utilities.
Page eleven
PRESIDENT SPEAKS TO
ALUMNI, FACULTY
(Continued from front cover)
exists.
—
Fees collected from studFIFTH
ents shall be related in some ratio to
the appropriations made by the state,
and not increased from time to time
merely to make up for budget deficWe regret that even when
iencies.
legislators cannot seem to find the
to accomodate more students,
they still clamor for the admission of
certain individuals, especially sons or
daughters of their constituents.
In addition to looking forward with
money
hope for change,
We, Mrs. Andruss and I, are grateful for a community such as Bloomsburg which gave birth to the Literary Institute which became the
State Normal School, then a State
Teachers College, and most recently a State College. The iaith of the
citizens
of
this
community
in
the
development of the college as it became a state-wide institution, and
the patience with which they have
looked upon recent changes (even
those they have not fully understood), has required confidence and
a willingness to accept change at
its face value even though sometimes it has meant the taking of
private property and an increased
demand lor such public utilities and
services as water, sewage, and police protection.
We
are grateful for
those householders in the town
numbers of our
ever-increasing
student teachers, offering them an
opportunity to observe and participate in the actual teaching process
before they embark upon their car-
Bloomsburg who have accomodat-
ed students in their homes when
dormitory facilities have not been
available at the college. In many
cases, these homes have provided
an atmosphere for college living
which has been the most wholesome
possible.
We are grateful for
the businessmen of Bloomsburg who
have adjusted to the college market,
by changing their store hours, carrying articles to meet the students’
wants as well as those of the ordinary citizen, and showing a willing-
ness to sponsor community activities in which college students participate. In sum, we appreciate their
kind understanding ol the changes
in college policy.
are grateful for
the churches of Bloomsburg
who
have had to assume an additional
burden to accomodate students. In
some cases, this has meant that
when requests were made of Church
olficials, in terms of additional finances for personnel who work with
college students, the local churches
have set themselves to the task of
trying to meet these religious and
We
moral needs.
We
are grateful for
the surrounding
schools districts,
which have provided playing fields
inter-collegiate
contests
and
other athletic activities while these
facilities were being constructed at
the college, and
have welcomed
for
Page twelve
Temple University
Edward K. Allen ’63, M.S.
in
Edu-
in
Edu-
cation.
William
eers.
Keller
J.
’63,
M.S.
cation.
We
are grateful for
Trustees who have held the college
above party politics and personal
Almost forty in numpreference.
ber over the years they have been
affiliated with both political parties,
and have given unstintingly of their
time, money, and counsel. Support
Frank R. Harris ’64, M.Ed.
Stephen W. Hartin ’64, M.Ed.
Richard W. Burkett ’65, M.Ed.
Jacob E. Dailey
Doctor of Edu-
’52,
cation.
Kenneth L. Cook
’50,
Doctor of Edu-
’61,
Doctor of Edu-
cation.
Gensemer
Ira B.
ing policies which were subject to
scrutiny, they have been largely responsible for the longest continuous
administration in the history of public education in the Commonwealth
cation.
Pennsylvania.
The names of
Reg. S. Hemingway, Esq., Judge
Wm. Kreishsr, Mr. Fred Diehl, and
Mr. Wm. A. Lank, will be remembered as Presidents of the Board of
Trustees for the last three decades.
Lowell A. Tinner ’64, Master of
Education.
William A. Welliver ’58, Master of
Education.
Jonah Goobic ’58, Master of Edu-
of
A
and well-deserving tribute is due them, not only from an
outgoing President, but from the
whole college community.
special
James
H. Joy
’57,
Master
Paul H. Spahr
’59,
Master of Edu-
Edu-
of
cation.
cation.
cation.
George Gorda
’51,
Master
Edu-
of
cation.
Millersville State College
L. Ohl ’57, Master of
Thomas
Edu-
cation.
We
Lehigh University
are grateful for
faculty, past
and present, who have
served students, not only as instructors, but as mentors and counselors.
In time, some of our recent and
present faculty will rival the memories and names of Carver, Waller,
Sutliff, Hartline, Bakeless, Dennis,
Cope, and Albert.
all of
ol
ADVANCED DEGREES
We
are grateful for
college employees who have made
the campus and its facilities a sub-
favorable comment by all
those who visit our campus. Certainly, the names of Nevin Englehart and Tom Gorrey will be ever
green in the memories of those who
love grass and trees on our college
hilltop. Business
Managers Paul
Martin, and Chester Hausknecht
have piloted us through the shoals
between the two rocks of income and
expenditures without a wreck or
even a threat of breakers.
ject
of
We
are grateful for
State Superintendents interested in
State
State Normal Schools and
Colleges. The names of John Alexander Hull Keith, David Jewett
Francis
BuchWaller, Jr., and
mann Haas are recalled in awe, for
these men have served as leaders,
personal mentors, and examples to
many
We
of us.
many
of
Education.
Lee F. Higgins
whom were
stud-
dents in our own time. These are
the candles which we have lighted,
and now they shine to cheer us.
And we must make
special mention
of Alumni Association Presidents R.
Bruce Albert Elna H. Nelson, and
Howard Fenstemaker, for their love
and devotion to their Alma Mater
can be appreciated bul never fully
rewarded.
’65,
’55,
Doctor of
Master
Edu-
of
cation.
Pennsylvania State University
’35,
323
John
Street, Elizabeth, N. J., Doctor
of
Education.
Samuel R. Bashore, Milford Street,
Port Royal, Pa.
Anthony E. Conte
logy.
Robert
Cohen, 162 S. Pine Street,
Pa. (BS> MEd, counselor
J.
Hazleton,
education
Robert L. Foster, 11118 Fifth Avenue, Berwick, Pa.
L’ENVOI
my
“Come,
friends,
’Tis not too late to seek a
newer
world
Push
off,
and
sitting well in
smite
The sounding furrows; for
pose holds
To
order
my
pur-
beyond the sunset, and the
sail
baths
Of
the western stars, until
be that the gulfs will
all
may
It
I die.
wash
us down:
may
It
be we shall touch the Happy
Isles,
And see the great
we knew.
Tho’
are grateful for
Alumni,
Thomas E. Persing
much
and
We
is
w'hom
Achilles,
taken,
much
abides;
tho’
are not now' that strength which
in old
Moved
days
and
which we are, we
One equal temper of
Made weak by time
earth
heaven;
that
are:
heroic hearts,
and
fate,
but
strong in will
To
strive, to seek,
to yield."
to find,
and not
—Tennyson
TIIE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
From "THE
PASSING THRONG” Column
THE MORNING PRESS,
No alumni association is what
those in charge want it to be or.
in
most cases, what
it
should be
but most of them are progressing
toward that elusive goal and included in the latter category is the
friendly
graduate body of “the
College on the hill " — Bloomsburg
State College.
There
will
be hundreds and per-
haps even a couple of thousand
here for all or part of the weekend
to participate in
the ceremonies
either from the status of graduate
or husband, wife or offspring of a
diploma holder.
BSC
has had a graduate bod\
time but it hasn't been
so many years since that organization was just one that went through
the motions.
lor a long
A number
withered
Great
Depression of the thirties but it
was in that period that tin
of
things
and many died during the
bloomsburg State Alumni Association actually came alive and started to go some place.
Up to that time alumni day was
one of those occasions when the
graduates who cared to come back
to the school, they met in the auditorium, elected officers and didn’t
do a thing from that time until
they met on the hill the Saturday
prior to
commencement
of the fol-
lowing year.
The fellow who got
body going was the
Albert.
He
was
the graduate
late R.
a
Bruce
dedicated
of
1969
April 28,
Bloomsburger and son of one of
“Old
institution’s
beloved
the
Guard” — Prof. Charles H. Albert.
Things were going reasonably
vears has been the shifting of the
alumni festivities of the spring
from the Saturday prior to com-
when the centennial of the institution came along in 1939. Bruce
May. Considering the time
well
saw an opportunity for the graduates to do something concrete. Up
to that time there had been some
funds contributed to the alumni
student loan fund. Bruce believed
that the centennial was the time to
build that fund to a point win re
it had real substance.
A
goal was set and the
was on. By and large it was
Bruce
a one-man promotion but
stuck to it and to the total raised,
while not up to his expectations,
was still substantial and gave the
solicita-
tion
association reason for being.
The organization has been growing in activity ever since. The late
Dr. E. H. Nelson, one of the most
dynamic and popular
grads and
teachers of the school, followed
Albert as the president. “Doe’ had
lots of ideas and the ability to make
them
click.
dent of the
Montour County
Schools, long a trustee at BSC and
always a loval alumnus, took over.
He relinquished the post for reasons of health after a successful
tenure and the torch was taken up
F.
Fenstemaker who
has been setting a brisk pace since
One
for
many
to late April
or early
it takes
to adjust, this shift
more than a
caused
We
didn’t
notice any drop in attendance the
fu st year the new date was operative and chances are good that it
will lead to a real build up in attendance.
Certainly the potential
little
ripple.
is there.
Along with the change of
has
date
come
the establishment of the
school’s loyalty fund.
In this BSC
is not a pioneer.
Frankly it is
copying from other institutions in
the conference. The returns have
been good but nothing sensational.
have a long w^ay to go to get
up to the pace set by some other
State Colleges and a much greater
distance to travel to get these annual contributions to where they
should be. But the move is toward
that point.
We
By the way,
fund which got
that
scholarship
to respectable size
the time of the centennial, is now
invested and the earnings go to
scholarships. In more recent years
Miss Mary McNineh gave to the
association a huge sum that was
to be used for loans, and only for
loans.
This has been more than
adequate to take care of loan
demands in this era when there is
money available on that basis from
federal and state governments.
at
Upon Dr. Nelson’s death, Fred
W. Diehl, now retired superinten-
by Howard
mencement
of the
changes of
recent
—Edward
F.
Schuyler
’24
Entered As Second Class Matter
August 8, 1941, at the Post
Office at Bloomsburg, Pa.
Under the Act of March 3, 1879
THE LOYALTY FUND - THIRD YEAR
The figures below show the amounts of the contributions made in the
third year of the Loyalty Fund, up to April 8, 1959, when the copy was submitted to the printer.
to express our thanks to all those who have supported
that those who have done not so will send us a contribution
Once more we wish
the fund.
soon.
We hope
An Alumni
for
its
Association that
fails to
support
its
Alma Mater has no
reason
existence.
The classes ending in 0 and 5 will have their reunions next Alumni Day. The
success of your reunion will be dependent upon the enthusiasm and the efforts
of someone who is able and willing to carry the ball.
There will be a new President of the College next year.
substantial evidence of the fact that we ar behind him.
Class
1896
1897
1898
]900
1901
1902
1903
1904
1905
1906
1906
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
Amt.
No. of Cont.
1
3
3
3
2
3
2
5
5
5
11
4
9
8
10
9
14
6
6
9
12
14
34
14
11
No. of Cont.
Class
10.00
10.00
35.00
14.00
22.00
7.00
17.00
50.00
35.00
32.00
32.00
64.00
23.00
158.00
27.00
94.00
62.00
153.00
138.00
42.00
32.00
103.00
75.00
244.00
187.00
65.00
1
10
17
21
12
1922
1923
1924
1925
1926
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1946
1947
Amt.
59.00
86.00
200.00
82.00
2.00
2.00
65.00
94.00
168.00
84.50
62.00
220.00
47.00
83.00
126.00
55.00
99.00
97.00
80.00
25.00
71.50
139.00
337.00
23.00
5.00
54.50
1
1
9
17
30
13
15
15
8
10
7
7
9
13
14
4
7
18
7
4
1
6
Let us give him
Class
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
15
17
12
10
9
13
12
13
17
29
22
21
21
17
39
31
47
66
30
3
Others
TO BE DETACHED, FILLED OUT, AND RETURNED
Signature
Name
while
in
college
Address
(street)
Zip Code
(town)
II
above address
is
new cheek
here
Q
Amount
Year of graduation
_
Mail cheeks to Alumni Office, Box 31. B.S.C.
To
insure tax deductions,
B. S.
C.
make cheeks payable
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
No. of Cont.
to
3
Amt.
102.50
108.13
175.00
61.00
39.50
100.00
58.00
66.50
184.50
170.00
173.00
177.60
89.00
388.50
225.00
154.00
231.00
276.00
231.00
9.00
112.00
Almost a century and a half cf service in the field of education is represented by the above faculty members of
Blcomsfcurg State College, all of whom are rearing this year. Dr. Andruss, President of Bloomsburg State Coliege,
has been associated with the College for the past 39 years; (L-R> Miss Mary Macdonald, Assistant Dean of Women
and a member of the counselling staff at B.S.C. joined the faculty 20 years ago. Mrs. Elizabeth Williams, Assistant
Dean cf Women, has been associated w'ith B.S.C. for the past 17 years. Miss Beatrice Mettler, Assistant Professor of
Health and Physical Education, has been at B.S.C. for the past 30 years.
NEW
PRESIDENT APPOINTED
Robert J. Nossen, Vice-President of Academic Affairs, State UniCollege, Fredonia, New York, has been named President of the
Bloomsburg State College, to succeed Dr. Harvey A. Andruss, who has
held the office for the past thirty years.
Dr.
versity
Announcement of the appointment was made after the printing of this
The Quarterly had been completed, with the exception of this page.
The December issue will feature the story of Dr. Nossen’s background, as no
details were available at the time this was written.
issue of
The members of the Alumni Association salute the retiring President, Dr.
Harvey A. Andruss, and thank him for a job well done. Your Alumni President
was a member of the faculty when Harvev Andruss came to Bloomsburg to set
up the newly created Division of Business Education. We cannot forget the
days of World War II, when three Navy programs were initiated, nor the days
after the war when, for a short time, there were 153 students on the campus.
Since that time, the growth of the College has been phenomenal. Not only has
there been enormous growth in the student body and the faculty, but there has
also been a great broadening of the educational facilities of the College.
Ten
new buildings have been erected, and three more are now under construction.
President Andruss has shown a great capacity for seeing future trends, and
being prepared to meet those trends when they materialized. Therefore
BSC as it is today stands as a lasting memorial to a great administrator.
for
To
new
we
extend our heartiest congratulations
No man would accept this
office without being conscious of the tremendous challenge that faces him. He
will need the support of the student body, the faculty, the general public and
last but not least, the Alumni.
Dr. Nossen, the
and best wishes
President,
for a successful administration.
We suggest that graduates of BSC write personal letters to Dr. Nossen, extending their congratulations and their pledges of support.
AYE ATQUE VALE!
518 Degrees Are
received degrees
State College at
commencement exercises held at the
grandstand at the Bloomsburg FailGrounds Sunday afternoon. May 25.
Of those twenty-three graduate students received Masters Degrees and
the others Bachelor Dedgrees.
This is the first time the exercises
have ever been held at the Fair
Grounds. The College now has fine
facilities on the campus at Haas auditorium but even that is not large
A
total
from
of 518
Bloomsburg
enough
to
to attend.
5.000.
accomodate all who wish
The grandstand seats over
Dr. Harvey A. Andruss,
president
of the college, delivered the charge
to the class at Commencement, and
the Rev. Kermit L. Lloyd, pastor of
Paul’s Episcopal Church, delivered the message for the morning serSt.
vice.
Baccalaureate Program
for the baccalaureate
The program
service: Processional, “Now Thank
We All Our God.” Kee; invocation,
the Rev. Bernard H. Petrina, Newman campus chaplain at BSC; hymn.
“Faith of Our Fathers,” Henry-Walton; Scripture, Dr. Andruss; baccal-
aureate address “We Live With Our
Eyes Open.” the Rev. Fr. Lloyd;
“God Is My Shepherd,” Dvorak,
benediction,
Beth Powlus, soprano;
Rev. Bernard H. Petrina; recessional. Psalm XIX, Marcello.
solo,
Commencement
The commencement opened with the
processional, “March,” Harris, and
the invocation by President Andruss.
Elton Hunsinger, dean of students,
presented the senior honor list. Dr.
John A. Hoch, dean of instruction,
presented the candidates for the Bachelor of Science in Education Degree.
Dr. Andruss conferred the degrees.
The presentation of diplomas was by
Dr.
Emory W.
Rarig, business educaDr. Royce O. Johnson, elementary education; Dr. C. Stuart
Edwards, secondary education and Dr.
William L. Jones, special education.
Dr. Hoch presented the candidates
for Degree of Bachelor of Arts and
Dr. Andruss conferred them. Diplomas were presented by Dr. Alden
Bucher. Dr. Andruss then delivered
his charge to the graduates.
The presentation of candidates for
the degree of Master of Education
was by Dr. Charles H. Carlson, director of graduate studies.
Dr. Andruss conferred
the
degrees
and
awarded the diplomas. The assembly
sang “Alma Mater” and the recestion;
sional
Awarded
was “Fugue
in
C Major.”
Stephen Wallace directed the music;
William K. Decker was the organist
and James B.
Creasy,
honorary
marshal at both programs.
Fourteen seniors were
graduated
with academic honors. Thirteen were
awarded BSC Service Keys, the high-
SEPTEMBER.
1969
est
the college comTwenty-one were presented
award given by
munity.
certificates indicating their inclusion
Who’s Who in American Colleges
and Universities, and nine lifetime
athletic passes were given to senior
athletes who had participated in a
Dr. Andruss
Honored
in
varsity sport for four years.
Graduating with honors were: Sumlaude (average ranging between 3.75 and 4.00) David Feather,
Fullerton, B.S. in Business Education:
ma cum
Magna cum
—
laude
(3.60-3.74)
—Ann
M. Hutz, Wilkes-Barre, B.S. in Secondary Education; Dolores
Slavik,
West Hazleton, B.S. in elementary
education;
John
Hamblin,
Swiftwater, B.S. in secondary education;
Charles E. Hestor, Trevorton, B.S. in
secondary education; Esther Zabitz,
Avenue E. Riverside. B.S. in secondary education, and Leland Smeltz,
Lewisburg R. D. 1, Bachelor of Arts
in Arts and Sciences.
The Cum laude (3.50-3.59) graduates were: Anna Krushinski,
Shamokin. B.S. in secondary education; Darlene Yocum, Catawissa R. D. 3, B.S.
in elementary education;
Rebecca
Gilliam, Danville, B.S. in elementary
education; Kathy Hippenstiel, Bloomsburg, B.S. in elementary education;
Elaine Mueller, Bloomsburg R. D. 4,
B.S. in secondary education;
Linda
Hellerman, Perkasie, B.S. in secondary education, and Elaine Zalonis,
Bloomsburg, B.S. in secondary education.
NINETY-FIVE PERCENT
ARE TEACHING
By Legislators
Further evidence of the high esteem
w'hich Dr. Harvey A. Andruss is
held by his colleagues was displayed
when present and former members of
the administrative staff honored the
retiring
President
Bloomsburg
of
State College with a dinner at Cox’s
Restaurant, Elysburg.
In addition to a gift presented to
Dr. and Mrs. Andruss by the adminin
istrative staff, special tributes were
also paid by two other guests, Kent
Shelhamer,
Representative to the
General Assembly from the 109th Dis-
and Preston B. Davis, Senator
from the 27th District.
Dr. John Hoch, dean of instruction,
presided as master of ceremonies and
presented the gift to Dr. and Mrs.
Andruss. Rep. Shelhamer presented
Dr. Andruss with a citation from the
House of Representatives of the Commonwealth while Senator Davis expressed the appreciation of Dr. Antrict
russ’ 39 years of education service to
the Commonwealth by presenting a
Resolution from the Senate.
Boyd Buckingham, director of development at the college, introduced
Rep. Shelhamer and Senator Davis.
In addition to Hoch and Buckingham
the planning committee consisted of
Paul Martin, business manager, and
George Birney, personnel director.
Citation
A recent survey reveals that 95
per cent of the 1968 January, May and
August teacher education graduates
WHEREAS,
Doctor Harvey A. Andruss, the President of Bloomsburg State College for the past
thirty years, and a man who has
spent forty-eight years of his life
in the field of education is retiring
BSC
available for teaching, have
in that profession, according to Thomas A. Davies, acting
director of placement at the College.
of
been employed
this year;
The total number of graduates of all
divisions for 1968 was 709.
There
were 654 graduates enrolled in education curriculums, 51 in
arts
and
sciences, and 4 in public school nursing and dental hygiene. Of the 654
who were enrolled in teacher education, 59 were not available for teaching duties due to beginning graduate
studies, entering the armed forces, or
being married; 30 graduates entered
into business or other occupations.
Of the 565 graduates who are teaching, 442 or 74 per cent are teaching
in Pennsylvania and 127 or 21 per cent
in other states.
The
salaries
of
those
Doctor Andruss, an
author of several widely read textbooks, a man who holds Master
of Business Administration
and
Doctor of Education degree, and a
man who was a consultant and
department head at the First
Am-
erican Army University in England in 1945, has served the youth
of Pennsylvania
years
for
NOW THEREFORE.
so
many
The House
Representatives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, joins
with the hundreds of others who
of
teaching in
Pennsylvania average $5,608; for those
out-of-state the average salary is $6,189.
This gives a $5,898 average salary for all the graduates teaching
and a difference of $581 for those
teaching out-of-state over the Pennsylvania teachers.
and
WHEREAS,
Published quarterly by the Alumni Association of the Bloomsburg State College,
Bloomsburg, Penna. 17815.
Second-Class
Postage Paid at Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania.
Send P.O.D. Form No. 3579 to the AL-
—
UMNI OFFICE, BLOOMSBURG STATE
COLLEGE, BLOOMSBURG, PA. 17815
Page one
are bidding farewell
to
Doctor An-
man whose
educational
abilities have been recognized by
druss,
a
his election to Phi Beta Kappa,
his fraternal membership having
recognized by his being a thirtythird degree Mason, and his civic
endeavors having been recognized
by his election as a director of
the Bloomsburg Hospital and the
Bloomsburg Public Library, And
further directs that a copy of this
Doctor
citation be delivered to
Harvey A. Andruss.
Sponsored by:
Kent D. Shelhamer;
Signed by:
Herbert Fineman,
Speaker of the House of Representatives
Resolution
In the Senate, Harrisburg, July 15,
1969.
This year marks the end of an outDr.
standing education career for
Harvey A. Andruss who is retiring
after having served as President of
Bloomsburg State College for the past
thirty years.
Dr. Andruss, an author of sevreal
widely read textbooks in the field of
business law and accounting has spent
the last forty-eight years of his life
He has been awarded
in education.
degrees from the University of Oklahoma, Northwestern University and
Penn State. In 1921 he became a principal of an Oklahoma high school. In
1930 he began his career at Bloomsburg and in 1939 he was elected to the
presidency.
We here in the Senate are proud of
men like Dr. Andruss. He has devoted his life to the teaching of our youth
and rightly deserves recognition.
We in Pennsylvania are so much
better off because of this great educator; therefore be it
RESOLVED, That the Senate of
Pennsylvania pause in its deliberaDr.
tions to pay its respect to
Harvey A. Andruss for a job well
done and to wish him all of the
happiness and success possible in
his retirement years; and be it
further
RESOLVED, That a copy of this
resolution be presented to Dr. Andruss upon his retirement as President of Bloomsburg State College.
I certify that the foregoing is a
true and correct copy of a Senate
Resolution introduced by Senators
Preston B. Davis and Zehnder H.
Confair and adopted by the Senate of Pennsylvania.
(Signed)
Mark Gruell, Jr., secretary, Senate of Pennsylvania.
George W. Heffner, Pottsville, has
been appointed to the Board of Trustees at BSC. He succeeds Judge Harold L. Paul, who has resigned.
Mr.
Heffner’s term will expire in 1973.
Mail your check today
Loyalty Fund.
Page two
to the
BSC
FACULTY MEMBERS
RETIRE
Two members of the Bloomsburg
State College faculty, Miss Mary Macdonald and Miss Beatrice Mettler, retired as of June 1.
Miss Macdonald
A native of Berwick, Miss MacdonArts
ald received her Bachelor of
degree with a major in Latin and a
minor in French from the University
cf Michigan. She began her teaching
career at Harter High School, Plymouth Township following her graduation from the University of Michigan. Two years later, she joined the
teaching staff at Berwick High School
In
where she remained nine years.
1939 she joined the faculty of Winthrop College, S. C., as a head resident
on the dean of women’s staff.
During World War n she was a
member
of the first class of
women
at
Smith College to become commissioned officers in the United States Navy.
Miss Macdonald held the rank of lieutenant junior grade and remained in
the service for 40 months.
In 1946 she went to Barnard College,
Columbia University, as a director of
resident halls with
full
faculty status.
Three years later Miss Macdonald became associated with Bloomsburg
State College where she has been an
assistant dean of women and a counselor, and has also taught English.
She has headed freshmen orientation
and Parents’ Day committees and is
a past president of the Faculty Asso-
Her professional memberciation.
ships include National Association of
Women Deans and Counselors, Pennsylvania Association of Women Deans
and Counselors, and Pennsylvania
State Education Association.
Miss Mettler
Miss Mettler was born in Elysburg,
and received her Bachelor of Arts
degree in biological sciences at Buckof
nell University and her Master
Science degree from the University
of Pennsylvania in health and human
She took additional gradrelations.
uate work at the University of Pittsburgh and the University of Chicago
and is a graduate of The Johns Hopkins School of Nursing, Baltimore.
Prior to her joining the faculty of
BSC in 1939, she was educational director at the Bloomsburg Hospital for
one year and was also associated
with The Johns Hopkins Hospital in
Baltimore. At one time, she served
as a resident director nurse and a coordinator of health at the college and
for many years has been an assistant
professor in health and physical education.
Miss Mettler holds memberships in
Alpha Chi Omega, Order of Eastern
Star, Bloomsburg Branch of the AmUniversity
Association
of
the Bloomsburg Club of the
Business and Professional Women and
the Pennsylvania State Education Aserican
Women,
sociation.
Miss Macdonald resides in Berwick
and Miss Mettler is living at the Mettler
farm, Elysburg.
Ifou
^JltGSth
(Contributions to Loyalty Fund to
July 1, not previously reported.)
1900— Mrs.
(In
Wenner,
C.
from Weatherly
William
Memoriam:
gifts
Area Teachers Association,
Univer-
of Pennsylvania Dental School,
1903—
Rural Electric Assn.
Northwestern
Inc.)
1905—
1902 Lourissa V. Leighow.
1909—Mrs. S. K. Worman.
1904 Mrs. David Sloan.
Blanche M. Grimes.
1908
1911—Florence G. Beddall.
Mrs. Clinton Herring, Mrs. H.
Brown, Mrs. G. G. Reichley.
A. 1912—
1910 Maurice E. Hauck, Mrs. S. C.
Pa1913—
rnpntpr
Mrs. P. H. Monaghan, Mrs.
Anna Kocher, Mrs. Alice D. Beavers.
William H. Davis, Mrs. Lena
Leitzel Streamer, Laura Williams.
Mrs. Fred Patten, Nellie M.
sity
Denison.
1914 J. Howard Deily, Gen. Idwal
Edwards, Mrs. J. A. Gossman,
H.1916—
Mrs. A. W. Sturman, Glennes H. Rickert, Mrs. Emily M. Jamison, Mrs. G.
Hassert, Mrs. George Lawton, J.
Lee
1917—
memoriam),
(in
Madeline Henrie
Mrs. Bess Maddy.
1918—Mrs. Frank S. Hutchison
1915
Mrs. Edson A. Potter, Mrs.
Jennie R. Morris, Frank S. Hutchison,
Earl B. Hartman, Mrs. Lela D. Hemingway, Lorena E. Thomas.
Mrs. Willard J. Davis, Mrs.
John W.
Alice T. Gardner, Mrs.
O’Toole.
Mrs. Robert D. Berninger,
Mrs. T. Edison Fischer.
1919 Edwina Evans, Mrs. Monroe
Eves, Mrs. James J. Martin, Mrs.
M. Drumm, Frances E. Kinner,
Ruth
1920—
Mi’s. William C. Kistler, Mrs. Mary
O.
Barklow, Marjorie Crook, Olive
Robinson, Mrs. Charles V. Miller,
Class Treasurer, Ann Baum, KatherGriffith,
ine Dougherty, Mildred E.
Mrs. Harry Hartman, Mrs. Harry ItW.
ter, Linda Kreidler, Mrs. John
1923—Mrs. B. C. North, Mrs. C. F.
Moore,
Mrs.
Taylor, Mrs. Marie Tumbach,
J. F. Laubach, Rhoda L. Crouse.
Mrs. Benjamin L. Eshleman,
Mrs. Laura C. Peters.
Sr.,
1921 Mrs. Allen L. Beaver,
Mrs. Josephine A. Moyer, Mrs. Hester H. Aten, Mrs. O. M. Girton, Mrs.
Lillie E. Moser, T. Edison Fischer,
Miller I. Buck.
1922 Esther J. Saxe, Mrs. E. S.
Weed, George B. Rhawn.
Mrs.
Mrs. Russell Padgett,
Fred W. Nicholls, Mrs. M. H. Kohler,
Stephen A. Lerda, Mrs. W. Paul
Blancher.
Mrs.
1924 Kathryn J. Dechant,
Rutter Keller, Miriam Lawson, Mrs.
John C. Brumbach, Class Treasurer,
Mary F. Amesbury, Mis. Alex E.
Armstrong, Mrs. Kenneth Conway,
Mrs. Alice M. Davies, Mrs. Mary O.
Earley, Mrs. Laura V. Eberhard. AgMrs.
nes Fahey, William M. Hess,
Catherine Huttenstine, Mrs. Teressa
TIIE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Jones.
Johnson. Mrs. Lawrence
R.
Elizabeth
Krolikowski,
Helen
Krusinski, Louis Lerda, Mrs. R. W.
McLaughlin, Mrs. Dorothy P. Marsh,
Mrs. Maude S. Meyer. Mrs. Ruth M.
Miles, Mrs. Margaret S. Morris, Mrs.
Consuelo Noz. Mrs. Ross Osborn, William H. Partridge, Mrs. H. C. Pearson, Mrs. Sheppard Pierce, Mrs. Bertelle Richards, Mrs. Maurice K. Ridall, Gertrude M. Roberts. Mrs. Adda
S.
M. Salesbury, Edward F. Schuyler,
1925—
Watters, Mrs. Sarah D. WhitEva
lock, Mi's. E. D. Williams, Adeline
1927—
E. Swineford.
Mrs. James P. Bussberg.
1929—
1926 Mrs. Hugh Campbell.
Doris G. Palsgrove.
Mrs. Edna M. Long. Sterling
Strausser. Mrs. Harold T. Davis.
Mrs.
Mrs. Hilton Anthony.
Walter Covert. Jack B. Fortner, Roy
D. Haring, Mrs. Beatrice Harrington,
Mrs.
John
Mrs. Rollin Moorhead,
Morton, Mrs. John E. Reese, Mrs.
Theron Rhinard. Mrs. Dale W. Sitler.
Mrs. George Thomas. Mrs. Ellis M.
Turner, Oliver S. Williams, Esther F.
Wright. Class Treasurer, Mrs. R. J.
Goodwin, George A. Matthews, Mrs.
Johns.
Franklin Bacon. Mrs. Carl
Mrs. Donald Wallace, Mrs. Grace K.
Hoover, Mi's. Margaret T. Beidleman.
Mrs. Nelson Stauffer, Mrs. Doris
Stewart. Mrs. Mary A. Harry, Mrs.
Harlen Leitzel, Mrs. C. H. Carls, Jane
B. Evans, Mrs. Freda Griffiths. Mrs.
Alice V. Smalser, Mrs.
Paul
J.
Mrs.
Bruch, Mi's. David L. Cooke,
Allan F. Mensinger, Mrs. Paul Rar1928
ich, Mrs. Lucille M. DeVoe,
Mrs.
Otis Adams.
1930 Mrs. Dorothy Foote Pililblad.
Edna Novak. William B. Yeager,
Jr.,
Richard O. Frymire. Mrs. William J.
Jones, Mi's. Paul H. Kepner.
1931 Minnie Olshefsky, Mrs. Sheldon A. MacDougall.
1932 Mrs.
Mildred
Hinebaugh.
Mrs. Ralph Krause.
1933 Lois Lawson. Mrs. Paul Turek.
1934 Mi's. Edward Cobleigh,
Edward F. Doyle, Mrs. Samuel W.
Mack, John W. Partridge, Mrs. Wm.
A. McDermott. Mrs. John S. Coldren.
Jr., Mrs. Arnold Embleton, Mrs. Roy
D. Masser, Nevin W. Rovenolt, Mrs.
John Troy, Mrs. Ivan L. Smith.
1935 Gerald C. Harter, Clarence S.
Slater.
1936 Mrs. N. W. Moreth.
1937 Josephine M. Magee,
E. Palsgrove,
Mary
Mary
J.
T. Smith, Sara E. Tubbs, Class Treasurer.
1940 Mildred A. Bonin, Mrs. Fay
G. Clark.
1941 Mi's.
George
Samuel F. Worman.
1943 Mrs. Irene
M.
Virginia M. Shambach.
1944 Joyce E. Hay.
1945
Mrs.
Douglas
Horvath,
J.
Smoczynski,
G.
Jackson,
Nancy Berlew Lyhne.
1946 Mrs. F. A. Ungermann, Mrs.
Thomas Bowman,
SEPTEMBER,
1969
1948 Stanley C. Krzywicki. George
1949—
E. Menarech.
George M. Dotzel, Jr., John
G. McNelis, John H. Reichard, Mrs.
E. C. Barrett, Jr., W. Eldon Berry.
Mario L. Berlanda, Mrs. George R.
Myers, John J. O’Donnell, Carson
Whitesell,
Thomas E. Bowman, Ken-
Mrs.
Billie
D.
WEDDINGS
1961
Patricia J. Bernard!, Pittston, Pa.,
and Nino J. Gaiomini, Taylor, Pa.
Now living at 218 Grace Street, Old
Forge, Pa. 18518
neth E. Wire.
1950 Mrs.
Richard
Ammerman,
1952—F. Pachalec, Vincent W. Karis,
Henry
Leonard B. Gricoski.
1951 Mike Masanovich.
Mrs. Nancy Lychos.
1954 Edna R. Keim, Mrs. Frank
Andrews, Mrs. Benjamin J. Lewis,
Mrs. Thomas M. O’Neill, Mrs. Gloria
Peiffer.
1955 Mrs. Joseph P. Feifer, Mrs.
1958—
Paul
L. Dunkelberger, Mrs. Vincent
W. Karis.
1956 Mrs.
Judith
S.
Schauffeli,
Richard A. Bittner, Paul R. Peiffer,
Michael Homick, Mrs. Walter Casper.
Mrs. C. A. Rebernik.
1962—
1959 Charles R. Hoyt. Mrs. James
L. Baumgardner, Mrs. Fred P. Delia.
1960 James R. McCarthy.
1961 Anthony A. Alastick,
Mrs
Adda C. Smith. Mrs. J. W. Lor ah.
Frank W. Deaner.
David W. Barbour.
1963 Richard C. Scorese. Mr. and
Mrs. Richard D. Rhoads, Robert C.
Houck. Jessie
Reppy, Mrs. Bernard Elliott.
1964 William R. Helgens, Sr., Mrs.
Richard C. Scorese, John H. Brausch,
Jr., Mrs. Carl L. Millard. Virginia C.
Hesel, Mrs. Bernard J. Marchilonis,
1967— P. Miller, Sandra C. ThornKenneth
ton, Mrs. Dieter Rosch, Mrs. Nancy
B. Erway, Mrs. Darlene O. Weber.
1965 Philip M. Thomas, Mrs. Howard T. Watson, Jr.. Randal F. Romig.
1966 Mrs. Marilynne Welsh, John
S. Mulka, Gary L. Russell, Wayne C.
Smitz, Mrs. Philip A. Smith,
Mrs.
Robert J. Donahue.
Robert O. Samsel, Mrs. Leatrice S. Becker, Marjorie A. Milani,
James M. Reilly, William F. Skinner,
Mrs. Willard E. Hoffman, Lt. Thomas
S. Fowles, Lorraine M. Savidge.
1968 Dona M. Houck, Barbara A.
Leta, Linda L. Fryling, Carole
A.
Marone, Ellyn S. Torregian, Diane
W. Dawson, Kathleen A. Elliott, Victoria A.
Mikell,
Mrs. Donna L.
Knouse, Robert T. Moran, Jr.
M
1964
Eugene Steinruck, Bloomsburg and
The
Wilma Kitchen, Bloomsburg.
bride has been a medical secretary
Mr.
at Geisinger Medical Center.
Steinruck, who has received his M.A.
at Bucknell, is teacher of physics at
Gettysburg Senior High School.
1965
Arlan LaRue Baer and Gwendolyn
Lea Borner. Mr. Baer teaches in the
Hughesville School system.
Donna Maria Barbaro and David
Andrew McRae. The bride has been
working on her dissertation for Ph.D.
Sociology at the University of Pittsburgh. Mr. McRae is Sales Representative for the Wells Jewelry, Inc.
Address: Antetam Apts., 103- A Carsonia Avenue, Reading, Pa. 19606
in
1968
Bonita D. Yoder and Jerome Bassion.
Mrs. Bassion teaches at Lawrence Junior High School in Chatsworth, Calilf. Address: 15900 Bryant
St., Sepulveda, Calif.
Michael J. Cromley and Linda KenMr. Cromley is employed as a
case worker in the social service department of Danville State Hospital.
Address: 20 W. Market St., Danville,
Pa.
and
Henry Edward Bernatonis
Phyllis Ruth Meeker.
The couple
will reside in Shenandoah, where Mr.
Bernatonis is teaching.
vin.
1969
Noreen Mensch, Bangor, Pa., and
Mr.
John W. McKinery, Pottstown.
McKinery is a senior at BSC and
Mrs. McKinery is employed by the
Vocational
Columbia-Montour Area
Technical School.
Ann Buiocchi, Dickson
and John M. Hutchings, Allentown. Both are employed as elementary teachers in the Bristol Township
Patricia
City,
School District, Levittown.
BSC FACULTY HONORS
PRES.
AND
MRS. ANDRUSS
The BSC Faculty Association paid
tribute to Dr. Harvey A.
Andruss,
president, on his coming retirement
at a banquet held at the college commons. Gifts of a color television, silver bowl and illuminated testimonial
by Dr. Edson Drake, president of the
association, were presented to
Dr.
and Mrs. Andruss.
Dr. Andruss addressed the group
and George A. Turner was introduced
new
Association
president.
Musical entertainment was by
the
Madrigal Singers.
as the
Ann
and
Mr.
Kishbaugh will teach biology in Kenai
Borough School District, Kenai Pen
Borough School District, Kenai Peninsula, Alaska.
The bride will graduate from BSC in January.
Sally
Reisler.
Frank Brink, Mr. and Mrs.
Ray O. Zimmerman, Leonard E. Barlik, Harriet L. Kocher, Sister M. Laurentia (Helen Mayan), Mrs. James
1939
Pugh.
Duncan
J.
Scheirer, Allentown,
Kishbaugh, Berwick.
Charlotte Elaine Tourney and Lt.
Gerald Patrick McBride ’67.
Mrs.
McBride teaches at Mt. Pleasant
School District, Wilmington, Del. and
her husband is presently stationed at
Fort Bragg, N. C.
Bette L. Hari'ison, Benton,
and
Charles C. Ryan ’68, Danville.
The
bride is teaching in Berwick and the
groom is a teacher in Central Luz-
Page three
erne School District.
Joan Ann Molnar and James E.
Laubach. Mrs. Laubach will teach
in Newark Valley School in September. Her husband is a programmer
IBM. Address: 118 Franklin
Owego, N. Y.
for
St.,
1939.
1900—
1892 Grace Blair (Mrs. Charles N.
Kerstetter), Milton Pa. Died October
3,
1968.
Mrs. Leona Wagner Seesholtz,
Stillwater, Pa. Died April 7, 1969.
1911 Lillie G. Sheard (Mrs. L. A.
Died
Newgard), Boyds Mills, Pa.
November 16, 1968.
1913 Hazel Hughes
(Mrs. James
—
—
1967.
Barton). Died December
1915 — Fred W. Faux, Shamokin,
4,
—
—
—
Pa.
1895 Olive E. Meyer, Drums, Pa.
1899 Martha E. Dodson, Berwick.
1902 Essene Hollopeter (Mrs. Ernest Martin), Kingston, Pa.
1902 Sallie Ormsby.
1907 Maree C. Higgins, Harrisburg,
—
Pa.
1907 — Reba
Lerch,
Jr.,)
Died April
5,
1969.
burg, Pa.
1900 Anna Redeker (Mrs. Percival
Erisman), Washington, D. C.
1917 Margaret
Williams
Davis,
—
Nanticoke, Pa.
Alice Feidt, Millersburg, Pa.
1900
1901
Orabel Mengel (Mrs. Samuel
Rarick), Schuylkill Haven, Pa.
1891 Carrie Meyer (Mrs.
Joseph
—
Bruna).
1894—Bertha L.
John J. Kelly).
Johnston
(Mrs.
Euphemia Monroe.
1929— Edith Fay Blud (Mrs. D. H.
1894
Saoni).
1929—Dorothy C. Colley (Mrs.
H.
Brewington), Benton, Pa.
1893—
1929 Jane P. Evans, West Pittston,
Pa.
1929 Julia Kelechaw, Mrs. Nestor
—
—
Schlanta).
1929 — Ruth A. Scanlon.
1929— Mary G. Ferry.
1906— Maude Boust Shawfield,
Har-
risburg, Pa.
1895 Mary H. Everett (Mrs. E. F.
Carpenter)
— John
Brace.
W. Williams (Mrs.
Richard Roderick).
1895 Bina Malloy (Mrs. Edward J.
1897
S.
Eleanor
—
Ryan
)
1895—Claude M. Stauffer, Howard
1894
1906
Mary Monaghan.
— Florence
Erdley,
New
Ber-
Pa.
Instructor of Nurses, Protestant Episcopal Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa.
1931 Marie Foust Merrell, Drexel
lin,
—
Pa.
Died January 2,
1969.
Taught 30 years.
1958— George Vivacqua, Levittown.
Hill,
Coordinator for Special Services at
the Witherspoon Elementary School,
age four
Director of the Bloomsburg Water Company; a member and
former Director of the Associated Petroleum Industries of Pennsylvania; a
member and former Director of the
Jobbers
Association
National * Oil
which recently honored him for forty
years of service.
An active participant in a variety
of civic endeavors, he was serving at
the time of his death, as Director of
Bloomsburg Public Library, as
a long-time trustee and currently a
Ruling Elder of the Bloomsburg Presbyterian Church, as a life member of
the Board of Directors of the Columbia County Cancer Society, and as a
the
member of the Bloomsburg Historical Society.
He was a past preHospital
sident of the Bloomsburg
Board. He served as Secretary of
the Board of Trustees of Bloomsburg
State College from 1940 to 1944.
veteran of two years’ service with
A
Army during World
he was past Commander-inChief, Valley of Bloomsburg, American Legion.
the United States
War
I,
outstanding leader and member
Masonic organizations, Mr. Hidlay
was a past Commander-in-Chief of
presently
Caldwell Consistory and
Chairman of its Board of Trustees.
On September 25, 1946, he was made
an honorary member of the Supreme
An
of
Council, 33rd Degree. He was affiliated with Washington Lodge No 265,
Chapter,
F. and A.M., Royal Arch
Crusade Commandery No. 12, the
Irem Temple Shrine, and the Craftsman Club. He was a member and
Past Sovereign of Orient Conclave,
Red Cross of Constantine. He was for
many years a member of the B.P.O.
E. and Loyal Order of Moose.
He is survived by his wife, Eugenia
Terwilliger Hidley; a son, William C.
Hidlay, Jr., of Bloomsburg; a daughter, Carvel Hidlay Moore, of New
York City; and five grandsons.
Mr. Hidlay received his education
in the Bloomsburg schools, was a
graduate of the Bloomsburg
State
Normal School, and earned the Doctor
of
of
Pharmacy defree from
Pharmacy degree from
the Philathe Phila-
Science.
Traub.
J.
He was a
life
Quick (Mrs. Frank H.
Jackson Heights, N. Y.
Lucy Kline Brobst, Blooms-
1901
/
—
JUgntDriam
3ln
Princeton Township School District.
W. Clair Hidlay
W. Clair Hidlay, former Secretary
of the BSC Board of Trustees, died at
the Blocmsburg Hospital,
Tuesday,
July 1, 1969. He was President of the
Hidlay Oil Company which he founded in 1929
Chairman of the Board of
Directors of the Bloomsburg BankColumbia Trust Company since 1960,
and a member of that board since
GerroUl W. Hart
Gerrold W. Hart, Bloomsburg R. D.
2, died May 25 at Wilkes-Barre VetSince 1962, he had
erans Hospital.
been on the faculty of the Department
oi Education, audio-visual services,
Bloomsburg State College. He had
been promoted to associate professor
this year.
He had been a
patient at the veter-
ans hospital about one month. Prior
he had been a patient for two
to that,
weeks at Bloomsburg Hospital.
He was born in Newark, N. J., son
of Stanley and Vivian Hart.
He
graduated frfom Springfield College,
Mass., in 1949 and received his M.A.
degree from American International
College, Mass., in 1956. He received
his M.E. degree in 1968 from Temple
University.
Before coming to Bloomsburg, he
taught high school for three years in
Connecticut and five years at BullardHaven Technical School in the field of
audio-visual aids. He taught summer
school at Temple University last year.
Mr. Hart served three years in the
Navy during World War II, receiving
numerous citations including the Distinguished Flying Cross, Gold Star
and Air Medal with three stars.
Dr. Eugene D. Thoenen
Dr. Eugene D. Thoenen, fifty-nine,
847 Lower Chester road, Charleston.
W. Va., for six years a professor in
history at
Bloomsburg State College.
1958-1965, died in Charleston on May
31.
native of West Virginia, and
the writer of an authoritative book
on the History of the Oil and Gas Industry in West Virginia, Dr. Thoenen
returned to his native state in 1965.
where he last served as director of
the Office of Veterans’ Training and
Education in the West Virginia Department of Education.
A
Dr. Thoenen attended Swarthmore
College and later West Virginia University, from which he received the
Ph.D. degree in History. Both he and
his
the
wife, Grace, were prominent in
of the Bloomsburg Episcopal
life
Church.
Bessie Derr Sked ’04
D. Sked, 85, a retired
school teacher and club leader, died
Mi-s. Bessie
February 28 in the Ogden Nursing
Home. A former Pennington resident,
she lived at 19 Delaware Avenue, Ewing Township.
Mrs. Sked taught in Pennington.
Princeton and Milton, Pa. She was a
member of the WSCS, United Church
Women and the Socialites of Pennington Methodist Church. She was a past
president of the Kleio Club of Pennington and had been a district officer
of
Federation
the New Jersey
Women’s Club.
in
G.
Edward
Elwell, Jr. ’05
George Edward Elwell, Jr., eightythree, one of the most prominent, best
known and active Freemasons in the
Northern jurisdiction and long active
in the religious, business and civic
life of the communuity died in June
in the Bloomsburg Hospital.
His last public appearance was at
of
the Bloomsburg State
College,
which he was a graduate, during the
Alumni Day festivities on Saturday,
April 26, and when one of the features
was the dedication of Elwell Hall,
named in recognition of his family’s
contributions to the development of
His grandfather and
the College.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Shrine, Bloomsburg; Eastern Star,
Iris Club, Golden Age Club, Business
and Professional Women’s Organiza-
the
of
trustees
father both were
school and he was a faculty member
for some years early in the present
century.
A native of Bloomsburg, he was
born April 19. 1886. the son of Geo-
Association.
A. McKelvey
sixth generation in direct line of descent from
Jabez Elwell who, like his son. John,
was active in the defense of the Colonies during the Revolutionary War.
He was a grandson of Judge William Elwell. twenty-six years presidistrict,
dent judge of this judicial
and one of the state’s foremost jurHis father, a lawyer and newsists.
paper publisher, was long a leading
Edward and Mary
He was of the
rge
Elwell.
citizen of
Bloomsburg.
He received
education
his early
under private tutors and was graduated from Bloomsburg State College
and later from Trinity College, Hartford. Conn., in 1909 as a Bachelor of
active in many extracurricular activities at Trinity where
he was a member of the Delta Psi
Arts.
He was
fraternity.
Upon his return to Bloomsburg he
became associated with his father in
the commercial printing business, established in 1837 and the oldest business house in Bloomsburg. His father
from 1872 to 1910 had also published
a
newspeper
weekly
“The
Colum-
bian.”.
He took an active and continuing interest in Bloomsburg’s intellectual life, and for nine years taught
French at BSC.
He made a hobby
autographs
of collecting rare
or letters of every head
government having to do with
America, from Ferdinand and Isabel-
of
present administration. In
1958 he presented the entire collection
la to the
to
Sunbury, and Retired Teachers’
tion,
Caldwell Consistory.
He served
for around a dozen years
on the Bloomsburg school board, during which time he held the offices of
both president and treasurer, and also
served on town council.
For many years he was junior warden of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church
and senior warden for six years. He
was a vestryman for a long period.
Christella
F. Masten ’06
Miss Christella F. Masten, eightyone, a native of Washingtonville. who
taught two generations of Binghamton
school children, died recently in Loudes Hospital. She went to Binghamton in 1909 after teaching for three
years in Pennsylvania schools and
for the next 44 years taught in six
different schools, retiring in 1953.
Miss Masten received a bachelor’s
degree from Syracuse University in
1939.
She was a member of the
Daughters of the American Revolution
and a member
the
Good Shepherd.
of the
Church
of
Lavona Megargell Chapin ’ll
Lavona M. Richards Chapin,
seventy-eight, Main street, Orangeville, died June 15.
She had been in
failing health for years, however her
death was unexpected. She was born
in Orangeville and resided in ScranMi-s.
many years before returning
Orangeville in 1949.
ton for
to
A graduate
of
Bloomsburg Normal
School, she taught for several years
in the early part of her life.
More
recently she had been employed by
the Bloomsburg Hospital, retiring in
1960.
member of the OrangeUnited Presbyterian Church.
She was a
ville
Kathleen M. Jones ’13
Miss Kathleen M. Jones died April
17 in Wilmington Medical Center, Del.
Born in Berwick, she graduated from
Berwick High School, received a BA
from Bloomsburg State College and
an MA from New York University.
She was principal at the Fourteenth
Street School, Berwick, until her retirement ten years ago.
She had
taught at New Castle, Del., the last
ten years. She was a former member of the Bower
Memorial
UM
He was married December 12. 1911
to Sara B. Milleisen.
Her death occurred in Key West, Fla., on Febru-
Church. Berwick and Asbury United
Methodist Church, New Castle, Del.
She was a member of the Soroptomist Club and Alpha Delta Kappa Soc-
ary
iety.
18, 1956.
Freemasonry he held the treasured Thirty-third degree, and was a
In
past commander-in-chief of Caldwell
Consistory. During his term as commander-in-chief Caldwell observed its
diamond anniversary. In 1966 he was
chairman of the Caldwell Centennial
observance and the class received at
that time was named in his honor.
Amy
S.
LeVan
’06
Miss Amy S. LeVan, ninety-one, of
Sunbury, died June 5 in Blue Hill
Nursing Home, Selinsgrove R. D. 2
She was a member of St. John’s
Methodist Church, Sunbury.
A retired teacher, she had taught school
for a number of years in the Sunbury
area.
She was a member of the
Rebecca
Lodge,
Sunbury;
White
Ethel Ravert Keck ’14
The death of Mrs. Boyd Keck, seventy-two of Gulf of Mexico Drive, Sarasota, Fla., occurred May 25 in the
Sarasota Memorial Hospital. Born in
Rock Glen, she came to this area at
an early age. Prior to moving to
Florida about 15 years ago, she and
her husband owned
and operated
Keck’s Linen Shop in Bloomsburg and
Berwick. She was a member of the
Church of Christ, Berwick.
.
SEPTEMBER,
1969
Peter Sincavage ’24
Peter J. Sincavage, Sugar Notch,
a retired teacher and for thirty-six
years basketball coach in the Ashley
and Sugar Notch School Districts,
died May 27 at his home following
an
illness of
He was a
some time.
native of Sugar Notch,
where he lived
and was
all of his life
a member of SS. Peter and Paul’s
Church, and the Holy Name Society
He was a
of that congregation.
member of the Lions Twin Borough
Club, Ashley-Sugar Notch.
Sincavage was a standout athlete
High School
at Hanover Township
and BSC.
Through most
ing career he
ful athletic
of his teach-
was a highly success-
coach.
Miriam Lehman Martin
’27
133
Martin,
Mrs. Miriam Irene
East Front Street, Berwick, died May
She was
21 at Berwick Hospital.
born in MifTlinville July 29. 1907 and
was married to Stanley Martin who
died in 1967.
She taught in Mififlinville for three
Later she was employed at
Berwick Shirt Company, Mifflin ville
Knitting Company, and until her illness at Bennett’s Restaurant, Berwick. She was a member of Mifflinand
ville United Methodist Church
Berwick Ladies of Moose auxiliary.
years.
William E. Letterman ’33
Willilam E. Letterman. fifty-seven,
Harrisburg, died April 30 at the PolyHe was
•clinic Hospital, Harrisburg.
born in Lewistown,
a
graduate
of
Bloomsburg State College, he received his Master’s Degree at Bucknell
He taught in BloomsUniversity.
burg Schools for several years.
Elmira Bankes Shaffer ’36
Mrs. Elmira Bankes Shaffer, of
Bloomsburg R. D. 5, died in June.
She had been in ill health for the past
year. She had done substitute teaching in the area school systems the
past ten years.
Edna Crouse Harrison ’06
Mrs. Edna C. Harrison, eighty-five.
Forks, Orangeville R. D.
2,
died at
Bloomsburg Hospital on July 7.
She was born in Nescopeck and lived in Fishingereek Township most of
her life. She was a graduate of the
township school, and Bloomsburg Normal School. She was a teacher in the
schools of Fishingereek, Mt. Pleasant
and Salem Township in the early part
of her life.
At the time of her death she was
president of Neil S. Harrison, Inc.,
operator of two stores, one at Forks
and the other in Benton.
Frances Dymond Gay ’33
former
Gay, the
Sheldon
Mrs.
Frances Dymond, Bloomsburg R. D.
a lengthy
5, died July 5 following
illness. She had been a school teacher in the Central Columbia District
and was widely known for her work
with ceramics. Mrs. Gay was a member of the Lime Ridge First United
Methodist Church, the Lightstreet
Grange and the Pennsylvania State
Education Association.
Page
five
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR
T2
H. F. Fenstemaker
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Grace Foote Conner,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Terms
Howard
P. Fenstemaker
242 Central Road
’12
expire 1972
Millard Ludwig ’48
Center and Third Streets
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Term
Millville,
VICE PRESIDENT
Pennsylvania 17846
El wood M. Wagner
Clayton H. Hinkel
TREASURER
Terms expire
Volume LXX, Number 3
’40
—
1903
Class Representative:
II.
Walter
Riland, 11 Warwick Avenue, Scarsdale, N. Y. 10583
Class Representative: Mrs. Pearle
Fitch Diehl, 27 Bloom Street, Danville. Pa. 17821
1910
1911
1905
1912
Class Representative:
Mrs. Vera
Hemingway Ilousenick, 503 Market
Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Representative: Howard F.
Central
Road,
Fenstemaker,
242
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1907
1913
Class Representative: Dr. Kimber
Kuster, 140 West lltli Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17821
Mr. and Mrs. E. K. Masteller (Renna Crossley), R. D. 1, Bloomsburg,
recently celebrated their golden wed-
1909
W.
Street, Danville, Pa.
They operated a
Columbia County for thirtyeight years and retired in 1967.
farm
in
1914
Representative:
J. Howard
Deily, 518 West Third Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1915
Class
Representative: John
man, 368 East Main
Street,
Shu-
II.
Blooms-
burg, Pa. 17815
Class
Class Representative:
Edwin M.
Barton, 353 College Hill, Bloomsburg,
Pa.
six
expires 1970
ding anniversary.
Class Representative: Robert E.
Ashley,
Metz, 23 Manliatton Street,
Pa. 18706
Page
Term
Glenn A. Oman ’32
1704 Clay Avenue
Scranton, Pennsylvania 18509
September, 1969
17821
1901
Fred
James H. Deily, Jr. ’41
Ba usman Drive
1971
Esther
Abbott
(Mrs.
Benjamin
Reist), Catawissa, Pa., is now a guest
at the Boone Nursing Home, Eyers
Grove, Pa.
Bloom
Gordon, Pennsylvania 17936
Mrs. Verna Jones ’36
18 West Avenue, Apartment C-4
Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087
expires 1970
Representative:
’29
McKnight Street
19526
224 Leonard Street
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Earl A. Gehrig ’37
110 Robin Lane, Sherwood Village
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Class
205
Lancaster, Pennsylvania 17603
Hamburg, Pennsylvania
expires 1970
12801
37 N.
John Thomas ’47
68 Fourth Street
’43
New York
Elizabeth H. Hubler
140 West Eleventh Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
643 Wiltshire Road
State College, Pa. 16801
Diehl, 627
Glen Falls,
’35
HI
Dr. William L. Bitner
33 Lincoln Avenue
’34
Dr. Kimber C. Kuster T3
SECRETARY
Term
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie
509 East Front Street
Berwick, Pennsylvania 18603
102 West Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Dr. Frank J. Furgele ’52
Colonial Farm Box 88
R. D. 1, Glen Mills, Pa. 19342
Term expires 1970
Term
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
expires 1970
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
Col.
—
’34
1916
Class Representative: Mrs. Russell
Burrus (Emma Harrison) R. D. 2,
Orangeville, Pa. 17859
1917
Class
Cromis,
Representative:
Allen
Mahoning Manor, R. D.
L.
1,
Milton, Pa. 17847
1918
Class
Representative:
J.
Clair
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Patterson. 315 West Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Ruth Hutton, DSA, (Mrs. W. Mason
Aucher) 5124 45th Street, Washington.
D. C. 20016, is chairman of the Sculp
ture Scholarship Competition (Washof
ington Chapter. National Society
Arts and Letters). She is preparing
new works for a coming sculpture
exhibition (September 6) at the Wii
liam Penn Memorial Fine Arts Museum, Harrisburg.
Schools.
She had been a public school teacher since 1923 and an administrator
former Sunbury
since 1934 in the
School District and since July 1, 1965,
has served as elementary principal of
the Shikellamy School District.
She is the dean of elementary school
principals in the Central Pennsylvania area, and is widely known through-
Miss CathClass Representative:
erine A. Keimard, 335 Jefferson St.,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
At the meeting of our class on Alumni Day, it was voted that I re-
main your Class Representative,
gard.
nishing information
Quarterly.
for
the
fur-
College
—
I can do this
only, if
you,
my
classmates, furnish me with the information you would like to share,
such as: (1) Change of addresses, (2)
Marriages; (3) Deaths, etc.
At our class meeting, the 1919er’s
contributed S65.00 to the Campus Tree
and Shrubbery program.
Officers elected were:
President.
Wesley E. Davies, 60 E. Overbrook
Ave., Shavertow n. Pa. 18708.
Secretary, Gertrude
Gordon Davies. 60
Overbrook Ave., Shavertown, Pa.
T
18708.
Out of state classmates back for
the reunion festivities were: F. Ralph
Dreilbelbis. 422 W. Highland Ave..
Wooster, Ohio. 44691:
Ruth Doyle
Moore, 336
Bender Ave., Roselle
Park, N. J. 07204:
Eva Ferguson
Ellis. 2764 Federal St., Camden. N.
J. 08105; Betty Steele Aurand. 4200
Cathedral
Ave.,
N.W..
Apt.
706,
Washington. D. C. 20016: Olive Robinson, 1117 Morningside Ave., Schnectady, N. Y. 12308; Frances E. Kinner, 3204 Verdun Ave., Endwell, N.
Y. 13760; Margaret Summers Brock.
Rosenhayn, N. Y. 08352.
1920
Leroy W.
Old Berwick Road,
Bloomsburg. Pa. 17815
Class
Creasy,
Representative:
3117
A
recent issue of Science, publication of the American Association for
the Advancement of Science, carries
the text of the address of Dr. H. Keefer Hartline, which he delivered at
Stockholm, Sweden, last December 12,
when he received the Nobel Prize in
Science.
1921
Class
Representative:
Cole, 100 Leonard Street,
Pa. 17815
1922
Class
Representative:
Edna
S.
Harter, R. D. 1, Nescopeck, Pa. 18623
1923
Class
Representative:
Mrs. Raymond P. Kashner, 125 Friar. Road,
Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg,
Pa.
17815
A
span of 46 years of working with
school children in the Sunbury area
came to a close in June with the retirement of Miss Grace S. Beck, 1014
E. Chestnut St., who retired as elementary
principal.
Shikellamy
SEPTEMBER,
1969
career, she received
awards from The
Freedom Foundation, as an
outstanding teacher and the “Citizen of the
Year” aw'ard by the people of Sunbury.
1925
Mrs. Pearl
Radel Bickel, 909 Masser Street, SunRepresentative:
Class
bury, Pa. 17801
1926
Class Representative:
Marvin M.
Bloss, R. D. 2, Wapwallopen, Pa. 18660
1928
Class Representatives: Mrs. (Elsie
Miss Beck attended Shamokin Twp.
elementary schools and was graduated from Shamokin High
School in
1921.
She
was graduated from
Bloomsburg Normal School in 1923.
and began teaching in Sunbury that
Nelson Stauffer, 88 John
Lebo)
Kingston, Pa.
18704.
Mrs.
Frantz) Walter Covert,
20
Street, Dallas, Pa. 18612
Street, Millville, Pa. 17864
She holds an elementary principal’s
certificate and a supervising principal’s certificate.
She was cited in
1964 in that year’s edition of “Who’s
Who
in American Education.”
She
listed in this book because of her
outstanding work in education.
Starting in 1923, Miss Beck taught
in elementary grades four to eight
until 1934, when she was named ele-
was
mentary principal at Maclay School.
She served
in this position until 1947.
to 1961, she served as
elementary supervisor in the Sunbury
District. In 1961, she was named dir-
From
1947
ector of elementary
education and
curriculum coordinator of the Sunbury
School District.
During this period,
she developed two curriculum guides
for kindergarten through 12
grades,
and guides for language arts and social studies.
She was also an instructor in sum-
mer
school and extension classes for
Bucknell from 1949-1961.
In 1963, she was named elementary
principal of the Sunbury district.
Esther Ludwig Stokes lives at 1516
Sycamore
Street,
Harrisburg,
Bitler, 117 State
The elementary faculty and retirees
Columbia Schools re-
of the Central
cently honored Elfed Jones at a dinner held at the Hotel Magee.
Jones,
elementary supervisor,
is
retiring
after thirty-nine years of service.
A graduate of Nanticoke High
School in 1924, Jones got his BS degree from Bloomsburg State College in
1930 and his MS at New York University.
He also worked on his doctorate at NYU.
He started his teaching career at
Nanticoke High School in 1930.
In
1937 he went to Wilkes-Barre where
he taught history and coached basketball.
While at Wilkes-Barre, he was
elected
principal
of
the
Dodson
School.
He also taught extension
courses for Bloomsburg State College
and Penn
State.
He was
co-author of a pamphlet
put out by the
Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania entitled “Self-Evaluation
in the Elementary Schools of Pennsylvania,” and contributed to the “New
Elementary Curriculum in Pennsylvania” and the “28th Yearbook of the
NEPA.”
1931
Class Representative:
James B.
Davis, 333 East Marble Street, Mechanicsburg, Pa. 17055
Pa.
17105
Parish
Luther W.
and Margaret Swartz
She later received a bachelor of
science degree in education at Bloomsburg State College in 1940, and master
of science degree in education from
Bucknell University, Lewisburg, in
1952.
St.,
(Arline
1930
Representatives:
Class
year.
1933
Representative: Miss Lois
Lawson, 644 East Third
Street,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1924
Mrs. Harry
Bloomsburg,
6th
after
retired
Street, Sunbury, has
forty-five years of teaching in the
Sunbury schools. During her teaching
out the state for her interest in the
elementary curriculum.
In her associations with young people, area educators said that
Miss
Black has done much to influence and
guide young people in their education
endeavors. Shikellamy Area elementary teachers hold her in high re-
1919
Muriel, plan extensive travels.
Helen E. Barrow, 117 North
Class Representative:
Edward F.
Schuyler, 236 West
Ridge Avenue,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Harold R. Miller, who is retiring
this year as teacher of eighth grade
geography at Bloomsburg Junior
High after 43 years in the profession,
was honored recently by the faculty.
Tributes were paid the retiring teacher by Supt. Warren E. Fisher and Assistant County Supt. Harold Hidlay,
among others. Miller, who has taught
two generations of Bloomsburg students, is highly regarded in the state
as a teacher of geography. He has
traveled in forty-seven
and
states
during retirement, he and his wife
1934
Representative:
Esther
Evans McFadden (Mrs. Joseph), 154
East Fifth Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
Class
17815
1935
Class
Reed,
burg,
William I.
East 4th Street, Blooms-
Representative:
151
Pa. 17815
1936
Representatives:
Kathryn
Vanauker (Mrs. Nicholas Moreth) 34
Class
Linden Road, Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey 07432. Co-Chairmen: Ruth Wagner (Mrs. Lawrence Le Grande) 126
Oak Street, Hazleton, Pa. 13201 and
Page seven
Mary Jane Fink (Mrs. Frederick MeCutchcon) Maple Avenue, Conyngham,
Pa. 18219
1937
Class Representatives: Mr. and Mrs.
Earl A. Gehrig, 110 Robin Lane, Sher-
wood
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Village,
1938
East Main Street, Blooms-
710
burg, Pa. 17815
1930
Willard A.
Class Representative:
Christian, Jr., 803 Logue Street, Williamsport, Pa. 17701
The
’39
of
thirtieth
reunion of the Class
was attended by
and friends
39
of Class of ’39.
members
A
fine
time was had by all who attended the
various events on the campus. At the
dinner $55.50 was collected and turned
over to the Alumni Fund for restoring
trees to the campus.
Some of those who were not in attendance sent us information about
themselves, and I will pass it on to
you.
Colonel Victor Ferrari will be stationed at Wright Patterson Air Force
Base in Ohio after July, 1969. He is a
professor of aerospace studies in the
United States Air Force.
Willhelima Peel Scheffler is living
in Indio, California where she is employed as a teacher of the mentally
retarded.
Dick Nolan is living in Salinas, California where he is employed as an
office manager. He is a retired Army
officer after serving 22 years.
be moving to Easwill be teaching at
the Churchman School of Business.
Harriet Kocher is living in Springfield, Virginia and has opened her own
business called “People Incorporated”
dealing in placement and resorts.
Sister Laurentia (Helen Mayan) is
an elementary principal at Pocono
Central Catholic School in Cresco, Pa.
Peggy Johnson Davis is living in
Faget West, Bermuda, and invites all
of us to stop in to see her sometime.
Eddie Mulhern is living in RockEddie received a
ville, Maryland.
prize at the reunion for the most
Roy Evans
ton, Pa.,
you have any news, please send
on and we will see that it is properly taken care of.
If
it
Sincerely yours,
Willard A. Christian
1940
Class Representative:
Clayton II.
Hinkcl, 224 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1941
Representative:
Zimmerman (Jean
Class
Kready
Avenue,
17551
Pngo eight
is
Mrs. Ralph
Noll),
Millcrsville,
165
I’a.
a
graduate
of
sales, regional
sales manager of Philadelphia in 1956
and sales superintendent in New York
In 1963 he became director
in 1960.
of sales for Prudent American Life In-
ed to director of
life
He was named
surance Company.
director of recruiting in 1965 for the
Western Reserve Life Insurance Company and more recently held the posi-
agency manager
Woodsmen of America.
for
tion of
Modern
1944
Representative: Mrs. (Pole
time Comunutzis) Carl Demetrikopoulos, Friar and Robin Lanes, Sherwood
Cillage, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1945
Mary Lou
Class
Representative:
John, 257 West 11th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
ces in district and commerical officHe is also faculty sponsor of the
student-operated school store and has
served in the past as both Attendance
Coordinator and as District Coordinator of Business Education.
es.
The Bristol Township educator received his masters degree from BuckHe has completed
nell University.
Penn
at
additional graduate work
State University, Lehigh
and Rider College, and
Junewood, Levittown, with his wife,
and their three children,
Harry III, Kim Marie, and Edward.
Connie,
Jane Keller Malinaro (Mrs. Frank)
and family now reside in Lightstreet.
Jane and her brood are waiting for
Frank to quit commuting to Washington, D. C. and settle to work in or
around Bloomsburg.
Nerine Middlesworth is now on the
faculty of Kutztown S.C. where she
is in charge of the fates of elementary student teachers.
Don and Betty (RiddalP Wagner
have moved into their new home,
2624 Point Breeze Drive Barkley, Wilmington, Delaware 19803. Bets teaches business in one of Wilmington’s
High Schools.
Ruth Shoup Beadle now lives with
her husband and five sons at 15 W.
Plum Street, Westerville, Ohio 43081.
Dick teaches math at the Westerville
High School.
1951
Representative:
Anastasia
Pappas (Mrs. John Trowbridge), 102
W. Mahoning Street, Danville, Pa. Cochairman: Mrs. Charles W. Creasy
(Jacqueline Shaffer,) R. D. 1, Catawissa, Pa. 17820
Class
1947
Robert L.
Bunge, 12 West Park Street, Carroll
Park, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
Representative:
Representative:
Harry G.
Class
John, Jr., 425 Iron Street, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
1949
Richard E.
Grimes, 1723 Fulton Street, Harrisburg, Pa. 17102
Class Representative:
J.
Gobora,
Jr.,
tor of Education degree in Educational Administration by Temple University.
a
member
Woodrow Wilson High School
of
busi-
ness education department, has been
elected president of the Bucks County
Business Education Association, Bucks
County, Pennsylvania, for the 1969-70
term. He has served in the past as
treasurer of the organization for two
years, and as vice president for three
years.
Gobora has taught in Pennsylvania
schools for 19 years, including the
past ten years at Woodrow Wilson. He
is currently Bristol Township
Business Education Work Experience Coordinator, supervising Wilson students
during their on job-training experien-
McNamee was
educated in the
schools of
Bloomsburg and
Bloomsburg State College. He began
his teaching career in Maryland and
concurrently began graduate studies
at Bucknell University completing his
public
Master of Education degree in 1954.
Since moving to Delaware in 1956,
McNamee
has held positions as
Social Studies
Department Chairman
Dr.
1950
Class Representative: Jane Kenvin
(Mrs. George Widger), R. D. 2, Catawissa, Pa. 17820
Harry
Class Representative: Dr. Russell
C. Davis, Jr., Sullivan County Community College, South Fallsburgh, N.
Y. 12779
Francis R. McNamee, 1027 Crestover Road, Graylyn Crest, Wilmington, Del., has been awarded the Doc-
Dr.
1948
the
University,
presently
is
work at
enrolled in graduate-level
Temple University.
Gobora lives at 19 Jonquil Lane,
1946
will
where he
children.
Would you believe ten? I
also noticed that Mulhern’s record for
in
still
the 440 established in 1939
standing. He ran the distance in 50.0.
Also, the one-mile relay, of which he
was a member, still standns at 3:23.2.
I also notice that the 100-yard dash
record of 9.7 set by VanDevander in
1939 still stands.
II.
Bloomsburg State College, BS Degree, and
Bucknell University, MS Degree. He
served as a teacher and coach at the
High
School,
Township
Fair view
Mountain Top. During World War H
Flying
he wore the Distinguished
Cross, Air Medal, Oak Leaf Cluster
and Three Battle Stars while he was
a pilot for the United States Air Force.
His insurance career began as an
agent for Nationwide Insurance Company in 1949. In 1953 he was promotMagill
Representative: Paul G. Mar-
Class
tin,
1943
Magill, Sugarloaf, has
been appointed as director of agency
for the Columbia Life Insurance Company, in Bloomsburg. He will specialize in recruiting and training representatives.
Andrew F.
and head basketball coach at the
Senior High School level. Subsequent
appointments included being named
Acting Elementary Principal. AssisSchool Principal
tant Junior High
and Assistant Junior High School
Principal and Assistant High School
Principal prior to setting up and directing the personnel office in his present assignment as Administrative Assistant for Personnel in the Alfred I.
duPont Special School District.
Dr. McNamee holds memberships
in the following professional organizations: the Alfred I. duPont School District Education Association, the Delaware State Education Association, life
membership in the National Education
Association, Public Personnel Associa-
TIIE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
and Phi Delta Kappa.
of
formerly
His wife, Dorothy,
Berwick, graduated from Bloomsburg
State College in 1951, majoring in elementary education. In 1963 she received her Master’s Degree in reading from the University of Delaware.
tion,
The McNamees have two sons, Patrick. twelve, and Brian, eight.
1952
Francis It.
Class Representative:
Galenski, 350 South York Road. Hatboro, Pa. 19040
Charles J. Daly was recently named head basketball coach at Boston
College. A native of Kane, Pa.. Daily
played his high school basketball in
that community under Dr. C. Stuart
Edwards, now director of the Division
Secondary Education at Bloomsburg State College. He attended St.
Eonavenlure for a year and then
of
Bloomsburg
to
where he was a court star
Coach Harold Shelley.
transferred
State
under
from
graduation
Bloomsburg, he taught and coached at
Punxsutawney High Schodl where he
remained several years before going
to Duke University as freshman basHe was later named
ketball coach.
assistant basketball coach at Duke
prior to his new appointment at BosFollowing
his
ton College.
Mi*, and Mrs. David T. North, formerly of Bloomsburg, are making
their home in Fargo, N.D., where he
is in research as a radiation uiologist
with a government laboratory connected with the Department of Agriculture and Mrs. North is teacher of
nutrition in University of North Dakota.
They are also in business with "The
Burlap Bag,” an art gallery and ooutique, which specializes in handmade
lounging outfits, caftons and hostess
gowns, water colors, miniatures, ceramics, woodcuts and photos.
Mi*. North is an active photograph-
and has had a number of exhibits
work. Mrs. North, the former
Barbara Bundens, is a member of the
League
Junion
Fargo-Moorehead
er
01 his
which does
the
much
volunteer service in
community.
1953
Class Representative: John S. Scrimgeour, 411 East 3rd Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
17815
1954
William J.
Class Representative:
Jacobs, Tremont Annex Apartments,
2
West Main
Street,
Lansdale,
Pa.
19446
1955
Class Representative:
Arnold Gar
Harvey’s Lake, Pa. 18618
R. Arnold Garinger, who had been
principal of the Valley Forge Junior High School, has been appointed
inger,
to the faculty of College Misercordia,
Dallas, Pa., where he will teach and
Mr.
teachers.
supervise
student
Garinger, his wife, and four children, will reside at his birthplace at
Harvey’s Lake, Pa.
like to hear from members of the class of ’55 as to then* in-
He would
SEPTEMBER,
1969
terest in a banquet reunion such as
Would a regular
afternoon session on Alumni Day serve
was held
in
1965.
tem where he has taught in the Social
Studies Department for the past six
years.
the purpose?
1956
Representative: Dr. William
Bitner, III. 33 Lincoln Avenue, Glen
Falls, N. Y. 12801
Class
1957
Representative:
William J.
Class
Pohutski, 544 Oakridge Drive, North
Plainfield. N. J. 07606
Shirley Seiler Vivacqua, 66 Outlock Lane, Oak Tree Hollow, Levittown. Pa., is teaching at the Bensalem High School.
William A. Griffiths has been pro-
moted
assistant professor at the
State University of New York Agricultural and Technical College at Alfred.
Professor Griffiths is a member of the faculty of the Secretarial
Science Department at Alfred State
College.
He received an associate
to
degree in
business
administration
from Keystone Junior College in 1959
and went on to obtain his BS in business education at Bloomsburg State
College. Currently, he is completing
requirements for his master’s at Alfred University.
Professor Griffiths is married to the
former Lyn Thomas of Eastchester,
N. Y. They have two children and
reside at Jericho Hill in Alfred Sta-
Pessie M. Repy, 6 East Main Street,
Plymouth, Pa., was awarded a Master
Teaching of French and
of Arts
Teaching of English as a foreign language, in December 1968 from TeachColumbia University.
ers College,
She was the recipient of a full tuition
Teachers College scholarship. Since
completing her studies in August of
last year she has taught in programs
at both Columbia and New York Uni:
versities.
Robert Joseph Sewell, formerly of
1232 Scott Street. Kulpmcnt. Pa., has
been awarded the silver wing of an
American Airlines flight officer after
completing training at American’s
A
flight school in Fort Worth, Tex.
native of Ashland. Sewell was grad-
uated from Catholic High, Mount
Carmel, in 1957 and Bloomsburg State
College in 1963. Prior to joining American Airlines, Sewell served in the
United States Air Force for five years,
from 1964 to 1969, attaining the rank oi
captain.
He and his wife, Virginia, and their
children, Kristie and Julie, will make
tjieir home in the New York City area,
where Sewell has been based.
tion.
1964
1958
Class
Representative:
Raymond
Hargreaves, 37 Dell Road. Stanhope,
N. J. 07874
1959
Class Representative:
William F.
Swisher, Box 245, Cincinnatus, N. Y.
14340
1960
Class
Representative:
James J.
Peek, 100 Hull Road, Madison. Conn.
06443
1961
Class
Representative:
Edwin C.
Kuser, R. D. 1, Box 145-C, Bechtelsville. Pa. 19505
1962
Class
Representative:
Richard
Lloyd, 6 Farragus Dr., Piscataway,
N. J. 08854
Carol Stenson (Mrs. Stefan Werba)
lives at 185 Glen Road,
Woodcliff
Lake, New Jersey. 07675
1963
Class
Representative:
Pat Biehl
(Mrs. Ronald Cranford) R. D. 1, 77
Hawthorne Ave., Boyertown, Pa. 19512
The
Scotch
Plains-Fanwood,
New
Jersey, Board of Education, has announced the appointment of Terry K.
Riegel to the position of Senior High
School Assistant Principal.
Mr. Riegel was educated at the
public schools of Berwick and at
Bloomsburg State College, where he
received the Bachelor of Science degree in 1963 and the Master of Education degree in 1965. He is presently
matriculated in a doctoral program in
the Department of Secondary Education at New York University.
He began his education career in the
Scotch Plains-Fanwood School Sys-
Shuba,
J.
Ernest R.
Gaston Avenue, Raritan, N.
Representative:
Class
1
08869
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Scorese are
living at 4 Marston Road. Flanders,
N. J. 08736, has accepted a position
as teacher of Physical Education and
Driver Education in Netcong, New
Jersey. Mrs. Scorese is the former
Betty Scaife, of the class of 1963.
Estelle Josephine Loll (Mrs. Dieter
is now living at 4008 N. E.
129 Place, Portland, Oregon. 97230
Roesch)
1965
Ann Carol Raynock has been
appointed dean of women at Penn Morton College of PMC Colleges, at Chester, Pa. 19013. Since September, 1968,
she has been residence hall staff coordinator at Pennsylvania State University’s main
1,300 coeds.
campus,
in
charge of
Miss Raynock earned the master’s
degree with a major in student per-
from Penn
administration
is currently enrolled
She
as a Ph.D. degree candidate.
formerly taught English in Weatherly,
Pa. high school and at the Roosevelt
High School in Levittown, Pa.
sonnel
State,
where she
Jack B. Stanton. 525 Harting Circle,
Warminster, Pa. 18974, has been appointed Elementary School Principal
in the Lower Moreland School, Huntingdon County. He received his
degree from Temple University.
Mary Louise (McCutcheon)
MS
Topol-
ski lives at 31 Sackse Avenue, Conyngham, Pa. 18219
Page nine
1966
18643
1967
Robert T.
Representative:
Lemon, Meadowvale Apt. No. 12, 903
Quarry Road, Harve de Grace, Md.
Class
21087
Airman Durwood E.
Slusser, Nescompleted basic
Pa., has
He
training at Lackland AFB, Tex.
copeck,
Sheppard AFB,
Tex., for training as a medical serhas been assigned
to
vices specialist.
1968
Class Representative:
Thomas W.
Free, R. D. 1, Box 34, Kintnersville,
Pa. 18930
Second Lieutenant Willard F. Kel-
Beach Haven,
Pa., has completed operational readiness training
at Vandenberg AFB, Calilf., for the
chner
III,
Minuteman Weapon System. Lieutenant Kelchner
being assigned to
Malmstrom AFB, Mont., for duty with
a unit of the Strategic Air Command.
Training School
at
Lackland AFB, Texas.
Charles G. Mowery, Bloomsburg, is
attending storekeepers school.
He
graduated from
Bloomsburg High
School in 1964 and from BSC in 1968.
He entered the service on December
His address is B445418 USN,
5, 1968.
Class 56902, U.S. Naval Supply School,
Bldg 381, U.S. Naval Base, Newport,
R. I. 02840.
tion
Officer
of
Robert T. Moran, Jr., is serving
on active duty with the U. S. Naval
Reserve. His address is Robert T.
Moran, Jr., Supply Department, U. S.
Naval Submarine Base, F.P.O., San
Francisco, Cal. 96610
Donna
L.
Fenstermacher
David A. Knouse),
(Mrs.
teaching mathematics in the Line Mountain School
Mr. Knouse, a graduate of
District.
Lewisburg High School and a veteran
of four years service in the Air Force,
is Assistant Manager of the Beneficial
Finance Company, Sunbury. They are
living at 468 Third Street, Northumberland.
Airman
is
First Class Lauren E. Mil-
Water
Northumberland,
1968—
Pa., has graduated from a U. S. Air
Force technical school at Kessler
ler, of 885
AFB, Miss.
St.,
He was
trained as
a
radio repairman and assigned to a
unit of the Strategic Air Command at
Westover AFB, Mass.
01022.
1898
1895
Margaret Armstrong Parsons
L. Wolfe, Martha Rom-
—Ada
berger Fichinger
1967 Phillip A. Dente
Marly nn A. Meyer
1899 Grace Oliver (Mrs.
Hagersville).
1895— Mary Detwiler (Mrs. F. E.
Bader), Hattie Jones (Mrs. D. John
Price)
1961
— Elizabeth
Zdep)
[’age ten
Toto, Philadelphia, a senior
secondary education who participated in basketball; Ralph Moerschbacher, Camp Hill, a junior in arts
and sciences who participated in
swimming; David Moharter, son of
Mr. and Mrs. George Moharter, 1519
Fairview Avenue, Berwick, a sophomore in secondary education who participated in baseball; Thomas Houston, Waverly, N. Y„ a senior in busi-
who
participated in
and Ronald
track;
Russo, Seaford, N. Y„ a senior in secondary education who participated
in wrestling.
education
ness
swimming and
SWIMMING
Temple U.—54
Monmouth 47
Wilkes—40
BSC—50
—
BSC— 56
BSC—62
BSC— 80
Millersville
BSC—45
BSC—53
BSC— 52
BSC— 75
BSC—62
BSC— 54
BSC— 74
BSC— 78
West Chester—59
E. Stroudsburg—51
St. Joseyh’s— 52
Lock Haven—29
California—36
Slippery
Rock—50
Trenton—29
Howard U.—25
Rock—West
Meet—Slippery
State
Gauz (Mrs. Stanley
—24
Chester 90, BSC 86.5, Millersville
E. Stroudsburg 31, California 28.
32,
BASKETBALL
BSC—77
BSC—7
BSC— 78
BSC— 86
BSC— 93
West Chester—97
Shippensburg— 78
Kutztown— 77
Millersville—96
—
—
Glassboro 77
Washington and Lee 87
Mansfield—69
Mansfield—60
BSC—75
BSC— 89
BSC—62
BSC— 93
BSC—93
BSC—69
BSC— 80
Cheyney—82
Towson—86
West Chester—67
Shippensburg— 70
Kutztown 77
Lock Haven— 79
BSC— 79
BSC— 104
BSC— 118
Millersville
BSC— 75
BSC—47
BSC— 105
BSC— 77
State
BSC
Philadelphia
—BSC —89,
—
Textile — 108
Towson— 73.
BASEBALL
Quadrangular Meet
Appalanchian State 15
BSC 18
BSC—27
Old Dominion College
Ashland College— 14
BSC— 27
Mansfield—
BSC—27
Terre Haute 12
BSC 24
—
—
—
So. Illinois
U.—23
Wilkes Tournament
placed second. N. Y. Athletic
club placed first
Millersville—
BSC— 35
BSC
BSC— 19
BSC—30
BSC—40
BSC—22
BSC—
BSC—
BSC—
BSC—
BSC—
BSC—
BSC—
BSC—
BSC—
BSC—
BSC— 10
BSC—
—
Kutztown
Mansfield
—
—
Lock Haven—
Lock Haven—
Kutztown—
Bucknell —
Lock Haven
E. Stroudsburg—
Mansfield
E. Stroudsburg—
TENNIS
BSC— 7
BSC—
BSC—
BSC— 7
BSC—
BSC—
—
—
Lock Haven—
Millersville
Kutzton
1-2
—1
1-2
Susquehanna—
E. Stroudsburg—
Kutztown
1-2
1 1-2
E. Stroudsburg
Shippensburg
—
—
Shippensburg Tournament
Won by East
Stroudsburg.
BSC—5th.
GOLF
BSC— 9.5
BSC— 11.5
BSC— 11
BSC— 8 1-2
BSC— 15
BSC— 12
BSC— 15
BSC— 13
BSC— 11 1-2
BSC— 12 1-2
BSC— 16 1-2
E. Stroudsburg
—8.5
—
—
Kutztown 7 .5
Susquehanna U.
Deleware College—9 1-2
Millersville—
Kings
Mansfield
—
—
Shippensburg—
Kutztown 7 1-2
—
—5
Lycoming —1
Mansfield
1-2
1-2
State Meet, Hershey, Pa.
West Chester 325, BSC 326, Clarion
331, Kutztown 331, California 333, Edinboro 333, Shippensburg 347, Millersville 352, Mansfield 353, Slippery Rock
363.
Trianguler Meet, Susquehanna Valley
Country Club
BSC — 11
BSC—8 1-2
Susquehanna
Delaware Valley 9
Delaware Valley
—8
—
—
1-2
Susquehanna— 10
TRACK
BSC— 113
BSC— 31
BSC— 37
BSC —60,
Cheyney—31
1-2
1-2
Millersville— 114
Lock Haven
E. Stroudsburg
—
43,
— 103
Kutz-
town— 78
WRESTLING
—
—
placed Seventh
— 110
Mansfield—94
Cheyney 48
East Stroudsburg—97
Meet
—
—
—
in
BSC—9
George
Shippensburg— 13
Lock Haven—25
West Chester— 17
BSC— 17
State Tournament Clarion
Lock Haven 96, Clarion 78, BSC 68
NAIA Tournament
U. of Nebraska
BSC— 15
Palmer
—
ADDRESSES WANTED
E. Stroudsburg—22
BSC—28
Five Bloomsburg State College athletes have been selected for inclusion
in the 1969 edition of Outstanding College Athletes of America. They are
is
He was commissioned upon comple-
BSC — 14
SPORTS
Anthony J.
Class Representative:
Cerza, 180 Mason Street, Exeter, Pa.
BSC—Third
BSC—97
BSC— 90
place in Penn Relays
Mansfield—48
Shippensburg 55
—
Meet
Millersville 108, Lock Haven 92, Slippery Rock 68, Cheyney 58, Kutztown
58, Clarion 46, Bloomsburg 43, ShipState
pensburg 34, Edinboro 12, Mansfield
E. Stroudsburg 2.
Cedar Cliff Relays
West Chester
Bloomsburg 17
Shippensburg
36,
1-2,
6,
Millersville
15
Kutztown
Clarion
5,
27,
1-2,
4.
Oswego— 16
Clarion—
Kutztown
—
Waynesburg—
Send your class news
Representative.
to your Class
Interesting notes are
always welcome.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
NEW MEMBERS
OF FACULTY
Dr. Ray C. Post. Associate ProfesB.S., Washington
sor of Education.
Rutgers
M.Ed.,
University.
State
University; Ed.D., Brandeis University.
Ronald F. Bower, Assistant ProfesM.Ed., Kutztown
sor of Art, B.S..
State College.
Willilam J. Sproule, Assistant Professor of Health and Physical Education. B.S., Syracuse University; M.S.,
Brooklyn College.
Raymond E.
Babineau. Assistant
Professor of Education. B.A., M.A..
Montclair State College.
Dr. Bryan B. Valett Associate ProB.S..
fessor of Biological Sciences.
Cornell College; M.A., University of
Oregon: Ph.D., Oregon State University.
Carroll J. Redfern, Instructor in the
B.S.,
Division of Special Education.
Johnson C. Smith University; B.S. in
Special Education, BSC.
Joseph T. Skehan, Associate ProB.A., Syrafessor of Economics.
cuse University Magna Cum Laude
Studied at
and Phi Beta Kappa).
DipLouvain University, Belgium.
loma in German. Hiedelberg Univeri
PhD. in Economics, Georgetown University.
John P. Sikula. Assistant Professor
B.A., Hiram College;
of Education.
M.A., Case Western Reserve University.
sity.
Richard
Mus.,
ProPhiladelphia
J. Stanislow, Assistant
of Music.
College of Bible;
fessor
B.S.,
B.
Mus. and M.
Temple University.
Ralph Smiley, Associate Professor
B.A., Brooklyn College;
M.A., Rutgers University.
James
J.
O’Toole,
Associate
Pro-
Marquette
B.S.,
Wayne
State Uni-
versity.
Michael E. Stanley, Director of
Publications.
B.A..
University
of
Missouri at Columbia; M.A., University of Missouri at Kansas City.
Dr. Halbert E. Gates, Chairman,
Department of Physics.
B.S., Milwaukee State Teachers College; Master of Physics. University of
sin; Ph.D., Michigan State
WisconUniver-
OPPORTUNITY PROGRAM
special
In September the Bloomsburg State
College initiated an Educational Opportunity Program for high school
graduates from economically deprived
backgrounds.
The group admitted
consists of approximately twenty-five
individuals, both Negro
and white,
who have been selected by the college
in close cooperation with high school
guidance counselors.
Plans for the Educational Oppor-
Program were initiated in August, 1968, when a special committee
was appointed by Dr. Harvey A. Antunity
druss,
president of the
College,
to
“survey and make recommendations
for promoting more opportunity for
economically deprived
students
at
Bloomsburg State College.”
The committee consisted of Dr. John
A. Hoch,
Dean
of Instruction; Dr. H.
M. Afshar, chairman. Department of
Education; Dr. Lee E. Aumiller, Coordinator of Field Experiences;
Dr.
Robert Miller, director of federal programs; John Scrimgeour, director of
student financial aid, and John Walker, director of admissions. This committee met bi-weekly throughout the
winter months to consider all aspects
of the program.
In order to have a
better overall evaluation of prospective students, it was decided that insofar as possible all students would
be contacted through high school guidance counselors.
program will
be
partially
funded with Economic
Opportunity
Grants.
Work-study programs, provided by the college, will be initiated
during the summer of 1969. Special
courses to improve communication
skills will be available during the summer, and tutorial services will be
available if requested.
All students admitted
under the
Educational Opportunity Program will
be required to maintain the same academic standards as other students, although the time usually required for
completing the degree programs may
be extended from four to five years.
GRADUATE DECREES
sity.
Harold J. Bailey, Assistant Professor of Mathematics.
B.S.,
Albright
College; M.Ed., Pennsylvania State
University.
James H. Neiswender, Instructor of
History.
B.S.,
M.S.,
Bloomsburg
State College.
Stephen Bresett, Associate Professor of Health and Physical Education.
B.S., Springfield
College;
M.Ed.,
Rutgers University.
Frank J. Davis,
Jr.,
Director
Computer Services, with rank
of
of AsProfessor.
B.S.,
M.Ed.,
Shippensburg State College.
Dr. Ralph R. Ireland,
Chairman,
Department of Sociology. B.A., M.A.,
University of Toronto; Ph.D., University of Chicago.
Robert L. Duncan, Associate Pro-
sociate
SEPTEMBER,
RECEIVE AWARDS AT
MAY COMMENCEMENT
The
of History.
fessor of Speech.
University; M.A.,
fessor, Assistant Dean of Students.
B.S., Depaw University; M.S., Butler University.
I960
—
University Richard
K.
Rutgers
Lloyd ’62 (Ed.M.); Eugene R. Malinowski ’62 (Ed.M.);
Franklin
L.
Moyer ’63 (Ed.M.)
Drexel Institute of
Technology
Carolyn M. MacFarland ’62 (M.S.)
University of Delaware Master of
Education Joy Louise Dreisbach Belles ’59; Neil Charles Belles ’64; RobA.
ert E. Borfield III ’65; Joseph
Dellegrotto ’64; Mary E. Barrall ’67;
Philip E. Pientka ’64;
Robert P.
Reeder ’61.
Montclair State College Master of
Arts Edward G. Shustack ’57.
University Master
of
Bucknell
Science Robert P. Blyler ’55; Rich-
—
—
—
—
—
—
ai'd
A. Foster
ski ’63.
’67;
Thomas
J. Shelin
Twenty-two BSC seniors x-eceived
awards at the May commencement exercises at the Bloomsburg
Fair Gi'ounds.
service
presented
Thirteen were
keys which are given for “outstanding
service to 10 per cent or less of the
senior class who accumulate a min-
imum
of 20 points for participation in
activities during their four
of college.” This is the highest
various
years
award given by
the college
commun-
ity.
Recipients of the key wex e; Sandra
-
M. Eckberg, Glenolden; Connie MarRobert T.
ene Fike, Warminster;
Hauck, Mifflinville; Max'y Kay Keys.
Hatboi’o; Gail Bower Landers, Williamsport; Virginia E. Lesevich. Catawissa, R. D. 2; Frank L. Mastroianni,
Matulis,
P.
Antoinette
Scranton;
Russell.
J.
Philadelphia; Bai’bara
Jersey Shore; Reinhold A. Shultz, Hatboro; Nancy K. Strauss, Lansford;
and
Russell W. Walsh, Levittown
Robex-t L. Wynne, Bangor.
Nine lifetime passes, given to senior
athletes who have participated in a
varsity sport for four years, were presented to Charles Bowman, Bloomsburg; Thomas Castrilli, Bath, N. Y.;
:
;
Gerald Fulmer, Bloomsburg; Wa-i'ne
Heim, Columbia; Dale Houck, Williamsport; Edward McNertney, HazleDouglas McRobei'ts, Hegins;
ton;
Frank Mastraianni, Scranton and Roy
Smay, CleaxTield R. D. 1.
Twenty-one recipients of certificates, indicating their inclusion in the
publication “Who’s Who in Amei’ican
Colleegs and Univex'sity,” were an-
nounced.
ITEMS PLACED IN BOX
OF HARTLINE SCIENCE
CENTER
A number
of
current and
recent
publications at Bloomsburg State College, a student directory, along with
several newspaper items pertaining
to Dr. Halden Keffer Hartline were
placed in a copper box which was
placed behind the date stone in the
new Haxtline Science Center on the
BSC campus.
Similar boxes containing various
materials for posterity were placed
behind the date stones on other recently completed buildings, including
Hall,
Elwell
the Andruss Librax-y,
Haas Auditorium, and South Hall.
In the box are 1968-1969 student directory, 1968 Obiter, 1968-1969 College
calendar, 1968-1969 Student Pilot, 19681969 BSC General catalog, 1968-1969
BSC graduate catalog; 1968 fall sports
brochure, 1967-1968 sports brochures,
1988 spring and fall letters to alumni,
1968 Olympian, Sept. 18, 1968 Max newspaper,
student
oon and Gold
1968 placement bx-ochure, Sept. 1968
-
Alumni Quarterly, Oct. 19, 1967 issue
concerning
Pi'ess
of The Morning
Hartline Nobel Prize; May 10, 1965
issue of The Morning Press showing
Dr. Hartline receiving BSC Alumni
Page eleven
Award;
anniversary brochure,
Guide, Bloomsburg State
about bureaucratic state government
played a big part, he said.
Columbia County
and Homecoming
In addition to the state college presidents, Dr. Eric A. Walker of Penn-
125th
Campus
College in brief,
tourist
brochure
Football Program.
The cost of construction of this building is $1,894,000.
BSC FACULTY HAS
ARTICLE PUBLISHED
Dr. Donald A. Vannan, professor of
education at Bloomsburg State College, has an article entitled “The Teaching Testing Bulletin Board’’ which
was published in the March, 1969 issue of Audiovisual Instruction. The
article deals with the methods used
by a classroom teacher to construct a
—
bulletin
board which can be used for
teaching concepts and later as a drawing which can be used in testing situations for identification purposes.
Thaddeus Piotrowski, of the Audiovisual Material Center at the College,
has a fine review of “The Practical
Audio-Visual Handbook for Teachers”
in the February, 1969
issue of Andiovisual Instruction.
The Audiovisual Instruction is a
monthly; educational media publithe
of
cation which is an organ
National Education Association.
which appears
PRE-SESSION
A total of 1,500
undergraduates and
graduate students registered on the
opening day for the first three weeks
of the 1969 summer session at Bloomsburg State College. Late registrations
were expected to boost the total to
nearly 1,550 which will be the largest
pre-session enrollment in the history
of the college.
There were 618
men and 591 women
Graduate
students.
students total 291 with 152 being men
and 139 women. Of the 1,209 undergraduate students, 977 were students
who were enrolled at BSC during the
undergraduate
previous semester.
Over 400 men and
women
were
housed in campus dormitories and
were served their meals in the College Commons. There were 390 day
women and 413 day men undergrad-
sylvania
State
University,
has
an-
nounced he will retire at the end of
Junue 1970. Miler emphasized that
he did not feel presidents of the staterelated institutions like Penn State
had as many bureaucratic troubles
as the state college presidents.
“Private schools
recruit
faculty
from October to January for the following September,” Dr. Miller said.
But state colleges might not know
what their budgets will be
Here, they’re admitting students and are never sure they’re going
until later
like.
have enough faculty.
“It takes long to process purchas“And then there’s the whole
es,”.
capital building program. The average time it takes to get a dorm is
four to five years from the time need
By that time you have
is established.
a whole new generation of students
to
in the school.”
Finally, there was the comparison
salaries, which at state colleges
are in the $20,000-$29,000 range, Miller
The state official said this
said.
of
range was “not to be compared with
private institutions,” which pay more.
“You’ll never find a private college
president taking over a state college,”
“It would be to Pennsylvanadvantage to upgrade the stateowned institutions. There is a growing awareness of raising faculty and
he said.
ia’s
administrative salaries.”
The problem. Miller said, is the current budget squeeze. In his proposed
1969-70 budget, Gov. Shaffer recommends $131,341,000 for the 13 state colleges and Indiana University up 26
million from the previous year.
—
The governor recommends
consid-
no
there’s
but
increases,
chance in this session of the legisla“Yet in order to
ture,” Miller said.
recruit and retain a properly qualified
administration and faculty, salary and
infringe benefits must be greatly
erable
creased.”
ANNOUNCE LOW BID
uate students.
FOR NEW BUILDING
MANY CHANCES IN
COLLEGE PRESIDENTS
The General State Authority in Harrisburg announced the unofficial low
bids totalling $2,435,787 on the field
The frustration of working under
the state’s bureaucracy and red tape
is
causing
among
an
alarming
turnover
presidents of the 14 state own-
ed colleges, Pennsylvania’s Commissioner of High Education says.
Dr. Frederick K. Miller said new
presidents must be found within 18
months at West Chester, Kutztown,
Bloomsburg, Lock Haven and Calilfornia.
Within the past
year-and-a-half,
presidents were named at Slippery Rock, Indiana, Kutztown, East
Stroudsburg and Mansfield.
Miller noted that wo of the vacancies were caused by deaths and some
by old age. But there was no mistaking the fact that the usual complaints
new
’age
twelve
house-gymnasium complex plannned
for the upper campus at Bloomsburg
State College.
The new complex
will
house a
full
basketball court with a fixed
seating capacity of 2,600 and room for
folding bleachers, at either end, to
size
accommodate
another 2,000 to
3,000
spectators.
In addition, the plans call for a
six-lane swimming pool with a seating capacity of between 500 and 600.
There will be two handball courts
and space for at least twelve officers
for faculty use.
The new field house will have four
locker rooms for the college and visiting varsity and jayvee teams as well
as storage space
for
uniforms
and
training room.
Several buildings are under construction at present at the college’s
main campus, but the field housegymnasium will be the first construction on the upper campus
known
locally at the Golf Club, a tract of
land that was acquired some years
ago for future expansion.
If accepted by the
General State
Authority the upper campus complex
will greatly enlarge the athletic facilities of Bloomsburg
State College
and will eliminate much of the parking problems now encountered at
sports events on the hill.
Due to the increased enrollment at
the college the present facilities are
inadequate to take care of all the ath-
—
letic
programs being scheduled.
ONE HALF STUDENTS
RECEIVING AID
Approximately 1,500 or nearly onehalf of all undergraduate students at
Bloomsburg State College received
some kind of financial loan, amounting to a total of $1,037,121, during the
according to
1967-68 college
year,
John Scrimgeour, director of financial
aid.
Loans which include National Defense Loans, Alumni Loans, and State
Guaranty Loans, accounted for the
largest percentage of the financial
assistance with a total of $518,318.
There were 251 recipients receiving a
total of $114,800 in National Defense
Loans for an average of $457 per stuAlumni
dent; 39 students received
Loans amounting of a total of $13.295 or a per-student average of $341.
State Guaranty Loans, which are not
obtained through the college but by
the student himself, totaled $390,223
for 461 recipients or an average student loan of $846.
The next largest amount of financial
aid was the scholarships and grants
area which amounted to $321,900. Of
Pennsylvania
in
this total, $256,850
State Scholarships, administered by
Education
the Pennsylvania Higher
Assistance Agency, was awarded to
518 students for an average of $496
per student.
Grants
Educational
Opportunity
totaled $49,200 for 101 students at an
average of $487; another $49,200 was
available in EO Grants through matching funds from the Pennsylvania
Higher Education Assistance Agency,
National Defense Loans, student employment, and private outside sourcBSC Alumni Scholarships awardes.
ed in the Spring of ’67 for use during
’67-68 totaled $3,225 for 23 individuals
or a $140 per student average.
Employment was available in three
areas for Bloomsburg State College
students and this amounted to a total
of $196,903, broken down as follows:
Pennsylvania State Student Employment program $100,467 for 296 students for a $339 average; work study—
$80,723 for 296 students for a $300 avgraduate assistance—$15,713
erate;
for 21 recipients for a $747 average.
—
TIIE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Statement of College Policy
Bloomsbury; State College is proud of its history and traditions, its faculty
A statement at this time does not indicate any special concern in regard to possible activities on our campus such as have been witnessed
on college campuses across the country. However, in view of the temper of the
times, we believe it proper to reassure our students, faculty, alumni, and friends
by a clear statement relative to the following:
and student body.
1.
Eloomsburg Stale College is a State-owned and State-operated college. It
has grown and expanded through the years with State funds. In accordance with State law, its management and control is the responsibility of
the
2.
Board of Trustees.
Bloomsburg State College proudly affirms its belief in, and support of,
the philosophy of individual freedom and responsibility. Acadt mie freedom is not academic license, and the right to criticize and protest is not
the right to disrupt or interfere with the freedom of others. Bloomsburg
State College believes in a government of law and not of men.
It is the
right of any citizen to criticize, protest, and attempt t6 change the law in
accord with constitutional procedures. It is not his right, however, to disregard or disobey the law even under the excuse of his own conscience.
3.
student enters Bloomsburg voluntarily.
He applies presumably because he wishes to further his education and because he believes Bloomsburg State College, with its traditions and reputation, is capable of advancing his intellectual development. Any student who is not in agreement
with the rules and regulations, traditions and policies of the College is
always welcome to suggest changes in an orderly manner; however, having been accepted and having decided to enroll, he is expected to abide
by the laws of our nation and comply with the rules and policies of
Bloomsburg State College until change is accomplished by proper pro-
A
cedure.
4.
Moreover, the administration of the College pledges unequivocally to
give full and prompt attention to proposals presented in a serious and
orderly manner. The use of violence, disturbances, or force of any kind
—whether bv a single student, a minority or a majority group— will not
be
tolerated.
Accordingly, the Board of Trustees formally announces this College offers
no sanctuary to anv individual or group which condones, advocates, or exercises the taking over, or damaging, of Commonwealth property or the use of intimidation or physical force. Any who engage in such activities will be held
and individually responsible. Corrective steps may include suspension,
expulsion, and/or prosecution in the court of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
legally
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE
(Adopted June
27, 1969)
Entered As Second Class Matter
August 8, 1941, at the Post
Office at Bloomsburg, Pa.
Under the Act of March 3, 1879
LOYALTY FUND - THIRD YEAR
Since the Loyalty
Fund was
Fund have amounted
been used
initiated in October, 1986, contributions to the
to $28,000, in
round numbers. Some
to defray the expenses, including printing of
of this
money has
The
Quarterly, salary
of the office secretary, Loyalty Fund publicity, dues to the Association of
Teachers Organizations and the Council of Alumni Associations, telephone, and
office supplies, and the sponsoring of broadcasts of athletic events.
Increasing
costs have made it necessary to dip more deeply into the Fund than we had
originally intended.
believe that these expenses are necessary in order to
prevent the Association from going out of business as an active organization.
We
Seven Alumni scholarships were presented last Spring. Four were in the
amount of $300 each, two to the amount of $200, and one to the amount of
$100. The recipients were carefully screened by a faculty committee.
We
wish to express our thanks to
all
those
However, when you read the tabulation
Fund.
who have
contributed to the
by classes, you can
easily see that only a small percentage of the Alumni have been involved.
Although larger gifts would be appreciated, what we most desire is more givers.
We
hope that the
to a substantial gift
LET’S
of gifts
classes in reunion in 1970 will give serious consideration
when
they meet in reunion.
KEEP THE BALL ROLLING.
TO BE DETACHED, FILLED OUT, AND RETURNED
Signature
Name
while in college
Address
(street)
Zip Code
(town)
li
above address
is
new check
here
Q
Amount
Year of graduation
Mail checks to Alumni Office, Box 31, B.S.C.
To
insure tax deductions,
B.
S.
C.
make checks payable
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
to
new President of B.
view the trophy shelves with Mrs. Nossen.
Shortly after assuming his duties as the
the
Alumni Room
to
S.
C.,
Dr. Robert J. Nossen visited
THE PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE
Not very many years ago, a state college essentially served a limited geographic region, its graduates were prepared for a single occupation, and for the
most part they continued to live in the area served by the institution.
Currently, of course, virtually every state-operated college recruits its students from
a wide population, prepares its graduates for diverse roles in society, and finds
its alumni scattered throughout the nation.
The era, therefore, of cohesive
alumni units is gone; it has become increasingly difficult to establish and to
maintain traditional alumni loyalties. Contact, for the most part, is continued
through publications such as this.
If, however, close community of interest has faded, there remains for every
graduate a responsibility for participating, even remotely, in the continuing
operation of his college, by supporting alumni programs.
One need not be reminded of the rapid rise of costs for higher education;
yet even with increased fees, the current student pays less than 25% of the
annual operating costs for Bloomsburg State College, exclusive of capital construction.
In all probability, you paid a lower percentage of the instructional
The demand for college opportunity has hardly
costs for your education.
abated; rather, the need for scholarship aid, loan funds, and grants-in-aid
becomes increasingly important. Today’s student should be able to look to
alumni for such assistance, as they, in turn, should help those who follow. Again,
with needs for more sophisticated facilities and equipment, essential for effective
and efficient operation, and with necessary limitations imposed upon the use
of available state funds, the need for unrestricted, discretionary funds becomes
increasingly important. The college itself should be able to look to alumni for
such assistance.
have been particularly aware of the fine Alumni Office at this college,
have watched its Board of Directors give of their time and assume responsibilities designed to fulfill the objectives of the Association.
The entire college
community joins in thanking them, and in hoping that you will support their
I
and
I
goals.
In order to keep the alumni abreast of college philosophy and college
operation, I believe it appropriate to comment briefly upon the so-called
Moratorium held on October 15. On that occasion classes were not dismissed,
On the
nor was there any disruption of the normal instructional program.
other hand, students organized and ran a series of panel sessions throughout the
day dedicated to a review of questions relating to military activity and foreign
policy, featuring participants representing a wide variety of attitudes and
approaches. The events were peaceful, constructive and represented an academically sound review of matters pertinent to common welfare.
The college can and does have no official position in matters of controversy.
should, however, provide a forum for intelligent and objective review of
pertinent issues. The date of October 15 provided one such opportunity.
It
ROBERT NOSSEN
President
ALUMNI SEE BSC PROGRESS
Alumni
lege
of
Bloomsburg State
returning
tivities
for
homecoming
Colfes-
saw more students and more
new buildings.
were the
The latter, of course,
most obvious with virtually every
segment of the campus experiencing
the construction of new buildings to
meet the needs of expanding educational opportunities.
The total cost of construction
way is $12,500,000.
under
Pour structures are already scheduled for completion in 1970. A dining hall-kitchen, facing East Second
Street, is expected to be ready for use
in January, 1970.
The dining areas
are completely air-conditioned and
will seat 1,000 students and feed 2,000
at each meal.
The present College
Commons was built in 1956 to accomodate only 720 students but is currently serving more than 1,700.
The maintenance building-garage
which
be completed in April,
provide offices, working
areas, and storage space for the
growing number of personnel who
must maintain the campus for use
during the entire year. The building
is being constructed on the site of the
former Heiss property facing Light1970,
street
is
to
plans.
This
project
the administrative staff will be located on the site now occupied by the
former Dillon House. Prefinal plans
are nearing completion, and construction could begin during the summer
In addition to the air-con1970.
ditioned office area, the project will
house a central receiving, supply, and
storage area.
The area extending east of Dillon
House to the new maintenance building will become the site of eighteen
all-weather tennis courts, a baseball
diamond, and a football-soccer field.
This area is to be used by health
and physical education classes and
for recreation activities. Preliminary
plans for these facilities and for a
of
new road and parking areas have
Road.
been completed by the project engineer.
The completion date has not
been determined.
The multi-level parking area in the
vicinity of Penn and Second Streets
will feature a new concept for parking cars at BSC.
Its purpose is to
building which
the Bakeless Center for
the Humanities, is located between
Haas Auditorium and Andruss Library.
Completely
air-conditioned,
the Center will provide 36 classroom
or seminar rooms, offices for 66 faculty members, a faculty lounge, and
storage areas. Occupation and use of
the builing are expected to begin during the 1970 Summer Sessions.
Most of the steel has been erected
for a nine story residence
hall
to
house 400 women, four resident advisers, and a member of the student
personnel
staff.
Lounges,
study
become
rooms, and storage areas are a part
of the residence hall which is expectto open its doors next August.
Final plans for a student center are
expected before the end of 1969 with
beginning construction anticipated in
the spring of 1970.
The three-story
structure will be air-conditioned and
will house a formal lounge, the College Store, a snack bar and dining
area, space for four bowling alleys,
lockers and mail-boxes, a multi-purpose room, a TV room, a listening
room, an infirmary or health center,
officer for a variety of student organizations, a recreation or
game
room, offices for student personnel
staff, a vending machine area, and
storage areas.
One of the major projects on the
Upper Campus
and
on prefinal
must be designed and coordinated
with the design and construction of
all future structures on the Upper
Campus.
New quarters for some members of
will
A new classroom
will
es
utilities
provide both roads
for residence halls,
a
dence hall for women on the Lower
Campus, two residence halls for men
and one for women on the Upper
Campus, a maintenance building-garage and a dining hall, also located on
Upper Campus.
To fulfill the provision of the Campus Plan to accomodate an enrollment
the
nearly 6000 in the 1970’s, there will
be need for other buildings on the
Upper Campus. These will include a
research and learning center,
a
science laboratory building, general
of
classroom and library
19G9
facilities.
ALUMNI DAY
April 25, 1970
Class ending in 5 and 0 will be in
will
dining hall, classroom buildings, and
auxiliary facilities.
Engineers are
currently putting the finishing touch-
DECEMBER,
provide a maximum number of spaces on a minimum amount
site
of
space. It was also felt that a parking garage, carefully designed to
blend with existing terrain, will be
more attractive than the usual amesited parking areas.
Pre-planning
for
the
additional
seven buildings is nearing completion.
Nearly $10,000,000 will be needed in
the next several years to construct a
classroom building and another resi-
reunion.
ALUMNI MEET DR.N0SSEN
Alumni returning for homecoming
at Bloomsburg State College had the opportunity of meeting
activities
the
institution’s
new
Dr.
president
Robert J. Nossen, who September 5
succeeded Dr. Harvey A. Andruss,
whose tenure covered a thirty year
span and who was on the faculty ten
years earlier.
Dr. Nossen came to
Bloomsburg
from Fredonia, N. Y., where he was
vice president for academic affairs of
State University College in that com-
munity.
Dr. Nossen was also the first Dean
of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Freedonia. From 1954 to 1960 he was professor and chairman of the English
Department. Lamar State College.
Beaumont, Texas. From 1950 to 1954
he was an assistant professor in English at Creighton University, Omaha,
Neb. from 1948 to 1950 and he was
an assistant professor of English at
Northwestern University.
Dr. Nossen was born in San Francisco, Calif., and received his early
education in the California
school
system. He received his B.A. degree
from the University of California in
1944, his M.A. degree from Northwestern University in 1948, and his Ph.D.
from the same university in 1951.
Dr. Nossen has served as a college
consultant
for
the
New York
State
Education Department and for the
Bureau of Teacher Education, and
the Bureau of Higher Education. He
has also had experience in working
with State Colleges in Pennsylvania
through the Middle States Commission.
Mi's. Nossen is
right, having
an educator in her
served on faculties
at the secondary and college level.
She is the author of numerous artic-
own
les in the field of
English Literature.
She holds A.B. and M.A. degrees.
BRINKLEY SPEAKS AT
COLLEGE CONFERENCE
“The answer to our problems is reform within the existing structure; we
need a peaceful resolution to make
the present system work because it
is still
the best in spite of
its
faults,”
David Brinkley, nationally known
news analyst and commentator, asserted at Bloomsburg State College
recently.
He addressed around 1,500 educators in Haas auditorium on
the BSC campus.
Brinkley’s address was a highlight
of the Twenty-Third annual Conference for Teachers and Administrators
sponsored by the College. He spoke
on “The State of the Nation.”
Page one
Nossen Outlines His Policy
Dr.
Asserting there is no standing still.
Dr. Robert J. Nossen, new president
of BSC, addressing the members of
the faculty and administrative staff
asked that faculty and students join
with him in a review of every phase
of the operation of the College.
The educator said he will review
some of the more pressing problems
of education including the “so called
campus
unrest,
its
causes and factors
involved in resolution, society’s expectations from the colleges and universities and the responsibilities of
higher education to society. Finally,
1 will review the possible application
of some of these to Bloomsburg.”
Tribute was paid to the marked
advancement of the college under Dr.
Andurss by the new president who
declared “The roles that this College
must play must be factored into its
long-range academic plan, and that
plan must be up-graded at least annually.”
Dr. Nossen prefaced his remarks
with this statement, “I wish to express my appreciation to the Board of
Trustees, for whom I hold great respect; to the faculty members and
students who worked with the trustees during the long, difficult,
and
sometimes tedious process of selecting a president; and to all
and
they are encouraging, numerous, and
from all areas of the College and the
region
who have made us feel fully
—
—
welcome
to
Bloomsburg.
“I am indeed pleased and proud to
be a part of BSC and the Bloomsburg
Area community. We have not been
here long, yet we already feel close
to both.”
Dr. Nossen continued his address
by noting that, “Dr. Andruss accomplished many things during his tenure: the College will long be grateful
for his years of effort, but I most appreciate his leaving a campus well
alone in the making, the buildings
and grounds that reflect care and nurturing and, above all, a fine staff with
whom
to
work.
“Assuming a new
never
have been minrole
is
easy: the difficulties
imized, thanks to those whose presence here assures a relatively smooth
period of transition.
“The past decade has been one of
lapid change in higher education, and
Bloomsburg State College reflects, in
many ways, the nature of such
change. There is no standing still,
even though some find comfort
in
a
status quo.
“I ask only that faculty and students join with me, and let me join
with them, in reviewing every phase
of the operation of the College, every
practice, every tradition, every concept.
When a new approach seems
warranted, let’s approach it carefully,
but deliberately; whatever
doesn’t
fulfill our expectations, let’s discard
Page two
and try an alternative.
“There are a number of areas
which I hope will be among our priconsiderations. Many of these
have already started and this statement will simply be a reaffirmation;
others will demand new consideration
and,
perhaps,
renewed tolerance
from you.
“Full procedures for faculty participation in goverance, the role of
students in College operation, curricula revision, the use of Library of
libCongress classification in the
configurainstructional
rary, new
tions and techniques, the implementation of a pass-fail option and, of
course, challenge procedures and an
administrative reorganization are just
a few of the considerations we must
confront openly and objectively.”
mary
HOW NEW
PRESIDENT
WAS CHOSEN
Dr. Robert J. Nossen, the new president of Bloomsburg State College,
was elected in a manner differing
Both
from that of his predecessors.
faculty and students had a part in
this election.
When
Dr. Harvey A. Andruss announced his intention early this year
oi retiring after thirty years as president, the Board of Trustees decided
both students and faculty should have
a part in naming his successor.
As a result, they invited the faculty
to name three instructors and invited
the student body to name three students to serve, along with three trustees, as a “screening group.”
The nine had an opportunity to
meet with the leading candidates
from the field of sixty who applied
There were interviews
for the post.
in which all took part. At the end of
the last interview the nine voted by
secret ballot for the top five. Dr. Nossen received the top number of votes.
The entire Board of Trustees, of
which William A. Lank of Bloomsburg is President, then met with the
two top-rated candidates and their
respective wives.
They recommended Dr. Nossen as first
choice
to
Governor Raymond Shafer. The latter announced his approval, Thursday,
August
To give
in
7,
1969.
to
a college
humanity—to
is to invest
offer health to
the sick, justice to the oppressed.
opportunity to the underprivileged, a richer and fuller life to all
and to build for oneself a
—
memorial carved
enduring of
all
the hearts and
in the
most
materials,
minds
of
men.
GRADUATE DEGREES
Bucknell University
Eckley Z. Swartz, ’67, R. D.
Bloomsburg. M.S. in Education.
Eugene P. Miller, ’67, R. D.
Master of Science.
1,
1,
Elys-
135
Pine
burg. Pa.
William H. Herald,
Lewisburg, Pa.
’64,
Master
Street,
of
Science.
Barry O. Smith, ’64, 110 South
Spruce Street, Lititz, Pa. Master of
Science.
G. Richard Garman, ’68, 114 Gearhart Street, Riverside, Pa. Master of
Science in Business Administration.
M. Thomas,
Philip
’65,
Avenue,
Williamsport,
of Science.
532
Pa.
Rural
Master
Teachers College, Columbia Univ.
’68,
M.A. in
Speech Pathology.
Shippensburg State College
Malina E. Savage, ’67, M.A. in
Business Education.
William J. Beery, Jr., ’64. M. Ed.
in Business Education.
Loreler Reed Hauck,, ’60. M. Ed.
in Business Education.
Roger G. Brumley, ’66. M. Ed. in
Rosemary Lubinski,
English.
Wayne
Smith,
’66,
John P. McElhoe,
’56,
C.
M.Ed.,
in
M.Ed.
in
English.
Reading.
Frederick L. Baker,
’64,
M.Ed.
in
Social Studies.
Ann Louise Cavanaugh,
’66,
M.Ed.
in Social Studies.
Michael Homick,
ial
’56,
M.Ed.
in Soc-
Studies.
Southern
Illinois
University
George Chebro, ’50, Master’s degree
in Secondary Education.
Lehigh University
Jane E. Hartman, ’68, Catawissa,
Pa. M.Ed., major in Elementary
Education.
Mabel L. Heffelfinger, ’43, Conyngham, Pa. M.Ed., major in Reading.
John J. Roberts, ’66. M.Ed., major
Reading.
Marie A. Solensky, Hazleton. Pa.
M.Ed., major in Reading.
Pennsylvania State University
Larry R. Eckroat. ’64, Ph.D. (Zooin
logy).
Jean M. Zelonis,
’66,
M.A. (Span-
ish)
'65,
Barbara E. Makar,
M.Ed.
(Business Education)
State University of New York at
Cortland
Neil B. Beisher, ’61, 104 Poplar St.,
Sayre, Pa. M.Sc.Ed.
Carole L. Miles, '67, 2122 Liberty
Street. Allentown, Pa. M.Sc.Ed.
Todd T. Morris, ’62, 26 Floral Avenue, Cortland. N. Y. M.Sc.Ed.
Genesco University, Genesco, N. Y.
Danielle Koury (Mrs. Jon Parker),
'66,
Master’s degree in speech and
hearing therapy.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
New York
J0nmtriam
3tt
1908— Edith Sturdevant iMrs. George R. Leonard' North Miami. Fla.
1914 Mrs. Olwen Argust Hartley.
Lenoxville. Pa.
—
1906— Amy
Levan, Sunbury, Pa.
H.
H.
1913— Anna Adams (Mrs.
Rohrbach', Northumberland. Pa.
(Mrs.
Breisch
1913— Dorothy M.
Helen J. Dresher*, Tamaqua, Pa.
1908 Eleanor Piekarski Mich.
1910— Mrs. Kate Schooley Stock.
1902—
Pa.
Trucksville,
—
— Edna
1906
Averill
(Mrs. Carl
T.
Philadel-
1895—
Wissinoming,
Apperman),
phia. Pa.
Elizabeth
Pittsburgh. Pa.
Kirkland.
Pollock
Anna Follmer (Mrs.
O.
E.
Hess) Taft, California.
1900 Jennie Beagle (Mrs.
W. C.
Leach). Maccmb. 111.
1899— D. Eleanor Gill.
1896—
1899 Mae E. Harker (Mrs. J. J.
—
—
Brandon
—
—
)
Norman
1904 Bessie Derr (Mrs.
Sked'. Pennington. N. J.
1886 Mary E. Riley (Mrs.
1900—
Thomas
Mack).
Mary Gallagher
Anna A. Brown
1898
(Mrs. J. H.
Kenney)
1899 Veronnica Conlan (Mrs. George Holliday).
Sophia M. Ferry
1900
(Mrs. Thomas E. Shaffer). Bloomsburg, Pa.
1895 George Norman, Mendenhall.
Pa.
—
1897 Bess Davis
1901 Bertha Appleman
1901 Augusta Hinkelman,
da, Md.
1901 Claude L. Moss
—
Bethes-
—
1901— Ralph E. Smith
Mollie Moran
(Mrs.
Johnson), Honolulu, Hawaii.
1903
1903
—Winifred
—
—
McGowen
J.
J.
(Mrs.
Gaugham), Mainscott, L. I., N. Y.
1903 Susie Cook (Mrs. Charles
C.
Morgan)
1903 Rae Hagenbuch
1903 — Elizabeth Waring (Mrs. Leon
Colvin), Mabel Silvius.
1901—Charles T. Belles
Benjamin E. Troutman,
Sunbury,
Pa.
E. A. Reams
The death of E. A. Reams, who
taught for more than a quarter century at
Bloomsburg State College,
ochis
curred July 26 at the home of
daughter with whom he resided in
Whittier, California,
Mrs. Virginia
Roberts. Born July 29, 1890, Reams
came
Bloomsburg in 1925,
His field was social
retiring
studies.
his AB degree at Kansas Wesleyan, and
at Columbia
University and took graduate work at
the University of Southern California,
Pennsylvania State University and
to
in 1952.
He received
DECEMBER,
AM
1969
167
Pound Ave.,
Whittier.
Helen Roberts Truscott ’20
Mrs. R. J. Truscott, of 703 Madison
Avenue. Jermyn, passed away Nov-
ember
21, 1968 after
a long illness at
Carbondale General Hospital.
Born
in Jermyn, she was educated in the
borough schools and was a graduate
of
Bloomsburg State College and took
graduate work at the Pennsylvania
State College. She is survived by her
husband. R. J. Truscott, retired chief
school administrator, and one son,
Dr. William Ray Truscott.
She was a member of the First
Methodist Church and was superintendent of the Primary Department.
Other affiliations were financial secretary,
Women’s
Society of Christian
life time member of
the Official Board of her church. She
was also active in all charity drives.
Service and a
Earl B. Hartman ’16
Earl B. Hartman, seventy-four, 2100
63rd avenue south, St. Petersburg.
Fla., died in St. Petersburg August 24.
He taught for two years in Riverside
before entering World War I in the
U. S. Army.
He served with the 312 Machinegun
Bn. 79 Position, AEF in World War I
and was wounded in action in France.
He was employed by Firestone Tire
and Rubber Company
Margaret Monahan
— Miles Pollock
— Elmira A. Bankes
1918
1936
World War
University.
Survivors include his wife.
Following retirement Mr. and Mrs.
Reams resided with their daughter at
of
Reading and
Ben
Franklin Consistory, Philadelphia.
Willliam
II.
Rowlands
’49
William H. Rowlands, a teacher at
Northwest Area High School, died at
the Wilkes-Barre General Hospital on
October 8. He graduated from Harter
High School in 1936, and also from
Bloomsburg State College and Bucknell University.
He was a member
of
PSEA,
local
and state chapters; National Congress
of PTA, St. Peter’s. Episcopal Church,
Plymouth; Shawnee Post 463, American Legion, Plymouth and Pennsylvania State Association of Township
supervisors.
He was a veteran of
World War II in the U. S. Army.
Dr. E. Paul Wagner
Dr. E. Paul Wagner, professor of
psychology and director of testing
program at BSC, died at his home.
140 East Twelfth Street, Bloomsburg,
September 1. He was born in Charleroi, a son of the late Henry N., and
Adnia Martin Wagner.
He earned his bachelors, master and
doctor degree from Penn State University, and also attended Washington
and Jefferson College.
He
Donora Lodge 626 F and AM; Coudersport Consistory; Irem Temple, WilKes-Barre; Pennsylvania State Education Association;
Association
of
Pennsylvania State College and University Faculties; Bloomsburg State
College Faculty Association; American Psychology Association; Phi Delta
Kappa Fraternity; Kappa Sigma Fraternity; and chairman of the scholarship committee of the Jacques Weber Foundation.
Wagner coached the BSC baseteam to a State College champion-
Dr.
ball
ship in the middle 1950’s.
During the second
semester
of
1968-69 Dr. and Mrs. Wagner toured
the South Pacific area during the prothe
fessor’s sabbatical leave from
college.
Harriet Bittenbender ’01
Miss Harriet Bittenbender, Berwick,
died September 7. She was born in
Nescopeck township and resided in
the Berwick area her entire life.
She taught school at Nescopeck and
Berwick for 55 years, retiring in 1956.
A member of the Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, Berwick, she was a
.
member
of all the women’s coordinate functions of her church.
for thirty-eight
years, retiring in Florida ten years
ago. He was a member of the Pasadena Commuunity Church, St. Petersburg; Loyalty Lodge 645, Akron, O.;
Rajah Temple
II.
Following the war he
taught at State University
College,
Utica, N. Y., and was athletic director
there before coming to BSC in 1950.
He was a member of the American
Legion Post 273; Bloomsburg Elks;
National Rehabilitation
Association;
taught physical education and
coached the track team at Donora
High School, prior to serving as a
naval officer in the South Pacific in
Harriet
McAndrew Murphy
’16
a
Mrs. Harriet M. Murphy,
76,
for
32
Washington area resident
years, died August 21 in Doctors Hospital.
She had undergone surgery
two weeks before. Mrs. Murphy was
the former Harriet McAndrew. She
was a graduate of Bloomsburg State
had taught
Teachers College and
school in Hawley, Pa.
She was a member of the Ladies
Guild of the Sisters of Our Lady of
Catholic
Africa, Blessed Sacrament
Church, its Sanctuary Sodality and
Her
also the Christ Child Society.
husband, George W.. an attorney, died
in 1952.
Anna Kane Crosby
’24
Vincent Crosby, the former
Anna Kane, of Frackville, a former
teacher in the West Mahoning TownMrs.
ship schools, died July 21.
Crosby was employed by the Lebanon
Valley school district at the time of
her death.
Mrs.
Rose E. Monahan ’96
Miss Rose E. Monahan, 91, of 440
Carey Avenue, Wilkes-Barre, retired
Wilkes-Barre City school teacher and
an active Girl Scout leader for many
years, died in the Suunnyside Nursing
Home, where she had been a guest
the past few months.
Miss Monahan taught in the WilkesBarre City School District for 48
years. She was a teacher at both the
Parrish and Henry M. Hoyt schools.
A
Girl Scout leader 41 years, she
Page three
of Girl Scout Troop
of St. Aloysius Church and previously had been a leader for the Girl
Girl
Pioneers, a forerunner of the
was the founder
Edith H. Dawson, Mrs. Lillian D.
Leon Krauser, Mrs. Helen
Margaret B.
H. McNaught,
Dr.
Parke, Mrs. Rachael E. Kline, Mrs.
Kline, Mrs.
17,
John Brown
Scouts.
She had been a member of the
board of directors for Wyoming ValIn 1962, she
ley Girl Scout Council.
was selected to appear or. the cover
of the annual report of the Wyoming
Valley Girl Scout Council which marked the 50th anniversary of Girl Scouting.
She was honored at a “Honor
Your Founders” dinner in October,
1960.
Miss Monahan was a member of St.
Aloysius Church and its Altar and
Rosary Society. She served as the
superintendent of St. Aloysius Sunday
School and also was a Sunday School
teacher at St. Leo’s Church, Ashley.
She served as district deputy of the
Catholic Daughters of America for
several terms and also was grand
regent for Court Gate of Heaven,
CDA.
The Wilkes-Bare Times Leader had
the following editorial comment:
“The death
of
Miss Rose Monahan,
South Wilkes-Barre,
the
recalls
made
mendous contribution she
treto
youth during a long career spanning
nine decades. She was an outstanding figure in Girl Scouting, education
and religion.”
Theron Watts
Theron Watts, 74, Bloomsburg, died
summer of a heart attack
his home.
A receiving clerk at
BSC for thirty -three years, he retired
twelve years ago. He later operated
the Watts Evergreen Nursery
in
during the
at
Benton Township. He served as parttime polilceman for thirty-five years.
3856
A
ENROLL AT COLLEGE
total
of
3,559
undergraduate
completed
students
registration for
the 1969-1970 college year at Bloomsburg State College, according to Robert Bunge, registrar.
In
addition,
297 graduate students are enrolled at
the college, which give a grand total
of 3,856
undergraduates and graduate
students, the largest enrollment in the
history of the college.
Contributors to the Loyalty Fund,
to October 1, 1969, not previously reported
1897— Mrs. Edward A. Reams (in
Others
memory of Prof. Edward A. Reams)
1896
E. Van Wie
1900— Mrs. F.
1901— Mrs. Isabel York, Jessie Gil:
—
christ
1898
Mrs. S. L. Richards
Mrs. Louise Lewis
Gertrude Fullmer (Mrs. A. T.
1903—
Lowry), Nevin E. Fuunk, William R.
Lams, Mrs. J. E. Ratajski.
1906—
1902 Bess M. Long, Mrs. E. W.
McHugh
L.
1904
1905
Ray Hawk
Mrs. Griselda D. Jacobus
Bessie Coughlin
D.
Carroll
Dr.
Mabel R. Farley
1907 Mrs. Robert
B.
Champlin,
Fleischer,
George M. Lehman
1908
Mary South wood,
Hartman, Mrs.
1909
Mrs.
J.
C. O.
Saida
L.
Moore
G. Morris, Walter C.
Welliver
1910 Julia Gregg Brill, Mrs. Fred
W. Zane, Sara F. Lewis, Mrs. Anna
K. Edwards, Mrs. Clarence N. Fisher, Maurice E. Houck, Mrs. Helen T.
Perry, Mrs. Harold Davis, Mrs. Clarence N. Fisher
1911 Alfred K. Naugle
1912 Mrs. Florence G. Carl,
Mrs
1914—
Walter Elison, Mrs. Guy F. Smith,
Mrs. Lera M. Yard, Ercel D. Bidleman, Mrs. Abbie Leh, Mrs. Alfaretta
Wilner, Mrs. William Peacock, Harold N. Cook
1913 Dr. Kimber C. Kuster, Hon.
Bernard J. Kelley, Mrs. L. L. Lister,
Mrs. Florence L. Conard
Mrs. F. J. Wyant
1915 Ramon Selles Roldan,
1918—
Mrs.
Dallas C. Baer, Mrs. Irwin R. Weaver, Joseph Cherrie
1916 Mrs. Jennie R. Morris, Mrs.
A. J. Munro, William D. Taylor, D.
Emerson Wiant
1917 Ralph W. Kindig, Mrs. Anna
M. Smith, Mrs. Alice T. Gordner,
Mrs. R. S. Burr, Dr. J. Loomis ChristJohn R.
ian, Clarence T. Hodson,
Richardson, Jr., J. Frank Brink
been named
Clyde A. Miller
Mrs. J. F. Labagh, Mrs. Priscilla A. McDonald, Alice M. Burns,
Mrs. Veda H. Lewis, Mrs. Victor G.
Mrs.
Patterson,
Long, Hurley O.
Catharine Wilkinson, Mrs. Norman A.
1923—
Fox, Sr., Olive O. Robinson.
1920 Mrs. Myron F. Garney, Margaret V. Hower, Mrs. Muzetta L. Morgan, Mrs. Helen S. Roach, Mrs. William R. Turner
1921 Mrs. Margaret J. D. Martin,
Mrs. Mary Shaler, Mrs. A. C. SutM.
cliffe, Miller I. Buck,
Lillian
Yerkes
1922 Mrs. Joseph E. Adams, Mrs.
Mary Emmanuel, Martha Y. Jones,
Mrs. Mary L. Paetzell, Mrs. Bertha
K. Flinchum, Mary C. Getty, William
tion
T.
Of the 3,559 undergraduate students, 1,884 are men and
1,675
are
women. The graduate student total
of 297 breaks down into 137 men and
160
women.
Approximately
men and
1,695
women are housed in campus dormitories and will be served their meals
through the
facilities
of
the
College
Commons.
Paul
S.
Riegel,
former
Students at BSC, and
ent Personnel at the
Illinois
of
at
Dean
of
of StudUniversity of
Dean
Urbana-Champaign,
has
to the newly-created posiassistant vice chancellor for
administrative affairs.
I’age four
1919
Payne
Mrs. Marion W. Evans, Mrs.
1924
Viola M. Stadler, Margaret J.
Jones,
Adaline E. Swineford,
Mrs.
K. Rolland, Clara D. Abbett
Gladys R. Stecker, Laura A.
Mrs. James S. Jordan. Mrs.
Y. Lewis, Mrs. Wayne Turner
Mrs. Maurice Zeisloft, Mrs.
Louise
1925
Davis,
Nelson
1926
Robert M. Dwyer, Martha M. Lingertot, Christine
Mrs.
B.
Roeder,
Thurston Smith, Mrs. Neal W: Wormley, Mrs. Claud F. Avery
1927 Naomi K. Bender,
Alice E.
Burdon, Beatrice
Englehart,
Mrs.
Ralph G. Davenport, Orice Dodge
1928 Mrs. F. P. Prettyleaf, Ellen
G. Davis, Mary K. Heintzelman, Mrs.
Ralph E. Dendler, Helen Kramer,
Mrs. Russell Tressler, Mrs. Walter
F. Vorbleski, Lois A. Watkins, Mrs.
Earl J. Smiley, Mrs.
Mildred
S.
Weiss, Mrs. Foster Furman, Francis
A. Garrity, Mrs. Louise B. Stevens
1929 Mrs. Leonora G. Reese, Walter M. Sieski, Mrs. James N. Wilson
1930 Helen E. Snyder,
Mary F.
Morton, Richard T. Sibley, Margaretta M. Bone, In memory of Armand G.
Mrs.
Keller, Mrs. Daniel G. Bouse,
Myrtle Ker, Mrs. Ruth L. La Rue,
Anne H. Morgis
1931 Mrs. Robert M. Shoemaker,
Mrs. Stanley C. Zybort, Mrs. Catherine S. Acker, Rev. Thomas L. Henry,
Mrs. Robert L. Stover, Mrs. Esther
Y. Castor
1932 Ezra W. Harris, Mrs. Lois H.
McKinney, Dr. Clarence L. Hunsicker, Mrs. Dorothy Ward, Wilhelmina
M. Cerine, Frank J. Gerosky, Mrs.
John E. Wise
1933 John
Lewis, Mary A.
V.
Stahl, Walter M. Kritzberger, John
A. Early, Mrs. M. E. Howells
1934 Robert H. VanSickle, Gladys
M. Wenner, Genevieve G. Morges
1935 Mrs. Stephen Cimballa, Catharine A. Mensch, Mr. and Mrs. William S. Reed, Unora B. Mendenhall.
Donald A. Ruckle
1936 Mrs. Harold Wertman, Mrs.
W. K. Mann, Mrs. G. C. Moore
1937 Mary E. Palsgrove, Mr. and
Mrs. Earl A. Gehrig
1938 Mary T. Quigley, Mrs. Joseph
1943—
Gillen,
Mrs.
Dorothy Kreinheder,
Mrs. N. M. Cassano, Dr. Clyde L.
Klinger, Vance S. Laubach
1944—
1939 Mrs.
Anna O. Guttendorf,
Victor J. Ferrari, Mrs.
Wilhelmina
Scheffler, Willard A. Christian Jr.
1940 Mrs. Glenn Hyssong, Clayton H. Hinkel, William W. Wertz
1941 Leo J. Lehman, Mrs.
Mae
M. Hackenburg
1942 Jack L. Mertz, William
P.
Wanich, Dominic R. Pino
Mrs. Lee C. Brown. Mrs.
Gertrude
H.
Grabowski, Martha
Wright, Mrs.
R. Yeany
Raymond
Algatt, Philip
Mrs. John Gallagher, Walter
A. McCloskey, Mrs. Philip R. Yeany,
Mrs. Lois W. Farr
1945 Mrs. Harvey
Huber,
Mrs.
Betty L. Dietrich, Joseph R. Gula
TI1E
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
1946—
1947— Mrs. Betty Linn
William E. Horvath. Vincent
Washville. Robert P. Martin, Mrs.
F.1948—
Joseph Kula.
Henry E. Crawford. Mrs.
1949— F. Washville. Paul N. BakVincent
er, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Reitz
Clifford J. Kendall. Richard
E. Grimes. John H. Reichard, WilM. Purcell.
lilam R. Miller. John
John Kunutza, Francis J. Radice,
Mrs. Patrick J. Flaherty
1950 Mrs. Thomas L. Gunn, Robert
MacJ. Kashner, Mrs. Robert A.
1951— Mrs. Hazel M. Guyler, MurMillan.
ray A. Hackenburg, Patrick J. Flah1952—
erty, Mr. and Mrs. William J. Brennan, Edward J. Kreitz
Mrs. Barbara J. Miller. Mrs.
Robert Fritz. Mrs. Clarence Meiss
Mrs. Pavil Cerula, David
Jenkins
1954— III. Calvin W. Kanyrick, Dr.
Maynard L. Hairing. Francis J.
W
Stanitski
1953 Mrs.
Frank
J.
Mary
Furgele,
Mrs.
Fowler.
Robert W. Ger-
hard. Jr.
1956— Mrs. Nancy E. Phillips, JerS. Kopeck, Robert L. Garrison.
William J. Jacobs. Mrs. L. H. Anerweck
1955 Joseph J.
Shemanski.
Dr.
John E. Kosoloski. Jr., John C. Panichello. Jacob S. Slembarski
David M. Cole, Karol E. Ruppel. Mary R. Moser,
Harrison
J.
Morson, Jr.
1957 Mrs. Edwin R. Hawk
1958 Mrs. Dolores
M. Plummer.
George E. Renn, Paul H. Anderson.
1961—
Mrs. Margaret A. Wightman
1959 Mrs. Jean Paxton, Otto
H.
Donar, Paul H. Spahr,
Ronald P.
Davis. Mrs. T. L. Radzinski. Ronald
F. Romig.
1960 Albert P. Francis, Mrs. Glenn
L. Porter. James W. Blair, Mrs. Carl
Janetka, Victor A. Miller, Paul T.
Paliscak. Mrs. Robert Jones
Mrs. E. L.
Roberts,
Mrs.
Paul Bickelman,
Robert L. Deibler, Mrs. E. R. Mullen, Ray L. George, Armand L. Sebastionelli, Robert
ome
H. Walters
David W. Barbour, Mrs. Teressa Y. Hartman, Judith A. Blair,
Mrs. Edward J. Demeter, Mrs. S. G.
Thomas, Thomas J. McHugh, Mrs.
Donald Vannan, Elaine J. Anderson,
Daniel Kwanoski,
Walter H. Ver1962
anda. Mrs. Elizabeth M. Cicero
1963 Gail L. Allen,
Thomas V.
Nawrocki, Robert A.
Koppenhaver,
Mrs. Richard C. Scorese, Mrs. D. R.
Wimmer,
Mrs. John
Windsor,
Charles L. Ditton, Lee R. Jackson,
Mrs. Beatrice B. Robinson, George
E. Weiser, James K. Sample
1904 Mi's. V. J. Serafino,
Helen
M. Sobota, Richard C. Scorese, Ray
C. Oman, Bonnie L. Zehner, Edward
Eill,
Floyd W. Walters,
Raymond
G. Brodish. Ann M. Hocker, Mr. and
Mrs. David W. Sharpe, Mr. and Mrs.
George A. Weigand, Mr. and Mrs. C.
Edward Crim. Dorothy P. Eisenhart,
Mrs. Gloria J. Froelick, Mrs. Kenneth
L. Richter, Mrs. Estella L. Roesch,
Mr. and Mrs. David A. Yergey, Harold C. Andrews, Ronald P. ColarusJr.,
—
DECEMBER,
1969
so.
William
Jeffrey
1965—
J.
O’Brien, Mr. and Mrs.
M. Garrison, Mr. and
George A. Weigand.
Mrs.
John
W. McCaskill.
Joseph Schein, Robert W.
Hertzig,
Alvin W. Balchunas, Donna M. Eckhart, John R. Klees. Jr., Nancy R.
Troutman, Neal L. Bower, Robert A.
Stevens. Mrs. Carol A. Straub, Mrs.
James K. Sample, Robert M. Farina. Wayne W. Smith
1966 Mrs.
Kenneth
Bartoo,
G.
Mrs. N. D. McLean, John S. Mulko,
Mrs. Robert Paul, Gareth T. Kase,
Jo Anne
Sill,
Mary
Alice
Wocdriff,
Zarski, Mrs. Clareen BeamE. Croughn, Darryl W. Lanning, Robert B. Lastka.
Robert L.
Letcavage, Rose M. Chiki, Joseph W.
Kurowski. Mrs. Judith
Makaravitz,
Mr. and Mrs. Spering, Mrs. Wilbur
1967—
Carlson. Gerard Dick,
Mary Ann
John
er,
J.
Mary
Dowd. Frederick J. Klock. Audrey M.
McClure, Suzanne Miller. Dolores M.
Revtyak. Mrs. Ronald P. Colarusso,
Edwin N. Johnson,
Jr.
Jane
E.
Schoenerberger,
Harry M. Saxton. Jr., Susan Shepherd,
Phillip D. Landers. William X. Ash,
Jr., Mary S. Gifford. Susan P. Hicks,
Mr. and Mrs. Irwin F. Zoblocky, Mrs.
Floyd W. Walters, Harold A. Swigart,
Dorothy J. Tiley. Eugene D. Shershen, Harry P.
Balliet.
Wilbur J.
Carlson, Allen W. Handwerk, John R.
Holton. Ronald G. Jackson. Mr. and
Mrs. Frank G. Klein. Carlann Nelson,
Mr. and Mrs. David A. Rudisill, Mrs.
Malina E. Savage, Mr. and Mrs. Regis
C. Sterling
1968 Mrs. Charles H. Fulton. Margaret M. Walsh, Mrs. C. David Shivery, Mary Virginia Hower, Mrs. John
Mulka, David M. Forney, Jr., Mrs.
David M. Forney, Jr., Mr. and Mrs.
Richard L. Hartman, Katherine M.
Ansacker, Betty Ruth Keller, Rosemary Lubinski, Aracelia E. Schlegel,
Gerald Somerday, Diana M. Cray,
Mrs. June L. Gallo, Thomas C. Kline,
Carol Ann Kopp, Dawn S. Schulter,
Mary L. Steffen, Karen Undeck, Joseph G. Alansky, Mrs. Leabetta E.
Mortorff, Mrs. Frank Plonski, Ronald
G. Kashlak, Vicki F. Colton, Mr. and
Mrs. James K. Sample, Mrs. Ruth E.
Kahler, Eugene E. Kline, Douglas C.
Hippenstiel. John J. Ondish, Mrs.
Janet E. Pursel, Mrs. Joan M. Puschauver,
Raymond B. Walverton,
Mi's. Carl J. Cobb, Charles J. Greco,
James L. Poeehmann,, Joseph T.
S.
Austin, Jr.
1969 Mrs.
Phillip
D.
Landers,
Sharon K. Logue, William R. Parker,
Beverly Ann Jones. Linda E. Wimmer, Elizabeth J. DeLance, Noble C.
Quandel, Jr., Bonnie
Rae Taylor,
Randy W. Hackenburg, Carl J. Cobb,
David W. Arnold, Frances R. Dennicki, John P. O’Brien, Frederick C.
Richards, Jeffrey A. Taylor, Lois J.
Goncoer, Kenneth C. Stanton, Albert
J.
MRS. WILLIAMS RETIRES
Mrs.
Fisher, Jr.
Mrs. Elizabeth Williams, Assistant
of Women at Bloomsburg State
College, retired at the end of August
after thirty-eight years in the field of
Dean
education.
A native of South Williamsport, Mrs.
Williams received her early education in the schools of that community
and earned a Bachelor of Science degree in education from Slippery Rock
State College where she majored in
English and social studies. The Pennsylvania State
University
awarded
her a Master of Education degree
with a major in psychology and student personnel work.
She has taken
additional graduate work in psychology at Bucknell University and in
student personnel work at Syracuse
University.
While at Bloomsburg she taught
psychology and sociology, chaired
orientation programs
and Parents
Day for many years, served as President of the Faculty Association at the
college and President of the Bloomsburg Branch, American Association
of University Women.
She has served on the executive board of the
Fennsylvania Association of Women
Deans and Counselors and holds memberships in the Pennsylvania State
Education Association, the National
Education Association, and the Order
of Eastern Star 321.
NEW DEPARTMENT
HEADS ARE NAMED
Dr. Martin Satz, a
BSC
member
of the
and a professor of psychology, has been named
acting chairman of the Department of
faculty since 1958
Phychology, replacing Dr.
Merritt
Sanders, who has become the new
director of Research and Evaluation
Center.
Dr. Edwin Drake, a member of the
staff since 1964 and a professor of
history, has been
arts and sciences
named
director of
succeeding
Dr.
Alan J. Buker, who accepted a position of dean of liberal arts at Robert
Morris College, Pittsburgh.
The former Department
of
Social
chaired by
Dr.
William
Carlough. has been spit into two departments
the Department of Philosophy, Dr. William Carlough, chairSciences,
—
man, and the Department of SocioDr. Ralph Ireland, chairman.
The former Department of Physical
logy,
Science, chaired by Dr. Norman E.
White, has also been divided into two
departments the Department of Physics, Dr. Halbert Gates, chairman,
and the Department of Chemistry,
Dr. Norman E. White, chairman. In-
—
creases in enrollment and expansion
curriculum has necessitated the
dividing of these two departments.
of
ALUMNI DAY
April 25, 1970
Class ending in 5 and 0 will be in
reunion.
Remember
to
mail
in
your contri-
Bloomsburg State College
Alumni Loyalty Fund. Do it now!
bution to the
Page
five
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR
T2
H. F. Fenstemaker
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Grace Foote Conner,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Terms
242 Central
Road
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Term
expire 1972
Millard Ludwig ’48
Center and Third Streets
Millville,
VICE PRESIDENT
Dr. Frank J. Furgele
R. D.
1,
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie
509 East Front Street
Berwick, Pennsylvania 18603
Pennsylvania 17846
Dr. William L. Bitner
33 Lincoln Avenue
’52
88
Mills, Pa. 19342
Glen
SECRETARY
John Thomas ’47
68 Fourth Street
Hamburg, Pennsylvania 19526
’43
Term
Clayton H. Hinkel
expires 1970
’40
224 Leonard Street
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
TREASURER
Earl A. Gehrig ’37
110 Robin Lane, Sherwood Village
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Term
205
expires 1970
Terms
’35
III
12801
Elizabeth H. Hubler
’29
McKnight Street
Gordon, Pennsylvania 17936
James H.
Delly, Jr.
’41
Bailsman Drive
Lancaster, Pennsylvania 17603
37 N.
Term
State College, Pa. 16801
New York
Glen Falls,
Dr. Kimber C. Kuster T3
140 West Eleventh Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
expires 1970
Elwood M. Wagner
643 Wiltshire Road
’34
102 West Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Farm Box
Term
Col.
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
expires 1970
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
Colonial
—
’34
expires 1970
Glenn A. Oman ’32
1704 Clay Avenue
Scranton, Pennsylvania 18509
expire 1971
Mrs. Verna Jones ’36
18 West Avenue, Apartment C-4
Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087
Volume LXX, Number 4 — December, 1969
Hill, Pa., after
1900
Anna Bywater
the
a guest at
Ribaudo Convalescent Home, R. D. 2,
Waymart, Pa.
Class
Riland,
is
18472
1903
Representative:
Walter
H.
Warwick Avenue, Scars-
11
1905
Class
Representative:
Vera
Market
Mrs.
Ilouscnick,
503
Street, Bloomsburg, I’a. 17815
1907
(127
Representative:
Bloom
Fred
W.
Street, Danville, Pa.
six
in
the
Drexel
burg, Pa.
17821
1914
Margie Reese Penman is in the
Delaware County Hospital, Drexel
Hill, Pa., after a fall which resulted
in a broken hip.
Representative:
Robert E.
Class
Metz, 23 Manhattan Street, Ashley,
Pa. 18700
Class Representative: Mrs. Pearle
Fitch Dielil, 027 Bloom Street, Danville, Pa. 17821
1912
Representtaive: Howard F.
Fenstemaker, 242 Central
Road,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17821
1913
Margie Reese Penman is
Delaware Cominty Hospital,
Page
that resulted in
Class
1909
Class
fall
1911
Class Representative: Edwin M.
Barton, 353 College Hill, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
Diehl,
17821
a
hip.
1910
dale, N. Y. 10583
Hemingway
a broken
Class Representative: Dr. Kimber
Kuster, 140 West 11th Street, Blooms-
Representtaive:
J. Howard
Deily, 518 West Third Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1915
Class
Representtaive: John H. Shu-
man, 368 East
burg, Pa. 17815
Main
Street,
Blooms-
1916
Class Representative: Mrs. Russell
Burrus (Emma Harrison) R. D. 2,
Orangeville, Pa. 17859
1917
Class
Representative:
Cromis, Mahoning Manor,
Milton. Pa. 17847
Allen
L.
R. D. 1,
1918
Class
Representative:
Clair
J.
Patterson, 315 West Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Dana H. Young, 335 South Market
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Me Alley)
Box
Street, Shamokin, Pa., is confined to
He would be
his home by illness.
very glad to hear from his classmates.
1919
Haroldl
Miss CathRepresentative:
erine A. Reimard, 335 Jefferson St.,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
and Margaret Swartz
Class
1920
Leroy W.
Representative:
Berwick Road,
Old
3117
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
Creasy,
1921
lass Representative:
Cole, 100 Leonard Street,
Fa. 17815
1922
Edna S.
Representative:
Class
Harter, R. D. 1, Nescopeck, Pa. 18623
1923
Mrs. RayRepresentative:
Kashner, 125 Friar Road,
Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa.
Class
mond
P.
17815
Mrs. Helen Hower McNaught, War-
85,
Sparks,
1930
Class
Representatives:
Luther W.
Bitler, 117 State
Street, Millville. Pa. 17864
1931
Representative:
James B.
Class
Davis, 333 East Marble Street, Mechanicsburg, Pa. 17055
Robert C. Bobby) Wilson, former
<
star
Mrs. Harry
Bloomsburg,
is
Nevada. 89431
Bloomsburg
at
athlete
High
School and Bloomsburg State College
and one time teacher and coach of
the Bloomsburg High football team,
retired after almost three decades
of service with the State Department
of
Education.
Wilson, chief of the Child Accounting Division, Bureau of School Administrative Services, is credited with
the development of the child accounting forms presently in use throughout
Oak Street, Hazleton, Pa. 18201 and
Mary Jane Fink (Mrs. Frederick McCutcheon) Maple Avenue, Conyngham,
Pa. 18219
Robert J. Rowland, Assistant Superintendent
of
Schools,
Luzerne
County Schools Office, Wilkes-Barre,
Pa., was appointed to fill the position
of County Superintendent of Schools
effective July 1, 1969.
He succeeds
the retiring Wesley E. Davies T9, who
has been County Superintendent for
the past five years and an Assistant
County Superintendent for twenty-nine
years.
1937
Class Representatives: Mr. and Mrs.
Earl A. Gehrig, 110 Robin Lane, Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1938
Class Representative: Paul G. Mar710 East Main
burg, Pa. 17815
lin,
Aerio Fetterman
Street,
Blooms-
chief
adminisSchool
the division.
A resident of 3514 Schoolhouse Lane,
Harrisburg, the former local resident
was honored in special retirement
trator of the Southern
District.
Miss Margaret Hower, Riverside,
Pa. Those present were:
Leona Williams Moore, Simsbury,
Conn.; Anna Bronson Seely, Drums,
R. D.; Lillian Derr Kline, Millville,
R. D.; Rachael Evans Kline, Orangeville; Ruth Geary Beagle, Danville.
R. D.; Sarah Levan Leighow. Emily
E. Craig, Catawissa R. D. and Helen
Hower McNaught, Warwick. R. I.
Mrs.
Guests of the group were:
Betty Crouse, Simsbury, Conn.; Mrs.
Dale Leighow and daughters, Sally
Kay, Suann Lea and Suzet Lea, Catawissa R. D.; Miss Margaret Hower,
ceremonies held during a general staff
meeting of the department.
In his twenty-seven years of service
he was a child accounting advisor
The
and school business specialist.
Willard A.
Christian, Jr., 803 Logue Street, Williamsport, Pa. 17701
Dr. James V. DeRose, Head of the
Riverside.
and coach
Rhode
Island, entertained the
members of the Rural Group of the
Class of 1923 at the home of her sis-
wick.
ter,
Kurtzman.
Wilson in his years in Bloomsburg
was an all around athlete at the
Bloombsurg High School and also
active in varsity athletics at Bloomsburg State College. Early in his
career in education he was a member
of the faculty of the local high school
team.
1924
Class Representative:
Edward F.
Schuyler, 236 West
Ridge Avenue,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1925
Class Representative:
Mrs. Pearl
Radel Biekel, 909 Masser Street, Sunbury, Pa.
17801
1926
Marvin M.
Class Representative:
Bloss, R. D. 2, Wapwallopen, Pa. 18660
1927
Ralph
(Verna Medley), 16
Ransom Street, Plymouth, Pa. 18651
Class Representative: Mrs.
G.
retirement certificate was presented
by Secretary of Education David H.
Davenport
169
The address
DECEMBER,
(Mrs. John Catterall)
Goodwin
of
Street,
San
Ruth Gardner (Mrs.
1969
the
Panther
football
left
—
1932
Lois
Heppe McKinney,
1903
Man-
ada Street, Harrisburg, Pa., 17104,
has been a teacher in the Steelton
Highspire School District for twenty
years. She has been chairman of the
PSEA Public Relations Committee for
Representative:
Science Department of Marple Newton Schools has been named for the
American Chemical
James Bryant Conant Award
51.000
Representative:
Miss Lois
Lawson,
644
East Third Street,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
78
River
Road,
with the Wilkes-
Barre Times-Leader since
1936.
1934
Representative:
Esther
Evans McFadden (Mrs. Joseph), 154
East Fifth Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
Class
17815
1935
Class Representative: William I.
Reed, 151 East 4th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1936
Society
for high
school chemistry teaching.
The honor was announced at the
Chemical
the
New York City,
and is sponsored by the duPont Com-
national meeting of
Society recently in
Presentation will be made during the Chemical Society 159th natMay,
ional meeting scheduled
for
1970 in Toronto, Canada.
pany.
Dr. DeRose has received
much
rec-
ognition for his contributions to the
improvement of science teaching in
secondary schools. He has served as
a consultant on overseas projects,
and recently returned from an assignment for the University Grants Commission of India. He also has served
as consultant for the American Association
Advancement of
for
the
Science, and the
National Science
Foundation.
In 1961 the National Teacher of the
listed
Dr. DeRose
among outstanding teachers
Class
Raymon Stryjak,
N anticoke, has been
Area
1939
Class
Year Honor Roll
four years.
1933
Mrs. Dendler requests that members of the class send ideas for the
45th reunion. “Let’s make it a big reunion.”
1929
Class Representatives: Mrs. (Elsie
Lebo) Nelson Stauffer, 88 John St.,
Kingston, Pa. 18704. (Arline Frantz)
Mrs James Wertman, 20 Parish
Street, Dallas, Pa. 18612
Arline Frantz (Mrs. James Wertman) lives at 20 Parrish Street, Dallas, Pa. 18612
Irene Johns
lives at 6616
Diego, Cal.
of
here to begin his successful career in the State Department of Education.
The retired educator plans to occupy the majority of his free time
with his favorite hobbies bowling and
flower gardening.
1928
Martha Davies Watkins lives at
South Maple Ave., Kingston, Pa.
He
is
selected
through the United States Office of
Education. In 1965, Dr. DeRose was
voted Outstanding Science
Teacher
of the Pennsylvania Science Teachers
Association. The educator was elected a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science
in 1966. He received the Distinguished Service Award of the B.S.C. Alumni
in 1967.
At Marple Newtown, Dr. DeRose
has implemented the
Independent
Study Science Program as well as
numerous
innovations
in
science
teaching. Dr. DeRose and his family
reside at 238 Kent Road, Springfield,
Kathryn
Representatives:
Vanauker (Mrs. Nicholas Moreth) 34
Penna.
Linden Road, Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey 07432. Co-Chairmen: Ruth Wagner (Mrs. Lawrence Le Grande) 126
Class Representative:
Clayton H.
Hinkel, 224 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1940
Page seven
William P. Kanasky is Associate
Professor of Library Education
at
the Kutztown State College. Mr. Kan-
asky has an M.S. degree from Bucknell University and the degree of
M.S.L.S. from the Drexel Institute of
Technology.
1941
Class
Representative: Dr. C. Stuart Edwards, R. D. 4, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
Crissman Y. Broderick, son of Mr.
a.nd Mrs. Prank C. Young (Marjorie
Young,) of Rushley Road, has been
awarded a Commercial Credit Company Scholarship. Crissman is one of
69 new students matriculating from
high schools or presently in college
throughout the United States
and
Canada
to
be awarded a Commercial
Company
Credit
scholarship for their
college term.
Crissman graduated June 11th from
1969-70
taught at Rutgers University and is
currently a part-time instructor at the
University of Delaware.
Mr. Von Stetten received his B. S.
degree from Bloomsburg State College and an M.A. degree from Seton
Hall University. He has also attended Millersville State College and the
University of Delaware.
Mr. Von Stetten is married and has
four children.
His address is 105
Aronimink Drive, Chapel Hill, Newark, Delaware. 19711
A
college
English textbook edited
by Robert Baylor has been published
by McGraw-Hill Book Company, New
York City. Titled “Detail and Pattern: Essays for Composition”, it is
designed for use in freshman writing
and reading classes.
The book is dedicated: “To the
memory of a creative teacher, Samuel
Bloomsburg State College,
Baltimore Lutheran High School and
L. Wilson,
will attend Essex Community College
where he will major in Engineering.
Bloomsburg, Pa.” Baylor received a
masters degree in English from Col-
He
is
a
member
of the Methodist
Youth Fellowship and his interests include wood- working, tree husbandry,
mechanical, electrical repair work.
During the past four years Crissman
has given many hours of his spare
time in the intense therapy program
for his injured sister.
1942
Class Representative:
H.
Zimmerman (Jean
Kready
Mrs. Ralph
Noll),
Millersville,
Avenue,
165
Pa.
17551
1943
Class Representative: Mrs.
Raymond A. Algatt (Betty Katerman),
253 Iron Street,
Bloomsburg,
Pa.
17815
1944
Class
Representative: Mrs. (Poletime Comuntzis) Carl Demetripopoulos, Friar and Robin Lanes, Sherwood
Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1945
Class
Representative:
Mary Lou
John, 257 West 11th Street, Bioomsburg. Pa. 17815
1946
Class Representative:
Jacqueline
Shaffer (Mrs. Charles W. Creasy, Jr)
R. D. 1, Catawissa, Pa. 17820
1947
Class
Representative:
Robert L.
Bunge, 12 West Park Street, Carroll
Park, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1948
Class
Representative:
Harry G.
John, Jr., 425 Iron Street, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
umbia University
Kutztown, as assistant trust officer.
A native of Nescopeck, Wagner
was graduated from Nescopeck High
School and Bloomsburg State College
where he served as president of the
college Commuunity Government Association
Who
in
Representative: Richard E.
Grimes, 1723 Fulton Street, Harrisburg, Pa. 17102
and was listed in “Who’s
American Colleges and Uni-
versities.”
After a mathematics teaching career in Nescopeck, Warrior Run and
master’s degree in guidance
from
Rutgers University.
He has completed additional graduate work at
Rutgers.
Elected to Who’s Who in American
Colleges and Universities
Morson made his mark in
in
1956.
college as
an athlete, scholar, musician and
edi-
joined the staff of Abraham
Clark High School, Roselle. N. J., in
September, 1956 as a teacher in the
He
business education department.
was appointed assistant principal in
Morson
1965 and principal in 1966.
also has coached baseball, football
and basketball at the high school.
Recipient of the Roselle Jaycees
Distinguished Service Award for 1967.
Morson is a member of several professional organizations, including the
National Association of
Secondary
School Principals. He served on the
Roselle Fair Housing Committee. He
He
tor.
a member of
Church, Roselle
is
He was
reader.
and
1966
St.
Luke’s Episcopal
and serves as lay
clerk of the vestry in
1967.
In 1968, he was selected to serve on
the committee to conduct the Title V
State Review for the New
Jersey
State Department of Education.
Morson served six years with the
ing as a fraternal insurance counselor
of the char-
Dr. Charles F. Wilson, chief administrator of the
Kutztown Area
School District since 1963, has been
named superintendent of the Allentown School Disti’ict, effective July
Dr. Wilson is the son of Mae
1, 1970.
Callender (Mrs. Lloyd Wilson) ’08,
and the husband of Joan de Orio ’56.
and parts one and three
tered
life
underwriters
study
prog-
ram.
1951
Class Representative: Dr.
Russell
C. Davis, Jr., Sullivan County Community College, South Fallsburgh, N.
Y. 12779
1952
Class Representative: Francis B.
Galenski, 350 South York Road, Hatboro, Pa. 19040
1953
Class Representative: John S. Scrimgeour, 411 East 3rd Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1954
Class
Jacobs,
2
Representative:
William
J.
Tremont Annex Apartments,
West Main Street, Lansdale, Pa.
19446
Brandywine
Representative: Dr. William
Bitncr, HI, 33 Lincoln Avenue, Glen
Falls, N. Y. 12801
Nancy J. Ebersole (Mrs. Dean Allison), lives at 528
Bailey
Street,
age eight
man
pointed director of student activities
and assistant to the dean of Union
College.
Morson, a native of Bryn
Mawr, Pa., is a graduate of Bloomsburg State College and received a
New
1950
Mr. Wayne Von Stetten, formerly
the assistant principal of Brandywine
High School, Delaware,
has
been
named as the new principal of that
school.
Mr. Von Stetten came to
in August, 1966, with 16
years teaching and administrative experience in Pennsylvania and
New
Jersey. He had also been an athletic
director in Pennsylvania.
He has
1956
Harrison Morson Jr., of 877 InAvenue, Edison, has been ap-
J.
Kutztown area schools, Wagner was
named Kutztown-Kempton district
agent for the Lutheran Brotherhood
Life and Health Insurance Company
in 1963.
While with the company,
Wagner completed two years of train-
1949
Class
in 1952.
The Kutztown National Bank has
announced the appointment of
J.
Richard Wagner, 124 N. Maple St.,
Roaring Spring, Pa. 16673
1955
Class
inger,
18618
Representative: Arnold GarR. D. I Harveys Lake,
Pa.
1956
Class
He
Jersey
Army
married
National
Guard.
the former Lillian
Isabelle Pettigrew of Roselle. They
have two sons, Jeffrey Harrison, 6.
and Craig Eric, 2.
is
to
1957
Class Representative:
William J.
Pohutski, 544 Oakridge Drive, North
Plainfield, N. J. 07606
The appointment of Dr. Donald T.
McNelis as Professor of Education at
Lock Haven State College, Penna..
has been announced by Dr. Richard
T. Parsons.
A native of Pennsylvania, Dr. McNelis received his
elementary and
secondary education
in
Kingston.
After graduating from
Bloomsburg
State College in 1957 with a B.S. in
Education, he earned his M.A. and
doctorate in Education at The George
Washington University in 1959 and
1963 respectively.
Dr. McNelis taught at The George
Washington University from 1960 to
1963.
For the next two years he was
Educational Adviser for the U.
S.
Foreign Service in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, and from 1965 to 1966 as Education Specialist for the Office of Eco-
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
in Washington, D.
1966 to 1968 Dr. McNelis was
of Instruction at the Hagerstown
From
Dean
Farragut
N.
joining
State College, Associate Professor of
Education at the College of Steuben-
Ave., Spokane,
ville in
Ohio.
1958
Raymond
Representative:
Hargreaves, 37 Dell Road, Stanhope,
N. J. 07874
Paul H. Anderson is Registrar at
He
Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa.
has been assistant to the President
Class
and assistant registrar at Trenton
State College, and assistant director of
Scholarship
the New Jersey State
Commission. He has an MS from
Southern Illinois University. He also
attended Drew University and Rutgers
University.
1959
William F.
Class Representative:
Swisher, Box 245, Cincinnatus, N. Y.
I)r.,
l’iscataway,
08854
J.
Myles
J.
Anderson, West
19th
99203, is
504,
sity.
is
in
Gonzaga Univer-
of Students at
Spokane, Washington. His wife
the former Myrna J. Bassett, also
of the class of 1962.
The address
Edgar R. Fisher is
APO,
of
Millitary Education
Division.
San Francisco, Cal. 96331
Willliam
Main
K.
Street,
412 West
Pa.,
has
in the U. S.
O’Donnell,
Girardville,
been promoted
major
Major O’Donnell
to
Air Force.
ground electronics
is
a
at Wiesin a unit of the
officer
baden AB, Germany,
Air Force Logistics Command. The
major, who received his commission
in 1963
through
Officer
Training
School at Lackland AFB. Tex., has
completed a tour of duty in Vietnam.
1963
1960
Representative:
Class
reek,
100
Rd.,
Hill
James
Madison,
J.
Conn.
06443
John
Drexel
J. Chidester, Kenwood Road.
Hill. Pa., is Assistant Principal
Radnor Senior High School. He
has previously taught at the Upper
Darby Junior High School. He has a
Master’s degree in School Administration from Villanova University.
at the
John Mascioli of Kingston and
mer Bloomsburg
for-
State College basket-
ball captain has been appointed coach
of Kings College in Wilkes-Barre.
A 1956 graduate of Kingston High
School, he played varsity basketball
there and helped the team to a 22-3
campaign in his senior year.
Entering BSC, he was a starter for
four years and was captain in his junior and senior seasons. He was guard
and playmaker and finished among
the top 20 scorers in the state with a
average.
Mascioli played under coach Harold
Shelly at Bloomsburg
and attained
honorable mention in the State College Conference.
Team’s most successful year was 16-5, w hen Mascioli
17.8
r
was a freshman.
The new frosh coach taught one
year in Allentown on the elementary
level. He received a master’s degree
in education from Temple in 1964 and
is taking graduate work at Temple towards a doctorate. Presently he is
head teacher at the Chester Street
School in Kingston.
1961
Class
Representtaive:
Edwin C.
Kuser, R. D. 1, Box 145-C, Bechtelsville, Pa. 19505
Lowery E. McHenry, a teacher at
the William Allen High School, Allentown. Pa., has completed twelve months of study at the University of Montana.
He has been studying electronic data processing and its impact
on business and education as a Fellow
in the Experienced Teacher Fellow-
Program.
DECEMBER,
Class
Representative:
Pat Biehl
(Mrs. Ronald Cranford) R. D. 1, 77
Haythorne Ave., Boyertown, Pa. 19512
Bernard L. Donegan, Middlesex, N.
J., received his Master’s degree, with
a major in chemistry, at the Summer
Commencement of the College of William and Mary, Williamsburg. Va.
Robert P. Birtley. Bloomsburg, has
been commissioned a second lieutenant in the U. S. Air For.oe upon graduation from Officer Training School
1964
1
Ernest R.
Gaston Avenue, Raritan, N.
08869
Clair M. Rarick, Catawissa,
J.
is
dean
women and
teacher of English at
Northeast Bible College, Green Lane,
a theological college operated by the
Assemblies of God. A Catawissa High
School graduate, she
received her
BS and M.Ed. degrees in English
from BSC. She taught five years in
West End Junior High, Shamokin.
of
John W. McCorkill. 213 South CaroPasadena, Md. 21122, is administrative assistant
at
Brooklyn
Park, Maryland, a suburb of Baltimore. He received his M.Ed. from
Johns Hopkins University in October,
1968 and is doing additional graduate
work at the University of Maryland.
lina Ave.,
1965
Class Representative: Carl P. Sheran, 43 Hazen St., Wayne, N. J. 07470
Mr. and Mrs. Alistor Rae B. (Jean
Davey) live at 4335 Wedgewood Drive,
22003.
Apt. 204, Anndale,
Virginia
They have two childi'en. They have
in
returned from a two-year
stay
Japan, where Mr. Rae was stationed
as Operations Officer
on a mine
sweeper.
Regina Kotch Snyder is living at
1718 Flournoy St., Apt. 500, Chicago,
111.
60612
Neal L. Boyer
is
teaching Spanish
Haven High
oceanology.
Nancy Yulis (Mrs. David M. Johnston) is living at 37 Hawthorne Ave.,
Boyertown, Pa.
19512
Patricia Wetzel Freed lives at 10
Belmont Plaza, E-118, King of Prussia,
Pa.
Donna Bogard (Mrs. Gennaro
urn'
Swatara,
at 1510
17104
lives
burg, Pa.
Gull-
Harris-
Regina Kotch Snyder is living at
Flournoy Street, Apt. 500, Chi-
1718
cago,
60612
111.
1966
Class Representative:
Anthony J.
Cerza, 180 Madison Street, Exeter, Pa.
18643
James
Deir is Head Teacher of
Rock Elementary
School,
L.
Ringing
Pottstown, Pa.
His address
is
117
Oak Lane, Reading, Pa.
Carole Kuzmick Grace reports her
maiTiage and new address: Box 201,
.
Selinsgrove, Pa.
1967
Pa. 18930
Class Representative:
Robert T.
Lemon, Meadowvale Apt. No. 12, 903
Quarry Road, Harve de Grace, Md.
21087
Representative:
Class
Shuba,
at the Schuylkill
1969
Clair, Pa.
Address:
113
Columbia
Street, Schuylkill Haven, Pa.
Jon I. Parker is a science and biology teacher in Union Springs, N. Y.
He is studying for a master’s degree
Dean
Washington
13040
ship
Richard
Representative:
Class
Lloyd, 6
Jr. College in
Maryland and prior to
the faculty at Lock Haven
He was married August 23, 1969 to
Miss Margaret M. Whitford, Saint
1962
nomic Opportunity
C.
School.
John B. Kwasnoski has been appointed to the faculty of the School
of Arts and Sciences at Western New
England College, Springfield, Mass.,
as an instructor in Physics. Mr. Kwasnoski has a Master’s degree from
Fi-anklin and Mai-shall College.
He
has served as lecture assistant at
Franklin and Marshall. He is a member of the American Association of
Physics Teachers, Sigma Pi Sigma
and Kappa Delta Pi.
Harry
512
Balliet,
J.
Avenue, Milton, Pa.,
Shakespeare
a student at
Temple University School of Pharmacy and expects to graduate with
a BS in Pharmacy in 1970.
is
F. Wirdt has been named
of the Alburtis Elementary School, East Penn School District of Emmaus, Pa.
He is cuiTently
emolled in the graduate program at
Lehigh University.
James
head teacher
Thomas
S.
Fowles has been piomo-
ted to first lieutenant in the U. S. Air
Foi’ce.
Lt.
Fowles
is
a weather
offi-
cer at Hunter AFB, Ga. He is assigned to a unit of the Air Weather Service. The lieutenant was commissioned in 1967 through Officer Training
School at Lackland AFB, Texas.
A 1963 graduate of Tunkhannock
High School, he received a BA degree
in mathematics in 1967 from Bloomsburg State College. He has also studied at the University of
Oklahoma.
Page nine
address is 1317 E. 55th Street.
Savannah, Georgia 31404
ginia
His
.
1968
Thomas W.
Class Representative:
Free, R. D. 1, Box 34, Kintnersville,
18930
I'a.
The address of Airman First Class
Lauren E. Miller is care S.A.C.,
Westover A.F.B., Mass.
01022
1969
Cheryl L. Vock Stanker lives at 419
Second Street, Weatherly, Pa. 18255
Gary W. Reichenbach, Bloomsburg,
has been commissioned a second lieutenant in the U. S. Air Force upon
Training
graduation from
Officer
School at Lackland AFB, Texas.
Lieutenant Reichenbach is
being
assigned to Keesler AFB, Miss., for
training as a communication-electronic staff officer.
He is a member of
Gamma Theta Upsilon.
and Patricia
Way Cobb
are
living in New Holland, Pa., where the
former is teaching business education.
Mrs. Cobb is a member of the class
Carl
of 1968.
A
1969
teaching assistantship in the Phy-
sics
Department has been awarded
by Franklin &_,Marshall College to
Linda Biduck, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley Biduck, West Catawissa
During her
Nesquehoning.
Street,
two-year stay at Franklin and Marshall, Linda will be a candidate for
the Master of Science degree in phyIn addition to being a teaching
sics.
assistant, she will serve as a counselor in the Women’s Residence Hall.
FOCUS ATTENTION ON
NEEDS OF STUDENTS
Education
suit of
is
just the purexcellence at Blooms-
burg State College and takes place not
only in the classroom but in all places
where students
interact.
WEDDINGS
Campus
.
Joyce Marion Welker and Gary
William Grubb. Mrs. Grubb teaches
in the Lower Dauphin School system. Her husband is a lineman for
Met. Ed. Co., Middletown. Address:
436 D North Union St., Middletown.
Carol Hartzell and Roger
Dieffenbach.
Address 324 Eckmont St.,
South Williamsoort, Pa. 17701
1964
Beryl M. Hampton, Catawissa R. D.
and David A. Benson, Slippery Rock.
Mrs. Benson has taken graduate work
at Vanderbilt University. Her husband
teaches sociology at Slippery
Rock
State College.
Susan E. Hartman, Catawissa and
John J. Tocks, Emmaus. The bride
a teacher of reading in the Abachua
County Schools, Florida. The groom
is an engineering student at the University of Florida.
Address: 1700 S.
is
W. 16th Court, Apt. C-5, Gainesville,
Florida.
1965
her dissertation for the Ph.D. degree
at the University of Pittsburgh. Mr.
McRae is Sales Representative for
Wells Jewelry Incorporated.
They
are living at Antietam Apartments,
106-A, 850 Carsonia Avenue, Reading,
Pa. 19606
Elaine Roberta
Schraeder,
Glen
Lyon, and Marry Miller Hackenberg,
Mifflinburg. The bride is taking post
graduate work at The Pennsylvania
The bridegroom
is
R.
D.
2,
Douglasville,
Mary
Joanne
Derr and John
Mrs. De Hoff
Grand Avenue Junior High
Louise
Newcombe De
Hoff.
The members of the Dean of Students’ staff focus their attention on the
needs of the individual student as well
as the entire commuunity with the intention of assisting young men and
women to more fully develop their
potentials as they progress towards
their various goals. Thus, this large
staff of qualilfied personnel is respon-
Susan Hammerquist and
Wilbur
Carlson ’67. Both are employed by
the Central Bucks School
District.
They are living at 639 South Broad
Street, Apt. F-6, Lansdale, Pa. 19446
student activities, housing,
food
services,
counseling,
health,
athletics, student financial aid, student government, and many related
areas.
Above all, they are respon-
maintaining an environment
which emphasizes integrity and con-
sible for
sideration of others.
Page ten
19363
1967
Marjorie Melane. Hamburg, Pa.,
and Dr. William McCormick. Address: Box 330, Pluckemin. New Jersey 07978
Nancy J. Tyrens, Hatboro, Pa., and
William R. Hall, Jr., ’66. Mr. and
Mrs. Hall are living in Stockton,
California where the former is working on his master’s degree in Marine
Biology at the University of the Pac1968
Rochelle J. Graziano, Berwick and
Carl T. Warhurst, Jr., Bloomsburg.
The bride is a teacher at the Salem
School, Berwick. Mr. Warhurst is a
case worker for the Pennsylvania
Board of Assistance, and is also selfemployed as a roofing contractor. Address: 3821 Rear Old Berwick Road,
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Donna Kay McHenry,
Orangeville
and William S. Kreisher, Catawissa.
Mrs. Kreisher is teaching at Biglersville. Pa., and Mr. Kreisher is a stu-
Address: Sunrise
Hoosty.
Roselle Park, N. J.
teaches in
School, Merrick, L. I., N. Y.
Her
husband is administrative assistant
for
They are living at D-21
College.
Oxhaven Apartments, Oxford, Pa.
program at Temple University.
They are both teaching at Daniel
Boone Area Schools, near Reading,
and reside at Amity Gardens Apart-
ram.
sible
Kathy Jane Woodring, Secone, Pa.,
Bolling
Lilley,
Jr.,
and John C.
The bride and groom
Springs, Pa.
both are teaching at the Oxford InMr. Lilley is a
termediate School.
graduate of the West Chester State
dent at Dickinson
1966
Alice Bush, Springville, Pa.,
and Alfred L. Mullen,
Muskagee,
Oklahoma.
Their address is 4632
Lauderdale Avenue, Virginia Beach.
Virginia. 23455
Consequently, almost all of the 3,BSC are afforded an
opportunity to explore their individual
potential and find a place for the expression of their talents so that they
may better understand themselves.
Fern R. Shellenberger, Bloomsburg
and James R. Hartman, Bloomsburg.
The bride is a student at BSC. Mr.
Hartman is a teacher at Central ColAddress: 351
umbia High School.
East Street, Bloomsburg.
an alumnus of Susquehanna University and will enroll in the masters
ments, 14-B,
Pa. 19518
650 students at
University.
ific.
Donna Maria Barbaro and David
A. McRae.
The bride is working on
life
includes residence hall and dining
room experiences as well as all of
the various social and cultural events
in the co-cu.rricular activities prog-
Commonwealth
Richmond, Va.
.
1962
State University.
more than
academic
.
for Ski Industries
Address:
City.
America,
New York
147-15
Roosevelt
Ave., Flushing, N. Y.
Linda Stemeling, White Hall, and
Lester G. Jones, Bloomsburg.
The
bride is a graduate of Johns Hopkins
School of X-ray Technology.
Mr.
Jones is doing graduate work at Vir-
Law
School.
Deanna Lee Watts and James
A.
Village,
McCarol Richard and Neal D.
Leon. Mrs. McLeon teaches in the
Mountain Lake, N. J., school system.
Her husband, a graduate of Hamilton College and Columbia University,
is employed as a journalist.
Susan Kay Spotts and Robert Boyd
Mr. Ikeler is social studies
Columbia-Montour Area
Ikeler, Jr.
teacher at
Vocational Technical School. Address:
127 W. Fifth Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
1969
Ann Louise Buggy and Lanny Lee.
Mrs. Lee is a teacher at the Child
Development Center, Bloomsburg. Her
husband is special education teacher
School.
at Bloomsburg Junior High
Address: 351 Center Street, Bloomsburg.
Kandace Ann Caupto, Allentown,
Stephen F. Foltz, Harrisburg. Mrs.
Foltz is teaching kindergarten in the
Central Dauphin School District. Mr.
Foltz is teaching sixth grade in the
630
Their address:
same district.
Humphrey Court, Paxton Park Apts.,
Harrisburg, Pa. 17109
Till:
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Marsha H. Carpenter, Matamoras.
and Charles J. Vogt. Address:
Glenmont Circle, Apt. 205, Glenmont, Md. 29902
Pa.,
2388
Wakefield, Mass., and
AddCarl M. Beagle, Bloomsburg.
ress: Indian Valley Apartment. Souderton. Pa.
Eva
Chitty.
Barbar L. Cramer, Bedminster, N.
and James W. Hufford, Bloomsburg. Mrs. Hufford is teaching specJ..
ial
education
in
Adelphia. Md.
and Michael F.
Kutzmonich.
Address: Pennbrooke
Apt. 6-B., Church Road. North Wales.
Carol A. Coakley
Kathy Ann Dean. Schuylkill Havand Robert G. Mull, Port Carbon.
Mr. Mull is attending the Pennsyl-
en,
vania State Police
Academy.
Kathleen Di Pippa
and Kenneth
Emkey. Mrs. Emkey teaches at West
Her husDeptford School District.
band received a degree from Penn
State
and
is
attending
Hannemann
Medical College, Philadelphia.
Apt
ress: 2011 Ferry Ave.,
Camden, N. J.
AddL-15,
Cheryl Elaine Galford and Robert
Mrs. Kessler teaches in the Warrior Run Middle School.
Address: Millville, Pa. R. D. 1.
Eugene Kessler.
Jane Louise Herring and Wayne
David Drumheller. Mrs. Drumheller
is a sixth grade teacher at Huntington Mills Elementary School of Northwest Area School District. Her husband is serving in the Berwick Unit
of the Pennsylvania National Guard,
and is employed by S. H. Evert Construction Co., Inc., Bloomsburg.
NEW MEMBERS OF
THE FACULTY
Hummel and Leonard
Linda Ann
Thomas,
Both Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas teach in the Lehighton School
District.
Address: 341 Second St.,
Jr.
Lehighton, Pa.
Carol Jean Johnson and Barry L.
’70,
Lopashanski,
Berwick.
The
bride is a teacher in the Salem Elementary School, Berwick. Address:
211 Schley Street, Nescopeck, Pa.
Lawrence
lege.
Candidate for Master’s degree
BSC.
at
town.
Barbara Ann Knorr and Carl R.
Willard. Mrs. Willard is teaching in
the Millersburg Area High School.
Nobel Quandel and Janet Land.
Shirley E. Schuyler, Turbotville
Robert W. Yost, Danville.
Linda M. Unger and
Their address
Drumm.
Robert
and
E.
420 East
6th Street, Laurel, Delaware 19956
is
University of Alabama.
Robert P. Yori, Assistant Professor
of Business Education. B.Sc., Bloomsburg State College: M.B.A., Lehigh
University.
Mrs. Jo Anne Growney. Associate
Professor
Mathematics. B.Sc.,
of
Westminster College: M.A., Temple
University.
Ober Morning, Jr.. Assistant Professor of Sociology. B.A., M.A., Yale
University.
John J. Serff, Jr., Assistant Professor of Geography. B. Sc.. Pennsylvania State University: M. Ed. West
Chester State College.
Eugene D. Shershen, Instructor of
Psychology. B.A., Bloomsburg State
College.
Judith A. Konscol, Assistant
Women.
B.A.. North
University:
College.
M.A.,
Dean
Dakota State
Colorado
State
DECEMBER,
1969
Taichung, Taiwan; Master of Library
Science. Syracuse University.
ADDRESSES WANTED
1902— Agnes V. Brennan
1899— Grace Oliver (Mrs.
1959— Mary A. Pileski
1966 Daniel L. Marks
1968 David C. Keefer
1968 Dennie W. Byrne
1966 William A. Crom
1967 John C. Poploskie
1925 Bessie Herriotts
1963—
1965 Lt. Christopher Fisher
Wilbur
1931 Anna Fowler (Mrs.
—
—
—
—
—
—
Hibbard)
1923 — Hilda Breeze
Zeckhouser
1959—Gary Fisher
Charles W.
University of California at Berk-
1905
1946
Men.
Bloomsburg State
1919
1923
1925
1964
Stetler
— Rhoda
(Mrs.
Wm.
Con-
Thomas Savidge
Robbins Shedd
— Elmer J. Haupt
—Dorothy Herring
Greenway
Stephanie Thurner, Lawrence
W. Wood, Mark F. Mosser
1943— Hazle O’Brien Davis
1952—Walter Troutman
1955 Ronald James Conch
Doris Krzywicki Smith
—
1961 —Gary
1954 Sheldon
Travel Wright
Erwine,
Jeanette
-
Lewis Reddig
1967— Robert E. Logue
1966 Mrs. H. Alan Sechrist
Hilda Breeze (Mrs. Edward Zeck-
Maryland.
Joseph R. Pifer, Instructor of Geography. B.Sc., Clarion State College;
M.A., Arizona State University.
Kay F. Rosencrance, Assistant Dean
of Women. B.A., M.A., West Virginia
Willliams
1929— Ann Taby
1956—
way), Lenore
Col-
Dr. Jack A. Jones, Associate Professor of Physical Education.
B.Sc..
Livingston State College; M.A., University of Alabama; Doctor of Physical Education, Indiana University.
Dr. Maxwell Primack,
Associate
Professor of Philosophy. B.A., Brandeis University; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University.
Roy D. Pointer, Assistant Professor
B.Sc., University of
of Chemistry.
Kansas; M.Sc., University of Michigan.
Philip H. Siegel, Associate Professor of Economics. B.A., Wilkes ColCincinlege; M.B.A., University of
Moyer
—Laura
—Mae Wolfe Klegman
— Kathleen A. Hess
J.
B.Sc.,
Brown
1961— Mrs. Charles
eley.
D. Bryden, Jr., Professor of
Speech Correction and Coordinator
of speech and hearing services. B.A..
College of William and Mary; M.Ed.
and Ph.D., University of Virginia.
Kenneth Whitney, Associate Professor of Education and supervisor student teachers in the
Philadelphia
area. B.Sc., Mansfield State College;
M.Sc., University of Pennsylvania.
John J. Zarski, Assistant Dean of
Edward
(Mrs.
(Mrs.
Schuppert
1967— Priscilla
Howard Finucan)
(Mrs.
1919— Lucia E. Hammond
Robert L. Wheeler)
1965 Jean Weisenfluh Mosser, Timothy C.
Glenn A. Good, Associate Professor of Education. B.Sc. and M.Sc.,
Bucknell University.
George
Hagersville)
1912
A.,
.Assistant
Kelly,
Science, University of Pittsburgh.
Susanna Wen-Cheng Chang, CataCollege
B.A., Providence
loged
John McLaughlin, Associate Professor of English. B.A.. Harvard; M.
nati.
Linda J. Watts, Millville and John
W. Mallen 3rd, Dallas, Pa.
Mr.
Mallen is teacher at the Middlebury
High School. Address: 203 Catawissa
Avenue, Sunbury, Pa.
Margaret Anne
Reference Librarian. B.A., College of
New Rochelle, Master of Library
A..
lege; M.A., University of
Donna Ellen Kennedy, New Cumberland. and John M. Carney, Levit-
ing College.
Jerry K. Medlock, Associate Proffessor of Health and Physical EducaB.A., Stamford University: M.
tion.
of
L. Verdekal, Instructor of
Education.
B.Sc., Lycom-
Business
Wesley E. Blamick, Associate Professor of Education.
B.S.. Bethany
College: M.Ed., University of Pittsburgh; Ed.D. and Education Specialist. University of Florida.
John R. Fleteher, Instructor of Biology. B.Sc.. Bloomsburg State Col-
Dr.
T.
University.
hauser)
E. Houk,
Bloomsburg State College
director
for the
past twelve years, has been
named
Russell
at
athletic
Chairman
of District 19 of the National Association of Intercollegiate AthDistrict 19 includes Eastern
letics.
New Jersey, New
Pennsylvania,
York, Delaware and Maryland.
In addition to serving as District
19 Chairman, Houk was reappointed
last spring to the Executive Committee of the National Olympic Wrestling
Team for the 1972 Olympics; he is
vice president of the Pennsylvania
Conference, a member of the Executive
Committee
the
of
Wrestling Committee, and
sultant to the newly
ling Federation.
AAU
a conformed Wrestis
Page eleven
HOMECOMING
A
the general
well
parade,
colorful
theme
of
executing
“Our American
Heritage,” the football game with
West Chester, get togethers of alumni
and two dances were among the features of the most successful festivities of the Bloomsburg State College’s
outstanding forty-second
ing weekend, with the
cooperating
Homecomweatherman
fully.
Townspeople joined with the grads
and other visitors of the days to view
the exceptionally fine parade of the
morning, now Bloomsburg ’s largest
procession.
graduates were on
Many of
hand for festivities on Friday evening but the majority came on Saturday and the campus was alive with
activity throughout the day and eventhe
ing.
There were get togethers
for
the
grades following the game and two
dances in the evening. Open house
was observed over the weekend and
the BSC concert choir entertained on
Sunday evening.
West Chester Rams, aiming to
move back to the top of the Pennsylvania State College grid conference
used a balanced attack and proved to
be opportunists of first rank as they
moved a step closer that goal on
Saturday when they bested Bloomsburg Huskies, 38-13, at Athletic Park
in the sports attraction of Homecom-
Department of Social Studies, are on
sabbatical leave during the first semester and James B. Creasy, assistant
Royce O.
to the presidnt, and Dr.
Johnson, Director, Division of Elementary Education, will be on leave the
second semester.
COMMUNICATION DISORDERS
CENTER AT BSC APPROVED
Notification has been received from
Dr. John W. Keys, chairman, ProfesAmerican
Services
Board,
sional
Board of Examiners in Speech Pathology and Audiology of the American
Speech and Hearing Association, that
the Center for Learning and CommuBloomsburg
nication Disorders at
State College has been approved as a
public service facility, according to
Richard M. Smith, administrator of
the Center.
This accreditation permits the BSC
Center to be listed in a national directory of Clinical Services which in-
bounded by East Second
Penn Street, Pine Avenue,
and Thornton Avenue. The new parking facility will accomodate approximately 210 cars. A portion of Penn
and Second Streets will be widened
to improve traffic circulation in the
on a
(Act of October
23. 1962;
University of Toledo
Charles H. Hurley, ’67, R. D.
ville, Pa.
Master of Arts.
3.
4.
Location of
2.
Date of
tion;
5.
Class ending in 5 and 0 will be in
reunion.
known
office
of publica-
Columbia
Location
6.
of headquarters
offices
the
of
County,
or general
publishers:
10.
Bloomsburg, Columbia County. 17815
Names and addresses of publisher, editor,
and managing
editor:
Publisher: Bloomsburg State College
Alumni Association, Inc., Bloomsburg,
Pa.
Editor: H. F. Fenstemaker, 242 Central
Road, Bloomsburg (Espy), Pa.
7.
Managing editor: Same.
Owner: Bloomsburg State College
Alumni Association, Inc., Bloomsburg
Pa.
Non-profit corporation no stock
—
8.
9.
issued or outstanding.
Known bondholders, mortgagees, and
other security holders owning or holding 1 percent or more of total amount
of bonds, mortgages or other securities:
None.
Paragraphs
7
and 8 include, in cases
where the stockholder or security holder appears upon the books of the com-
Upper Campus.
members
who
will
A. Total No. copies printed (net press run)
be
artment of Foreign Languages; Eli
McLaughlin,
of
Department
Health and Physical Education; Miss
Susan Rusinko, Department of English and Tobias F. Scarpino and David
A. Superdock, Department of Physi-
W.
Department
of
English, and Robert R. Solenberger,
I’age twelve
ciary relation, the name of the person
or corporation for whom such trustee
is acting, also the statement in the two
paragraphs show the affiant’s full
knowledge and belief as to the circumstances and conditions under which
stockholders and security holders who
do not appear upon the books of the
company as trustees, hold stock and
securities in a capacity other than
that of a bona fide owner. Names and
addresses of individuals who are stockholders of a corporation which itself is
stockholder or holder of bonds, mortgages or other securities of t)ie publishing corporation have been included in paragraphs 7 and 8 when the
interests of such individuals are equivalent to 1 percent or more of the total
amount of the stock or securities of
the publishing corporation.
This item must be completed for all
publications except those which do
not carry advertising other than the
publisher’s own and which are named
in sections 132.231, 132.232 and 132.233,
Postal Manual.
Single Issue
Nearest To
Filing Date
10,650
11,100
3,220
3,340
3,220
3,340
B. Paid circulation
1.
Sales through dealers and carriers,
and counter sales
Mail subscriptions
street vendors
2.
on
sabbatical leave for the entire college
year are Mrs. Mary Lou John, Dep-
cal Sciences.
Richard C. Savage,
United States Code)
Average No. Copies
Each Issue During
Preceding 12 Months
part of the 1969-1970 college year.
Five
39,
pany as trustee or in any other fidu-
filing:
Bloomsburg,
business
area.
Nine members of the Bloomsburg
State College faaculty are on sabbatical leave of absence either all or
Dan-
April 25, 1970
Pa. 17815.
site
NINE AT COLLEGE ARE
ON SABBATICAL LEAVE
4,
ALUMNI DAY
Section 4369, Title
September 29, 1969
Title of Publication: Alumni Quarterly.
Frequency of issue: Quarterly.
1.
Street,
The project, for which $400,000 has
been allocated, also includes a road
which will connect the Upper Campus with Arbutus Park Road.
The
new road will facilitate the flow of
traffic to and from varsity athletic
contests when the Athletic Field and
the gymnasium are completed on the
AWARDED DEGREE
STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT AND CIRCULATION
ing.
Preliminary plans were approved
recently by Dr. Robert J. Nossen,
president of Bloomsburg State College
for a multi-level garage to be located
sures the general public that the professional services available at this
center are of the highest quality. Dr.
William L. Jones, director of the Division of Special Education at BSC.
stated that initial plans for the Center
were started as an outgrowth of the
former facilities of the Division of
Special Education, and that the realization is something that the
staff
members of the Center and the faculty
ol BSC can be justly proud.
C. Total paid circulation
D. Free distribution (including samples) by
mall, carrier or other means
E. Total distribution
(sum of C and D)
F. Office use, left-over,
7.181
7,439
10,401
10,779
249
321
10,650
11,100
unaccounted,
spoiled after printing
—
Gl Total (sum of E and F should equal
net press run shewn in A)
that the statements made by
H. T. FENSTEMAKER, Editor.
I certify
me
above are correct and complete.
TIIE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
IS
SOMEONE
ELSE
PAYING FOR YOUR
QUARTERLY?
11,119 copies of the September Quarterly were sent out in the mail.
The
and mailing the Quarterly is over $4000 a year. The loyalty
those who have contributed $2.00 or more per year has made it possible for
cost of printing
of
us to send the Quarterly to
The
all
Alumni.
Alumni Association have not been subsidized by the
College. We would not have it any other way. We do not wish to give funds
to the College with one hand and get it back with the other.
activities of the
We are
not asking for extremely large
gifts,
but
we do hope
that
more grad-
uates will participate.
We
also urge all the representatives of classes in reunion
April 25,
1970,
to see that their classes are well
on Alumni Day,
represented in the
list
contributors.
Let’s
show President Xossen
President,
that
we
are behind him!
Bloomsburg State College Alumni Association
of
Entered As Second Class Matter
August 8, 1941, at the Post
Office at Bloomsburg, Pa.
Under the Act of March 3, 1879
LOYALTY FUND
The Loyalty Fund Campaign is now entering its fourth year.
received during the first three years are as follows:
First Year
$10,223.12
Second Year
$10,382.70
Third Year
$11,473.57
Total
ing
Contributions
$32,079.39
Some of this money has been used to defray the expenses, including printof The Quarterly, salary of the office secretary, Loyalty Fund publicity,
dues to the Association of Teachers Organizations and the Council of Alumni
Associations, telephone, and office supplies, and the sponsoring of broadcasts
of athletic events.
Increasing costs have made it necessary to dip more deeply
into the Fund than we had originally intended.
believe that these expenses
are necessary in order to prevent the Association from going out of business as
an active organization.
We
Seven Alumni scholarships were presented last Spring. Four were in the
amount of $300 each, two to the amount of $200, and one to the amount of
$100. The recipients were carefully screened by a faculty committee.
We
wish to express our thanks to all those who have contributed to the
However, when you read the tabulation of gifts by classes, you can
easily see that onlv a small percentage of the Alumni have been involved.
Although larger gifts would be appreciated, what we most desire is more givers.
We hope that the classes in reunion in 1970 will give serious consideration
to a substantial gift when they meet in reunion.
LET’S KEEP THE BALL ROLLING.
Fund.
TO BE DETACHED, FILLED OUT, AND RETURNED
Signature
Name
while in college
Address
(street)
Zip Code
(town)
If
above address
is
new check
here
Amount
Year of graduation
Mail checks to Alumni Office, Box 31, B.S.C.
To
insure tax deductions,
B.
S.
C.
make checks payable
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
to
New Dormitory under
construction.
This
is
located on what older graduates will
athletic field.
remember
as the old Mt.
Olympus
TO THE ALUMNI
FROM PRESIDENT NOSSEN
indeed, is a propitious time
accounting and stewardship for
both you and me.
I have been granted the opportunity to serve in a leadership role at
This,
—
for
am proud of the associaam pleased with the chal-
this college; I
tion and I
I
have the responsibility to
help this college develop during the
coming years, not along the lines of
so-called conventional universities, but
as an institution dedicated to students
on the undergraduate level essentially,
and as a college with a potential for
lenge.
distinctive service.
Not the young only
of society.
are searching for service to the public interest; but those of us at every
age level who care and there is no
ills
—
dividing line on an age basis for this
quality
I call upon you to recognize with
us that educational institutions cannot yield to every demand, many of
which have been presented without
prior careful thought; that a healthy
cannot reject admissions
qualified or ignore methods of recording achievement; that it can neither
practice nor preach a philosophy that
institution
My
students are freed from those moral
ember
restraints to which the rest of society
is subject.
colleagues and I need to remthat state colleges today enroll
21 per cent of all students in higher
education, and that between 1954 and
1966, while overall enrollments grew
by 141 per cent, state colleges grew
by 266 per cent.
My
colleagues and I in American
education must prepare, by
1980, for 11.5 million students as opposed to 7.5 million today; for a faculty that will require 1.1 million qualified professionals, as opposed to the
current
for
proportionate
785,000;
costs in salaries and libraries and construction and as yet unidentified new
programs, and new techniques of instruction, and new objectives to ful-
higher
fill.
Your responsibilities are no less
awesome. I call upon you to work
with us, individually, and collectively
within your various groups, to support this college and to uphold the
values of higher education.
that
I ask you to question those
preach the doctrine of a generation
Not
gap that “can’t be bridged.”
the young only want to throw back
the veil of hypocrisy and treat the
upon you to continue to
with a restless spirit; to first
attempt to identify that which is evil,
then oppose it; in your learning, I
ask you to develop a sympathy with
I
call
learn,
human endeavors and an empathy
with other men and women.
I ask
you to reaffirm the truth that a life
worth living demands restraints, that
freedom, to be actual and to survive,
must conform to laws that must be
higher than human whim.
Finally, I call upon you for your
understanding and support, when this
and those within its faculty
and administration make appropriate
efforts to institute changes that are
meaningful and valid, and opposing
forces rise in indignation and condemnation. The building of a better college is not an easy process, or even
one designed to assure popular support. But if you, and the other thousands of alumni with whom you join,
college
are with us,
we
can, both of us,
in-
deed stand with pride in our accountability and our stewardship.
Mid-Year Commencement
“There shines forth fleetingly the
ever-threatened truth that each and
every man builds for all,” Dr. Robert
Bloomsburg
J. Nossen, president of
State College, told the 151 members of
the graduating class at the winter
commencement in Haas auditorium at
BSC and pointed out that “It is not
only the young who are searching for
service to the public interest, but also
those of us at every age level who
and there is no dividing line
care
on an age basis for this quality.”
One hundred thirty-one Bachelor
—
and twenty
awarded.
Master’s
Degrees
were
discussion he asserted that
change is necessary but "must be controlled for a specific purpose, and not
simply as a reaction to threat or
force”; participation does not and canor control:”
not mean domination
curriculum relevancy "does not mean
a curriculum without basis in sound
practice: conformity with the whim
of the moment or a program devoid
of discipline” and “there are many
in current higher education that are
worth preserving, that we can build
In his
—
upon to effect our changes and our
improvements.”
Referring to his topic, the educator
young man visited me in my
few days ago, to review with
me what he considered the ills of the
perhaps not as
I listened,
college.
patiently as I might; and I responded, perhaps a little more vigorously
than I should have. But he said a
number of things, based essentially
his
upon validity, but distorted in
said, “A
office a
understanding.
He
said
many
things
often,
have been repeated so
without analysis, that they have become ingrained in the popular conception, and accepted it as verified.
Change Must Have Purpose
“He believed that change in higher education is necessary, and so, of
course, do I. An education based upon
the study of the classics, a mastery of
Latin and Greek, the standard of a few
decades past, does not begin to fulfill the needs
of those crowding our
that
colleges today. An education designed essentially to train clergy, the goals
of an era not too far from our time,
would hardly fit
the
1970’s.
into
Change has indeed been with us
in
higher education since the first students gathered at Bologna or Oxford.
And the period of the sixties set the
stage for some of the most dramatic
changes that higher education has
ever seen. Changes will continue to
come, but each must be controlled and
for a specific purpose, and not simply
as a reaction to threat or force.
Participation Not Domination
“He stated he thought that students
should share in planning, and be heard
in various facets of administrative de-
ection of a president, as advisor to the
of Trustees, in service on a varPerhaps
iety of faculty committees.
the basis for participation can be
broadened, but the precedent and the
But.
practice have ben established.
and cannot
participation does not
I
or control.
mean domination
hear every so often the term ‘student
power,’ or ‘faculty power,’ and must
Board
—
those upholding such have
wonder
given thought, deep thought, to the
function and purpose of higher education, which must operate less on a
if
concept of power and antagonism, and
ever more on the concept of construc-
Relevancy With Discipline
“He
stated his conviction that curricula need to be relevant, and so do
does
But, curriculum relevancy
I.
not mean a curriculum without basis
in sound practice; it does not mean
conformity with the whim of the moment. It does not mean a program devoid of discipline, of the need for intensive study and mastery of basic
mean that
subject matter.
It does
one gains, even today, his understanding of the man-ness of man, his concept of human dignity and human
worth (even in a world beset with
manifold ills from a study of the past,
from a study of literature and philosophy, from a variety of studies of
man’s activities in the world. It does
mean, too, that one is surely at a loss
to grasp his world without a basic
understanding of mathematics and the
natural sciences.
)
“So this young man and I agreed
on many points, insofar as ends are
concerned, though we interpret them
quite differently; we shared little in
common with regard to means. Were
I to follow his thoughts, there is nothing of value in the current structure of
this college and of higher education in
general; only through its destruction
could it, Phoenix-like, arise from the
in
a
new and more meaningful
and more
effective form.
“Perhaps, despite a so-called generation gap, I can perceive his motivation. I, too, live in his world, and
I, too. can recite the litany of pollution and corruption, crime and hatred, continued warfare among peo-
poverty and ignorance. I, too,
regret that in most of higher education there is a lack of flexibility in
program, there are faculty members
disdainful of teaching and advisement,
and courses are taught that are long
ples,
outmoded.
Need Constant Reform
-making, and so do I.
At
Bloomsburg, students participate in
“There are abuses of society and
of the academic community, and as
such they are in need of our constant
efforts for reform. But we needn’t, in
this, as in any other age, conclude
that because there are wrongs, everything is wrong; or that in destroying
that which is, we can somehow, con-
such varied responsibilities as the
trary to all
cisions
march,
1970
sel-
human
are many things in current higher
education tht are worth preserving,
that we can build upon to effect our
changes and our improvements. There
much at Bloomsburg State that all
of us can share a pride in, and I believe that each graduate before me
can and would testify to that.
“In short, you are important, each
is
of
let
personally and individually;
share with you the words of
fine French
novelist,
Albert
you,
me
that
Camus
tive cooperation.
ashes
from ruins that which is better.
“There are many things that are
right in society, and I am sure all of
you can well enumerate them. There
struct
experience, recon-
“Great ideas,
it has
been said,
world as gently as dovPerhaps then if we listen attenes.
tively, we shall hear, amid the unroar
of empires and nations, a faint flutter
com
into the
of wings, the gentle stirring of life and
hope. Some will say that this hope lies
in a nation; others, in a man.
I believe rather that it is awakened, revived. nourished by millions of soli-
individuals whose
deeds
and
works every day negate frontiers and
the crudest implications of history. As
tary
a result, there shines forth fleetingly
the ever threatened truth that each
and every
man
.
.
builds for all.”
The Program
The invocation was given by the
Rev. Craig J. Dorward. The Concert
Choir sang “Hallelujah Amen,” Handel.
Dr. John A. Hoch, dean of instruction, presented candidates for the
Bachelor of Arts Degree and the degrees.
The degrees were conferred by Dr.
Nossen and the diplomas awarded by
William A. Lank, president of the
trustees,
assisted
by
Edson
J.
Drake, director of Arts and Sciences.
The candidate for the Bachelor of
Science in Education Degree were
then presented by Dr. Hoch to Dr.
Nossen and in presenting them Lank
was assisted by Dr. Emory W. Rarig.
director of Business
Education;
Royce O. Johnson, director
Dr.
Elementary Education; Dr. C. Stuart
Edwards, director of Secondary Education, and Dr. William L. Jones, direcof
Education.
Dr. Charles H. Carlson, director of
graduate students presented the candidates for the Master of Education
Degree to Dr. Nossen and Lank
awarded the diplomas.
Miss Beth
Powlus, soprano,
sang “Father of
Heaven,” Handel. After the address
the program concluded with “Alma
tor of Special
Mater” and the recessional.
Representatives from 18 Pennsylvania colleges and over 50 Pennsylvania school districts from central
Pennsylvania attended the Central
Regional Meeting of the Pennsylvania
Association for Student Teaching held
at Bloomsburg State College on October 29.
Page one
Gov. Shafer Pays
Visit
VISITS CAMPUS
Governor Raymond P. Shafer paid
GOV SHAFFER
a visit to the BSC campus recently,
and among the various features was
a press conference. Because, as is
usually the situation in such circumstances, things were behind schedule
and the hour conference was limited
tc foi'ty minutes.
The Questions were in the usual
areas. Sincee he was at a State College most of the student queries
were similar to those asked by students on campuses of similar instituWhen the reporters had their
tions.
inning their questions were built largely around things they usually inquire about.
The tenor of the session was made pertinent by question that were formed so they included
current developments.
As to a query about putting all the
State Colleges under one board of
trustees, the Governor does not believe that this would enhance the poliHe
tical influence of appointments.
said there would be no basic change
in appoinment which would continue
to be made by the Governor and approved by the Senate. He felt mentioned amendments would cause non
basic change and mentioned an act
of earlier in the day of placing the
student
government presidents of
each college on the board of trustees,
a move he holds will be a step toward
the eliminating of lack of understanding and communication.
Support of Colleges
that he had proposed
He mentioned
millions for the State Colleges
and the Legislature had cut that to $68
millions.
As to why this Commonwealth gives so much aid to private
institutions, he said this is unique in
Pennsylvania and he believes it is
sound. The Governor said that state
has more private colleges, on basis
of population, then any other state
and “it makes sense to aid them to
keep operating and is certainly cheaper than to build state schools from
$83
scratch to replace them.”
Complaint was raised about segregation in the state colleges.
Showing a slight irritation at the statement
Shafer replied that any who held that
opinion was “either misled, misguided presenting a wilful untruth.” He
said the Colleges are not segregated
or separated. He said it is a fact the
Negro enrollment is low “but we are
attempting to bring more blacks in.”
A student brought up the matter of
individual rights believed violated at
the College and the Governor told
him “I just don’t believe it.”
He
added that there are local rules at
institutions and when an individual
enrolls he must accept them “and if
you don’t like them then work to
change them.”
Future Tuition Increases
Asked if there would be future
in-
creases in tuition at the State Col-
Page two
To BSC Campus
Governor said he could not
answer that stating it would depend
on future costs and action of future
leges,, the
Legislatures.
trip around the Colleges, he
to learn first hand from students, faculty, administration and trustees.
Told about Akron U. students
His
said,
was
seizing a building and asked what he
would do if that happened in this state,
he said he would take such steps as
required to remove
the
students.
“Such acts as seizing buildings violate
rights of others and also those of the
perpetrators.”
INSTALLATION FOR DR.
NOSSEN WILL BE APRIL 18
The new president of Bloomsburg
State College, Dr. Robert J. Nossen,
will be inaugurated at a convocation
to be held on Alumni Day, April 18.
The Trustees approved the naming
inaugural planning committee
September meeting. The committee is comprised of representatives of the college faculty, the community, the board of trustees, the student body, and the Alumni Associaof an
at is
tion.
Serving along with Creasy as assochairman is George G. Sradtman, associate professor of mathematRepresenting the community
icse.
are Frank Burnside, president, Fowler, Dick and Walker, Wilkes-Barre;
and John A .Ekey, manager of the
Sears and Roebuck Company store in
Bloomsburg. Other members include
E. Guy
Bangs and William E.
Booth, trustees; Dr. Lee E. Aumiller,
ciate
faculty;
Samuel T. Trapane and Anne
D. Peacock, student body; Mrs. Joseph C. Conner and Dr. Kimber C.
Kuster, Alumni Association.
DR.
ANDRUSS RETURNS
FROM
TRIP
Dr. and Mrs. Harvey A. Andruss
have returned from a three-month
camera safari in South and East Africa. Their main mode of transportation was the “African Mercury,” of
the Farrell Lines, which called at the
ports of Cape town and Durban,
Marques,
Lourenco
South Africa;
TanDar-es-Salaam,
Mozambique;
zania, and
Mombasa, Kenya.
Dr.
After landing at Cape Town,
and Mrs. Andruss flew to Johannesburg and proceeded by safari car
with courier to the Kruger and Hluhlume Animal Parks. They re-boarded
the ship at Durban, where they obsercompetition
ved the Zulu dancing
which involved five teams. In Swaziland they were delayed four hours
by the flooding of the Komati river
and experienced another delay at the
border of the Transvaal. South Africa.
Arriving at the Portugese colony of
Mozambique, the Andrusses proceeded up the Incomati River to take pictures of hippos and crocodiles.
A ten-day delay in the return of the
ship afforded the local couple an opportunity to spend some time in the
Tsavo National Park with a party of
This is one of
five other people.
the largest national parks in the
world, and covers more than nine
thousand square miles in the shadow
of
Mount Kilimanjaro.
Although being chased by a rhino
and followed by elephants added zest
to photography in the African game
preserves where lions, hippos, leopantelopes
and
ards,
wildbeasts,
abound, returning to America, was a
most welcome experience for the Andrusses.
FOCUS ATTENTION ON NEEDS
OF EACH OF BSC STUDENTS
Education is more than just the
at
excellence
pursuit of academic
Bloomsburg State College and takes
place not only in the classroom but
in all places where students interact.
Campus life includes residence hall
and dining room experiences as well
as all of the various social and cultural events in the co-curricular actvities
program.
Consequently, almost all of the 3,650 students at BSC are afforded an
opportunity to explore their individual potential and find a place for the
expression of their talents so that they
may better understand themselves.
The members of the Dean of Students’ staff focus their attention on the
needs of the individual student as well
as the entire
community with
the in-
of assisting young men and
to more fully develop their
tention
women
potentials
as
they progress
towards
their various goals. Thus, this large
staff of qualified personnel is responhousing,
sible for student activities,
food service, counseling, health, athletics, student financial aid, student
government and many related areas.
Above all, they are responsible for
maintaining an environment which
emphasizes integrity and consideration of others.
BSC IN SPAIN
The Bloomsburg in Spain program,
conducted by the Bloomsburg State
College during the past summer, was
study
one of the most successful
abroad programs that has been conducted by the college over the years.
The main objective was to provide
the future Spanish teacher, as well
as the experienced classroom teacher of Spanish, a better knowledge of
the people of Spain and their culture,
ideas and customs.
The trip to Spain was from June 30
September 4 and, in addition to
the study at the University of Madrid. the students travelled to Toledo.
Valle de los Caidos, Monasterio del
Escorial, and they also attended a bull
to
fight in
Dr.
Madrid.
E.
Alfred
Department
at
BSC and
Tonolo,
chairman.
of Foreign Languages
his wife, accompanied the
group.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Jn iWemnnam
1905— Lulu
1894hem. Pa.
Carpter Horn.
Bethle-
Cordina Fisher Mayer,
Sacramento, Pa.
H.
H.
1913— Anna Adams (Mrs.
Rohrbach.* Northumberland, Pa.
1895 Ada Wolfe, Forty Fort, Pa.
1915 Fred W. Faux. Shamokin, Pa.
1925 Bernetta M. Kelly, Scranton.
-Mrs.
—
—
Pa.
1924— Ruth Beaver (Mrs. Daniel G.
Lindemuth) Catawissa, Pa.
1911 Elmira M. Guiterman (Mrs.
John Linner), Philadelphia. Pa.
Evers,
1924 Veronica McNamara
Hawley, Pa.
1915 Nettie C. Dietz (Mrs. John A.
Hayward, California
Luxton
1902— Genevieve Bubb, Williamsport.
—
—
—
i
Pa.
,
—
Robert
1927 Elsie Bossert 'Mrs.
Glonan.)
W.1923—
1908— Edith Sturdevant
1923— Elmer Haupt, West Chester,
Pa.
Albert K. Foster, York, Pa.
1905— George C. Baker, Moorestown.
N. J.
1905— Walter S. Brooke
1918 Helen Lord (Mrs. Arthur Powell), Kingston, Pa.
1899 Jennie C. Smith (Mrs. Clinton Guillot), Lake Worth, Florida.
1902 Helen Reice Irwin. Blooms-
—
—
—
burg
1924 Mrs. Andrew
Glen
Tirpak,
Lyon, Pa.
1895 Jennie
Blandford
Morris,
Kingston, Pa.
1920 Alice F. Cocklin, Shickshinny,
Pa.
1894— Hannah Jones, Nanticoke, Pa.
1908 Edith
Sturdevant
Leonard.
North Miami, Fla.
—
—
—
—S. J.
Pa.
1917 — Sarah
1902
Seesholtz,
Blcomsburg,
Emmitt (Mrs. Sara
E.
Reichard), Riverside. Pa.
Dr. J. Frank
Dr. J.
Dame
Frank Dame, former
Direc-
tor of Business Education at B. S. C.,
died October 30 in Winter Park, Fla.,
where he had moved after leaving
Florida State University as Dean of
the School of Business.
Dr. Dame also taught at Upper
Darby High School for 17 years, was
a professor at Temple University,
and Supervisor of Business Education
oi the Washington, D. C., schools, t
Edwin Kubach
Edwin Kubach, 42 East Fifth St.,
Bloomsburg, Pa., a Bloomsburg State
College professor, was dead on arrival at Bloomsburg Hospital November
23.
He had been an instructor at the
college since August, 1968.
Born in Union, N. J., Kubach received his elementary
and secondary
education in the schools of that community. His Bachelor of Arts degree
was
earned
MARCH,
1970
at
Rutgers
University
and his Masters of Fine Arts degree
was awarded by Yale. He also attended the University of Michigan and
the University of Pennsylvania, and
the course requireDoctor of Philosophy
degree. He was currently working on
his dissertation for that degree.
Kubach began his teaching career
He later joined
at Rutgers in 1940.
has
fulfilled
ments
for
all
his
the faculty at
Moravian College, Beth-
lehem, for a three years period starting in 1947. His next teaching assign-
ment was
West Virginia Institute of Technology, Montgomery, W.
Va., where he remained for seven
years from 1950-57. He then became
at the
a member of the Fairleigh Dickinson
University at Madison, N. J. from
1961-63.
For the past five years he
has been teaching at the Pennsylvania
Mililtary College in Chester.
W.
W.
Clair Hidlay,
Former Trustee
Company, which he founded in 1929;
chairman of the board of directors of
the Bloomsburg Bank-Columbia Trust
Company
since 1960, and a
that board since 1939.
member
of
of
John, Bloomsburg, died in
Bloomsburg Hospital where she had
been a patient since July. She was
born October 23, 1876, in Mtotour
Township, a daughter of the late Peter
Dr. J.
S.
Samantha White Evans.
Long interested in Daughters of the
American Revolution, Fort McClure
Chapter, she furnished awards for the
highest history marks in area schools
A. and
DAR.
A member of the Wesley
through the
Methodist Church, she was
member
United
also
a
Bloomsburg Hospital
Auxilliary and WCTU, and was the
last surviving member of her immeof the
diate family.
Mrs. John .who was one of the oldAlumnae of BSC, was a loyal supporter of
Alumni activities.
She
missed very few alumni meetings during the years that followed her gradest
uation
Clair Hidlay. prominent businessman and civic leader, died at the
Bloomsburg Hospital recently.
He was president of the Hidlay Oil
Mae Evans John ’96
Mae Evans John, widow
Mrs.
.
Leona Seesholtz Wenner ’00
Mrs. Leona S. Wenner, Stillwater R.
R. 1, died April 7. 1969 in the Rest
Haven Nursing Home, Chestnut Hill.
Philadelphia, where she had been a
patient for several weeks. Her death
followed an illness of two and one-half
months during which she was hospitalized several times.
•She was the widow of William C.
He was a director of the Bloomsburg Water Company; a member and
former director of the Associated
Petroleum Industries of Pennsylvania
and a member and former director of
the National Oil Jobbers Association
which recently honored him for forty
years of service.
Wenner. who died in 1935. She was
born in Orangeville, a daughter of the
Seelate Harry and Clara Seibert
sholtz, and spent most of her life in
Fishing Creek Township.
In her early life she taught school
in Fishing Creek Township for sev-
An active participant in a variety
of civic endeavors, he was serving, at
the time of his death, as director of
Bloomsburg State College Alumni As-
Bloomsburg Public Library, as a
long-time trustee and currently a Ruling Elder of the Bloomsburg Presbythe
terian Church, as a
Board
life
member
of Directors of the
of the
Columbia
County Cancer Society, and as a
member
life
Bloomsburg Historical
Society. He was a past president of
the Bloomsburg Hospital Board. Durof the
ing the 1940 ’s he served as secretary
of the Board of Trustees of Bloomsburg State College.
A veteran of two years’ service
with the United States Army during
World War I, he was past commanderin-chief, Valley of Bloomsburg, American Legion.
An outstanding leader and member
of Masonic organizations Hidlay was
a past commander-in-chief of Caldwell Consistory and chairman of its
Board of Trustees.
On September 25, 1943, he was made
an honorary member of the Supreme
He was afCouncil, 33rd Degree.
filiated with Washington Lodge No.
265, F. and A.M., Royal Arch Chapter, Crusade Commander No. 12 the
Irem Temple Shrine, the Craftsman
Club and a member and Past Sovereign of Orient Conclave, Red Cross
of Constantine.
He was for many
years a member of the BPO Elks and
Loyal Order of Moose.
eral years, and was a member of St.
James United Church of Christ and
sociation.
Helen Reice Irvin ’02
Mrs. Helen R. Irvin, Bloomsburg.
died at Maple Crest Nursing Home
on October 25. Born in Bloomsburg,
she lived
years.
in
She taught
Philadelphia
for
many
in Mifflinville, Mainville,
Bloombsurg and closed her career as
a teacher in the Philadelphia school
system. Her husband, James C. Irvin, died in 1917. She was a member
of St. Matthew Lutheran church, of
Bloomsburg.
Rev. Charles L. Hess ’13
The Rev. Charles L. Hess,
83,
a
York
minister of the Central New
Methodist Conference, died at Genesee
Nursing Home, Utica.
A native of Kunkle, Pa., Mr. Hess
served churches in Eatonville, Pa.,
Bridgeport and Syracuse (Woodlawn
Methcdist Church). He was associated with the Methodist Church of Williamson from 1929 to 1939 and subsequently serving at Canasota for 10
years. From 1949 until his retirement
served
the
Methodist
in 1957 he
Church at Clifton Springs.
Since his retirement, he served the
Wall Street Methodist Church, Auburn, and then was a supply clergyman for Freeman Avenue Methodist
Page three
Church, Solvay until his illness about
a year ago.
He
graduated from Bloomsburg
State Teachers College, and Syracuse
University in 1925. He was a former member of a Pennsylvania Grange
and the Odd Fellows and Rotary.
Vincent Karas ’50
Vincent Karas, forty-four, Hazleton,
died January 6 at Hazleton State General Hospital following a long illness.
He joined professional Scouting in
1955 and served as executive Scout
in Bloomsburg and in Baltimore, Mr., before going to Hazleton
in 1963
where he served as Scout
Executive for the Anthracite Council,
Boy Scouts of America.
In 1968 he took a position with the
RCA plant, Mountaintop. He was a
former member of Hazleton Rotary
Club. A veteran of World War II, he
served as a staff sergeant in the Army
and a Master of Science in
Chemistry from Kansas State College
in 1924
in
Manhattan
in 1932.
school in
He taught
before entering the
He served
Curwensville
army
in
April,
France with the
79th Division. Before going to Kansas
1918.
in
he taught at Port Allegheny,
In Kansas, he taught at Syra-
Fowler and went to Medicine
Lodge in 1925 where he taught science
cuse,
He was
Lodge High
also principal of Medicine
School from 1943-56.
affairs.
Martha Creasy ’04
Martha Sloan Creasy, Bloomsburg,
died at her home on December 11. She
v/as born in Bloomsburg and had resided in Bloomsburg all her life.
She was a member of Wesley
United Methodist Church. For many
years she headed the Home Missionary Society of the Church. She was
active in the choir and WSCS.
She was a graduate of Goucher College, Baltimore, Md., and
attended
Peabody Conservatory. She was a
Socity
and was
church
affairs.
active
in
many
Elsie Bossert Gloman ’27
Mrs. Elsie B. Gloman, Wilkes-Barre, wife of Robert W. Gloman, Commander-in-Chief of Caldwell Consis-
She was a member of the Millville
Friends and of the Columbia County
Church
Westminster Presbyterian
and its Webster Class. She also was
a member of the Wilkes-Barre Wom-
1893,
son of the late Charles Daniel
and Ellen Beishline Kindig. He rerecieved a BS degree
from
Fort
Hays, Kansas State Teachers College
Page four
Member
tee,
:
1821-1899;
State
Senator.
U. S. Minister to Ecudor,
U. S. Senator, 1863-1969;
of Congress, 1877-1891: Trus-
Bloomsburg State Normal School.
1874-1890.
Barre General Hospital, having served as treasurer of the latter organiza-
The original part of this house was
constructed of brick and sevral additions have been made to it.
Local
historians want to determine the date
of the first construction, but the facts
are fairly clear that U. S. Senator
Buckalew occupied his home during
his term of service in Washington
tion.
(1863-1869.)
en of Kiwanis, the Wyoming Valley
Women’s Club, the Pennsylvania Educational
iaries
of
and the AuxilIrem Temple and Wilkes-
Association,
Samuel Green
’35
Samuel Green, Berwick, died at the
Bloomsburg Hospital where he had
Survivors include his wife the forQuigley and six children.
mer Ann
Historical Society.
Bruce A. Kindig ’17
Information has been received of the
death of Bruce A. Kindig, seventysix, on November 12 in Kiowa Manor,
Kiowa, Kansas.
He was born in Berwick, October 6,
—
1850-1858;
1956-1861;
Berwick Elks.
Bloomsburg.
an aluminum plaque which appears
cn the lower end of the front of the
house and reads as follows
Buckalew Place
Homes of Charles R.
in
Buckalew
College.
former Century Club
require the construction
of
a
for the President on the newer
or Upper Campus, at the present time
the President’s house or residence on
Lightstreet Road will continue to be
occupied for the purpose for which it
has been used for more than half a
century.
Some years ago Dr. John J. Serff,
then chairman of the Department of
History, did the research that resulted
home
the Dorrance
Township School and later for the
Wilkes-Barre City School District.
Mrs. Gloman was a member of the
November 13.
Mrs Gloman taught at
Miss Elisabeth White ’10
Miss Elisabeth White, seventy-six,
og Bloomsburg, died October 28, at
Bloomsburg Hospital after a lengthy
illness. She was born in Bloomsburg,
April 2, 1893, daughter of the late Heister V. and Clara Aikman White. She
was one of the first women to receive
a degree from Pennsylvania
State
of
of the
Although
the
development
of
Bloomsburg State College in the future
tory, died
been a patient three days. He has
been in ill health three months.
Following his graduation he taught
in the Salem township school system
prior to entering in the U. S. Air
Force in World War II where he serFollowing served as a Sergeant.
vice he was affiliated with his father
in the wholesale meat business of R.
Green and Son.
He was a member of the Berwick
Golf Club, Berwick Duplicate Bridge
Club of which he was a director and
founder; as active patron and booster of the athletics in Berwick; active
in civic affairs, member of the board
of Ohev Sholom Synagogue, and the
member
IS
may
Arlene Weiss Gardner ’19
Hills,
Mrs. J. R. Gardner, Blue
Columbia, N. J., a native of BloomsShe was
burg, died December 22.
a retired school teacher. Mrs. Gardner was a member of Knowlton, N.
J., Prebyterian Church, the Gideon
.
Arlene Weiss Gardner ’19
Mrs. J. R. Gardner, sixty-nine, of
Blue Hills, Columbia, N. J., a native
of Bloomsburg, died in January. She
was a member of Knowlton, N. J.,
Presbyterian Church, the Gideon Society and was active in many church
BUCKALEW PLACE’
HISTORICAL SITE
retirement in 1958.
until his
Air Force.
He was a member of St. Paul’s
United Methodist Church, Hazleton.
He taught in the church Sunday
School and was a trustee and member
of the official board of the church.
of the senior choir and administrative board of the church. He
belonged to the National and Pennsylvania Teachers Associations, Berks
County Teachers of Mathematics Association and the Hamburg Area Education Association.
to teach,
Pa.
official
—
member
Eugene P. Sandel ’59
Eugene P. Sandel, thirty-two, 113
North Fourth Street, Hamburg, died
Monday, December 22, at Reading
Hospital where he had been a pattwo months.
He had taught in the Hamburg
Area High School for the past nine
The Board of Trustees entered into
an agreement of sale to purchase the
Buckalew Place on July 17, 1908 at a
price of $6,000.
The next reference
regarding the sale is several months
later and deals with the seeking of a
right-of-way from the Dillon family
for the “recently acquired Buckalew
Place.”
The affixing of the plaque to the
house is to preserve the historical
nature of the structure for the College and the community of Bloomsburg.
BSC WILL HOUSE
HISTORICAL ITEMS
The Columbia County Historical
Society has approved an agreement
for affiliation with the Bloomsburg
State College.
According to this agreement the
valuable collections of the
Society,
while remaining in the full possession
of the Society, will be housed, cared
for, and exhibited by the College, using its personnel. All of these services will be at no expense to the Society.
ient for
ALUMNI DAY
years
Hew as a member of the Bethany
United Methodist Church, Hamburg;
APRIL
28,
1970
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
i
i
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR
T2
H. F. Fenstemaker
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
’34
Grace Foote Conner,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Terms
242 Central
expires 1970
102
140
John Thomas
’43
Term
expires 1970
Glenn A. Oman ’32
1704 Clay Avenue
Scranton, Pennsylvania 18509
’40
expire 1971
Mrs. Verna Jones ’36
18 West Avenue, Apartment C-4
Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087
expires 1970
Volume LXXI, Number
1899
our oldlest
alumni, lives at Holly Place No. 2,
Shamokin Dam, Pa.
of
1901
Dr. Frank C. Laubach, world-famous missionary-educator, who observed his 85th birthday anniversary, received a telegram of congratulations
from President Richard Nixon.
New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller
and Lowell Thomas are other national
figures who sent personal congratulations.
Syracuse’s
Mayor William
Walsh proclaimed the birthday “Dr.
Frank C. Laubach Day” for his city.
The President’s telegram read:
“On the occasion of your 85th birthday, I want to join the many friends
and admirers who salute your long
years of devotion to learning.
“Eight and a half decades are a
1970
Lancaster, Pennsylvania 17603
19526
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Terms
’29
McKnight Street
James H. Deily, Jr. ’41
37 N. Bausman Drive
224 Leonard Street
TREASURER
17936
Gordon, Pennsylvania 17936
’47
Hamburg, Pennsylvania
Earl A. Gehrig ’37
110 Robin Lane, Sherwood Village
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
march,
204
68 Fourth Street
Clayton H. Hinkel
Pennsylvania
Elizabeth H. Hubler
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
State College, Pa. 16801
Term expires 1970
Rush Shaffer, one
Gordon,
West Street
Kimber C. Kuster T3
West Eleventh Street
Dr.
SECRETARY
Term
Dr. William L. Bitner III
205 McKnight Street
’34
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Dr. Frank J. Furgele ’52
Colonial Farm Box 88
R. D. 1, Glen Mills, Pa. 19342
Term expires 1970
Elwood M. Wagner
643 Wiltshire Road
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie ’35
509 East Front Street
Berwick, Pennsylvania 18603
expire 1972
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
VICE PRESIDENT
Col.
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Millard Ludwig ’48
Center and Third Streets
Millville, Pennsylvania 17846
Road
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Term
—
1
—
March, 1970
milestone in any life. But when filled
with enduring service to your fellow
citizens, they are worthy of our special
admiration and gratitude. May this
day be a most happy one for you, may
the year ahead bring you the fullest
measure of the contentment that derives from such a full, productive
life.”
1901
living at the William Penn Hotel, Harrisburg, Pa. 17101.
She had been a
guest at the Naval Home in Philadelphia, but the home was destroyed by
fire, and the guests were obliged to
move.
1907
Class
Representative:
Edwin M.
Barton, 353 College Hill, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
Gertrude Follmer (Mrs. A. T. Lowry)
is
now
living at 22
James Love
Road, East Hampton, N. Y.
11937
1903
Class
Riland,
11
Class
1909
Class
10583
1905
Representative:
now living with her sisters at 209
South 4th Street, Lewisburg, Pa.
is
H. Walter
Warwick Avenue, Scars-
Representative:
dale, N. Y.
1908
Kostenbauder Weinman, who
has been living in Twin Falls, Idaho,
Stella
Mrs.
Vera
Representative:
Diehl, 627
17821
Hemingway Housenick,
Market
503
Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Mrs. Blanche Miller Grimes is now
Bloom
Fred
W.
Street, Danville, Pa.
1910
Representative:
Class
Metz,
23
Manhattan
Robert E.
Street,
Ashley,
Page
five
Pa.
Bloomsburg, Pa. .17815
18706
1911
Class Representative: Mrs. Pearle
Fitch Diehl, 627 Bloom Street, Danville, Pa. 17821
1912
Representative: Howard F.
Road,
242
Central
Fenstemaker,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1913
Class Representative: Dr. Kimber
Kuster, 140 West 11th Street, Bloomsbury, Pa. 17815
Dr. and Mrs. Kimber C. Kuster, 140
Street, Bloomsburg,
observed their golden wedding anniversary recently.
Dr. and Mrs. Kuster were married
Mrs. Kuster is
in Somerville, Mass.
the former Gladys Teele, native of
West Somerville, Mass., and a gradShe later
uate of Mount Holyoke.
taught English at BSC.
Dr. Kuster attended Bloomsburg
Normal School and received his Bachelor’s, Masters and Doctors degrees
He
from University of Michigan.
taught in several states before coming to BSC in 1935. He was head of
the math and science department at
the local college at the time of his retirement in 1964.
Mrs. Kuster was in YWCA work in
Baltimore, Md., and Ann Arbor, Mich.,
before coming to Bloomsburg. Here,
she served as volunteer chairman of
Red Rross during World War II, was
on the Child Welfare board for many
years and is active in AAUW, Ivy and
Delta Clubs.
A member of Washington Lodge,
F. and A.M., and Caldwell Consistory,
Dr. Kuster also holds membership in
Rotary and Torch Clubs. He served
as chairman of the local Red Cross
West Eleventh
Boy Scouting,
Bloomsburg Hospital
Board and BSC Alumni Board.
They are members of First Baptist
Church, Bloomsburg, serving in many
chapter,
was
member
of
active in
capacities. Dr. Kuster has been trustee and deacon and also served as lay
moderator.
Representative:
J. Howard
West Third Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. .17815
Class
Deily, 518
1915
Representative: John H. Shu-
man, 368 East Main
burg, Pa.
Street,
Blooms-
17815
1916
Class Representative: Mrs. Russell
(Emma Harrison) R. D. 2,
Orangeville, Pa. 17859
Burrus
1917
L.
Representative:
Allen
Class
Cromis, Mahoning Manor, R. D. 1,
Milton, Pa. 17847
Erwin Hobb’s address is 5522 Gracewood Avenue, Unit 816, Temple City,
California 91780.
1918
Class
Representative:
Clair
J.
Patterson, 315 West Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1919
Class Representative:
Miss Catherine A. Reimard, 335 Jefferson St.,
age six
Class
Creasy,
Leroy W.
Berwick Road,
Representative:
3117
Old
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Dr. H. Keffer Hartline, Bloomsburg
native and 1967 winner of the Nobel
Prize in medicine, and Senator Hugh
Scott of Pennsylvania, newly elected
leader of Senate Republicans, were
featured speakers at Lafayette College, Easton on October 24 and 25.
Dr. Hartline, a 1823 graduate of
Lafayette spoke on October 25 at the
ceremony dedicating Lafayette’s new
biology building in honor of Dr. Beverly Waugh Kunkle. Dr. Hartline is
now a biophysicist at The Rockefeller University.
Dr. Hartline won his Nobel Prize
for his research on the optic nerve.
His research began at Lafayette 50
years ago when he studied the reactions of animalsto light under the late
Dr. Kunkel.
When Dr. Hartline and Dr. Kunkel
were honored by Lafayette alumni at
a dinner in New York in 1968, Dr.
Hartline lauded Dr. Kunkel as a man
whose “work showed that intellectual
integrity whichc is now short in supHis was a grim science, but
ply.
one full of zest and enthusiasm.”
Dr. Kunkel,
who
died
March
6
at
the age of eighty-seven, taught biology
at Lafayette for 37 years. He achieved the rare distinction of teaching two
Prize winners in medicine
Dr. Hartline and the late Philip S.
Hench, the winner in 1950 for his work
with cortisone.
He returned to Johns Hopkins in
1949 as a professor and chairman of
Nobel
the department of biophysics. In 1953
he joined the faculty at The Rockefell-
er University.
Dr. Hartline is the author of
than 550 articles and has won
more
many
honors and awards for his
Lafayette awarded him
an honorary Doctor of Science degree
scientific
contributions.
Mildred Ti-everton Zeigler lives at
Barnhart Drive, Snyder, N. Y.
Mi and Mrs. Zeigler recently retii’ed.
They conducted a floral shop in Sny-
250
-
,
der.
Edna
Siegel
Key
1922
Edna S.
Representative:
Class
Harter, R. RD. 1, Nescopeck, Pa. 18623
1923
Leroy A. Richard, 109 N. Second
St., Shamokin, Pa., is l-ecovering from
a very serious illness after a lengthy
stay in Shamokin Hospital.
Harold and Grace Williams Keller,
living at 6 Morris Circle, Trenton 8, N. J., have purchased
who have been
a
new home
in
Mrs. Harry
Cole, 100 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
Laura Boetticher Best, Conyngham,
Pa., recently retired from the retail
fui'niture business which she and her
husband conducted.
Jule Fagan O’Rourke lives at Apt.
6, Sycamore Gardens Apts., Bristol,
Pa.
Beatrice
311
Walnut
Ruth Koch, 551 Lincoln Avenue, HazPa., has retired in 1967 from
teaching at Hazleton High School. She
traveled
extensively since, her
to
abroad, being
trip
She
Portugal and Morocco.
represented in “Who’s Who of
Spain,
is
Village,
Bei'lew Jopling lives at
Street, Moosic, Pa. 18507
1924
Rpresentative:
Edward F.
Class
Avenue,
Schuyler, 236 West Ridge
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1925
Mrs. Pearl
Radel Bickel, 909 Masser Street, Sunburg, Pa. 17801
Dorothy Herring Greenway lives at
928 Blythe Avenue, Drexel Hill, Pa.
Class
Representative:
19026
1926
Marvin M.
Class Representative:
Bloss, R. D. 2, Wapwallopen, Pa. 18660
(Mrs.
Claude
Hazel K. Graham
Avery), lives at 310 DeHai't Avenue.
Endicott, N. Y. 13760
1927
Class Representative: Mrs. Ralph
16
G. Davenport (Verna Medley),
Ransom Stret, Plymouth, Pa. 18651
1929
Mrs. (Elsie
Nelson Stauffer, 88 John St.,
Kingston, Pa. 18704. (Arline Frantz)
Mrs. James .Wertman, 20 Parish
Stret, Dallas, Pa. 18612
Class Representatives:
Lebo)
Class
Representatives:
and Margaret Swartz
American Women.”
Mabel Kraft Reniche,
30-47 81st St.,
Jackson Heights, L. I., N. Y., recently returned from an extended trip to
Spain, where their son Bill is representative of the Fraft Food Company.
Sue McCoy, 425 East Diamond Avenue, Hazleton, Pa., retired form teaching in 1966 and is enjoying retirement
Luther W.
Bitler, 117 State
Street, Millville, Pa. 17864
1931
Class Representative:
James B.
Davis, 333 East Marble Street, Mechanicsburg. Pa. 17055
1932
Dorothy Jones Ward lives at 208
18517
S. Pond St., Taylor, Pa.
Ruth Myers Herman lives at 507
Emmett Street, Scai-nton, Pa. 11229
leton,
has
Sherwood
Bloomsburg.
1930
Class Representative:
most recent
lives at 416 Allegh-
eny Avenue. Arnold, Pa. 15068
hlHRmrr fczf.w..4ti DpA4fllS, 5-rF..
in 1959.
1921
1914
Class
and traveling.
1920
1933
Miss Lois
Representative:
Street,
Lawson,
644
Third
East
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Mildred Busch (Mrs. Howard D.
Linse) is living at 1932 N. W. 36th
Class
Street, Corvallis,
Oregon. 97330
1934
Representative:
Class
Esther
Evans McFadden (Mrs. Joseph),
East Fifth Street,
Bloomsburg,
154
Pa.
17815
1935
Class
Reed,
I.
William
East 4th Street, Blooms-
Representative:
151
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
burg:.
Fa. 17815
studies having significant influence on
the furtherance of the Agency’s mis-
193i>
Class
Vanauker
Representatives:
Kathryn
IVIrs. Nicholas Moreth) 34
Road, Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey 07432. Co-Chairmen: Ruth Wagner (Mrs. Lawrence Le Grande) 126
Oak Street, Hazleton, Pa. 18201 and
Mary Jane Fink (Mrs. Frederick MeCutcheon) Maple Avenue, Conyngham,
Linden
Pa. 18219
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Evans' Kathryn John) are living at 10 Lenox Road,
Rockville Centre, L. I„ N. Y. 11570.
They have returned to the U.S.A. after
a two years’ stay in London. England.
1937
Class Representatives: Mr. and Mrs.
Earl A. Gehrig, 110 Robin Lane, Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1938
East Main
710
In 1969 he received his M.S. degree
Management from George Washington University. He is also
a graduate of the U. S. Army War
College. He had been with the Natin
Financial
Security Agency since 1948.
Mr. Schramm is married and has
two sons.
iinal
1949
Class Representative: Willis Swales.
9 Raven Road, Montvale, N. J. 07645
1950
Frances Cerchiaro Abitanta
Class Representative:
Dr. Russell
Davis, Jr., Sullivan County Community College, South Fallsburgh, N.
Y. 12779
Street,
Blooms-
burg, Pa. 17815
1952
1939
Representative:
Class
Willard A.
Christian, Jr., 803 Logue Street, Williamsport, Pa. 17701
1940
Class Representative:
Clayton H.
Hinkel, 224 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1941
Class
Representative:
Edwards, R. D.
art
4,
Dr.
C.
Stu-
Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
1942
Class Representative:
H.
Zimmerman (Jean
Kready
Avenue,
lives at
N. J.
1046 Cross Avenue, Elizabeth,
07208
1951
C.
Class Representative: Paul G. Martin,
sion.
<
Mrs. Ralph
Noll),
Millersville,
165
Pa.
17551
1943
Class
Representative:
Mrs. Raymond A. Algatt (Betty Katerman),
253 Iron
Street,
Bloomsburg, Pa.
17815
Gertrude Makowski Grabowski
liv-
es at 907 Cedartree Lane, Woodacres,
Claymont, Delaware. 19703
1944
Class Representative: Mrs. (Poletime Comuntzis) Carl Demetripopoulos, Friar and Robin Lanes, Sherwood
Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
Representative:
Galinski, 90 Tower
lestown, Pa. 18901
Hill
Francis B.
Road, Doy-
Frank Furgele and Mildred “Lucky”
have now moved to Glen
Mills, Pa.
Frank is currently Superintendent of Schools in the Claymont
Pliscott
School District in Claymont, Dela.
Following his years at Bloomsburg,
he taught Social Studies in the Baltimore County Public Schools for one
year, and in the Bristol Township
Schools for two years.' He then became Assistant Principal of the Benjamin Franklin High School in Bristol in 1955, and Principal of the Woodrow Wilson High School in Bristol in
1959.
In July of 1968, Frank accepted his current position.
All of his graduate work was at
Temple University where he received
his Masters degree in 1955 and Doct-
rinate in 1965.
Frank is very active in various Educational and Civic organization and is
presently on the Board of Directors of
the Bloomsburg State College Alumni.
His four children also keep him active for he and “Lucky” have three
boys and one
girl.
1946
Class
Representative:
Anastasia
Pappas (Mrs. John Trowbridge), 102
W. Mahoniny Street, Danville, Pa.
17821.
Co-chairman: Mrs. Charles
W. Creasy (Jacqueline Shaffer), R.
D.
1,
Catawissa, Pa. 17820
1947
Class
Representative:
Robert L.
Bunge, 12 West Park Street, Carroll
Park, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1948
Class
Representative:
Harry G.
John, Jr., 425 Iron Street, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
Robert F. Schramm, 6813 Beacon
Place, Riverdale, Maryland, was recently presented the ational Security
Agency Meritorious Service Award by
Nthe Agency Director, Lt. General
Marshall S. Carter.
Mr. Schramm was cited for his outstanding contributions in providing
the continuity and direction required
in the management and plans and
MARCH,
1970
Richard Ledyard is currently reat Gravel Hill Road, Southampton, Pa. 18966. Dick was a Business department graduate and has received his Masters degree in Education from Temple University.
The Army and tour of duty to Germany took some time from Dick’s
plans.
However, for the last fifteen
years, he has been with the Business
Education Department of the HatboroHorsham High School. He is currently the Department Chairman.
Dick was married in 1962 and has
three boys and one girl.
siding
William M. McAloose,
Bucks
a
County resident, now lives at 135
Taifer Avenue, Doylestown, Pa. Bill
received his Masters Degree
from
in 1959 and is now
working on further graduate work.
After
leaving
Bloomsburg,
Bill
taught in the Hazleton City School
Temple University
District until 1957.
He then became
Department Chairman of the Business Education Department in
the
Central Bucks High School in Doylestown, Pa., until 1966. After serving
as Assistant Principal of the school for
two years, he was appointed Assistant
Principal of the newly constructed
Central Bucks
East High School
in
Doylestown.
Bill was married in 1954 and has
one son. He is an active member
of the Doylestown Lions Club.
Maynard Hairing and his wife
Lois, whom he married in 1957, lives
at 105 Division Stret, Valley View,
Maynard and
Lois have three
and two girls.
Since graduating from Bloomsburg
Maynard has attended Pre-Med school
at Muhlenberg College, received his
M.D. from Temple University, and
Pa.
children, one boy
served his internship at Geisinger
Medical Center in Danville, Pa. Since
1960, he has practiced medicine at
Tri Valley Medical Center in Valley
View, Pa.
Civic and community activities are
He is
certainly a part of his life.
active as a director or officer in TriValley Charities Churches, and Youth
Maynard is presently VicePresident and Director of the HeginsValley View Rotary Club. In addition
projects.
to his
many
directorships in the busi-
ness community, he is President and
Director of the First National Bank
of Hegins.
Maynard served two years in the
Army Quartermaster Corps, and one
year with the Army in Korea.
Lola
(Deibert)
Glass now
resides
at 140 Hillendale Drive, Doylestown,
Pa. 18901. While living in the most
scenic county in the State of Pennsylvania, (author’s license), she also has
managed to keep quite busy.
After her graduation, she attended
She did,
a private business school.
however, teach one year in the Doylestown Elementary School, became a
Secretary in the advertising department of Leds and Northrup, and for
ten years was the music director and
organist in her church.
Lola was married in 1953 and has
three children. She boasts two girls
an done boy. She is very active in the
Girl Scouts of America and is presently Service Unit Director in the Doyles-
town Area.
Rocco V. Cherilla, “shortest” graduate of the Class of 1952, is now “long”
with teaching experience. Rocco has
taught for 17 years in the Business
Education department of the Montgomery Area Senior High School in
Montgomery, Pa.
Since graduating from Bloomsburg,
Rocco has received his MA degree
from New York University.
Rocco is a confirmed bachelor, eligible, but does carry rank. He was a
second lieutenant in the U. S. Air
Force. He is outranked only by William I. Troxell, also a member of the
same
class,
who
is
Rocco ’s immediate
principal.
Page seven
Rocco resides at 246 E. First
Hazleton, Pa. 18201.
St.,
a 1946
High
Hazleton Senior
School, Dr. Wilson earned his B.A. in
Spanish and his M. Ed. in educational
Pennsylvania
administration
from
He completed his
State University.
Ed. D in secondary administration at
Columbia University in 1961. In the
spring of 1956, Dr. Wilson took coursat
teaching certificate
es for his
Bloomsburg State College. Before going to Kutztown in 1963, he served for
two years as prilncipal of WheatlandChilli Junior-Senior High School near
Rochester, N. Y. He taught French
and English at Muncy High School
and at Fort Lee High School in New
graduate
Major Edward W. Johnson, Bloomsburg, Pa., has been selected for promotion to lieutenant colonel in the U.
Major Johnson is an
S. Air Force.
operations staff officer with the Inspector General activity at Norton
AFB,
Drums, near Hazleton, and
California.
The major, who served during the
Korean War, has also served in Vietnam. He holds two awards of the
Distinguished Flying Cross, eight Air
Medals, three awards of the U. S. Air
Force Commendation Medal and the
Purple Heart.
1953
Class Representative: John S. Scrimgeour, 411 East 3rd Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Mary J.
Mrs. Don
Butler, daughter of Mr. and
Butler, 315 S. Chapman St.,
Chesaning, Mich. 48616, died on October 16, 1969 of lukemia. Don is Administrative Assistant to the state director of Easter Seals, in charge of
public relations, funud raising and
programming.
of
Jersey.
His wife, mother and two of his
three sisters are graduates of Bloomsburg State College. Dr. Wilson’s father, Lloyd Wilson, Bendertown, died
in 1956. His mother, the former Mae
Callender ’08, of Sweet Valley, still
resides in Drums.
1957
William J.
Class Representative:
Pohutski, 544 Oakridge Drive, North
Plainfield, N. J. 07606
1954
1958
Class
Representative:
William J.
Jacobs, Tremont Annex Apartments,
2 West Main Street, Lansdale,
Pa.
Hargreaves, 37 Dell Road, Stanhope,
N. J. 07874
Class
Representative:
19446.
Raymond
part of an article
concerning a recipient of the Distinguished Service Award at BSC.
The
is
appeared
article
in
the
Indianapolis
Star:
department of otolarynThere he will be actively involved in the evalution and treatment
of communicatively handicapped individuals and will have a major responsibility for continuing and directing research in speech pathology and
logist in the
gology.
speech science.
Alexander R. Stepanski received his
M. A. in mathematics from Central
Michigan University, Mt, Pleasant,
Michigan. He studied for three summers at C. M. U. on a National
fellowship
and
Science Foundation
graduated with a 4.0 average. Alex
is
New York. 13409
Hazel Hunley (Mrs. Dennis Rues),
Munnsville,
a First Lieutenant in the 70th Air Refueling Squadron.
Hazel previously
taught in New Jersey for three years,
edited a weekly newspaper in Mount
Holly, N. J., and spent a year in Seattle, Washington, editing a community
weekly newspaper.
Mr. and Mrs.
Rues have one daughter, Kimberly.
Dale Anthony lives at 11 Tioga Boulevard, Apalachin, New York, with
his wife Hazel (Crain), ’63 and son
Douglas.
Mrs. Ann Olskey Kester reports her
address as Box 5604, Belleville, Penna.
Randall F. Romig, 411 Crump Road,
Exton, Pa. 19341, is teaching English
Boone Senior High
in the Daniel
School, Birdsboro, Pa.
frequently acted as assistant ot the
ed.”
Some of the problems he plans to
study with his students are genetic
technology, population explosion, organ transplants, biological warfare,
space exploration, pollution, conservation, drugs and the process of aging.
In a day when students all over the
United States are asking for “relevance” in their course work, Chiscon is
trying to provide it.
1955
Class
ingcr,
18618
1956
Class
Representative:
Dr.
William
Glen
Bitner, III, 33 Lincoln Avenue,
Falls, N. Y.
12801
Dr. Charles F. Wilson, husband of
De Orio, has been
named superintendent of the Allenthe former Jean
School
Page eight
District.
1960
James J.
Representative:
Peck, 100 Hull Rd., Madison, Conn.
Class
06443
cipal,
principal. The new staff member received his Masters degree in school
administration at Villanova University.
He has additional graduate
credits in administrative subjects from
Penn State, Temple and Haver ford.
In school and college he was a firstteam football player and wrestler.
1961
Edwin C.
Representative:
Class
Kuser, R. D. 1, Box 145-C, Bechtelsville, Pa. 19505
Norman and Barbara Schaefer Shutovich, 1814 Farragut Avenue, Bristol,
Pa., announce the birth of a son, Norman Scott. They also have a daughter,
Representative: Arnold GarR. I). 1, Harveys Lake,
Pa.
A
native
of
Randolph
13040
“The Social Impact
my sabbatical,” Chiscon said, “and came to
the conclusion that most of our broad
social problems are biologically bas-
Morrisville-
lives at 2312
The new position of Assistant PrinRadnor Senior High School, will
be filled by John J. Chidester, of 904
Kenwood Rd., Drexel Hill. He comes
to Radnor from Upper Darby Junior
High School, where he taught, and also
Sciences.”
“I read a great deal during
presently teaching at
Eaton Central Schools, Morrisville,
New York, and lives with his wife
Joyce and two sons in Middle Road,
Class Representative: William F.
Swisher, Box 245, Cincinnatus, N. Y.
Can Purdue humanities majors be
taught biology by reading the poet
Carl Sandburg or examining the plays
of Edward Albee?
Dr. J. Alfred Chiscon of the Department of Biological Sciences thinks so.
Chiscon, who spent last year on sabbatical at the Carnegie Institute of
Terrestrial Magnetism at Washington,
D. G\, returned to Purdue University
last fall and designed a biology course
only for humanities students called,
of the Biological
R. D. 3, Lewwas awarded the
Jr.,
degree of doctor of philosophy at Purdue University at West Lafayette, Indiana. Dr. Leeper received his B. S.
in speech correction from BSC and
received both his master’s and doctoral degrees from Purdue. His dis“Pressure Measuresertation was
ments of Articulatory Behavior During Alterations of Vocal Effort.” He
has joined the staff of The Jewish Hospital of St. Louis as a speech patho-
1959
The following
town
Herbert Leeper,
istown, Pa., 17044,
Amy
Leigh.
1962
Richard
Representative:
Class
Lloyd, 6 Farragut Dr., Piscataway,
N. J. 18854
1963
Representative:
Pat Biehl
Class
(Mrs. Ronald Cranford) R. D. 1, 77
Hawthorne Ave., Boyertown, Pa. 19512
James H. and
Saample
Sandra
live at 23 1-2
Montrose, Pa. 18801
Daskalos
Locust Street,
Street,
Grissom
AFB, Indiana, where her husband
is
17004.
Ronald W. Cranford is presently the
programmer-analyst in charge of data
processing for the borough of Pottstown and the Pottstown School Dist-
He previously taught at William
Allen High School, Allentown, for four
years and spent two years as head of
data processsing for the Shikellamy
School Diserict, Sunbury. He received his master’s degre from BSC. His
rict.
address is 77 Hawthorne
Avenue,
Boyertown, R. D. 1, Pa. 19512
1964
Class
Shuba,
J.
Representative:
1
Ernest R.
Gaston Avenue, Raritan, N.
08869
June A. Houseknecht (Mrs. Joseph
R. Kuzmick) lives at 3524 Nortside
Boulevard, Apt. C-ll, South Bend,
Indiana.
Her husband, Capt. Kusmick,
a graduate student at Notre
University.
Mrs. Margo Bolig Brabson lives at
324 Central Drive. Lansdale, Pa. 19446.
is
Dame
She received her Master’s degree at
BSC in 1968. She and her husband
are teachers in the New Hope-Solebury School District.
Frank R. Harris, Bloomsburg, has
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
been commissioned a second lieutenant in the U. S. Air Force upon graduation from Officer Training School
AFB, Texas.
iOTS> at Lackland
Lieutenant Harris, selected for OTS
through competitive examination, is
being assigned to Vance AFB. Okla.
The lieutenant received his M.Ed.
degree in 1968 at Temple University.
Philadelphia.
1965
Class Representative: Carl P. Slieran, 43 llazen St., Wayne, N. J. 07470
1966
Anthony J.
Class Representative:
Cerza, 180 Mason Street, Exeter, Pa.
18643
John G. Reichenbach
American
is
a teacher
of
Resife,
School
His address: Escola AmerBrazil.
icana do Recife, Caixo Postal 404,
in the
Recife,
Pernambuco,
Brasil.
Sherryl Shaffer Cope, and Ralph
Edward Cope, ’69, are the parents of
a son, Paul Edward, born on July
Mr. and Mrs. Cope are now
25, 1969.
residing in Big Pool. Maryland,
Mr. Cope
where
serving as a student supUnited
ply pastor of the Potomac
Methodist Charge. He is also studyis
Master of Theology degree
Gettysburg Lutheran Theological
Seminary. Their address is R. D. 1,
Big Pool. Maryland. 21711.
Susan C. Hammerquist (Mrs. Wilbur Carlson), lives at 639 South Broad
Street, Apt. F-6. Lansdale, Pa. 19446
Carol Richard (Mrs. N. David Mcing for his
at
Lean i,
lives
at 925
Wooton
Street.
Boonton, N. J. 07005
J. Woodring
Lilley), lives at D-21
Kathy
(Mrs. John C.
Oxhaven Apart-
ments, Oxford. Pa. 19363
David J.
Judith E. Mann (Mrs.
Myers) lives at 401 Eden Road. Apt.
C-6, Lanbaster, Pa. 17601
Mr. and Mrs. John Foster (Jean
Zenke), spent the 1968-69 academic
year in Durham. New
Hampshire
where both did graduate work at the
University of New Hampshire. John
was awarded an NDEA Fellowship for
advanced study in the field of elementary school counseling, and received
a Master of Education Degree in June.
1969. Both returned to their positions
in the Abington Heights School District
at Clarks Summit, Pa., in September.
1969
Jean as a high school mathematics teacher, and John as an elementary school counselor. They are
presently living at 914 W. Grove St..
Clarks Summit, Pa. 18411
—
1967
Class Representative:
Robert T.
Lemon, Meadowvale Apt. No. 12, 903
Quarry Road, Harve de Grace, Md.
this year.
John will receive his Master’s degree at the
Commence-
1968
1964
Linda Berry (Mrs. David Phillips),
lives at 1600 Fairview
toursville, Pa. 17754
Drive,
petitive examination, is being assigned
to Keesler AFB, Miss., to attend a
personnel officer coui'se.
Airman Harry E. Swank. Jr., Fredericksburg, Pa., has completed basic
training at Lackland AFB, Texas. He
has been assigned to Lowry AFB,
Colo., for training in the field of photography.
Josephine Sklanka
(Mrs.
Frank
Plonski), reports her address as Rolo
Court, R. D.. care of Fry, Mechanicsburg, Pa. 17055
Leahetta Taylor Mortarff lives at
611 Vander Avenue, York, Pa. 17403
1969
Class
Representative:
Frank J.
Mastrivanni,
1008
Cooper
Street,
Scranton, Pa. 18500
Edward R. Hess, Bloomsburg, is a
student at Hahnemann Medical College, Philadelphia.
Home address:
145
West Third
Bloomsburg,
Street,
Pa.
Kathleen Di Pippa
(Mrs.
Kenneth
Emkey), is living at 2011 Ferry Avenue, Camden, N. J. 08103
Eva Chitty Beagle is low living at
the Indian Valley
Apartment B-9,
Souderton, Pa. 18964
Dawne Schrantz Pender lives at 100
Woodlawn D-17, Horsham, Pa. 19044
Bonnie L. Zehner (Mrs. Willard L.
Black) reports her address as Route
1, Box 36, French Camp, Miss. 39745
Cheryl E. Galford
(Mrs.
Robert
Kessler) lives at Millville, Pa., R. 1.
Lawrence A. Ward, Jr., 4131-G Beaufort Manor, Fawn Drive, Harrisburg,
Pa., 17112, has successfully completed
the Loop Course with the Bethlehem
Technology.
Mrs. Christian is employed as a librarian at Georgia State University.
The couple reside in Atlanta.
1964
Paula
Jean
Simon.
Berwick
and
Stanley R. Beiter, Berwick,
Lt.
Beiter is a naval aviator and member
of Attack Squadron 72, Jacksonville,
Florida
Lt.
1964
Judith Ann Brewer and R. Scott
Gross.
Mr. Gross is teacher
and
basketball coach at Mount Carmel.
1965
Peggy Ann Semiclose and Robert
Palmer Auker. The bride is a junior
at BSC.
Her husband is a chemical
technician at U. S. Steel Corporation,
Address: Berwick R.
Berwick, Pa.
2
1966
Bonnie L. Search and Kenneth Eugene Yeisley. The bride has been a
member
of the business education facat Susquehanna Valley H. S.,
Conklin, N. Y.
Address: 5339 Broad
ulty
St.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
1966
Sally Ann Brennan and David M.
Schlieder.
Address: 117 Penn Lake,
White Haven, Pa.
1966
Kathleen M. Lutz and Larry Lee
Edwards, The groom is a teacher at
Gorham, N. Y.; the couple reside in
Geneva, N. Y.
1966
Caroll L. George and Robert Mor-
Mrs. Morrison has taught
rison, Jr.
in Madison, N. J., for three years v He
is branch manager of National Bank
of North America, Great Neck, Long
Island, N. Y. The coulpe resides in
Company. Because of his accomplishment, Bethlehem Steel has
Port Washington, N. Y.
awarded BSC an amounj of $2500. In
a letter to Mi-. Ward, President Nos-
Marcia L. Earnhart and Donald E.
Bryan, 156 S. Main St., Perkasie,
“On behalf of this entire college community, may I extent congratulations and best wishes for your continued superior service and in your
sen said
chosen field.”
Duncan
Kishbaugh
Class
Dalfovo,
Meadow, Pa.
Dean
Pa. 18944
1968
Margaret Yabczinski and Glenn W.
Faust.
Address: 190 College Com8. Rochester, N. Y. 14623
II is
Representative:
61
1967
plex. Apt.
teaching
in Kinai, Alaska.
His address is P.
O. Box 2644. Kinai. Alaska. 99611
J.
1970
Street,
18216
John
W.
Beaver
1968
Betsy Davis and Dr. Henry C. Schneider, Jr. Dr. Schneider is serving
a tour of duty as a flight surgeon.
Mrs. Schneider is teaching in the
Address:
Colonial School District.
400 Runnymede Avenue, Jenkintown,
Pa. 19046
1968
ALUMNI DAY
School District, Lemoyne, Pa.
She
received her Master’s degree
from
BSC at the Mid-Year Commencement
APRIL
1970
Gayle A. Richards, Catawissa, Pa.,
and William G. Christian, Birmingham, Alabama. Mr. Christian, a former Peace Corps volunteer stationed
in Nigeria, is now employed as an
instructor of mathematics and is also
enrolled in the PhD.
program in
mathematics at Georgia Institute of
Steel
Pa., 17104, were married June 1, 1968.
Jonelle is teaching in the West Shore
MARCH,
Mon-
Margaret Walsh, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Edmond J. Walsh, 500 East
Hancock St., Lansdale, Pa., has been
commissioned a second lieutenant in
the U. S. Air Force upon graduation
from Officer Training School (OTS)
at Lackland AFB, Texas. Lieutenant
Walsh, selected for OTS through com-
21087
Michael and
Elaine
Brumbaugh
Mehle are living at Apt. C-8, Maple
Garden Apts., Pottstown, Pa. 19464
Jonelle C. Simcox and John C. Edwards, 1934 Chestnut St., Harrisburg,
WEDDINGS
May
ment.
28,
1970
Mary
Hower and William
Mrs. Derr teaches in Selinsgrove H. S., and her husband is a
Virginia
L. Derr.
senior at BSC.
The couple
at R. D. 1, Bloomsburg.
reside
Page nine
1969
Susan Kay Spotts, Bloomsburg and
Robert Boyd Ikeler, Bloomsburg. The
groom is a social studies teacher at
Vocational
Columbia-Montour
the
Address: 127 West 5th St.,
School.
Bloomsburg.
Humk
Contributors
to
Loyalty
the
Annual Giving Program
to
Fund
January
1969
Stephen F. Foltz and Kandace Ann
Humphrey
Address:
630
Caputo.
Court, Harrisburg, Pa.
1969
Lind C. Hellerman (Mrs. John F.
Dietrickson), 603-A Vine St., Berwick,
Ex-Faculty Miss Margaret E. Wal1907—
dron
1901 Mrs. A. T. Lowry
1906 Mrs. Howard Ryder
1910—
1911— Mrs. Helen Moyer Hemingway, Mrs. John R. McCulloch, Mae
Pa.
L.
15, 1970,
James A. ShoeMrs. Shoemaker teaches in
maker.
Area
School District: the
groom is a Sergeant in the U. S.
Marine Corps. The couple resides in
Danville
Millville.
1969
Barbara Ann Masich and John D.
Timbrell.
Mr. Timbrell has been
serving in the U. S. Navy for three
years. The couple resides in Japan.
1969
Joan Marie Woods and Gerald R.
Naugle.
Address:
1100
Colorado
Blvd., Denver, Colo.
Joan Marie Woods, Danville and
Gerald R. Naugle, Danville. Mr. Naugle is attending Precision Measure-
ment
Specialist School in the U. S.
Force.
Their address is 1100
Colorado Boulevard, Denver,
Colo-
Air
rado. 80200.
—
—
MeFee
John
(Mrs.
Mrs. J. G. Luscerieni, Ray
V. Watkins, Mary D. Comerford.
1914 Dr. Jacob Vastine II
1915 Dr. Carl L. Hosier, Mrs. George H. Moore, Mrs. Carl F. Ruck
1916 Marjorie Austin, Mrs. Elmer
1921—
Fairchild
1917 Mrs. Alice F. Gardner, Mrs.
Kathryn Blackstock
1918 Mrs. A. J. King
1919 Mrs.
Thomas Main waring,
Mrs. Alice P. Blair
Anna L. Swanberry
1922 Mrs. Stephen
Bellas,
Mrs.
Herbert Lugg
1923 Mrs. Agnes L. Foster, Mrs.
Albert K.
— Kathryn Merithem (Mrs. G.
C. Lowe)
1928 — Elizabeth Rhoades (Mrs. Russell Tripp)
1930 — Josephine Holuba (Mrs. William C. Hawk)
1950 — Isabel D. Bolinsky
1958 — Rita Krzywicki Ulrich
1957 — Edmund Swartz
1961 — William Stevenson
1969—
1965— Richard C. Dapra
1965 —Thomas J. Storm
1969— Brian B. McLernan
19641965 Ann C.
Raynock, Jean
K.
Weisenfluh
Kreisher)
Karen A. Kallay, Joseph M.
—
Deardorff, 1969 Terrence T. Hatch
1961— Mrs. Charles Stetler
1966
—Gerald
L. Robinson
1963 Nancy Phillips (Mrs. Joseph
Candela)
1965 Mrs. Dorothy Weaver
—
-Elizabeth
Stask,
Susannah
Smith (Mrs. Steve Buckley), Mrs.
Richard Kiehn, Ronald R.
Klock,
Stephanie Turner
— Mrs.
1961 — Mrs.
1905
Jacob Klegman
Page ten
Charles Stetler
Jarrett,
Dickstein
1928 Mrs. Gladys H. Lyon, Mrs.
1933—
Elizabeth C. Williams
1929 Mrs.
Robert
Seletski, Caroline E.
(Mrs.
Walters,
Mae
Petrullo, Mrs.
Earl Fairman
1930 Georgiena L. Weidner,
Alda
Culp, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C. McKenzie
1938—
1932 Mrs. Ruth M. Herman, Mrs.
W. Donald Miller, Mrs. Ralph S.
Knouse, Mrs. Earle N. Stauffer
Raymond Stryjak, Mrs. Howard A. Linse, Frank J. Greco
1934 Mrs. Anna A. Green
1935 Mrs. S. W. Stanulonis, Stanley
Heimbach
1936 Frank A. Rampalo
1937
1943— Marie E. Foust (in
memory
of
Elisabeth A. White)
Mrs. W. R. Wallace, John F.
Hendler
Glenn L. Rarich
Paul B. Kokitas, Mrs. Stetler
H. McCleary
1941 Mrs. Frank M. Taylor, William G. Kerchusky, Mrs. John H.
Uhl, Jr., John E. Lavelle
1942 Mrs. John W. Thomas,
Mrs.
Arnold B. Wagner, Merrill A. Deitrich, H. Burniss Fellman, Mrs. John
A. Dean, Mrs. H. Dorothy Pollock
Frank M. Taylor, William H.
Barton, Mrs. Clyde C. Deets, Reba
1939
1940
Cassandra E. Roush
Wolfe)
J.
1926 Mrs. Ida V. Fisher
1927 Harold J. Baum,
Elizabeth
Reilly, Mrs. Isadore Spitz, Mrs. Ruth
P.
David A. Trout
Donna McHenry (Mrs. William
1968
Ann
H. Ash
1921
S.
Foster,
Mrs. Harold W. Major, Mrs. Marcella
S.
Fisher)
1966
1968
Brill
1913
Sherwood
David R. Schnarr III
Robert Stevenson
Mrs. Eva Reid Embrey
1911— Mina
1912
F.
Mrs. William Allen
Hazel D. Kester
Mrs. Charles A. Nicely, C. B.
1924 Mrs. Ruth J. Harris, Mox E.
Long, Margaret Berlew, Mrs. Charles F. Johnson, Jr., Mrs. M. Roselda
ADDRESSES WANTED
1967
1953
1914
—
Howard
Ella R. Knittle and
les C.
Harmony
1949—
1948 James
not previously reported:
—
1969
Henrie Fellman
1944 Mrs. Mary E. Seybert
1945 Mrs. Mary Lou John, Mrs. C.
W. Epley, Jr.
1946 Mrs. Marvin C. Schappell
1947 Mrs. John W. Thomas, CharJ.
Dormer, Donald N.
Rishe, Betty L. Fisher.
William R. Deebel, John H.
Reichard
1950 Clarence J. Meiss, Mrs. Charles1952—
S. Adlis, Martha G. Bonin, KenGrande.
neth E. Borst, Joseph
J.
Richard E. Jai'man, Jean E.. Stein.
Wayne Von Stetten. Dr. Max G. Cooley
1955— Mrs. H. M. Snyder, Viola M.
Blue, Lola D. Glass
1953 Stephen Tago, Dr. David N.
Newbury, Richard C. Knouse, Donald J. Butler
Mrs. F. R. Kennedy, Michael
R. Bernot
1956
1958— Curtis R. English, Eugene R.
Schulutheis, Elvin C. LaCoe
1957 Mrs. Margaret Keller, William
E. Cranmer, Evelyn M. Kilpatrich,
Donna R. Wilcox, Joseph Wascavage.
Mrs. John Epler
E.
Bernard
Beth Evans,
O’Brien, Fern A. Goss, George W.
O’Connell,
George T. Herman, Mrs.
1961—
Joseph N. Coirao
1959 Robert S. Asby, Otto H. Donor, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Kessler.
Mary E. Labyack, Kenneth A. Swatt
1969 Mrs. R.
Mrs.
E. Bucker,
Ethel M. Hummel, Mrs. Allan Rathbone, Peter D. Ego
Mrs. Robert S. Dayton, Mrs.
Martin R. Knon Mrs. Norman Shutovich, Mrs. William K. Bonta
1962 Arthur B. Comstock,
Ellen
Mae Clemens, D. James Donald, Joseph Jennings, Richard R. Lloyd. Mrs.
E. J. Demeter, Mrs. Frances Petru-
—
-
,
zzi
Mrs. Margo B. Brabson, John
Rankin, Jr.
1965 C. Blair Hartman, Robert W.
Griffiths, Mary D. Brogan, Ray E.
1967—
Gross II, Edward L. Richards, James
M. Sahaida, Mrs. Rita M. Seybert.
Mrs. Regina K. Snyder, Mrs. Laird
D. Shively, Robert W. Herzig
1964
J.
1966 Dean M. Hollern, Donald R.
Beltz, Rita C. Bradish, Mrs. Michael
T.
Brozowski, Mr. and Mrs. John
Foster, William H. Hoffman, John W.
Kerlish, Mrs. David J. Myers, Barbara Ann Urbas, William E. Topolski,
Louise R. Beltz
James F. Windt, William C.
Rowett, Spencer L. Empet, Richard
W. Leonovich, John R. Price, Emerson J. Schnable, Laird D. Shively,
Mrs. Richard Wilcox, Marlin G. Kester, Wm. X. Ash, Jr., Mis. Kathryn
Ricca, James J. Fritz, Mr. and Mrs.
John C. Edwards, Mrs. Peter C. Cailland
1068
— Mark
S.
Goldman, James H.
Neiswender, Mr. and Mrs. Larry GruPhillips,
Mrs.
gan. Mrs. Linda B.
Catharine A. Kosoloski, Roger L. George, Nancy L. Tuzi, Robert T. Maran.
Jr., Sandra K. Roberts, Mrs. Betsy
L. Schneider, Pamela A. Smith, Mrs.
Diane Kazemba, Mrs. Sallie R. Urn-
TIIE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Richard S. Benyo
Mrs. Ruth T. Bennett, Cheryl
L. Dyer, Gregory A. Kanasku, Mrs.
lauf,
—
ADVANCED DEGREES
1969
James F. Windt, James M. Riggs,
Ivan
K.
John Walchonski,
Henderson, Mrs. Verdun
Dinges,
Marsha J.
Thomas, Kathleen K. Horst, Harriet A. Hummell, Connie L. Jarrard
C.
NAME DINING HALL AT
BSC FOR SCRANTON
A new
dining hall nearing completion on the BSC campus will be named for William H. Scranton, Governor of Pennsylvania from 1962 until
1966.
Expected to be ready for occupancy
by February. 1970, present plans call
for the facility to be dedicated during the week of April 12-18, 1970. in
conjunction with the inauguration of
President Robert Nossen, and will be
officially designated the William H.
Scranton Commons.
Former Governor Scranton has been invitd to narticipate in the dedication and the trustees are hopeful that his calendar
will permit him to be on campus at
that time.
The new Commons will include two
new large dining areas which can be
divided into four smaller areas, each
having its own serving equipment.
The seating capacity will accomodate 1.000 students and the food prepration area is designed to serve 2.000 students at each meal. The Commons also includes several offices,
lobbies, a dining room for faculty
and another for food service
employees, a bakery, walk-in refrigeration storage units, a loading dock and
receiving area, employe locker rooms,
and general storage areas. All areas
except the kitchen are air-conditioned.
The cost of construction is approximately $1,645,000.
TEST CENTER AT BSC
Bloomsburg State College was designated as a test center for administering the National Teacher ExaminaJanuary
tion on
for this
Arrangements
31.
were made through
Stuart Edwards.
Secondary Education, and
Dr. Merritt W. Saiders, Director of
the Research and Evaluation Center.
The number of Bloomsburg State
College seniors finding need for the
scores has been increasing.
The escenter
the
efforts
Director of
of
Dr.
tablishing of this center will lessen the
reed for travel to other centers for
these tests.
The
designation
of
Bloomsburg
Lehigh University
1965 Mary D. Brogan, Fullerton,
Pa. Master of Education.
Sandra D. Sample, Allentown. Master of Education.
1967— Alan C. Bartlett, Boyertown,
Pa. Master of Education.
Bartlett.
1967— Katherine Moyer
Boyertown. Pa. Master of Education.
1964 William D. Bartman,
Pottstown. Pa. Master of Education.
—
Bradish,
Hazleton,
1966 Rita C.
1965—
Pa. Master of Education.
1964 Helen Saviolis, Whitehall, Pa.
Master of Education.
Murtin.
Mahanoy
John M.
City. Pa. Master of Education.
1933— Marjorie Bishop Kropp, Canadenses, Pa. Master of Education.
Pennsylvania State University
Ann Weigh, 16 Atherton Hall,
University Park, Pa. Master of EduSally
cation.
Mrs. Donna K. Weigand, Shamokin
Dam. Pa. Master
—George
of
Education.
1546
Weigand,
North Allen Street, State College. Pa.
Master of Education.
James R. Miller, Jr., 616 Martin St.,
Clearfield, Pa. 16830. Master of Edu-
1964
A.
Miami Univ., Oxford, Ohio
1967—
1962— Lawrence James Finn, Master
Arts in Teaching.
1959—ADDRESSES
WANTED
—Shirley Wismer Baker
Charles Loughery
—Eleanor Thomas Savidge
1912—
1951
1958
1929
Robert E. Logue
1969— Joseph R. Bainbridge
1968 Catherine J. Stagick
1911 Mia McFee Fisher
Gary S. Fisher
1942 Edna Zehner Pietroszak
—
—Anna Taby Conway
— Martha S. Grabowski
— Mrs. Anne E. McGee
Laura Williams
1961 — William Stevenson
1968— Margaret J. Golden
1910 — Zora Low Gemmel
1964— James L. Howard
1919 — Katherine M. Dougherty
1929
1927
1966
GRADUATE DEGREES
Shippensburg State College
Alan J. Reily ’67, M. A. in Guidance and Counseling.
in
Hari'y W. Ravert ’65, M. A.
Business Education.
Representatives from colleges, comprising District 19 of the National Association of Intercollegate Athletics
State College as a test center for these
attended an
examinations
Bloomsburg State College
prospective
will give
teachers in this area an opportunity
to
compare
their
performance on the
examinations with candidates throughout the country who take the tests.
Leonid Hambro, famous
pianist,
appeared at Bloomsburg State College
on November 13, in Hass Auditorium
at 8:15 p.m. under the sponsorship
of the Artists and Lecture Series of
the college.
MARCH,
1970
John Robert Quatroche, assistant
director of admissions at the State
University College, Freedonia, N. Y.,
has been named assistant to the preCollege.
sident at Bloomsburg State
The appointment, approved by the
Board of Trustees, was announced by
Dr. Robert J. Nossen, president of
BSC.
Quatroche, who will assume his new
February 2, will succeed
James B. Creasy, who has held the
position since the post was created in
August, 1964. Creasy has been granted a sabbatical leave of absence to
continue his graduate studies at The
Pennsylvania State University during the second semester of the 1969position
1970 college year.
Quatroche, a former resident of
Southampton, Long Island, was appointed to the admissions staff at
Fredonia in September, 1964; named
assistant director in 1967, and promoted to associate director in 1968. He
received both his bachelor’s and master’s degree from the College at Fredonia.
A
veteran of four years service in
United States Air Force, Quatroche has also taught English at Fredonia and Mayville Central Schools.
He is a member of the New York
State Personnel and Guidance Association, the Western New York Personnel
the
cation.
of
ASSISTANT TO
BSC PRESIDENT
initial district
meeting at
to
outline
plans for the 1969-70 colleeg year.
Russell E. Houck, Athletic Director
at BSC for the past 12 years, was recently named Chairman of District 19
of the NAIA, which includes 16 member colleges in eastern Pennsylvanina,
eastern New York, New Jersey, Delaware, eastern Maryland and Virginia.
ALUMNI DAY
APRIL
28, 1970
and Guidance Association, and the
Chautauqua County Counselors Association.
Lloyd Tourney, formerly Dirof Business at
Bloomsburg
College, has been
appointed
President of Goldey Beacom Junior
College, Wilmington, Delaware.
Dr. Tourney was at Bloomsburg
from September, 1962, to June, 1967,
Dr.
S.
ector
State
when he was appointed Academic
Dean of Goldey Beacom. He was
made
vice president of the college in
1968.
He
received his Bachelor’s Degree
of Georgia, Athens, Georgia.
He is a Lieutenant
Air
Colonel in the United States
Force Reserve.
His present residence is Newark,
from the University
Delaware.
Phillip D. Stern, nationally known
author,
astronomer, lecturer and
spoke on the topic “Beyond the Beyond’’ in Hartline Science Center on
October 29, under the auspices of the
Department
Science and
of
Geography and Earth
Theta Upsilon,
Gamma
international
geographical
fraternity
of the college.
The musical organizations
of
the
their
annual
presented
Christmas Concert Sunday, December 7, in Haas Auditorium. Participating in the program were the Madrigal Singers, the Men’s Glee Club,
the Women’s Choral Ensemble, the
Brass Sextet, and the Concert Choir.
College
Page eleven
NEW CAMPUS PLAN
A campus
SPECIAL TRIBUTE TO
that will
accommodations on the two
DR.
campus
As a special tribute to Dr. Harvey
Andruss, former president of
Bloomsburg State College, in whose
honor the new college library was
main campus and former
areas
country club property) of 133 acres
for 6,000 undergraduate students, plus
graduate and part time students at
Bloomsburg State College, has been
approved by the State Superintendent
of Public Instruction and the executive director of the General State AuJudged by past experiences
thority.
this enlrollment should be attained
(
by
1975.
The final signatures of approval
were affixed this month. The plan
had been given preliminary approval
by the BSC board of trustees last September. The plan was developed by
Price and Dickey, Media architects.
of
the fourth in a series
campus plans which had their beginning in 1941. The first plan, develop-
This
is
ed by McCloud and Schatchard, Architects, provided for 1,200 full-time students and used only the land which
extended from
Penn to Chestnut
streets.
Sixteen years later in 1957,
Schell,
John
Bloomsburg architect, develto accommodate an enroll-
oped a plan
ment
of 2,000 on the present campus
wich then had less than 60 acres.
This was the first plan for any of the
fourteen
vania.
State
Colleges
in
Pennsyl-
A
third plan was developed four
years later by Esbach, Pullinger, Stevens, and
Bruder,
Philadelphia.
While in the process of completing
plans, the anticipated enrollment was
increased from 3.000 to 4,000 and provided for the purchase of the Blooms-
Club property.
The
capacity was subsequently increased
burg
Country
to 4,300.
With
two
purchases
adding
A.
named
at dedication ceremonies in
a special collection bearing his
name is being established.
The collection, according to James
B. Watts, director of library services,
will be comprised of books, articles
1967,
appearing in magazines and journals,
pamphlets, and other materials containing Dr. Andruss’ extensive writings in the fields of business education, college
administration, and high-
er education.
At present a number of items that
go into the collection are in var-
will
ious stages of processing.
When
pro-
cessing has been completed, the materials will be placed in a special section of the reserve area where they
will be available to patrons of the library.
Some consideration is being
given to the possibility of microfilming the collection in the interest of
long-range preservation and probable
loans to other college libraries.
A unique feature of the Andruss
Collection will be publications and
other papers related to the First American Army University, located at
England;
Berkshire,
Shrivenham,
Shrivenham Post (student newspaper),
and Shrivenham Silhouettes (edited by
President Andruss and including The
Shrivenhaven Newsletters). Dr. Andruss served on the faculty of the university, which was founded by directive of General Dwight Eisenhower.
When the special project has been
completed, it is planned that a comprehensive bibliography of the Andruss Collection will be issued.
made certain recommendations
the Superintendent of Public Instruction.
They were Dr. Harry W.
Porter, provost, State University of
New York; Dr. Charles E. Bull, Plant
Planning Coordinator, State University of Buffalo, N. Y., and Dr. Thotors
to
mas Robinson, president of Glassboro State University, N. J.
After
giving consideration to the plan since
September, 1967, the BSC trustees
gave their final approval in early
April of last year.
SWIM COACH TAKING
SABBATICAL LEAVE
Eli McLaughlin, Associate Professor of Health and Physical Education
and coach of the Bloomsburg State
College swimming team for the past
ten years, is on sabbatical leave during the 1969-1970 college year pursuing his doctor’s degree at the University of West Virginia.
Northeastern
Smith,
The Bloomsburg State College Concert Choir under the direction of Mr.
William Decker, held its fourth annual “Pops Concert” October 12, in
Haas Auditorium. For the past several years the choir has been extreme-
making appearances at several high schools, on television, and
on the college campus.
ly active,
Pennsylvania’s
Auditor
General.
Robert P. Casey, spoke in Hartline
Science Hall on October 16. His appearance was sponsored by the Young
Democrats
of
Bloomsburg State
Col-
lege.
Bramwell
Fletcher,
international
star of theatre, television, and motion
pictures, presented his nationally acclaimed Bernard Shaw in Haas Auditorium at Bloomsburg State College
on October 8, under the auspices of
the Artists and Lectures Committee.
ADDRESSES WANTED
1969— Yukiji Hachisuka
1962— Robert McAloose
1969 Rebecca J. Spatzer
1966 Gerald L. Robinson
—
—
Pennsyl-
vania’s only accredited and licensed
Nationlal Aeronautics and Space Administration newsman, recently presented a lecture at Bloomsburg State
College, on “The Space Program.”
After giving a few brief introductory
remarks. Smith began a slide lecture where he took the audience on a
journey through the space program
from the first Mercury flight up to
Apollo 11 and a glimpse of what is to
come in future Apollo missions.
Gov. Raymond Shafer has asked the
Senate in Harrisburg to confirm the
appointment of Frank D. Croop, of
Berwick, as a member of the Bloomsburg State College board of trustees.
Croop will succeed J. Howard Deily
for a term which expires in January.
1975.
Notification has been received from
Dr. John W. Keys, chairman, Professional
Services
Board,
American
Board of Examiners in Epeech Pathology and Audiology of the American
Speech and Hearing Association, that
the Center for Learning and Communication Disorders
Bloomsburg
at
State College has been approved as a
public service facility, according to
Richard M. Smith, administrator of
the Center.
Bloomsburg State College was host
at the annual fall meeting of the Marine Science Consortium of Pennsylvania Colleges and Universities on
October 27 in Hartline Science Center.
This is one of only four suclr consortia in the U. S. and is represented by
the following institutions
Bloomsburg State College, Edinboro, S. C..
:
Kutztown
Slippery
S.
C., Millersville,
S. C., West
Rock
C., and
Indiana
Pennsylvania.
S.
68
acres to the present campus the development of another plan was necessary. Before the firm of Price and
Dickey proceeded with plans for both
the lower and upper campus, a committee of three college administra-
Pago twelve
Til
ANDRUSS
provide
plan
S.
C.,
Chester
University
of
1958
Paul
the Dickinson
College registrar, began a two-year
term as treasurer of the Middle States
Association of Collegiate Registrars
and Officers of Admission on February 1.
He was elected at the association’s
annual meeting recently in Atlantic
City to succeed George E. Oettinger,
of Queen College, Flushing,
N. Y.
Sherman
Stanford.
Pennsylvania
State University, was elected presi-
H.
Anderson,
dent.
The Middle States Association, comprising Delaware. New Jersey, New
York. Pennsylvania and the District
of Columbia, is part of a nation-wide
organization and leads all other regional groupings in size of membership.
Anderson plans to attend the natmeeting in New Orleans in
A Bloomsburg State College
ional
April.
graduate, he holds a master's degree
from Southern Illinois University and
took his present Dickinson position
last June after several years as the
Trenton State College registrar.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
ALUMNI DAY
SATURDAY, APRIL
25,
1970
Events scheduled for the week-i nd of April 25 will mark
Day
vlunmi
tion of Dr.
the
The program
as a very special occasion.
Robert
new Commons,
J.
Nossen
to
as the
be named
new
after
year’s
this
includes the Inaugura-
President of BSC, the dedication of
William Scranton, former Governor of
Pennsylvania, the annual Alumni Luncheon and Business Meeting, and reunions of classes of the years ending in 0
and
5.
Alumin graduating before 1920 are invited
to
be the guests of the Alumni
Association at the dinner honoring the class of 1920, the fifty-year class. Those
bringing guests are requested to pay for the guest’s dinner.
It
is
very important that every one attending the 50-year dinner and the
Alumni Luncheon should make reservations by April
back
your class
to the
We
is
not
in
campus and
shall
in
order that
all
the
mav be made.
necessary arrangements
If
15,
reunion
this vear,
it
will
be worth your while
to
participate in the activities.
be expecting you on Alumni Day!
President,
Alumni Association
come
Entered as Second Class Matter
August 8, 1941, at the Post
Office at Bloomsburg, Pa.
Under the Act of March 3, 1879
LOYALTY FUND
PROGRAM OF ANNUAL GIVING
The response
tributors
October
gifts
was
was
At
219.
It
1.
to our
Alumni
With many thanks
made no
that
shall
be
far short of our goal of $10,000
to
those
all
have been able
who have
supported the Lovalty Fund
to those
who have
started.
We
hope
have derived great
satis-
special appeal at this time
list
of those
who, we
feel sure,
is
was
from having supported their Alumni Association and
their
Alma Mater.
IN!
TO BE DETACHED, FILLED OUT, AND RETURNED
Signature
while
in college
Address
(street)
Zip Code
(town)
If
bv
to contact.
contribution to the fund since the campaign
COME ON
Name
of con-
capita giving in previous years has been one
whom we
Annual Giving, our
you will join the
faction
The per
$5.00 or more.
of
we
this rate,
The number
has been gratifying to note, however, that a greater proportion of
dollar for each of the
Program
October appeal was $1740.50.
above address
is
new check
here
Amount
Year of graduation
Mail checks
To
to
Alumni
insure tax deductions,
R. S. C.
Office,
Box
31, B.S.C.
make checks payable
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
to
The
(liiiiiiii
ilnarlerly
Fresident Robert J. Nossen and William A. Lank, President of the Board of Trustees, chat with Ex-Governor
William W. Scranton at the dedication of the Scranton Commons.
The President's Page
Academic
tradition has established a pattern
inaugurated until several months after he assumes
whereby a president
office.
Many have
is
not
question-
ed the rationale, and I, too, will admit to concern during these past few months
But
as we have tried to meet the usual succession of major and minor crises.
there are reasons, good reasons, for the pattern, and I for one am grateful for
the interval.
I have, during this period, come to know my colleagues, those
with whom I work each day; and hopefully, they have come to know and to
some extent at least, to understand me, and the philosophy and the system of
values by which I hope to conduct my office.
By virtue of the time lapse,
therefore, I come to this occasion not as a stranger.
By this time, I have become personally and professionally identified with the College, involved with
it, concerned about it in a way that could not have been last September or
October.
An academic community,
a college community cannot exist without tenFar more dangerous would be complacency, self-satisfaction, fear of
sions.
struggle, or desire for escape.
But
conflict
must be constructive;
it
must be
based, ultimately, upon mutual respect within the academic community, upon
and upon understanding.
tolerance,
We
have much to do as all of us settle down to our daily responsibilities.
will, indeed, exceed our grasp, and the heaven of academia will
continue to be on a distant shore. We will have conflict leading to inevitable
tensions during those years given to us as students, faculty, alumni, administra-
Our reach
tors,
and
trustees,
and
confines of the campus;
the contributions
as those
we
who
represent us and work for us beyond the
will have, too,
we make, however
I
small,
know, our pleasures derived from
to the growth and welfare and
functioning of Bloomsburg State College.
DR.
ROBERT
J.
NOSSEX
Dr.
Nossen
As
Installed
Is
12th President of College
Academic communities and college
communities cannot exist without tenFar more dangerous would be
sions.
complacency, self satisfaction, fear of
But
struggle, or desire for escape.
‘
must be constructive, it must
ultimately
upon mutual
be based
respect within the academic community, upon tolerance, and upon understanding,” stated Dr. Robert J. Nossen after being installed as twelfth
President of Bloomsburg State College Saturday afternoon. April 18.
Presiding since September 1969. he
was formally installed during cereconflict
monies conducted by
Pennsylvania
of Education
David
H.
Kurtzman.
Dr. Nossen built his address around
the word “Tensions,” stating “Conflict must be constructive.
It must
be based ultimately upon mutual resSecretary
pect within the academic community,
tolerance, and understanding.”
He added, “There is as little justification to adopt policies or practices
based upon immature or irresponsible demands as there is to retain a
status quo for fear of changes.”
He
pledged his use of college resources
to reach educational goals as efficiently as possible.
Dr. Oscar Lanford, President
of
State University College,
Fredonia,
N. Y., stated, “Although higher education in the decade of the sixties can
be characterized by the word ‘change’
it
has changed perhaps less during
the immediate past than many other
aspects of our society.
“If higher education is to continue
to be one of the main driving forces
of our society, then it must change
much more rapidly in the decade
ahead than it has during the decade
just entered. Critics of higher education. both friendly
and otherwise,
have asserted that while colleges and
universities have been the principal
agent in social and political reform,
the University itself is very slow to
change or as one has put it
wellnigh impervious to change.
“It is clear that the demands for
reform of higher education are to a
considerable degree justified. Questions concerning the objectives of various levels of education; the varying
of abilities, motivation, and learning
methods;
administration
policies;
courses examination procedures; the
maturity of today’s high school graduate; and the intergrading of constituent groups of college communities
.
.
into decisions regarding policies, call
for answers, and the answers call for
major change or reform.
“It is to the state colleges and universities that the nation will turn to
JULY,
1970
in meeting the
needs of the last quarter of the twentieth and the first part of the twenty
an increasing degree
centuries.”
After an initial processional of
faculty and dignitaries, the invocation was given by the Rev. James T.
Berger, St. Paul’s Episcopal Church,
SCRANTON
first
Bloomsburg.
William A. Lank, President of the
of Trustees of BSC, presided.
Dr. Nossen further commented,
"Tensions do exist among the younger
people for whose education we are
responsible. There have been ’chang
COMMONS
DEDICATED
Board
es,’
many
of
them good, and there
will be others, inevitably and necessarily, but hopefully, they will be
There is as little jusconstructive.
tification to adopt policies or practices based upon immature or irresponsible demands as there is to retain a status quo for fear of changes.
“We have much to do as we settle
down to our daily responsibilities.
Our reach will, indeed, exceed our
grasp, and the heaven of academia
continue to be on a distant shore.
We will have conflict leading to inevitable tensions during those years
given to us as students, faculty, alumni, administrators, and trustees,
and as those who represent us and
work for us beyond the confines of the
campus. However we will have, too,
our pleasures derived from the contributions we make, no matter how small
to the growth and welfare of the functioning of Bloomsburg State College.”
One hundred and ninety delegates
represented colleges, universities, and
learned societies throughout the country in the procession along with other
will
“I am delighted and proud to have
a building named for me where men
and women can ‘come and get it,’ ”
concluded William W. Scranton, former governor of Pennsylvania, at the
dedication program at
State College for the
Bloomsburg
W.
Scranton Commons and the renaming
William
of several residence halls.
He added, “Let
us not be too provin-
and think of Bloomsburg State
College in terms of just the communWe are trying hard to change
ity.
cial
our
multi-type
state institutions to
institutions and we must adopt broad
scope thinking and objectives.
“For generations people have unteaching
derrated members of the
profession. In the Soviet Union teachWe
ers are held in high respect.
They should
still have this to learn.
have our
full
support and understandmake a better
ing in their efforts to
and more informed America.”
Pledging his full support to the college’s new president Dr. Robert Nos“Let
us
sen, Scranton concluded,
never forget this college was dedicated to the teaching profession.”
Accepts Building
In accepting the Scranton
Commons
members
of the college community.
Nearly 1,000 guests attended a luncheon in Scranton Commons prior to
the inauguration. At this function, Dr.
A. Lank, president of the
Board of Trustees, spoke of occasion as “one honoring a man who has
contributed so much to the education
Nossen recognized distinguished guests
and especially relatives and personal
friends with whom he has been asso-
of
ciated in his career.
Edwin M. Barton,
of the
Columbia
County Historical Society, spoke briefly, commenting on the Society’s pleassure in its new affiliation with the college and of the Society’s entrusting its
historical collections to the college’s
care.
Benediction was made by the Rev.
Frank W. Ake, president of the
Bloomsburg Area Community Ministries.
Singing of the Bloomsburg
State
College Alma Mater concluded the
program. An afternoon tea was held
at the college Commons, followed by
the Inaugural Ball Saturday evening,
both being well-attended.
William
Pennsylvania
and
who
has
given so generously of his time for
others.”
Board members presented were:
William E. Booth, Danville; E. Guy
Bangs, Millville; Gerald Beierschmitt,
Mt. Carmel; Edgar E. FenstermachBerer, Berwick; Frank D. Croop,
wick, and George W. Heffner, Pottsville.
Dr. Nossen paid tribute to the efof former Governor Scranton
and former President Harvey A. An-
forts
Published quarterly by the Alumni Association
of the
Bloomsburg State College,
Bloomsburg, Penna. 17815.
Second-Class
Postage Paid at Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania.
Send P O D. Form No. 3579 to the AL-
—
UMNI OFFICE, BLOOMSBURG
COLLEGE, BLOOMSBURG, PA.
STATE
17815
Page one
plans
in the development of
He
which have become a reality.
in
concluded, “I am proud to
be
Bloomsburg making this college a cre-
druss
dit
to
all
of
us,
the
and nation.”
Aware
of
Needs
from the
In extending greetings
Representative
General
Assembly,
Kent Shelhamer observed, ‘‘Our educational program is a passport to the
In Harrisburg we
future for youth.
are aware of the continuing needs of
our schools, and I wish to commend
the men on this hill with the vision to
make possible buildings such as the
Scranton Commons.”
Congratulations from the community were extended by C. Martin Lutz,
mayor, and Dr. George W. Hoffman,
director, Bureau of State Colleges and
DepartUniversities, Pennsylvania
ment of Education, who compared the
growth of state colleges in the past
nine years.
Howard P. Fenstemaker, president
Alumni Association,
ol the General
11,000
brought greetings from the
membership and pledged support
of
the Association to Dr. Nossen.
Fulfilling
possible in the development of its college system.” He paid tribute to Governor Scranton’s interest in the education and the progress the system made
during his tenure.
Greetings were extended from the
College Council by Jean Reese, secretary. Other student participation involved the naming of Columbia Hall,
Anne Peacock; renaming North Hall
Residence
Hall,
Northumberland
South
Stanley Rakowski; renaming
Hall to Luzerne Residence Hall, Linda
Szoke; renaming East Hall to Montour Residence Hall, Renee Zimmerman; renaming West Hall to SchuylResidence Hall.
Cindy Gross, with Frank
kill
S.
Davis,
director, computer service, outlined the purposes of this new center.
The Madrigal Singers, under the
direction of William K. Decker, presented four numbers, while the inJr.,
vocation and benediction were offered
by the Rev. Benjamin Jacobson, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church.
Dr. Robert Miller, chairman, Committee on International Education at
Bloomsburg State College,
accompanied a team
of Latin-American
Development Specialists to the State
of Bahia, Brazil, to explore possible
new programs of cooperation between
Bahia and Pennsylvania on behalf of
the Pennsylvania-Bahia Partners of
the Alliance, and the Committee on
International Education at BSC. The
visit was to result in the investigation
of new projects and the assessment
and development of education projects
which have previously been
Nearly all the events scheduled for
capacity
BSC’s Alumni Day drew
crowds as nature provided benevolent weather for the weekend activities.
Class
and
identified.
—
reunions
featuring
the
Fiftieth get-together
presentation of three Distinguish-
class
of
1920’s
ed Service Awards
day
— marked
the two
affair.
began Friday night with
assembling for dinners, dances and informal at-homes.
The full schedule Saturday began
for
get-together
with an informal
alumni and faculty in the morning
and ended with the play, “The Docby the
of Himself,”
tor In Spite
Bloomsburg Players in the evening.
superintendentDr. John Magill,
elect of the Bloomsburg Area School
of BSC,
District and an alumnus
spoke to the annual meeting of the
He reviewed
Alumni Association.
the number of BSC students and gradFestivities
various
classes
who entered
uates
Responsibility
Senator Preston B. Davis spoke of
evidthe new Commons as ‘‘visible
ence of the State’s determination to
fulfill its responsibility as rapidly as
Page two
AWARDS TO ALUMNI
3
Comomnwealth
World War
II
the services during
and called the
roll
of
who
those
twenty-seven names of
sacrificed their lives during that con-
Alumni Association, a dynamic
church school teacher, and reporter
and editor of The Morning Press,
where his untiring influence was directed toward the progress of the community and the college.”
Schuyler worked on The Morning
Press staff forty years, the last twen-
the
ty-one as editor. He retired April 1.
Prior to presenting Schuyler’s award,
Howard Fenstemaker, president of
the Alumni Association, said Schuyler had been recommended for the
DSA many times, stating, “We’ve
been trying to give Ed a DSA for
about five years now.”
Schuyler accepted the award, stating, “I don’t deserve this award.
I
do appreciate it. Thank you.”
Change In Constitution
Howard Fenstemaker announced a
proposed change in the Association’s
constitution.
This would install a
as an ex-officio member of the Association’s
Board
No
action
proposal until
it is published four times in the Alumni Quartrely.
flict.
He
of Directors.
can be taken on
this
Finances Good
closed with a prayer written by
a Dutch girl, read at Margraten Military Cemetery, Holland, last Memorial Day, dedicated to the twenty-seven
and all others buried there.
Two
lifelong educators
and a form-
er editor of The Morning Press were
presented the Bloomsburg State ColDistinglege Alumni Association’s
uished Service Award at the luncheon.
Miss Grace Beck, Sunbury, class of
1923, was cited as a “distinguished
alumnus”, who was a “dynamic teacher and administrator in elementary
education for forty-six years, a member and officer of civic and professional organizations in her local community and state, loved by students
and colleagues everywhere.”
Miss Beck received her B.S from
BSC in 1923 and her Master’s from
BSC and Bucknell University.
Wesley E. Davies, Shavertown, class
of 1919, was cited as a “career educateacher and administrator for
tor,
forty-three years in Pennsylvania, an
enthusiastic leader in civic, church,
and professional activities of his home,
community and state, and highly esteemed for loyal friendships and applied Christian ethics.”
Davies received his graduate degrees from Pennsylvania State University.
He was associated with the Luzerne
county superintendent of schools office for thirty-five years, as assistant
superintendent and for four and onehalf years before his retirement in
1969 as superintendent of schools.
Edward F. Schuyler, former editor
of The Morning Press, class of 1924,
was cited as a “former member and
secretary of the Board of Directors of
Financially, the Association is in
good shape, although costs of operaslightly
tions
is
This
was
more than income.
attributed to the cost of
printing the Alumni Quarterly and
distributing it to every member for
whom the Association has an address.
was announced dues were being
from $2.00 to $5.00 and that
It
raised
$25,000
would be available
Mary McNinch
in
the
loan fund this year.
Dr. Robert J. Nossen. BSC’s twelfth president, said BSC had undergone
many changes this year and would
undergo many more in the years to
come.
He mentioned the constant
process of reevaluation and revision
college policies
and structures receive.
He mentioned some
changes.
possible future
They included a calendar
change that would prevent the fall
semester from running into January,
more emphasis on the arts and scienwithout de-emphasizing
programs in health
areas, such as nursing and
technology.
He concluded “You’re all a
the ‘now’ of BSC.”
ces
training,
teacher
related
medical
part of
Pass Resolution
The Association passed
a resolution
supporting Dr. Nossen,
Board
of
Trustees, and college administration
in their leadership in all aspects of
BSC’s growth and change in these
"troubled times” for college campuses.
Officers elected to the Association’s
Directors:
President,
of
Howard F. Fenstemaker; Vice President, Millard Ludwig; Secretary, Col.
Elw'ood Wagner; Treasurer, Earl A.
Board
Gehrig.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
CLASS OF
The class
Friday
1920
of
evening,
HONORED
1920
was honored on
April
24,
by
being
the guests of the Alumni Association
at the annual dinner held in the new
Commons.
William
W.
Scranton
Howard F. Fenstemaker, President
of the Alumni Association, acted as
Master of Ceremonies. The invocation was given by the Rev. Foster L.
Fennybacker, husband of Grace GotPennybacker, a
shall
class.
member
of the
Dr. Robert Nossen, new President
was presented to the
guests and addressed the group. Leroy Creasy, president of the class,
gave the response for the class.
Also joining with the class of 1920
were members of the classes of 1905,
of the College,
1910,
and
1915.
guests of the dinner were
of
the
Alumni
Distinguished Service Award, including the following: Mrs. Vera Hemingway Housenick ’05: Dr. Kimber
C. Kuster T3 and Fred W. Diehl ’09.
Dr. Kuster and Mr. Diehl were accompanied by their wives.
Special
former
DR.
recipients
ANDRUSS NAMED
PRESIDENT EMERITUS
“No governing body of this college
has been faced with more problems
then the present Board,” Dr. Harvey
A. Andruss declared as Bloomsburg
State College bestowed the
title
of
“President Emeritus” on him.
In his response he said “
I
fervently beseech every one to support
the new administration and the Board
of Trustees from this day forward so
that Bloomsburg, as it becomes bigger
.
will also
become
.
.
better.”
Dr. Andruss w'as honored in the climaxing event of the first day’s activities marking the formal inauguration
of Dr. Robert J. Nossen as new president of the college.
Dr. Andruss was cited during an
Awards Convocation in Haas auditorium in a ceremony in which over 100
students were recognized for
their
achievements at the college.
The
title was bestowed on Dr. Andruss by
William A. Lank, president of the
Board of Trustees who gave Andruss
“most of the credit for the development and expansion of a small teachers college into a substantial institution of higher learning.
“Under his guidance and foresight,”
Lank said, “our college has grown to
a multi-million dollar educational institution, supported by a faculty of approximately 275 members and serving
as a medium for the training and development of 3,700 members of the student body.”
In his response, Dr. Andruss said he
was “duly impressed” noting that the
only other recipient was the late Dr.
David J. Waller who had served the
former Normal School a total of 27
for this consideration and max-k of
continuing confidence. No governing
body of this college has been faced
with more problems than the present
Board. These Trustees inspire trust
and merit the confidence of the college community.”
Dr. Andruss pointed out that in the
last three decades there have been 30
or more trustees who were all good
men, putting the college and its policies above personal or private considerations. He indicated many of them
have given not only their time, but
also their means to serve the college.
Dr. Andruss mentioned that the late
Reginald S.
Hemingway Esquire,
Judge C. William Kreisher, Superintendent Fred Deihl, all past pi'esidents
of the Board of Trustees and
Lank,
the current president, deserved special
commendation from everyone. He said
that he was happy to have the opportunity to voice it publicly.
Dr. Andruss continued, “A few days
ago. running my finger along a set of
books, I paused at the Russian novel
Turgenev’s ‘Father and Sons’ written over 100 years ago. The title recalled to my mind the modern ‘generation gap.’
More than that, it
brought to mind the use of the term
‘nihilist’ in the present day in conjunction with some of the younger
generation. Turgenev did not oi-iginate the epithet ‘nihilist’ but he did
give it more than the usual political
connotation in Russia at the time the
freedom of the serfs was about to
take place. Nihilist as a word can be
defined in almost as many ways as
those who try to give this Latin word
modern meaning.
Orignally, nihil
meant ‘nothing’ so those youth in
Tui’genev’s day were said to ‘accept
nothing’
or
nothing’
‘x-espect
by
those who wanted the status quo to
be continued or to be changed more
slowly.
“Certainly there is visible evidence
here today in the attendance of these
selected students and their parents
that there still continues an appreciation of scholarship, service and unselfish devotion to this college w'hich bids
fair to offset the publicity given by the
newspapers, radios, and television, to
who want change, want it right
and have no conception how the
desired change is to take place, what
it will entail, and how it is to be finanthose
now
r
,
ced.
“A college is a community organized for living and learning. This week
marks the formal beginning of a new
administration. It is my fervent hope
and expectation that it will surpass the
past. This is possible only if all concerned including alumni, townspeople,
students, faculty and legislators supthe Board of Trustees and the
new president.
poi’t of
“While expressing gratefulness of
honor accorded me today, I fervently beseech every one to support
this
Board
years.
the new' administration and the
“This presentation fills me with the
deepest emotion which is equaled only
by my gratefulness to the Trustees
Trustees from this day forward so
that Bloomsburg as it becomes bigger
JULY,
1970
of
will also
become
better.”
INAUGURAL WEEK
MARKED
IS
BY ACTIVITIES
The Inaugural Week
at
Bloomsburg
State College was ushered in on Sunday, April 12 with an Awards Day
Convocation and dinner, and a concert
by the BSC Maroon and Gold Symphonic Band.
In addition to the numerous other eventse that were held, the
week was climaxed by the Inaugural
Convocation held at 2:30 p.m. Saturday. April 18. at Haas Auditorium.
The Awards Day Convocation was
held in Haas Auditorium at which time
Dr. Harvey A. Andi’uss, who served
for 30 years as president of BSC and
retired last September, was presented
a President Emeritus Certificate by
William A. Lank, president of the
Board of Trustees.
Service Keys
convocation
Also featured at the
was the awarding of service keys to
sixteen seniors. These keys ai'e given
for “outstanding service to 10 per
cent or less of the senior class who
accumulate a minimum of 20 points
for participation in various activities
during their four years of college.”
This is the highest award given by the
college community.
Tw'elve lifetime passes were given
to senior athletes who have participated in varsity sports for four years. The
certificates,
thirty-one recipients
of
indicating their inclusion in the publication “Who’s Who in American Colleges and Universities,” were recognized.
Fourteen BSC scholarships were
awarded and twenty-one students were
recognized for academic honors.
The convocation was followed by a
dinner for college administration per-
awards,
sonnel, the recipients of the
and their parents.
The day was concluded with the
BSC Mai'oon and Gold
Symphonic Band under the direction
concert by the
Stephen C. Wallace.
Other Activities
Other activities during the week inexhibit
cluded Tuesday, April 14
Landscape Artists
of Pennsylvania
w'ith an accompanying talk by Andred Hudson; Wednesday, April 15
the dedication of the new William W.
Scranton Commons, the naming of
the new nine story women’s residence
of
—
hall,
the dedication of the
new RCA
Computer Center, and the renaming of
four residence halls on campus at a
special dedication luncheon, attended
by the former Governor of the Commonwealth, William W. Scranton,
along with other dignitiaries.
Friday, Api’il 17
an outstanding
Dr.
cultural presentation
featuring
Frank Pallano, baritone, and Dr. Robert Marvel, pianist, both of State University College. Fredonia, N. Y., appearing in concert; Satui'day, April
18
an inaugural luncheon for invited guests; the Inaugural Convocation
and an Inaugural Ball that evening;
Sunday, April 19
the week’s activities concluded with a performance
by the Concert Choir of BSC in Hass
Auditorium at 7 p.m.
—
—
—
Page three
AWARDS DAY DURING
INAUGURAL WEEK
awards.
“Inaugural Week’’ was personally
dedicated as “Loyalty Week” by the
Robert J.
college’s president, Dr.
Nossen.
Nossen used the term during the
course of his remarks in the “Awards
Day” ceremony in which a number of
students were honored and Dr. Harvey A. Andruss was designated “President Emeritus.”
The new president stated, “To see
that for which we exist take place and
to see those who understand what education is for, is to understand why we
exist,”
Turning to the honored students,
he said, “This college exists for purposes of sound education. You students who are being honored are the
culmination of our efforts.
“We want parents to participate in
activities of the college and we want
students to honor their parents
for the many kinds of support given
students by their parents.
.
.
Elton Hunsinger, dean of students,
presented “Who’s Who Certificates
and Service Keys” to twenty-seven
students who demonstrated ability,
scholastic
personal
achievement,
traits, leadership, potential usefulness
to society and professional promise.
Lifetime athletic passes were given
whom
to twelve athletes, each of
earned a major award during his college career in one
specific
sport.
These awards were made by Russell
Houk, director of athletics.
Scholarship awards made on aca-
demic achievemtnt in specific areas
were made to fourteen students by
Robert Duncan, director of financial
aids.
Dr. John Hoch, dean of instruction
presented academic honor awards to
twenty-eight students who had attained at least a 3.5 cumulative average for the duration of their college
career.
.
Debt Is Owed
“Things don’t happen by accident.
Dreams are worthwhile but must be
fulfilled with much hard work and
sacrifice.
We have a great debt to
the people of our commonwealth who
are willing to tax themselves to support our colleges and universities. We
appreciate the interest and support of
our alumni.
performed Handel’s orajudas Maccabaus” Sunday
choir
cert
torio
evening, April 19, to conclude the week
of celebration for President Robert J.
Nossen’s inauguration.
The performance, conducted by Wilthe
K. Decker, chairman of
music department, was attended by a
to
large audience including several chor-
who helped make your
college
pos-
is based in some way on
disappointments.
Each of us falls
short of the goals we set. That doesn’t
mean we should give up and say that
our life was not worthwhile.”
Dr. Nossen referred to serious and
difficult problems “but we have much
on which to build. We can work in a
creative sense. There is no hope in
working in a negative snese.”
He said the country is in a time of
stress and “some fail to stand up for
our country. If we are unwilling to
work for our country, it can only become worse.
“All
life
‘Don’t Sell Short’
“There are some who would destroy
our civilization. In the history of mankind, nothing great has come out of
ashes. This has happened only in mythology.”
He declared, “I am personally dedicating this week as ‘Loyalty Week.’
Loyalty to several concepts
to the
College, to your parents,
the
to
Bloomsburg area.
“Don’t sell BSC short
and don’t
apologize for it. If you have no pride
in BSC, you can have no pride in
yourself. If you wouldn’t have come
here, you would have paid far more
than you did or than you might have
been able to afford.”
Dr. Nossen introduced William A.
Lank, president of Ihe Board of Trustees, who also paid tribute to the students
who received honors and
—
.
Page four
.
conductors from throughout Penn-
al
sylvania.
A professional orchestra,
including string players from Philadelphia and Washington, corraborated
with the choir to present Handel’s
work in his original orchestration.
were Mary Decker, sopBeth Powlus, mezzo-soprano;
Richard Stanislaw, tenor;
Timothy
Hoffman, bass, and Lois Sturgeon,
Soloists
rano;
harpsichordist.
Highlights of this very long work
were “Hail, Judea Happyland,” “See
Conquering Hero Comes”,
“O
Wretched Israel”, and “Hallelujah,
the
Amen.”
The
performance was extremely
successful and the audience responded
by giving the singers and orchestra a
standing ovation.
Dr. Charles H. Carlson, director of
Graduate Studies at Bloomsburg State
College, has been elected president of
Ihe Pennsylvania State College and
University Graduate Deans AssociaDr. Carlson joined the faculty
of Bloomsburg State College in 1959
as associate professor of music and
was elevated to a full professorship
tion.
of
Music
ing
in 1962.
director
of
He was named
graduate
June, 1967 and was
named
a
all
act-
studies in
director of
graduate studies in October, 1968. Dr.
Carlson served as chairman of the
Music and as a director of the Maroon and Gold Band and Studio Band.
al-
paid-up
dues card were admitted free
the Alumni Luncheon, and
We
the College paid the bill.
have been informed that the
to
College is now obliged to
continue this policy, and
Alumni Association
the
have to bear the expenses
dent to the luncheon.
Accordingly, the Board of
ectors, at their
dis-
that
will
inci-
Dir-
meeting on Al-
umni Day, voted to raise the
Alumni dues from $2.00 to $5.00.
The first $5.00 of your gift to the
Loyalty Fund will be set aside
as dues, and any amount above
that will be put into the Loyalty Fund for scholarships and
other projects approved by the
Board of Directors.
Proposed Amendment
back and say ‘thanks’
sible.
Throughout the years,
umni who showed
to
Constitution
The Bloomsburg State College con-
liam
those
YOUR ATTENTION
CHOIR CONCERT
CONCLUDES WEEK
“You worked hard and learned in
campus facilities. I hope you will look
all
PLEASE GIVE THIS
(To be voted on at 1971 Alumni
Meeting)
TO: Secretary, Alumni Association of
the Bloomsburg State College
1. At present, Section 2, Article II,
reads as follows:
The Board of Directors shall be fifteen in number, five of whom shall
be elected each year from the membership of the Corporation to serve
Said
for a term of three years.
Directors shall be elected at the
annual meeting, and shall be organthereafter and
ized immediately
elect their officers aforesaid.
2. To effect closer working relationships with soon-to-be and graduates
of the college, we propose that Section 2, Article II read as follows:
The Board of Directors shall be sixnumber— fifteen elected
teen in
members and one ex-officio member. Five Directors shall be elec-
ted each year from the membership of the Corporation at its an-
nual meeting to serve a term of
three years.
At said meeting, a
representative elected by the current graduating class of the college,
will be invited to serve as an exofficio member of the Board until
the next annual meeting of the corporation.
Said Directors shall be
organized immediately after the
annual meeting and elect their
of-
ficers aforesaid.
A
highlight of the festivities of InWeek at Bloomsburg State
Dr.
College was a joint concert by
Frank Pullano, Baritone, and Dr.
augural
Robert Marvel, pianist-composer, on
Friday. April 17, in Haas Auditorium.
Both artists are members of the faculty of State University College, Fredonia, N. Y.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
3tt
ifflmnriam
1918— Helen Lord (Mrs. Arthur Powell) Kingston, Pa.
1902—Helen Reice ( Mrs. James Irvin), Bloomsburg, Pa.
1908 Florence G. Beddell, Summit
—
Hill Pa
1917 —Gertrude
Methodist
Lecher,
Manor, Tunkhannock, Pa.
1925— Mary E. Whalen Mrs. Francis Farrell) Shenandoah Heights, Pa.
1911— Iris Avery (Mrs. George C.
Armitage, Jr.), Harvey’s Lake, Pa.
1949 Bertha Grolf, Kulpmont, Pa.
i
—
1892 — Louise
Moss
(Mrs.
Benson), Haverton, Pa.
—
Elmira Bankes
Bloomsburg, Pa.
1936
D.,
E.
Shaffer,
A.
R.
Cora Shaffer Keller ’01
Mrs. Cora Keller, 1439 Spring Garden avenue, Berwick, died at the Hampie Nursing Home, Nescopeck, April
She was born at Weston and in
il.
her early life lived in Berwick where
she was a school teacher. Later she
taught school for twenty-five years
Fenn Brook, Harrisburg School dis-
m
She was a member of Grace
United Methodist Church, Harrisburg;
and Retired Teachers Association.
trict.
Dr. Howard K. Rarig ’05
Dr. H. R. Rarig died March 2 in the
VA Hospital. Wilkes-Barre, where he
had been a patient one month.
He was born at Catawissa R. D. 1,
on July 23, 1885, son of the late Lloyd
He
and Catherine Mensch Rarig.
from the
received his AB and
University of Michigan in 1910. Surgery was studied at Jefferson Medical College in 1913 and he received a
Master of Science Degree in Surgery
from the University of Pennsylvania
MD
in
1927.
He was also a permanent officer of
the U. S. Public Health Service and
Veterans Administration.
He was
af-
filiated with the Columbia County Medical Society, Medical Society of Penn-
sylvania and Fellow American Medical Association.
Dr. Rarig practiced in Berwick for
over thirty years. He had served as
a captain in the U.S. Army Medical
Corps during World War I, serving
overseas for tw'o years. He had also
practiced medicine in New York and
New Jersey.
Dr. J. R. Brobst ’ll
Dr. J. R. Brobst, 204 East street,
Bloomsburg, widely-known physician
and Columbia County Coroner, died
March
24 in Bloomsburg Hospital.
Dr. Brobst had been a patient at the
hospital since last December 23, excepting for two weeks spent in Geisinger Medical Center.
A native of Bloomsburg. Dr. Brobst
was a general practitioner in this area
for fifty -three years.
He was a graduate of Bloomsburg
High School,
Bloomsburg Normal
School,
JULY,
and Jefferson Medical
1970
Col-
Maude Dent Banghart ’27
Mrs. Lee W. Banghart, the former
After
lege, Philadelphia, in 1915.
inter nshop ill Cooper Hospital,
Cam-
Anna Maude Dent,
den, N. J., and Childrens Hospital,
Flnladelphia, Dr. Brobst began his
practice oi medicine in Bloomsburg,
until the entry of the United States in
World War
204 Park Boulevard, Park Place Village, Berwick,
She had been ill for
died April 6.
several years and had been hospitalized since February 18.
I.
He served
Mrs. Banghart was born in Bowmantown, Tenn., and had been a resident of this area since she was one
year old.
She was a graduate of
Scott Township High School and had
taught school for a number of years
in Columbia County.
in the Medical Corps for
two years in France and attained the
rank oi Captain. Following the war,
he studied at the University oi Edin-
and in St. Louis, Mo.
Upon discharge from the service he
resumed his practice of medicine.
Dr. Brobst was recognized in medi-
boro, Scotland,
cal circles as an astute diagnostician
and worked long hours each day at
his chosen profession.
He was serving his fourth term as
county coroner, being elected last
term with no opposition, and endorsement of both parties. Dr. Brobst was
Irma Miller Nagule
Irma
an avid hunter and fisherman and
spent as much time as his busy sche-
Park from 1917 to 1969. She did subwork in Union and Roselle
Park. She was an active member of
Mrs.
St. Paul’s Lutheran Church.
Naugle is survived by her husband,
two sons, two daughters, and eifjht
dule could allow at these sports.
A member
oi
stitute
Washington Lodge 265
F. and A.M., he was also a member
of Caldwell Consistory; First Presbyterian Church; Loyal Order of
Moose
Veterans of Foreign Wars; American Legion; Izaak Walton League,
Fairmont Township; Columbia CounPennsylvania
Society;
ty Medican
Medical Society; Bloomsburg Hospital
623;
Staff; Alumni Association of Jefferson Hospital, and Pennsylvania Coron-
ers Association.
Helen E. Sutliff ’23, ’34
Miss Helen E. Sutliff, Harrisburg,
died April
Camp
in a convalescent home in
native of Bloomsburg,
a daughter of the late Wil7
Hill.
A
she was
liam B. and Ella Stump
Sutliff.
Her
was dean of Bloomsburg State
Teachers College for many years.
Miss Sutliff taught third grade in
Harrisburg for 44 years. She had also
been a member of Pine Street Presbyterian Church, Daughters of American Revolution, National Education
Association, PSEA of Harrisburg, an
honorary member of the PTA Harrisburg Little Theatre Group, the Harrisburg Symphony and the Scottish
father
Rite Society.
Rachel Balles Malone ’25
Mrs. Rachel Balles Malone, 1304
Tab Street, Odenton, Maryland, died
October 18, 1969 as a result of injuries received in an automobile acci-
grandchildren.
Marion Van Horn Fray
•
’33
Mrs. Marion Van Horn Fray died
March 1 at the Jersey Shore HosBorn in Register, Huntington
pital.
Township, Luzerne County, she had
resided in Avis for the past two years.
She had formerly resided in Beach
Haven, Catawissa and Orangeville
where her husband had served as
pastor.
She was in her twenty-first year of
teaching. She was a fourth grade teacher at Jersey Shore and had also
taught in Catawissa.
She was a member of
United Methodist Church
active in the affairs of
Town
Hill
Avis
the
was
and
WCTU
of the
Methodist Charge.
Dr. Robert A. Ohl ’39
Dr. Robert A. Ohl, 3729 Chili Ave.,
Rochester, N. Y., died in March in
Genessee Hospital. He had been hosone week.
A graduate of Berwick High
High School, and Bloomsburg State
pitalized
College,
he
received
Master’s
his
Degree from Columbia University. He
taught school for a year at Harrisburg
Academy and was employed
dent.
former
Mrs. Malone had been a teacher
secondary schools in her home
state of Pennsylvania for many years
before coming to Jessup, Maryland,
to reside at the time of her marriage
She moved 12 years
20 years ago.
later to Odenton. Although she was an
active member of the Severn Baptist Church, she often attended the
Wesley Chapel Bible Class at Wesley Chapel, which her husband teachShe was a member of the Womes.
an’s Club of Jessup and the Jessup
Homemaker’s Club. She is survived
by her husband, a step-son, three
brothers, and a sister.
lab.
in
’ll
(Mrs. A. K. Naugle)
died January 15, 1970 in St. Peter’s
Hospital, New Brunswick, N. J., after
a lingering illness. After graduating
from Bloomsburg, she taught in the
Ricketts School System for two years.
She and her husband lived in Roselle
Miller
ACF
at
the
Industries in the photo
He was a veteran
of
World War
II.
He was employed as associate professor in the School of Photography
at Rochester Institute of Technology
and was listed in the current edition
of Who’s Who in the East.
While a resident of Berwick, he was
of
Berwick
Baptist
a member
Church, and in Rochester, for the past
12 years, he was a member of the
Church of
First United Methodist
North
Chili,
Rochester, N. Y.
service was held
A memorial
on
April 14 at the Rochester Institute of
Technology. An industrial and scienti-
Page
five
1917—
photographic reference collection is
being assembled at Rochester Institute
oi Technology (KIT) in memory of
lie
the highly esteemed teacher.
Capt. Daniel li. Bonham ’41
Retired Navy Reserve Capt. Daniel
H. Bonham, 5U, who retired in October as administrative officer for the
Navy’s
office
oi
civilian
manpower
management, died January 20 in
Georgetown University Hospital after
heart surgery. He lived at 3702 Ivydale Drive, Annandale.
Capt. Bonham, who was born in
Forty Fort, Pa., was a flight instructor and pilot during World War II.
He was on active duty 13 years and
was a civilian Navy employe 14
years. From 1966 to 1969 he was commanding officer of the Naval Reserve Officer School 5-7 in Alexandria.
Eugene P. Sandel ’59
Eugene P. Sandel, thirty-two, 113
North Fourth Street, Hamburg, died
in January at Reading Hospital where
he had been a patient for two months.
Death was due to complications. He
had been in ill health for fourteen
months.
He had taught in the Hamburg Area
High School for the past nine years.
He was a member of the Bethany
United Methodist Church, Hamburg;
member of senior choir and administrative board of the church. He belonged to the National and Pennsylvania Teachers Associations, Berks
County Teachers of Mathematics Association and the Hamburg
cation Association.
Area Edu-
Dr. Martin Pestei
Dr. H. W. Martin Pestei, 606 Park
Court, Williamsport, husband of Dr.
Hildegard Pestei, reference librarian
a
at Bloomsburg State College for
number
of
years, died in
March
in
Williamsport Hospital.
He was a native of Lititz, Germany
and came from Frankfurt, Germany
to the United States in 1951 and to
the Williamsport area in 1956.
James J.
J. O’Toole,
O’Toole
popular member
ol the Bloomsburg State College faculty, died suddenly at Geisinger MediO’Toole was
cal Center, Danville.
rushed to the emergency center of the
hospital.
An associate professor of
speech at BSC, he began teaching in
James
of last year. He was also
director of the college’s forensic pro-
September
gram and was debating coach.
He came here from Villanova
versity, residing in
Sherwood
O’Toole had served
was a graduate
of
in the
Uni-
Village.
Army and
Muskegon Junior
He received his B.S. degree
from Marquette University and his
M.A. from Wayne State University.
He had completed his course requirements for the Doctor of Philosophy
College.
degree.
In 1962 he joined the speech department of Villanova. He had previously taught in public and parochial
Page
six
schools in Michigan.
He had been president of the Debating Association of Pennsylvania ColAmerican
leges, a member of the
Forensic Association, the Speech Association of America, and the Speech
Association of Eastern States.
O’Toole was a member of St. ColCatholic Church, the Columbia-
umba
Montour Chapter
the Barbershop
Quartets’ Society, and had been active
in
Boy Scout
of
activities.
Ijau
Contributors of the Loyalty Fund to
April 16, 1970, not previously reported:
Others Samuel L. Bredbenner be1902—
quest, Newman Center (by Rev. Bernard T. Petrina).
1892 Mrs. E. E. McKelvey
1896— Mrs. Mrytle A. Van Wie
—
—
Nevin E. Funk
Miss Bess Long
1905 Mrs. Blanche M. Grimes, Mrs.
Vera
H. Housenick, Mrs. Carrie C.
1907—
Myers, Mrs. Helen M. Hemingway.
Dr. Charles L. Mowrer, Mrs. Elizabeth
M. Lesker, Jessie Y. Shambach, Mrs.
1901
Anna Thomas
1906
1909—Dr. Carroll D.
Raymond
Champlin, W.
Girton
Mrs. Ada M. Bittenbender.
Mrs. S. J. Conner, Mrs. H. M. Chisohlm, Mrs. Robert B. Fleischer, Mrs.
Harold H. Hayman
1908 Mrs. H. G.
Williams, Mary
South wood, Mrs. George S. Westfield
Harold L. Moyer, Fred W.
Diehl, Mrs. L Clair Conner, Martha
Black, Mrs. W. Milton Brown, Anna
Kushke
1910 Mrs. Byron Fairchild, Frank
R. Adams, Julia Gregg Brill, Sara F.
Lewis, Mrs. Fred B. Steig, Mrs. Jared
Montanye, Mrs. LeRoy H. Sinquett.
1912—
Mrs.
S. C. Carpenter, Mrs. Fred W.
Zane, Maurice E. Houck. Mrs. Blan-
che M. Berger, Mrs. Anna K. Edwards, Mrs. Harold E. Davis, Mrs.
William L. Allen, Sara F. Lewis, Marion Williams, Earl R. Laubach, Mrs.
Morris S. Evans.
1911 Peter J. Eshmont, A. K. Naugle, Mrs. Fred W. Diehl, Mrs. Edward H. Beavers, Mrs. Chase M.
Herrick, Mrs. P. H. Monaghan.
Mrs. Charles A. Nicely, Harold N. Cool, Mrs. Florence G. Carl,
Mrs.
Mabel D. DeMott
1916—
1913 Mrs. Nellie M. Dennison, Elizabeth Sturges, Mrs. Earl Gooding,
Mrs. Joseph Cherrie, Nellie M. Seidel,
Mrs. J. Harry Wright
1915 Mrs. Henry Mensinger, Ruth
E. Pooley, Mrs. Earl E. Richards,
Esther Dreibelbis, Mrs. Elmer Harrington, Mrs. W. I. Larson. Warren A.
Dollman, Mrs. George H. Moore, Lorena E. Thomas, Mrs. Eulah M. Spiegal, Mrs. Nora A. Oberfell, Mrs. Hoyt
E. Heller, Clara A. Oman, Paul M.
Trembley.
Mrs.
Ruth A. Dreibelbis,
Dwight Folsom. Mrs. Emma H. Burrus, Mrs. Jennie R. Morris
Edwin
S.
Heller,
J.
Frank
Brink, Dr. J. Loomis Christian, Earl
E. Richards, Mrs. John W. O’Toole,
Mrs.
Mrs. Alice Tiffany Gardner,
Veda E. Miller, Anna Pursel
1918 Mrs. Robert
D. Berninger,
Mary M. Gillespie, Mrs. Paul H. Trescott,
Mrs. Jay Lee Funk
Elsie M. Pfahler, Mrs. PrisA. McDonald, Catherine A. Reimard, Mrs. James J Martin, Alice M.
Burns, Mrs. Eva F. Ellis, Mrs. Mar1920—
garet S. Brock, Mrs. Victor C. Long.
Grace B. McCoy, Mrs. Chester E.
Vastine.
Leroy W. Creasy, Mark H
Bennett, Mrs. Grace E. Pannebacker,
Mrs. O. C. Peters, Mrs. Roy O. Fry.
Mrs. William R. Turner, Mrs. Clark
Kennedy. Warren Hendershott, Mrs.
Grayce M. Newhart, Mrs. William R.
Turner, Mrs. Benjamin Eshleman,
Lawrence V. Keefer, Mrs. Paul M.
1922—
Trembley,
Mrs. Guy W. Stearns
1921 Mrs.
Josephine A. Moyer,
Anna
L. Swanberry, Miller I. Buck.
1923—
Mrs. Lillian M. Yerkes, Mrs. Ralph
Moser, Adeline Burgess
William T. Payne. Martha Y.
1924—Mrs. Oren L. Harris, Mrs.
Jones,
Perry L. Smith, Esther J. Saxe
1919
cilla
Mrs. Karl Freyermuth, Emily
E. Craig, Mrs. Ralph R. Maynard.
Mrs.
Helen R. Padgett, Mrs. Dorothy
1925—
Blancher, Mrs. C. F. Hoffmeister.
Mrs. Robert MacNaught, Sr.
Mrs. Mary Bugbee. Mrs. Clare
L. Reger, Margaret J. Jones, Edith
Brace. Mr. and Mrs. Carl D. Blose,
Mrs. Dorothy W. Risley, Adeline E.
Swineford
Mrs. W. L. Baughman, Mrs.
Ira Bogart, Mrs. Wayne Turner, Mrs.
Eugene Walsh,
Pearl
E.
Poust,
Mildred M. Powell,
Mrs. H. J. P.
Lesaius, Mrs. Harry Nicholas, Michael A. Walaconis, Martha A. Fisher,
1927— S. Davey, Mrs. Martha R.
Marjorie
Miers, Mrs. Leslie J. Boone, Helen V.
Cashmarek, Edith May Eade, Mrs.
Kenneth M. Miller. Mrs. Anna R. Sidler, Mrs. Matthew G.
Gray, Lillian
Burgess, Margaret E. Price
1926 Margaret Hobbs, Mrs. Neal W.
Wormley, Mrs. Robert M. Dwyer. Mrs.
Robert A. Walburn, Margaret E. Lambert, Mrs. Vivian H. Hallenback.
Mrs. Mildred A. McCloughan,
Mrs. Russell Smith, Mrs. George A.
Wagner. Doris G. Palsgrove, Mrs. J.
Fred
Giger
1930—
1928 Mrs. M. S. Martin. Mrs. Caroline E. Criswell. Mrs. Walter F. Vorbleski, Mrs. Foster
Furman. Mrs.
Miltona Klinetob, Lehman J. Snyder,
Mrs. Louise B. Stevens, Lois A. Watkins, Margaretta M. Bone, Mrs. Waltei J. Gordon, Mrs. Howard K. Scott
1929 Mrs. Harold Arner, Mrs. Alice
B. Blair, Mrs. Bernard Burnat, Mrs.
Theron Rhinard, Mrs.
Emma G.
Shearer, Mrs. J. L. Cohen, Caroline
E. Petrullo
Mr. and Mrs. Luther W. Bitler. Mrs. Ann Mergo, Helen E. Snyder,
Alda Culp. Mrs. Dorothy Pihlblad.
Pearl Mason Keller (in memory of
Armand G. Keller), Grayce R. Carr,
Charles A. John, Mrs. Margaret R.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
1953—
D'Asidoro, Miriam Edwards, Harold
H. Hidlay, Mrs. Earl G. Hoyt, Virginia
Cruikshank, Mrs. Clyde R. Daubert.
Mr. and Mrs. Jasper M. Fritz. Alex
J. Kraynack, Mrs. Franklin Miller,
Mrs. Grace R. Gardner, Thursabert
Schuyler, Cyril W. Stiner, Mrs. S.
Earl Walker, Mrs. John Kotch, Mrs.
John Schaeberlin, Mrs. Kathryn I.
Mrs. Lawrence Mattern,
Waltman,
1931—
Georgiena L. Weidner, Mrs. Mary L.
Whalen
1932— Mrs.
Helen
C.
McGeehan,
Wilkes, Mrs. Paul H. Kepner,
Emily A. Park, Mrs. Esther Y. Castor
Mrs. H. C. Heinbaugh, Theron
1933— Wilhelmina M. Cerine, Mrs.
F.hinard.
Ralph S. Krouse, Mrs. Stephen Lorks.
Dr. Henry J. Warman, Mrs. Robert
B. Miles
Walter M. Kritzberger, Mrs.
John
J.
1935—W. Zeisloft
Emily
1934 Walter S. Chesney, Robert H.
Van Sickle. Mrs. Robert A. Elder.
Mrs.
George Plowright, Gladys M.
1936—
1937—
Wenner
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer J. Mc-
Kechnie, Mrs. Stanley W. Stanulonis,
Roy
Peterman. Mrs. M. L. Mark-
C.
ley
Mrs. Ruth W. Legrande
1939— Ray G. Schrope, Mary E.
Palsgrove, William E. Zeiss. Mrs. Edgar M. Darby
1938 Aerio M.
Fetterman.
Mrs.
1941— R. Wallace. Mrs. Robert V.
William
1942—
O’Connell. Mrs. N. M. Cassano, Mrs.
C. V. Maslow
Isaiah D. Bomboy
1940 Mrs. Ezra W. Harris, Frank
Koniecko. Charles L. Kelchner, Mrs.
Robert W. Wambach, Mrs. Margaret
McCern
Marqueen White
E.
William E. Booth. Mrs. Eleanor M. Zosler, Mrs. Adrian M. Kal-
Alexander
Hardysh,
Mrs.
1946—L. Ehrhart. Bertha A. Hir.dKevin
march. Mrs. Dorothy C. Dean
1943
1947—Col. and Mrs. Elwood M. Wagner, Mrs. William P. Handy, Anna
M.1948—
Buck, Sara K. Wagner
1944 Mrs. Sarah D. Edwards, Mrs.
Jack H. Reynolds, Mrs.
Leon E.
Grant, Mrs. James S. Powell
1945 Mrs. Mary Lou John, Mrs. C.
W. Epley, Jr.
Nellie A. Kramer, Mrs. Charles W. Creasy, r., Mrs. Lillian H.
lender,
Holland
William E. Harvath, Vincent
F. Washville
1951—
John F. Magill, Jr.. Elroy F.
Dalbert, Class Treasurer, Mrs. Vincent F. Washville.
1949 Ralph W. Baird, Mrs. Donald
F. Schueler, Richard E. Grimes. John
H. Reichard. Leo J. Speicher, Kenneth
E. Wire, John Kuntza, Mrs. Mildred
S. Kowalski, John M. Purcell Mrs.
Julia P. Sterling
1950 Mrs. Dale H. Reighart, Rob-
James Kashner, Mrs. John C.
Chevalier, Jr., Rev. Charles F. Glass,
Leon E. Frant, Warren M. Sterling
ert
Ralph W. Wire
Andre Vanyo, Eleanor R.
Kennedy, Mrs. Joan
Cerula,
Mrs.
John O. Lychos
1952
JULY,
1970
Mrs.
Mary
Stephen Fago,
Fowler, Keith S. Bearde
1954 Mrs. Lawrence H. Auerweck,
Mrs.
Patricia B. Hollingsworth, Wil1955—
liam J, Jacobs
Mrs. Carolyn Y. Karas, Mrs.
David G. Belles, Lt. Cmdr. Philip W.
Gergen,
1956— Mrs. Robert E. Klein, Mrs.
Judith B. Shirey, Jacob E. Slembar-
Mrs. Royce M. Crossman
1957—Mrs. Edward H. Michehl, Mrs.
Mary R. Moser, Mrs. F. K. Schauffele, Harry J. Weist, Elvin C. LaCoe
1958— Walter G. Fox, Thomas J.
Reimensnyder, George J. Bach, Jr.,
Mrs. John L. Epler, Mrs. Donald T.
McNelis. Robert L. Dipipi
George W. O’Connell,
Mrs.
Helen
1960—Kerstetter, M. Donald Miller,
Mrs. Lona F. Wayman, Thomas J.
ski,
Sheehan, Jr.
1959 Larry A. Fisher, Mrs. June L.
Trudnak, Mrs. Charles C. James
Albert P. Francis, Mrs. John
A. Lindner, Jr., Raymond W. Trudnak. Gary F. Anderson, Mrs. Dale E.
Thomas. Dr. Carl
L. Stanitski, Rich1962—
ard A. Staber, Mrs. Carl Janetka,
Mrs. Geraldine Alley, Mrs. Barbara
Buchter. Mrs. Gary
Charles,
Mrs.
Harry F. Powlus
1961 Mrs. William
Sheridan.
C.
Robert L. Deibler
Gerald J. Wright. Mrs. Janet
M. Hoover, Thomas J. McHugh, Walter H. Veranda, Gary
Kahler,
R.
Capt. Robert J. Steinhart
1963 Mr. and Mrs. Ronald W. Cranford. Gail L. Allen, Mrs. Jeanne M.
Shutt, Mrs. Bernard Elliott, George
E. Weiser, John M. DiLiberto, Gerald E. Malinowski
1964 Mrs. Samuel R. Dunkelberegr,
Mrs. James R. Woods, Robert A.
Mayefskie, Lowell A. Tinner.
Mrs.
John H. Stone, Terry L. Beard, Mrs.
James R. Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Edward Crim, Joseph P. Mockaitis, Mrs. George F. Miller
1965 Mrs. Robert M. Hontz, Norman F. Hayl, Mrs. Lowell A. Tinner,
Robert A. Green, Mrs. F. A. Pinero
Carol J. Wertman, Mrs. Janet
U.
Hoffman. Joseph R. Gates, William
J. Megargel, Sally
Weigler,
Mrs.
Patricia Azrazinskas, Robert J. Donahue, Henry E. Fetterman. Arthur M.
Saxe, Fhilip M. Thomas, Mrs. Laird
D. Shively, George F. Miller, Joseph
R. Koons, Susan R. Krier, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry R. Sitler
1966 Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth G.
Cremswell, Jr., Mrs. John C. Lilley,
C. Shaffer, Jr., Mrs. John C. Lilley,
Mrs. Joseph T. Jamiaekowsky, Mrs.
Irene A. Frantz. Barbara A. Urbas,
John S. Mulka, Robert J. Biscombe
Mrs. Wilbur J. Carlson. Mrs. Charles
M. Evans
III,
James R.
Miller, Jos-
eph P. Fazzari, Mrs. Sharon K. Herr,
Nancy E. K. Smith. Mr. and Mrs.
Henry L. Spering, Mrs. Sandra B.
Williams. Darryl W. Lanning
1967 Mrs. Donald E. Bryan, Mrs.
Deborah H. Guthrie, Carol B. Crawford. Donald E. Ulrich, Richard
T.
Brosius, Mrs. Mary M. Lee, David
J. Hollingshead, Charles M.
Evans
III,
Stephen
G.
Karol,
Charles
E.
Wagner, Judith A. Yarnall, Lorraine
M. Savidge, Susan M. Shepherd, Carol
McA. Campbell, Mrs. William M.
Cormick, Laird D. Shively, Mrs. Carl
K. Stine, Ronald P. Jackson, Richard R. Leonovich, Roseann M. Sabulski, Robert O. Samsel, Mrs. Joyce
A. Mordan.
1968 Mrs.
Robert A. Bachman,
Joyce E. Brobst, Cherie E. Vaughn,
Mrs. Wilson A. Shaffer, Carolyn J.
Toby, Mrs. Eileen A. Meiser, Rosemary Lubinski, John J. Trathen,
Karen Undeck, Mrs. Charles E. Shepperson III, Mrs. John S. Mulka, Noelle
A. Cassarella, Mrs. David S. Allen,
David C. Gerhard, Dona M. Houck,
A.
Mrs. Diane Kazemza,
Richard
Philipkoski,
tMyra
J.
Schlesinger,
Martin
1969—T. Smith. Leonard C. Bastian.
Jr., Mrs. William F. George, Mary
L. Steffen, Dale L. Branch. Diane W.
Dawson, Mr. and Mrs. Harold L.
Latchford
George F. Sheperis, James A.
Metzler, Mrs. Robert Lehman. Linda
Kessler,
Lechnev, Mrs. Robert E.
Charles E. Shepperson III, Michael
L. Smith, Eleanor M. Kolet, David S.
Allen. Ann Marie Hutz, Donna J.
Reitz, Sandra K. Sanford, Charles S.
Sherbin, Louis J. Mulka, Thomas F.
1970—
Castrilli. Mrs. Joan A. Laubach, Gail
V. Moyer, Gary F. Pender, Mr. and
Mrs. Reinhold A. Schulz, Robert A.
Mususky,
Wayne
J.
Sekellick,
E.
Ronald
Koch, Galen G. Quick, Mrs.
Charles J. Vogt, George A. Ziolkawski
Regina F. Hepner, Boyd T.
Keiser. Jr., Mr. and Mrs. John J.
Higgins, Jr., Robert A. Shultz
CGA PRESIDENT
Mike Pilligalli, of West Chester,
was elected president of Bloomsburg
GovernState College’s Community
ment Association (CGA) by a vote of
861 to 729 over Dudley Mann. He and
other officers were installed at. the
CGA meeting this year.
terms expire in May 1971.
final
A
Their
total of 1,590 students, faculty
and
administrators cast ballots.
Mike Hock, current editor
of the
college newspaper, won the vice presidency by a vote of 766 to 721 for Marty
Morgis.
Jodi Kohler ran unopposed
Janet Boyancwski defeated Jack Feddock for the
secretary
position of corresponding
for recording secretary.
818-608.
The new treasurer,
Anne
Peacock, won by 852 to 617 for Tom
Baltuskonis. Mark Foucart ran unopposed for parliamentarian.
An article entitled “Subjectivity in
the Art of Eighteenth Century Biography: Johnson’s Portrait of Swift”
by Dr. Jordan Richman, Associate
Professor in the Department of English at Bloomsburg State College, has
been accepted for publication in “Enlightenment Essays,” a journal published by the University of Illinois at
the Chicago Circle and dedicated to
inter-disciplinary
18th century.
scholarship
of
the
Page seven
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR
H. F. Fenstemaker T2
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
’34
Grace Foote Conner,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Terms
242 Central
Road
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Term
expires 1973
VICE PRESIDENT
Millard Ludwig ’48
Center and Third Streets
Millville, Pennsylvania 17846
Term
18
Terms
expire 1971
Mrs. Verna Jones ’36
West Avenue, Apartment C-4
Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Dr. Kimber C. Kuster T3
140 West Eleventh Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
John Thomas '47
68 Fourth Street
Hamburg, Pennsylvania 19526
Elizabeth H. Hubler
’43
205
Clayton H. Hinkel
’29
McKnight Street
James H.
expires 1973
37 N.
Lancaster, Pennsylvania 17603
Earl A. Gehrig ’37
Robin Lane, Sherwood Village
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
space,
of limitations of
personal items have had to be
postponed until the September issue.
This has been made necessary by the
coverage of the events of Inaugural
Week and Alumni Day.
1903
Class
Representative:
Walter
II.
Riland, 11 Warwick Avenue, Scarsdale, N. Y. 10583
Sweppenheiser
Wor-
man, Danville, Pa., was present
Alumni Luncheon.
at the
1904
Lillian Buckalew Rider, Irene Ikeler Sloan and Mabel
Mertz Dixon
were present at the Alumni Luncheon.
1905
Representative:
Hemingway
Page
eight
llousenick,
Mrs. Vera
503
1,
Market
Farm Box
Glen
Camp
Because
Class
R. D.
expires 1972
many
Nellie
Colonial
Mills,
’52
88
Pa. 19342
Dr. Alexander J. McKechnie, Jr.
19 N. 24th St.
Volume LXXI, Number 2
Mrs.
Terms expire 1973
Dr. Frank J. Furgele
Deily, Jr. ’41
Bausman Drive
110
Term
’40
Leonard Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
224
Gordon, Pennsylvania 17936
TREASURER
’34
West Street
102
State College, Pa. 16801
Term
expire 1972
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
Dr. William L. Bitner III
33 Lincoln Ave.,
Glen Falls, N. Y. 12801
expires 1973
Elwood M. Wagner
643 Wiltshire Road
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie ’35
509 East Front Street
Berwick, Pennsylvania 18603
SECRETARY
Col.
—
Street,
—
Pa. 17011
July, 1970
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1906
Marian Groff (Mrs. David
gler), lives at 1048
Hill,
’39
I. SpanN. Fourth Street,
and community
by
of us;
up of
made
many
them
all
is to be envied
his secret of success is
all
aspects and he has used
wisely.”
Reading, Pa. 19601
1909
Representative:
1907
Class
Class
Representative:
Edwin M.
Barton, 353 College Ilill, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
Edwin M. Barton, long a devoted
leader in community affairs, was recognized by
the
Bloomsburg Area
Chamber of Commerce as the “Citizen of Year” during the annual dinner meeting of the Chamber.
The
recipient was described as "one who
is equally talented in many areas; he
is rather hard to describe. His honesty and integrity are beyond question; his devotion to his fellow man
Diehl, 627
17821
Bloom
Fred
W.
Street, Danville, Pa.
1910
Class
Representative:
Robert E.
Metz, 23 Manhattan Street, Ashley,
Pa. 18706
1911
Class Representative: Mrs. Pearle
Fitch Diehl, 627 Bloom Street, Danville, Pa. 17821
1912
Representative: Howard F.
Fenstemaker,
Central
242
Road,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
1923
1913
Class Representative: Dr. Kimber
Kuster, 140 West 11th Street, Bloomsbury, Pa. 17815
Judge Bernard J. Kelley, a member
of the Board of Trustees of BSC, has
relocated his office, the address of
which now is 1004-1 Market Street
East, Philadelphia, Pa. 19100
1914
J. Howard
Class Representative:
518 West Third Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Ileily,
1915
Class Representative: John S. Shu-
man, 368 East Main
Pa.
burg.
Blooms-
Street,
17815
1916
Class Representative: Mrs. Russell
Burrus (Emma Harrison) R. D. 2,
Orangeville, Pa. 17859
1917
Class
Cromis.
L.
Allen
Representative:
Mahoning Manor, R. D.
1,
Milton, Pa. 17847
1919
Miss CathClass Representative:
erine A. Reimard, 335 Jefferson St.,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Esther
eran
Reichart
now
is
(Mrs.
living
Home, formerly
Hotel. 143 West
ton. Pa. 18291
burg, Pa. 17815
38
Marion Watkins (Mrs. T. H. Evans)
East Trenton Avenue. Morrisville,
Pa. 19067, is retiring at the close of
the present school year.
1924
Represtnative:
Edward F.
Class
Avenue,
Schuyler, 236 West Ridge
Bloombsurg, Pa. 17815
Edward F. Schuyler, former editor
Morning Press, whose reof The
tirement severed his record coverage of Columbia County’s affairs
and courts, was honored by those
who have been intimately associated with him in that aspect of his
newspaper
career.
County
offiemployees
and
courthouse
cials.
county attorneys turned out for the
dinner event at Hotel Magee and presented Schuyler and his wife, Florence. with gifts to mark the occassion.
1918
Clair
Representative:
J.
Class
Patterson, 315 West Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Schaffer)
Mrs. Raymond P. Kashner, 125 Forrest Road, Sherwood Village, Blooms-
Broad
Llewellyn
in
the Luth-
the
Altamont
Street, Hazle-
Rhoda Robbins Shedd lives in Carson City, Nevada. Her husband is a
mining engineer.
Doris Morse (Mrs. D. F. Aldrich),
Pa. 18825
Representative:
Leroy W.
Road
3117
Old Berwick
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Mrs.
Pearl
Radel Bickel, 909 Masser Street, Sunbury. Pa. 17801
Adeline
Burgess,
Camp Ground
Road,
Carverton.
Wyoming, Pa.,
18644, has retired from teaching first
grade in the Trucksville Elementary
Class
Representative:
School.
1926
Marvin M.
Class Representative:
Rloss. R. D. 2. Wapwallopen, Pa. 18660
Margaret E. Lambert, 245 Hale St..
Brunswick. N.
J. 08902, will retire
after forty-two years of
Mrs. Lambert is also a
teaching.
member of the class of 1943.
1927
1.
1970,
Representative: Mrs. Ralph
Davenport (Verna Medley), 16
Ransom Street, Plymouth, Pa. 18651
Class
1921
Mrs. Harry
Cole, 100 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg,
G.
Pa.
1928
East Trenton
38
Avenue, Morrisville, Pa.. 19067. is retiring from teaching in the Elementary Grades in Morrisville, where
teaching
she has spent her entire
career.
1929
Class Representatives: Mrs. (Elsie
Lebo) Nelson Stauffer, 88 John St.,
Kingston, Pa. 18704. (Arline Frantz)
Mrs. James Wertman, 20 Parish
Street, Dallas, Pa. 17612
Class Representative:
17815
Myrlyn T. Shafer, 1432 South Main
Wilkes-Barre, Pa., 18702, retired
in 1968. At the time of his retirement
the
at
he was Assistant Principal
St.,
Hanover Township High School, and
Administrator
of
the
Penn
State
Evening School.
Elmer
Mildred Downing
(Mrs.
Major), 106 Davis Street, Trucksville,
Pa., 18708, is a substitute teacher in
the Dallas Area Schools.
Helen Eisenhower (Mrs. H. R. Kocher), recently moved to 34 Underwood Road, Montville, N. J. 07045
Elsie Maust (Mrs. William D. Kelley), is living at 6811
Glenmont Road,
Falls Church, Va. 22042
Warren L. Fisher, superintendent
Bloomsburg Area School District,
on June 30.
Fisher,
Supt.
who replaced J. Claire Patterson as
of
retired
superintendent, has been associated
with the Bloomsburg School District
as a mathematics teacher and administrator for
more than a quarter
of a
century.
1922
Class
Representative:
Edna S.
Harter, R. D. 1, Nescopeck, Pa. 18623
JULY,
1970
1931
James B,
Representative:
Class
Davis, 333 East Marble Street, Mechanicsburg, Pa. 17055
1933
Miss Lois
Representative:
Street,
644
East Third
Lawson,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1934
Esther
Representative:
Evans McFadden (Mrs. Joseph), 154
East Fifth Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
Class
17815
Lois
Watkins,
1930
Class
Representatives:
and Margaret Swartz
1935
Luther W.
Bitler, 117 State
Street, Millville, Pa. 17846
Elfed H. Jones, retired elementary
supervising principal of the Central
Columbia schools, has been appointed as district manager of the 1970
Census of Population and Housing in
the Bloomsburg area, according to
an announcement by Director John
G. Gibson of the Census
Bureau’s
Regional Office in Philadelphia.
Born in Nanticoke, he was graduated from Nanticoke High School. He
holds a Bachelor of Science degree
from
State
Teachers
College,
Reed,
I.
William
East 4th Street, Blooms-
Representative:
Class
1924
July
Class
Creasy,
sociation.
lives in Jackson,
New
1920
Bloomsburg, and a Master in Education from New York University with
sixty credits toward Doctorate. Jones
has served as head coach, teacher
and principal in Pennsylvania schools
and colleges for thirty-nine years.
Over the years he has been active
in church, school and hospital work,
Boy Scouts, United Fund and Rotary.
He is past president of the Luzerne
County Board of the Bloomsburg State
Teachers College Alumni Association
and the Wilkes-Barre Education As-
151
burg, Pa. 17815
Elmer
McKechnie, superintendent
Berwick Area School District
since 1956. has announced his retireof the
ment
effective
July
1.
In
a
letter
which he read at the session of the
Berwick Board of Education, McKechnie said he is retiring in order to devote time to travel and writing. He
has been a teacher and administrator
in the Berwick system for 33 years.
Board President Dan DeFinnis lauded McKechnie as a “dynamic and
and
hard-working superintendent”
speaking in behalf of board members
said they were well pleased with his
work.
1936
Kathryn
Representatives:
Vanauker (Mrs. Nicholas Moreth) 34
Class
Linden Road, Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey 07423. Co-Chairmen: Ruth Wagner (Mrs. Lawrence Le Grande) 126
Oak Street, Hazleton, Pa. 18201 and
Mary Jane Fin (Mrs. Frederick McCutcheon) Maple Avenue, Conyngham,
Pa. 18219
1937
Class Representatives: Mr. and Mrs.
Earl A. Gehrig, 110 Robin Lane, Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
William E. Zeiss and his wife Betty,
R. D. 2, Clarks Summit, have three
daughters, two of whom are Bloomsburg State graduates, and have had
Since graduating
32 foster children.
from Bloomsburg he has obtained a
Master’s Degree from Bucknell University.
He has been very active in
activities of the Pennsylvania State
he
Education Association, where
served as a member of the Retire-
ment Problems committee,
Constitu-
committee, president of
the Department of Classroom Teachers, and is
currently
serving
his
tion Revision
fourth term as chairman of the PSEA
Resolutions committee.
He is also
serving his second year as Northeast
Page nine
Regional Director of the Association
Classroom Teachers of the National Education Association repre-
of
senting
all
Committee
from
states
Washington, D.
of
Maine
to
on the Executive
C.,
National
the
Associa-
tion.
He has been very active in civic
and community activities besides operating a farm. He teaches seventh
and
eighth grade remedial
World
History in the Abington Heights Junior High School, Clarks Summit, Pa.
19.38
Class Representative: Paul G. Mar710
tin,
East Main Street,
Blooms-
burg, Pa. 17815
1939
Class
Representative:
Willard A.
Christian, Jr., 803 Logue Street, Williamsport, Pa. 17701
1940
Class Representative:
Clayton H.
Hinkel, 224 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg. Pa. 17815
Dorothy Derr Tilson lives at 435 W.
119th St., New York, N. Y. 10027
1941
Class Representative: Dr. C. Stuart Edwards, R. D. 4, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
1942
Class Representative: Mrs. Ralph
Zimmerman
II.
Kready
(Jean
Noll),
Millersville,
Avenue,
165
Pa.
17551
Merrill A. Deitrich has been elected
of the National Bank of
Royal Oak, Michigan.
Deitrich,
a
Certified Public Accountant for 20
years, is an executive with Comae
chairman
Co.,
Birmingham,
Michigan-based
Aianagement company, with responsi-
for controllership services for
firm’s 22 banking organizations.
He has been associated with Comae
since April, 1968.
Earlier he was employed for 18
bility
the
Company and a
Ford Motor Credit Company.
His last position with Ford
Motor Comapny was regional manager for Latin America and the Paciyears by Ford Motor
subsidiary.
area.
Deitrich earned a graduate degree
in business administration from
the
Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, in Philadelphia.
He is chairman of the executive
committee and a director of Public
National Bank, Washington D. C., and
a member of American Institute of
Certified Public Accountants and the
Michigan Association of Certified
Public Accountants.
fic
1946
Representative:
Anastasia
Pappas (Mrs. John Trowbridge), 102
W. Mahoning Street, Danville, Pa.
17821.
Charles
Co-chairman: Mrs.
W. Creasy (Jacqueline Shaffer), R.
D. 1, Catawissa, Pa. 17820
Class
Class
A.
253 Iron
17815
Mrs. RayKatcrman),
Bloomsburg,
Pa.
Representative:
Algatt (Betty
Street,
Class
1951
Representative:
Robert L.
Bunge, 12 West Park Street. Carroll
Park, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1948
Class
Representative:
Harry G.
John, Jr., 425 Iron Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Dr. John F. Magill, Jr., serving as
assistant
superintendent
the
of
Bloomsburg Area School District, has
been unanimously named to the chief
administration post, effective July 1,
1970.
Dr. Magill was born in Sugarloaf and is a graduate of Bloomsburg
State College and Pennsylvania State
University where he received his Doc-
Education degree in 1965.
He and Mrs. Magill are parents of
tor of
five children, the oldest now teaching
in Perry County, two in college, and
two in public schools.
a member of the PSEA, the
Blain Fire Company, American Legion Post 177, Newport; The Airborne
He
is
Association, The Military Order of
the Purple Heart, and a member of
Col. V. Porter Adams Post 7463, New
Bloomfield. Dr. Magill served in the
European Theatre in the Paratroops,
and was wounded in action.
He is listed in the 1970 edition of
“Creative and Successful Personalities of the World,” American edition.
1949
Class Representative: Richard E.
Grimes, 1723 Fulton St., Harrisburg,
Pa. 17102
John M. Purcell, 16 Walland Ave.,
Farmingdale, N. Y., 11735, is acting
President of the State University Agricultural and Technical College, at
Farmingdale, Long Island. The college has a day and evening enrollment of over 10,000. Mr. Purcell has
a professional diploma from Columbia,
and is working for his Doctor’s degree
at the same institution. He has been
a member of the staff at Farming
dale since 1952.
1950
Class Representative: Willis Swales,
9 Raven Road, Montvale, N. J. 07645
Dr. Max Cooley, 404 Sunset Lane,
Shippensburg, Pa., has been appoint-
1945
Class Representative: Mary
Lou
John, 257 W. 11th St., Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
Page
ten
Class Representative:
Dr. Russell
C. Davis, Jr., Sullivan County Community College, South Fallsburgh, N.
Y. 12779
Mrs.
Mary Ann Alarcon Donnelly
now
living at 6206 Inwood Street,
Cheverly, Maryland 20785
is
1952
Class
Representative:
Galinski, 90
lestown, Pa.
Tower
Hill
Francis B.
Road, Doy-
18901
1953
Class Representative: John S. Scrimgeour, 411 East 3rd Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1954
Class
Jacobs,
2
Representative:
William
J.
Tremont Annex Apartments,
West Main Strreet, Lansdale, Pa.
19446
Sheldon Erwine, 1927
Corinthian
Avenue, Abington, Pa., 19001, is Principal of the Glenside Weldon Junior
High School, Glenside, Pa.
(Boyle)
Patricia
Hollingsworth,
37
East Lincoln Avenue. Gettysburg, Pa.
17352, recently received her Certificate of Clinical Competance from the
American Speech and Hearing Association.
She is currently assigned
as Coordinator of Speech and Hearing Services for
tysburg, Pa.
Adams
County, Get-
1955
Class
inger,
18618
Representative: Arnold GarR. D. 1, Harveys Lake, Pa.
1956
Class Representative: Dr. William
Bitner III, 33 Lincoln Avenue, Glen
12801
Falls, N. Y.
1957
William J.
Representative:
Class
Pohutski, 554 Oakridge Drive, North
Plainfield. N. J. 07606
1958
Class
Representative:
Hargreaves,
37
Maymond
Dell Road, Stanhope,
N. J. 07874
1959
Class Representative:
William F.
Swisher, Box 245, Cincinnatus, N. Y.
13040
vice president and
director
of
marketing of Ortho Diagnostics with
John E. Nagle, Reading Education
Advisor, Bureau of General and Academic Education, State Department
of Education, spoke on “OrganizaSecondtion and Administration of
ary Reading Programs” at the Sixth
Annual Reading Conference held at
Bloomsburg State College March 13
offices at Raritan, N. J.
and
ed Dean of Continuing Education at
Shippensburg State College. He will
continue as Director of Business Education.
James H. Boyle has been promoted
to
Ortho Diagnostics
1944
Class Representative: Mrs. (Poletime Comuntzis) Carl Demetripopoulos, Friar and Robin Lancs, Sherwood
Cillage, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
award offered by the Company.
1947
1943
mond
was formed in 1960. Promoted to national sales manager in 1966, he was
elected to the Board of Directors two
years later. He was first to receive
the Ortho Distinguished Contribution
Award and has earned every sales
is
manufacturer
quality laboratory reagents for
blood typing, blood coagulation testing, pregnancy testing, as well as speof
tests for infectious mononucleoand sickle cell anemia.
Boyle joined ORTHO in 1951 and
cific
sis
became
manwhen it
the first divisional sales
ager of Ortho Diagnostics
14.
After
attending
Allentown
High
School, Nagle received his Bachelor
of Science degree in education from
Bloomsburg State College where he
majored in English and social studies.
His Master of Education degree
m reading psychology was earned at
Temple University, where he is cur
rently a candidate at that institution
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
for his
Doctor of Education degree
in
reading psychology.
In addition to being a teacher and
native
his
a reading consultant in
school district at Allentown, from the
period 1953 through 1968 Nagle also
served as developmental reading instructor at Lehigh University, as an
off-campus faculty member of The
Pennsylvania State University, as an
at
evening school faculty member
Loyola College, and as an electronics
technician with the United States
Marine Corps.
Jay E. Long, 218 West Frederick
Pa. 17551, beMillersville,
ginning in September, will be a parttime instructor and part-time student
Seminary. Clarks
at Baptist Bible
Summit, Pa., where he will be working on his degree in theology in preparation for the ministry. He has reStreet,
signed his position as chairman of the
of
department
business education
Penn Manor High School. Millersville,
and will have completed eleven years
of public school teaching.
1960
Class Representative: James J.
Peek, 100 Hull Road, Madison, Conn.
06443
1961
Representative:
Edwin C.
Class
Kuser, R. D. 1, Box 145-C, Bechtelsville. Pa. 19505
Charles B. Pomicter, Director of
Special Education for the Board of
Services,
Cooperative
Educational
Oswego County, New York, has developed a unique in-service teacher
training
program which received
publicity in “The Pointer”, an international magazine for teachers and
parents of the mentally retarded. His
wife, the former Ruth Morgan ’62, is
busy caring for their son, John Michael.
The Pomicters are living at R.
D. 2, Lacona, New York. 13083
1962
Class
Representative:
Richard
Lloyd, 6 Farragut Dr., Piscataway,
N. J. 18854
John J. Yastichock is administrator
charge of elementary education
for the Central Columbia School Disin
trict.
A
native
is
Minersville,
County. Yastichock
Sch-
married
to the former Marion Matthews. They
have three children.
They reside
on Bloomsburg R. D. 3.
uylkill
is
Yastichock served four years in
U. S. Air Force and began his
undergraduate studies
Florida
at
State University while in the service.
He received a Master’s Degree from
BSC and has done further graduate
work with Temple University.
He began his teaching career in
Fairfield
School District,
Adams
County, and come to the Central Columbia School System where he worked from 1962-68. In 1968, he assumed
the position as a supervisor for Montgomery County School System where
he served until January 2, 1970.
The new administrator served as
the
president
of
Montgomery
Chapter of Council for
JULY,
1970
County
Exceptional
Children in 1969; member of advisory
board, Rivercrest School for the Mentally Retarded, Mont Clair, 1968-69;
president of Central Columbia Teachers Association, 1965-67 Board of Directors Columbia County Association
for
Retarded
Children
(PARC),
1966-68, and member of Middle Atlantic States Evaluation Team for Williamsport High School in 1967.
The current issue of the Drew
University Magazine carries an article by Dr. James J. Nagle. He is an
Assistant Professor of Zoology and
Botany at Drew with his doctorate
from North Carolina State. His article is concerned with the foundation
course in Biology and bears the title
“New Life for the Science of Life.”
Thomas
L.
Little,
16
York Road,
Delaware,
Deerhurst, Wilmington,
19801, is President of the Investment
Delaware,
Annuity Corporation of
with Executive offices located at 610
Mr.
Delaware Avenue, Wilmington.
Little is also a member of the Delaware House of Representatives, National Officer of the Young Republicans, manager of the Attorney General campaign in Delaware and Instructor of Political Science at Wilmington College. His wife is the former Kay Gaglione, a member of the
class of 1961.
1963
Representative:
Pat Biehl
Class
(Mrs. Ronald Cranford) R. D. 1, 77
Hawthorne Ave., Boyertown, Pa. 19512
Professor Elhannan Keller, assistant professor of chemistry at Trenton State College, has been awarded
a grant to participate in the Louisiana State University Ph.D. program
for college teachers this summer.
The program is aided by the NatFoundation-supported
ional
Sciejice
Research Participation Program and
Institute.
Professor Keller was one
of 40 selected from more than 200 apThis is the third consecuplicants.
tive grant that he has received to
program.
participate in the L.S.U.
Professor Keller holds a bachelor of
science degree from
Bloomsburg
State College and a master of arts
degree from Trenton State .He resides at Penn Park Apartment, Morris ville.
Nancy
(Mrs. Victor Castellani). is living at R. D. 3, Clarks
Summit. Pa. 18411. She is the mother
of tw in daughters, Vikki and Shelly,
four years of age.
Nancy teaches
first grade in the Abington Heights
School District, Clarks Summit, Pa.
J.
Zeiss
T
1964
Earnest R.
Gaston Avenue, Raritan, N.
Representative:
Class
Shuba,
1
08869
Daniels, whose home address
is 607 Bates
Street, Scranton, Pa.,
18509, has been appointed the Student
Personnel staff at the Shippensburg
State College.
J.
Amy
Judy E. Reitz (Mrs. Samuel R.
Dunkelberger) reports her new address as R. D. 1, Box 181, Sunbury,
Pa.
Captain Joseph P. Mockartes is
stationed at Mountain Home Air Force
Base, Idaho. He is in charge of the
TFS Munitions Branch, and has
spent one year in France and tw'o in
Germany with the Air Force.
417
1965
Class Representative: Carl P. Sheran, 59 Vreeland Ave., Bloomingdale,
N. J. 07403
Robert A. Green, 346 Crest Drive,
Fullerton, Pa. 18052, has been awarded a Master of Arts degree from
Temple University. He is the Acting
Supervisor of Itinerant Programs and
Class for the Hard of Hearing, and
Director of the Gifted Program in
Northampton County Public Schools,
Nazareth, Pa.
Barbara Twitmire Smith and Harold W. Smith live at 801 Finch Drive,
Cornu-ells Heights, Pa.
Their son,
Erik, was born October 31, 1969. Harold is now an industrial engineer with
American Sugar Co., Philadelphia.
They had previously been at Fort
Dix. N. J. for two years.
Henry E. Fetterman is a member
Marple Newtown
of the faculty of the
Schools, Newtowm Square, Pa. 19073.
He ur as recently the producer-director
of
of the High School
production
“Annie Get Your Gun.”
Joseph R. Koons has received the
degree of Master of Social
Work,
with a concentration in Community
Organization and Planning, from Virginia
Common wealth
University,
Richmond, Virginia.
A son, Philip, Jr., was born to Mr.
and Mrs. Philip M. Thomas, 532 RurAvenue, Williamsport, Pa.,
al
on
Sunday, March 29, 1970.
The newcomer has a four year old sister, Rebecca Lynn.
Donald E. Stanko, Box 212-T, R. D.
Kingston, N. Y., 12401, has been
promoted to Associate Systems Anal4,
yst at the IBM Corporation’s Manufacturing Division plant in Kingston.
1966
Class Representative:
Anthony J.
Cerza, 180 Mason Street, Exeter, Pa.
18643
Karen M. Zeiss (Mrs. E. N. Hesbacker, Jr.), resides at 5925 Green
St., Philadelphia, Pa.
She is employed as a secretary at the General
Electric Aerospace Center, King of
Prussia, Pa.
Miss Karen Marie Gates, 325 East
Water street, Shamokin, was named
Reading Supervisor of the Southern
Columbia Area Schools. Miss Gates
received her Bachelor of Science Degree in elementary education to College Misericordia, Dallas,
and her
Master
of Education at Bloomsburg
State College.
She holds the certificate “Reading Specialist” issued by
the Department of Education in Harrisburg, and has taken work beyond
her Master’s Degree at the University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania State
Page eleven
Bloomsburg
and
University,
College.
State
ARE YOU EMPLOYED BY A
WEDDINGS
CORPORATION?
We have on file
1967
Representative: R. Thomas
Lemon, Warwick Apt. 3-D, Bel Air,
Class
Md. 21014
Mr. and Mrs. Randall T. Rissinger’s address: 442 Fort Ross Avenue,
Lititz, Pa. 17543. Mr. Ressinger is
teaching in the Warwick High School,
Lititz.
Mrs. Rissinger is the former
Jeanatte Zack, of Gowen City. The
Ressingers have a son, Troy.
1967
Irene D. Davis, Berwick, and Dale
H. Segel, Warfordsburg. Mrs. Segel
is teaching and her husband is an insurance adjuster for Federal Mutual
Insurance Co.
Address: Aurora R.
D. 1, West Virginia.
1968
named
Keller,
Bloomsburg,
Ruth
and Theodore Luchak, Berwick.
Barbara Kay Yale and Michael E.
Downs. Mr. Downs is a faculty member of Susquehanna Community High
trollers
School.
joined Aetna in 1968 at
Harrisburg
and was named supervisor
in 1969.
Marian Harris and David A. Eisenhower. Mrs. Eisenhower is Spanish
teacher at Liberty High School, Bethlehem. Her husband is employed by
Terry L. Rhinesmith
has
been
superintendent in the field condepartment at the Boston,
Mass., casualty and surety division
office of Aetna Life & Casualty. He
lives
at 8
Holly
Ave.,
He
Cambridge,
Mass. 02138
Betty
Bethlehem
Steel.
1969
1968
Class Representative: Thomas W.
Free, R. D. 1, Box 34, Kintnerville,
Pa. 18930
Kenneth D. Weaver, Watsontown,
left recently for naval service.
He
taught school for a year at Susquenita High School at Duncannon and
had been a part-time employe of
Jasper Woll Products Company at
Watsontown.
1969
Class
Represenative:
Frank J.
Mastrivanni,
1018
Cooper
Street,
Scranton, Pa. 18508
Karen Pearson Thomas reports her
address as 63 S.
Landon Avenue,
Kingston, Pa.
Her husband is in
the service.
1970
Class
Representative:
John W.
Dalfovo, 61 Dean
Street,
Beaver
Meadows, Pa.
18216
Mrs. Dolores Politza Higgins lives
at 504 Washington Street, Freeland,
Pa. 18224
The Alumnin Association has received a check for $1000, which is a
bequest provided for in the will of
Samuel L. Bredbenner, Main
Township, Columbia County. The income from this bequest will be used
the late
Graham and Ray
T. Hock,
Mr. Hock teaches physics at
Pennsbury Senior High School.
Karen L. Pearson and Lt. Randall
Mrs. Thomas
F. Thomas, USAF.
taught mathematics at Centennial
School District, Warminster. Her husband is a student navigator with the
USAF, Mather AFB, Calif.
Dianne K. Frey and Stephen J.
Wright. Mrs. Wright teaches second
grade at Alexandria township school
Her husband is a computer operator
The
at Butcher and Sherrod, Inc.
Gail
Jr.
Bloomsburg
Civic
Music Association were introduced to
the work of a true master craftsman
of
Monday evening, March 16 in the
concert presented in Haas auditorium
by Virgil Fox, foremost virtuoso of
the organ.
Noted throughout the world for the
new dimensions he has given the instrument, Fox brought the audience to
its feet twice in resounding ovations.
The Second East Central Pennsylvania College Biology Teachers Conference was
held
Bloomsburg
at
State College on March 7 and 8. Biologists
from
forty
community
col-
leges and universities within a radium
of seventy-five miles of Bloomsburg
met to discuss various problems of
mutual concern
tion.
Page twelve
in
biological
educa
which you are employed is on our list.
Please make your gifts payable to
the Alumni Loyalty Fund.
Two graduate
awarded
fellowships have been
to the
Department
of
Com-
munication Disorders at Bloomsburg
State College by the U. S. Office of
Education for 1970-71.
Those fellowships carry stipends of
$2,200, a waiver of tuition and fees
and an allowance of $600 per dependent to enable recipients to carry full
time graduate study during the academic year. Applicants should have
an undergraduate major in Communication Disorders or Speech Correction, as this curriculum was formerly
called, and should be qualified for acceptance in the Division of Graduate
Studies.
|
Warren
couple resides in Philadelphia.
Class Representative: John M. Dalfovo,
61
Dean
Street,
Beaver Mead-
ows, Pa. 18216. (Class President).
Erwin, a
Dr. Forrest A.
member
of the faculty of the Bloomsburg State
College in the twenties when the local
institution was the Bloomsburg State
Normal
the
New
City,
School, has been honored by
Jersey State College, Jersey
which named
their
new
two
million dollar library for him.
a past president of the
college and is the current honorary
Dr. Irwin
is
treasurer and was active in obtaining
the funds for the
new
Johnson has been serving
of Elefor
the
of the 1939-1970 col-
mentary Education
second semester
Division
at
BSC
lege year.
Johnson
Johnson,
and
is
is
who
replacing Dr. Royce O.
is on sabbatical leave
visiting a
number
of
elemen-
tary schools throughout various parts
of the United States.
Johnson was appointed to the BSC
faculty in September of 1952 as a staff
member of the Benjamin Franklin
School and
has been a supervisor of student teachers of the Elementary Education
Division for a number of years.
Elementary Laboratory
library.
The Society of Physics Students of
Bloomsburg State College installed
a charter group into Sigma Pi Sigma.
National Honorary society in Physics.
The installation was part of an all
day program of activities designed
for both the Bloomsburg college and
local
I.
acting director,
as
1970
for scholarships.
Members
a list of 384 corporations which match gifts to Colleges
and Universities made by their emIf you are employed by a
ployees.
corporation we suggest that you do
one of two things:
Check with the corporation by
1.
which you are employed to see if
they have such a policy.
2. Write to us at the Alumni Ofby
corporation
if the
fice to see
professor
Dr. George D. Spache.
1964—
University of Florida, was
emeritus,
1965—
the principal speaker at the general
session of the Sixth Annual Reading
Conference held at Bloomsburg State
College on March 13 and 14.
ADDRESSES WANTED
communities.
Advice to save
from
students
“drowning in a sea of mathematics”
was given an estimated 300 elementary teachers at a highly successful
Science and Mathematics Conference
at BSC on April 11.
Conference chairman
Dr. Donald
Vannan and Richard Donald announcel plans to hold another conference
next spring.
Speaking were Dr. Lola May. mathematics consultant,
Winnetko, 111.,
public schools and Dr. Glenn Blough,
University of Maryland.
1968— Victoria A. Mikell.
1953 Robert Stevenson
1952 John Peffer
Lt. John J. Owens
Barbara Wendell
1915 Alma Baer (Mrs. John Huff-
—
—
—
1968 — Virginia Styer Moore
1915 — Ramon Seller Roldman
man)
1968— Patricia A. Koerner
1964— Judy Reitz (Mrs. Samuel R.
Dunkelberger)
1968
— Victoria
—
A.
Mikell
1967—Sylvia M. Plotts
1901 Genevieve Burns
TIIE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
RESOLUTION
The
April 25.
Whereas:
following resolution was adopted
It
was approved by
Dr. Robert
Bloomsburg
J.
a
at the meeting held on Saturday,
unanimous standing vote.
Nossen was formally inaugurated as President
College on April 18, 1970, and
State
of
1
Whereas:
Dr. Nossen brings with him a wealth of experience as an educator and administrator, and
Whereas:
He was
Whereas:
The members
selected for his high position by a committee composed
of students, faculty, and trustees, confirmed by the Board of
Trustees, an recommended to the Governor of the Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania for appointment, and
of
the
Alumni Association
of
Bloomsburg State
and
College reflect with nostalgia on their days as students
are becoming increasingly aware of the unrest pervading college
campuses, and recognize that constructive criticism, peaceful
the
demonstrations, and legislative changes may contribute to
growth of a great
Whereas:
The members
Whereas:
The
institution,
and
of the Alumni Association view with concern the
disruptive forces which have torn some campuses asunder, and
said Association has as
its
primary objective the support of
alma mater in developing a dynamic educational program and
that such a program be the first and common responsibility of all
its
members
Be
it
of the college
community
resolved, therefore, that the Board of Directors and members of the Alumni
Association along with all graduates of Bloomsburg State College
support President Nossen and the Board of Trustees in their efforts to develop and implement policies and procedures which
will coordinate the revision and expansion of the program of
instruction, the recruitment and retention of dedicated and able
faculty members, the construction and maintenance of necessary'
physical plant facilities, and the relationships and activities of
members of the college community in order that each student
may achieve his greatest potential growth and educational
development, and
Be
it
further resolved that alumni, individually and collectively, express their
support by communicating their feelings in writing to President
Nossen, and
Be
it
be approved at the annual meeting
Bloomsburg State College on April 18, 1970, and
minutes of the meeting and be published in the next issue
the B.S.C. Alumni Quarterly.
also resolved that this resolution
Signed:
The Committee
Elwood Wagner, Chairman
Mrs. Charlotte McKechnie
Mrs. Grace Conner
Boyd
F.
Buckingham
of
of
Loyalty Fund
OCTOBER
Amt.
No.
Yr.
Others
1892
1896
1901
1902
1905
1906
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1923
1110.00
3
3.00
10.00
3.00
25.00
55.25
25.00
49.00
22.00
179.00
123.00
94.00
53.00
93.00
10.00
140.00
25.00
70.00
60.00
89.00
111.00
52.00
1
1
2
1
7
3
9
3
6
20
8
6
9
1
17
5
10
5
12
14
7
7
12
50.00
78.00
1,
1969
Fourth Year
- APRIL
No.
Yr.
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
13
20
7
9
13
11
32
7
11
5
6
7
2
5
7
2
7
5
13
9
5
3
4
5
16,
Amt.
90.00
117.00
57.00
89.00
85.00
47.50
196.75
60.00
97.50
35.00
82.00
55.00
10.00
80.00
50.00
15.00
33.50
52.00
133.00
52.50
60.00
17.00
40.00
30.00
1970
No.
Yr.
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1982
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
6
12
16
7
6
7
3
9
7
12
11
9
17
6
13
17
13
32
31
36
35
38
4
TO BE DETACHED, FILLED OUT, AND RETURNED
Signature
Name
while in college
Address
(street)
Zip Code
(town)
If
above address
is
new check here
Amount
Year of graduation
Mail checks to Alumni Office, Box 31, B.S.C.
insure tax deductions, make checks payable to
To
B. S. C.
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Amt.
98.91
115.00
121.00
95.00
35.00
82.00
15.00
65.00
38.00
94.00
81.00
46.00
110.00
40.00
114.00
118.00
72.50
178.00
145.00
171.50
224.00
198.50
11.00
Final plans have been completed lor a new Administration Building at Blocmsburg State College. When completed
an estimated cost of $1,350,000, the structure will provide offices, conference rooms, and work areas for the
college business office, members of the Dean of Student’s staff, the Dean of Instruction’s staff, college duplicating
at
services, college mailing
ment.
room and
With the exception
post office, and complete
facilities
of the large storage area, the building will
for the Purchasing and Receiving
be completely air conditioned.
Depart-
THE PRESIDENT’S PAGE
The summer months have been particularly full ones.
Once again, the
college offered three sessions, and enrollment in each continued to increase
over previous sessions. In addition, the college welcomed about 250 students
representing the Pennsylvania Association of Farm Cooperatives, two groups
from abroad representing the Experiment in International Living, and four
groups of incoming Freshmen, with their parents.
Summer sessions provide an excellent opportunity for acceleration, for
make-up, and for enrichment. Starting this year, each offering is calculated
to meet a specific student need, and is being integrated into a two-year plan
Insofar as is possible and feasible, professors
of courses for each department.
from other campuses are brought in for these sessions to provide a greater
breadth of learning experience.
Once again, the college offered a wide range of summer lectures and artists.
Of special significance was the appearance in July of Miss Lynn Bari in a
production of The Little Foxes, and of David Bimey in Hamlet. These, like
productions of previous summers, were directed bv a member of the college
faculty and, except for the lead, utilized college players.
The Farm group spent four days on campus in early July. Highly select
ed, highly motivated, these young people were capable of restoring anyone’s
Particularly concerned with
faith in our public schools and in our students.
cooperation, they demonstrated the pleasures such a group can derive from
learning together, working together, singing together, and losing themselves
completely in an array of activities. Ah who had any association with this
group hope that the organization will return to the Bloomsburg campus in
subsequent years.
Bloomsburg State College has become increasingly concerned with International Education, and, therefore, particularly welcomed the first two foreign
groups to visit the campus through the Experiment in International Living.
The initial group included eleven students and teachers from Japan; the second,
a group of thirteen teachers from Germany.
Each attended classes of their
choice, visited a number of faculty homes, and lived with and studied with
regular Bloomsburg students.
All reports verified the success of the program
both for the visitors and for our own campus community.
And, finally, the college initiated this year Freshmen Summer Orientation.
Replacing the usual rather hectic and certainly crowded, traditional fall Orieri
cation, students and their parents were invited to the campus for a three-day
period in groups of about 250. They were addressed by members of the Administrative staff and faculty, engaged in a number of activities, underwent the
usual testing, and were assisted in preparing their fall schedules.
Special
programs were held for the parents with emphasis upon student personnel
services.
The college has announced its new Administrative Reorganization. Following a year of study, a plan has now been developed which will provide a reorganization of responsibilities, the development of new titles, and a ffexibilitx
which should serve the college well during the coming years of expansion and
development. Further details will be carried in a future issue of the Quarterlv
o
Among
the
new programs
o
o
for the
o
fall
o
will
o
o
be one
in
Medical Technolog\
offered in connection with the Geisinger Medical Center.
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
Although the 1970-71 budget year will be a particularly tight one, the
college, nevertheless, will welcome approximately 4,000 students to the campus.
These students, as I am sure you have already heard, will be paying an additional
$200.00 per year in fee costs.
o
o
o
o
o
o
The much discussed Bloomsburg Foundation
o
is
now becoming
a reality.
Formally approved through all legal channels, the final proposal was presented
to the Board of
rnstces at their July meeting.
The Foundation will enable
die college to engage in meaningful educational projects which cannot or should
not be supported by state funds.
Again, in a later issue, we will provide
further details about the Foundation and about its relationship to the total
I
college operation.
524 IN
will have your achievements
you have a world of sufficient order
in which to live— if you preserve the
basic freedoms you have inherited—
pay and pay, in money and
if you
self, for schools, roads and hospitals
against
fight
—if you continue to
tyranny and hatred— if you hold as
inviolate the doctrine that men and
countries can survive and develop
only under law.”
This was the challenge presented
by Dr. Robert J. Nossen, president,
“You
if
College’s
State
during Bloomsburg
commencement convocation held at
the Bloomsburg fairgrounds.
There were fifty-three candidates
for the Bachelor of Arts Degree. 475
for bachelor of Science Degree, nineteen for Master of Education Degree,
and one for a Master of Arts Degree.
Participating in the commencement
program were: invocation, Father
Bernard H. Petrina. Catholic campus
minister: presentation of candidates.
John A. Hoch, dean of instruction;
Dr.
Nossen:
conferral of degrees,
awarding of degrees. Edgar A. Fenstermacher, of the Board of Trustees,
assisted by Edson J. Drake, director,
arts and sciences: Emory W. Rarig.
acting director of elementary education: C. Stuart Edwards, director of
secondary education, and William L.
Jones, director of special education.
The response for the class of 1970
was given by John M. Dalfovo, president. The benediction was offered by
the Rev. Vincent R. Siciliano, First
English Baptist Church.
Taking as his theme “It’s Your
Move,” Dr. Nossen stated in part:
“The American Bar Association in
its report of the Commission on Campus Government and Student Dissent,
included the statement ‘freedom of
dissent, freedom from disorder.’ We
are just now completing a spring that
has seen dissent, intensive dissent, unfortunately erupting in various forms
and degrees of disorder.
We have
been through not only a struggle to
establish a philosophy or ideology, but
a constant threat of or attempt to
force confrontation.
We have read
or received a super-abundance of
analysis or information, and
have
emerged, I am sure, with about the
same amount of confusion.
Concerned With Future
“But I’m not talking this afternoon
about freedoms or causes or necessary changes. I’m concerned simply
—
with prospects for survival my survival and yours, but especially yours,
because the coming several decades
belong to you, not me; the survival of
higher education, not to protect me
or to educate my children, but you
and your children; the survival of
this country, this land which, despite
all of its problems,
represents the
best
achievement
of
economic
strength, of personal hope and personal freedom, of idealism towards a
better world for the threatened and
SEPTEMBER,
American education
GRADUATING CLASS
1970
short
How
the
the oppressed everywhere, that
world has yet known. I am concerned
not for my economic security or personal safety, but for yours and for
that of your childlren.
"This is a time rather to ask you,
graduating in 1970, moving into ocdecupations which will inevitably
mand from you leadership on a variety of boards, in economic organizations, in government, in business and
industry what are you going to do
with your world? Despite the repeated claims of your disaffection, what
are you going to do now for America?
Because you have reached not a
someday in the future, but a now, and
—
—
your move!
“At a speech at Kent State University several weeks ago, Jerry Rubin
said, ‘Until you people are prepared
to kill your parents, you aren’t ready
it’s
Well,
you are already parents, and
of you will be before too long.
for
the
some
revolution.’
of
most
How
are you going to handle this situation?
It’s Your Move
“Mr. Rubin said further, ‘The
American school system will be end-
ed in two years.
We are going to
bring it down.
Quit being students.
Become criminals. We have to disrupt every institution and break every
law.’ So, for most of you, after this
hour you are no longer students. But
what position will you take? What
do you want? What will you stand
It is, indeed, your move.
“I have given and I believe that
most of my generation have assured
your rights, under reason and law, to
dissent, and the full right to work for
changes as you have viewed their
needs, or to review that which should
be subject to review. But a mob,
no matter what the original intent of
those who have organized it and lead
it,
degenerates inevitably into anarchy.
And through anarchy nothing
can be changed, or developed, or improved in this world.
“We, too, had and have our ideals,
and many of my age have given fully
of themselves for their philosophies.
But we had and continue to have, I
believe, ultimate faith in the economic, social and political structure of
this country.
If you lack that faith,
the result will be simple and inevitable; as the country passes over into
your hands, it will be destroyed. It’s
really that simple; if you want to destroy America, you will have full opportunity when those of your generation control it.
“We, too, wanted to improve higher
education when I and my contemporaries were students, and in the years
since. We saw and see inequity, in-
for?
justice, and weaknesses of all kinds.
And, like you, we still work and hope
for what might prove to be at least
a
partial answer.
But you cannot
improve an institution that doesn’t
exist, and if Jerry Rubin is right.
has
two
but
years of possible lead time.
are you going to spend them?
Confidence in Class
I think
you’ll make it.
spite of all our educational
“I think
that,
in
shortcomings, we have given you a
for values and that we have
assured you of something of value
basis
upon which you can build.
“I think, ultimately, you will stand
I
for this country, and defend it.
think you will be proud of this College
and of the American system of education, despite its never-ending need for
improvement.
“I
what
ultimately,
see,
you’ll
of us have been try-
think
it
is
many
Then it’ll be your
ing to tell you.
turn to tell others. It is now, and for
the next few years will continue to
be, your move until the following
generation needs the kind of anlysis
and understanding you’ll be trying
impart
to
to
them.
“The decision you make,
affect not only
all
generations yet to
upon this earth.”
of
us,
have
then, will
but those
their
time
BACCALAUREATE
The Bloomsburg State College baccalaureate service was held Sunday,
May 14 in Haas Auditorium. It was
sponsored by the Community Ministries, a group of nine local congregations banded together to do ecumenical work.
The Rev. Dr. Gustave W. Weber,
president of Susquehanna University,
Selinsgrove, spoke on “The Inevitable Conniption.”
Liturgists for
the
baccalaureate
service were Dr. Robert Nossen, president of Bloomsburg State College;
the Rev. Bernard Petrina, Roman
Catholic College Chaplain, and the
Rev. Craig J. Dorward, pastor of
Church,
Matthew
Lutheran
Bloomsburg, chairman of the service
committee in charge of arrangements.
William Decker, B.M., M.M., head of
the music department, BSC, was the
organist playing “Darwell” by Willan
and “Fugue in G. Major” by Buxtehude.
Miss Beth Powlus, mezzosoprano, sang “Thou Shalt Bring
St.
Them
In.”
A grant of $58,800 has been awarded to Bloomsburg State College in an
educational opportunity allocation to
benefit 107 students.
The fund will
provide for grants ranging from $200
to
$1,000 for
each academic year
of
study up to a miximum of four years
for students of exceptional financial
need who are eligible for the pro-
gram.
BSC
is
to
determine the
re-
cipinets.
Published quarterly by the Alumni Association of the Bloomsburg State College,
Bloomsburg, Penna. 17815.
Second-Class
Postage Paid at Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania.
Send P O D. Form No. 3579 to the AL-
—
UMNI OFFICE, BLOOMSBURG STATE
COLLEGE, BLOOMSBURG, PA. 17815
Page one
3n Mnttoriam
1896
—Stella
Hughes
Irvin
(Mrs.
Davis) Flushing, N. Y.
1903— Ray L. Hawk, Plymouth, Pa.
1916 Olive M. Aucker (Mrs. Hoyt
—
Glaze) Port Trevorton. Pa.
Toomey
1916— Genevieve
Mow-
bray, Norwood. Pa.
'
(Mrs. J.
Kathryn Walbourn
F. 1924—
Laubach) Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
1920— Claire Herman Ruth, West
1919
Nanticoke, Pa.
Kathryn Wolverton Myers
Blanche Horne Zimmerman,
1923
Halifax, Pa.
1925 Mrs.
Pearl
Radel
Bickel,
Sunbury. Pa.
Everyone
1927— Margaret
Everett, Pa.
1933 Anthony
—
ary Harry Edwards, also of Benton,
tell of the need for missionaries and
decided to enter that field.
He was ordained a minister of the
Congregational Church and went to
the Philippines in 1915. He taught at
in
the Union Theological Seminary
Manila and in 1929 he began his literary work with the Moro tribesmen.
Finding the Moros had no written
language, Dr. Laubach adapted the
alphabet into the Maranaw language
and started a folk school to teach
them to read. Within a few months,
there were 50 teachers on the staff.
During the Depression, the project
was threatened by lack of funds. A
Moro chief said, “Literacy is the best
thing that
ever came
Lanao.
to
Crouse
F.
Derrick,
Carroll,
Mount
Carmel, Pa.
1962— Ruth Stine Lindemuth, Catawissa. Pa.
how
in
my
village
who knows
read must teach
someone
else.”
This gave rise to the “Each
One Teach One” program which
spread literacy to an estimated 70
to
million persons.
In addition Dr.
Laubach developed
teaching materials for use
103
in
countries and 312 languages.
Five
biographies were written about him
and he authored fifty-six books.
His
most recent, “Forty Years of the Silent Millions,” was released on June
22
.
He founded Laubach
Literacy, Inc.,
with headquarters in Syracuse. Decorated
by two nations, he was
awarded seven honorary degrees.
From 1941 to 1954, he was missionary-at-large for the National Council
Churches and in addition did literacy work for the United Nations,
Scientific and Cultural Org. (UNESCO), the U. S. State Department, and
the Peace Corps.
Dr. Laubach’s “home church” was
the
Benton
United
Methodist
Church where he was the featured
speaker Sunday June 7 as the congregation marked its centennial year.
Dr. Laubach was a recipient of the
Alumni Distinguished Service Award
of
in 1961.
Dr. Frank C. Laubach
’01
Dr. Frank C. Laubach. Benton native credited with lifting millions from
the morass of illiteracy, died June 13
of
age
ot acute leukemia at the
eighty-five.
unexpectedly
in
Death occurred
Crouse-Irving Memorial Hospital at
In apparent good
Syracuse, N. Y.
health, he had visited in Benton over
the weekend.
The son of the late Dr.
John Britain
and Harriet Derr Laubach, the worldacclaimed educator was a graduate
of Benton high school.
He received
his bachelor’s degree from Princeton
University
in
1909.
In
he was
Theological
1913
Union
graduated from
Seminary and he was awarded
master’s and Ph D. degrees from
umbia University
in
his
Col-
1915.
Following his
graduation
from
Princeton, he heard the late Mission-
Page two
Russell C. Zimmerman ’16
Russell Carling Zimmerman. 401
East Fifth Street. Berwick, died recently at the Berwick Hospital following a prolonged illness.
Born in
Shickshinny. he had spent most of
Berwick.
A dedicated educator, many of his
former students credited his guidance
in the choice of their life’s work. One
of his outstanding ideas was to use
his
life
in
work of his students
ho
actual vespers at First
dist Church, Berwick, when the Rev.
Aurance Shank, minister, gave his
the
illustrated
MM
in the
evening vespei-s.
A graduate of
School
and
Berwick
High
Bloomsburg
Normal
School, he received a BS degree at
Bucknell University.
He attended
Pennsylvania State University
and
received a master’s degree at New
York University. His teaching career
included subjects from mechanical
drawing finance and business,
penmanship and, at retirement,
was art consultant in the Berwick
Senior High School.
Following retirement he accepted
a position as art directer of the Colwyck Junior High School, New Castle,
Del, where he taught for two
years. At Wilmington, Del., he was
associated with the art department
Owing to ill health
of Wanamakers.
he was forced to return to his home.
A member of the First United
Methodist Church of Berwick, he was
also a member of Knapp Lodge, No.
AM
of Berwick and Cald462 F and
He
well Consistory of Bloomsburg.
was a member of Berwick Historical
Society and Columbia County Mental
Health Association.
Jeanne Stroh Walsh ’20
Mrs. Jeanne S. Walsh, seventy, of
Bloomsburg R. D. 3, died at Bloomsburg Hospital on June 5.
Bloomsburg she was active
the American
Revolution, was formerly a member
Star,
and
of the Order of Eastern
was a retired elementary school
teacher. She was a mamber of the
Lutheran Church, Mainville.
Born
in
in
the Daughters of
Dorothy Barton Cherrington ’23
Mrs. Dorothy Lucille Barton Cherrington died June 17 in the BloomsShe was born July
burg Hospital.
22, 1904, a daughter of the late Harry
S. and Mable- Peacock Barton.
She was a member of the Wesley
United Methodist Church and a graduate of Bloomsburg High School and
Bloomsburg Sttae Normal. She taught
in Hershey and Bloomsburg prior to
her marriage.
Her death breaks a
marital span of forty-four years.
Laura Stevens Graham ’26
Mrs. Laura Graham, sixty-four, of
145 East Sixth Street, Bloomsburg.
died
May
17 at the
Bloomsburg Hos-
She was born in Bloomsburg.
April 1, 1906. She was a member of
the Church of Christ and active in
church work.
pital.
Raber Seely
Raber
Seely, 87 Clifton Avenue.
Kingston, N. Y., a former resident of
S.
Berwick, died on May 6.
A former coach at BSC, he was
an all-around athlete and had captained both the basketball and football
teams at Gettysburg College from
which he graduated. He also attended West Point.
He graduated from
Berwick High School in 1926.
HOME-COMING DAY
Saturday, October
17,
1970
ALUMNI DAY
Saturday, April 24, 1971
art,
he
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
1967—
^Ihanh
5,
l^jau
Loyalty Fund contributions to July
1970, not previously reported:
Faculty Emeritus— Edna J. Hazen,
McCammon.
Lucy
1904—
Howard
Worman.
1903
S.
K. Houtz, Mrs. Nellie
1909— Mrs. David Sloan.
1905 Mrs. Frances L. Davis.
1907— Edwin M. Barton, Mae
Howard, Mrs. W. H. Hile.
L.
1910 Nora Elizabeth Geise, Mrs.
1911—
Vera Housenick, LaRue E. Brown,
Henry S. Conrey, Mrs. Thomas
Mrs.
1912—
H. Keiser, Mrs. J. F. O'Brien, S.
Tracy Roberts.
Thomas H. Keiser, Mrs. Anna
Kline Kocher.
Mrs. Ruth K. Landis, Floyd
Tubbs. Ercel D. Bidleman.
1913 Mrs. John Bradford, Jacob F.
Kimber C. Kuster.
1914 Mrs. Bruce F. Lamont.
1915 S. J. Robbins. Mrs. Elwood
E. Farrell, Mrs. William C. Burger,
Mrs. William J. Prizer, John H. ShuWetzel, Dr.
man,
Mrs. Ray B. Wandel. Mrs. Doro1918—
thy Rice Williams, Lillian Zimmerman, Mrs. Frank S. Hutchison.
Mrs.
S.
J.
Robbins, Dorothy
M. Fritz, Mrs. Florence E. Munro.
1920—
Frank
S. Hutchison.
1917 Allen L. Cromis, Miss Ruth
Smith.
Vida. E. Edwards. Mrs.
T.
Edson Fischer, Dr. Helen E. Becker,
Harold J. Pegg. Dr. Ralph L. Hart.
1919 Rhoda L. Crouse. Mildred E.
Stover.
Mrs. William V. Moyer, Mrs.
R. E. Deitrick, Class Treasurer, Mrs.
Anna D. Barrow. Eleanor H. Griffith.
Mrs. Golden Kehler, Clara N. Santee, Jessie Mensinger. Mrs. Fay Jones
Pugh.
1922 Mrs. Paul A. Morrow, Mrs.
W. F. Barry.
1923 T. Edson Fischer, Mrs.
C.
Ellen Howard. Mrs. Henrietta Souleret, Mrs. Frances H. Harrell. Joseph
Zelloe.
Johns.
Lois Lawson, Raymond Stry
jak, Mrs. William K. Richards, Mrs.
J.
Edwin Krum.
Mrs. H. Pearson Muller.
Mrs. Leonard Baker, Mrs.
Raymond J. Brenner, Mrs. Stephen
Cimbala, Mrs. Robert C. Deisroad.
1936— Myers, Mrs. Donald Stevens,
Naomi
1937—
Mrs.
William Ungemach, Mrs. Kermit D. Witmer, Gift from Class Treasury.
Mrs. W. K. Mann.
Donald A. Watts.
1941—
1938 Paul G. Martin, Mrs. Margaret M. Dickey.
1940 S. Dean Harpe, Mrs. Fay L.
Clark,
1942—Mrs. Ray McBride, Jr., Mrs.
Vivian Payne.
Dr. and Mrs. C. Stuart Edwards, Mrs. M. Rebecca Hackenburg,
S Frederick Warman, Leo J. Lerman. Mrs. Frank M. Taylor.
Howard W. Brochyus.
1943 Frank M. Taylor, Mrs. Pablo
Caban.
1944 Mrs. Wanda Langdon, Mrs.
Carl Demetrikopoulas,
Mrs. Janet
McLaughlin.
1945 Mrs. Albert Kohrherr.
1946 Mrs. Dorothy Pugh, Mrs. D.
T. Walker.
1947 Robert L. Bunge, Mrs. Helen
Roberts.
1948 Mary
Elizabeth Rush,
Lt.
1952—
Col.
James J. Dormer.
1949 George N. Dotzel, Jr., Mrs.
Arthur E. Fasshauer, Dr. Eugene M.
Nuss.
1950 Murray
A.
Hockenburg,
Donald L. Hoar, John J. Sheleman,
1959—
Mrs. Richard A. Ammerman.
1951 Hazel E. Palmer, John Joseph Ryan.
Dr. Frank J. Furgele.
John J. Tilmont.
1963—Mrs. John H. Hessler, Jr.,
Mrs. Walter Casper.
1957 Robert G. Rainey, Thomas A.
1953
1956
Garrett.
1924
Mrs. Alfred L. Wendel, Mrs.
Milton
Sommer, Miriam R. Lawson.
Mrs. Myron M. Trumbower,
1925
1931—
from Class Treasurer.
Rev. Thomas L. Henry, Elizabeth H. Hubler, Mrs. Sheldon A.
MacDougall.
1933— Mrs. William McGuire, James
1932
1934
1935
Mrs. G. G. Reichley.
1916
A. Nevin Sponseller, Catherine D
Mrs. Orva Reinbold, Gift
Reilly.
Mrs. John P. Magee,
Mi's.
Pearl
Bickel, Mrs. Wilbur Deeter,
Mrs.
Esther W. Farrell. Mrs. Leona M.
Kerschner, Mrs. James F. Miller,
Mrs. Pauline Swank, Mrs.
Eugene
Walsh.
1926 Mrs. Claude F. Avery, Mrs.
Helen D. Gustason.
1928 Grace E. Saylor, Mrs. Grace
M. Bucher.
1929 Anna
M. Troutman. Mrs.
Robert J. Walters, Wilbur G. Fischer.
1930
Karleen M. Hoffman,
Mrs.
Frances Y. Leisenring, Mi’s. Harold
A. Walter, Myron R. Welsh,
Mrs.
Myrtle Ker, Mrs. Leona Brunges,
Mrs. Harold A. Davis, Richard D.
Frymire, Mrs. William J. Jones, Dr.
SEPTEMBER,
1970
1958
1960
Mrs. C. J. Tuza, Beth Evans.
Otto H. Donar.
-Robert M.
Rohm,
James
Richard
Wright,
McCarthy,
Donald
Mr. and Mrs. James
H.
J.
Peck.
1962 David W. Barbour, Mrs. Calvin Lehew, Arthur B. Comstock.
Richard D. Walters, Mr. and
1963 Mrs. R. J.
Lauzon,
Lynn
Shoop, Lanus D. Miller.
1964 Mrs. Richard
Bartz,
Floyd
M. Grimm, William R. Helgeno, Sr.
Mrs. Richard C. Scorese.
1965 Randall F. Romig, Mrs. Harold W. Smith, Mrs. Gerri DeMilio,
Mrs. Jack Madery, Mr. and Mrs.
Carl P. Sheran.
1966 John W.
Mi’s. Richard H.
1966
—
Kerlish,
Mr.
and
Fulmer.
Charles S. Lovett, Robert C.
Leidy, Mrs. A. F. Andrews.
Thomas A. Fowles, Mr. and
Mrs. James Stepanski, Mrs. Floyd M.
Grimm, Phillip D. Folk, Alvin J.
Brunner.
1968 Joanne Polega, Ruth A. Slonaker, Pamela G. Wagner, Linda F.
Herbert, Mrs. Phillip D. Folk.
1969 Carolyn T. Weaver, Gene L.
Berkheimer, Randy W. Hackenburg,
Lee J. Berry, Paul W. Canouse, Jr.,
Mrs. T. L. Guy.
1970
Class Treasurer, Elizabeth
A
Jones.
NEW MEMBERS
OF THE FACULTY
Raymond E. Babineau, Assistant
Professor of Education. B.A. and M.
A., Montclair State College. Doctoral
candidate at Temple University.
Harold J. Bailey, Assistant Professor of Mathematics.
B.S., Albright
College: M.Ed.,
University.
Pennsylvania
State
Matthew Zoppetti, Associate Professor of Education.
B.S., California
State College: M.Ed., University of
Pittsburgh; Ph.D.,
University
of
Maryland.
John Robert Quatroche, Assistant to
the President.
B.S., and M.S., State
University College, Fredonia, N. Y.
Joseph A. DeFelice, Assistant Profof Sociology.
B.S.,
Pennsylvania State University;
Master of
Social Work, University of Pittsburgh.
Dr. Arthur Lysiak, Assistant Professor of History. B.S., Loyola; M.A.
and Ph.D., Loyola University.
Michael W. Gaynor, Associate Professor of Psychology.
B.A., Muhlenberg College; M.S., Lehigh University; Ph.D., Colorado State
Univer-
essor
sity.
John E. Hartzel.
Professor of Business.
Assistant
’58,
Bloomsburg State; M.Ed., Lehigh University.
Graduate work at Temple UniB.S.,
versity.
Vjagar Bowa, Professor of Economics. B.A.. Khalas College, Gujranwala; M.A.. Punjab University; M.A.
University of Pennsylvania; Ph.D.,
Cornell University.
Kenneth D. Schnure, Assistant Registrar.
B.S.,
Bloomsburg
State.
Russell W. Guthrie, instructor asComputer Services
signed to BSC
B.S., Mansfield State ColCenter.
lege.
David E. Greenwald, Assistant
Professor of Sociology. B.A., UniverM.A., University of Pennsylvania.
sity of California at Berkeley. Candidate for Ph.D., at Berkeley.
Tommy Lee Cooper, Director of
Admissions.
B.A., Morehead State
University. Kentucky; M.Ed., Pennsylvania State University.
James D. Pietrangeli, Associate
Professor of Phychology, B.A., University of Virginia; M.A., Kent State
University. Additional graduate work
at the University of Florida.
Page three
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR
H. F. Fenstemaker T2
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
’34
Grace Foote Conner,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS — ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
PRESIDENT
Terms
Howard
F. Fenstemaker
242 Central Road
T2
18
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Term
Millard Ludwig ’48
Center and Third Streets
Millville, Pennsylvania 17846
Term Expires 1972
John Thomas ’47
68 Fourth Street
Hamburg, Pennsylvania 19526
Elizabeth H. Hubler
’43
205
Dr. Alexander J. McKechnie, Jr.
19 N. 24th St.
Camp
Ilousenick,
Mrs. Vera
503
Market
1907
Representative:
Class
Edwin M.
Barton, 353 College Hill, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
1909
Bloom
Hill,
Fred
W.
Street, Danville, Pa.
17821
1910
Class
Representative: Robert E.
Metz, 23 Manhattan Street, Ashley,
18706
Pa.
’39
Pa. 17011
September, 1970
1911
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Representative:
3,
Class Representative: Mrs. Pearle
Fitch Diehl, 627 Bloom Street, Danville, Pa. 17821
1905
Page four
Terms expire 1973
Dr. Frank J. Furgele ’52
Colonial Farm Box 88
R. D. 1, Glen Mills, Pa. 19342
Lancaster, Pennsylvania 17603
1903
Diehl, 627
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
expires 1973
Representative:
’40
224 Leonard Street
James H. Deily, Jr. ’41
37 N. Bausman Drive
H. Walter
Class Representative:
Riland, 11 Warwick Avenue, Scarsdale, N. Y. 10583
Class
Clayton H. Hinkel
’29
McKnight Street
Volume LXXI, Number
Hemingway
140
Gordon, Pennsylvania 17936
TREASURER
Kimber C. Kuster T3
West Eleventh Street
Dr. William L. Bitner III
33 Lincoln Ave.,
Glens Falls, N. Y. 12801
Earl A. Gehrig ’37
110 Robin Lane, Sherwood Village
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Street,
Dr.
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
State College, Pa. 16801
Term expires 1973
Class
’34
West Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
102
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie ’35
509 East Front Street
Berwick, Pennsylvania 18603
SECRETARY
Elwood M. Wagner
643 Wiltshire Road
Term
expire 1972
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
expires 1973
VICE PRESIDENT
Col.
Terms
expire 1971
Mrs. Verna Jones ’36
West Avenue, Apartment C-4
Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087
1915
Class Representative: John H. Shu-
man, 368 East
burg, Pa. 17815
1913
Representative: Dr. Kimber
Class
Kuster, 140 West 11th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Elizabeth J. Robbins (Mrs. John
Bradford) lives at Station Road, Newport, Newport, N. J. 08345
1914
..Class Representative: J. Howard
Deily, 518 West Third Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Street,
Blooms-
1916
1912
Representative:
Howard F.
Fenstermaker,
242
Central
Road,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
Main
Class Representative: Mrs. Russell
Burrus (Emma Harrison) R. I). 2,
Orangeville, Pa. 17859
1917
Class
Cromis,
Milton,
Representative:
Allen
Mahoning Manor, R. D.
Pa.
L.
1.
17847
1918
Clair
Class
Representative:
J.
Patterson, 315 West Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1919
Class Representative: Miss Catherine A. Reimard, 335 Jefferson St.,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Lucia Hammond (Mrs. Robert L.
Wheeler) lives at 124 West Fern Avenue. Apt. 3. Redlands. Calif. 92373
Esther Reichard Schaffer lives at
143 West Broad St., Hazleton. Pa.
18201
1920
W
Leroy
Representative:
Road.
Old Berwick
3117
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
Creasy,
Ransom
Street,
Edna
S.
Representative:
Class
Harter, R. D. 1, Nescopcck, Pa. 18623
1923
Nelson Stauffer, 88 John St.,
1’a. 18704. (Arline Frantz)
Mrs. James Wertman, 20 Parish
Street, Dallas, Pa. 18612
Mildred Ann Goodwin lives at 8030
Rancho Fanita Drive, Santee, Calif.
Representative: Mrs. Raymond Kashner. 125 Forrest Road,
Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa.
17815
The rural group of the class of 1923
met at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Leslie Seely, Drums, Pa., for their
annual picnic. The following members and their families were present'
Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Beagle,
Sarah Leighow, Mrs. Dale Leighow
and their three daughters. Mrs. Lillian Kline, Mrs. Rachel Kline, Mr.
and Mrs. Leslie Seely and son. Letters were received from Mrs. Leona
Moore and Miss Elma Major.
Kathryn Harder Edmonds is living
at 2500 East Las
Olas Boulevard.
Apt. 401, Fort Lauderdale,
33301
Kingston,
Out-
standing Citizen Award this year went
to
Stephen A. Lerda, principal of
Westminster. Pa., High School. Lerda
came to Carroll County in 1945 from
Pennsylvania and
the
taught
in
Hampstead schools until becoming
Westminster
High
School in
In
the
Lutheran
Church he has been active in many
principal
areas,
of
1957.
including
teaching
in
the
Sunday School, membership in the
Church Council and serving on the
Executive Board of the Synod. The
National Association
of
Secondary
School Principals honored Lerda this
spring with a special citation for his
contribution over the years both at
the local and national levels.
As chairmen of the Chamber of
Commerce
Education
Committee.
Lerda was the prime mover in the
Adult Education program.
1924
Class Representative:
Edward F.
Schuyler, 236 West Ridge Avenue,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1925
Class
Representative: Michael
P.
Walakonis, Box 222, Ringtown, Pa.
17S67
Mary Esther Whalen (Mrs. Francis
Farrall)
St.,
Shenandoah, Pa. 17976
lives
at 119
S.
Jordan
1926
Class
Representative: Mrs. Pearl
Bloss, R.D. 2, Wapwallopen, Pa. 18660
1927
Class Representative: Mrs. Ralph
G. Davenport (Verna
16
Medley),
SEPTEMBER,
1970
Maple
Class
Representatives:
Luther W.
Class
Representative:
James B.
Davis, 333 East Marble Street, Mechanicsburg, Pa. 17055
1937
Mr. and
Representatives:
Mrs. Earl A. Gehrig, 110 Robin Lane,
Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa.
17815
1938
tin,
710 East Main
burg, Pa. 17701
Class
Representative:
Miss Lois
Lawson,
641
East Third Street,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Raymond Stryjak has been placed
on the substitute teacher list in the
Greater Area Nanticoke School Dist-
Willard A.
Christian, Jr., 803 Logue Street, Williamsport, Pa. 17701
Morgan Foose, formerly Chairman
the
cf
Class
Representative:
Esther
154
Representative:
Clayton
Hinkel, 224 Leonard Street,
burg, Pa. 17815
1941
Class
Representative:
It.
D. 4,
17815
art
John Partridge is principal of the
high school at Pennsauken, New Jersey.
Dr. Harvey A. Andruss, President Emeritus of BSC, delivered the
baccalaureate address at the Pennsauken High School this year.
Pa. 17815
Edwards,
Dr.
II.
Blooms-
C.
Stu-
Bloomsburg,
1942
Representative:
Zimmerman (Jean
Class
If.
Kveady
Avenue,
Mrs. Ralph
Noll),
Millersville,
165
Pa.
17551
1943
1935
William I.
East 4th Street, Blooms-
Representative:
burg, Pa. 17815
Elmer J. McKechnie has retired as
Superintendent of the Berwick area
schools. The Morning Press recently
had this editorial comment:
Retirement July 1 of Elmer J. McKechnie, superintendent of Berwick
Area School District since 1956 and
associated with Berwick schools for
33 years, will be a distinct loss to the
system.
He plans to travel and
write.
School Board President Dan
Finnis appropriately
described
superintendent
as
“dynamic
hardworking.”
Manheim Township High
School, has recently been promoted
to the position of Administration Assistant in charge of Business Affairs
Manheim Township School
in the
District, Neffsville, Pa.
1940
East Fifth Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
151
Depart-
Education
Business
of the
Class
Evans McFadden (Mrs. Joseph),
Blooms-
1939
rict.
1934
Street,
Representative:
Class
ment
1933
Reed,
Conyng-
Class Representative: Paul G. Mar-
and Margaret Swartz Bitler, 117 State
Street, Millville, Pa. 17846
1931
Class
Avenue,
18219
Class
92071
Florida.
Club’s
ham, Pa.
Lcbo)
Class
Rotary
Mrs. (Elsie
1930
Harry
Bloomsburg.
IMrs.
Cole, 100 Leonard Street,
Pa. 17815
1922
Westminster
Mary Jane Fink (Mrs. Frederick McCutclieon)
Class Representatives:
1921
Representative:
Class
Plymouth, Pa. 18651
1929
McKechnie’s
Dethe
17815
Elizabeth Singley (Mrs. Harold R.
Trexler) is teaching in Couer d’Alene,
Idaho.
1944
Representative: Mrs. (Poletime Comuntzis) Carl Demetripopoulos, Friar and Robin Lanes, Sherwood
Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1945
Mary Lou
Class Representative:
John, 257 W. 11th St., Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
and
devo-
to his work resulted in an
tended illness some time back. Naturally he wants no recurrence.
Administering a large area district
is a far more demanding job than was
the supervision of a teaching staff
years ago. Problems multiply with
ex-
tion
Mrs. RayRepresentative:
mond A. Algatt (Betty Katerman),
Bloomsburg, Pa.
253 Iron
Street,
Class
the size of the school.
Berwickians familiar w ith his community activities as well as his school
duties hope that McKechnie’s devotion to travel and writing will still
r
allow his participation in civic pro-
and that he will remain in the
community. The schools are losing
jects
a good man.
1936
Representatives:
Kathryn
Vanauker (Mrs. Nicholas Moreth) 34
Class
Linden Road, Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey 07423. Co-Chairmen: Ruth Wagner (Mrs. Lawrence Le Grande) 126
Oak Street, Hazleton, Pa. 18201 and
1946
Anastasia
Representative:
Pappas (Mrs. John Trowbridge), 102
W. Mahoning Street, Danville, Pa.
Charles
Co-chairman: Mrs.
17821.
W. Creasy (Jacqueline Shaffer), R.
D. 1, Catawissa, Pa. 17820
Class
1947
Robert L.
Bunge, 12 West Park Street, Carroll
Park, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
Representative:
1948
Harry G.
Representative:
Class
John, Jr., 425 Iron Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
USAF
James J. Dormer. Lt. Col.
(Ret.), 2358 St. Charles Drive. Clearwater, Florida 33516. is teaching in
the Largo Senior High School, Largo.
Florida.
1949
Class
Representative:
Grimes, 1723 Fulton
Pa. 17102
Alfred M.
St.,
Lampman
is
Richard E.
Harrisburg,
living at 142
Page
five
E. Sinclair
Florida. 33950
S.
Port
St.,
Charlotte,
School
Levittown
in
named
where he was
the Outstanding Teacher of the
Philosophy at the Pennsylvania State
University.
Year
Homesak,
William
1235
High
Williamsport, Pa. 17701, has
received the degree of
Doctor
of
Education from
the
Pennsylvania
State University.
Street,
1950
Class Representative: Willis Swales,
9 Raven Road, Montvale, N. J. 07645
in 1963-64.
his
University of
doctorate in
He earned
the
education at Penn
native of Harrisburg, Dr.
Kautz presently lives
in
Reeser’s
Summit, Fairview Township,
Pa.,
with his wife, Gladys, and their children Frank and Tobias.
his
State.
A
1951
Class Representative:
Dr. Russell
C. Davis, Jr., Thunder Hill,
ville, N. Y. 12740
1952
Class Representative:
Galinski, 90 Tower Hill
lestown, Pa. 18901
1954
Grahams-
Francis B.
Road, Doy-
Representative: John S. Scrimgeour, 411 East 3rd Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1954
Class Representative:
William J.
Jacobs, Tremont Annex Apartments,
2 West Main Street, Lansdale, Pa.
19446
1955
Class Representative: Dr. William
Bitner III, 33 Lincoln Avenue, Glens
Falls, N. Y.
12801
1957
William J.
l’ohutski, 554 Oakridge Drive, North
Plainfield, N. J. 07606
William C. Harrell has been named assistant director of admissions at
Class
Representative:
Shippensburg State College.
Mr. Harrell holds a master’s degree from Syracuse University and
lias been on the guidance counseling
staff of the Shippensburg Area School
System since 1964.
the former Mollie
He and
his wife,
Hippensteel, ’55,
the parents of
children,
two
Heidi, 3, and Timothy 1.
are
James E.
Harris, Bloomsburg, befull-time administrative duties
as principal of the Main-Beaver Ele-
gan
mentary
Schools,
Bloomsburg Area
School District, on July 1, 1970. Harris received his elementary education
at the
North
Centre
Township
School and graduated from Bloomsburg High School. He received his
Masters of Education degree in elementary administration from Temple
University.
Harris taught three years in Tredyffrin-Eastown School District, Valley Forge Area, and one year at the
Evans Memorial School.
For the
past seven years, he has been head
teacher of the Mainville Elementary
School.
William D. Kautz, 41, has joined
the Pennsylvania Department of Education as a teacher education advisor
in the Bureau of Teacher Education.
Dr. Kautz ’s most recent position
was at The Pennsylvania State University where he was an assistant
professor in education. He also served as a graduate assistant and center
supervisor of student teachers at the
same university. Before that, he
taught at
Woodrow Wilson High
Page
six
masters degree at
Pennsylvania and
1958
Class
Representative:
Raymond
Hargreaves, 37 Dell Road, Stanhope,
N. J. 07874
Fern A. Goss, a member of the
Montgomery
College,
faculty
of
Rockville, Maryland, has received the
degree of Doctor of Education from
George Washington University.
Marianne Angrade (Mrs. Conrad J.
6 Arrowhead Lane
Tuza) lives at
Portsmouth, R.
02871
1959
I.
William
Class Representative:
Swisher, Box 245, Cincinnatus, N.
Gary S. Fisher is living at
Third Street, North Hornell, N.
F.
Y.
365
Y.
14843
1960
Representative:
James J.
Peck, 100 Hull Road, Madison, onn.
Class
06443
1961
Representative: Edwin C.
Kuser, It. D. 1, Box 145-C, Bechtelsville, Pa. 19505
William Stevenson is Director of
Student Personnel Services at Gloucester County College, Sewell, N. J.
Class
08080
Carolyn Ann Wood
Gilligan), 400 Club
(Mrs.
Patrick
House Road, Apt.
1, Binghamton, N. Y. 13903, has received the degree of Master of Education from the Pennsylvania State
University.
Mrs. Teressa
Barrett
Ganoga Lake, R. D.
McDonald,
Benton, Pa.
17814, has received the
degree of
Master of Public Administration from
the Pennsylvania State University.
He did volunteer teaching for disadvantaged students at Prairie View
A and M. College, Prairie View.
Texas, under the funding from O.E.O.
and the Carnegie Foundation. He continued work with disadvantaged students as a volunteer teacher at Opportunities and Industrialization Center, Washington, D. C.
In 1969, he
was awarded a Community Action
Volunteer Service award.
2,
1963
Representative:
Class
Pat Biehl
(Mrs. Ronald Cranford) R. D. 1, 77
Hawthorne Ave., Boyertown, Pa. 19512
The Rev. Robert H. Pursel, formerly of Bloomsburg and for the past
four years pastor of The Chestnut
Street United Methodist Church of
Shamokin, received the degree
of
Master
of
Sacred Theology
in
Church
History at the commencement convocation of The General Theological
Seminary of the Episcopal Church.
New York City, on May 26. He is a
graduate of Wesley Theological Seminary, Washington, D. C., in the class
of 1966.
Michael R. Klick, 310 Joan St.,
South Plainfield, N. J. 07080, has received the degree of Master of Education at Rutgers University.
1962
Richard
Representative:
Class
Lloyd, 6 Farragut Dr., Piscataway,
N. J. 18854
C. Gene Baker, 2207 McCormack St.,
Placentia, Cal., 92670, has received
the degree of Master of Arts at the
University of the South, Sewanee,
Tennessee. He is teaching chemistry
at the Los Angeles High School.
Harry E. Cole, Jr., Bloomsburg,
has accepted a Fulbright-Hays grant
to teach in Greece during the coming
school year.
Cole
was graduated
from
Bloomsburg Area
Joint Higli
the help of a state
competitive scholarship, he majored
in English at Bloomsburg State College, chiefly under the direction of
Dr. Cecil C. Seronsy.
After winning a three-year National
Defense Education Act Fellowship, he
did graduate work at Lehigh Univer-
School.
With
He
sity, Bethlehem.
has
lish at Lehigh University,
taught Eng-
and for the
past four years, he has been teaching at Georgetown University, Wash-
ington, D. C.
James H. Huber, 69 Lyckman Avenue, Albany, N. Y., 12208, has recently received the degree of Doctor of
Richard D. Walters is teaching at
Connetquot High School. Bohemia, Long Island, N. Y. He recently was granted the degree of Master
the
of Arts at Hofstra University,
Hemp-
stead, N. Y.
(Wadsworth), Mrs. Roger
Kimball, reports her address as
5082C Diamond Heights, San Francisco, Calif. 94131. She recently married Dr. Roger S. Kimball who is an
assistant clinical professor of internal
medicine at the University of California Medical Center and has a private
practice in Internal Medicine and CarPat is
diology in San Francisco.
teaching in San Raphael, Calif.
Patricia
S.
Edna Yurick (Mrs. David
Stauffer),
Wenonah.
husband
a newspaper photo-
lives at 289 Alliance Street,
New Jersey 08090, with
David, who is
grapher, and their three children.
Gary Rupert
is an assistant basketcoach at Philadelphia College of
Textile and Sciences, which recently
won the NCAA 1970 Small College
Division championship in Evansville,
Indiana.
Gary and his wife Nancy
(McFerran ’63) live at 1228 Fayette
19428.
Conshohocken,
Pa.
Street,
with their two sons, Gary II and
Gregg.
ball
Elizabeth Pingar Dudinyak lives at
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Box
D.
4.
545- A, Mountaintop, R.
Her husband,
Pennsylvania 18707.
Richard, graduated from Villanova
Law
in
practices
School and now
Their daughter. Lori,
Wilkes-Barre.
was born in November 1968.
San
Paul Ritzinger lives at 35
Diego Drive, Magnolia, New Jersey
08049, with his wife, Carol and son
Jeffrey.
Paul teaches math in the
Collingswood School District and is
a cross-country and track coach.
1964
Shuba,
Ernest K.
Gaston Avenue, Raritan, N.
Representative:
Class
1
Herr, 429 Robin Drive, West Chester,
Pa. 19380, are the parents of a daughter, Jacqueline Ann, born December
Mrs. Derr taught for three
31, 1969.
years in the Central Bucks School
District, and is doing graduate work
at Temple University.
Carl and Janet Hoke Wink11903 Galaxy Lane, Bowie,
Maryland 20715. While Capt. WinkJanet
ler was stationed in Guam,
taught first grade for two years in
native school there. Capt. and Mrs.
Winkler are the parents of a daughter, Amy Heather, born October 25,
Capt.
ler, live at
J. 08869
1969.
John H. and Ann Weed Stone. R.
D. 4, Montrose. Pa., 18001, are the
parents of a daughter, Betsy Ann.
born May 3. 1969.
her
Kathleen Beltz Rarig, Morrisville,
has received her Master’s degree in
guidance and counseling from Rider
College, Trenton, N. J. She has accepted a position as counselor in
the nursing
program at Mercer
County Community College, Trenton
Wright was recently
degree of Master of
Arts in Science at Trenton State ColThe requirements for
lege, Trenton.
part
in
the degree were fulfilled
through participation in a National
Science Foundation Institute in Oceanography at Oregon State University,
Corvalis, Oregon, during the summer
Richard and Betty Scaife Scorese
have a new baby boy, Russell Richard, born April 7,
1970.
Dick is
teaching health and physical educatiion (senior high only) at Netcong
High School and in addition, he is
teaching two classes of driver education.
He is head wrestling coach
but he has given up his position as
assistant football coach.
Kathleen Beltz (Mrs. Neil H. Rarig) 126 Maple Avenue No. 6, Morrisville,
Pa. 19067, has received the
degree of Master of Arts in Guidance
and Counseling from Rider College,
Trenton, N. J.
Mary Lesevich Grant lives at 222
Colony Point Road,
Williamsburg.
Virginia 23185.
Her husband is a
member of the faculty of William and
Mary
College.
John R. Madden was awarded the
of Doctor of Philosophy in
Social Studies Education at commencement exercises held at Syracuse
University on June 6. For the past
three years Dr. Madden has been on
the faculty of Syracuse University.
He, his wife Judy (Whaite ’62), and
infant daughter Kelly
are in the
degree
process of relocating to Wallingford,
Pennsylvania.
Dr. Madden has accepted an administrative post in the
Rose Tree Media
School
District.
Address
410
East Country
Lane, Wallingford. Pa. 19086
:
Club
1965
Class Representative: Carl P. Sher-
man, 59 Vreeland Ave.,
Blooming-
dale, N. J. 07403
1966
Class Representative:
Cerza, 608 Corlie Ave.,
N. J. 07711
1970
Main
Street,
Vincent
awarded
N. Y. 13060
Elbridge,
J.
the
of 1969.
employed as a teacher of earth science in the Pennsbury
School system in Yardley, Pa.
Mrs. Wright
is
1967
Representative:
Class
R.
Thomas
Lemon, Warwick Apt. 3-D, 802 Old
English St., Bel Air, Md. 21014.
Eugene P. Miller, Elysburg, Pa.,
second
a
has been commissioned
lieutenant in the U. S. Air Force upon
from Officer Training
graduation
School at Lackland
The
AFB, Texas.
selected
lieutenant,
for
OTS
through competitive examination, is
being assigned to Vance, Okla., for
pilot training.
Lieutenant Miller, a 1963 graduate
High
Columbia Area
of Southern
School, Catawissa, Pa., received his
B. S. Ed. degree in 1967 from BSC,
and his M.S. degree in 1969 at Bucknell University, Lewisburg, Pa.
Jane E. Schoenberger (Mrs. LowB. Possinger) is now living at 430
Oakwood Avenue, Stroudsburg, Pa.
ell
18360
J.
Wallenhurst,
Va. She received a Doctor of Jurisprudence degree, having earned her
B.A. from Bloomsburg State College.
Jeanne E. Merolla 102 Mt. Airy
Road, Shavertown, Pa., has received
the degree of Master of Arts in Guidance and Counseling at Rider College,
Trenton, N. J.
Class Representative: Thomas W.
Free, R. D. 1, Box 34, Kintnerville,
Pa. 18930
Mary Ellen Margaret Yasalonis,
934 East Centre Street,
Mahanoy
City, Pa., 17948, has received the
degree
(Mrs.
M. Elizabeth Crouthamel
Lawrence L. Conte) reports her address as 207-34-0639, USAAFSB, Box
237,
APO, New York.
of
Master
of
Education
in
09742
have received addegrees from Rutgers University: M. Kathleen Bowen, High
Manchester, Pa. 17345, M.S.W.
St.,
Mrs. Ghislaine Launay, 720A Village
Dr. S, North Brunswick, N. J. M.A.
The
following
vanced
Lynda L. Fryling (Mrs. Danny F.
Herbest) lives at 427 Glenwood Avenue, Williamsport, Pa. 17701
1969
Representative:
Frank J.
Mastroianna, .1018 .Cooper .Street,
Scranton, Pa. 18508
Mr. and Mrs. (Joan Molnar) James
E. Laubach’s addres is 118 Franklin
Street, Owego, P. O., N. Y. 13827
Class
Mr. and Mrs. (Dorothy Kessler
Charles E. Shepperson’s address
106 L.
17821
Mulberry
’68)
is
Street. Danville, Pa.
Mr. and Mrs.
(Karen
Pearson)
3768
Randall
Thomas’s
address:
Malibu Way, Sacramento, Cal. 95826
Shirley A. McHenry (Mrs. Terence
Guy) reports her address as 416th
Heavy Bomb Wing,
2792, Grif13440
fes AFB, N. Y.
L.
CMR
1970
Class
Dalfovo,
Representative:
61
Dean
John
W.
Beaver
Street,
Meadows, Pa. 18216
Blair R. Monie has entered Princeton Theological Seminary, Princeton.
N. J.
Janet Hafer (Mrs. David Moyer)
at 133 North 12th Street, Sunbury, Pa. 17801
lives
Miss Sally Ann Teats, Millersburg,
has been selected by the Susquehanna
Valley Section of the American Chemical Society to receive an outstanding
senior chemistry major
award:
a
National Institute of Health Fellowship for doctoral studies in the field
of Biochemistry at the University of
Wisconsin,
M. Albertson, Bloomsburg,
is among some 850 students who received degrees from the College of
William and Mary, Williamsburg,
Eileen
1968
Anthony
Susan Treaster (Mi’s.
Aaron F.
Andrews) reports her address as Box
95-B. R. D. 1, Etters, Pa. 17319
David A. and Sharon (Kuchinskas)
SEPTEMBER,
Sandra Williams Swetland reports
address as Box 214, 138 East
Counselor Education from the Pennsylvania State University.
beginning
in
September,
1970.
Miss Teats is a member of Sigma
Pi Sigma, Kappa Delta Pi, the American Institute of Physics, and currently serves as President of the American Chemical Society Student AffilShe is also a member
iates at BSC.
of the Mathematics Club, Le Cercle
Francais, the Literary and Film SocDean’s
iety, and has been on the
List since entering BSC in the fall
She is listed in the 1968-69
of 1966.
edition of Who’s Who Among Students
in American Colleges and Universities.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter S. Rygiel have
returned from a three-week tour of
Catholic Europe. They toured Portugal, Spain, France, Italy, Germany
and Switzerland.
Page seven
.
.
.
WEDDINGS
Kinney
.
.
.
1962
Margaret M. Bitner, Nescopeck,
and Walter M. Barski, Berwick. Mrs.
Northwest
Barski is a teacher in
School District.
Mr. Barski is emPulton
Manufacturing
ployed
by
Company, Berwick.
Robinson.
The bride took
graduate work at
Drexel Institute
of Technology, where she received her
Master’s Degree in Library Science.
She is librarian at Lehigh County
Community College. Address: General Delivery, Allentown, Pa. 18105.
Marcia
Earnhart and Donald
Address: 156 South Main
Street, Perkasie, Pa.
Laura M. Ansbach, Bloomsburg and
The
Russell E. Shields, Berwick.
Hatborobride is secretary at the
Horsham Junior High School. Mr.
Shields is a teacher in Hatboro-Horsham High School. Their address is
1136 Limekiln Pike, Ambler, Pa.
David
L.
E. Bryan.
S.
Allen and Sally Ertwine,
1338
New
Address:
Road, Levittown, Pa. 19056
’68.
Rodgers
1967
P. Ranee, Bloomsburg and
Gerald L. Bogart, Columbia.
Mrs.
Bogart, who received B.S. and M.Ed.
degrees from BSC in elementary education, is a teacher in the
Central
Dauphin School, Harrisburg.
Mr.
Bogart is a reporter for Dun and
Bradstreet, Inc., Harrisburg.
Address: East Park
Gardens Apts.,
Carol
Harrisburg.
1963
The Rev. Jere L. Hock, Seven
Valleys, R. D. 2, and Elaine B. Basehoar, Littlestown R. D. 2. The Rev.
Mr. Hock, a graduate of Lutheran
Theological Seminary, Gettysburg, is
pastor of the Hometown-Loganville
Parish. Mrs. Hock, who has a B.S.
and M.S. from Shippensburg State
College, is a teacher in the Southwestern School District, Hanover.
1964
Nancy George, Catawissa and Dale
R. Kratzer, York. Mrs. Kratzer is a
first grade teacher in the Rose Tree
Media School District. Mr. Kratzer
is a graduate in
civil
engineering
from Pennsylvania State University
Ida Gingrich and Barry Smith. Address: 521 Spring Avenue, Lititz, Pa.
17543
1965
Kathleen Helwig and Wayne George.
Mr. George is employed by Berwick
Area School system.
1966
Sharon
Kuchinskas
and
Herr.
Address: 429 Robin
West Chester, Pa. 19380
David
Drive,
Joanna Bette Kreischer, Catawis3, and Lawrence J. Splitt,
Bloomsburg R. D. 3. The bride is a
registered nurse at the Ashland State
General Hospital. Mr. Splitt is employed by the Retail Credit Company,
sa R. D.
Berwick.
Mary Jane Smith,
and
Danville
Franklin A. Rishel, Danville.
Mr.
Rishel is employed by the Alfred I.
Dupont School District, Wilmington,
Delaware. Mrs. Rishel is a graduate
of the Episcopal Hospital School of
Nursing.
1968
Patricia Derr and William F. GeoSquare
rge.
Address: 261 Varsity
Apts., Bowling Green, Ohio. 43402
Jean E. Booth, Milton, and Philip
Stainer,
Mechanicsburg.
Mrs.
Stainer is teaching in the Mechanicsburg High School. Her husband is
employed as a diesel mechanic.
1966
Gail Noreen Masters and Charles
W. Sorber. Mr. Sorber teaches mathematics at Bloomsburg High School.
The couple is residing at Fairmont
Springs.
Jean E. Booth, Milton, and Philip
L.
Stainer,
Mechanicsburg.
Mrs.
Stainer is teaching in the Mechanicsburg High School. Her husband is
employed as a diesel mechanic.
1967
Deanna Sue Woolcock and James
Page eight
Mr. Calinski, an electrical engineer,
a graduate of Penn State Univ.
is
Susan
and
Jane
Palmer M.
Magill, Danville
Toto, Philadelphia.
The
bride attended BSC and Mr. Toto is
teaching in the Bristol Township
School District.
Donna
Rheinhold
Murray and
Address: Peace Corps ColYap, Falalop, Ulithi, Western
L.
Linda L. Fry ling and Danny
Herbst, 427 Glenwood Avenue, Williamsport, Pa. 17701. Mrs. Herbst is
teaching in the Williamsport area and
her husband is with the Grit Pub-
onia
Caroline Islands. 96943
lishing Co.
ert
Schultz.
’70 and RobMrs. Hauck will
teach special education at Parkland
Gloria Jean Altemose
Thomas Hauck.
Marian Harris, Orangeville R. D.
and David A. Eisenhower, Berwick.
Mrs. Eisenhower is teaching Spanish
in Liberty High School, Bethlehem
and Mr. Eisenhower, who served four
years in the U. S. Navy, is employed
by Bethlehem Steel.
Address: 428
Wyandatte Street, Bethlehem, Pa.
ner, both of Berwick.
been employed at the
prise.
Mr. Sterner
18015
Denver, Pa.
Karen Noel Sitler and Thomas A.
P. Hunsinger. Mrs. Hunsinger is an
elementary teacher in the Berwick
schools. Her husband, who attended
Pennsylvania State University and
served four years in the U. S. Air
Force, is a printer for Keystone Publishing Company, Berwick, Pa.
John N. Calleri and Patricia E.
Ashworth, both of Berwick.
They
are both teaching in
Westminster.
Maryland.
Pamela Ann Whitmire, Bloomsburg
The
Blair R. Monie, Bloomsburg.
bride is a graduate of the Geisinger
Medical Center School of Nursing.
Mr. Monie is a student at the Princeton Theological Seminary, Princeton.
2
and Jimmy L. Rupert, Bloomsburg.
Mr. Rupert is a teacher in the Benton High School.
Mrs. Rupert is a
student at Geisinger Medical Center
School of Nursing.
Address:
523
Railroad Street, Danville, Pa. 17821
Judy K. Young and David E. Davis,
Bangor, Pa.
Mrs. Davis
is a superand Chemical,
Inc., Allentown, Pa.
Mr. Davis is
Accounting
Manager at Phoenix
AdClothes, Inc., Allentown, Pa.
visor at Air Products
L.
Anna Louise Buckley, Danville and
Mrs.
Peter J. Calinski, Nanticoke.
Calinski is teaching in Bellefonte.
dress: 2148 S. Ninth
town, Pa. 18103
Street,
Allen-
1969
Darlene J. Yocum, Catawissa and
Gary L. Zimmerman, Bloomsburg.
Mrs. Yocum is teaching at
RCV
Elementary School and Mr. Yocum
is employed by Kawneer,
Inc. Ad143 Main Street,
Catawissa,
Pa.
Kathleen E. Jarrard. formerly of
Berwick, and Richard E. Osberg,
Chelmsford, Mass.
Mrs. Osberg is
a teacher in Chelmsford and her husband is an accountant. Their address
is 70 Boston Road, Chelmsford, Mass.
dress:
School District, Allentown. Her husbusiness subjects at
White Hall School District, Allentown.
band teaches
1970
Mack and David
Kathy
C.
Ster-
The bride has
Berwick Enteris
teaching
in
Janet Hafer and David Moyer. Address: 133 North 12th Street, Sunbury,
Pa.
Sandra Hamstra, Bloomsburg and
N. J.
Marilyn J. Palmer and Brent C.
Address: 215 Washington St..
Toms River, N. J. 08753
Both Mr. and Mrs. Davis will teach
in Toms River School District.
Davis.
Apt. 9,
Patricia Robbins, Bloomsburg and
Kenneth D. Saunders, Levittown. Mrs.
Saunders is teaching in Bristol, and
Mr. Saunders is teaching in the Woodrow Wilson High School, Levittown.
Their address
Bristol, Pa.
is
234 Franklin Street,
Joan Marie Russell and Thomas L.
West.
Gloria J. Altman and
Robert
F.
Hauck.
Ann
Schlieder, Catawissa and
Schwartz, Phiadelphia. Mrs.
Schwartz is a teacher in the Juniata
Joint Area Schools.
Mr. Schwartz,
a graduate of Temple University, is
Jo
Jeffrey
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
elementary principal
Area Schools.
the
in
Newport
Betsy A. Styers, Berwick, and JamAddress:
Gavitt, Conyngham.
Maple Ave., Conyngham, Pa.
es L.
BSC SCOREBOARD
FOOTBALL
Lock Haven 28
25
21
14
13
Mansfield
Adelphia U.
West Chester
Stroudsburg
34
16
38
38
Kutztown
Cheyney
17
28
14
Millersville
7
E
23
.
6
7
CROSS-COUNTRY
l
low score wins)
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
24
21
21
BSC
finished
31
Millersville
24
Kutztown 39
Kings 50
Susquehanna 31
Mansfield 40
Kutztown 38
Shippensburg 44
Shepherd 42
Cheyney 50
20
15
17
18
15
Pa. Conference Meet
seventh. Won by Slip-
pery Rock
Triangular Meet
BSC
BSC
Lock Haven 22
33
21
Mansfield 34
WRESTLING
—Appalachian
Quadrangular
BSC
BSC
BSC
Millegan 0
Old Dominion 3
Appalachian 13
Quadrangular Meet at BSC
BSC 27
Massachussetts 9
BSC 0
Ohio U. 32
BSC 11
Terre Haute 29
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
Oswego
27
9
11
Clarion 23
30
34
Kutztown
California
5
6
Waynesburg
30
25
9
Millersville
7
Shippensburg
8
25
Lock Haven
E. Stroudsburg 20
21
West Chester 17
East Stroudsburg Meet
12
Lock Haven,
1st
place,
BSC— fourth
place.
BASKETBALL
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
103
73
85
74
121
83
86
BSC
55
Baptist Bible Sem. 49
Cheyney
74
E. Stroudsburg 71
Mansfield 87
Shippensburg 86
Millersville 73
Baptist Bible Sem. 74
Berwick Tournament
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
Drexel 61
Highspire Tournament
85
Elizabethtown 83
Towson
72
Millersville
93
Kutztown 68
West Chester 74
State Meet
Eastern Division BSC second place
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
59
Clarion 81
Indiana State 79
West Chester 86
Shippensburg 87
Cheyney
1970
BSC
BSC
67
53
31
26
49
36
41
42
40
30
31
62
39
Monmouth
Wilkes
Kings
Millersville
Indiana U.
E. Stroudsburg
Glassboro
Lock Haven
Slippery Rock
California
West Chester
State
Meet
BSC
NALA Meet
—
—
Akron
of
9 1-2
BSC
Trenton
Lock Haven
Wilkes 10
BSC
Millersville
Slippery
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
Wilkes 4
Mansfield 2
Slippery
Clarion
Rock
first
120
Further
meeting
of
the
General
Alumni
the
Consequently,
change will not go into effect until
it
is approved on
Alumni Day.
1971.
Since the College will
no
longer pay for the Alumni Luncheon. some change will be necessary. The other alternative would
be to keep the Alumni dues at
$2.00 in which case those attending the luncheon will pay for their
luncheon tickets. We invite your
comments on the proposed change.
Association.
6
0
place
third place
Kutztown 4
Kutztown 3
7
7
Mansfield 3
Mansfield 9
Kings 2
4
5
4
4
0
Kings
Shippensburg
Shippensburg
3
9
3
Millersville 3
Lock Haven 9
Lock Haven 8
Mansfield 5
Mansfield 6
Wilkes 10
0
11
10
3
0
1
7
Lock Haven
Lock Haven
Kutztown
Kutztown
8
10
5
3
2
8
E. Stroudsburg
E. Stroudsburg
1
1
BSC
Ursinus
ober.
The letter from D. David H. Kurtzman, secretary of the department in
Harrisburg, to Dr. Andruss stated:
“I am pleased to announce that a
1
0
“In honor of the occasion, we plan
include the ceremony as part of the
49th Education
Congress Banquet.
The affair will be held on October G.
1970 at the Penn Harris Motor Inn
Camp Hill, Pennsylvania. We will
to
Lock Haven
—
The Pennsylvania Department of
Education will honor Dr. Harvey A.
Andruss, retired president of Bloomsburg State College, during the 49th
Education Congress banquet in Oct-
tion certificate of appreciation will
be presented to you for your many
years of dedication and service to
education.
8
assemble in the Keystone
p.m. prior to dinner.
Room
at
6
“You are
cordially
invited
to
be
guest for the evening, and I am
looking forward to your appearance.
“In the event that you are unable
my
TRACK
Indoor Meet
E. Stroudsburg
TO BE HONORED
Pennsylvania Department of Educa-
E. Stroudsburg 8
U. of Scranton 3
Kings 1
1
6
8
ANDRUSS
1
Shippensburg 8
Wilkes 5
Mansfield 8
1
4
DR.
3
6
6
TENNIS
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
to $5.00.
study of our constitution indicates
that dues must be approved at a
9
BASEBALL
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
87
had been raised
second place
BSC
71
71
Announcement was made in the
Quarterly that Alumni dues
1-2
1-2
Lycoming
Rock
92
July
1-2
Susquehanna
127
97
67
Lock Haven 53
Millersville 100
Shippensburg 10
Kutztown 58
BSC
Millersville 3
Kutztown 8
16
11
12
13 1-2
3 1-2
6
Cliff Relays
placed fourth
Shippensburg 32
113
Penn. Conference Meet
BSC
Fourth place
LaCrosse, Wisconsin
19
70 1-2
65
45 1-2
E. Stroudsburg
West Chester
7 1-2
—
BSC finished ninth
Tri-Meet, Kutztown
Kutztown
Scranton U. 9
Shippensburg 1 1-2
E. Stroudsburg 9 1-2
9
17 1-2
48
Mansfield 32
Western Frontier Relays, University
GOLF
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
Cheyney
97
113
Cedar
Temple
37
51
64
74
55
68
63
59
62
84
73
42
65
Kutztown 78
96
106
91
97
89
86
SEPTEMBER,
E. Stroudsburg 64
Mansfield 70
Penn. Conference Championship
Meet
34
33
22
Lock Haven 76
79
73
83
89
74
81
SWIMMING
1989-1970
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
East Stroudsburg
64
43
18
to attend, please let me know so that
other arrangements can be made.”
Page nine
TWO TEACHERS
ARE HONORED
Two Bloomsburg
State College fac-
ulty
ley
members, Mx-s. Iva Mae Beckand Miss Beatrice
Englehart,
who
will
retire prior to the start of
the next college year, were honored
with special citations for faithful service at the final faculty meeting of
the current college year.
Mrs. Beckley, Assistant Professor
of Education, will retire at the end
of the present college year.
Mrs.
Beckley received her Bachelor of
Science
degree in education from
Lock Haven State College, her Master of Education degree from the
Pennsylvania State University, and
has taken additional graduate studies
in supervision in elementary education
at Teachei-s College, Columbia University.
Before joining the faculty
Bloomsburg State College in 1943,
she was an elementary teacher for
nine years in the public schools of
Tyrone.
She has served as consultant and
conducted workshops during summer
sessions at BSC,
as consultant at
county institutes and for various Parent-Teacher
Assocation
groups
throughout the area. She organized
and directed the Head Start Program of Columbia County during the
of
summer
summer
of 1965, and the following
directed the program in the
Bloomsburg area. When a regional
training office for the Head Start
Program was appi-oved at Bloomsburg State College in March of 1968,
Mi-s. Beckley was selected as a regional training officer. From 1966 to
1968, she served as a consultant for
the ESEA-Title I program in the
public schools of Mount Carmel.
She is a member of the National
Council of Teachers of English, International Reading Association, American
Association
of
University
Women, National Education Association, Pennsylvania State
Education
Association, Susquehanna Valley Super visoi-s, Columbia
County
Mental
Health Association, and has served
as Director and Chairman of the committee on Childhood Mental Illness.
Mrs. Beckley is a past president of
the Central Region Pennsylvania Association of Student Teachers, Susquehanna Valley Reading Council,
BSC College Faculty Association,
and the Business and Professional
Women’s Club
Bloomsburg.
BSC Graduate
Miss Englehart is an Associate
Professor of Education and retired
at the end of the 1970 summer session.
Prior
to
of
joining
the
faculty
of
in 1956,
for a two
primai’y depai"t-
Bloomsburg State College
Miss EnglehaiT had taught
year period in the
ment of Abington Township Schools
in Montgomery County.
She began her teaching career in
Mays Landing, N. J., in 1927, after
completing her teacher-certification
at the then Bloomsburg State Teachers College. In 1929 she returned to
Bloomsburg
Page ten
to
teach
in
the
public
elementary schools, and during that
pei'iod completed the requirements
for the Bachelor of Science degree in
Education.
Miss Englehart
Master
and
was awai'ded the
Education
degree
at
Bucknell Univei-sity in 1953 and qualified for the Elementary Supervisor’s
and Pi-incipal’s Cei’tificates. During
same year she accepted an
the
ap-
pointment as Instructor in the Early
Childhood Elementary Education Department at Temple University and
devoted part of her time to the supervision of student teachers in the
public schools of Philadelphia. Her
career as a teacher spanned a period of foi'ty-three years.
Her professional affiliations include
membership in the Pennsylvania State
Education Association, the National
Education Association, the Association of Childhood International, the
Association for Student Teaching, and
Delta Kappa
Fraternity.
TREASURERS REPORT
is a summary of the
report presented by Earl A. Gehx-ig,
Treasui'er of the Alumni Association,
at the annual meeting of the Alumni
Association on Alumni Day.
During the pei-iod April 1, 1969 to
The following
31, 1970, Loyalty Fund and
dues collected totaled $8,699.53. During the same period, expenditures
totaled $10,310.28, leaving us with a
net decrease in equity of $1,160.75.
The largest area of expenditures has
to do with the printing and mailing
of the Quarterly to all graduates of
the College, whether or not they are
March
currently contributing to the Association.
In the area of scholarships and
grants, out total income for the year
ended March 31, 1970 was $1,356.91 of
which $1,300.00 has been awarded
the form of grants.
Gamma
Citation
IN RECOGNITION of almost three
decades of faithful srevice to Bloomsburg State Teachers
College
and
Bloomsburg State College, We, the
faculty of Bloomsburg State College
desire to accord this tribute to
IVA
MAE BECKLEY
WHEREAS, Mi-s. Iva Mae Beckley
has devoted twenty-seven years to the
teaching of children and the supervision of student teachers in both the
Campus Laboratory School and the
area Public Schools, and
WHEREAS, she has made notable
contributions as an instructor in virtually evex-y phase of
Teacher Education, and
WHEREAS,
she
Elementary
was instrumental
in initiating the first Head Start project in Columbia County, as well as
serving as Regional Training Officer for the program for North Eastern Pennsylvania, and
WHEREAS, her complete trustworthiness and loyalty, her persistent
demand for excellence, and her unqualified dedication as an educator,
serve as an inspiration to all those
who know
her.
THEREFORE, BE
IT
RESOLVED,
that this citation be spread upon the
minutes as a permanent record of this
May 14, 1970, Bloomsburg State College College Faculty Meeting.
Expression of Appreciation
In recognition of fourteen years of
service to Bloomsburg State
College as a teacher and a supervisor of student teaching, as a fi'iend
and counselor of students and faculty,
as inspirational leader among early
childhood specialists, and in recognition of many additional years as a
teacher in the elementary schools of
the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
faithful
this tribute is
presented
to
BEATRICE M. ENGLEHART
by her grateful colleagues upon the
commencement
May
14,
1970.
of
her
retirement,
Scholarships
in
Awarded
Rhodes Scholarship
Alumni Scholarships
Lucy McCammon Scholarship
E. H. Nelson Scholarship
200.00 5
600.00
200.00*
300.00
*These scholarships are taken from
the principal, until the fund is exhausted.
Scholarship Funds
Scholai-ships are pi-ovided by the
income fi*om these funds. Allocations
to these funds are made fi'om Loyalty
Fund contributions.
Centennial Loan Fund
Bakeless Fund
Nelson Fund
Watkins Fund
Earl H. Rhodes Fund
19,294.59
10,001.49
1,390.24
1,390.00
420.00
610.20
95.00
1904.28
3628.04
910.00
3031.45
Lucy McCammon Fund
Henry J. Warman Fund
Wm. B. Sutliff Fund
Paul Thomas Fund
Anna Lowrie Wells Fund
Fenstemaker Fund
42.770.39
Total
McNinch Fund
(According to the McNinch
will, the
principal and income ai e to be used
for loans only).
Equities
128.758.70
Principal Bequest
-
25,748.29
Additions
Total Equities
Student loans, totalling
were outstanding on Max-ch
During the year April 1,
March 31,
was made
1970, a total
to students.
of
154.506.99
$41,601.46
31.
1970.
to
1969
53 loans
Approval of three new Master of
Education degrees has been received
by Bloomsbui’g State College from
the state Department of Education,
according to Dr. Charles Cai'lson. director, division of graduate studies at
BSC.
The new degrees to be offered will
be the master of education in physical science, master of education in
chemistiy, and master of education
in
physics.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
LEGISLATION ON
FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE
As a result of recent legislation enby the Pennsylvania General
Assembly, amending the law which
affects the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency, Dr. Robert
J. Nossen, President of Bloomsburg
Stale College, signed an agreement
with the PHEAA which affects the
acted
continued eligibility
tending the college.
of
students
at-
In a letter from Kenneth R. Reeher,
Executive Director of PHEAA to Dr.
Nossen (preceding the signing of the
agreement by Dr. Nossen i, an extract
from the amendments enacted speci-
that
fy
The Agency may deny
all
forms of financial assistance of any
student
"ll> Who is convicted by any court
of record of a criminal offense which
was committed after the effective
date of this act which, under the
laws of the United States or Pennsylvania, would constitute a misdemeanor involving moral turpitude or a felony; or
(2) Who has been expelled, dismissed, or denied enrollment by any
approved institution of higher learning for refusal to obey, after the effective date of this act. a lawful regulation or order of any institution of
higher learning, which refusal, in the
opinion of the institution, contributed
to a disruption of the activities, administration or classes of such institution; or
3 Who has been convicted in any
court of record of any offense committed in the course of disturbing, interfering with or preventing, or in an
attempt to disturb, interfere w'ith or
prevent the orderly conduct of the activities, administration or classes of
an institution of higher education.
(b) Each institution of higher education shall immediately furnish to
the Agency, the name and address of
any student who is a resident of the
(
»
Pennsylvania who
is expelled, dismissed or denied enrollment for the reasons set forth in
Commonwealth
of
clause (2) (of subsection (a) of this
section) or of whom the institution
of
higher education has knowledge
that he has been convicted of offenses as set forth in clauses (1) and (3)
(of subsection (a) of this section.)
(c) Nothing in this section shall be
construed to limit the freedom cf any
student to verbal expression of individual view's or opinions.
(d Any institution of higher learning w'hich refuses to execute an agreement with the A.gency to comply with
subsection (b) of this section shall be
denied the status of an approved institution under the provisions of this
>
act.”
Mr. Reeher also requested that the
college begin providing the Agency
with the name and address of students
as required in subparagraph b of the
quoted legislation. The effective date
of the legislation wr as October
29.
1969.
A decision as to eligibility of
such students for loans or scholarship
i
SEPTEMBER,
1970
)
assistance will be made upon completion of the Agency evaluation of each
individual case.
The provision for denying an institution approval to participate in either
the PHEAA Scholarship
or
Loan
Guaranty Program will be effective
1970-71
from the
academic year.
Scholarship awards or loan guaranties
cr any renewal thereof will not be
issued to applicants for the 1970-71
academic year unless the institution
(hey plan to attend has executed the
attached agreement.
COLLEGE INSTALLS NEW
SYSTEM FOR EDUCATION
The Department of Education of
Bloomsburg State College has installed an auto-tutorial educational media
laboratory in Hartline Science Center.
The system, which utilizes audiovisual material in a carrel setting w'ill
allow large numbers of students to
receive necessary instruction in audiovisual
machine
operation
and
production techniques. Teachers need
to be familiar with the latest equipment and materials in education and
the new sytem allow's each student to
receive
individualized
instruction
moving him at his ow'n pace.
The system is essentially a prog-
rammed
instruction system that utilfilms, and other visual media that are accompanied by
an audio tape. To learn a particular
machine or production procedure, a
student merely seats himself at a carrel, presses the appropriate buttons
and the program is delivered to him.
He may review the program as many
izes slides.
8mm
times as he likes, until he feels competent in the operation. Professional
assistance is continually available and
the student is responsible for demonstrating
competency
to his instructor
an exam setting.
Although the concept is not new,
this system represents the first time
that such a system has been utilized
in
Bloomsburg State College.
The
system allows the student to come to
the laboratory and have his instructor prescribe for him those experiences which are appropriate to his needs
at
rather than receiving the
mass type
Such systems have been
successfully employed at Purdue University, at Michigan State University
to teach educational media and at
instruction.
numerous other
institutions of higher
education to provide instruction in a
variety of subjects.
The particular system for Bloomsburg State College wr as conceived and
designed by Raymond E. Babineau,
assistant professor of education. Barbineau was a participant in an institute and wr as one of the members who
designed the proto-type for the carrel
that is being used in the new system.
His system incorporates 15 carrel
experiences in v.'hich the student progresses through experiences that are
designed to increase his levels
of
competency in educational media.
The installation of the system culminates a year of planning that commen-
ced when Babineau joined the
BSC
staff last July.
Administration support for the plan
was provided by Dr. H. M. Afshar,
chairman of the education department
and Dr. John Hoch, dean of instruction. Technical assistance was provided by Thaddeus Piotrowski, direcaudio visual materials cenwill become operational during the Main Summer Session.
Interested teachers from the
local area are invited to visit the
facility in Room B-79
Hartliuo
of
Science Hall.
tor of the
ter.
The
system
BSC BUILDING PROGRAM
The 1975 projection of Bloomsburg
State College, involving both the lower and upper campuses, is one of 6,000 students.
To achieve that objective four projects will be completed this year and
during 1970 final designs are expected
to be completed and ready for bids
for the following projects; an athletic
field,
a student center,
recreation
areas, a multi-level parking garage,
and administration building and complete utilities for the upper campus.
It is hoped construction
on these
projects, involving an expenditure of
3>13,000,000 w'ill begin during the 1970
calendar year. Four projects will be
completed in 1970. Food service began in the new College Commons
in February.
A maintenance building-garage w as completed
and the Bakeless Center for the Humanities W'as ready for occupancy in
sometime
r
A nine-story
women will be
June.
residence hall for
used for the first
time in September.
Both the new
College Commons, which was named
for former Governor William Scranton, and the Bakelss Center, will be
completely air-conditioned.
Construction has begun on a new'
fieldhouse-gymnasium on the upper
400
campus.
Preplanning has been completed
a new classroom building, two
for
residence halls for women, 2 residence
halls for men, a dining hall-kitchen,
and a maintenance building.
Preplanning is expected to begin in the
near future for another residence hall
for women and for an extension of
underground facilities.
Progress is the keynote at
BSC and
should continue at
a
steady
rate
throughout the next few years with
the enrollment be.ing regulated by the
growth of the physical plant as well
as the expansion of curriculum necessary to fulfill the needs of students of
the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
The college pledges a continuation of
improved service and progress in
1970.
HOME-COMING DAY
Saturday, October 17, 1970
ALUMNI DAY
Saturday, April 24, 1971
Page eleven
ADDRESSES WANTED
it
received $4,635,000 in the past bud-
White
Robert
Mrs.
Lang) ’67
(Geraldine
James
P. Gallagher
Richard Kitchen ’62
Jerome D. Slavick
’62
Louise M. Ronskey
’29
—
Frank M. Hydro
Joan M. Woods (Mrs. Gerald Nau’66
gle)
receive
year.
’69
Dr.
Connie Jean Cromley ’69
Gloria Janasik (Mrs. Gerald Gurisk)
However, seven of the 14 institusystem will be cut in their
funds from the state.
The three state-related universities
will
—Penn State, Pitt and Temple
tions in the
’64
’69
Rebecca A. Burke
J.
Lonie
'68
’61
BSC WILL GET
STATE INCREASE
Bloomsburg
State
College’s
state
share will rise by $338,000 for 1970-71
despite the state budget allotment of
$73,018,000
for
all
same amount
Harry Gasser, a former
the state colleges
Franklin
Elementary
new budget
Is
coming year, while
Schools.
Upon his return to Bloomsburg, Dr.
Johnson wrote descriptions of the
schools for use in catalog of the Project to Utilize
(PURE).
Resources
in
The information
Education
wall
then
be made readily available to school
boards and administrators who wish
to visit places where experimental
and innovative ideas are in successful
practice. Dr. Johnson will also send
a summary of his findings to the more
than 700 educators throughout the natrecommending
ion who assisted by
schools for visitation.
The Johnsons have
visited
schools
on their way to Florida,
westward through Texas and Arizona
in states
to California.
the Division of
018,000.
Laboratory
School.
The total amount for all the state
colleges will remain the same, according to the austerity budget submitted
by the Shafer administration, at $73,-
$4,973,000 for the
in-
of the faculty of BSC from Septemsupervising
ber, 1950, serving as
teacher, Grade 5, in the Benjamin
STUDY COVERS
SIXTY SCHOOLS
the
last
structor and supervisor of student teachers at Bloomsburg State College,
has been named associate professor
and Indiana University as proposed
by Governor Shafer.
Due BSC under
as
of
Rebecca Spatzer Cunningham
Judith A. Bole ’61
Thomas
the
and
educational
administration
supervisor in the Graduate School at
Villanova University.
Dr. Gasser in currently assistant
county supei’intendent, Montgomery
county, Norristown, a position he has
held since 1956. He was a member
’63
Isabel D. Bolinsky ’50
Department of Education. Dr. Johnwho was on sabbatical leave
from his college position, was accompanied by Mrs. Johnson who was on
leave from her teaching position in
Millville
Area
Elementary
the
son,
get.
Dr. Royce O. Johnson, Director of
They visited in Oregon and proceeded through Washington and then startvia
Utah,
ed their homeward trip
Colorado,
Illinois
Wisconsin,
and
Michigan.
Elementary Education
at Bloomsburg State College has been
visiting more than sixty experimental
and innovative elementary schools in
twenty-eight states as part of a project sponsored by the Pennsylvania
Warren I. Johnson, Supervisor of
Student Teachers of the elementary
division, served as Acting Director
of the Division of Elementary Education during the second semester.
HOME-COMING DAY
SATURDAY, OCTOBER
17,
1970
ALUMNI DAY
SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 1971
Page twelve
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Where Are Our
An
item of mail from the General Alumni Association of the Shippensburg
State College indicates that during the
local
the
Local Branches?
months of February
branches were scheduled to hold meetings.
state,
to July, nineteen
Eight of these were out of
and included Ohio, Chicago, Michigan, Florida, Delaware, West
Virginia, San Francisco
and Los Angeles.
During the past year, only three
local
branches of
BSC have been
Eight other areas, once active, have been inactive for several years.
your Board
been the opinion of
should stand on their
own
feet,
of Directors
that
the
local
active.
It
has
branches
without continuous prodding from Alumni
headquarters.
We
should like to hear from interested Alumni, and learn their opinions
of the advisability of reactivating the local branches,
Lists of
Alumni
It
names
may be
obtained from the
Office.
is
the opinion of your Editor that the time has
should support their
nels as possible.
the
of people living in your area
and what should be done.
Alma Mater
in as
many ways and through
will
as
During these days College administrators need
Alumni are behind them.
Who
come when Alumni
be the
first
one
to start the ball rolling?
many
to
chan-
know
that
Loyalty Fund Fourth Year
October
1,
1969 to July
Class
No.
Amt.
Class
No.
1892
1896
1901
1902
1903
1904
1905
1906
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1
3.00
10.00
1S.00
30.00
12.00
3.00
58.25
25.00
67.00
22.00
1923
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
16
17
1
3
2
2
1
8
3
12
3
7
28
10
8
12
2
25
9
12
10
16
184.00
170.00
101.00
95.00
110.00
15.00
162.00
40.00
82.00
109.00
129.00
243.00
79.50
72.00
23
9
10
(*
1944
1945
1946
1,
1970
Amt.
92.00
103.00
134.00
64.00
89.00
105.00
88.00
588.75
74.00
112.50
50.00
92.00
71.00
20.00
95.00
55.00
15.00
50.50
78:50
138.00
180.00
84.00
27.00
53.00
29
9
9
16
16
45
10
13
9
6
15
3
6
9
.2
11
11
14
12
8
4
7
Class
No.
1947
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1934
19S5
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
Others
7
8
16
20
9
7
8
3
9
10
14
13
10
21
7
16
24
18
38
37
42
42
45
6
5
Includes check presented on Alumni Day)
TO BE DETACHED, FILLED OUT, AND RETURNED
Signature
Name
while
in college
Address
(street)
Zip Code
(town)
If
above address
is
new check
here
Q
Amount
Year of graduation
Mail checks to Alumni Office, Box 31, B.S.C.
To
insure tax deductions,
B.
S.
C.
make checks payable
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
to
Amt.
67.00
115.91
132.00
137.00
120.00
45.00
87.00
15.00
65.00
51.00
289.00
89.0H
47.00
133.00
50.00
136.00
175.50
97.51
195.00
158.00
201.5 L
256.50
230.50
615.00“
1114.00
The new Student Center will include a formal lounge, snack bar, multi-purpose rooms, the College Store, the
student bank, a game room, an infirmary, an information center, mail boxes for students, a locker room for commuting students, offices for administrative personnel who work with student publications and the Student Union
Board, a TV room, a music listening room. The Student Center will be constructed on a portion of the terrace area
between Waller Hall and Montour Hall.
THE PRESIDENT'S PAGE
academic year will
has been a good semester, marking a number of achievements and bringing, of course, a number of problems. For the first time an allorganization,
administrative
college senate is in operation; coupled with the new
For the first time, too, the
college governance is undergoing significant change.
Foundation becomes a reality, and you should be hearing much about its activities
during the coming months and years.
By
the time you read this, the first semester of the 1970-1971
be nearing
its
end.
So far
it
—
The maintenance building was put into service during late October, and plans now
opening of Columbia Hall, a residence for 400 women, immediately after
Thanksgiving. Bakeless was dedicated in an impressive ceremony in connection with
the annual Education Conference in late October, and the field house is rising from
the ground on the new campus site. November marked the opening of bids for the
call for the
Administration Building, and construction should begin prior *o the end of the year.
Of the planning for and the starting of building projects there is no immediate end
m sight, as the college gears itself to carry its share of the growing number of students expected throughout the Commonwealth during the ’70’s.
On
necessary to take
immediate and
reasons essentially known only to
them, decided they did not have to fulfill their contractural obligations. Faculty and
administrative officers spent an inordinate amount of time in attempting reconciliation
prior to dismisal action. During the critical period the campus remained calm, the
instructional program continued unimpaired, ar.d members of the campus community
showed remarkable unanimity in their opposition to the threat oi those who challenged
the orderly and professional conduct of campus affairs.
In this case, as with any
the negative
side,
the college
found
decisive action against two professors who,
it
for
other relative to the operation of Blocmsburg State College, the integrity of operation
and the fulfillment of declared educational objectives remained paramount and governed all decisions and actions. While the incidents in themselves are regrettable, it
would, of course, be intolerable should we fail to meet directly our responsibilities.
Returning
to the affirmative
uate phases of
its
and the constructive, the college continued
curricular organization,
its
calendar of operation,
its
to
eval-
admissions
program, and numerous other matters. While the summer sessions for 1971
man 3-6-3, Mr. James Creasy, Director, has announced that a 6-6 organization
will
re-
will be
instituted for 1972.
Numerous
efforts are being
made
services and in continuing education.
to
expand the role
of the college in
community
A major
undertaking, that of long-range planning, is well under way, and the college, in all probability, because of its resources
and its favorable location in relationship to outstanding medical facilities will further
develop its role in the health-related sciences and services.
On November
14, I participated in a panel discussion at Shippensburg on the role
governance of colleges. This is being written prior to that date, and
In the meantime,
1 plan to report to you in the next issue on some of the conclusions.
we can point at Bloomsburg to an alumni director serving with the Trustees, and to
cwo members of the Association participating as members of the Foundation. Regardless however, it is apparent that those who carry the Bloomsburg degree can continue a role at the college by their interest in and support of their Association, by
assisting the admissions officers, and by writing, on occasion, to any of us offering
your views and your suggestions.
of the
alumni
in
Robert Nossen
President
Homecoming 1970
Activities for the 43rd annual Homeat BSC got under
coming Celebration
way with
the Big
Name
Entertainment
Committee of the College Community
Government Association presenting a
concert package. On Thursday, October 15. Charles Byrd, one of today’s
outstanding Jazz guitarists, performed
in Centennial Gymnasium at 8:00 p.m.
During the intermission of the latter,
the Homecoming Queen was crowned.
The Homecoming Parade began the
festivities on Saturday, October 17.
at 10:15 a. m. with a line-of-march
from Centennial Gymnasium, down
Second and Main streets to Market
street, and south on Market to Town
Park. Jack Mulka. Director Student
Activities,
awarded prizes
for the best
decorated seven floats, three off-campus houses, and a men’s and women’s
residence hall on campus.
A
luncheon for alumni and visitors
in the Scranton Commons
A record
at 12:00 noon, Saturday.
crowd was present at Bloomsburg’s
was held
m. to see the
entertain the Marauders of Millersville State College in an
eastern division Pennsylvania State
College Conference game. In a closely
contested game, BSC defeated Millersville with a score of 23 to 17.
Athletic
Park
Huskies of
at 2:00 p.
BSC
A cafeteria dinner for alumni and
visitors followed in the Scranton Commons. Saturday evening activities featured two semi-formal dances held at
separate locations. Beginning at 8:30
p. m., “Hot Buttered Funk” played
the latest music for students and recent graduates in the West Dining
Hall of Scranton Commons, while at
the same time in the East Dining Hall.
Lee Vincent’s Mcdernaires furnished
the music for the faculty members
and less recent graduates.
Alumni remaining on campus Sunday. October 18, along with students,
faculty members, and the general
public were able to attend a “Pops
Concert” presented by the College
Concert Choir under the direction of
Richard Stanislaw in the Haas Auditorium at 8:15 p. m.
Boyd Buckingham. Associate Vice
President for Development and External Relations was chairman for the
festivities.
AMENDMENT TO
CONSTITUTION
An amendment
the
the
to the Constitution of
Alumni Association, approved by
Board of Directors, will be voted
on at the next general meeting of the
Association on Alumni Day, Saturday,
April 24, 1971. This amendment would
install a member of the graduating
class as an ex-officio member of the
Board of Directors, to serve for one
year.
DECEMBER,
1970
BAKELESS CENTER
IS
DEDICATED
The Bakeless Center
for the
this
completed earlier
ities,
Humanyear on
the campus of Bloomsburg State College, was foi’mally dedicated during
the luncheon of the 24th Annual Conference for Teachers and Administrators held at Bloomsburg State Col-
lege Saturday, October 24.
This
fine
which was
mer
structure,
educational
used during the sum-
first
sessions, 1970, is named for two
of the Bakeless family,
generations
whom are graduates of Bloomsburg State Normal School.
The late Professor O. H. Bakeless,
all of
a member of the Class of 1879, was a
faculty member from 1890-1892 and
Extremely interested in
1902-1929.
students, he was principal for many
years of the Model or Training School
on campus, and taught courses in psychology and history of education. Professor Bakeless solicited $25,000 from
students, faculty, and other donors to
purchase Tiffany stained glass win-
dows in 1920. The windows were installed in Waller and Noetling Halls,
and were removed and placed
druss Library
when
it
in
An-
was constructed
in 1966.
The late Sarah Harvey Bakeless,
Class of 1884. was the wife of O. H.
She served as a faculty
member from 1885-1892 and was a teacher in the Model School.
Dr. John Bakeless, Class of 1913, is
the son of O. H. Bakeless.
He has
gained an international reputation as
an educator, scholar, and Army Colonel.
A review of Dr. Bakeless’ recent book, “Spies of the Confederacy,”
was in the September 13, 1970 issue of
the New York Times Book Review.
His wdfe, Katherine Little Bakeless,
Ciass of 1915, is a noted authoress
and musician.
Mrs.
Katherine
Bakeless
Nason, Class of 1918 and daughter of O. H.
Bakeless, is an educator, artist, and
Bakeless.
benefactress to the College.
Dr. and Mrs. John Bakeless were
present at the dedication ceremonies.
Mrs. Nason is traveling abroad and
was unable to attend.
Centrally located in the
academic
area of the campus, the Bakeless Center for the Humanities is the first
building on campus to feature wallbearing construction with re-enforced
concrete floors.
The exterior walls
consist of concrete block with brick
veneer facing.
Included in the three and a half
story building are 36 classrooms, three
seminar rooms, offices for 66 faculty
members, secretarial areas, a faculty
lounge, storage areas, and an automatic elevator. All classrooms and
offices are air conditioned.
The three large classrooms on the
third floor are illuminated with skylights and will be used by the Art Department. Language laboratories will
be installed in the large classrooms on
the second floor. The stair tower was
specifically designed to enhance the
aesthetic qualities of the new center
and also provides wall space to be
used as an area for paintings. A portion of the building has currently been
designated as the center for the Columbia County Historical Museum,
which will be used jointly by the colege community and members of the
Historical Society.
The architectural firm of Milton Schwartz and Associates, Philadelphia.
Pennsylvania designed the Bakeless
Center for the Humanities, completed
on July 15, 1970. Boyd F. Bucking
ham. Associate Vice President for
Development, co-ordinated the planning meetings between representatives
of the college, the architect, and the
General State Authority during the deDr.
sign and construction stages.
Francis Radice. Professor, School of
Business, served as chairman for the
dedication.
The master of ceremonies at the
dedication luncheon was Dr. Stuart
Edwards, Dean of the School of Professional
Speakers were
Studies.
President Nossen, William A. Lank,
Chairman of the Board of Trustees,
and Dr. John Bakeless
NOSSEN ADDRESSES
FRESHMEN-PARENTS
DR.
“There are many who wish to give
you advice. A true test of wisdom is
how to choose your counselor wisely,”
Dr. Robert
Nossen,
president
of
Bloomsburg State College stated in an
address to freshmen students and their
parents during the seventeenth annual
freshmen-parents day activities in the
campus. Approximately 1,100 parents,
students, and faculty attended.
In a statement directed to parents,
Dr. Nossen added. “This is the most
important advice I can give young
people. I would urge you as parents
to be aware of it and to repeat it often.”
Speaking of those who counsel or
advise students, Dr. Nossen continued,
“There are those who come to the
campus to lead persons to take action
that the counselor wants them to take
for his own narrow purpose.
“There are those who print underground or unofficial papers in the hope
that they can influence students.
“There are those, well-meaning,
of really
good intent, who
will inter-
pert events at they see them, but
don’t understand them.
“All of these influences are on this
campus. Every student here will be
subject to them. The careful choice
of an advisor will be important to you
both now and for years to come.”
Dr. Nossen also discussed plans
Page one
made by
thirteen
student leaders from the
State Colleges and Indiana
University to declare October 15, as
Stae College Day. The students will
Harrisburg to call attention to
the true needs of these institutions of
higher education.
Dr. Nossen noted that plans for Octrally in
ober 15 have been developed by
ponsible student leaders, spokesmen
res-
for the Board of Presidents, and perhaps, Gov. Shafer.
“It is a form of protest, but responsible and guided protest, to help others
understand the importance of these
colleges,” Dr. Nossen said.
“We will not close; we will not put
aside our academic program for any
reason over which we have control.
But in spirit, we will give our support
insofar as ends remain constructive
and means remain objective, responsible, and valid,” Nossen said.
Dr. Nossen expressed his faith in
Michael Pilligalli, president of the
community government association,
and other students at the college.
“They have given me little reason
to feel otherwise,” he said.
John S. Mulka, director of student
activities, presided during the pro
gram.
He reminded those present “Success
may
in life
way street.
be characterized as a two-
“For example, every human being
has certain rights and privileges, but
accompaning these are responsibilities
which must be fulfilled,” he said.
Michael Pilligalli, CGA president,
explained the October 15 student
movement referred to earlier by Dr.
Nossen.
Students are going to Harrisburg not
to protest or act unlawfully, but as
responsible adults who want to impress State officials with the need for
the State Colleges and Indiana University, he said.
Elton Hunsinger, vice president for
student affairs at the college, said,
college youth hold in their hands
three of the most important influences
of all times - love, understanding, and
“Our
responsibility.”
“Our current problems can be overcome,” he said, “with the proper
quantity,
quality,
and application
of
hard
discipline,
and
knowledge,
work.”
“Today’s student,” he said, “will
wake up and defy a gloomy future.
But he must assume a full share of
responsibility for that future.
“He must understand that an eduis one who can differentiate between what you do know and
what you don’t know. He must know
cated person
and
right
the
difference between
wrong, and have the courage to support that which is right.”
Dr. John A. Hoch, vice president
and dean of the faculties, urged parents to encourage their sons and daughters to “solve problems before they
become serious.”
He asked parents
BUILDINGS
Although three new buildings have
been occupied recently and a fourth
is nearing completion, physical facil-
Bloomsburg State College
have to be utilized to the fullest
ities of the
will
possible extent during the 1970-71 college year to accommodate nearly 4,000
full-time undergraduate and graduate students, over 550 part-time undergraduate and graduate students.
282 faculty and administrative personnel, and 272 non-instruotive employees.
The Scranton Commons, Bakeless
Center for the Humanities, and a new
to
residence halls, a dining hall-kitchen
and a maintenance building.
The Upper Campus now
service building were completed during the summer. Columbia
Residence Hall, which will house 400
women,
is
expected to be ready for
of October.
occupancy by the end
In addition to these projects, there
are nine others in various stages of
construction cr design. The total cost
of construction for the thirteen projects is in excess of $13,000,000.
An
additional amount of
for
$3,800,000
four projects is included in the 1969-70
Capital Budget which has not yet been
passed by the State Legislature. A new
gymnasium is emerging above the
horizon on the Upper Campus. It is
expected to be ready for use by September, 1971. A central air conditioning system is now being installed in
the former College Commons, which
will be used as a temporary student
union building until a student center is
completed. Additional space will be
available in Centennial Gymnasium
following completion of an excavating
project now in progress in the basement area.
Final plans and specifications have
been delivered to the General State
Authority to provide for new varsity
(Upper Campus);
athletic fields
util-
roads, and parking areas (Upper
Campus); a student center (Lower
Campus); a multi-level parking garrecreation arage Lower Campus
ities,
(
)
eas, parking
;
and roads (Lower Cam-
pus); an administration - supply building (Lower Campus).
It is hoped that bids will be opened
for several of these projects this fall;
the others will be delayed until late
winter or early spring.
When the 1969-1970 capital budget
is approved, funds are expected to be
available for the design and construction of a new residence hall for 300 women on the site of Waller Hall; a new
classroom building east of Andruss
Library; the air-conditioning of Sutliff Hall; the conversion and addition
of boilers in the heating plant.
Pre-planning of additional projects
Upper Campus is following guidelines established in the Campus Plan
which was completed in 1967. At the
present time, pre-planning submissions have been completed for four
ion
that
need.
should seek the
ask for the help they
students
proper person
to
consists of
approximately 103 acres, which includes the 68 acres purchased from the
former Bloomsburg Country Club and
35 acres purchased this summer. The
latter area will be used as a site for
roads and recreation facilities.
NEW FACULTY
An educator once accused by the
Russians of being an American spy
has been named head of the Foreign
Language department
of
Bloomsburg
State College.
campus
Hoch reinforced Dr. Nossen’s suggest-
give their
children support while the young
people are adjusting to college life.
Page two
NEW
Dr. Ariane Foureman, a native of
Tunisia, has been
of the department.
named chairman
Born of Russian parents, who left
Russia at the time of the revolution
become French citizens in Tunisia,
Foureman attended a private
Dr.
Notreschool in Tunisia,
Catholic
Dame de Sion, and received a French
Baccalaureat. which is approximately
equivalent to two years of college in
the United States.
Her studies in law school in Tunisia
were interrupted by World War II.
She became a war bride of an army
officer, arriving in the U.S. in 1947.
to
and became an American citizen in
1950. She continued her education at
Ohio State University, and was awardMaster of
ed the Bachelor of Arts.
Arts, and Doctor of Philosophy degrees in French.
Dr. Foureman started her teaching
career at Ohio State University as an
Assistant Instructor in 1957. and served as an Instructor from 1962 to 1968.
During the summers of 1964 and 1965
she taught Russian at Ohio State and
was an instructor and co-leader of a
language studv tour to Russia sponsored by Ohio State University.
A year later she was accused in the
Russian newspaper, Pravda. of being
an American spy for the United States
government. In 1968 she was appointed Assistant Professor at Capital Un
iversity in Columbus, Ohio, and served in that capacity until her appoint-
ment
to
Bloomsburg
in 1969.
Although Dr. Foureman
left
OSU
the fall of 1968. the class of 1969
inated her for the Arts Council
in
nomGood
Teaching Award.
Dr.
in
of
the
Foureman holds membership
Modern Language Association
University Professors, Ohio State
University Alumni Association, Societe des Professors Francais en Amerique, Alliance Francaise de Columbus.
Ohio, and the Association of Pennsylvania State College and University
Faculties (A.P.S.C.U.F.).
Her husband. Dr. Roy Foureman.
received a Doctor of Philosophy degree from Ohio State University and
retired from the U.S. Army with the
rank of lieutenant colonel. The Fou remans have two children, Ariane. a
senior at Ohio State, and Alexandra,
a sophmore at the same institution.
Dr. Foureman makes frequent trips
Europe to visit her parents and
t,o
further her education.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
oming Valley Garden Club.
She is
survived by three daughters, three
grandchildren, and two great grand-
3u iUmnrtam
children.
George W. Vansickle ’35
George W. Vansickle, forty-six, of
Vineland, N. J., died Aug. 15 in Wash-
1919— Mrs. Frances Epler Manning.
Cuernavaca, Mexico.
1922— Leah Griffith, Plymouth, Pa.
1927— Eleanore S. Henry, Summit
Hill.
ington, D. C., of a heart attack, while
attending a Moose convention.
Born April 3, 1914, in Jamison City,
he was the son of R. Emory and Nellie
Vansickle.
He was principal of the Norma
School in Vineland. He was active in
the Moose Lodge and was past deputy
governor of the lodge in New Jersey.
Pa.
1932— Ruth E. Jones (Mrs. N. Donald Miller) Havre de Grace, Maryland
1912— Harold N. Cool, Culver City.
Calif. Died August 24. 1970
1958— Bertlette Burrell, R. D. 1, Elysburg, Pa.
Margaret Crouse DerPa.
Marguerite Davey, Wanamie,
•1927— Mrs.
rick. Evert,
—
Pa.
/ 1920 —Jeanne Stroh
June
1970.
1927 — Helen Schaefer
1924
Walsh,
Harold J. Pegg ’18
Harold J. Pegg, seventy-three, Altoona, died in a Pittsburgh Hospital,
died
Sunday, Sept. 20
He was born at Mordansville, a son
of the late Clarence B. and Alice Mordan Pegg.
He graduated from Buckhorn High
5,
(Mrs. George
Jacobs) Minersville, Pa.
Edna F. Maurer ’19
Miss Edna F. Maurer, 519 S. River
St., Wilkes-Barre, former art and penmanship supervisor for the Forty Fort
Public Schools for 43 years, died Wednesday, July 8, in the Nesbitt Memorial
School and Bloomsburg State College
He taught at Pine Summit,
Buckhorn and Fishingcreek Union
High School. He received his BA degree at Gettysburg in 1925 and then
accepted a position in the Altoona Senin 1918.
Hospital.
High School.
In 1931 he received his Master’s degree from the University of WashingIn 1938 he was elected
ton, Seattle.
principal
of Roosevelt Junior High
School, Altoona, a position he held unior
Miss Maurer was a graduate of
Wilkes-Barre High School, and received her bachelor of science degree
from Columbia University.
She also did graduate work at the
University of Pennsylvania, Pennsyl-
He
til his retirement in May
1962.
persued further study toward a Doctor’s degree at the Universities of Wis-
vania State University, Cornell University, Philadelphia School of Industrial
Arts and the Palmer School of New
York
Maine and Wyoming.
4, 1942 he was called
to active duty and served at Valley
Forge General Hospital, New Cumberconsin,
City.
On February
Anthony McDonald ’21
Anthony McDonald, 83, of 7330
Howard Road. Dundalk. Mr., formerly
of West Park Street, Centralia, died
Wednesday, August 12, in the Veterans Administration Hosital at
Reception Center, Philadelphia
Navy Yard, Indiantown Gap and
land
Edge wood Arsenal. He was discharged from the military in 1947 with the
permanent rank of Lieutenant Colonel.
Fort
Howard, Md.
He was born
in Bynesville, October
son of the late Alexander and
Bridget Cleary McDonald. He taught
school in Cor.yngham township before
Luther P. Hess ’13
Luther P. Hess, seventy-seven, of
1025 North Flagler Drive, West Palm
Beach, Florida, died recently at his
summer home at 2558 Old Berwick
Road. He had been in ill health for
12, 1886,
retiring in 1954.
He was a member of St. Ignatius
Church, Centralia and the Holy Name
Society of the Church. He served in
some
He was born
Almedia, a son of
the late Francis W. and Elmira E.
Creasy Hess. He was a graduate of
Bloomsburg State College in 1P13, and
taught school for several years in Columbia County. He then went into the
coal dredging business until his retirement in 1947, at which time he moved
World War I and was in tne Army
Band. At one time he was leader of
the
Elks Band in Ashland.
He
held
memberships in Ashland Elks Lodge.
Central American Legion Post 608 and
was a retired member of National Education Association and Pennsylvania
State Education Association.
Ida
O’Donnell ’01
Ida May O’Donnell (Mi's. George
N. Klein), died April 14, 1970. She was
born in Ashley, Pa. May 7, 1882. Prior
to her marriage she taught in the New
DECEMBER,
1970
in
to his Florida residence.
He was a member of the
May
York City Schools. From 1927 to 1945
she was a member of the faculty of
the G. A. R. Memorial High School,
Wilkes-Barre. She was a member of
St. Ignatus Church and the Alter Society. Mercy Hospital Auxiliary, Wyoming Valley Women’s Club, and the Wy-
time.
Church and the Berwick LOOM.
Fredrick R. Harrison ’29
of Fredrick R. Harrison,
occurred Wednesday, October 14,
The death
66,
at his
home,
at
McKendree,
follow-
ing a lengthy illness.
Mr. Harrison was born at HuntingHe taught in the Northwest Area Joint School for 45 years
and served as principal at the Hunlock Elementary School from 1954 to
1968 when he retired.
The deceased was a member of the
McKendree United Methodist Church,
the Sunday School where he served
on the official board for a number of
ton Mills.
He also was a member of
McKendree Grange and served on
years.
the
the
executive board of that organization
and a member of Luzerne County Retired Teachers Association and National Retired Teachers Association.
Charles H. Weaver ’98
Charles
H.
Weaver,
ninety-one,
Wilkes-Barre, a graduate of BSC in
1898. died in New Hanover Memorial
Hospital, Wilmington, N. C. He was
born in Danville, August 31, 1878.
He was honored by BSC during the
seventieth reunion of his class in 1968.
He was the oldest living High Priest
of the Grand Chapter of the Masonic
Order
in
Pennsylvania.
He was a member of Lodge 61, F
and AM. Wilkes-Barre; Royal Arch
Chapter 182. Dieu Le Veut Commandery.
Chapter
45.
Knights-Templar,
Irem Temple and Keystone Consistory.
He served
State
Masonic conventions
fifty
as a delegate to the
for
over
years.
Helen W. Fenstermacher ’06
Miss Helen Winifred Fenstermacher,
a former U. S. Civil Service officer,
died August 3 at a nursing home.
She lived at 1745 Lombard St., Philadelphia.
Espy Luth-
She entered the federal service as a
clerk in the
Margaret Hower, several nieces and
nephews.
signed to the Philadelphia Navy Yard,
becoming a supervisory clerk.
In 1923 she was transferred to the
Third U. S. Civil Service District as
assistant secretary and appointed acting manager in 1931.
Miss Fenstermacher was a member
of the Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners from 1923 to 1940 and a member of the Customs Promotion Board
James E. Karns
E.
Karns,
’34
fifty-seven,
of
Espy, died recently at the Gold Star
Nursing Home, Danville. He sustaineed an injury while at work January
i
ACF in Berwick. He had been employed a total of 30 years at ACF.
Born August 8, 1912, in Espy, he was
the son of the late Charles O. and
Catherine (Golder) Karns.
His entire life, with the exception of
seven years in St. Louis, was spent in
Espy. A graduate of the Ssott Town
ship and BSC in 1934, he participated
on the track team and had won the
Berwick Marathon three times.
He also worked as a male nurse at
the Danville State Hospital prior to
his employment with ACF. He was a
member of the St. John’s Lutheran
eran Church.
Surviving are his wife, the former
James
*
past seven years.
Prior to that he had worked at the
28, at the
ACF
plant in St. Louis, Mo.,
for the
where he had been employed
ture,
Department
of Agricul-
Washington, and was later as-
Page three
from 1933 to 1940. In March 1940 she
was appointed administrative officer
in charge of personnel at the Frankford Arsenal and in 1946 became executive secretary for the Civil Service
of Examiners for the Arsenal.
Following her retirement from government service in 1950 Miss Fenstermacher served as secretary and office
manager in the department of Christian Education of the Evangelical Luth-
you
^JUank
ADDRESSES WANTED
— Pauline E. Bohg
—Mrs. Mildred Russel Vought
—Richard Paden
— Mrs. Anna Deberstern Cumberland
1954— Shirley Walters
1967 —Larry J. Swisher
NEW MEMBERS OF
1925
1917
1960
1948
THE FACULTY
Moroose II, Assistant
Mathematics.
B. S.
Fairmount State College; M. S. UniJ. Vincent
Professor of
versity of Pittsburgh
David C. Evans, Admissions Counselor. B. S., Slippery Rock State College; M. Ed., Rutgers University.
Ronald J. Bercherb, Asst. Professor
of Art. M. A. in art and art education.
Kenneth Hoffman, Director of Publications.
B. S. Pennsylvania State
University.
Dr. Thomas H. Poulos, Professor of
Communication Disorders. B. S., Milwaukee State Teachers College. M. S.
University of Wisconsin; Ph. D., Michigan State University.
Dr. Vyagar Bawa, Professor of Economics. B. A., Guru Navak Khalsa
College; M. A., Punjob University;
M. A., University of Pennsylvania;
Ph. D., Cornell University.
Dr. Ann Marie Noakes, Assistant
Professor of Education.
Michael A. Bonacci, Assistant Dean
of Men. B. S., Bloomsburg Slate Col-
M. Ed., Bloomsburg.
Harry C. Strine III, Instructor
lege;
of
Speech.
B. A. .Susquehanna University; M. A., Ohio University.
Russell W. Guthrie, Instructor, Assigned to Computer Center, B. S.,
Mansfield State College.
Dr. Michael W. Gaynor, Associate
Professor of Psychology. B. A., Muhlenberg College; B. S., Lehigh University; Ph. D., Colorado State University.
Loyalty Fund contributions to Sep1970, not reported pre30,
tember
viously
1901—
:
—Mrs.
—Mrs.
1903—
1892
1898
Eva
F.
McKelvey
Richards
Mrs. A. T. Lowery, Nevin E.
S. L.
1905—
Funk
1902
1907—Lourissa V.
Leighow
1908—H. Walter Riland
Mrs. Sue T. Beaver
1909—
1906 Mabel R. Farley
1910— Mrs. Helen M. Hemingway
Mrs. E. J. Tomlinson, Dr. Jay
H. Grimes
Harold L. Moyer, Mi’s. Marion
P. Fall, Fred W. Deihl
1912—Theodore D. Krum, Mary Shoulin, Sara F. Lewis
1911 Mrs. G. W. Hasbrouck, A. K.
1913— Hazel D. Kester, Mrs. Fred
Naugle,
W. Deihl
1915— William H. Davis, In memory
of Harold N. Cool, Mrs. Grace W. Arnold, Mrs. Lera F. Yard, B. J. Swartwood
Mrs. C. J. Tallman, Bernard
J. Kelley, Mrs. Fred Patten, Mrs.
Wayne
1917—J. Hughes
Mrs. Frank S. Hutchison, Mrs.
Mrs. George H.
Louis E. Weber
Moore, Anne G. Ruddy, Mrs. Dallas
C. Baer, Mrs. Elwood Farrell
1919—
1916 Frank S. Hutchison, Mrs. Harry B. Welliver, Mrs. Dwight Falsom,
Mrs. Justin Buyauskas
-
,
Alice Tiffany Gardner, Stuart
C. Bulton, Mrs. R. S. Burr, Allen L.
Cromis.
1918
Clude
A.
Miller,
Mrs.
W.
Mason Ancker
Margaret T. Reynolds, Mrs.
Thomas Mainwaring,
Olive O. Robin-
Ralph Dreibelbis, Alma L.
Bachman, Margaret S. Brock, Alice
M. Burns, Mrs. Margaret J. Dyer
1920 Margaret V. Hower
1921 Warren L. Fisher, Mrs. J. A.
son,
F.
Kaiser, Mrs. Elmer R. Martin, Anna
L. Swanberry, Mrs. Lillian N. Yerkes
1922 Martha Y. Jones, Mrs. Joseph
E.
Adams
1926—
1923 Ann J. Jarrett, Mrs. Ralph R.
Maynard, J. J. Welliver, Mrs. Albert
K. Foster
1927—
1924 Mrs.
Donovan F. Aldrech,
Mrs. Charles F. Johnson, Jr., Olga A.
Nelson, Viola M. Statler, Mrs. Leroy
Bugbee
1925 Mrs. James P. Bussberg, Mrs.
Martha A. Fisher,
Otto G. Little,
Priest,
Pearl Poust, Mrs. William
Gladys R. Stecker, Mrs. Wayne Tur-
We
ner
ried name.
In order to
Mrs. Claude F. Avery, Verna
E. Fetterman, Mrs. Margaret Davies,
Christine B. Raeder, Mrs. H. L. Campbell, Jr., Mrs. Helen Gradwell
Mrs. Earl J. McCloughan,
Mrs. Esther W. Copp, Mrs. Isadore
request that all correspondence
with the College or the Alumni Office include the year of graduation.
Married women arc requested to
include both maiden name and mar-
for
credit on
formation
is
properly identified
our records, full innecessary.
be
Spitz
1928
Snyder,
Helen
Mrs.
Kramer,
Earl
J.
Lehman
Smiley,
J.
Sr.,
Mrs. Edna A. Reilly, Mrs. Michael L.
Page four
John H. Caterall, Mrs. James
Mi's.
Board
eran Ministerium of Pennsylvania.
Miss Fenstermacher was active as
a Red Cross Worker and was a board
member of the Methodist Home for
the Aged.
1929—Alice L. Evans
Weiss,
Mrs. R. J. Goodwin, Jack B.
Fortner, Mrs. Nelson Stauffer, Mrs.
Charles J. Shearer, Walter M. Siesko,
Wertman
1930 Mrs. Anna I. Gossler, Helen E.
Snyder, Mrs. Earle V. Charles, Mrs.
Sara W. Edwards
1931 Mi’s. Robert L. Stover, Mrs.
Robert M. Shoemaker
1932 Dr. Chester C. Hess, C. L.
Hunsicker, Almeda L. Derby, Mrs.
Harold A. Millington, Mrs. Alma E.
Todd
1933
Mary
A. Stahl, Mabel Belles,
Mrs. Edwin Krum, Mrs. Howard A.
Linse
1934 Mrs. Wm. McDermatt, Mrs.
1937—
Joseph Conner, Mrs. George Plowright
1935 Walter G. Hiney, Clarence S.
-
Slater
1936
Mrs. N. W. Moreth, Sr.
Mary E. Palsgrove, Sara M.
Berger, Mary Reisler, Mrs.Helen S.
Moore
Mrs. Dorothy Kreinheder, Dr.
1938
Cleo M.
Hummel
Dr. Alex J. McKechnie
Mrs. Glenn A. Hyssong, Mrs.
Margaret E. McCern, William W.
1939
1940
Wertz
1941 Mrs. Frank M. Taylor, Leo J.
Lehman, John E. Lavelle, Mrs. Ken-
neth A. Baylor
1942 Mrs. Harey G. Maty as, Edward D. Solach, Mrs. John W. ThomMr. and Mrs. Edward B. Can
as,1947—
-
,
Mrs. William B. Fritz
1949—
1943 Mrs. Harold Trexler, Frank
M. Taylor, Dr. John M. Apple, Loren
L. Collens, Mrs. Clyde C. Deets, Mrs.
Henry C. Van Blohn
1944 Joyce E. Hay, Carmel A. Sinanni, Mrs. John J. Gallagher
1946 Stephen M. Hatz
J. Richard Zerby, Mis. Harry
John W. Thomas
1952— Mrs. Edward A. McElivee.
John
H. Reichard, Francis J. Radice,
1954—
Richard E. Grimes
J. Dill, Jr.,
1950 Thomas J. McAndrew, Mrs.
Berdine L. Rittenhouse, Mrs. Muriel
M. Himmelberger, Edward J. KolodHenry F. Pacholic, Paul P. Plevyak, Henry C. Talarsky
1951 Mrs. Donald
W. Donnelly.
Mike Masanovich, Charles F. Lewis,
Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Harold F. Emmitt
Calvin W. Kanyuck
gie,
Mrs. R. B. Hallingsworth, Dr.
Jerome S. Kopec,
Michael
Mrs. Laurence Auerweich,
R. Crisce
1955
Mrs. Relda M. Scott, Mrs.
Ernest P. Rebuch, Lt. Cdr. Philip W.
Gergln USN, Mrs. William C. Harrell, June E. Lukac
1956 Mrs. Leonard Flecknoe, Robert J. Huntz, Robert E. Dalton, Mrs.
Ronald R. Krick, Mrs. J. D. Coughlin,
Curtis R. English
1957 Mrs. Margaret D. Folliner,
Donna R. Wilcox, Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Maurer, William C. Harrell.
Mrs. William C. Follmer, Mrs. Hugo
Mori
1958 Theodore F. Reznick, Mrs.
William F. Swisher, George E. Renn.
J. Alfred Chiscon,
—
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Mrs. Conrad J. Tuza
1959— William F. Swisher. Mrs. Robert E. Hicks, Mrs. Margaret Price
1990 Victor A. Miller
—
19G1— Frank W. Deaner. Mrs. Paul
E. Bickelman, Mrs. J. W. Lorah, Ray
L. George, Mrs. Beatrice M Roberts
1962 John C. Spangler, Richard E.
Wendel, Mrs. Lane L. Kemler, Thomas1963—
J. McHugh, Mrs. Anthony Cicero
Gary R. Kahler, Daniel Kwasnoski.
Mrs. John W. H. Ribble
Mrs. Leon Applegate, Mrs.
Karl
Najaka, James S. Case, Mrs.
1964—
Eugene Criswell, Mrs. John E. Willard
Herbert A Leeper, Fredrick T. Min-
OVER
4,500
ON
cludes ten valedictorians and six salutatorians.
BSC ROLLS
A
total of 3,953
undergraduate stud-
completed registration for the
1970-71 year at Bloomsburg State College, according to Robert Bunge, registrar.
In addition, 393 graduate students
which
are enrolled at the college,
gives a grand total of 4,346 undergrad-
amination results. These results were
reviewed and six hours of credit were
awarded and 15 hours were exempted.
The mean grade point average for
uate and graduate students. This is
the largest enrollment of the college.
Approximately 175 part time undergraduate and graduate students that
have been registering by mail raised
majority of transfer students was from
two year community colleges.
ents
the grand total of fulltime and part-
time
undergraduate
and
graduate
nich
students over the 4,500 mark.
Mrs. Vincent J. Seraflno, Diane A. Bensinger, Karl Najaka. Stanley E. Rummel, Ann M. Hocker. John
W. H. Ribble. Harold C. Andrews,
Mrs. John K. Frank. George J. Froe-
undergraduate students,
1.990 are men and 1,963 are women
Approximately 1.983 men and women
will be housed in campus residence
halls and will be served their meals
through the facilities of the Scranton
lich
1965 Mrs. Donald R. Fisher. Jr..
Robert W. Hertzig, William J. Reilly,
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Bittenbender, Mrs.
Donna Gulluni, Mrs. Jack Madeoy.
Charles H. Wilson
1966 Mrs. David L. Welsh. Mrs.
Philip A. Smith. Barbara A. Urbas,
1967—
Mrs. Robert J. Donahue, John J. Zarski, Mrs. Kenneth G. Bartoo, Mrs.
Sharon K. Herr, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth G. Cromwell, Jr., Mr. and Mrs.
Richard
1968— H. Fulmer. Mrs. Allyn E. Hostetter, Frederick J. Klock, Donna F.
Miller. Mrs. Lola M. Hunsinger
Thomas S. Fowels. Kay E.
Schmidt, Gerald E. Depo. Kenneth L.
Adams, Mrs. Cheryl A. Bold, George
H. Cook. Allen W. Handwerk, Judith
A. Heffelfinger
L.
Robert T. Moran, Jr., Mrs. L.
Dona M. Houck. Barbara
Conti.
Politis,
Henry Bernatonis. Elizabeth A.
Pinter. Mrs. Josephine Plonski, Claude
M. Cocodrilli, Carole A. Marone, John
Trathen. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce H.
Williams, George R. Colestock, David
W. Gerhard, Gale M. Kovalich, Mrs.
Araulia E. Schlegel, Mrs. Wilson A.
J.
James
Poechman. Mrs.
Linda R. Beyer, Mrs. Nicholas Kazemka. Joseph T. Austin, Jr., Diane M.
Shaffer,
L.
Boone, Joyce E. Brobst, Mrs. Sharon
L. Griggs. John R. Moyer, John J. Ondish
1969 Mrs. Francis A. Demnicki.
Robert T. Repko. Donna L. Reed, Connie M. Fike. Mrs. Mark B. Pierce
Linda E. Wimmer, Gerald F. Sheperis
Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Clayton, Ernest P. Rebuch, Thomas F. Castrilli.
Barbara M. Klepac, Linda D. Tonkin.
Mrs. James L. Poechman, Robert J.
Brochi, Bart Giacometti, Beverly Ann
Jones, Mrs. Larry S. Smith. Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Kowalski, Kathy J. McGuire, James E. Riefenstahl
1970 Nancy M. Grifasi, Helen V.
Olanovich, Horace D. Bennett III,
Janet M. Nossal, Robert K. Ace. Mrs.
Deanna M. Banonis, Jon L. Black, David C. Sarge, George Beecham. Loretta M. Kukol. J. Garth Edwards, Susan
J. Bower, Barbara L. Lawser
DECEMBER,
1970
A total of eleven students submitted
College Entrance Board Advanced Ex-
Of the
3.953
Commons.
A total of 282 faculty and administrative personnel will be on duty during the semester.
Bloomsburg State College admitted
new students for the 1970-71 colyear.
Forty-six and one tenth
per cent of these new students were
men and 53.9 per cent were women.
The new students were broken down
into the following categories:
freshmen totaled 1,069 with 465 being male
and 604 female; transfer students totaled 215 with 121 males and 94 female;
returning students (those who had
been enrolled prior to the preceding
semester) totaled 40. broken down into 27 males and 13 females; one male
and six females were not classified.
This class of new students was selected from 4,524 applicants.
Of all
the freshmen candidates, 8.2 per cent
were offered admission with 58.9 per
cent of that number being enrolled.
In the transfer group, 47.9 per cent of
the applicants were accepted and of
this group 61.6 per cent registered .Admission was offered to 73 8 per cent
of those who applied
as
returning
students;
forty-three
per
cent
1.331
lege
of this
group completed registration.
The geographical aspect
of the new'
cent re-
students reveals that 90 per
side in counties located in
Pennsylvania. Counties with
representation are Luzerne,
Eastern
the most
11.3
per
Northumberland, 9.8 per cent:
Columbia, 8.5 per cent; Montgomery.
cent;
8.0
per cent;
Lackawanna,
Schuykill, 6.9 per cent;
per cent and Bucks
per cent. A total of 48 counties of
Pennsylvania are represented and
eight per cent of the new freshmen
are out-of-state students. The majority of new freshmen. 86.2 per cent attended public secondary schools.
Forty-five per cent of the freshmen
ranked in the first fifth of their respective high school graduating class.
33 per cent in the second fifth 20 per
cent in the third fifth, and 2 per cent
in the fourth fifth. These figures are
commensurate with last year’s rank
6.5
4.9
distributions.
The class
of
1974
in-
the transfer
men was
women was
2.72.
transfer
all
2.55 and for the
total mean for
The
students was 2.63.
The
NEW FRESIiMEN
arrived at
begin the
Over 1,000 freshmen
Bloomsburg State College
to
1970-71 college year.
An informal reception was held in
Scranton Commons lobby giving new
students and their parents the opporwith administrators,
tunity
to talk
members, and student
faculty
A
ers.
buffet dinner
lead-
followed
in
Scranton Commons, and later that
evening a freshman class meeting
was held, climaxed by a band dance
in the Student Union Building.
for freshmen took
Centennial Gymnasium, at
which time the students were issued
The registration
place
in
dinks,
dars.
name
signs, pilots,
and calen-
Prior to a picnic held on the
soccer field adjacent to the Gym, fun
and games were held on the same
location. A band dance in the Gym-
nasium Parking
lot
terminated
the
day’s activities.
upperclassmen were registfreshman class meeting and
group meetings were held throughout
the day. Students also had the opportunity to meet with faculty members
who direct varsity sports, men’s intramurals, women’s intramurals and
While
ering, a
extramurals, choral groups, theatre,
and forensics.
For the first time, orientation sessions were held for new' students during the summer. By conducting several orientation sessions in this manner, students and their parents were
given more time and attention, which
w’as not possible when all new students previously arrived on campus
the week before registration in Sept-
ember.
The National Secretaries Association
has approved Bloomsburg State College as a center for the annual examination for Certified Professional Secretary (CPS) to be given in May, 197i.
according to Dr. Emory w. Rarig.
Director of the Division of Business
Education. Prior to the addition of
BSC, the only other centers in the
state were located in Philadelphia
and Pittsburgh.
Willard A. Christian. Associate Professor of Business Education at BSC,
has been named testing administrator
for the examination.
ADVANCED DEGREES
—C.
Gene Baker, 2207 McCormPlacentic, Calif.. 93670. M. A.,
University of the South, Sewanee,
1962
ack
St..
Tennessee.
Page
five
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR
H. F. Fenstemaker T2
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Grace Foote Conner,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
PRESIDENT
Terms
Howard
F. Fenstemaker T2
242 Central Road
’48
Dr.
John Thomas ’47
68 Fourth Street
Hamburg, Pennsylvania 19526
Elizabeth H. Hubler
’43
205
140
Clayton H. Hinkel
’29
Gordon, Pennsylvania 17936
TREASURER
Lancaster, Pennsylvania 17603
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Terms expire 1973
Dr. Frank J. Furgele ’52
Colonial Farm Box 88
R. D. 1, Glen Mills, Pa. 19342
James H. Deily, Jr. ’41
37 N. Bausman Drive
Earl A. Gehrig ’37
110 Robin Lane, Sherwood Village
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Dr. Alexander J. McKechnie, Jr.
19
Camp
expires 1973
Volume LXXI. Number
1903
Class Representative: II. Walter
Riland, 11 Warwick Avenue, Scarsdale N. Y. 10583
1905
Representative:
Class
Hemingway
Mrs.
Vera
503 Market
Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Ilousenick,
Barton, 353 College
Pa. 17815
Hill,
Edwin
M.
Bloomsburg,
1908
Dr. Jay Harold Grimes retired from
active practice of medicine in 1951 and
moved from Martinsville, Indiana to
Bellleair Estates Clearwater, Fla..
33516.
Spends
joying
Page
his
life.
six
time playing golf and enHe and his wife are act-
3.
N. 24th
Hill,
’39
St.
Pa. 17011
December. 1970
ive in the first Methodist Church United of Clearwater and many civic organizations.
daughter at 564 Ryder’s Lane, East
Brunswick, N. J. 08816. Mr. Naugle,
one of the organizers of the Greater
He spent 38 years in the general
practice of medicine with the last six
years in heart speciality, before retire-
New York Branch
1909
Diehl, 627
17821
of the Alumni Association, recently underwent surgery.
1912
Class
ment.
Class
1907
Representative:
Class
’40
224 Leonard Street
McKnight Street
643
State College, Pa. 16801
Term expires 1973
Term
Kimber C. Kuster T3
West Eleventh Street
Dr. William L. Bitner III ’56
33 Lincoln Ave.,
Glens Falls, N. Y. 12801
SECRETARY
M. Wagner
Wiltshire Road
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
1972
Col. El wood
’34
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie ’35
509 East Front Street
Berwick, Pennsylvania 18603
Pennsylvania 17846
Term Expires
expire 1972
West Street
102
Plant Avenue
Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087
VICE PRESIDENT
Millville,
Terms
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
’36
11
expires 1973
Millard Ludwig
R. D. 1
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
expire 1971
Mrs. Verna Jones
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Term
—
’34
Representative:
Bloom
Fred
W.
Street, Danville, Pa.
1910
Robert C.
Class Representative:
Metz, 23 Manhattan Street, Ashley,
Pa. 18706
1911
Class Representative: Mrs. Pearle
Fitch Diehl, 627 Bloom Street, Dan-
Pa. 17821
Alfred K. Naugh
is
living with his
Howard
F.
Road,
1913
Class Representative: Dr. Kimber
Kuster, 140 West 11th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1914
Representative: J. Howard
Deily. 518 West Third Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1915
Class Representative: John
man,
ville,
Representative:
Central
Fenstemaker,
242
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
368 East
burg, Pa. 17815
Main
Street,
II.
Shu-
Blooms-
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Reed,
1916
1922
Class Representative: Mrs. Itussell
Burrus (Emma Harrison) R. D. 2,
Orangeville. Pa. 17859
Class
Representative:
Edna
S.
Harter, R. D. 1, Nescopeck, Pa. 18623
Mahoning
Cromis,
Representative:
Mrs. Ray125
Forrest
Road,
Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa.
Class
1917
L.
Allen
Manor, R. D. 1,
Representative:
Class
1923
mond Kasbner,
:
baster.
Portraits
Three Dimensions by
Mrs. Ancker will be Mason, bronze:
Dr. W. Ross Morris, bronze loaned by
Dr. Monis, president of the Medical
in
Doctors’ Hospital, Washington.
C.;Danilo and Curance, bronze:
Zelda, fibreglass: Kathy, terra cotta;
Robert, bronze loaned by Mrs. Robert
Hutton. Drawings in penline and watercolor will also be in the display.
Mrs. Ancker graduated from Bloomsburg Normal School and Columbia
University. She studied art at Philadelphia
Museum School; Parsons
School of Design, New York; University of New Mexico and Cincinnati Art
Staff,
Class lteresentative:
Edward F.
Schuyler, 236 West Ridge Avenue,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1925
Michael P.
Walakonis, Box 222, Ringtown, Pa.
Class Representative:
17967
1926
Class
Representative:
Bloss, P. O.
Pa. 17815
Box
505,
Marvin M.
Bloomsburg,
Class Representative: .Mrs. Ralph
G. Davenport (Verna Medley),
16
Ransom Street, Plymouth, Pa. 18651
ren.
1929
Mrs. (Elsie
Nelson Stauffer, 88 John St.,
Kingston, Pa. 18704. (Arline Frantz)
Mrs. James
Wertman, 20 Parish
Street, Dallas, Pa.
18612
Walter Siesko, Apt. T3, 7858 Americana Circle, Glen Burnie, Md. 21061,
has retired after serving as Head of
Employment, Naval Ship Research
and Development Laboratory, Annapolis, Maryland.
Class Representatives:
Lebo)
—
1930
Class
Representatives:
and Margaret Swartz
1920
Luther W.
Street, Millville, Pa. 17846
Old
Leroy W.
Berwick Road.
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1921
Mrs. Harry
Cole. 100 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg,
Class
Representative:
Pa. 17815
DECEMBER,
Jer-
Class Representative: Paul G. Martin,
710
East Main Street,
Blooms-
burg, Pa. 17815
1939
Class
Representative:
Willard A.
Christian, Jr., 803 Logue Street, Williamsport, Pa. 17701
1940
Class Representative:
Clayton H.
Hinkle, 224 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1941
Representative:
art Edwards, R. D. 4,
Pa. 17815
Class
Dr.
C.
Stu-
Bloomsburg,
1942
Class Representative: Mrs.
Ralph
H. Zimmerman
Nell),
165
(Jean
Kready Avenue,
Millersville,
Pa.
17551
1943
Representative:
Mrs. Raymond A. Algatt (Betty Katerman),
253 Iron
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Street,
Class
17815
1944
Class Representative: Mrs. (Poletime Comuntzis) Carl Demetripopoulos. Friar and Robin Lanes, Sherwood
Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1945
Mary Lou
Representative:
Class
John, 257 W. 11th St., Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
1932
1946
Paul Reichart, president of Columbia Accident and Health Insurance
Company and Columbia Life Insurance Company, Bloomsburg, was one
of twenty of the nation’s leading insurance executives selected to attend
Insurance
the
Sixth
International
Seminar at the Imperial Hotel, Tokyo,
Japan, on July 26-30.
Anastasia
Representative:
Pappas (Mrs. John Trowbridge), 102
W. Mahoning Street, Danville, Pa.
Charles
17821.
Co-chairman: Mrs.
W. Creasy (Jacqueline Shaffer), R.
D. 1, Catawissa, Pa. 17820
1933
Representative:
Miss Lois
Third Street,
Lawson,
East
644
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1947
Harry G.
Representative:
Class
John, Jr., 425 Iron Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1934
Esther
Representative:
Evans McFadden (Mrs. Joseph), 154
East Fifth Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
1949
Representative: Richard E.
Grimes, 1723 Fulton St., Harrisburg,
Pa. 17102
Class
Class
1950
Class Representative: Willis Swales.
9
Raven Road, Montvale, N.
Edward
17815
1935
Class
1970
New
17815
1931
Representative:
3117
Ho-Ho-Kus,
Representatives: Mr. and
Mrs. Earl A. Gehrig, 110 Robin Lane,
Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa.
Bitler, 117 State
Class
Representative:
James B.
Davis, 333 East Marble Street, Mechanicsburg, Pa. 17055
Class
Creasy,
Road,
1938
Rosalie Boyer (Mrs. Earl J. Smiley), 519 Stanbridge St., Norristown,
Pa. 19401. Mrs. Smiley is teaching in
the Norristown Schools.
She has
three children and three grandchild-
She has attained renown in the field
of sculpture and in that art form was
a student of the late Oronzio Maldarel-
1919
Linden
sey 07423. Co-Chairman: Ruth Wagner (Mrs. Lawrence Le Grande) 126
Oak Street, Hazleton, Pa. 18201 and
Mary Jane Fink (Mrs. Frederick McCutcheon)
Maple Avenue, Conyngham, Pa. 18219
Florence Piathowski Timmes lives
at 10 Lochinvar Drive, St. Catherines, Ontario, Canada.
1928
Academy.
Class Representative:
Miss Cath
erine A. Reimard. 335 Jefferson St..
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
;
1936
1937
Anna S. Gossler, 226 North 9th St.,
Sunbury, Pa., 17801, has retired from
the Shikellamy Schools after thirtythree years of teaching.
Helen E. Snyder, 1059 Market St.,
teaching
Sunbury, Pa., 17801,
is
grade two at the Maclay School in
Sunbury.
li.New York; Ferenc Varga, Detroit:
Antonucci Volti, Paris, and Allesandro
Monteleone, Rome.
She has had a
number of exhibitions in New York.
Paris and Rome.
Mrs. Ancker taught art in Cooper
Union. New York; Pratt
Institute.
Brooklyn; University of Alabama and
University of Cincinnati.
Clarence S. Slater, 5100 Atlantic
Avenue, Ventnar City, N. J. 08406,
reports that he has successfully completed open heart surgery.
Class
1927
D.
Blooms-
Kathryn
Representatives:
Vanauker (Mrs. Nicholas Mereth) 34
1924
1918
East 4th Street,
Class
17815
Milton. Pa. 17815
Clair
Representative:
J.
Class
Patterson, 315 West Street. Bloomsburg. Pa. 17815
Ruth Hutton Ancker. Washington.
D. C.. who is a native of Bloomsburg.
is one of three native Pennsylvania
artists, whose works will be featured
in the Pine Arts Galleries of the William Penn Memorial Museum, Harrisburg.
Sculpture by Mrs. Ancker on display will be Compassion, bronze: The
Three Graces. By The Sea. Ondine St
Andrew. Sun Worshipper and Brotherhood, all in terra cotta: The Family,
bronze loaned by Louis Reid. Department of the Interior. Washington, D.
Dancer in Leotard, terra cotta:
C.
St. Francis in bronze and two bas relief in bronze of St. Francis’ Funeral
Procession and St. Francis Giving His
Cloak to the Poor Man: Dancer at
Rest and Running Dancer, bronze:
Fallen Angel, carved coral rock:
Enigma, and The Tranquil One. carved limestone: Hark. Hark the Lark,
wood and metal; Night Flight, ala-
151
burg, Pa. 17815
Representative:
William
I.
J.
Kalodgee
is
J. 07645
Treasurer of
Educators Processing Service, located at 99 West Greenwood Avenue,
Page seven
Lansdowne, Pa.
Paul
Towson, Md.
19050
Road,
501 Holden
21204, is President-elect
Plevyak,
of the National Business Education
In 1968 he was PresiAssociation.
dent of the Eastern Business Association.
After military service in Korea and
Japan he
completed
Master’s
a
Degree at Bucknell University in 1956.
A doctorate in administration and curriculum development was earned at
Wayne State University in 1967. New-
bury
tendent
Michigan, a suburban
1951
Francis B.
Class Representative:
Galinski, 90 Tower Hill Road, Doylestown, Pa. 18901
Harold F. Emmitt, 141 Forest Hill
been
Road, Leola, Pa. 17540, has
teaching chemistry at the Conestoga
Valley High, Lancaster, Pa., for the
past fifteen years. He has been selected as one of the outstanding high
school chemistry teachers in Eastern
Pensylvania by the Chemistry Industry Council of Eastern Pennsylvania.
Elizabeth Johnson, Winnipeg, Canada, daughter of the late Rev. and
Mrs. E. W. Johnson, was married to
Dr. Emory Webster Rarig, Bloomsiburg, in a candlelight ceremony on
July 3 in Harrow United Church of
The bride and
Winnipeg, Canada.
groom are both graduates of TeachUniversity.
Columbia
ers College,
The bride formerly taught at Rutgers
University and most recently in the
School of Nursing at Queens UniverDr. Rarig
sity, Kingston, Ontario.
is director of the Business Division
at Bloomsburg State College.
He began teachand has served as
Director
and
Curriculum
Science
Director before being appointed Assistant Superintendent. Dr. Newbury
has served on the Board of Directors
of
the Michigan State Curriculum
Development Association and was
president of the largest county curriculum leadership group in Michigan.
1954
Class Representative: William
J.
Jacobs, Tremont Annex Apartments,
2 West Main Street, Lansdale, Pa.
19446
Dr.
Michael R. Crisci, former assistant
principal of Somerville High School,
is
principal
ville.
Teams.”
The book
entitled
“Teacher Nego-
Guide
for
Bargaining
is considered unique in
educational circles since it is one of
the first to attempt to connect the
growing practice of teacher bargaining with research on effective learning of students.
It is published by
•the Parker Division of Prentice-Hall
Publishers and is aimed at the national market of public and college
educators, as well as school board
members, who are concerned with
teacher negotiations.
Newbury has previously published
articles on such topics as the history
of iron mining at Danville, Pa., federal aid to education, science education, dropout prevention,
and vocational education.
Dr. Newbury attended elementary
school in Sunbury, graduated from
Watsontown High School in 1949 and
graduated with various honors from
Bloomsburg State College in
1953.
Page eight
of
the
new Somerville
J. Crisci
Somerville in 1958 as a teacher in the high school business education department.
He was named asto
sistant
principal in 1967, and two
left the school system to
principal of South Hunterdon
years later
become
High
Regional
School
in
Lambert-
tenure in Somerville,
Crisci was best known as coach of
top-flight varsity swimming teams.
He organized Somerville High’s first
team for competition in 1962, and went
on to develop teams which won 51
consecutive meets. In 1962 he received a master’s degree in secondary
administration from Rutgers University.
Crisci and his wife Marilyn
nave three children. They live at 380
Catherine Street, Somerville.
his
Campus violence, elective office,
the prosecution of a campus revolutionary, and citations of merit from
the Calif. State Senate of the
Pa.
House
of Representatives have worked their way into the fabric of Kenneth D. Wagner’s life.
A Selinsgrove native who graduated
from Bloomsburg State Teachers College, married Inez Spaid, a Bloomsburg girl, and moved in 1955, to Whittier California, Wagner now teaches
biology in a Los Angeles school.
Cited by the Calif. Jr. Chamber of
Commerce in 1962 as one of the five
outstanding men in California for his
outstanding work with biology students
at Manual Arts High School, Los An-
geles, his
scientific
several
the
Calif.
State
Senate
and Pa. House of Representatives
passed resolutions citing him for his
work as a scientist and educator.
1955
Class
inger,
18618
Representative: Arnold GarR. D. 1, Harveys Lake, Fa.
1956
Class Representative: Ur. William
Bittner III, 33 Lincoln Avenue, Glens
Falls, N. Y. 12801
1957
Ciass Representative: William J.
Pohutski, 554 Oakridge Drive, North
Plainfield, N. J. 07606
Jean Stavisky Mori lives at 1541
Wyoming Avenue, Scranton, Pa. She
has two chilldren. Her husband, Hugo
Mori, M. D., is a urologist.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Stanton are
living at 525 Halting Circle, Warminster, Pa. 18974. They have twin daughters. Mr. Stanton is Elementary Principal in the Lower Moreland School
District, Huntingdon Valley, Pa. Mrs.
Stanton, a graduate of Marywood College, taught home economics at the
William Tennant High School,
War-
minster.
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Follmer
(Margaret Ann Duck) live at 1518
Chalk Avenue, Whitpain Manor Development, Norristown, Pa. 19403. Mrs.
Follmer has taught in the Neshaminy
School District and in Blue Bell, Pa.
She is serving as a substitute in the
Wissachiason School District. Her husband is Manager of the Automotive
Electronics Research Laboratory of
the Philco-Ford Corporation. Mr. and
Mrs. Follmer have two daughters.
1958
During
Class Representative: John S. Scrimgeour, 411 East 3rd Street, Bloomsburg. Pa. 17815
Dr. David N. Newbury has recently
co-authored a book which relates
teacher contract negotiations to effective learning for school children.
is
Government Best
May 5, 1970. The
award was made “on the basis of
student body elections and in recognition of outstanding work being done
in the classroom.”
His address is
400 N. River Rd., Apt. 1109, West
Lafayette, Ind. 47906
gina.
A
Alfred Chiscon was presented
J.
the Purdue Student
Instructor Award on
came
1953
of
30,000 residents.
ing there in 1956
Class Representative:
Francis B.
Galinski, 90 Tower Hill Road, Doylestown, Pa.
18901
Calvin W. Kanyack is teaching Physics and Chemistry at the Lake Lehman High School. He has a Master’s
degree from the University of Vir-
tiations:
community
High School, Somerville, N.
1952
The book
currently Assistant Superinof Schools in Hazel Park,
is
studies.
Also, both
community
service,
and
his
work, Wagner has received
grants to pursue biological
Class
Representative:
Raymond
Hargreaves, 37 Dell Road, Stanhope.
N. J. 07874
Gary Rupert has accepted the head
basketball post at Johns Hopkins University for the 1970-71 season.
A 1958 graduate of Bloomsburg High
School, Gary had been an assistant for
three years to head coach Herb Magee
of the Philadelphia Textile cage team.
At BSC he participated four years
on both the cage and diamond squads
and took to the gridiron his junior and
senior years.
With the Huskies football team, he
was ninth in the nation in punting and
received invitations to attend camps of
the Cleveland Browns of the NFL and
several Canadian clubs. He decided
to pass on the latter because he wanted to coach basketball.
In basketball he was an All-NALA
and All-Penna.,
Conference
State
guard on the ’63 team coached by
Bill Foster, the current head coach at
Rutgers.
Coach Rupert taught in the Colonial
School District in Plymouth Meeting
for the past seven years and from
1964-67 he scouted and recruited for
the Textile Rams. As frosh coach he
earned a healthy 36-11 record.
In addition to his cage duties, Gary
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
handle the backfield on the Jay’s
team. His assignment will be
strictly coaching on a iull-time basis.
He received his Master’s Degree in
Education from Temple U. this past
June.
will
grid
be upon us soon (May,
predate hearing from
ideas
Also,
class
ings”
1972) --I’d
ap
people with
or suggestions for the reunion.
I’d appreciate hearing from the
members concerning their “dothe last eight years.
1959
Class Representative: William F.
Swisher, Box 245, Cincinnatus, N. Y.,
13041)
1960
Class Representative: James
J.
Peek, 100 Hull Road, Madison, Conn.
06443
1961
Class Representative: Edwin C.
Kuser, It. D. 1, Box 145-C, Bechtelsville, Pa. 19505
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Shutovich
(Barbara Schaefer) live at 28 Hilltop Drive, Morris ville, Pa. 19067
Ronald W. Thomas,
the
Dean
of
Men
33, will become
at Indiana Univer-
of Pennsylvania, September 1.
Since 1966 in his most recent position Thomas served as Assistant Dean
of Students and Housing Director at
Susquehanna University in Selinsgrove. In that post his assignments included responsibility for all residence
and off campus housing, discipline and
a student counselor program. In addition he worked as advisor to the Student Handbook at Susquehanna.
Prior to his employment at the Selinsgrove institution he taught English at Edinboro State College for one
year and for four years at Harbor
Creek High School in Erie.
At all three locations Thomas also
held duties in coaching.
In 1963 he completed work on his
Master’s Degree in Education at Edinboro State College; since that time
he has earned additional credits in
guidance and college administration at
Bucknell University.
sity
IUP’s new Dean of Men is married
and the father of four children.
1962
Class.
Representative:..
Richard
Lloyd. 6 Farragut Dr., Piscataway,
N. J. 18854
Thomas F. Foley has been elected
President of the Canandaigua Jaycees
for 1970-71.
Tom has been active in
the Jaycees for three years and has
been Director and Treasurer in the
last two years. He is a 1962 Graduate
Business Education from Bloomsburg State College. He is now employed as a representative and Acin
counting Specialist with the Gregg
Division/McGraw Hill Book Company
of New York City.
Tom resides with
his wife and four children in Canan-
—
daigua,
New
York.
Connie Allegrucci, now Mrs. Richard
Louis Dunn III, is living in California
1533 Espinosa Circle, Palos Verdes
Estates, California 90274. Connie and
Lou have a son, Richard IV. Also,
living in California is Kay Ann Karmilowicz, now Mrs. Lloyd Gordon. Kay
lives in San Francisco.
know
come
as a shock to
some, but our tenth year reunion will
I
it
will
DECEMBER,
1970
Whatever happened to Jerry Wright.
Krash, Kathy Buggy, Ed Cocco
Kathy Sinkler, etc.!
Bill
C. Spangler, Lt. USN, 210 72nd
Virginia Beach, Va. 23451, is
Naval Science Instructor at the First
Colonial High School, Virginia Beach,
John
St.,
Va.
1963
Class Representative:
Pat Biehl
(Mrs. Ronald Cranford) R. D. 1, 71
Hawthorne Ave., Boyertown, Pa. 19512
Joseph V. Oravitz has been named
director of personnel and research
services in the Pennsylvania School
Boards Association. He was formerly
administrative assistant to the superintendent of
the
Hanover Public
Schools.
.
Benjamin M.
pointed
Baum
has been ap-
Principal of the Oxford
Area Elementary School, Oxford Area
School District, Oxford, Pennsylvania.
Baum began his teaching career in
Newark. Delaware, as a 6th grade
teacher.
In 1967 he was appointed
as an elementary counselor in the
Cecil County Public Schools. In June,
as
1970 Mr.
Baum was awarded
MasElemen-
his
Education Degree in
tary Guidance from the University of
ter’s of
Delaware
He and
Baum,
his
wife,
Sandra Treuhaft
reside at 48 Stanford
Robscott
Drive,
Manor, Newark, Delaware
19711 with their daughter Jennifer.
1964
Class
Shuba.
Ernest It.
Gaston Avenue, Raritan, N.
Representative:
1
J. 00869
1965
Class Representative: Carl P. Sheran, 59 Vreeland Ave., Bloomingdale,
N. J. 07403
William J. Reilly, 1408 North 2nd
St., Harrisburg, is employed as coordinator for the Distributive Education
program in Harrisburg.
Harry
Ravert, 626 Erford Road,
Pa. 17011, is employed as
an accountant with the U. S. Army,
and is working at the Indiantown Gap
Military Installation.
Camp
Hill.
Edward K. McCormick has joined
the staff of Susquehanna University
as dean of men and director of financial aids.
In the latter capacity, he
will supervise the distribution of scholarships, grants-in-aid, and other forms
of financial assistance for students.
McCormick, who holds two master’s
degrees from the University of Pittsburgh, comes to Susquehanna from
Lycoming College.
He was at Lycoming for three years, serving as as-
named Appalachian Program
coordinator for the Economic Development
Council of Northeastern Pennsylvania.
Mrs. McDonald
is
a
member
of
Am-
erican Society of Planning Officials,
Health and Hospital Planning Council
Northeastern Pennsylvania Study
Committee, Pennsylvania State Education Association and Bradford-Sullivan Chapter of Crippled Children’s
of
Society.
Charles Wilson, 116 Oak St., Forty
Fort, Pa. 18704, is teaching Business
Law and coaching in the basketball
and track programs in the Wyoming
Valley West School District, Kingston,
Pa. In 1969 he received the Master’s
degree in Business Education from the
University of Scranton.
1966
Class Representative: Anthony J.
Cerza, 608 Corlie Ave., Wallenhurst,
N. J. 07711
Mr. and Mrs. K. Gary Bartov, 2121
Billington Rd. E. Aurora, N. Y. 14052.
announce the birth of a son, Nicholas
Jon. on July 11. 1970 in Buffalo, N. Y.
Mrs. Bartov is the former Nancy M.
Jones.
Donna L. Miller, 618 Catawissa Avenue, Sunbury, is a member of the faculty of the Middleburg Elementary
She recently received her
School.
Master’s degree at BSC.
1967
Class
Representative:
It.
Thomas
Lemon, Warwick Apt. 3-D, 802 Old
English St., Bel Air, Md. 21014
The board of Education of Kent
County (Maryland) recently announced the appointment of Alex J. Dubil
to the position Assistant Principal
at
Chestertown Middle School.
Mr. Dubil graduated from Berwick
Sr. High School in 1963.
He received
his B.S. degree from Bloomsburg State
College and a M.Ed. degree in Secondary School Administration from the
University of Delaware.
He had been teaching in Delaware
for the past four years.
1968
Class Representative: Thomas W.
Free, R. D. 1, Box 34. Kintnerville,
Pa. 18930
Bruce H. and Brenda Nafzinger Williams are living at 12 Villa St., Mansfield. Mass. 02048.
Bruce is a graduate student at the School of Theology,
Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts. He is also an ordained Methodist
minister, and at present has charge of
two churches in the Mansfield (Mass.)
area. Mrs. Williams is doing graduate work at Boston University; her
major field is Mathematics Education.
She is employed by Milton Public
Schools, Milton, Mass., as a math
teacher in one of the city’s junior
high schools.
1969
then as assist-
Class
Representative:
Frank J.
Mastroianni.
1018
Cooper
Street
Scranton, Pa. 18508
Teresa B. McDonald, who resides at
Ganoga Lake, near Benton, has been
Pa., hs been appointed an assistant
professor in the Department of Executive Secretarial Science at State
sistant
dean
of
men and
ant dean of students.
Chester
J.
Buglia
of
Miners ville.
Page nine
University of New York Agricultural
and Technical College at Alfred, N.Y.
Mr. Buglia, who taught in the business education department at Easton,
Pa., Area High School from 1966 until
this past June, will begin his duties
at the two-year college in September,
according to Dr. David H. Huntington,
president. He will teach shorthand and
typewriting
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Kowalski
S.
(Sarah E. Biddle), R. D. 1, TurbotPa. are both teaching in the Milton School District, Milton, Pa.
ville,
1970
Class
Dalfovo,
Mary Ann Cecile Kotchic and Thomas R. Bender, Jr. The bride is a stewardess on Delta Air Lines. The bridegroom is serving in the Armed Forces
in Georgia, where the couple resides.
WEDDINGS
1960
Linda Anne Bartlow and David G.
Hutchinson. Address: 2124 Lombard
Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 19146
1963
Sandra Fleming, Catawissa, and
The
Mifllintown.
Robert Shearer,
bride has been a teacher at the Cata\vissa Elementary School, and the
bridegroom is a sergeant in the U. S.
Susan Fritz and Donald J. Clayton
Both are teaching in Port Jervis, N.
Y. Their address is 214 Broad Street,
Milford, Pa. 18337
Air Force.
Rosalie P. Giovannini and Douglas
E. Schroeder. Address: 76 Italy St.,
Mocanaqua, Pa. 18655
John W.
Dean Street, Beaver
Representative:
61
Meadows, Pa.
Patricia A. Shepardson, Little Falls,
N.Y. and John Dowett, Berwick. Mr.
18216
Vincent J. Shiban, 1805 Ridgeview
Drive, Coates ville, Pa., has been commissioned a second lieutenant in the
U. S. Air Force.
David C. Large, 1539 Centre St., Ashland, Pa. 17921, has enlisted in the
Air Force.
Miss Joanne Cashman, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Neil Cashman, 232 West
6th Street,
Berwick, began duties
as a member of the
in
faculty
the
Shikellamy
(Sunbury
area)
School District, being assigned to Junior High, in Special Education.
She is a 1970 graduate of Bloomsburg State College and did her student
teaching at Lower Merion and Central
Dauphin.
Dowett is teaching in the school system of Stratford and West Canada
Valley, N. Y.
1965
Shirley Marie Pooley, Bloomsburg,
and John C. Lutz, Orangeville, Pa.
The bride is employed in the IBM department of Milco Industries, Inc.
Nancy E. Voelker, Waterford, Conn.,
and Glenn R. Rupert, Niantic, Conn.
Mr. Rupert is teaching in the Waterford High School, and Mrs. Rupert is
a teacher in the Old Lyme High
School.
Amanda
DR. NOSSEN SPEAKER
Jane Weaver, Orangeand John L. MacDonald, Jr.,
Bloomsburg. Mrs. MacDonald is teaching in the Central Area School District
Columbia County. Mr. MacDonald is
employed by the Volpex Corporation,
AT REGIONAL MEETING
Rochester, N. Y.
Aproximately forty
of
area on Setember
19, 1970.
The meet-
ing was held at Harford Junior College and lasted from 10:30 A. M. until
1:30 P. M., after which a luncheon
was served for those attending. Mr.
and Mrs. Richard V. Miller, both BSC
alumni and members of the faculty at
Harford served as hosts for the meeting.
the College Community
the meetmg and spoke
to the alumni about current trends
and changes at BSC were Dr. Robert
Nosen, President; Mr. Elton Hunsinger, Associate Vice President for Student Affairs; Dr. Bruce Adams, Geography Department; Mi James Creasy, Director of Summer Programs and
Mr.
and,
Education;
Continuing
James H. Neiswender, Assistant Director of Development.
Dr. Nossen discussed the new administrative changes at the college as
well as the many new programs which
have been added recently. He explained the purposes of the Bloomsburg Foundation and how it will contribute to the overall academic community. The President also invited
and encouraged each Alumnus to become involved in the College Commun-
Members of
who attended
-
.
ity.
The Bel Air meeting was the first of
approximately seventy-five regional
meetings being organized by the College to keep the Alumni informed and
up-to-date in college affairs.
Page ten
ville,
1966
our Alumni
residing in the Greater Baltimore Area attended the first meeting for that
Carolyn A. Danneker and Larry S.
Smith. Their address is 241-D Woodhill Drive, Glen Burnie, Md. 21061
Carol M. Whitmoyer, Millville, and
James Rutkowski,
Selinsgrove. Mrs.
Rutkowski is a head nurse at Geisinger Medical Center.
Mr. Rutkowski
Peggy Hamor and Frank Straub.
The bride is a graduate of the Geisinger Medical Center School of Nursing.
Mr. Straub is an earth and
space science teacher for Perkiomen
Valley School District, Schwenks ville.
Address: Apt. 35-C, 1151 Stergiere
Courts, Stergiere St., Norristown.
Harriet A.
Poeckmann
Hummel
’69
and James
Address: Apt. 2, 413
Matlach Avenue, Lewisburg, Pa. 17837
’68.
B. Wayne Laubach, Horsham, Pa.,
and Bonnie Jean Simpson, Bloomsburg. Mrs. Laubach is teaching in the
Abington School District, and Mr. Laubach is a teacher in the Hatboro-Horsham School District. Address: 107
Briarwood Drive, Horsham, Pa. 19044.
Gloria Jean Matylewicz, Millville,
and Gary J. Woolcock, Orangeville.
Mr. Woolcock is a teacher in the Lower Moreland School District.
New York. Mr. Teter is an
engineering graduate. Mrs. Teter recently received the Certificate of Clinical Competence in Speech Pathology
Terri Miriello and Albert C. Rogers.
is an elementary school teacher at North Penn School District,
Lansdale. The bridegroom is teaching senior math and public speaking
at North Penn School District, Lansdale. He is also organist at the Oak
Restaurant in Hatfield. The couple
resides in Hatfield, Pa.
from the American Speech and Hearing Association. Mr. and Mrs. Teter
are living at 156 Graystone Lane, Ro-
Carmen
is
teaching in Selinsgrove.
1967
Mary
Gifford and Jack Teter, Jr.,
Ithaca,
chester,
New
York.
Roberta Jean Pentz, Montgomery,
and Leonard J. Specht, East Orange,
N. J. The bride is a teacher-coordinator at Rahway, N. J., High School.
Mr. Specht is a student at Rutgers
University. He has served four years
in the Air
Force.
1969
Virginia Foster Boyd, Conklin, N.
Y. and Barry Whitenight, Orange-
Mrs. Whitenight
is
a teacher
in
Susquehanna Valley School System. Address: Riviera Ridge Apartments, Vestal, N. Y. 13850.
the
Patricia Ann Branch,
Michael R. DiPippa.
Eighth
St.,
Rose Marie Varsics, Danville, and
E. Roma, Shamokin.
Mrs.
Roma
is
teaching in Danville.
Bonnie Kay Zeek, Langhorne, and
Gerald F. Kearney. The bride is a teacher
Township School
Her husband is a teacher in
the same school district and also
sports writer for Bucks County Courier Times of Bristol.
Address: The
in
the Bristol
District.
Dorelyn Terrance Apartments, Lang-
1968
Greienaway,, San Dtiego,
Calif., and James R. Davis, San DiThe bride is a teacher in San
ego.
Address: 4515
Diego City Schools.
35th Street, Apt. 5, San Diego, Calif.
Cecelia
ville.
The bride
Pen Argl, and
Berwick, Pa.
Address
118
horne, Pa.
1970
Deborah Ann Brandt, Mifflinville,
and Donald Ray Deitterick, Berwick.
Mr. Deitterick is a teller in the Berwick Bank. Their address: 1308 Market Street, Berwick.
Kathleen
R.
Burger,
and
William Singer,
Mrs. Singer is teaching
Bloomsburg,
Bloomsburg
in East Gran-
by, Connecticut.
Sandra Kay Doebler, Berwick, and
Clayton L. Newcomer, Montours ville.
Both are teaching.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Carol Gerencher and William H.
Grow, Jr. Mrs. Grow is teaching in
Bethlehem. Their address: 2050 Westgate Drive. Apt. P-8, Bethlehem. Pa.
18018.
Esther A. Mason, Freeland, and
John D. Driesbach, Bloomsburg. Both
are teaching at the Bloomsburg Elementary School.
Dorothy Merz and Dale A. Clark.
Both bride and groom teach in Bel
Air,
Md.
Virginia Ann Miller, and Ted Carl
Hess, both of Berwick. Mr. Hess is a
teacher in the Whitehall-Coplay School
District. Their address is 208 N. Nelson St., Allentown, Pa. 18103
Irene C. Newhart and Carl M. BerThe couple resides in Lutherville.
Md., where both are teachers in the
Baltimore County School District.
lin.
Cinde Lee Rogers. Williamsport, and
Alfred E. Hippenstiel, Orangeville.
The bride is a teacher at the Migrant
Day Care Center. Address: Bloomsburg R. D. 1.
Kay Anne Smeal, Bloomsburg, and
Donald K. Klinefelter, ’69. Nescopeck.
Mr. Klinefelter is employed by Nelson’s Express Co., Millersburg. Mrs.
is teaching in Millersburg.
Address: R. D. 1, Halifax, Pa.
Klinefelter
Splain and Robert H. Daily.
in paraMr. Daily is pursuing an
pathology at Boston College.
Sally
MA
Jo Ann Irene Verdekal. Catawissa.
and Robert J. Zorambo, Ranshaw.
The bride, majoring in elemnetavy
education at BSC. is completing her
senior year at Kutztown State College. The bridegroom is a teacher of
mathematics at Perkasie. Address:
Allentown.
205 North Ninth Street.
Pa.
STATE BOARD
OF DIRECTORS
Dr. Robert J. Nossen, president of
BSC, was present when Governor
Raymond P. Shafer at Harrisburg
signed into law a bill creating a statewide board of directors of the State
Colleges and the Indiana University.
He received a pen used in the signing.
Dr. Nossen said that the measure
“ is excellent and necessai'y ”
ar.d
“ overdue ”. He believes it will provide meaningful relationships within
the group and be a center for direction of these institutions.
The boards of trustees of each of
the individual institutions will continue to operate as in the past although
their duties will be somewhat curtailThe state board
ed in some areas.
will provide coordination and general
guidelines.
be fifteen members of
the state board and there will be three
names submitted for consideration
for each position.
The State Secretary of Education will serve as an ex-
There
will
DECEMBER,
1970
member and chairman,
and
employ an
with students and attending various
classes on Tuesday, February 16.
executive secretary and staff.
The local educator said that this is
a somewhat modified form of the setup in New York state and is in the
line with organization of state colleges
followed in many states.
Dr. Nossen said he is grateful that
the local board
is
to be continued,
Another special program follows almost immediately when the Erich
Hawkins dance company begins a
three day artist in residence series
officio
the board has the right to
adding that the BSC board “has been
a real source of strength to this institution.”
Unless a member of the local board
should be named to the state board
it is expected to remain as presently
constituted.
OFFER 43 COURSES
FOR GRADUATES
A total of forty-three graduate courses are being offered during the first
semester of the present college year
at Bloomsburg State College, according to Dr. Charles Carlson, Director
of Graduate
Studies.
This is the
largest number of graduate courses
offered during the regular semester
of the college year.
The forty-three courses are being
offered by 15 different educational departments. There are two courses in
biology, two in business
education,
one in economics eight in education,
two in English, three in foreign languages. one in geography, seven in
two
political science, two
in psychology, one in sociology, one in
speech, two in special education, four
history,
in
communication disorders,
in
five
in
teaching of the mentally retarded.
At the present time there are 21 full
time graduate students and 341 part
time graduate students enrolled at
BSC, both of which are an all-time
high. This increase in enrollment is
largely due to more students being
interested in graduate work and the
addition of new degree programs on
the graduate level. It is anticipated
that this increased enrollment will
continue as
a result of the newly
created graduate programs.
The
SIX
EVENTS
1970-71 Artists
and Lecture Ser-
at Bloomsburg State college will
offer six major events during the season. A “Rock” Musical adapted very
ies
from Shakespeare’s
comedy
“Twelfth Night”, and called “Your
Own Thing”, was presented on Monday, October 26.
A real novelty will be a closed circuit television satire, “Groove Tube”,
which will play two days. Tuesday
and Wednesday, February 2 and 3.
This video taped show satirizes the
television industry and programs, and
is constantly updated.
freely
On Monday, February
will play a program
Bacon
Haas Auditorium.
made up
man
The symphony is
from the East-
of students
School of Music.
At least two more events, one of
which will feature a leading lecturer,
announced during the fall
will be
semester.
Attention is called to the cooperating
musical program of the Bloomsburg
Civic Music which so far has signed a
musical revue program. “Set to Music.” featuring a troupe in highlights
of the musical stage. In the Spring
the Association had signed the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra. The
Community Government Association
helps to subsidize this program and
tickets are available to students and
faculty.
Two more major musical
events will be announced in October,
events will be announced in October.
Varied musical programs are offered by college Concert Choir. Concert
Band. Harmonettes, Studio Band. Madrigal Singers, and Men’s Glee Club.
All in all. a varied artists and lecture program covering musical comedy, symphony, soloists, events of public interest, and an innovation closed
circuit touring television, makes up
the new season at Bloomsburg State
College
UDALL ADDRESSES
CONFERENCE
ARTISTS COURSE
OFFERS
with visits to classes, demonstrations
master dance classes with a
final event a full evening’s dance program. Hawkins is tentatively schedFebruary 17, 18, and 19th.
uled for
This program is under the sponsorship
of the National Foundation of the Arts
and the Pennsylvania Council for the
Arts. A final date will be set early in
the first semester.
The performance on March 7, on a
Sunday afternoon of the Eastman Philharmonia. a symphony orchestra, will
realize a dream of the Committee to
present a full symphonic concert in
lecture,
15,
Former Secretary of the Interior
Stewart Udall was the speaker at the
general session of the fourth Annual
Conference for Teachers held at BSC
on Saturday. October 24. He issued a
call for a new set of values to overlay
the old set regarding the earth’s environment. thinking of it in its totalityin relation to all of
man’s
activities.
Udall is now visiting professor of environmental humanism at Yale University and head of Overview Group,
an agency interested solely in environmental problems.
Julian
of lute
and
guitar music ranging from 16th cent-
ury music to modern folk and flamenco. Baco will stay on campus for two
days conducting informal sessions
ALUMNI DAY
SATURDAY, APRIL
24, 1971
Page eleven
FACULTY MEMBERS
ARE PROMOTED
Biological Sciences; Dr. Percival R.
Roberts, III, Art; and Dr. Alfred E.
Tonolo, Foreign Languages.
Eight assistant professors advanced
to associate professors. They include:
Richard Anderson, History; James C.
Creasy, Administration; Russel E.
Houk, Health and Physical Education;
Mrs. Mary Lou John, Foreign Languages; Eli W. McLaughlin, Health and
Physical Education; Louis V. Mingrone, Biological Sciences; Miss Gwendolyn Reams, Library; and Mrs. Margaret Webber, Communication Disorders.
The remaining seven faculty members who were advanced to assistant
professor are: Thomas L. Ohl, MathAaron Polonsky, Library;
ematics;
Carrol J. Redfern, Mental Retardation
Richard M. Smith, Communication
Disorders; Mary A. Tolan, Student
Personnel; Stephen C. Wallace, music;
and Miss Janice M. Youse, Speech.
AWARDED DEGREES
Shippensburg State College
Linda Jane Lurowist ’66, R. D. 5,
Bloomsburg, Pa. M. Ed. in Elementary Education.
Linda K. Maul ’65, 2814 North Front
Street, Harrisburg, Pa. 17110. M. Ed.
in Elementary Education.
Lawrence F. Potter, ’67, Fallston,
Md. M. Ed. in Business Education.
Apple
Claire Ann Zutlas
Drive, Mechanicsburg, Pa. 17055.
1118
M.
Elementary Education,
Mary Alice Woodruff ’66, Harrisburg, Pa. M. Ed. in Elementary EdEd.
in
Bucknell University
John R. Gotaskie ’66 M. S.
Karl K. Sheaf fer ’66 M. S.
Robert R. Erdman ’64 M. A
Ace
T.
'67,
Shippensburg
in Counseling.
BSC
Ray E. Gross, Bloomsburg. M. Ed.
(Guidance and Counseling)
Lehigh University
Mrs. Bonnie P. Voiles ’64, 419 Pen
Argyl, Pen Argyl, Pa. 18027 M. Ed.
Major in Elementary Education
Jerry E. Trear ’61, Nazareth, Pa.
Major in Education
State University of New York,
College at Cortland
John M. Coulter ’66, 94 Park Watson
Master of SciSt., Ccrtland, N. Y.
ence
1,
Troy,
lives
at
San Fran-
7,
BSC will sponsor a Culture Trip to
Europe. The trip will last 29 days,
from May 30 to June 28, 1971. The
trip will include a round trip flight
from New York to Amsterdam, bus to
Cologne, Geneva, Innsbruck, Venice,
Florence, Naples, Pompeii, Rome,
Pisa Nice, Monaco, Paris, and return
to Amsterdam.
Cost will be $699.00
or $709.00, the latter price for those
receiving three
credits
academic
from BSC.
For information, contact Dr. Alfred E. Tonalo, Department of Foreign Languages, BSC.
EDUCATION CONFERENCE
More than
700 teachers, administra-
and students took part in the 24th
annual Conference for Teachers and
Administrators held Saturday, October
tors
24.
The topics discussed were business,
elementary, secondary, and human
resources and services.
The sessions were held in the Bakeless Center for the Humanities
CLASS NEWS
1910
lives
Fortman Sobolesky
E.,
Seattle,
lives
at
Washington,
Cecelia M. Gross (Mrs. Philip A.
Smith) lives at R. D. 3, Box 311. Geneva, N. Y. 14456.
Trudy Snyder (Mrs. Richard L.
Foster) lives at 919 Log College Drive,
Warminister, Pa. 18974.
1967
Geraldine L. Lang (Mrs. Robert F.
White) lives at 803 Manor Drive.
Stroudsburg, Pa. 18360.
Mr. and Mrs. D. James Clinger
(Susan Dianne Marguardt) are living
at 615 Broadway, Milton, Pa. 17847.
Mr. Clinger, a graduate of Hillsdale
College, Michigan is affiliated with
the Clinger Lumber Co. Mrs. Clinger,
a teacher in the Milton Area school, is
doing graduate work at Syracuse University.
Mr. and Mrs. R. Thomas Lemon are
living at 802 Old English Court, Warwick Apt. 3-D, Bel Air, Maryland,
21014.
Corey F. and Marilyn Sheerer Per’65, are residing at 2323 3rd Avenue, Altoona, Pa. 16602. Corey is a
District Executive for the Boy Scouts
ot America.
Marilyn received her
master’s degree in Student Personnel
Administration at Syracuse University in 1967.
She is doing substitute
teaching in the Altoona School System
and caring for Brian Wallace Perrin,
one year old.
rin
Carol Kozemku Welgosh lives at
105 Darling Street. Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
18702.
1970
Robert T. Marshall, 83 Slocum St.,
Forty Fort, Pa. 18704, has enlisted in
the U. S. Coast Guard,
Anwyl (Mrs. Harold E. Davis
at 405A Parkway Plaza Apts.,
May
1966
Jane
7211 9th N.
98155.
will
at
Sandy Hook, N.
and
is
stationed
J.
From Nov-
1971, her
address is 208 Jamaica Way, Punta
Gorda, Florida.
1,
1970,
to
15,
1926
Helen Kehler Gradwell is living at
Locustdale, Pa. 17945. She retired in
1967 after teaching 41 years.
ALUMNI DAY
1943
James
Broad
Rutkowski,
212%
North
Pa. 17870,
is teaching at the Selinsgrove Area
Junior-Senior High School.
He was
recently married to Miss Carol Whitmoyer, who is a head nurse at the
Geisinger Medical Center, Danville,
Pa.
Street, Selinsgrove,
Rev. Carl
Union College
Apt.
Merle Tomaryn Madeoy, 4706 Naples
Avenue, Belts ville, Md. 20705, is teach-
S.
State College, Pa. 16801.
Towson State College
Page twelve
M.
sponsor a trip to Puerto
Rico from June 13 through June 19,
1971. The cost will be $275 per person,
double occupancy, European plan,
with $65 single supplement. For brochure and more information, write
to Mr. James H. Neiswender, Asst.
Director of Development, Bloomsburg
State College, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
Please include your name, class, address, zip code, and telephone number.
ember
Paul James Zaleskie, R. D.
’68
St.,
cisco, Calif. 94133.
1965
ANNUAL BSC-ALUMNI
FACULTY VACATION
Lila
tion.
Faust
350 Franciscus
ing first grade.
Vicki Faye Culton ’68, Williamstown. M. Ed. in Elementary Educa-
Enrico A. Serine
1962
Kutztown State College
Judith A. Heffelfinger ’67 M, Ed.
ucation.
M. Ed.
Teachers
of Science for
Kay Karmilowicz Gordon
Promotions in rank for 18 members
of the Bloomsburg State College Faculty have been approved by the Board
of Trustees. The promotions became
effective in September, 1970, for the
1970-71 academic year, accoding to Dr.
Robert J. Nossen, president.
Three associate professors were advanced to full professor status and inDr. Julius R. Kroschewsky,
clude:
’69,
Master
Pa.,
S.
Berninger
at the Sanford
Del. 19707.
School,
SATURDAY, APRIL
24, 1971
Chaplain
Hockessin,
is
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
PROPOSED CHANGE
ALUMNI DUES
At the meeting of the Board of Directors on Alumni Day, it was voted to
annual dues from $2.00 to $5.00, subject to approval by the General
Association on Alumni Day, 1971.
raise the
This has been made necessary because the money set aside as dues has
been insufficient to pay the costs of printing the Quarterly and mailing it to
all of the 11,000 graduates of whom we have the correct addresses.
These
expenses also include the salary of an office secretary, postage for other mailings,
telephone and dues to the Pennsylvania Association of Teachers College Alumni.
For many years the College has paid the bill for the Alumni Luncheon.
\Ve have been informed that tlie College will no longer be able to do so. At
rhe Director’s meeting held Saturday, October 17, it was decided
that
the
Alumni Association will pay the bill. All those who present membership cards
will be admitted free to the luncheon.
We
invite
comments from the Alumni, expressing approval
or disapproval
of this policy.
The Blo.omsburg Foundation is in the early stages of organization. This
involves an appeal for funds from the Alumni.
It is obvious that two appeals
Only one appeal is practicable, either the
cannot be made concurrently.
Foundation or the Association, through the Loyalty Fund, must be the collecting
agency. It has been agreed that, for the time being, the Association will be the
collecting agency, and that the requests for contributions to the Loyalty Fund
will continue.
We
invite
vour comments.
President,
Alumni Association
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE
BLOOMSBURG, PA. 17815
Non-Profit
U. S.
Org.
POSTAGE
PAID
Address Correction Requested
1.6c
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Permit No. 10
Loyalty Fund Fourth Year
OCTOBER
Amt.
Class
32
8.00
10.00
100.00
38.00
30.00
22.00
3.00
83.25
37.00
67.00
31.00
202.00
195.00
14
14
16
218.00
132.00
145.00
2
29
15.00
199.50
62.50
144.00
119.00
159.00
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
1948
1949
No.
2
Class
1892
1896
1898
1901
1902
1903
1904
1905
1908
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1923
1,
1
1
4
2
3
1
9
4
13
5
10
13
17
12
22
24
12
268.00
94.50
82.00
142.00
11
20
1969 to
OCTOBER
No.
21
34
15
12
20
21
50
12
18
11
10
16
4
8
11
3
13
13
19
16
9
4
6
8
9
18
1,
1970
Amt.
Class
131.00
231.00
104.00
109.00
135.00
118.00
615.75
89.00
180.00
65.00
112.00
91.00
25.00
125.00
70.00
25.00
65.50
116.00
173.00
212.50
104.00
27.00
53.00
77.00
125.91
147.00
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1986
1987
1968
1969
1970
No.
21
15
8
8
5
11
15
18
17
12
22
11
22
29
22
44
44
50
56
65
17
(“Includes check nresented on Alumni Dav)
Others
5
TO RE DETACHED, FILLED OUT, AND RETURNED
Signature
Name
while
in
college
Address
(street)
Zip Code
(town)
If
above address
is
new check here
Q
Amount
Year of graduation
Mail checks to Alumni Office, Box 31, B.S.C.
To
insure tax deductions,
B.
S.
C.
Amt.
192.00
170.00
50.00
87.00
49.00
98.00
75.00
360.00
124.00
57.00
145.00
69.00
185.00
240.00
139.51
262.00
218.00
258.51
429.50
340.00
695.00°
make checks payable
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
to
1114.00
HOARD OF TRUSTEES, BLOON1SBURG STATE COLLEGE
Guy Bangs. Standing:
Gerald Strauss, Faculty representative, BSC; Howard Fernsler, Gerald A. Beierschmitt, Frank Croop, Howard Fenstemaker. Alumni Representative, BSC: Edgar Fenstemacher.
Seated: Judge George W. Heffner, William Booth. William B. Lank. Dr. Robert J. Nossen, E.
THE PRESIDENT’S PAGE
James Neiswender
I am sure that most of you already know that Mr.
assumed responsibilities, on a part-time basis, during this past summer associated with alumni activities. He has continued to be active in the general area
of college-alumni relations.
what
To accomplish
happening
his first objective, that of advising
he has been organizing regional
meetings in approximately 60 geographic areas throughout Pennsylvania and
He and I, and, frequently other persons from the college
adjoining states.
community, have enjoyed the opportunity to meet with interested graduates.
The response to these meetings thus far has been most gratifying, and were
looking forward to those gatherings which have been scheduled during the
coming months. The role of the alumni in the college community is a vital one,
and at each of our meetings, graduates have expressed interest in participating
actively towards the welfare of the college.
Jim is now working on programs
designed to provide interested alumni opportunity to aid in college development. Do not hesitate to write directly to him if you have ideas or wish to
organize or participate in a regional gathering.
the alumni on
is
at the college,
This summer we plan to initiate an Alumni-Faculty Vacation. The itinerary includes San Juan, Puerto Rico, where those participating will be spending
six nights and seven days at the fabulous El San Juan Hotel.
The flight is
scheduled to depart from the Philadelphia Airport on June 13th, returning to
Philadelphia on June 19th, at a cost of $275.00 per person. Please, again, direct
your inquiries to Mr. James Neiswender, who will be most pleased to forward
brochure or other information.
ii
In keeping with the reorganization started last year, the college has now
its fourth Vice-President, Dr. Don B. Springman, who will be primarih
concerned with administrative services.
Dr. Springman is an
experienced
administrator, coming to us from Cleveland State University, where he held the
position Dean for Special Programs.
His appointment will provide one more
means to assure the smooth and efficient operation of the total college program.
added
We
cannot, unfortunately, yet make specific plans for enrollment for the
1971-72 academic year because of budget uncertainties. Demand for inclusion
in our entering class, however, continues very strong, and in fact, is running
well ahead of last year. The college hopes to be able to increase its enrollment
of community college transfers.
When the fiscal matters are settled, hopefully
in the near future, the college will again be able to make specific plans to assure
full utilization of its available facilities.
These facilities, by the way, continue
to improve; work is progressing very rapidly on the Field House located on the
new campus site; excavation has been completed and mechanicals are being
installed for the Administration Building; and the new multi-level Parking Lot
at the comer of East 2nd and Penn has been progressing, despite the extreme
cold weather during the latter part of January and early February.
As we continue to meet with regional groups,
opportunity to see and speak with each of you.
I
certainly
Robert Nossen
President
hope
to
have an
members
192 Are Graduated
One hundred seventy undergraduand twenty-two graduate students
received degrees at the mid- January
ate
commencement
exercises
held
at
Bloomsburg State College Tuesday.
January 19, at 2:30 p.m. in Haas Auditorium.
The commencement address delivered by Dr. Edson Drake. Dean of
School of Arts and Sciences, was en
titled. “The Idea of a College.”
The senior class was presented by
Dr. John A. Hoch. Vice President and
Dean of the Faculties and the graduate candidates were presented by Dr.
Charles Carlson, Dean, School of
Graduate Studies, and Director of Research Activities. All degrees were
conferred by Dr. Robert J. Nossen
President of BSC. and awarded bv
William A. Lank. President Board of
Trustees.
The following seniors were graduated with academic honors. (Scholastic
average of 3.75 to 4.00).
Mrs. Elaine Balkiewicz. Shenandoah, B.S. degree in elementary educaah. B.S. degree in elementary education: Penny Faux, R.D. 3. Bloomscation; Deborah Fenstermacher. Milton. B.S. degree in elementary education: Mrs. June Hoover, R.D. 1.
Shickshinny. B. S. degree in elementary education: Mrs. Sally Manbeck
Kint. R.D. 2, MifTlintown. B. S. degree
Mrs. Dorothy
in special education:
Messner. Hershey, B.S. degree in
secondary education:
and Deborah
Rhodes. R.D. 2. Shamokin. B.S. degree
in secondary education: Mrs. Cynthia
Basta, Allentown. B.S. degree in ele-
mentary education.
Magna Cum Laude (3.60-3.74). Carl
Magee. 1418 Carlyn St.. Philadelphia.
B
S. degree in secondary education:
and Mrs. Norma Reed, R.D. 5. Danville. B.S. degree in elementary edu-
cation.
Cum Laude (3.50-3.59). Zane Dennis
R.D. 1. Shickshinny. B.S. degree in secondary education: Beverly Donchez,
1608 Spring St., Bethlehem, B.S. degree in business education: Norman
Foster. 575 Broad St.. Nescopeck. B.S.
degree in secondary education: Wil-
liam Hyde, Jr.. R.D. 3. Bloomsburg.
B.S. degree in secondary education,
Mrs. Marion Marks. 509 E. 3rd St..
Nescopeck, B.S. degree in elementary
education: Mrs. Martha Seymour. 220
E. 13th St., Bloomsburg, B.S. degree
in secondary education: Mrs. Nancy
Sherlock Husted. R.D. 1, Port Royal,
B.S. degre in elementary education:
and Keith Wagner, R. D. 1, Herndon.
B.S. degree in elementary education:
Of the 170 undergraduate students,
22 are graduating in business education, 69 in elementary education, 43 in
secondary education, 11 in special education, and 25 in arts and sciences.
The 22 graduate students will all receive the Master of Education degree.
MARCH,
1971
Dr. Edson J. Drake, Dean of the
School of Arts and Sciences, delivered the address at the commencement
His address was entitled
exercises.
“The Idea of a College.”
Dr. Drake joined the BSC faculty
in June, 1964 as Associate Professor
In August, 1969 he was
of History.
named Director of the Division of
Arts and Sciences, replacing Dr. Alden Buker who resigned from the faculty to accept a similar position at
Pittsthe Robert Morris College in
burgh. Under the new organizational
structure, which became effective on
September 1, 1970, Dr. Drake was
named to his present position.
A native of Philadelphia, New
York, he earned his Bachelor of Arts
degree at the University of Notre
Dame and both his Master of Arts
and Doctor of Philosophy degrees
from Georgetown University.
Prior to coming to Bloomsburg, he
had been associated with school sys-
Wheaton, Maryland and Belleserved as an
tems
in
ville,
New York and had
Assistant
Professor
of
Air
Science
and tactics at the College of St. Thomas, St. Paul. Minnesota.
From 1942 to 1953, he was a United
States Air Force officer and a psychological Warfare officer.
The Commencement address delivered by Dr. Drake follows:
"A college is government under
law, not of men. If the latter were
true, we would have either despotism
or anarchy, each of which is equally
abhorent and ultimately
self-destructive.
College law may be couched in such euphemistic
terms as
statements of policy or
suggested
guidelines, but the essential purpose
and characteristics of law remain,
which, by dictionary definition, is a
rule of conduct, recognized by custom or decreed by formal enactment,
which is considered by an authoritatively constituted group as binding
upon its members. It is conceived in,
and dedicated to, the welfare of the
community: or as JereBentham would have stated it, it
entire college
my
is
designed
to
provide the
greatest
.
Utopian society
democracy
must be a parin
which
all its
which a group
of
ual.
man is not
man himeach man
“This fourfold nature of
in perfect balance; nor is
self perfect.
Furthermore,
unique unto himself, or
idea
“Instead, a college
in
disciplined solely by their
intellects, divided their labors, under
common
just government, for the
good. The fallacy in such a conclusion would be that a college is a community for men, who, by their very
nature, are physical, emotional, and
spiritual beings, as well as intellect-
sential role in the existence of a college.
ticipatory
equit-
scholars,
is
Dual Concept
an
guaranteed
ure of a college.
“Lastly, I would emphasize the idea
of a college as a community of men.
Until now one might have been tempted to conclude that a college is an
good for the greatest number.
“Although college is a government
under law, it by its very nature cannot be a pure democracy since students outnumber the faculty and administration, 15 to 1, and thus colege
would become a government of, by,
and for the students
with hopefully
the rights of the faculty and administration guaranteed.
But to accept
this concept of a college as a pure
democracy would be to deny that faculty and administration have any es-
—
are
able voice. In this idea of a college
as a government under law and functioning as a participatory democracy,
we have a viable institution that defines the rights and responsibilities
of its members and provides the mechanisms for peaceful and orderly
change as change is desired or needed.
"When one thus considers the dual
concept of a college as a community
of scholars and a government under
law, it becomes manifest that violence and revolution, and even campus unrest, are antithetical to it.
Cries of ‘pigs on campus’ and taunts
of ‘Fascist’ or ‘Communist’ are not
rational and hence, not scholarly; the
bombing of campus buildings and the
barricading of classrooms are neither
rational nor legal. Less dramatically
the professor who refused to carry out
student
his assigned duties and the
who aids or abets him are likewise
acting neither rationally or legally.
“A college is also a functional society composed of students, faculty,
and administration; each with a function to perform for the common good
Reduced to the most elemenof all.
tary terms, the primary function of
the student is to learn; the faculty,
to teach; and the administration, to
manage or supervise. These three
functional groups are thus interdependent and, like the leaves of a shamrock, component parts of the whole.
To conceive of a college as an arena
in which students are pitted against
faculty and both are locked in mortal
combat, with the administration, is
to deny any understanding of the nat-
Thomas Browne
so
Sir
as
aptly expressed
is the common
phenonomen, ‘It
wonder of all men, how among
this
so
many
millions of faces there should
be none alike.’ And so it is with the
opinions which men hold, or, as Montaigne phrased it, ‘There never was
in the world two opinions alike, no
more than two hairs or two grains,
the most universal quality is diversity.’
“This quality of diversity thus be-
comes the fourth dimension
of
a college.
This
in the
diversity
must be recognized, must be welcomed, and must be utilized to its fullest
extent to better attain the truth which
is our common objective.”
Page one
BLOOMSBURG FOUNDATION
ORGANIZATION
Members of the Bloomsburg Foundation, Inc. of Bloomsburg State ColDr.
lege held their first meeting.
Robert J. Nossen, President of the
Foundation, discussed the purposes of
the Foundation as well as
its
goals and
operating procedures.
According to the by laws, the membership of the Corporation shall consist of those individuals who occupy
the following positions: President of
the College, Dr. Robert J. Nossen; Associate Vice President for Student Affairs, Elton Hunsinger; Business Manager of the College, Paul G. Martin;
two members of the Board of Trustees, William A. Lank and William E.
Booth; two faculty members selected
by the faculty, Dr. Bruce E. Adams
and and Dr. Frank Radice; the President of the Senior Class, William
Cluley; the President of the Junior
Class, Alexander Horvath; the President of the Sophomore Class, Michael
Soptroth;
a representative of the
Freshman Class, George W. Meschter; two Alumni representatives selected by the Alumni Association, Earl
A. Gehrig and Millard Ludwig; the
Vice President and Dean of the Faculties, Dr. John A. Hoch; and Associate Vice President for Development
and External Affairs, Boyd F. Buck-
ingham.
Following the meeting of the Corporation, the board of directors convened
for the election of officers and its first
business meeting. Membership of the
Board of Directors consists of the folPresident of Bloomsburg
lowing:
State College, Dr. Robert J. Nossen;
two representatives of the College
Board of Trustees, William A. Lank
and William E. Booth; a faculty representative, Dr. Frank Radice; a representative of the Alumni Association, Earl Gehrig; the Business Manager of the College, Paul G. Martin;
the Associate Vice President for Student Affairs, Elton Hunsinger.
The following officers of the Board
of Directors were elected: Dr. Robert
Nossen, president; William E.
J.
Booth, vice president; Earl A. Gehrig,
secretary; John Trathen, treasurer;
James Neiswender was appointed as
executive director of the Foundation
and Marilyn Muelhof w as appointed
r
recording secretary.
The Foundation has been designed
various functions for which either state funds
should not or cannot be used, the
to assist the college in
Foundation
will
signifiicantly
the college in carrying out
cation mission.
assist
its full
edu-
TIFFANY PANEL GIFT TO
GOLLEGE
A handsome
panel of Tiffany Glass,
a gift of the Bakeless Family, has
been recently installed in the lower
foyer of the Bakeless Center for the
Humanities.
A specially designed
mounting constructed by Charles Ty-
Page two
son provides fluorescent illumination
of the glass.
The stained glass represents a fitting adornment since
Professor O. H. Bakeless in 1920 sol-
is
from students, faculty,
and other donors to purchase the Tiffany stained glass windows, formerly
installed in Waller and Noetling Halls,
and removed and replaced in the An-
officers, the Faculty and the Student
Body of Bloomsburg State College.
Through the attainment of this prim-
icited $25,000
druss Library in 1966.
Louis Comfort Tiffany (1848-1933)
was a major innovator in stained
glass design, and according to Dr.
Percival R. Roberts III, Chairman of
the Art Department at Bloomsburg
State College, began his career as a
painter, the training of which permitted him to think and design in terms
of plastic forms, color and texture.
Tiffany experimented widely with various effects. His own romantic originality combined with his almost sensuous regard for the preciousness of
medium,
glass and its decoration,
contribute to the remarkable efthe incifectiveness of his work
glass
dental effects and cased
techniques for which he is famous.
The splendidi specimen given to
the college exhibits all these fine qualities, the multi-hued layers of stained
glass, the three dimensional effect of
depth, the ripple glass and streaked
color create an almost mystical or,
by today’s optical standards, psychedelic effect. Dr. Roberts, who teaches
American Art History, finds Tiffany
convenient to lecture on, since stylistically and historically he represents
somewhat of a bridge between the
high Victorian tastes of his day and
the
more avant-garde tendencies
found in the emerging organic forms
oi the Art Nouveau with perhaps some
traces of inspiration from the Orient.
Dr. Roberts finds the subtle hues,
achieved by the use of copper to produce a soft luster, and the gentle
forms a pleasure to study. The overall quality he says is “not assertative,
it doesn’t dazzle but rather moves the
viewer with its diffused iridescence.”
The total mocd projected is one of
quietude without glaring, completely
in harmony with nature and the contemplative spirit one would expect in
a Humanities’ Hall.
his
all
—
—
to facilitate the development and
of viable relationships,
“among the Board of Trustees, the
maintenance
President,
the
administrative
other
ary purpose it is intended that the administrative officers of the college and
the board of trustees may receive a
steady flow of information concerning campus opinions, that policy decisions by the board of trustees, the
President and other administrative
officials may be quickly and clearly
presented to all segments of the college population, and that each segment through its elected representative may influence changes in policy
or the formulation of new policy.”
Work on the constitution for the
Senate began a few years ago by the
Committee on Professional Affairs.
Dr. Robert Warren chaired a subcommittee of faculty, students, and
administrators which prepared the
Senate
constitution.
was approved
in
The document
year by
and the board of
May
the faculty, students,
trustees.
of this
APPLICATIONS DISTRIBUTED
The Office of Admissions at Blooms
burg State College has distributed over
5,000 applications for the Spring Sem5,000 applications for the Spring and
Fall semester 1971. It is anticipated
before the 1971 enrollment quotas are
reached, 12,000 applications will be
Of
sent to prospective candidates.
the total estimated 12,000 applications
distributed,
expects
to
the Office of Admissions
receive in excess of 5,000
completed applications.
Admission to Bloomsburg State College is determined by the applicant's
academic and personal qualifications.
Decisions are reached without regard
to race, color, creed, or national origin.
Applicants must be graduates of or
accredited
secondary
seniors
in
schools or must have secondary school
equivalency as determined by the
Credentials Evaluation Division of the
Pennsylvania Department of Education.
COLLEGE SENATE
The College Senate recently estabBloomsburg State College is
a formal step by which faculty and
lished at
students
ment
participate
in
the
develop-
of college policies.
Serving as president is George A.
Turner, assistant professor of history
vice president, Dr. Robert Rosholt.
chairman, Political Science Department; and secretary Mary Tolan, assistant dean of Students.
There are
seventy-four members of the Senate
consisting of sixty faculty, twelve
students, with President Nossen and
Vice President Hoch at ex-officio
members.
Acceptance is determined by the OfAdmissions upon evaluation of
secondary school preparation, achievement, rank in class, standardized
testing, personal characteristics, and
fice of
Previously, faculty and
student involvement in contributing to
college governance existed in a committee structure.
The primary purpose of the Senate
institutional capacity.
Those candidates whose credentials
present the best likelihood for experiencing success in an academic college
program are offered admission.
Application materials and instructions for submitting the application
may be secured by writing the Director of Admissions.
ALUMNI DAY
SATURDAY. APRIL
24, 1971
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
iHmurtam
Jlti
1926—Loretta Maher
1912—
Re1924 Clara Krzyzanski, Mrs.
hon
Helen S. Walp
1900—Julia Kirk, Shenandoah, Pa.
1970 Andrew J. Schucker, M. Ed.
1911—Mrs. Harriet Armstrong (Mrs.
—
—
A. C. Garberson), Harrisburg, Pa.
1911 Rosalie
Donahoe, Scranton,
—
Pa.
1906— Mrs. Blanche Pealer Troxell,
Narberth, Pa.
1913 Edith Keeler (Mrs. Clarence
Died
Tallman), Vienna, Virginia.
December
—
9,
1970.
1904 Margaret A. Burns, Harrisburg. Pa. Died November 22, 1970.
1916— Iram R. Schlauch.
1926 Ruth Carver (Mrs.
Maxwell)
—
,1926— Irene
Coval
Charles
Guffrovitch (Mrs. John
)
1929
— Frederick
—
Henry B. Aikman ’01
Henry B. Aikman, Bloomsburg R. D.
5,
died
Saturday,
United Methodist Church. Berwick,
and he taught Sunday School for many
years. He was a member of the Columbia County Federation of Bible
Classes. He was a 50 - year member
of Caldwell Consistory; former member of Berwick Rotary
November
14,
in
Berwick National Bank, and entered
into farming for the balance of his
life.
Dr. Charles L. Mowrer, Hagerstown, Maryland.
Florence Priest (Mrs. M. W.
Cook) Cortez, Pa. died in Hialeah,
Florida, April 20, 1970.
1908
Margaret A. Burns ’04
Miss Margaret A. Burns, formerly
of 3216 N. Fourth St., Harrisburg,
Pa., died Sunday. November 22.
She was a teacher in the Harrisburg
area for more than 45 years.
She
was a life member of Our Lady of the
Blessed Sacrement Catholic Church.
Helen Moyer Hemingway ’07
Mrs. Helen Moyer Hemingway, of
24? W. Third Street, Bloomsburg, died
ac the
Bloomsburg Hospital.
Mrs. Hemingway was a member of
the First Presbyterian Church, and
the Woman’s Circle of the Church, the
“S” Club and the Bloomsburg Hospital
Auxiliary.
Maurice E. Houck ’10
M. E. Houck, Berwick, died
Lera Farley Yard ’12
Lera M. Farley (Mrs. Milton G.
Yard). 743 Hepburn Street. Milton, Pa.
died October
cal
1.
Community
EvangeliHospital. Lewisburg.
1970. at the
Pa.
Mary
Mary
F. Conlan ’13
F. Conlan. Pittston, Pa., died
August at her home. Miss Conlan
was one of three sisters who were
graduated in the class of 1913. The
other two sisters were Anna Conlan
and Helen Conlan (Sister Marie Bernard of the Sisters of Charity). Graduating in the class of 1914 were Alberta Conlan and Francis Conlan,
now practicing medicine in the Pittston Area. Requiem High Mass was
celebrated for Miss Conlan in the
Church of St. John the Evangelist in
Pittston by her nephew. Rev. Dr. Allan F. Conlan of Mansfield, Pa.
in
Elsie
Myers Boughner
MARCH,
1971
’49
Monday. November
30,
in that city.
was born in
in
the
General Hospital
Mrs. Boughner
Slocum
Township. August 9. 1893. For many
years she was a teacher in Grant
Street School, retiring 12 years ago.
She was a member of St. Stephen’s
Episcopal Church and taught Sunday
School 50 years.
teacher
of
1970.
in
11.
years ago.
Mr. Speicher was a member of Immaculate Conception BVM Church.
He was a fourth degree member of
He held
the Knights of Columbus.
membership in Berwick Rotary Club
Berwick Elks. Berwick Moose and
Berwick Golf Club.
Mr. Speicher was a veteran of World
War
II.
Paul F. George ’61
Paul F. George, a graduate assistant in the History Department, died
Monday. December 14.
He graduated from Hazleton High
School in 1953. then spent two years
at
Penn
He
State.
graduated
from
Bloomsburg
State College in 1961, and taught
school from 1961 to 1964 in Bayville,
that city, died
the Williamsport
Miss Hill was an ardent worker for
her church and for the various educational and social clubs with which she
was affiliated. She was a member of
1964 to 1970, he first spent four
the Navy, then three years
years
in
in the
Army.
his army career, he had two
tours of duty in South Vietnam.
He was a captain in the U.S. Army
Medical Corps.
During the post session of this year
he became a graduate assistant at
During
the- college.
John
Cara G. Hill ’16
Cara Gertrude Hill, Williamsport, a
March
J.
From
Mrs. William Boughner. of 462 North
Pennsylvania Avenue. Wilkes-Barre
died
Leo
N. J.
’13
the national, state, and local retired
teachers’ associations, and was instrumental in reorganizing the latter.
Surviving is a sister. Miss Eloise Hill,
with whom she lived.
Michigan in 1913, and received
a master’s degree from Penn State in
1929.
He began teaching in Berwick
Speicher
Mr. Speicher was born in Nanticoke
and was a graduate of Kingston High
School. He received his Master’s Degree from Rutgers University and had
taught in Drake Business College, at
Perth
Amboy. Pleasantville High
School in New Jersey. He had served
as an Internal Revenue Agent for nine
years and became controller of the
Berwfck Fabricating. Company 10
survives.
sity of
J.
burg Hospital.
She was a guest at the Boone Nursing Home for seven weeks prior to her
admission to the hospital, and had
been in ill health for several months.
She was a member of the Lightstreet United Methodist Church.
Hospital. Since her retirement in 1956,
the Univer-
He received his masters degree
from Columbia University in 1936. At
one time he taught at Hunter College,
New York City. He retired two years
ago after serving as curator of Laguna
Beach Art Museum. He was a veteran of World War II and Korean War
attaining the rank of commander in
the U.S. Navy.
Leo
wick Hospital Sunday, December 16.
He was born in Nescopeck Township. Luzerne County. May 22, 1886.
He was married to the former Margaret Meixell, June 17, 1914, and she
He was graduated from
Street,
Speicher, controller of Berwick Fabricating Co., died Saturday,
December 12 in the Berwick Hospital.
retired
at Ber-
fifty-nine, 570 Cal-
Laguna Beach, Calif.,
died Thursdey, November 12 in Laguna Beach Nursing Home.
liope
Helen Shue
Berwick Hospital.
Mr. Aikman was born in Centre
1909—
Township
and spent his entire life
there. He taught for a time, for a period of eight years was employed at the
Rostand. D. Kelly ’35
Rostand D. Kelly,
(Mrs. Helen M. Ferguson) ’ll
Mrs. Helen M. Ferguson, Lightsteet
died Sunday November 15. in Blooms-
R. Harrison.
1902— Lourissa V. Leighow,
St. Pettersburg, Fla.
1965 Ronald J. Turri, Freeland, Pa.
„
High School in 1913, instructing biology. In 1916 he was made high school
principal and in 1920 he was made
superintendent cf Berwick schools,
where he served for more than 20
years.
He was a member of the First
—
Fisher Injuries in an auto
caused the death Sunday,
November 15. of John J. Fisher, Sr.,
J.
accident
eighty-two. 417
Ir.d.,
former
Gra-Roy Drive, Goshen
member
at the Murphy
Warsaw, Ind.
ulty,
of the
BSC
fac-
Medical Center,
He was
injured Saturday when his
went through a stoplight near
Warsaw and was struck by a truck,
it was reported.
The deceased was on
his way to a psychologists’ meeting
car
at Indianapolis.
Fisher was born in Johnson County.
Iowa, on Oct. 4, 1888. He was married
Page three
1923 to
in
Elma Warye who
died in
1964.
He
from the psychology deBloomsburg State Teachers College in 1950 and later served
retired
partment at
as school psychologist at Harrisburg.
also had been serving in that capacity in Goshen, Ind., where he went
to reside in Noivember, 1963.
He
Verna Keller Beyer ’09
Verna Keller (Mrs. Frank Beyer)
died November 23, 1970 in the Sunbury
Community Hospital. She was a former member of the Mausdale Reformed
Church.
Helen Shew Ferguson ’ll
Helen Shew (Mrs. James Ferguson),
Lightstreet, Pa., died November 15,
the Bloomsburg Hospital,
1970 in
where she had been a patient for one
She was a member of the
day.
Lightstreet Methodist Church.
Catherine Kerl Rebernik ’58
Mrs. Catherine Kerl Rebernik, Phyllis Court, Pequannock, New Jersey,
native of Simpson. Pennsylvania, died
December 12, 1969 at home after a
brief illness.
Mrs. Rebernik was employed in the
Fairlawn, N. J. School District as a
Preteacher for retarded children.
viously, she taught in the Maine-Endwell School District.
A graduate of
Fell High School, she was graduated
at Bloomsburg State Teachers College and received a master’s degree
at Marywood College, Scranton, Pa.,
majoring in special education, and later matriculated in that field at Columbia University.
^Ihanh
1909—
l.jau
Loyalty Fund Contributions to December 31, 1970, not reported previously:
Ex-faculty
—Mrs.
1901
1907
1908
— Margaret
J.
E. Waldron
E. Ratacki
Edwin M. Barton
Martha V. Jones
Walter C. Welliver
Maurice E. Houck, Mrs. Clareva N. Fisher, Robert C. Metz, Mrs.
Harold E. Davis, Mrs. Lee A. Perry
1911 Edward
Robinson, Mrs.
J.
1910
David
J.
Crew
Elison,
Ruth
Walter
Monahan, C. B. F. Brill
1913 Catherene Malloy
1916 Mrs. Kenneth Hoyt, Sr., Mrs.
Jennie R. Morris, Rachel C. Cappello,
Mrs. Lela D. Hemingway, Mrs. Emma
H. Burrus, Mrs. Elmer E. Fairchild
1917 Nan R. Jenkins, Edwin S. Hel-
Mrs.
1912
ler
—
1918 Mrs. Margaret Brown Wilson,
Mrs. Jay Lee Funk, Mrs. A. J. King
1919 Mrs. Esther R. Schaffer, Mrs.
Charles V. Miller
—
Page four
1920 Mrs. Ruth T. Deitrick
1921 Mrs. Lillian N. Yerkes, Mrs.
A. C. Sutcliffe, Mrs. Otto M. Girton
1922 Mrs. J. Russell Reed, Evadna
M. Ruggles, William T. Payne
1923 Mrs. Viola H. Dando, Mrs.
1924— E. Snyder, Mrs. Margaret B
Charles
Parke,
1925—Grace H. Brandon
Clara D. Abbet, Mrs. V. E.
Whitlock
Dr. James H. Sterner
1927 George A. Mathews, Mrs. Kenneth Cooper, Bertine Prosser
1928 Mrs. Sterling Strausser, Mrs
Miltona Klinetob, Mrs. Jeanette H.
Buckingham. Mrs. Mary Ruddy, Mrs.
Mary P. Dole, Margaret L. Lewis,
Mrs. Mabel Linskill, Mrs. F. P. Prettyleaf
1929 Mrs.
1933—
Charles D. Blair, Margaret D. Kleback, Mrs. E rl F.trman.
1934—
Mrs.
Paul H. Bittner
1931 Mrs. Esther Y. Castor
1932 Dr. Henry J. Warman
Mrs. Paul J. Turek. Raymond
1937— Walter M. Kitzberger
Stryjak,
Mrs. Ivan L. Smith, Mrs.
1938—
Morris A. Greene
1935 Clarence S. Slater, Gerald C.
Harter, Stanley P. Heimbach
1936 Mrs. Verna Jones
Mary Reisler, Mrs. Helen S.
Moore
Mrs. Clyde Dickey, Mrs. Joseph R. Gillen, John F. Hendler
1939 Mrs. Tirzak Pesto, Mrs. Jennis
—
T.
Odgen
1940 William W. Wertz, Mrs. Stephen R. Illeck, Mrs. Joseph A. Withey,
Mrs. Jean S. White, Clayton H. Hinkel
1941 John E. Lavelle, Mrs. Kenneth
A. Baylor, Mr. and Mrs. C. Grant
Brittingham, Thurwald Gommer, Sr.
1942 H. Burnis Fellman, Mr. and
Mrs. William E. Smith, Mrs. Bernice
E. Bandida. Mrs. H. Dorothy Paltrock. John W. Betz
1949—
1943 Mrs. H. Burris Fellman, Mrs.
Julius
1950—F. Adamic, Mrs. M. E. Smoczynski
1944 Mrs. John H. Gallagher, Mrs.
Jean A. Moyer
1945 Mrs. Ralph J. Balliet
1946 Mrs. William J. Davis
1954—
1947 Mrs. Joseph R. Kula
1948 Henry E. Crawford, James G.
Tierney, Sr.
1956—
William R. Miller, Ralph W.
'
Baird
Max
Mrs. Arlene P. Walters, Dr.
Cooley, Joseph J. Grande,
G.
Wayne Van
Stetten
Charles L. Edwards, George
N. Roessner, Mrs. Robert F. Fritz
1953 Dr. David N. Newbury
Jerome S. Kopec, Mrs. Lawrence Auerweck, Michael R. Crisci.
Mrs. Myrna E. Wagner
1955 Mrs. Paul Dunkelberger
R. Glen Fenstermacher, David
M. Cole. Mary R. Moser
1957 William E. Dupkaneck, Mrs.
David M. Cole, Donna R. Wilcox,
1951
Thomas
J.
Reimensnyder,
Joseph
Wascavage
1958
tine J.
Otto H. Donar,
1960 Mrs. Robert E. Bucher, Paul
T. Paliscak, James H. Williams
1961 Joyce L. Dascola, David J.
1962— Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. EdLoughlin.
wards
John T. Kovich
1963 John J. Boback, Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne A. Hock, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
O. Rhoads, Raymond N. Miller, William H. Garson. Jr.
1964 Mrs. Robert L. Bull, John R.
Schneider,
Edward
A. Wallesh, George
Weigand. Mrs. Dale E.
Mrs. Walter C. Beamer
A.
Erway,
1965 Frank C.
Dowman, Joseph
Schein, Mrs. Rita Seybert, Milton J.
Van Winkle, John N. Ritter, James F.
Eisenhardt, Jr., Mrs. David Hixon,
Glenn R. Morrison, Mrs. Emily A.
Bell, Diane H. Sheridan.
1966 Kathryn L.
Sharrow, Mrs.
Dowman, Mrs. Richard L.
James J. Rutkowski, Ray H.
Fox, William M. Reiter, Mrs. Dennis
Zimmerman, Mrs. Robert L. Schuld,
Frank
C.
Foster.
Mrs. Robert Barchik
Frank
Chellino.Jr., Mrs.
Robert F. Kline,
Charles E. Wagner, Michael V. Mellinger, Phillip D. Landers, Mrs. Marilyn Y. Houck, John R. Price, Harry
J. Balliet, Stephen L. Empet
1968 Mrs. Carol A. Sutzko, Mrs.
Paul H. Umlauf, Mrs. Dawn S. Moffett, Mrs. Michael V. Mellinger, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard L. Hartman, Mrs.
Carol L. Mace, James H. Neiswender,
Diane W. Dawson, Lawrence F. Foran, Mrs. Stephen L. Empet
1969 Thelma Connistra, Francis R.
Demnicki, Marsha Henderson, Robert
Muscosky, James M. Riggs, Mr. and
Mrs. Reinhold A. Schulz, Dolores A.
1967
Mary G.
Slavik,
J.
Teter,
Nancy
Strauss,
Canda
L. Sch-
wenke, James L. Carter, Mrs. Robert
J. Bednar, Robert S, Van Horn, Mrs.
Phillip D. Landers, Victor E. Keeler,
III, Mrs. Richard E. Osberg, Mrs.
Larry E. Drumm, Van G. Booth, Kenneth C. Stanton
1970 Robert T. Marshall, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry M. Maurer, Mrs. Charles
H. Nielsen, Jr., Mrs. James L. Carter,
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene E. Coiffi HI,
James M. Waragaris, Mr. James
Snyder II, Mrs. Craig F. Sleep, Richard L. Bingaman
AMENDMENT TO
CONSTITUTION
An amendment
the
the
to the Constitution of
Alumni Association, approved by
Board of Directors, will be voted
on at the next general meeting of the
Association on Alumni Day, Saturday
April 24, 1971. This amendment would
install a member of the graduating
class as an ex-officio member of the
Board of Directors, to serve for one
year.
COLLEGE CALENDAR
— April 24, 1971
— May 29. 1971
Pre-Session — June 7 to June 25
Main Session — June 28 to August 6
Alumni Day
Clarence W. Swade, ConstanSpentzas, Kenneth J. Oswald,
George T. Herman
1959
yack, Paul H. Spahr
Mary E. Lab-
Commencement
Post Session
-
August
8 to
August
27
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR
F.
II.
Fenstemaker
’12
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
’34
Grace Foote Conner,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS — ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Terms
242 Central
Road
Bloomsburg. Pennsylvania 17815
Term
expires
Millard Ludwig
R. D. 1
’48
Pennsylvania 17846
Term Expires
1972
SECRETARY
West Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania
Dr.
Dr. William L. Bitner III ’56
33 Lincoln Ave.,
Glens Falls. N. Y. 12801
John Thomas ’47
68 Fourth Street
Hamburg, Pennsylvania 19526
Park and Oak
Hubler
Sts.,
140
Clayton H. Hinkel
’31
Terms expire 1973
Dr. Frank J. Furgele ’52
Colonial Farm Box 88
R. D. 1, Glen Mills, Pa. 19342
James H. Deily. Jr. ’41
37 N. Bausman Drive
expires 1973
Lancaster, Pennsylvania 17603
Dr. Alexander J. McKechnie, Jr.
19 N. 24th St.
Camp
expires 1973
Volume LXXII, Number
1903
Representative:
11
Walter
Warwick Avenue, Scars-
dale, N. Y. 10583
1905
Representative: Mrs. Vera
Hemingway Housenick, 503 Market
Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1906
Dr. Carroll D. Champlin, 627 West
Fairmount Avenue, State College,
Pa., 16801, concludes his 1970 holiday
letter by saying. "God save the world
and help us to observe more widely,
study more assiduously, think more
rationally, arrive at more justifiable
conclusions and treat each other more
sincerely.”
MARCH,
1971
1,
1909
Class
Representative:
Bloom
Pa. 17011
18702
Class Representative:
Edwin M.
Barton, 353 College Hill, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
Diehl, 627
17821
Hill,
’39
March, 1971
1907
H.
’40
Leonard Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
224
Apt. 2
Gordon, Pennsylvania. 17936
TREASURER
Class
Riland,
17815
Kimber C. Kuster T3
West Eleventh Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Earl A. Gehrig ’37
110 Robin Lane. Sherwood Village
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Term
’34
102
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie ’35
509 East Front Street
Berwick, Pennsylvania 18603
Elizabeth H.
Col. Elv.ood M. Wagner ’43
643 Wiltshire Road
State College, Pa. 16801
Term
expire 1972
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
197.'!
VICE PRESIDENT
Millville.
Terms
expire 1971
Mrs. Verna Jones ’36
111 Plant Avenue
Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087
Fred
W.
Street, Danville, Pa.
1910
Class Representative:
Robert C.
Metz, 23 Manhattan Street, Ashly,
Pa. 18706
1911
Class Representative: Mrs. Pearle
Fitch Diehl, 627 Bloom Street, Danville, Pa. 17821
Mina McFee (Mrs. John Fisher) is
a guest at the Carey Nursing Home,
366 Carey Avenue, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
1912
Class
Representative:
Howard
Fenstemaker,. 242. Central.
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
F.
Road,
1913
Class Representative: Dr. Kimber
Kuster, 140 West 11th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Judge Bernard J. Kelley, member of
BSC Board of Trustees, has
changed his address to 1004 One East
Penn Square, Philadelphia, Pa. 19107.
Mr. Kelley is a Judge in the Court of
the
Common
Pleas
in Philadelphia.
1914
Representative: J. Howard
Deily, 518 West Third Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
Page
five
1915
Class Representative: John H. Shu-
man,
368 East
Main
Street,
Blooms-
burg, Pa. 17815
1916
Class Representative: Mrs. Russell
(Emma Harrison) R. D. 2,
Orangeville, Pa. 17859
Harrison (Mrs. Russell Burrus), R. D. 2, Orangeville, Pa., has for
the past twenty years been associated
with the Zaner—Bloser Publishing
Company, who publish all kinds of
materials for the instruction of handwriting at the elementary level. At
present she is completing, as co-author, a series of books for the teaching
of handwriting to children in Special
Education classes. Dr. Emily Reuwsaat. of the BSC faculry, has been
assisting in an advisory capacity.
Burrus
Emma
1917
Representative:.
Class.
Allen.
Cromis, Mahoning, Manor, R. D.
Milton, Pa.
L.
1,
1918
Clair
Representative.
J..
Class.
Patterson, 315 West Street, Bloomsburg. Pa. 17815
Jay Lee Funk and Miriam Welliver
Funk are now living at 806% S. Richardson Avenue, Roswell. New Mexico
88201.
Class Representative: Miss Catherine A. Reimard, 335 Jefferson St.,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1919
Dreibelbis.
F. Ralph
1919, and his
fifth
wife Ruth are spending their
winter in Tucson, Arizona.
1920
.Old. Berwick
Pa. 17815
1921
.3117
Bloomsburg,
Class
Leroy W.
Road,
Representative:
Class
Creasy,
Representative:
Cole, 100
Pa. 17815
Wilbur
Leonard
S.
old Drive,
21157
Street,
Foresman
Mrs. Harry
Bloomsburg,
lives at 2 Arn-
Westminister,
Maryland
1922
Class. Representative:. Edna. S.
Harter, R. D. 1, Nescopeck, Pa. 18623
1923
Representative: Mrs. Raymond Kashner, 125 Forrest Road,
Sherwood Village. Bloomsburg, Pa.
Class
17815
A
distinguished educator who was
born in Mauch Chunk recently observed her 50th year of teaching and was
the guest of honor at a party attended
by 25 friends and associates.
Dr.
Margaret Bittner Parks, a graduate
of the 1919 class of Mauch Chunk High
School, was the guest of Mrs. Dorothy
Fasanelle, Phillipsport, N. Y., who
entertained, Oct. 3 at her home in the
Catskill Mountains.
Dr. Parke is a graduate of Pennsylvania State University Teacher’s College and Columbia University, where
she received her doctor’s degree. In
addition, she was the recipient of an
honorary degree from Staley College.
Dr. Parke has taught at all levels
of the school system - elementary,
secondary and college.
Page
six
Margaret Parke started teaching in
a rural school in Rockport, Pa.; immediately after graduating from high
school taught grades 3 and 4 in Packerton, grades 7 and 8 in Doylestown.
She went to New York State in 1928 to
attend Columbia University to major
in guidance, taught in the Washington
Junior High School in Mt. vernon,
from which she moved to the East
where she
Chester High School,
pioneered for eight years in developing guidance and research
systems
for a small school system.
She later moved to New York City.
In the research bureaus of the New
York
City Public School system, she
conducted numerous reasearch projects, developed tests and wrote bul-
letins for teachers, chiefly in the field
of language arts.
In 1951 Dr. Parke went to Brooklyn
College where she chaired a commitand supervisors of student teachers in elementary education.
Later she developed graduate programs for teachers of reading and the
language arts and became advisor of
these programs, a post which she now
holds
Dr. Parke’s record is found in Who’s
tee of teachers
Who
of
American Women, Leaders
in
Education, International Biography,
and other compilations of note. She
was admitted to the honorary societies
of Pi Lambda Theta and Kappa Delta
Pi and received a Fulbright Grant in
1960 to lecture in Australia, the Philip-
pines and Taiwan.
Her books
for parents and young
published by Grosset and
Dunlap, have been widely circulated
in the United States and in some other
English speaking
countries.
They
include Young Reader’s Picture Dictionary in five different editions. My
children,
Book to Read. My Second Book
Read, You Can Teach Your Child
to Read. Practice Workbooks in Writing. I, II, in.
Getting to Know Aus-
First
to
was written for older children.
Dr. Parke is active in world, nation-
address
is
P. O.
Box
20168, Astrodome
Texas 77025
Station, Houston,
1926
Representative:
Class
Bloss, P.
Pa. 17815
O.
Box
505,
Marvin
M.
Bloomsburg,
Collins (Mrs. Henry S.
living at 39 Verbena
Avenue, N. Merrick, L. I., N. Y. 11566.
Ruth
E.
Fairchild)
is
Second Grade TeachShaverton Elementary
Shaverton, Pa. retired from
teaching as of June, 1970 after 41
years of service.
She is residing in Riverside, CalifBertha
er
at
School,
Sutliff,
the
ornia, at the following address:
4440
Street 92501.
1927
Bertine Prosser, 900 Main Street,
has retired
Peckville,
Pa.,
18452,
after forty-three years of teaching.
Lemon
Forty-two years were in the Blakely
District and one year
in the Valley View School District
Borough School
consolidation).
(a
Cooper
Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth
(Thelma Prosser) have moved from
Boonton, New Jersey and now reside
at 321 Gravity Street, Peckville, Pa.
18452
Class Representative: Mrs. Ralph
G. Davenport (Verna Medley), 16
Ransom Street, Plymouth, Pa. 18651
1928
Mabel Albertson
Linskill, 21 Butler
Street, Forty Fort, Pa. 18704, has retired from teaching in the public
school system of Freeport, Long
Island, N. Y.
1829
Class Representatives: Mrs. (Elsie
Lebo) Nelson Stauffer, 88 John St.,
Kingston, Pa. 18704. (Arline Frantz)
Mrs. James Wertman. 20 Parish
Street, Dallas, Pa. 18612
1930
Class
Luther W.
Representatives:
and Margaret Swartz
Bitler, 117 State
Street, Millville, Pa. 17846
tralia
state
and
She
participated in the UK Reading Conference in England in 1969 ond chaired
a secton of the World Reading Conference in Australia in 1970.
al,
city organizations.
The educator
currently on the executive board of the Woman’s Press
Club of New York City and the New
York State organization of College
English educators.
She is a vice
president of the New York Society for
is
the Experimental Study of Education
and has been elected to serve on the
Elementary Committee on the National Council of Teachers of English.
Dr. Parke resides at 1655 Flatbush
Ave.. A-1810, Brooklyn, N. Y.
1924
Class Representative: Edward F.
Schuyler, 236 West Ridge Avenue,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1925
Class Representative: Michael P.
Walakonis,
Box
222,
Ringtown,
Pa.
17967
Dr.
Harold H. Hidlay, Assistant Superintendent of the
Columbia County
Schools,, recently received the Honorary Keystone Farmer Degree.
1931
Class Representative:
Davis, 333 East Marble
anicsburg. Pa. 17055
James
Str<|t,
B.
Mech-
1933
Representative: Miss Lois
Lawson, .644 .East Third .Street.
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1934
.Esther
Representative:.
Evans McFadden (Mrs. Joseph), 154
East Fifth Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
Class.
17815
Joseph J. Gribbin. Bethlehem, Pa.,
has been appointed field representative to eleven northwestern counties
for the Pennsylvania Division of the
American Cancer
A
Soiciety.
veteran of the
U
S.
Army, Gribbin
has been active in youth work with
the YMCA and the Bethlehem Boys
Club.
James H. Sterner
Associate
Dean of the School of Public Health
at Houston, University of Texas. His
1935
is
Class
Reed,
Representative:.
151
East
William
I.
4th Street, Blooms-
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
mond
burg, Pa. 17815
1936
Kathryn Vanauker (Mrs. Nicholas
Moreth) 34 Linden Road. Ho-Ho-Kus,
New Jersey 07423, Co-Chairman; Ruth
Wagner (Mrs. Lawrence LeGrande)
18201
123 Oak Street, Hazleton, Pa.
and Mary Jane Fink (Mrs. Frederick
M. Cutcheon) Maple Avenue, Conynghani. Pa. 18219
1937
and
Mr.
Class Representatives;
Mrs. Earl A. Gehrig. 110 Robin Lane,
Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa.
17815
Randall
F.
Clemens,
Senior
Pro-
Specialist. Division of Compensatory Education. U.S. Office of Education was one of the speakers at the
gram
Twenty-Fourth Annual Conference for
Teachers and Administrators held on
the BSC Campus on Saturday, October
24, 1970.
Mr. Clemens has been engaged
program review and development
in
in
the field of compensatory education
since 1965 when Title I was enacted
by Congress. He has been specializing in programs for the education of
migratory children of migratory agricultural workers.
A native of Berwick, he also holds a
Master of Arts degree from New
York University, and has taken graduate work at the University of PennHe is a former classroom
sylvania.
teacher and high school principal in
Pennsylvania School Systems. Clemens served with the U.S. Navy from
1942-1945.
Mr. Clemen’s wife is the former
Janice Nicholls, of the class of 1936.
1938
Class Representative: Paul G. Mar710 East
burg, Pa.
tin,
Main
Street,
Blooms-
1939
Willard A.
Christian, Jr., 803 Logue Street, Williamsport, Pa. 17701
Prof. Alfred P. Koch, Pine Top
Class
Representative:
Trail, Bethlehem. Pa. 18017, professor
of accounting at Lehigh University,
has been appionted to serve on the
Committee on Taxation of the Pennsylvania Institute of Certified Public
Accountants (PICPA).
A native of Shenandoah. Pa., Prof.
Koch received the M. S. degree at
Busknell University and joined the
Lehigh faculty in 1946. He became a
CPA in Pennsylvania in 1952.
A contributing author to the “Accounting Teachers Guide” published
by Southwestern Publishing Co.
1940
Class Representative: Clayton H.
Hinkle, 224 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1941
Representative: Dr. C. Stuart Edwards, R. D. 4, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
Class
1942
Class Representative: Mrs. Ralph
H.
Zimmerman (Jean Noll) 165
17551
1943
Class
MARCH,
Representative:
1971
Mrs.
Ray-
A.
253 Iron
17815
Algatt
Katerman),
Bloomsburg, Pa.
(Betty
Street,
1944
Class Representative: Mrs. (Poletime Comuntzis) Carl Demetripopoulos. Friar and Robin Lanes, Sherwood
Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1945
Mary Lou
Class Representative:
John, 257 W. 11th St., Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
1946
Anastasia Pappas (Mrs. John Trowbridge), lOp
Danville, Pa.
W.
Mahoning
Street,
Co-chairman:
Mrs. Charles W. Creasy (Jacqueline
Pa.
Shaffer), R. D. 1,
Catawissa,
17821.
17820.
Representative:
Robert
L.
Bunge, 12 West Park Street, Carroll
Park, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
The Board of Education of the City
School District of Binghamton. New
York, announces the appointment of
Gerald J. Demaree as Assistant Superintendent of Schools for Business
and Non-Instructional personnel.
Mr. Demaree had been associated
with
the
Binghamton
1952
Francis B.
Galinski, 90 Tower Hill Road, Do.vlestown. Pa. 18901
U. S. Air Force Major Clarence W.
Troutman, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. C.
Rhodes of R. D. 2, Sunbury. Pa., has
been decorated with the Distinguished
Flying Cross (DFC) and the Bronze
Star Medal for action in Southeast
Asia.
Major Troutman’s DFC was for exClass
Representative:
traordinary achievement as an RF-4C
tactical reconnaissance airenemy
Despite
navigator.
craft
Phantom
fire, he completed two special
missions to obtain information of vital
ground
1947
Class
1951
Class Representative: Dr. Russell
C. Davis, Jr., Thunder Hill, Grahamsville, N. Y. 12740
District
since
serving as a business education
teacher and coach, director of finance,
business administrator, and in his
present capacity. The Assistant Superintendent was awarded a Masters
degree from New York University in
1951.
He has also taken additional
graduate courses at Cornell, Syracuse,
and Ithaca College.
1947.
1948
Harry G.
Representative:
Class
John. Jr., 425 Iron Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Ralph E. and Nancy Evancho Seltzer, live at 2604 Helen Street, Allentown, Pa.
1949
Representative: Richard E.
Grimes, 1723 Fulton St., Harrisburg,
Pa. 17102
Class
1950
Class Representative: Willis Swales,
Raven Road, Montvale, N. J. 07645
Mrs. Francis Cerchiaro Abitanta.
1046 Cross Avenue, Elizabeth, New
Jersey, is Principal of an elementary
school in that c ity.
Mrs. Abitanta
has a Master of Education degree.
She has two children.
9
Mrs. Audrey Terrel Adliss, Forest
Clifton
Forge, Virginia, is
head of the Mathematics Department
in the Clifton Forge High School. She
has two children.
Hills,
Mrs. Nancy Anthony Thomash, 577
Park Ridge Drive, Wayne P. O., Pa.
is Speech Therapist in the Cheltenham
Township School District.
Mrs. Janice Jones Kulp, Teaching
Supervisor at the Mary Richenbach
Research-Learning Center, Kutztown
State College, is the author of an article, “Third graders build Kidsville,”
which appeared in a recent issue of
the “Instructor” magazine.
importance
to allied forces.
The major received the Bronze Star
Medal for meritorious service (Turing
military operations against Viet Cong
forces. He was cited for his performance as a requirements reconnais
cance officer at Seventh Air Force
headquarters, Tan Son Nhut AB,
Vietnam.
Major Troutman was honored at
Tactical Air Command. Bergstrom
AFB. Austin, Tex., where he now
serves.
Commissioned in 1953 through the
aviation cadet program, he served
during the Korean War and holds the
aeronautical rating of master navigator.
1953
Class Representative: John S. Scrimgeour, 411 East 3rd Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Dr. David N. Newbury, 4852 Iowa
Drive, Warren. Michigan 48092, has
recently co-authored a book which relates teacher contract negotiations to
effective learning for school children.
The book is entitled, “Teacher Negotiations:
A Guide for Bargaining
Teams.” The guide was written in
collaboration with Dr. William C. Miller, who, like Newbury, is a Detriot
area school administrator.
The book is considered unique in
educational circles since it is one of
the first to attempt to connect the
growing practice of teacher bargaining with research on effective learning
of students.
It is published by the
Parker Division of Prentice-Hall Publishers and is aimed at the national
market of public and college educators, as well as school board members, who are concerned with teacher
negotiations.
Newbury has previously published
articles on such topics as the history
of iron mining at Danville, Penna.,
federal aid to education, science ed-
ucation, dropout prevention, and vocational education.
After military service in Korea and
Japan he completed a Master’s Degree at Bucknell University in 1956.
doctorate in administration and
curriculum development was earned
at Wayne State University in 1967.
Newbury is currently Assistant Sup-
A
Page seven
erintendent of Schools in Hazel Park,
Michigan, a suburban community of
He began teaching
30,000 residents.
there in 1956 and has served as Science Director and Curriculum Director before being appointed Assistant
Dr. Newbury has
Superintendent.
served on the Board of Directors of
the Michigan State Curriculum Development Association and was president
of the largest county curriculum leadership group in Michigan.
1954
Class Representative: William J.
Jacobs, Tremont Annex Apartments,
2 West Main Street, Lansdale, Pa.
19446
Myra
Wagner
Albertson
606 Hobart Terrace,
California 95051
1955
is
living at
Santa
Clara,
officiated.
A
of Bloomsburg State
and the Wesley Theological
Seminary of Washington, D. C., he
received the degree of Master of Sacred Theology in Ecclesiastical History
from the General Theological Semin-
graduate
College
ary of the Episcopal Church, New
York, in May of 1970. He was ordained to the Diacconate by Bishop
Stevenson on June 28, 1970, in St.
Luke’s Church, Mechanicsburg.
Thomas
Class Representative: Arnold GarR. D. 1, Harveys Lake, Pa.
inger,
18618
er at the
School in
team leader-teachPerry Browne Elementary
Davis, a
Norwich,
New
York,
and
Mary Whitmore, an insurance
1956
Representative: Dr. William
33 Lincoln Avenue, Glens
Falls, N. Y. 12801
Class
Bittner
Curate at Christ Episcopal Church
Reading, was elevated to the Sacred
Order of Priests on January 17, in
the Cathedral Church of St. Stephen.
Harrisburg.
The Right Reverend
Dean Theodore Stevenson, Bishop of
the Episcopal Diocese of Harrisburg,
III,
administrator at the Norwich Pharmaceutical Company, were married last
summer. Their address is Box 64,
Tanner Hill Road, R. D. 1, Norwich,
New
1957
Class Representative: William J.
Pohutski, 554 Oakridge Drive, North
Plainfield, N. J. 07606
1958
Class
Representative:
Raymond
Hargreaves, 37 Dell Road, Stanhope,
N. J. 07874
York, 13815
lives at R. D. 1, Box
Oxford, Penna., 19363. Lanny is
a teacher in the middle school in Oxford and completed a 22-day tour of
Lanus Miller
74,
Western Europe
last
summer.
Teresa Julio Kohut lives at 15 Brown
Lane, R. D. 2, Appalachin, New York,
Alexander R. Stepanski, Bear Path
Road, Munnsville, New York, has accepted an assistantship at Syracuse
13732.
University to study for his PhD. in
1959
mathematics.
Class Representative: William F.
Swisher, Box 245, Cincinnatus, N. Y.,
13040
1960
Representative!:
Glass
James J.
Peck, 100 Hull Road, Madison, Conn.
06443
George M.
Emmaus,
Avenue,
Apilla, 6 Alvin
Pa.,
a
is
member
Emmaus
of
the
High School. He
married and has one daughter.
staff of
is
1961
Class Representative: Edwin C.
Kuser, R. D. 1, Box 145-C, Bechtelsville, Pa. 19505
1962
Class Representative: Richard Lloyd
6 Farragut Drive, Piscataway, N. J.
18854
John W. H. Ribble and Salley Layton Ribble are living at 36
Oak Lane.
Royersford, Pa.
1963
Class Representative:
Pat Biebl
(Mrs. Ronald Cranford) R. D. 1, 77
Hawthorne, Ave., Boyertown, Pa.
19512
An item appeared
in the December
Quarterly, stating that
Mr. Rupert had been appointed head
basketball coach at Johns Hopkins
University.
The item erroneously
listed Mr. Rupert as a member of the
class of 1958. Mr. Rupert and his wife
issue of the
(Nancy McFerran
sons live at 717
and their two
Hallen Road, Balti’63)
more, Maryland 21212.
The Rev. Robert Howard
Page eight
Pursel,
Gary Rupert has begun
his
new
job as head baskebatl! coach at Johns
Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland. He will also assist in their football program. He and his wife Nancy
(McFerran ’63) and their two sons
live at 717 Ho lien Road, Baltimore,
Maryland
21212.
Robert Painter lives at 509 Center
Street, Milton, Penna., 17847, with his
wife Bonnie (Fisher ’63) and their
two daughters, Lynn and Kathleen.
in the middle school in
Bob teaches
Milton.
is
The address of Capt. John J. Owens
Co B 2-12 Cav 1st Air Cavalry Div-
ision,
APO
Nancy Pickering (Mrs. John K.
Frank) reports her address as Box
92- A,
R. D.
Ernest R.
Shuba, 1 Gaston Avenue, Raritan, N.
N. 08869
The address of James F. Gallagher
is Box 203, Cloverdale, N. Y. 12820.
Representative:
1,
Moscow, Pa. 18444
George and Kay Shaffer Weigand,
2625 Skylark Drive, York, Pa., are
the parents of a daughter, born July
28,
1970.
George
is
Dean’s Repre-
sentative to the College of Education
at the York Campus of the Pennsylvania State University.
1965
Class Representative: Carl P. Sheran, 59 Vreeland Ave., Bloomingdale,
N. J. 07403
1965
W. Greenly, Newtown has been
accepted in an advanced program' of
study at the University of New MexL.
Albuquerque, which leads to a
Master’s degree in architecture. He
graduated from Bloomsburg State
College in 1965 and did further study
ico,
Lawrence University, Temple
University, Holy Cross College and
Rider College. He taught physics and
at St.
photography for five years at Pennsbury High School, Fairless Hills,
where he recently resigned.
Thomas E. and Barbara Boland
Miller are living at 236 St. David Ct..
Cockeysville, Md. 21030.
They have
two children. Mr. Miller is the Specialist in Business and Office Occupations for the State of Maryland.
Barru Brittingham (Mrs. Louis J.
White) lives at 411 New York Ave.,
Ogdensburg, N. Y. 13669.
Emily Herman Bell is living at R.
2, Ganague, Ontario, Canada.
D.
1966
Class Representative: Anthony J.
Cerza, 608 Corlies Ave., Wallenhurst,
N. J. 07711
Ruth Rimsha (Mrs. Robert L. Schuld)
lives at 1284 Ellisworth Drive,
Whitehall, Pa. 18052.
Manlynne Kolnik (Mrs. David L.
Welsh) is living at 1023 Lacouer,
Missouri 63122.
1964
Class
S.F. 96490.
1967
Class
Representative:
Lemon, Warwick
R.
Thomas
Apt., 3-D, 802
English St., Bel Air, Md. 21014
Old
Richard and Cheryl Crewdson Bald,
R. D. 1 Center Valley, Pa., 18034, announce the birth of a daughter, June
Arthur C. Pursel, elementary teachCamp Hill School District,
will open a private nursery school and
day care center on the West Shore
under the name “Arthur Pursel’s
West Shore Children’s Center.”
It will be located in New Cumberland and will provide organized educational experience for three and four-
21.1970.
year-old children in addition to competent developmental child care.
The founder and director has been
involved with child development for
over ten years and feels there is a
need for day care and nursery school
programs for pre-school children.
sity.
er in the
Dr. E. C. Keller, Jr., Chairman of
the Biology Department at West Virginai University, has selected William
Frederic Skinner as a graduate research assistant on a $68,650 research
grant awarded by the Office of Water
Resources to West Virginia Univer-
Skinner is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
E. B. Skinner. Bloomsburg.
After
completing two years active duty in
the U.S. Coast Guard, he entered graduate school at West Virginia University in January of this year.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Mr. and Mrs. R. Thomas Lemo.i
have moved to 802 Old English Court
Md.
Apt. 3-D, Bel Air.
21014.
Ernest A. Cole has moved
to 1106 E.
5th St., Berwick, Pa. 18603
Mrs.
(Hileman)
Virginia
Ryan
is
Rear Elm St.. Huntington
Va. 25703 where she is working in the
Office of Career Planning and Placement at Marshall University where
her husband is a student.
living at 620
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bentley are
living at 1124*4 South Allen St., State
College, Pa. 16801. Mrs. Bentley is the
Emmajane
Pellen and is
Bellefonte High School
former
teaching at
while her husband
is working on his
Ph.D. in Finance at State and she is
working on her M.Ed in Business Ed-
U.S.
Training School (OTS) at Lackland
AFB, Texas.
Lieutenant Hitz is being assigned to
Mather AFB. Calif., for navigator
low Grove, Pa.
training.
Airman Terry L. Lutz,, Bloomsburg,
Pa., has completed basic training at
Lackland AFB, Texas. He has been
to Sheppard AFB, Texas, for
training as a medical service special-
assigned
ist.
Robert J. Stahl, whose address is
W. Union Blvd., Bethlehem, Pa.
18018. has been enrolled in the class
of ’73 at Westminister TheologicalSeminary, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia,
28
Pa. 19118.
ucation.
1968
Class Representative: Thomas W.
Free. R. D. 1. Box 34, Kintnerville.
Pa. 18930
Carol Kopp Sutzko lives at 125 S.
Mill Stret, St. Clair, Pa. 17970
Sally S. Splain (Mrs. Robert H.
Daley is living at 1546 Commonwealth
Avenue. Boston, Mass. 02100.
Cinde Rogers Hippensteel is living
at R. D. 1, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
)
Nancy Stewart Magrone
is
400 No. Dupont Highway,
Apts., Dover, Del. 19901.
Sharon Griggs Hogett
Daniel R. DiFeo. Jr., 1805 Brazos
Street. Apt. 35, Austin Texas 78701, is
enrolled in the Botany Department of
the Graduate School at the University
of Texas.
Carlton
Terrace,
lives at
2019
Williamsport,
Pa.
17701
1969
Representative:
Frank J.
Masteroianne,
1018
Cooper Street,
Scranton, Pa. 18508
Francis J. Handy (Mrs. John D.
Wright) lives at Apartment 107, 210
Lake Hallingsworth Drive, Lakeland.
Class
Beverly Forry Bode reports her
address as P. O. Box 151, Middle
River, Minn. 56737.
.
.
WEDDINGS
.
/".
.
Florida, 33803.
1944—1942
Anne
’44
L. Shortess
and H. Ray-
Victor E. Keeler III, 106 N. Howard
Avenue, Gettysburg, Pa. 17325, is a
Social Studies teacher and StudioVisual Director for the Fairfield Area
School District. He is married and
Mrs. Chandler has been emCity.
ployed by the Henry Dreyfuss Asso-
has one son.
Organization Resources Counselors.
Address: 927 Madison Avenue, New
Marsha Carpenter (Mrs. Charles
J.
Vogt) lives at 863 Carlivynne Manor,
Carlisle. Pa. 17013.
Charlene
Graci
Goldthevarte
re-
ports her address as Box 700. Lot 54,
Rte. 2. Fountain Blue Mobile Home
Park, Pensacola. Fla. 32506
Francis J, Handy (Mrs. John D.
Wright) lives at Apt. 1607. 210 Lake
Hallingsworth Drive, Lakeland, Fla.
mond Chandler
ciation.
York
’42.
Mr. Chandler
61
Dean
John
W.
Street,
Beaver
Meadows, Pa. 18216
Airman David C. Large, Achland,
Pa., has
completed basic training at
Lackland Air Force Base, Texas. He
has been assigned to Lowry Air Force
Base,
Colorado,
for
armament systems
address
Pa.
is
training
field.
His
in
the
home
1539 Center Street, Ashland
employed by
1957
Jean Starisky and Hugo More, 1541
Wyoming Avenue, Scranton, Pa. 18509.
Suzanne Miller and Dennis ZimmerDowman, ’65, 1503- A Rollin Glen
Drive, Boothwyn, Pa. 19061
Barbara L. Robinson and Frank C.
Dowman. 1503- A Rolling Glen Drive.
Boothwyn, Pa. 19061.
1960
Gertrude
1970
Representative:
is
New York
City.
33803.
Class
Dalfovo,
both of
Snyder
Foster, Address 919
Warminster, Pa.
and Richard L.
Log College Drive
18974.
1967
Carla Mattucci and Anthony Scala,
both of Berwick. Anthony is a teacher
at the West Hazleton High School.
1968
Virginia Ann Brown and John R.
Hatton.
Address: 3217-A Wakefield
Road, Harrisburg, Pa. 17709.
Donna Jean F. Pucino, Catawissa
Gary L.
MARCH,
Hitz, 60 Sylvania
1971
Road, Her-
R. D.
1,
na
is
a teacher of kindergarten for the
Upper Moreland School
and Capt. William K. Gifford,
District, Wil-
Bonnie Wallos and Jan Keller.
The
bride is a mathematics teacher in
Central Bucks School District, Tamanend Junior High School, Warrington.
Address: 433 Summit Ave., Horsham.
Karen
J.
Zehner, Bloomsburg, and
R. Bradford Adams, Rochester, N.Y.
The bride is doing graduate work at
Bucgnell University and the University of Rochester.
At present she is
teaching mathematics at Spencerpm't
Senior High School. Spencerport, N.Y.
1967
Joan Hand and William Dupkanick.
1968—69
Karla Klinoff, Nanticoke, Pa., and
Charles H. Bowman. Williamport, Pa
Address: 2508 Benvenue Avenue, Berkley. Calif. 94700.
Sharon McQuillen and Anthony M.
Vinciguerra. The bridegroom
ing in the U. S. Navy.
is
serv-
1969
living at
Lake Club
James W. Warth
lives at Apt. A-7.
King of Prussia, Pa. 19406. His wife
is the former Nancy D. Shaffer, of
the class of 1970.
Army, Morgantown, W. Va. Don-
shey, Pa. 17033, has been commissioned a second lieutenant in the U.S. Air
Force upon graduation from Officer
Jocelyn Entrot and Charles Celli.
The couple resides in Newtown
Square. Both are employed as chem
ists at Wylth Laboratories. Inc., Paoli.
Kathleen Jarrard and Richard E.
Osberg. Apt. 21. 4 Silver Drive. Nashua,
New Hampshire
03060.
Harry A. Snyder and Margo Fetterolf.
Address: 6 Academy Apts., Marvin St., Deposit, N. Y. 13754.
Bonnie L. Yorks, Berwick, and Peter
R. Gatski, Bloomsburg. The bride is
an elementary teacher in Norristown.
Her husband, is a mental health worker at Norristown State Hospital.
1970
Bonnie J. Beaver and James E.
Rufenstahl ’69. Address: 206-C Perkiomen Place Apts., Pennsbury, Pa.
18073.
Donna Calvello and Glenn A. Ahlum.
Address: 1510 Oriole Drive, Cornwells
Heights, Pa. 19020.
Mary E. Leiby, Bloomsburg, and
Bernard V. Curran. Shenandoah. Mrs.
Curran is a social worker for the
New
Jersey Division of Public WelMr. Curran is a teacher in the
Pennsbury School District, Fiarless
Hills, Pa.
fare.
Sharon L. Pinkerton and Larry M.
Maurer. Address: 14 Rector Street,
“C” Lancashire Apts., Wilmington,
Del. 19810.
Barbara
and Charles H.
Address is Benton AFS,
Poireca
Nielsen, Jr.
Box
369, R.
D.
2,
Benton, Pa. 17814
Rebecca Brown.
Northumberland
and Gary R.
Steiner,
Nescopeck.
Mrs. Steiner is a teacher in the Shikellamy School District. Mr. Steiner,
who served
four years in the U. S.
Navy, is a machinist.
Bargara Louise Scaran, R. D. 4,
Danville, Pa., and Thompson P. Ging-
Page nine
her,
His estate was valued
about $25 million. The costs and
taxes totaled almost $20 million, thus
leaving his family with only 20 per
cent of his estate.
Many of you have Catherine Marshall’s book “TO LIVE AGAIN” in
which she says, “Peter, to the surprise
without a will.
Bloomsburg.
The bride graduated from the Gelsinger Medical Center School of Nursing in 1969 and is currently employed
as a staff nurse at the Center. The
groom is employed by the F and T Insurance Company. The couple reside
at 224 W. Fourth St., Bloomsburg, Pa.
at
of all
17815.
left
Ellen G. Shoemaker and Craig F.
Address: A-6 Meadowbrook
Sleep.
Apts., Gilbert ville, Pa. 19525.
James P. Snyder
Address: 526 Turner Street, Apt.
Mrs. Snyder is
403, Allentown, Pa.
teaching at Pieruff High School in
Allentown.
Judith E. Urso and
n.
Horace D. Bennett 3rd and Marilyn
Barr.
I.
The groom
is employed by the Heart
Association as a field representative.
The couple will reside in Pittsburgh.
HOUK HONORED
Russell Houk, Athletic Director and
Wrestling Coach at Bloomsburg State
College for the past fourteen years, received international recognition when
he was elected by the United States
Olympic Wrestling Committee to serve
as manager of the freestyle wrestling
team for the 1972 Olympics to be held
no
who had known him well, had
will. If only he had known how
much
it left to be taken care of.”
Only th ough a valid will are you
enabled u:
1. Decide who is to receive your
property and how
2. Choose the organization or person
you wish to supervise the settlement
of your estate
3. Lessen the amount of Federal estate tax your estate will have to pay
4. Name the person you wish to
serve as guardian of your minor
children
5.
Make
specific provisions for the
Foundation
Bloomsburg
or
other
charitable organizations
Even those who have wills sometimes do not spend enough thought
and time in planning for something
which is so important. For example,
Benjamin Franklin, the wise leader of
early America, left an endowment to
the city of Philadelphia, which now
amounts to over $1 million. But Ben
stipulated in his will that the
money
in
Munich, Germany.
As a manager, Houk will serve as
administrator for the team, arranging
would be used to buy watering troughs
for horses. Of the adults in the United
States today who have wills, eight
including travel,
prepamtiic'ns
meals, lodging, and clothing. He is
responsible for communications between teams and issues protests of
out of ten provide for outright distribution of their estates; for example,
leaving everything to spouse who in
turn leaves all assets to children. This,
of course, is the most costly way of
leaving assets to loved ones.
So you see wills and estate planning
are important to Bloomsburg State
College because by education we help
others and by bequests others help
Bloomsburg State College.
all
matches,
necessary.
In his thirteen previous years at the
helm
of
if
BSC, Houk has amassed an
enviable record of 131 wins, 26 losses,
and 3 ties. He has won three National
NAIA team
Pennsylvania
Championships, and one
titles,
five
Conference
Wilkes Open Tournament
was named NAIA Coach
He
Title.
of the Year
in 1960-61, 1962-63, 1964-65.
WHY A WILL?
Many alumni have asked why
Bloomsburg State College is interested
in informing them about wills and
estate planning. There are two simple answers to that question.
First, Bloomsburg State College is
an educational institution, and our
primary purpose is to educate. The
Bloomsburg State College experience
has already provided our alumnae
with their basic education, and we
are concerned with their continuing
education in matters which relate to
their personal well-being and that of
their loved ones.
A recent survey in the United States
came up with some interesting facts
about estate planning:
1.
Seven out of every adults die
intestate (without a valid will)
2. Less than 50 per cent of those
with estates of $60,000 or
a
will.
I read
recently about a prominent
in New York who died
businessman
Page ten
more have
Remember--your will is probably
most important, single document
you will ever be called upon to sign.
Be sure it is prepared the right way,
the
the best way, the only
attorney
way-by your
Have you made your will?
Did you remember Bloomsburg
idence Hall.
For nearly two decades, the Husky
Lounge in Waller Hall had served as
the center of student activities. However, as the student enrollment grew
steadily during the past decade, it became apparent that a completely new
designed
structure
and specially
would be needed to accommodate a
college enrollment of 5.600 - 6,000.
When plans were designed for a new
student center, the old Husky Lounge
occupied part of the site which will be
needed for construction. The student
union board immediately sought temporary headquarters to program student activities, and the former College
Commons, built in 1956, became available when Scranton Commons was
completed
Asst. Director of
Development
Social events, such as movies, are
the featured activities held
weekly in the temporary union. The
Union is open daily from 7:00 a.m. until midnight and until 1:00 a.m. each
Friday and Saturday.
ADVANCED DEGREES
Lehigh University
John T. Kovich ’62, Master of Education, Major in Counseling.
Charles J. Greco ’68, Master of Education, Major in Educational Administration
.
Patricia A. Stickler
An improved
facility for student actthis summer in the
of
John R. Hinkle ’66, Master of Arts,
Major in Education.
Edward R. MacKay ’69, Master of
Arts. Major in Education.
John H. Rittenmeyer ’53, Master of
Arts, Major in Education.
Allen
Montclair State College
H. Kessler ’57, Master
of
Arts.
University of Delaware
Susan Ruth Krier
’65.
Master
of
Science.
Benjamin M.
Baum
’63
Master
of
Education.
Robert A. Koppenhaver
ucation
ivities
Master
ucation.
formation
IMPROVED FACILITY
’67,
Education, Major in Elementary Ed-
of Education.
necessary.
The form-
among
ried name.
In order to be properly identified
for credit on our records, full inis
1970.
Jack Mulka.
We
request that all correspondence
with the College or the Alumni Office include the year of graduation.
Married women are requested to
include both maiden name and mar-
March,
The temporary student union is
divided into four areas: the snack bar,
a multi-purpose area, a billard area
with five tables, and a combination
television, reading, and game lounge.
Also included are an information center, offices for the student union board
and the Director of Student Activities,
State College?
James H. Neiswender
in
er Commons provides approximately
twice the area which was available
in the Husky Lounge.
Joseph P. Lavelli
’66.
’63.
Master
Master of Ed-
.
Shippensburg State College
Reker LeRoy Richards. ’57, Camp
Hill, M. S. Major in Communication.
was opened
former College Commons. This temporary student union building will serve
the college community until a new
student center is completed in the area
between Waller Hall and Montour Res-
Rider College
Elaine Kennedy (Mrs. W. C.
er)
26
boro,
Beam-
Kings Court. Mill Run, HatPa.. M. A. in Guidance and
Counseling.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
GRADUATE PROGRAM
The Master of Education degree
at Bloomsburg State College is now
Bioareas
Business Education, CommuniPhycation Disorders, Chemistry,
Elementary
sics, Physical Science,
Education, English, Foreign Language (French, Spanish), History, Read-
offered in the following
:
logy,
ing,
cal
Social Studies (History, PolitiSpecial
Geography),
Science.
Education with emphasis on Mental
Retardation, and Speech (Theatre or
Public Address.)
During the fall of 1968 the first
Master of Arts degree program ofCollege
fered by Bloomsburg State
was instituted in the field of history.
Other departments such as English,
econopsychology, geography and
mics, will follow suit and are in various stages in preparing similar proposals.
cf biology will be
the first to offer a Master of Science
The department
Their proposal is on the
verge of completion and should be
acted upon during this academic year.
Other science departments are expected to follow with similar programs.
degree.
Bloomsburg State
In future years,
Master of
anticipates
a
College
Science degree in geology.
The department of psychology is
in the process of preparing a proposprepare
ed curriculum designed to
A future proschool psychologists.
gram designed to prepare guidance
counselors is also anticipated.
Graduate programs are being esretablished as rapidly as staff,
sources, and facilities will permit,
according to Dr. Charles
Carlson,
Dean
cf Graduate
Studies.
The
over-ail growth of the college encour-
ages additional degree programs on
the graduate level.
INCREASE IN TUITION
The Board
of Trustes of
Bloomsburg
State College, in its regular monthly
meeting held recently, approved an
increase in the basic fee paid by students from the present $350 to $450, an
increase of $100 per year; subsequently this fee increase has been approved
by Satte Secretary of Education. Increase is in keeping with action previously taken by a majority of the
Boards of Trustees of the thirteen
State Colleges and Indiana University of Pennsylvania, and is essential
in assuring the funds necessary to
balance the operating budget of the
College for the 1969-1970 fiscal year.
The $100 fee increase for the 19691970 college year wall be paid by the
students of Bloomsburg State Collgeg
in the Basic Fee payment for the Sec-
ond Semester, which began January
1970.
Out-of-state students, currently paying $25 per credit hour, will
be charged $30 per credit hour; graduate students will have an increase
from $20 to $25 per credit hour, and
undergraduate fees for part-time students will be increased from the present $15 to $18 per credit hour. Sub26,
MARCH,
1971
sequent semesters, however, will be
charged at the $50 per semester increase rate.
At its meeting on October 24, 1969,
the Board of Trustees had delayed
action on the passage of a fee increase, pending further study. During
the intervening weeks, a thorough investigation for the rationale of a fee
increase was made, exploring various
possibilities for avoiding it. On November 10, 1969, Board President William A. Lank and President Robert J.
Nossen met with College Council
members to review with them the current financial status of the College,
pointing out that the passage of the fee
increase at Bloomsburg was essential
to the current and future operation of
the College.
A report from the College Business
Manager showed that, withont the
increase in fees, the College would be
unable to meet its
ities for 1969-1970.
out that
fiscal
responsibil-
The report pointed
even though every step had
been taken to curtail expenses to provide reserve funds for necessary items
of instruction and operation, a sufficient amount did not exist to cover minimal operation for the balance of the
academic year without the above-mentioned fee increase.
It is pertinent to note that, cutbacks
notwithstanding, support of higher education within the Commonwealth has
risen over the past years more than
450%, and the budget figure for the
current year will well exceed six hundred million dollars. With the fee in-,
crease, the student share of operating
costs at Bloomsburg,
exclusive of
capital construction, will approximate
a
more than 25%.
Part of this
also covered by State Scholarships and other financial aids.
Following the November 21, 1969
meeting, Mr. Lank stated, “The
Board of Trustes of Bloomsburg State
College regrets the necessity for such
action, but it nevertheless, bears the
responsibility to the College in providing a sound fiscal operation.”
A recent survey made by the Office
of Institutional Research of the Association of State Universities and
Land Grant Colleges disclosed that
tuition charges at the nation’s major
public colleges and universities rose
this year at a record rate of 16.5%. It
pointed out that tuition and fees at 113
institutions belonging to the National
Association of State Universities and
Land Grant Colleges registered the
16.5% hike and 261 institutions affiliated with the American Association
of State Colleges and Universities
showed a 14% rise in these charges.
Of the total oi 405 institutions and
components of systems of institutions
reporting to the two national associations in this year’s survey, all but 52
reported raising at least one charge in
the last twelve months.
little
amount
is
ALUMNI DAY
SATURDAY, APRIL
24, 1971
ADDRESSES WANTED
— Mrs. Donna M. Schuster
Florence Sugarman Stetler
—Benjamin B. Baer
Mrs. Brenda de Estrada Berg
— James H. Mlserian
1969
1922
1916
1961
1966
1966
1966
1966
—Dennis E. Rosini
—Kay Diamond
Karen Zeiss (Mrs. Ted Hes-
backer, Jr.)
—Ann M. Vitale (Mrs. Daniel
1933 —Dr. Walter Jarecki
1925 Mrs. Ruth Stevens Wilson
1969 — John M. Ritter
1969 —Barbara E. Schall
1963
Harner
1926 Helen
Walburn)
1962
Pursel
Patricia
L.
(Mrs.
Whittaker
Robert
(Mrs.
Bobby
1963—D. Knight)
1923 Carol Hattenstein
(Mrs. Albert James)
1927 Hannah Barry
1953 Robert J, Dowd
Wayne T. Maressey
1963 Bruce D. Reffeor
1964 Donna Brown
(Mrs. David
1970—
A. Davis)
1965 David A. Davis
1969 Kathleen Hanzlik Finkbeiner
—
—
1968— Carol
J. Erb
Donna Kennedy
1969
(Mrs.
John
Carney)
Betty
J.
Edward
1967
1961—
1969—
1967
Weiss
T.
— Emmajane
Andrews
Pellen
(Mrs.
Frank Bentley)
—Vincent H. Doyle
— Dennis E. Rosini
1959
1965
1969— Geraldine Byrnes
1969 Kathy Jarrarl (Mrs. Richard
Osberg)
Mrs. Edith Whitesell Yoke
Robert F. Deitrlck
1962 Dorothk Dildine (Mrs. William
—
Landis)
—
1963 Sylvia M. Mattis
1965 Dennis E. Rosini
1970 P. Peter Henzlick
1965 James A. Slymansky
i960 Adabelle Shellenberger
—
—
—
THIRTEENTH YEAR
FOR ARA
ARA
School and College Services
is
13th year of dining service to
the students, faculty
and
college
community at Bloomsburg State College.
After serving in the old College
Commons for 12 years,
moved
into the new Scranton Commons in
March of 1970. At the present time
approximately 4.750 meals are served to college students each day. In
addition to this,
provides dining service for many special events
throughout the year some of which
include up to 1 000 persons. Special
dinners are also provided for the
students throughout the college year
in
its
ARA
ARA
for such events as Circus Night, St.
Louis Night, Dixie Land Night, Italian
Night, Western Barbecue Night, plus
coffee breaks during exam periods.
The School and College Service Division currently provides dining services for over 300 schools throughout
the United States.
Page eleven
NEW ADDRESSES
—Beulah Beltz Hewett, R.
Box 36, Catawissa, Pa. 17820
1959 — Barbara Yeager Jones, R.
1940
2,
2,
Box
148,
and Reformed Church,
Matthew Lutheran Church.
Evangelical
seriously
D.
St.
are welcome to apply.
D.
GERMAN
Catawissa, Pa. 17820
CHAPLAIN APPOINTED
Protestant
called by selven Ideal
churches and the Central Pennsylvania Synod of the Lutheran Church in
America to be the first protestant
chaplain of the Bloomsburg State College.
The local churches who have worked
over the past two years in bringing
First Presbyterthis to fruition are:
Paul’s Episcopal
ian Church,
St.
Church, First Baptist Church, Wesley
United Methodist Church, Good Shepherd United Methodist Church, Trinity
join
the truly
excellent
to
in
language
So are adults
the
widen their cultural and
human
IN AUSTRIA
Teachers of German, graduate and
undergraduate students are invited
to
The Rev. Jay Rochelle has been
who wish
interested
German
language program at Graz,
Austria which operates with Dr. Hans
K. Gunther of the BSC faculty as its
Resident Director.
The beginning,
intermediate and advanced courses,
together with co-curricular activities, provide total and intensive exposure to undiluted German in the
native environment of the
second
largest city in Austria in the picturTransfer credits
esque Steiermark.
are granted by BSC to those who pass
the examinations and earn a certificate or diploma. High school seniors
horizons by learning another
language or improving their competence. The seven-week program costs
$690. For full details, booklet and application forms, contact Dr. Hans K.
Gunther, Box
165,
BSC.
Alumni are urged to inform the
Alumni Office when they change
address.
Mail that is returned costs ten cents per piece.
The last bill for returns was $50,
their
which means that 500 pieces
mail were
returned.
This
money going
down
of
is
drain.
Please help us to save money, so
that it can be
used for more
the
worthy purposes.
ALUMNI DAY
Saturday, April 24, 1971
Page twelve
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
ALUMNI DAY
SATURDAY, APRIL
The Alumni Day Week-end
will
be
complete program of
activities:
We
hope
with
filled
not have complete information at this time.
that
24, 1971
activities, of
which we do
The Alumni Letter will give the
many Alumni will take advantage
of them.
Alumni graduating before 1921 are invited
to
be the guest
of the
Alumni
dinner honoring the class of 1921, the fifty-year class. Those
It is very imporbringing guests are requested to pay for the guest’s dinner
Association at the
tant that
should
even one attending the 50-vear dinner and the Alumni Luncheon
reservations by April 15, in order that necessary arrangements may
make
be made.
In previous years, the presentation of an
the bearer to the
of
budget
Alumni Luncheon.
limitations, the College is
Alumni dues card has admitted
The College has paid
unable
to
pay the
the
bill
bill.
Because
this year.
This
be asked to pay for their luncheon. We are hoping that
a different arrangement may be made next year. This may be possible, if the
Association votes to raise the dues to five dollars.
We have noted that at
practically all the Colleges of which we have information, the Alumni pay
for the Alumni Luncheon.
year
all
Alumni
will
There have been many changes on the Campus.
see what has been o
going
O on.
We
hope that you
will
come back and
We
shall
be expecting you on Alumni Day!
President,
Alumni Association
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE
BLOOMSBURG, PA. 17815
Non-Profit
U. S.
Org.
POSTAGE
PAID
Address Correction Requested
1.6c
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Permit No. 10
Loyalty Fund Fifth Year
OCTOBER
Year
Amt.
No.
Ex. faculty
1901
1
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1923
1924
1925
1927
1
1
1
1
5
2
3
1
6
2
3
2
1
2
3
3
2
1
3
100.00
10.00
2.00
10.00
10.00
37.00
28.00
11.00
50.00
15.00
30.00
40.00
13.00
1.00
9.00
25.00
17.00
15.00
10.00
13.00
1,
1970, to
Year
1928
1929
No.
7
5
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
1948
1949
JANUARY
Amt.
1
73.00
225.00
10.00
50.00
18.00
2.50
20.00
50.00
35.00
12.00
25.00
25.00
50.00
20.00
15.00
1
1.00
1
5.00
5.00
15.00
30.00
1
1
3
1
2
1
3
2
3
1
6
3
1
2
2
6,
1971
Year
1950
No.
5
3
1951
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1988
1969
1970
1
1
1
3
1
4
4
3
4
1
7
6
10
9
10
11
19
12
TO BE DETACHED, FILLED OUT, AND RETURNED
Signature
Name
while in college
Address
(street)
Zip Code
(town)
if
t
above address
is
new, check here
Q
Amount
ear of graduation
Mail checks to Alumni Office, Box 31, B.S.C.
To
insure tax deductions,
B. S. C.
make checks payable
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
to
Amt.
22.00
20.00
25.00
5.00
5.00
20.00
30.00
40.00
18.00
19.00
22.00
3.00
39.00
42.00
39.00
89.00
51.00
44.00
134.00
47.00
nKF
*v
DISTINGUISHED SERVICE
AWARD
—
Miss
Julia
Gregg Brill and her brother. Col. Clinton B. F. Brill,
were recipients of the Distinguished Service Award given
by the Bloomsburg State College Alumni Association
and presented at the annual luncheon by Dr. Kimber
Kuster (right).
THE PRESIDENT’S PAGE
academic year, and once again we can
academic and administrative issues
No one at the college enjoys having
that, critical or not, seemed so at the time.
Yet in a world dominated
internal matters made the subject of public media.
by the rapidity of communication, such is virtually inevitable.
In spite of difficulties in some areas, we have had a good year. The Senate
for the first time convened and brought together faculty, students, and admin
istrators to share a role in the governing process^. Initially, it reviewed the
myriad details and concerns that make up an academic community; it recommended policies from “moonlighting' to plagiarism; it established standing committees to assure orderly procedures for future operation.
Just this month we received notice of approval for our program leading to
the M.S. in Biology.
We have continued to review our curricular patterns,
broaden general education requirements, and consider each of our course offerings.
We shall continue for some time with this phase of our operation, establishing objectives, working to improve classroom teaching, keeping offering.;
current and meaningful, and carefully selecting those areas through which we
might fulfill our responsibilities. We initiated, too, a program of Continuing
Education, and though modest at present, it should become of increasing concern
through the years ahead.
Perhaps the best way to assess the end of an academic year is to ask our-
Once again we reach
the
end
of the
with some degree of calm review a
series of
number of questions. The following are some that many of us throughout the profession are struggling with.
How can we make intelligible to young people today the unbelievable anti
What methods can yet be
still rapidly increasing sum of human knowledge?
devised for organizing, storing, and transmitting human knowledge? When a
scientist, of the stature of Costeau estimates that our oceans face possible extinction with fifty years, and with them, the ability of man to survive, what steps
cowards correction of the causes must we take, and what part must the colleges
and universities play in determining and executing those steps? These and
other questions in all probability lead to the basic question: What kind of education do we need for the balance of the seventies and on into the eighties, and
how do we achieve it?
Partial answers are already apparent.
will utilize more and more work
and study sequences, with less emphasis upon continuity of the program in highwill rely upon short term and evening courses, grant credit
er education.
for apprenticeship programs, use TV and other media.
will also be concerned with “second career preparation as vocations will continue to change, new
ones appear and old ones disappear. As for our survival, other segments of our
society working together will be able to meet the challenge.
And while we are concerned for survival, let us not forget that we must
retain our concern for values.
We must understand the continuity of life, and
therefore our touch wdth the past; we must remember history as group memory,
and philosophy as the art and science of reflection and of probing into the unknown.
must continue our studies of the works of man, and our concern
for man as man; we must not lose sight of the role of imagination so that, as
Sir Philip Sidney wrote, we can explore not only what has been, what is, and
what will be, but also what might have been, what should be, and what could be.
Certainly I want to offer my thanks to Mr. Howard Fenstemaker for his
many years of fine service to the Association and most particularly to the
Quarterly.
I
owe many thanks, too, to numerous oJ»ers who are working to
make this college a more effective institution, more capable of fulfilling its educational objectives, and more definite in what those objectives are and should beselves a
We
We
We
We
ROBERT NOSSEN
President
DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AWARDS
TWO BSC ALUMNI
GIVEN
A brother and sister received the
Distinguished Service Awards oi the
Bloomsburg State College's Alumni
Association at the association’s annual
meeting at the college on Saturady.
The recipients, the son and daughter
a former member oi the faculty,
were honored during the association's
business meeting in Scranton Com-
oi
mons
in the afternoon.
Col. Clinton B. F
Brill, class of 1912, nationally prominent architect and engineer, and his
sister. Miss Julia Gregg Brill, class oi
Honored were
ementa of English
prolessor
composition, Pennsylvania State Uni191U,
versity.
Prof. William Brill,
the department oi hiscivics at Bloomsburg State
Then father,
became head of
tory and
Normal School
in 1911,
and served
the capacity until within a
death on June
8,
week
in
of his
1925.
The presentations of their awards
was the climax of the Saturday afternoon association gathering.
All officers of the association were
Howard F.
re-elected as follows:
Fenstemaker, Bioomsburg, president;
Millard Ludwig, Millville, vice president; Col. Elwood Wagner, State Coland Earl Gehrig.
lege, secretary;
Bioomsburg, treasurer. The reorganization followed at a directors meeting,
a sequel to the association gathering.
Mr. Fenstemaker extended greetings and the invocation was offered
by Fred W. Diehl, Danville.
William H. Cluley, president of the
1971 graduating class, presented a
check to the alumni association and a*,
the same time issued a challenge to
the older alumni to “’try to understand” the involvement of students today and their concern ’’not only on the
campus but in the community.”
He cited student work in the fields of
pollution, special education, and efforts to "get down in the classroom”
and “help with the problem.”
Cluley advised, “Don’t accept any
person not willing to sit down and talk
over the confrontation of the prob-
lem.”
The Class of 1971’s check was for
more than required for association membership. This fact and the
$800,
fact that the class has also made a
contribution to the Bloomsburg Hospital was lauded by Dr. Robert J.
Nossen, president of the college, during his remarks later. He cited the
contributions as an indication of the
class’s civic-mindedness.
Dr. Kimber Kuster, chairman of the
association’s DSA committee, replied
briefly to Cluley, observing that his
generation was of the“same clay” as
others and that there was really not
much difference in the two age groups.
Dr. Kuster pointed out there had al-
ways been some problem
JUNE,
1971
of
commun-
oline
quartermaster and engineer sup-
He
plies.
During the height of his career, Colonel Brill held licenses in eight states
as a registered professional engineer,
was licensed to practice architecture
in five states, and held both architect’s and engineer’s licenses in New
New
Yerk,
technical
She continued her education
earn a Bachelor of Arts degree in
classical languages in 1921 from The
Pennsylvania State University, and
a Master of Arts degree in Euglish
School.
to
moral and ethical values. He said
the college “would not be a part of the
.”
’rushing away’ from those values.
just for the sake of “rushing.”
The college wrill not oppose change
.
will
the
seek it, he said, but it would
with the development of
man
a dignified being in
scheme
—
of things.”
Dr. Kuster presented the two recipients for the DSA’s and each spoke of
the other’s accomplishments.
Colonel Brill, a well know’n authority on turnpikes, thru- ways, highways,
bridges, and urban materials serves
as a consultant for state, national,
organizations
professional
and
He attended
throughout the world.
the Bloomsburg State Normal School,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
and Trinity College; at the latter he
holds a Bachelor of Science degree.
A member
of
numerous engineering
firms, he has long been engaged in the
practice of archotecture and engineering. In 1971, he assumed the presiden-
cy of Brill Engineering Corporation of
New York City. The previous year he
was chairman of the New York State
Thruway Authority and directed a
variety of engineering projects, particularly express highways in conjunction with the New Jersey, Ohio, Indi-
ana, and Massachusetts Turnpikes;
The Garden State, Sunshine State, and
Taconic Parkways; and the New York
State Thru way.
In past associations with other consultants as well as his own, Colonel
Brill has participated in such well
known projeats as Miami (Fla.)
- South Expressway, Columbus
Ohio) Outerbelt, remodeling of New
York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art,
original runway and terminal design
for New York International Airport,
and construction of all permaneni
buildings for the New York World’s
Fair in 1939.
As a Public Works
Administration Engineer from 1934 to
1936, he worked on New York’s Triborough Bridge and Lincoln Tunnel.
With the U.S. Army Engineers in
the European Theatre in World War
II, Colonel Brill was in charge of all
general construction, including depots
for ammunition and explosives, gas-
North
i
and professional organiza-
tions related to his profession.
Miss Julia Gregg Brill attended Sunbury High School prior to her enrollment at Bloomsburg State Normal
“Relevancy” today.
Dr. Nossen said
considered the “greatest
relevancy to be in the integrity of the
learning process” and that included
Jersey and Massachusetts.
affiliated with numerous
He has been
the college
continue
“man as
strips,
evacuation,
surgical
front-line
stations.
ication between the young and the old.
In his remarks. Dr. Nossen made
special mention of the approaching
retirement of Dean of Women Ella
Mae Jackson, and the retirement of
Howard Fenstemaker as editor of the
Alumni Quarterly after forty-five
years as its editor.
He told the former students of some
of the activities on the campus and
noted that great stress was placed on
and
also supervised building of
forward landing
and
hospitals,
and American Liteerature from the
same
institution in 1927.
Before her appointment to the faculty of the University in 1924, she
taught in the public schools of Luzerne
County, at Town Hill and Huntington
Mills. She later taught at Bloomsburg
High School.
As a result
of serving on the faculty at Penn State for thirty years, retiring in 1954, and her continued interest in that institution, she was named
Penn State
of theYear in 1958.
During those 30 years, she was
friend and counselor to hundreds of
Woman
students, serving as vocational counselor of women students in the College
of the Liberal Arts, and assisting
many undergraduates in extra-curricular activities.
She also was adviser to and continues as an active
alumna of her sorority. Alpha Chi
Omega. Her interest is Phi Kappa
Phi, scholastic honor society,
has
been constant.
When
ciaion
was
the Penn State Alumni Assowas reorganized \n 1930, she
named
to
its
first
executive
She served for 20 years on
the Board, then retired briefly, and
again served on the Board. She has
been vice president of the Association and president of the Penn State
Alumnae Club of Centre County and
has served as a member of the Board
of Directors of the Penn State Founboard.
dation.
At the general session, the report
Boyd H. Buckingham, of the nominating committee,
was accepted,
electing to the board of
directors:
Miss Elizabeth Hubler, class of ’31;
Mrs. Jean Foster, class of ’66; Frank
Galinski, class of ’52; Charlotte McKenchnie, class of ’35 and Mrs. Verna
of
Jones, class of
’36.
ALUMNI DAY
Many “Old Grads” of Bloomsburg
came back as Alumni
State College
Weekend
activities
got
underway
Friday, April 23. at the “Friendly
College on the Hill.”
The Alumni Association played hosi
Friday evening to the Class of 1921,
Page one
the Fiftieth Reunion Class.
In addition, the classes of 1906, 1911,
and 1916 were guests of the association
at a dinner in Scranton Commons, on
Friday evening.
Special class dinners and activities
were held Saturday evening by the
classes of ’36, ’41, ’56, ’61 and’66.
On Saturday morning at nine, an informal session for alumni and faculty
was held in the Waller Hall Lounge
and lobby.
From ten-thirty till noon, members
of the faculty discussed “Fiscal Prob-
lems
Our Commonwealth’’
of
in
a
panel presentation.
At twelve-thirty, luncheon for all
alumni was held in the Commons,
followed by the annual business meetHighlight of the session was the
presentation of two distinguished service awards.
Open house in all residence halls followed from three to five. Social hours
and special dinners, scheduled by the
classes in reunion, began at five.
At nine Saturday night, the Presidents Ball held in two dancing areas in
the Commons. “The Train” furnished
“music” for students and recent grads
in the Blue Room, while a slower
tempo was provided for faculty and
alumni in the Gold Room.
ing.
Mrs. Harry Cole, Bloomsburg, was
chairman of the honored 50-year class
Mrs. Fred W. Diehl, Danville, chairman of the class of 1911, and Mrs.
Russell Burrus, Orangeville R. D. 2,
chairman
of the class of 1911.
Class of
Special events included:
1941, Dr. C. Stuart Edwards, Bloomsburg, R. 4, chairman, diner at Hotel
Magee. Class of 1961, get-together and
dinner at Briar Heights. Class of 1966,
get-together, dinner and dance at
Holiday Inn, Danville.
AWARDS DAY
Dr. Milton M. Klein, Professor of
History, University of Tennessee, delivered the keynote address at the
Annual Awards Day Convocation at
Bloomsburg State College held Sunday, April 25, in Haas Center for the
Arts.
The noted scholar, humanist, administrator, and outstanding class-
room teacher spoke on “A Plea
for
Welcoming remarks
honored
and August graduto the
1971 January, May
ates and their parents
were given by John
S.
and friends
Mulka, Direct-
or of Student Activities.
thirty-two
recipients of
Who’s
Who
in American Colleges and Universities certificates and the twenty-one
recipients of Service
Keys were
ac-
knowledged by Elton Hunsinger, Associate Vice President for Student Affairs.
Lifetime Athletic Passes were presented by Russell Houk, Director of
Fifteen special scholarAthletics.
ships were awarded to underclassmen
by Robert Duncan, Director of FinanForty-six students were recial Aid.
cognized for their academic achievements by Dr. John A. Hoch, vice
Page two
former
member
of
the
Board
of
Trustees and Dean Jackson, Dean of
Women, who
retired at the end of the
current college year. Dr. Robert J.
Nossen, President, delivered the congratulatory remarks, and following
Dr. Klein’s address, Kappa Kappa
Psi fraternity gave a musical presentService Keys are given for “outstanding service to 10 per cent or
less of the senior class who accumulate a minimum of 20 points for participation in various activities during
their four years of college.” This is
the highest award given by the college
community.
Those receiving
this award were:
Beverly Boston, Warminister; Beverly
Conchez, Bethlehem; Penny Faux,
Bloomsburg; Donna Harper, Troy;
Gayle Thorpe, Scranton; James Berkheiser, Berwick; William Cluley, Upper Darby; Anita DeLance, Shenandoah; Susan Dieffenderfer, Nisbet;
Thomas Funk, Bloomsburg; Mlike
Hock, Bdoomsburg; Bob Medford,
F'eacoqk,
Anne
Northumberland;
Drexel Hill; Michael Pillagalli, West
Chester; Patricia Quinn, Millersville
Amy Raber, Elysburg; James Reese,
Frackville; Doris Remsen, Roselle,
New Jersey; Joe Roinick, Hazleton:
Susan VanRiper, Scotch Plains. New
Jersey; Samuel Zachary, Shavertown.
Lifetime Athletic Passes are given
to senior athletes who have participated in varsity sports for four years.
Those to receive these passes were:
Arnold
E.
ing and mailing the Alumni Quarterly.
The publication and mailing costs will
be paid by The Bloomsburg Foundation.
3. The College, Alumni Associationand the Foundation will continue to
work together on programs of mutual
concern Homecoming, Alumni Day.
i
Special Events).
4. The Alumni Association should
continue those programs which they
have performed in the past.
5.
ation.
Thompson,
Washington,
New
Jersey; Mark Angelo Sacco,
West Hazleton; Joseph Accardi, Bristol; Lee Barthold, Bethlehem; Joseph
Bottligilieri, Easton; Richard Brand,
Pennsburg; James Cavallero, Metuchen, New Jersey; John Davis, NazarWilliam
Firestine,
Athens;
eth;
Thomas Fleeger, Turbotville; Richard
Geise,
Danville;
Charles
Hess,
Bloomsburg; Hugh Jones, Nazareth;
David Kelter, Swarthmore; Michael
Kolojejchick, Swoyei'sville; John Masters, Phoenix ville
Dennis Mummey,
Weston; William Nagly, Dimellen.
New Jersey; Paul Pelletier, Menlo
;
New
Park,
Talent.”
The
President and Dean of the Faculties.
William A. Lank, President, Board
of Trustes, presented certificates of
appreciation to Howard S. Fernsler,
Jersey;
James
Platukis.
West Hazleton; John Reeve, Philadel-
The appointment
of
Mr. James
H. Neiswender as Executive Director
This
Alumni Association.
of the
would result in the Alumni Associasomeone on campus
tion’s having
daily who would be able to greet visiting graduates and answer any questions they might have about the Colimportant
vitally
It
is
lege.
that the Association have an office
which is open and accessible on a fulltime basis.
EXTEND GREETINGS
The following was received from
Mr. James B. Watts, Director
of Lib-
rary Services at BSC:
The Alumni Association
Bloomsburg State College
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Dear friends,
The staff of Andruss Library joins
me in extending greetings and best
wishes to the Alumni.
Students and faculty alike are deeply grateful for the abundant support
of help the Library receives from the
generosity
Alumni, through
whose
many phases of library services have
and
enriched,
broadened,
been
Among these have
strengthened.
been in recent years such outstanding gifts as:
A handsome Recordak
Microfilm
presented by the Class of
1917 in honor of the Golden Anniversary of their graduation. Mr. Allen
L. Cromis was in charge of arrangements.
Ten tape-players and 50 Cassette
Associathe
tapes, provided from
Library
Fund
tion’s Fenstemaker
The Cassette
(total cost $796.75).
format is a recent innovation in recording technology, one that is incredi-
Reader,
bly
compact and
self-contained.
The
50 tapes cover a wide range of topin
ics that should be a great help
The Bloomsburg
tation of funds for both organizations.
will
Foundation
through
alive”
“bringing history
sound. Plans are in progress for the
eventually
scores,
acquisition of
hundreds, of Cassette tapes devoted to
music.
An extremely important survey entitled “Three Centuries of Drama”
has been acquired on microfilm (5,the
451 units in 26 boxes) through
Class of 1961’s gift of $1,200.00 for
The
microforms for the Library.
scope of the material ranges from
1515 to 1800 A.D. for English drama
and from 1714 to 1830 A.D. for Amer-
guarantee the annual operating budget
ican drama.
phia; Steve Ryznar, Pottstown.
PROPOSAL ADOPTED BY
ALUMNI BOARD
PROPOSAL ADOPTED BY
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION BOARD OF
DIRECTORS
On SATURDAY, APRIL
24,
1971
The Bloomsburg Foundation will
assume the responsibility of solici1.
Alumni Association.
The Office of Development and
of the
2.
External Relations of the College will
assume the
responsibility of publish-
From time to time, gifts are received from individual Alumni. One of
the largest in recent years was the
Miss
late
personal library of the
TIIE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Mary
Jones
Elliott
(Class
of
1927),
memory
by her sisters Miss Martha Y. Jones (Class of
1922), Miss Margaret J. Jones (Class
of 1924) and Mrs. Dorothy K. (Jones'
given in loving
Chase (Class of 1931). The sisters
parents were John T. and Mary Elliott (Taylor) Jones, both alumni of
The 265-volume gift, chiefly
BSC.
professional works in Education, will
the
tangible evidence of
meaningful continuity of the educa-
as
serve
from one generation
tional process
the
to
next.
Again,
we
Director of Library Services
1900—
hi Mrmnrtmn
Home.
Hayman,
Lutheran
Phila., Pa.
Louise Buck Lewis,
Hawley,
Pa.
1902—Jennie E. Williams (Mrs. Wil1908—
Cook), Mechanicsburg. Pa.
liam
1904— Mrs. Margaret Brogan. Shenandoah, Pa.
1906 Lillie Hartman (Mrs. T. J. Irish), Camden. N. J.
1907 Lillian Wendt (Mrs. George H.
Webber), Milledgeville, Georgia
Alberta Handley (Mrs. John
McGowen), Pittsford. N. Y.
1908— Joanna Beddall Watkins, Ventura, Calif.
1917 Elva
cott,
Brobst
Ramage,
Pres-
Grace Mae Henwood. MethoHome, Tunkhannock, Pa.
—
1921 Mrs. Elizabeth Fetherolf
Fister, Ringtown, Pa.
1926 Loretta Maher, Plymouth, Pa.
1926— Florence E. Ness, Peckville,
—
Pa.
—
1926 Olive Henrietta Watts, Millersburg, Pa.
1946 James E. Foley, Willoughby,
—
Ohio
— Robert
E. Hale
Gannon, Pittston, Pa.
1916 Margaret E. Rutherford (Mrs.
Herbert Dygert), Medina, N. Y.
1926—Sister M. Wm. Carroll
1953
1901
Lizzie
—
— Mae Hilda Feissner
1926—Anna E. Lenahan
1900— Edna Boutz Hassler,
1926
Allen-
town, Pa.
Olive
Beeman
Mrs. Olive E. Beeman, eighty-one,
South Hadley, Mass., widow of Charles
R Beeman, died Friday, Fedruary 19.
at
Holyoke Hospital.
Born
in Hindsale, HI., she was a
graduate of the University of Chicago
and teacher in Chicago schools for
many years. She was later a member
of the faculty of Blomsburg State College. In 1961 she went to Mount Holyoke where she was an assistant in the
zoology department. She also assisted
in the college library.
JUNE,
1971
with
community
was
and
affairs.
Anna Susan Magill ’07
Mrs. Anna Susan Magill, Blomsburg
R.D. 3 (Rock Glen) died Saturday,
March 27, in the Davis Nursing Home,
Mountain Top. after an extended illEducated in the Black Creek township schools and the Bloomsburg Normal School, she taught in the Gowan,
Weston, Sugarloaf, Sybertsville and
Rock Glen schools. She substituted up
until a few years ago in the Rock
Glen school.
Mrs. Magill was instrumental in the
establishment of the Black Creek
township PTA and served as its first
president. She was also instrumental
in the establishment of the PTA Council of the Greater Hazelton Area serving also as its president.
A lifetime member of the Black
Creek United Methodist church, sho
served as a Sunday school teacher for
over
fifty
years.
E. Louise Jolly ’07
Louise Jolly, Paradise, California, died August 9, 1970. Miss Jolly
retired from teaching in 1952. After
graduation from the Blommsburg
State Normal School, she went to
New Jersey to become a first grade
E.
teacher.
She went
to
California
and taught in Alomda until her
retirement. She received her Bachelor’s .and Master’s degrees from the
University of California at Berkley. In
1936 she was the honored guest of the
Japanese government, one
of
fifteen
U.S. teachers selected to visit Japan,
Korea, and Manchuria. She served as
President of the California Retired
Teachers Association from 1961 to
Anna Louise Slocum Williams
’08
Anna Louise
(Slocum) Williams, 82. of 1024 South Main Street,
Taylor, died Sunday, January 17, in
the Gilbert Nursing Home, Gilbert.
She was a member of the Stewart
Memorial Methodist Church, Old
Forge, and of the Women’s Society of
Christian Service, of that church and
of the
He was a graduate of
University.
The Alumni
Office received a copy of resolutions
adopted by the faculty of Seton Hall
College, in which they paid tribute to
his forty-six years of service as a
member of the faculty.
ember,
Notre
1970.
Dame
Florence
Miss Florence
S.
S.
Houck
’13
Houck, Numidia,
died in the Char-Mund Nursing Home
Saturday, January 30.
Born in Roaringcreek township, she
was a member of the United Church
of Christ, Mill Grove.
She taught in Roaringcreek township high school in 1914, and then
taught in South Forks until retiring in
1961.
Anna N. Yost ’16
Mrs. Anna N. Yost, seventy-five, of
Forks. Orangeville R.D. 2, died Tuesday, January 19.
She was a member of the Zion United Church of Christ, Forks, and the
Women’s Guild of the church. She had
served as church secretary for more
than thirty-three years and as pianist
for thirty years.
She was a member of the ladies
auxiliary of the Fort Ricketts Post 817
VFW, Benton, and of the 56th Pioneer
Veterans of World War I. She was
active in Democratic politics and had
served as a committee woman in Fishingcreek Township for thirty years,
and had also served on the Columbia
County Democratic Executive Committee.
Cora G. Hill ’16
Miss Cora Gertrude Hill. Williamsport, Pa., died March 11, 1970.
Miss
Hill taught until her retirement in
1956. She w as a member of CovenantCentral Presbyterian Church in Williamsport and a member of the national, state, and local teacher’s associr
ations.
Phoebe Pennington Appleman,
1962.
Mrs.
College, Greensburg, Pa., died in Nov-
in
1919
Arizona
1918
dist
affection by all his patients. He
closely affiliated with his church
ness.
are beholden.
Very sincerely yours,
James B. Watts
1890— Eleanor
Dr. Charles L. Maurer ’05
Dr. Charles L. Maurer, Hagerstown,
Maryland, died October 7, 1970. He
had practiced medicine in Hagerstown
for fifty years, and was held in deep
Lackawanna
Historical Society.
Ralph I. Wertman, Sr. ’10
Ralph I. Wertman Sr., of Quakake,
died on Tuesday, January 26, in the
Hazelton State General Hospital.
He taught school for some time in
Rush Township and furthered his education at Pennsylvania State College
where he earned a degree in Agriculture. He was self employed as a
farmer, and was a member of Ascension Lutheran Church, Quakake.
Daniel Joseph Carr ’ll
Daniel Joseph Carr, Chairman of the
Department of Chemistry at Seton Hall
’16
school teacher, died Saturday, Februburg, Orangeville R.D. 1, a retired
school teacher, died Saturday, February 20, at the Hampel Nursing Home
Nescopeck. She had been a guest at
the nursing home the past three and a
half months.
She taught in the Fishingcreek
township
schools
for
twenty-four
years, and then in the Huntington
Mills elementary school from 1941 to
1961. She was principal at the time of
her retirement.
Anna Isaacs Gay
’17
Mrs. Anna Isaacs Gay, a resident of
Albuquerque. N.M., 40 years, died
February 4 in Presbyterian Hospital.
Mrs. Gay was born in Forty Fort.
She was a graduate of the University
of New Mexico and taught school in
Albuquerque 32 years until her retirement. She was a member of the Forst
United Methodist Church.
J.
J. Claire Patterson ’18
Claire Patterson, seventy-three.
Page three
315
West
Street,
Bloomsburg, retired
superintendent of Bloomsburg Area
School District, died at Bloomsburg
Hospital Sunday, March 28, shortly
after being admitted as a patient.
He was a lifelong resident of Columbia County and one of the area’s best
known educators. He retired as superintendent of the Bloomsburg Area
School District in 1962 after forty
years of service to education.
During his long career he had been
on the faculty of the Bloomsburg system for 28 years, twenty as principal
Bloomsburg Junior-Senior High
of
School and six as superintendent. Following his retirement, he was parttime instructor at Bloomsburg State
College and an advisor to Bloomsburg
Area School District for a number of
years.
A native of Orangeville, he was a
graduate of the schools there, the
Bloomsburg State College,
in 1918,
and
Bucknell University in 1934 where he
received his Bachelor’s Degree. He
received his Master’s Degree from the
latter institution a short time later.
He began his teaching career in Canby High School, in Mount Pleasant
Township, in 1918, shortly after his
discharge from military service during
World War I.
For a time he was in the State Department of Agriculture, Harrisburg,
and then resumed teaching with the
position
supervising
principal in
Salem Township. From there he went
to Mifflin Township where he was a
member of the faculty and coach of
all sports during a seven-year tenure
of
A member
of
Bloomsburg Kiwanis
was a past secretary, past
and past exalted ruler of
Berwick Lodge of Elks.
For a substantial time, he was a
Club, he
president
member
of the
board of directors
of
Bloomsburg Hospital, being president
board for several years.
of the First Prsebyterian
Church, he served three terms as
elder and as clerk of sessions.
For
years he was active in Masonry and a
member of Oriental Lodge, 460, Orangeville; the
Scottish
and York
Rite Bodies and Oriental Conclave,
Red Cross of Constantine, Bloomsburg,
and Irem Temple, Shrine,
of the
A member
Wilkes-Barre.
He was
also a member of Pennsylvania State Education and National
Education Associations; Susquehanna
Valley Superintendent’s Association
Retired Teachers Association, and
other groups.
Cloe r a VV. Frit*
’20
Mrs. Cleora W. Peggy Fritz, seventhree, Benton R.D. 2, died at the Geisinger Medical Center Tuesday, February 23.
She was born in Sugarloaf township.
She taught school in Beaver township school and also at the Fritz Hill
school, Sugarloaf township.
She was a member of the Brandon
United Methodist Church and the
WSCS of the church. She was a member of the Grassmere Garden Club.
Page four
Geraldine Garrison Petyjohn ’28
Roy (Geraldine) Petyjohn died
Saturday, March 6, at Milford, Delaware, Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Pettyjohn was recognized as
an outstanding teacher in the Milford
schools where she had taught for the
past 41 years. She had spent her entire teaching career in those schools
having left Berwick in 1929 to take a
She was a
teaching position there.
graduate of Berwick High School.
Mi's. Pettyjohn was a member of
numerous educational organizations
Mi’s.
including the Delaware State Educa-
She was also
an active member of the Milford Calvary United Methodist Church.
tional Association.
Miriam R. Lawson
’29
Miss Miriam R. Lawson, Bloomsburg, died Sunday, April 3, at the
Bloomsburg Hospital. She had been
in ill health for the past three months
and hospitalized for the past 12 weeks.
She received her Masters degree at
Columbia University. She was a school
teacher for forty-four and one half
years and taught in the Bloomsburg
school system since 1922.
She was a member of St. Matthew
Lutheran Church, Bloomsburg, the
church council, a Sunday School teacher for 45 years, Lutheran church
women, American Association of University Women, and numerous education organizations.
She was also a
member
of the retired teachers association. She was a board member and
in
charge of memberships of the
Bloomsburg Civic Music Association.
Clifford A. Nelson ’34
Clifford A. Nelson, coordinator of
religious affairs at Penn State since
1963,
died
unexpectedly
Thursday,
March 18, at his office at the Helen
Eaken Eisenhower Chapel. He served
also as associate professor of accounting at the university, joining the faculty in 1945 and in 1961 he became
assistant coordinator of religious af-
He had served in 1959-60 as
interim director of the B’nai B’rith
fairs.
Hillel Foundation and also had been
active at the university at that time as
chairman of the Committee on Inter-
religious affairs. He received his master of science degree from Bucknell
University. Prior to joining the Penn
State faculty, he had been head of the
business department of Mt. Carmel
high school.
Beulah Fairchild
Mann
’36
Mrs. Beulah Fairchild Mann, 62,
former teacher in the Nescopeck
schools and resident of Montgomery
Street, Nescopeck, for many years,
died Thursday, March 25, in
North
Brunswick, N.J. Death followed an
extended illness.
Mrs. Mann, who had also resided in
Wanamie earlier in her life, was a
member of North Brunswick, U.M.
Church.
Russell E. Hcnne ’70
Russell E. Henne, who was born in
Reading, died in March
Lynwood,
Hospital,
in St. Francis
Calif.
He was a
teacher in the Stanford Avenue Elementary School, South Gate, Calif.,
since last September.
He was active as a member of
Bloomsburg Players, the Maroon and
Gold Marching Band, the glee club,
the Maroon and Gold Concert Band,
and the Huskie Club during his student
days.
Ray D. Leidich
’16
Ray D.
Leidich, Tremont, died Saturday, April 17, following a heart attack. After his graduation from the
Bloomsburg State Normal School, he
was a teacher in the Tremont Elementary Schools for one year, and was
basketball coach at Tremont High
School from 1944 to 1946.
A
in
veteran of World War I, he served
France with the Ambulance Corps,
Company
111,
28th
Division,
U.
S.
Army. He was a Post Commander, a
member and a life member of
Brennan Keip Post No. 384, Tremont
American Legion, and a member of
World War Veterans Barracks, Pine
charter
—
Grove.
A fifty-year Mason, he was a member of Swatara Lodge, F. & A. M. Tremont, and a member of Tremont Fire
Company No. 1.
For many years, he was actively engaged in Republican politics of Schuylkill County, was a member of the
Pennsylvania House of Representatives for two terms, was Schuylkill
County Controller from 1932 to 1936,
and then held the office of Chief Clerk
in the County Registration Bureau.
He was one of the outstanding athletes at Bloomsburg during the years
when he was a student.
Dorothy Lynch Litwhiler
Mrs. Daniel Litwhiler, East Lansing.
Mich., former BSC student and wife of
the former major league baseball
player, passed away Saturday, March
in Jackson Memorial Hospital,
27,
Miami, Fla.
Mrs. Litwhiler was in Florida with
her husband, now head baseball coach
at Michigan State University, on a
spring training trip. She and her husband, were natives of Ringtown,
Litwhiler, whose
county.
pro baseball career included playing
with the Philadelphia Phillies, Boston
Braves and Cincinnati Reds, later
basecoached Florida high school
ball teams that won national recognition before moving on to Michigan
State. He was an outstanding athlete
Schuylkill
in his undergraduate days at Bloomsburg State College.
Margaret Byerly Morrison ’12
well-known and prominent citizen
B.
T.
of Danville, Mrs. Margaret
Morrison, 79, of 214 Walnut Street,
Danville, died suddenly at the Mansion
A
Convalescent Home, Sunbury.
She was a graduate of Danville High
School and Bloomsburg State Teachers College.
She also did graduate
work
at
Susquehanna University.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR
F.
II.
’12
Fenstemaker
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
’34
Grace Foote Conner,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Terms
242 Central
Terms Expire
’34
1974
Mrs. Verna Jones ’36
111 Plant Avenue
Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087
102 West Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Bloomsburg. Pennsylvania 17815
Term
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
expire 1972
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
Road
—
expires 1972
Dr. Kimber C. Kuster T3
VICE PRESIDENT
Millard Ludwig
Main
625 East
140 West Eleventh Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
’48
Street
John Thomas ’47
68 Fourth Street
Pennsylvania 17846
Term Expires 1972
Millville,
Hamburg, Pennsylvania
SECRETARY
Elwood M. Wagner
Col.
Clayton H. Hinkel
’43
Terms
expires 1973
Colonial
Earl A. Gehrig ’37
110 Robin Lane, Sherwood Village
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
expires 1973
R. D.
1,
Farm Box
Glen
Mills,
1903
dale,
H.
Walter
Ave.,
Soars-
Representative:
11
Warwick
N. Y. 10583
Class
Representative:
Vera
Market
Mrs.
503
Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1906
Laura Aurand (Mrs. Martin W. Witmer) 178 Main Street, Trappe, Collegeville, Pa. 19426, has been spending
some time with her daughter, a member of the faculty of Central Connecticut State College,
son-in-law
is
Community
Class
JUNE,
New
Britain.
Her
President of Mattabuck
College,
1907
Waterbury.
Representative:
1971
Barton, 353 College
Pa. 17815
Hill,
Edwin
M.
Diehl, 627
17821
Bloom
’29
Apt. 2
Pennsylvania. 17936
Gordon,
Sts.,
Mrs. Jean Zenke Foster
’66
W. Grove St.,
Clarks Summit, Pa. 18411
914
88
Pa. 19342
2,
Francis Galinski
’39
90
Tower
’52
Hill Rd.,
Doylestown, Pa. 18901
June, 1971
Bloomsburg,
Fred
W.
Street, Danville, Pa.
He has served on
skill.
for
1909
Class Representative:
1905
Hemingway Housenick,
Park and Oak
’52
Dr. Alexander J. McKechnie, Jr.
19 N. 24th St.
Camp Hill. Pa. 17011
Volume LXXII, Number
Class
Riland.
Miss Elizabeth H. Hubler
expire 1973
Dr. Frank J. Furgele
TREASURER
Term
19526
’40
224 Leonard Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
643 Wiltshire Road
State College, Pa. 16801
Term
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie ’35
509 East Front Street
Berwick, Pennsylvania 18603
•
thirty
years.
this
Mr. Ikeler
board
is
the
former General Manager of the PeekHe sold his
skill Evening Star.
interest in the paper several years
ago.
1910
Class Representative:
Robert C.
Metz, 23 Manhattan Street, Ashly,
Pa. 18706
1912
Representative:
Howard F.
Fenstemaker, 242 Central
Road,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1911
1913
Class Representative: Mrs. Pearle
Fitch Diehl, 627 Bloom Street, Danville, Pa. 17821
Donald F. Ikeler, 201 Buttonwood
Class Representative: Dr. Kimber
Kuster, 140 West 11th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Avenue, Peekskill, N. Y: 10566, has
been elected Chairman of the Board of
Directors of the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Peek-
Representative:
J. Howard
Deily, 518 West Third Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1914
Class
Page
five
1915
John H. Shuman, 268 East Main Street, BloomsClass Representaive:
bury, Pa. 17815
1916
Class Representative: Mrs. Russell
Burrus (Emma Harrison) R. D. 2,
Orangeville, Pa. 17859
1917
Representative!:
Class
Mahoning
Cromis,
Allen L.
Manor, R. D. 1,
Milton, Pa.
1918
Mrs. J. R.
Class Representative:
Ohl (Edna Davenport), 25 E. 11th St.,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1919
Miss CathClass Representative:
erine A. Reimard, 335 Jefferson St.,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1920
Leroy W.
Old Berwick Road,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Representative:
Class
Creasy,
3117
1921
found their homes in Wyoming Valley.
I have lived a long time and have observed people and I tried to depict the
characters as I found people in this
region,” Mrs. Wilkie explained.
The title “The Three Virgins” is deceptive because the book is not a 1970
sex story, but rather a “journey
through life with a thoroughly Christ-
us that she will have a four-month
furlough in the States, from December 15, 1971 to April 15, 1972. During
that time her address will be 47 Claremont Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10027.
ian attitude.”
Clarence S. Slater, 5100 Atlantic
Avenue, Ventnor City, N.J. 18406,
underwent open heart surgery in
December. He returned to work on
1935
Reed,
1922
Edna S.
Representative:
Class
Harter, R. D. 1, Nescopeck, Pa. 18623
March
1923
Mrs. RayRepresentative:
mond Kashner, 125 Forrest Road,
Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa.
Class
17815
1924
pendent
:
When one reaches
10 years,
three score and
generally assumed that
1925
it is
relaxing, enjoying the little things of
life
that the so-called “productive
years” prevent one from doing.
Known facetiously as the Twilight
Years, the 70’s are associated with
sagacity, experience and indifference.
Such is not the case for Mrs. Kathryn Gronka Wilkie of 2122 East Main
Street, Glen Lyon.
At the age of 70, she has become an
authoress of a 550-page first novel,
“The Three Virgins,” which was released for publication Jan. 15, 1971, by
the Vantage Press Inc., New York
City.
“Besides, I have my 50th reunion
from the Teachers College of Bloomsbury this Spring and I thought it would
be nice to show my classmates that
I had accomplished something during
my life.” Rearing her family and
teaching thousands in the Newport
Schools have been accepted by Mrs.
Wilkie as part of life rather than ac-
complishments.
The novel, parts of which are based
upon historical fact, was written in
long hand at Mrs. Wilkie’s kitchen
table.
It
is
set
in
the
1880’s
when
thousands of European emigrants, of
all nationalities and religions, poured
into this land.
“The characters are a composite of
I have known all of my life,
who came from abroad and
people
people
Page
six
1.
Ernest E. Line’s address is 5250-A
Seattle, Washington
Michael P.
Representative:
Walakonis, Box 222, Ringtown, Pa.
Broadway, APO,
Class
98737
1926
Jean Smith (Mrs. Robert Pritchard)
Parkway, Wor-
Representatives: Marvin M.
Bloss, P. O. Box 505, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815 and Mrs. Allen Earnhart,
307 Berwick St., White Haven, Pa.
lives at 26 North
cester, Mass. 01601
18661
Florida 33134
Class
Francis E. Conner (Mrs. William
Mensinger) lives at 327 East 10th
Street, Berwick, Pa. 18603.
Grace D. Robbins (Mrs. Richard F.
Hunt) lives on 17th Avenue, Wareham,
Mass. 02571
1927
he or she has earned the privilege of
Mrs. Ralph
Medley), 16
Street, Plymouth, Pa. 18651
Class Representative:
G. Davenport (Verna
Ransom
1929
Mrs. (Elsie
Nelson Stauffer, 88 John St
Kingston, Pa. 18704.. (Arline Frantz)
Mrs. James Weriman, 2(0 Parish
Street, Dallas, Pa. 18612
Class Representatives:
Lebo)
,
1930
Class
Representatives: Luther
and Margaret Swartz
W.
Bitler, 117 State
Street, Millville, Pa. 17846
1931
Frank J.
Representative:
Class
Golder, 1113 Market Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1932
Class Representative: Miss Wilhelmina Cerine, 2716 31st Street S.E.,
Washington, D.C. 20020
1933
Representative:
Miss Lois
Street,
Third
Lawson,
644 East
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1934
Class
Representative:
Esther
Evans McFadden (Mrs. Joseph),
East Filth Street,
Bloomsburg,
Street,
at
Evelyn Robbins Sparrow is living at
275 Engle St., Tudor Hall, Apt. S-l,
Englewood, N. J. 07631
part of an article
appearing in the Wilkes-Barre Inde-
4tli
Madeline D. Feorini Merva lives
Place,
Wittingham
West
106
Orange, N. J. 07052
Edward F.
Class Representative:
Schuyler, 236 West Ridge Avneue,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
year.
Fisher, a member of the local service club, retired last year from the
school superintendency and is serving
the system in an advisory capacity.
is
East
Genevieve R. Bowman (Mrs. Vincent McKelvey) 6601 Braxburn Drive,
Bethesda, Maryland 20034
17967
The following
151
burg, Pa. 17815
Mrs. Harry
Cole, 100 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
Warren L. Fisher, former Bloomsburg superintendent of schools, will be
Lieutenant Governor of the nine-club,
Kiwanis Division 14 in the 1971-72
Class Representative:
William I.
Blooms-
Representative:
Class
151
Pa.
17815
Dorothy L. Schmidt has changed
her address to 7-14 Deneuchofu 3Chome, Ota Ku, Tokyo 145, Japan.
Miss Schmidt has been teaching for
many years in Japan. She informs
Gerald J. Wolfson lives at 3691
North Prospect Drive, Coral Gables,
1936
Kathryn
Representatives:
Vanauker (Mrs. Nicholas Moreth) 34
Linden Road, Ho-Ho-Kus, N.J. 07423,
Co-Chairmen:
Ruth Wagner (Mrs.
Class
Lawrence LeGrande)
123
Oak
Street,
Hazleton, Pa. 18201 and Mary Jane
Fink (Mrs. Frederick M. Cutcheon)
Maple Avenue, Conyngham, Pa. 18213
Helen (Latorre) Tinelli lives and
works in Rochester, N. Y. She received her Masters degree in library
science in 1961 and is now busy setting up an elementary school library
while working for Doctorate.
Her
son and daughter both teach in Rochester, and even though she is a
grandmother, Helen is planning her
third trip
abroad
this
summer.
Jean (Phillips) Plowright, 103-C
Georgetown Dr., Casselberry, Fla.
32707, still lives in Florida surviving
the ever changing scene of teaching
but she is looking forward to retirement. Her summer tour this year is
being planned for visits to the South
Pacific Islands,
Australia.
New
Zealand
and
David Mayer, 12 Morningside Dr.,
Lansdale, Pa. 19446, is an Associate
Professor at the Montgomery County
Community
College,
Conshohocken.
Pa..
Morgan, Bldg.
24, Ste. 203, 6930
Dr., Cleveland, Ohio
44141, is retired and is now working
for himself as a construction consultant. Jan, his wife, teaches fourth
Bill
Carriage
Hill
grade
in Ohio.
His daughter, Molly,
getting her Ph. D. in French from
Tulane, while his son, Mike, is a 1st
Lt. in Vietnam, and they will soon be
is
grandparents.
Ruth (Wagner) LeGrande
is
a read-
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
ing supervisor in four schools in the
Hazleton School District. She is active in the St. Joseph Hospital Auxiliary. also has spent several of her
summers getting a change of scene by
She is also a
traveling to Europe.
grandmother.
proud
Kathryn (Vannauker) Moreth. 34
Linden Rd., Ho-Ho-Kus, N. J. 07423,
has been active in the Garden State
Chapter WAC Veterans Association
serving as its secretary for two years
and treasurer for this past year. She
has also been a Red Cross volunteer in
Service
the
Military
to
Families
Red Cross
for the last
four years. She and her husband of
twenty-five years are hoping to leave
May 3 for London and Paris, motor-
branch
ing
of the
south
to
Marseille (
met while both were
in
where they
the service,
then on to Menton, Pisa, and Rome.
After seeing the places she taught her
students about in Latin classes, she
and her husband will go to Venice.
Florence, Parma. Verona and Milan
getting home May 31 in time to pick
up their son who will be finishing his
Dr. Kenneth L. Cook. Ed.M. and Ed.
17820
Robert L.
Class Representative:
Bunge, 12 West Park Street, Carroll
Park, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Theodore Jurasik has been elected
a vice president of Ketchum, MacLeod & Grove.
Mr. Jurasik. who joined KM&G in
1967, is manager of the agency’s Director Advertising Department. Prior
to joining the agency he had been with
the Reuben H. Donnelly Corporation
and Cross & Blackwell Company.
Mr. Jurasik is married to the former
17815
Escoffier.
1937
Class
1938
Paul G. MarStreet, Blooms-
Class Representative:
tin,
710
East Main
burg, Pa. 17815
Anna B. Rech (Mrs. E. J. Medyckii
lives at 143 Di Marco Drive. Philadelphia, Pa. 19154
Representative:
Representative:
Richard E.
Grimes. 1723 Fulton Street, Harrisburg. Pa. 17102
Class
Kready
Avenue,
Millersville,
Pa.
1943
Representative:
Mrs. Raymond A. Algatt (Betty Katerman)
253 Iron Street, Bloomsburg,
Pa.
17815
1944
Class Representative:
Mrs. (Poletime Communtzis) Carl Demetripopoulos, Frair and Robin Lanes. Sherwood
Village. Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1945
Class Representative:
Mary Lou
John. 257 West 11th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1946
Anastasia Pappas (Mrs. John Trowbridge) 102 W’est Mahoning Street,
Co-chairman:
Danville, Pa. 17821.
Mrs. Charles W. Creasy (Jacqueline
Shaffer), R. D. 1, Catawissa, Pa.
JUNE,
1971
Connelly,
6206
In wood Street, Cheverly, Maryland
teaching at the Prince
is
20785,
George Community College.
1952
Francis B.
Galinski, 90 Tower Hill Road, Doylestown, Pa. 18901
David L. Heckman, Bloomsburg,
was awarded the Doctor of Education
degree at Temple University, Philadelphia. His field is education adminRepresentative:
Class
istration
.
He serves
_
as assistant to the superintendent of the Haverford Township
School District, Havertown, and is in
charge of pupil personnel services and
data processing.
After serving in the U.S. Army
Signal Agency where he was assigned
to the White House, Dr. Heckman
began his teaching career in Clifton
Heights High School and the following
year moved ta the senior high wrhere
he taught chemistry and physics.
Before being appointed to his present position in 1967, he was assistant
principal in the senior high school
and assistant to the business manager
of the school district.
He is a member of Phi Delta Kappa,
national educational honorary society
and lives with his wife, Mary and two
children,
David and Lynda,
in
Drexel
Hill.
1950
1953
Class Representative: Willis Swales,
9 Raven Road. Montvale, N. J. 07645
Robert Balent. M. A., 24 Honeysuckle Lane, Levittown, Pa., is a
teacher in the Woodrow Wilson High
School.
Class Representative: John S. Scrimgeour, 411 East 3rd Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Kenneth E. Borst, B.S., M.S., 5
Maplewood Orchard Drive, Greenville,
Rhode Island, is Associate Professor
of Chemistry at Rhode Island College.
17551
Class
N.Y. 12740
Mary Ann Alarcon
1948
Harry G.
Class Representative:
John. Jr., 425 Iron Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1940
Class Representative:
Clayton II.
Hinkle, 224 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1941
Class Representative: Dr. C. Stuart
Edwards, R. D. 4, Bloomsburg, Pa.
17815
1942
Class Representative:
Mrs. Ralph
H. Zimmerman (Jean Nool), 165
ville,
11581.
1949
Willard
Christian, Jr., 803 Logue Street, Williamsport. Pa. 17701
1951
Dr. Russell
Class Representative:
C. Davis, Jr., Thunder Hill, Grahams-
Mr. and Mrs. Jurasik reside in 86
Jackson Rd.. Valley Stream. L.I., N.Y
1939
Class
State College.
Sidari ’43 of Hazleton. Pa., who
is currently Commercial Department
Head at Valley Stream Memorial
Junior High School.
Mr. Jurasik is a recognized authority in his field and has been retained
as a consultant by such diverse groups
as BOAC and the Mexican Govern-
Mr. and
Representatives:
Mrs. Earl A. Gehrig, 110 Robin Lane,
Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa.
year of college.
Max G. Cooley, 404 Sunset Lane
Shippensburg, Pa., is Director of
Business Education at Shippensburg
Dr.
Nan
ment. Mr. and Mrs. Jurasik were
formally welcomed recently in Mexico
City by personal representatives of
President Gustav Ordaz.
Mr. Jurasik is a member of the following organizations: Directory Committee; American Association of Advertising Agencies. Sales Executives
Club, Society of Independent Slovaks
in the U.S.. Village Interest Party, W.
C. Fields Lompoc Boosters, Anis De
first
D., R. D. 1, Mohnton, Pa. is Associate
Professor at Kutztown State College.
1947
James and Susan
Dreibelbis Boyle
live at 38 Ski Hill Drive,
Bedminster,
N.J. James is Vice-President and Director of Marketing and Sales at Ortho
Diagnostics.
Mr. and Mrs.
Boyle
have two children.
Dorothy Snyder
Madingley Road.
Linthicum Heights, Md. Dorothy is
a substitute teacher in the Andover
High School, and William is Physics
Instructor at Southern High School.
J.
and
live at 508
William
Brennan
John E. Buynak, 9805 Pitt P.I.N.E.
Albuequerque, New Mexico is a Lieutenant Colonel
Marine Corps.
ine
ROTC
School.
children.
He
at
is
in the U.S.
is teacher of Mar-
(Retired)
He
Rio Grande High
married and has six
the
1954
William J.
Class Representative:
Jacobs, Tremont Annex Apartments,
2 West Main Street, Lansdale, Pa.
19446
Gerald Houseknecht is pastor of St.
Paul Lutheran Church, Newport, Pa.
17074. His wife (Vera Rowlyk) and 2
sons, Gerald Jr. and Mark, also reside
Pastor
at 24 N. 4th St., Newport.
Houseknecht was named to the 2nd
Annual Edition of Community Leaders
1969
and is active in
of America
Cub Scouting and the International
Platform Association.
(
)
1955
Arnold GarClass Representative:
inger, R. D. 1, Harveys Lake, Pa.
18618
1956
Dr. William
Class Representative:
Bittner III, 33 Lincoln Avenue, Glens
Falls, N.Y. 12801
1957
William J.
Class Representative:
Pohutski, 554 Oakridge Drive, North
Plianfield, N.J. 07606
Richard J. Kratzer, R. D. 2, Box 409,
Page seven
Sunbury,
Pa.
was
17801
named Postmaster
in
recently
Sunbury.
1958
Raymond
Class Representative:
Hargreaves, 37 Dell Road, Stanhope,
N.J. 078784
Green Uniteaching in the
Glen Ridge School District, N.J. Mrs.
1967
National Bank of New Jersey. Their
address is Apt. 3-A, 25 Manor Drive,
Newark, N.J. 08628.
Class Representative:
1959
William F
Class Representative:
Swisher, Box 245, Cincinnatus, N.Y
13040
1960
James J.
Class Representative:
Peck, 100 Hull Road, Madison, Conn.
06443
1961
Edwin C.
Class Representative:
Kuser, R. D. 1, Box 145-C, Bechtelsville,
ate of Bucknell University. A former
engineer, he is now in his third year
at the University of Pittsburgh School
of Dentistry.
Pa. 19505
R.
Thomas
Lemon, Warwick
Old
Apt., 3-D, 802
English Street, Bel Air, Md. 21014
1968
Class Representative:
Thomas W.
Free, R. D. 1, Box 34, Kintnerville,
Pa. 18930
Dawn S. Schulten (Mrs. Thomas L.
Moffet) lives at 7425 Mountain Avenue,
Melrose
Park,
teaching
first
Elementary
Pa.,
19126.
She
is
grade
at Blair Mill
School in the Hatboro-Hor-
sham
1962
Class Representative: Richard Lloyd
6 Farragut Drive, Piscataway, N.J.
School District, Montgomery
County, Pa. Her husband is a student
University Dental
at the Temple
School.
18854
William
Dildine
(Mrs.
Dorothy
Landis) lives at 6807 Fairfax Road,
Apt. 130, Bethesda, Md. 20014
Mrs. Viriginia A. Kline lives at 562
Avenue, Palmerton, Pa
Kathy Giger, 818 Fishburn Rd., Hershey, Pa. 17033, is a research assistant and a graduate student at the
Milton S. Hershey Medical Center of
the Pennsylvania State University.
Lafayette
18071
1963
Class Representative:
Pat Biehl
(Mrs. Ronald Cranford) R. D. 1, 77
Hawthorne Ave., Boyertown, Pa. 19512
Ronald E. Hosier, 1151-B Forest
Edge, West Aaron Drive, State College, Pa., has received the degree of
Master of Science in Computer Science at the Pennsylvania State Uni1964
Shuba,
Boards Speak for Math.” Mr .Fennell, a former teacher and principal
in the Williamsport school, is a doctoral candidate in elementary education at Pennsylvania State University.
versity.
Class
Francis M. Fennell, 550 Grandview
Place, South Williamsport, Pa., is the
author of an article appearing in the
April issue of the Instructor Magazine.
The article is entitled “Bulletin
Ernest R.
Avenue, Raritan,
Representative:
1
Gaston
N.J. 08869
Janice M. Clemens (Mrs. John De
Finnis), is living at 815 East Front
Street, Berwick, Pa.
Her husband,
who served with the U.S. Army Dental
Corps, has opened a private dental
practice in Berwick.
1965
Class Representative: Carl P. Sher59 Vreeland Ave., Bloomingdale,
N.J. 07403
1966
Class Representative:
Anthoy J.
Cerza, 608 Corlies Ave., Wallenhurst,
N.J. 07711
Drue P. and Nancy Kneer Michael
report their address as Box 10, R.D. 4,
Reading, Pa. Mr. Michael is claims
adjuster for the Pennsylvania Manufacturing Association Insurance Co.
sons.
Mr. and Mrs. D. Theodore Apperman (Sally Regan) are living at 7231
Whipple Street, Swissvale, Pa. 15218.
Mrs. Apperman taught in the Harrisburg School District and has worked
for the Pa. Dept, of Welfare and Dept,
of Education as a Personnel Analyst.
In May, 1970 she received her Master’s Degree from the School Psychology Dept, at Temple University, Philadelphia.
At present, she is doing
post graduate work at Duquesne University and is employed by the Pittsburgh Board of Education as a Schol
Psychologist.
Her husband, Tedd,
Page eight
After graduation, Mrs. Parker taught English
for two years in the Interboro School
System of Glen Alden. Mr. and Mrs.
Parker have one daughter.
Glenalden,
Pa.
19036.
Richard Benyo, 207 Center Street,
Jim Thrope, Pa.
18229,
was awarded
place in the 1971 Keystone Press
Awards Contest for local columns.
Benyo is employed as Associate Editor of the Times-News & Record, Ediitor of News ’N Views, and Program
Director for PTVC TV in Lehighton,
Pa. He accepted the award at the
annual conference of the Pennsylvania
Newspaper Publishers’ Association on
May 15 in Harrisburg. The award was
presented for his weekly column,
“Tripping It.”
Benyo has also recently been assigned as a special correspondent for
Stock Car Racing Magazine; his initial
contribution, a history and prospectus
of
Pocono International Raceway,
appeared in the July issue of that
first
an,
They have two
Robert and Elaine Barlow Parker
at 19 West Knowles Avenue,
live
is
a 1965 gradu-
—
magazine.
Economics
versity, Ohio.
McNertney
is
at Bowling
He
is
employed by the First
Ronald L. Buffington is serving as
a First Lieutenant in the Marine Corps
His address is 1st
in South Vietnam.
Lt. Ronald Buffington, 0110534 USMC
H & HS
18 Security Officer, Vietnam, APO San Francisco, Calif. 96602.
Friends and classmates are urged to
write to him.
—
1970
John W.
Class Representative:
Dalfovo, 61 Dean Street, Beaver Meadows, Pa. 18216
Private Daryl L. Stull, R.D. 2, Fairfax Farms, York, Pa., was honored recently as the Outstanding Trainee of
the Cycle during Basic Training graduation exercises at Fort Jackson,
South Carolina. He was selected for
the honor in recognition of his leadership, military bearing and training
proficiency.
Airman Clayton
L.
Newcomer, Mon-
toursville, Pa., has completed basic
training at Lackland AFB, Texas. He
has been assigned to Sheppard AFB,
Texas, for training in the communi-
cations field.
Airman Terry L. Lutz, Bloomsburg,
Pa., has graduated at Sheppard AFB,
Texas, from the technical training
course for U.S. Air Force radiology
specialists.
Airman Lutz
USAF
is
Hospital
(Branch
of
being assigned to the
at
Andrews
AFB,
Wash., D.C.), Md. 20331.
Linda Aim Lyle (Mrs. Timothy
Roach) is living at 82 Kikapai Street,
Apt. 302, Kailua, Oahu, Hawaii. Her
husband is serving in the U.S. Marine
Corps.
1971
Class
Cluley,
Representative:
115
Terrace
William H.
Avenue, Upper
Darby, Pa. 19082
1907—
Loyalty Fund contributions to April
not previously reported:
Dr. Harvey A. Andruss
1892— Mrs. E. E. McKelvey
1901—N. Elwell Funk
1903 Howard K. Houtz
1911—
15,
1971,
—
1969
Class
Representative:
Frank J.
Masteroianne, 1018 Cooper Street,
Scranton, Pa. 18508
Theresa Eyerman Castro is living at
16700
Sunnyside
Street,
Oakland,
California 94603
Jean A. Moulder, Chester, Pa., and
Edward McNertney,
in
Hazleton,
Pa.,
were married in September, 1969. Mr.
McNertney completed his M.A. degree
Rowland F. Hemingway
Dr. Carroll D. Champlin
Mrs. W. H. Hile, Mrs. Robert
B. Fleischer
1908 Saida L. Hartman
1909 Mrs. W. Milton Brown
1910 Sara F. Lewis, Mrs. Jared D.
Montanye, Julia Gregg Brill, Mrs. Lee
A. Perry
Mrs. Edward H. Beavers, Mrs.
P. II Monaghan, A. K. Naugle
1905
1906
.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
1969—
1912—
Mrs. Charles A. Nicely, Col.
B. F. Brill, Mrs. B. J. Swartwood
C. 1913—
Mary D. Comerford, Mrs. Eugene F. Sarber, Nellie M. Denison,
Kenneth Mausteller, Judge BerMrs.
1914—
nard J. Kelley, Mrs. W. L. Snyder
1915—Dr. Jacob H. Vastine II, Mrs.
J. A. Gosaman, Glennis H. Rickert
Mrs. William R. McCready.
Mrs. George H. Moore, Mrs. Glennis
id Rickert
1916 Mrs. H. R. Robinson. Cora G.
Hill
(in
memory
of Eloise C. Hill.)
James O'Donnell, Mis
1919—Mrs.
John W. O'Toole, Mrs. Harry W. Miller, Mrs. Alice T. Gardner
1918 Mrs. Robert D. Beminger
Patterson, Mis.
1920— Hurley O.
Victor G. Long, Mis. Priscilla A. McDonald,
1921— Mrs. Norman A. Fox, Sr.,
Mrs. Thomas Mainivaring, Mrs. William D. Powell
Bennett, Margaret
1922— Marie H.
1917
V.
Hower
Mis. Kathryn Wilkie, Anna L.
Swanberry, Mrs. Allen L. Beaver, Sr.
1923—
Edith B. Hoffman, Wilbur S.
Mis.
Foresman, Alice M. McDonnell
Emmanuel, Mrs.
1924—Mrs. Mary S.
Stephen Bellas, Mrs. Oren L. Harris,
Mis. Antoinette C. Mason, Mary C.
Getty
Mrs. Beatrice
Mrs.
Mis. Helen
Jopling,
Robert MacNaught, Sr.,
R. Padgett
Mrs. Clare L. Reger, Alma
1927— Mrs. Guy F. Roliand, Mrs.
Thomas,
Leroy Bughbee, Mrs. Harbert C. PearMrs. Margaret Brumbach
son,
1928—
Wayne Turner, Mirs.
1925 Mrs.
James S. Jordan, Alice E. Stead
1926 Mi-s. Edmund Jenkins, Mrs.
Neal W. Warmley, Mrs. Robert M.
Dwyer, Christine B. Roeder
1930—Naomi K. Bender, Mrs. Esther
W. Copp, Mis. Harvey Dickstein, Rosina Ellery, Mi's. Earl J. McCloughan
Mrs. M. S. Martin, Lehman J.
Snyder, Mrs. Charles D. Blair, Mary
K. Huntzelman, Alice L. Evans, Mrs.
Howard K. Scott, Mrs. Thomas Han1932—
lon, Margaret L. Lewis
1929 El wood Avery, Mrs. J.L. Cohen, Mrs. Esther W. Burnat
Mrs. Anna S. Gossler, Mrs.
Myrtle R. Ker, Margaretta M. Bone,
James B. Davis, In memorw of
Armond G. Keller, Helen E. Snyder
Mi's.
1931 Mi's. Catherine S. Acker, Catherine R. Ingram, Emily A. Park, Mrs.
S. L. Ritchie, James J. Wilkes, Mrs.
Sheldon A. MacDougall
Mrs. Mildred Hinebaugh
1933 Mrs. R. Kenneth Maiers, Mrs.
Benedict A. Stein, Mrs. Samuel Shirk,
Mi's. Stanley C. Strausser
1934
Mrs. Robert A. Elder,
Mrs.
Mercedes McDermott
1935
Mi's. S.
Mi's.
W.
Vincent
E.
McKelvey,
Stanulonis
Mr. and Mrs. Earl A. Gehrig,
Mary A. Palsgrove
1938 Mrs. Robert V. O’Connell
1939 Dr. Alex J. McKechnie, Sara
E. Tubbs.
1941 Mrs. Edwin H. Andrews, Marqueen V. White, Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Tomlinson, William G. Kerchusky
1942 Mi's. Mildred R. Levitt, How1937
JUNE,
1971
ard R. Brockyus, Jack L. Mertz,
William P. Wanick, Dr. Lawrence B.
1943—Mrs. Eleanor M. Zale
Myers,
Dr. John M. Apple, Loren L.
Collins, D. Mae Graw, Virginia M.
Shambach, Col. and Mrs. El wood M.
Wagner, Hugh S. Niles, Philip R.
Yeany
1944 Mrs. C. P. McLaughlin, Mrs.
Frederick J. Edwards, Mrs. Philip R.
Yeany, Mrs. Leslie B. Gare
1945 Mrs. Carrie J. Balliet, Mrs.
Shirley Nicholas
1946
1949— James E. Foley (In Memoriami, Mrs. Dora B. Silk
1947 Vincent F. Washville
1950—Mrs. Vincent F. Washville
1948
Carl H. Robbins, Richard E.
Grimes, John H. Reichard, Frank J
Radice,
1952— John M. Purcell
Mrs. Robert A. McMillan,
Paul D. Slusser, Richard E. Jarman
1951 Mrs. Eugene R. Miller, Ralph
Wayne
ger
1971 Janet M. Brew, Walter A.
Karmosky, Mrs. James W. Fox, Mary
Ann Schwartz
LOYALTY FUND
ADDITIONAL CONTRIBUTIONS
1897— Mrs. F. E. Van Wie
1906 Mabel R. Farley
1907 Mrs. Wilfred Seeming
1909 Harold L. Moyer
1910 Mrs. Morris S. Evans
C.
Wagner
1958—
1955 Mrs. Caroline Y. Karas, Jay
Stanley Worth, Mrs. Joseph P. Feifer
Milton H. Croop
1957 Mrs.
WUll&am C. Follmer,
Thomas
J.
Reimensnyder, Evelyn M.
Strine,
Mrs.
C.
Kilpatrick,
Dick
Moritz L. Schultz
Mrs. Joseph N. Corrio, C.
J.
Spentzas, Mrs. Willis Wayman, Beth.
Evans, William C. Sheridan
1959 Craig R. Yeanish, Otto H.
Donar, Robert W, Harris, Mrs. Rose
Ann Radzinski, Moritz L. Schultz,
Kenneth A. Swatt
1960 Mi's. Sue B. Lindner, Mrs.
1964— A. McFall.
Barbara
1961 Donald L. Smith, Mrs. Richard W. Thomas, Thomas V. Grace,
Mrs. Robert S. Dayton, Mrs. Beatrice
1918—Dr. Kimber C. Kuster, Mrs.
Mabel Luccareni, Elizabeth Sturges
1915 Mrs. Elmer A. Harrington
1920— Ruth A. Dreibelbis, Dorothy
1916
M.1921—
Fritz, Mrs. Lila D. Hemingway.
William A. Thomas
1917 Mrs. Alice F. Gardner
Clyde A. Miller, Mrs. Theo1922—
dore
B. Wallin
1919 Mrs. Claire T. Parker
Mrs. Roy O. Fry
Mrs. Margaret B. Fetch, Mrs.
Frank Honstrater, Mrs. Hester Aten,
Mrs. Otto M. Girton, Mrs. Bertha B.
Zong, Mrs. Ralph Moser, Alice M.
McDonnell
1928—
William T. Payne, George B.
Jr., Mary C. Getty
1923 Mrs. Edith H. Dawson, Mrs.
Hershel S. Libby
1924 Mrs. Alfred L. Wendel, Mrs.
Rhawn,
Margaret Brumbach
Thomas
J.
McHugh
Ronald H. Beury, Robert C.
Houck, James K. Sample, Mrs. Beatrice B. Robinson, Mrs. Richard C
Scorese
Kenneth R. Miller, Dr. EdP. Azary, Mrs. D. Dale Kleppinger, Anne M. Hocker, Richard C.
Scorese. Mrs. John De Finnis, E. Ed-
ward
ward
Eill, Mi's.
Joseph R. Kuzmick
Mrs. H. L. Campbell, Jr.
Mrs. Cyril J. Sweeney, Harold
1926
1927
M. Roberts
1962
1963
Donation
Mrs. E. B. Landis
Class
1911
1912
1913
Blue,
Myra
Koch. Mrs. John D.
Jane M. Rompala, Richard L. Benjamin. Mrs. John C. Gottschling, Connie D. Roth, Helen D. McAndrews,
Robert P. Sheptack, Stephen M. Klin-
W. Wire
Mrs. H. M. Snyder, Viola M.
Andre M. Vanyo, Russell C.
Brachman, Mrs. Paul Cerula
1956—
1953 Keith S. Bearde
1954 Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. An
drews, Louise M. Schullery, Mrs.
J.
Wright, Chester A. Buglia, Bonnie K.
Rinehimer, Robert A. Muscosky, Lee
Berry, Connie L. Jarrard, Thomas
J. 1970—
F. Castrilli, Cheryl L. Dyer
Dennis D. Bohr, Evelyn Kovalchik, Mrs. Robert D. Gauss, Jr.,
Judith M. Rohland, Stewart O. Strohle,
J.
Baum
Mrs. Foster
Furman
1929 Mrs. Emil Lang
1930 Mr. and Mrs. Jasper M. Fritz
1931 Elizabeth H. Hubler
1932 James J. Johns
1933 Mrs. Max D. Frye
1934
1949—Gladys Mae Wenner
1935 Charlotte H. McKechnie
1936 Mrs. Mae H. Deitrick, Mrs
Neil A. Mercando, Robert A.
Green, James L. Apriani, Mrs. Thomas L. Snyder, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
D. Zavgaglia, Edawrd Beck, Robert
Griesing, Robert E. Barfield III, William C. Ross, Jr.
1966 Mary Alice Woodroff, Rose M.
Nicholas W. Moreth, Sr.
1937 Ray G. Schrape
1938 Elizabeth J. Gilligan
1939 Isaiah D. Bomboy
1942 Mrs. John W. Thomas, Dominic R. Pino
1944— Mrs. James S. Powell
Chiki, Darryl W. Lanning, James M.
Ayers, Barbara A. Urbas, Mr. and
Mrs. Henry L. Spering
1967 Mr. and Mrs. Regis C. Sterling. Glen H. Book, Mrs. Joyce A. Mordan, Mrs. Nickola J. Oram, Robert O.
Samsel, David J. Hollingshead
1968 Nancy
L.
Luzi,
Joyce E.
Brobst. Richard O. Wilhour, Charles
J. Greco, Jr., Mrs. Thomas E. Karam,
Mrs. Diane Kazemka, Mrs. Francis
R. Dick, Richard J. Yost
1947 John W. Thomas
1948 Henry E. Crawford,
Magill, Jr.
1965
—
John F.
William R. Dubel, Mrs. Julia
P. Sterling
1950 Warren
Thomas
ski
1951
1952
L.
M. Sterling, Mrs.
Gunn, Frank T. Lupashin-
Mrs. Donald W. Donnelly
Mrs. Nancy Lychos, Francis
J. Stanitsky
1954 Mi's.
—
Rachel W. Dailey, Shel-
Page nine
1970—
Sandra Sample, Mr. and Mrs.
Michael L. Schreckengost
1966 Robert J. Biscombe, Rosemary Fogarty
1967 Mrs. Lavere McClure, Thomas
S. Fowles, Ronald R. Jackson, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert F. White
1968 Frederick T. Bausch, Douglas
C. Hippenstiel, Kathryn E. Giger, Mrs.
R. B. Adams, Mrs. Ruth A. Smith,
Mrs. Robert A. Bachman, Myra J.
Schlesinger, Mrs. Betsy L. Schneider,
Raymond B. Walverton
1969 Mrs. T. L. Guy, Mr. and Mrs.
Marie Hutz, George A. Ziolkowski
1965
Joseph W. Kinder, John C.
1955—
1957—
Panichello
1958—
William J. Pohutsky
1959— Mrs. William J. Pohutsky,
Mrs. Helen Kerstetter
1961—Mrs. Gerald H. Major
1960 Allen M. Rathbone
Ray
Kathleen
Yergey
ton N. Erwine, William J. Jacobs
L. George, Mrs. Robert
Dayton
David W. Barbour, Mrs. Nancy E. Evans, Gerald J. Wright
1963 John M. Di Liberto, Thomas
W. Nawrocki, Mrs. Joann H. Zogby
1964 Mrs. Richard C. Bartz, Robert
A. Mayefskie, Mr. and Mrs. David A.
S.
1962
Cahill,
Robert
Shelly, Leslie A. Rohrbach
1971 Kay F. Leonard, Class
tion ($800.00)
S.
Dona-
SCHOLARSHIPS
In the future, all direct contributions to the Alumni Association will
be credited to the various scholarship funds, which are listed elsewhere in this issue, in the report of
the treasurer. You may, if you wish
specify the fund to which you wish
It is desirable that
contribute.
these funds be built up; scholarships
are granted only from their income.
to
Alumni Association
BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania
Report of the Treasurer
STATEMENT OF CONDITION
March
31,
1971
ASSETS
Cash, Checking Account, 1st National Bank
Cash, Savings Account, 1st National Bank
.
.
.
7,420.05
1,368.60
Assets
Total
8,788.65
EQUITIES
General Loan Fund and Misc. Payables
Long Term Dues Reserves
Plus
Interest
1970-71
Credit,
Long Term Dues Reserve, March 31,
Loyalty Fund Balance, April 1, 1970
Net Addition,
Net Balance
214.82
1,308.71
59.89
1971
1,368.60
6,957.69
247.54
1970-71
® March
Total Equities
31, 1971
March
31,
7,205.23
1971
8,788.65
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
April
Income
Dues and Loyalty
1,
1970 to
March
Collections
Expenditures
Quarterly Printing
Postage and Office Supplies
Clerical Assistance
Editor’s and Business Manager’s Fees
Advertising and Publicity
Alumni Day Dinner and Expense
Flowers
Misc. Expenses
Travel and Meals, Directors’ Meetings
Dues, State Associations
Telephone Expense
Insurance and Wage Taxes
Alumni Field Meetings Grant
Contribution to Inaugural Activities
Total
Expenditures
Net Increase
in
31, 1971
Equity
11,530.00
4,935.00
1,229.30
1,849.50
400.00
919.50
232.75
75.00
14.12
53.00
600.00
107.29
66.91
500.00
300.00
11,282.46
247.54
General Information
Dues
Collection (no Loyalty Fund), year ended March 31, 1966 3,842.01
8,405.23
Fund and Dues Collection, year ended March 31, 1967
Fund and Dues Collection, year ended March 31, 1968 8,346.92
13,016.42
Fund and Dues Collection, year ended March 31, 1969
8,699.53
Fund and Dues Collection, year ended March 1, 1970
11,530.00
Fund and Dues Collection, year ended March 31, 1971
Loyalty
Loyalty
Loyalty
Loyalty
Loyalty
Page ten
THE ALIJMNI QUARTERLY
Alumni Association
BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania
BSC General Alumni Funds
STATEMENT OF CONDITION
March
31, 1971
ASSETS
Cash, Checking Account, 1st National Bank
1st National Bank, Savings Account
1st National Bank, Certificate of Deposit
General Trust Fund, BBSTC
Accomodation
U. S. Govt. Securities
—G
4,943.37
3,794.07
5,000.00
17,079.67
35.00
11,801.56
960.00
and Treasury
Accrued Interest Income
Total Assets
43,613.67
AND EQUITIES
LIABILITIES
Liabilities
Scholarships
Equities:
and Grants Payable
Centennial Loan Fund
O.H. and S.H. Bakeless Memorial
E. H. Nelson Memorial Fund
Operations Reserve Fund
William D. Watkins Fund
Earl N. Rhodes Fund
1,900.00
19,249.49
Fund
......
10,001.49
1,160.24
74.10
1,460.00
250.00
590.20
100.00
1,994.28
3,794.07
660.00
2,334.70
Lucy McCammon Fund
Henry J. Warman Fund
Wm. B. Sutliff Fund
Paul Thomas Endowment Fund
Anna Lowrie Welles Fund
Fenstemaker Fund
Total Equities
41,713.67
Total Liabilities and Equities
43,613.67
RECONCILIATION OF TOTAL EQUITIES
Total Equities, March 31, 1970
Less: Contribution from Fenstemaker
Andruss Library
Net Decrease per Schedule on Page
Total Equities,
March
42,770.37
Fund
796.75
259.97
41,713.67
1971
31,
1,056.72
3
Alumni Association
BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania
BSC General Alumni Funds
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
April
1,
1970 to
March
31,
Income:*
Income from Trust Fund. BBSCT
Interest on Government Obligations
Interest on Savings Account, 1st National Bank
Interest on Certificate of Deposit, 1st Natl. Bk.
1971
749.28
320.00
166.03
254.72
Total Earned Income
1,490.03
Other Receipts:*
Contribution
B
Club
Lucy
to
McCammon Fund
150.00
Total Other Receipts
150.00
Total Receipts
1,640.03
Less Grants Awarded:
Rhodes Scholarship
Alumni Assn. Scholarship
Lucy McCammon Scholarship
E. H. Nelson Memorial Scholarship
Anna Lowrie Welles Scholarship
Total Grants
Net Decrease
JUNE,
1971
in
200.00
900.00
200.00
300.00
300.00
Awarded
1,900.00
Fund
(259.97)
Equities
Page eleven
^Income and other Receipts was allocated as follows:
Operations and Alumni Scholarships
E. H. Nelson Memorial Fund
Watkins Fund
Rhodes Fund
879.00
70.00
70.00
30.00
180.00
5.00
90.00
166.03
50.00
100.00
McCammon Fund
Warman Fund
Fund
Sutliff
Paul Thomas Fund
Anna Lowrie Welles Fund
Fenstemaker Library Fund
Total
1,640.03
BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania
BSC McNinch Alumni Loan Fund
STATEMENT OF CONDITION
March 31, 1971
ASSETS
Checking Account, BSSTC (less $25
Cash,
held as accommodation)
Cash, Certificates of Deposit, BBSTC
Cash, Certificate of Deposit, 1st Natl.
United Student Aid Fund Deposit
Student Loans Receivable
Permanent Trust Fund, BBSTC
Office
11,830.52
15,000.00
10,000.00
6,000.00
34,296.46
78,696.79
416.45
Bank
Equipment
Total Assets
156,240.22
EQUITIES
Original Bequest McNinch Estate
Additions to March 31, 1970
Additions to March 31, 1970
Net 1970-71 Addition
128,758.70
8,424.55
17,323.74
1,732.23
27,481.52
Total Equities
156,240.22
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
April
1,
1970 to
March
31,
1971
Income:
Income from BBSTC, Trustee
Inerest Income, Certificate of Deposit
1,854.01
1,261.72
Total Income
3,115.23
Expenditures
Clerical Assistance
Postage and Supplies
Treasurer’s Fees
Dues, State Association
Auditing Service
424.00
18.00
300.00
600.00
40.00
Total Expenditures
Net Addition
to
1,382.00
Equity
1,733.23
GENERAL INFORMATION:
Student loans, totaling $34,296.46 were outstanding at March 31, 1971. During the year April 1, 1970 to March 31,
1971 a total of $10,175. was loaned to 27 students.
.
.
WEDDINGS
.
1966
Donald H. Bowman’ 66 and Nancy J.
Moyer ’67. Address: Old Orchard
Lane, Mifflinburg, Pa. 17844.
Lois Silkroski and Lawrence Skoger-
Address:
158 Grand
Englewood, N. J. 07631.
son.
Avenue,
1968
Donna Rae Dunn and William Kerstetter, Jr. The bride attended MansPage twelve
and has been employed at Keck’s Drapery. Mr. Kerstetter is studying for his Master’s
Degree at BSC. He teaches reading
and English in the seventh and eighth
grades of Southern Area School Distrist.
Address: 366
Street.
Center
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
field State College,
.
1969
Marcella Lynn Hall and David G.
Moharter. The bride teaches German
at Berwick High School. Her husband
is a senior at BSC.
Address: Glenn
and Washington Avenue, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815.
1970
Dolores A. Bowen and Robert D.
Gauss, Jr., 803 West Lockhart St.,
Sayre, Pa. 18840.
Susan Jane Bower and Richard J
Varner.
Mrs. Varner has been a
graduate assistant in the Department
of Special Education at BSC; in September she will begin teaching special
education in the Southern Columbia
Area School District. Her husband
is on office employee at Joseph A.
Rado. mechanical contractors.
Address: Berwick, R.D. 1, Pa.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
With
this issue of
The
Editor.
first
The
issue of
Quarterly, the undersigned
The Quarterly was published
ties,
and publication was continued
time
The Quarterly was
Publication
staff.
about 1921.
was then discontinued
ing the magazine.
Under
and the
appeared
issue
until
out as
in the eigh-
Up
that
to
edited and published by the Normal School
Alumni Association decided
first
bows
until
1926,
assume the responsibility
to
arrangement,
this
December,
in
I
when
of publish-
was appointed
1926.
I
the
Editor,
have performed
the editorial duties since that time.
At the meeting
24,
it
was decided
of
to
your Board of Directors on Alumni Day, April
hand over the
responsibility of publishing
and
mailing the Quarterly to the Office of Development and External
Relations.
The
publication and mailing costs will be paid by the
Bloomsburg Foundation.
the September issue.
This
new
policy will go into effect with
At that time, the
new
editorial staff will
be
announced.
We hope
that you, the Alumni, will continue to supply the Editor
with news, as you have done
in the past.
President,
Alumni Association
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE
BLOOMSBURG, PA. 17815
Non-Profit
U. S.
Org.
POSTAGE
PAID
Address Correction Requested
1.6c
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Permit No. 10
Loyalty Fund Fifth Year
OCTOBER
Amt.
Yeai
No.
Ex-faculty 2
1892
1896
1901
1903
1905
1906
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1923
150.00
10.00
10.00
40.00
10.00
5.00
22.00
22.00
20.00
215.00
92.00
309.00
98.00
152.00
25.00
25.00
52.00
60.00
73.00
56.00
50.00
258.00
65.00
62.00
1
1
2
1
1
2
4
2
4
10
24
7
10
4
3
13
6
5
9
4
14
10
9
i
I
1
1
1
!
.
1,
1970 to
Year
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
No.
9
5
5
10
17
9
7
8
3
8
4
5
3
4
5
5
3
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
6
14
10
6
4
3
3
APRIL
30, 1971
Amt.
Year
1948
1949
1950
58.00
30.00
57.00
63.00
148.00
247.00
74.00
110.00
65.00
58.00
24.50
72.00
70.00
25.00
50.00
36.00
25.00
80.00
140.00
75.00
65.00
45.00
20.00
20.00
9
11
6
7
2
8
6
4
10
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1981
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
10
11
7
10
5
15
18
23
18
22
28
34
27
TO BE DETACHED, FILLED OUT, AND RETURNED
Signature
Name
while in college
Address
(street)
Zip Code
(town)
If
above address
is
new, check here
Amount
Year of graduation
Mail checks
To
to
Alumni
insure tax deductions,
B. S. C.
Office,
Box
31, B.S.C.
make checks payable
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Amt.
No.
5
to
.
36.00
78.00
72.00
75.00
43.00
35.00
53.00
35.00
25.00
65.00
81.00
47.00
44.00
58.61
33.00
76.00
127.00
125.00
76.00
162.00
180.00
214.00
138.00
817.00
The
iliiiniii
The upper and lower Campuses
Volume LXXII
of
Quarterly
Bloomsburg State College are outlined
Number
3
in this
airview
SEPTEMBER
made
in July 1971
1971
THE PRESIDENT'S PAGE
In 1966, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
brought out its first comprehensive Master Plan
for Higher Education, and at that time called
for a review and a revision within four years.
During these past two years Task Forces and
other groups worked towards the development of
that Plan, and a short time ago, the 1971 version
appeared. Some of the more significant parts
are the following.
The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, like all
states,
serious
faces
Education
ing ever
is
difficulties.
an expensive process and
more
stitutions is
fiscal
so.
The
is
Highe
•
becom
plight of the private in-
such that their very survival depends
upon some kind of public support.
private education has
Certainly,
made
a significant contribution, and its loss would be serious for everyFinancial problems, however, also extend
one.
must be
to the public sector, and a system
found
that
will
assure
that
public
institutions
character. The Masincreases.
gradual tuition
retain their unique public
ter
Plan
proposes
Some increases are inevitable, and the individual
It
to make a greater contribution towards its cost.
education will have
be hoped, however, that loan
who have
provisions and scholarship provisions will be such that those students
sought, through public institutions, both social and vocational mobility, will not be
hampered. The Master Plan ultimately should come forth with a meaningful philosophy of public higher education, in addition to its concern for independent institutions.
The Plan calls for greater emphasis on Continuing Education. During the past
year, this College appointed a Director of Summer Sessions and Continuing Education,
and tried to take its part in this vital area of educational concern. In a world in
which occupations are changing rapidly and radically, the major hope for man:
individuals is flexibility achieved through a continuing process of learning.
The Master Plan is cognizant of the need for further educational opportunities for
the disadvantaged. Bloomsburg has assumed responsibility for trying to provide such
educational opportunities but the process is costly, and financial support has not
been forthcoming. Nevertheless, this College will continue to do what it can to provide
meaningful opportunities.
There has been emphasis upon the need for cooperative endeavors regionally
with public and private working together. This past year has seen meaningful cooperation among all segments of higher education, a degree cf corporation w’hich, heretoMore, of course, is needed, but the coming era will
fore, had not effectively existed.
receiving an
is to
see the emergence of regional consortia.
Finally, the Master Plan calls for a Board from the various segments of higher
education to advise the Council on Higher Education. I have, I am pleased to say,
been asked to serve in this capacity. This is a meaningful step towards better communication among all segments of higher education, and among the institutions, the
and the legislature.
The Master Plan indicates the need for private support of public education. As I
am sure all of you recall. The Bloomsburg Foundation was established during the
past academic year in an attempt to gain private funds for those things that the State
public,
either cannot or should not undertake.
In keeping with the efforts of the Foundation,
Alumni Association has turned over to the College all fund-raising activities. You
will be hearing more about this; the need is great to provide many of the educational
the
services for which only private monies can be used.
CAMPUS BUILDING
PROGRAM CONTINUES
by Boyd F. Buckingham
Alumni returning to campus for Homecoming Day
Activities on October 9 will notice several changes in
both the Upper and Lower Campus areas.
Six new projects are curently under construction at an
estimated cost of $7,200,000, and several others are in
either the planning or design stage.
The new Gymnasium on the Upper Campus is expected
to be completed before the end of this year at a cost of
$2,435,000. The gym will provide areas for varsity basketball, wrestling, and swimming as well as health and
physical education classes and intramural activities.
Nearly $200,000 worth of movable equipment must be installed before the gym will be completely ready for use.
More than
Husky Lounge, formerly
make way
for the
the gymnasium, comes down
new Student Center building.
to
$1,000,000 is being spent to install utilities,
roads, and parking areas on the Upper Campus. Although
this project will not be completed before July, 1972, it is
expected that a 350,000 gallon reservoir and utilities in
some areas will be finished earlier to accomodate the
the new gym next spring. The utilities will be installed in
sites, wiiere new' classroom buildings, residence halls, a
dining room, and other projects are to be constructed in
the future.
A
parking area adjacent to Elwell Residence
more than 200 cars when it is
completed in December at a ccst of $467,000. Adjoining
streets will be widened and new' srdewalks constructed.
Most of the steel w'ork and the concrete block and brick
facing of the new' air conditioned Administration BuildThis
ing will be completed by Homecoming Day.
structure, located on the site previously occupied by
Dillon House, will provide central offices for a number of
administrative and office personnel now located in different buildings. One wing of the building will house offices,
loading docks, and storage areas for the receiving and
disbursing of college suplies. The target date for completion is April, 1972; estimated cost of construction is
triple-level
Hall will provide spaces for
Work
is
Dillon
House
underway on
site.
new'
President’s
Administration Building
home
is in
on
the background.
$1,350,000.
Old Husky Lounge has been demolished to prepare the
Student Center. When completed in Decemnew center wall house the College Store, a
formal lounge, a snack bar and dining area, multi-purpose
rooms, an area for four bowling alleys, a game room, a
television lounge, a listening room for hi-fi and stereo
record playing, offices and workrooms for student publications, a first aid center, and offices for student organizations.
Completely air-conditioned, the center wall cost
$1,250,000 plus the cost of movable equipment.
New' recreation areas are being constructed to meet one
of the most critical needs on campus. By June. 1972 there
should be 18 all-weather tennis courts mine will be lighted
for night-time use), a football soccer field, a softball
diamond, and a new' road connecting Chestnut Street with
Light Street Road. The playing fields are to be used only
for health and physical education classes and intramural
site for a new
ber, 1972, the
athletic activities.
mate $550,000..
The cost
New
field
house on the upper campus takes form.
of the project will approxi-
Several problems continue to block approval of plans
for newr athletic fields for varsity football, baseball, and
track. It is hoped these problems can be resolved in the
near future so that all varsity athletic contests can be
played on campus.
The Capital Budget has allocated funds
to 1. install one
converted boilers in the Heating Plant to make
gas and oil the primary sources of energy for heat and
hot water; 2. design and construct a residence hall on the
site of Waller Hall; 3. design and construct a classroom
building east of Andruss Library
4. provide installation
new and
2
;
of air-conditioning in Sutliff Hall.
New lawm areas, trees, shrubbery,
and flowers are being
planted near recently completed buildings as funds permit
SEPTEMBER,
1971
Construction area of multi-level parking garage at Second
and Penn
streets.
Page one
This
is
Bloomsburg State College
Someone once asked Ernest Hemingway, “What is the best early trainHemingway reing for a writer?”
“An unhappy
childhood.”
childhoods are unremarkably uniform these days, teachers of composition face a tough challenge. It isn’t like the good old days
when Lafayette College threw out
Stephen Crane and Lehigh University bounced Richard Harding Davis.
Bloomsburg State College this year
launched a new idea in teaching composition that may not produce Stephen
Cranes or Hemingways, but it won’t
discourage them, either, and it will
save the patience of everyone.
What Bloomsburg found in its freshmen is puzzling, yet true. Because of
higher admissions standards and better high schools in Pennsylvania, the
quality of writing composition by the
average freshman is up. Certainly
there are fewer F-rated writers getting into college. However, the reading background of freshmen has not
improved that much, if at all. The
paradox is that so many college freshmen are half-decent writers but indifferent readers.
The Bloomsburg English Department of 25 professors decided to junk
the worn-out system of inflicting a dull
English Composition course on everyone. Now tests are given, and at least
half the incoming class goes right into
an “English Laboratory” program.
plied,
Since so
Page two
many
New
in 1939. the
Centennial year.
"English Lad"
Program Replaces
Tiresome Lecture
B. BEERS
Associate Editor
Harrisburg Patriot-News
By PAUL
Students who are slow on grammar,
punctuation and the rest endure a
straight composition course for a semester and then head for the lab work
The lab has audio-visual methods
of teaching the fundamentals of writing. Ten professors are tutorial assistants to the lab. The staff has devised
10 slide shows on composition, plus 6
These presentations
tape cassettes.
are better than a lecture, because
pictures of writing
a professor’s voice
gives explanations over the earphones.
I sat through one slide presentation
on “The Whole Theme,” where the
elements of unity in a composition
were discussed and shown. It took
one essay of a cashier describing
Christmas shoppers. Her point was
that she was interested in the shop-
(they
offer visual
examples while
pers’ attitudes toward spending money. A poor theme was shown that had
make that point in the third
sentence. A good essay - or a proper
rewrite, editing job -- then revised
the cashier’s story and put her thematic point in the first sentence.
The 20-minute slide presentation
also has examples on content, style,
tone, methods of organization and
diction. A student quickly learns some
basics of good writing and editing
when he sees “nice” person scratched
out for “cheerful” person or “chaste"
as a
synonym for
not permitted
“pure” when used as an adjective
before “water.”
The tape I heard was of a Bloomsburg professor correcting a student’s
her essay
paper on why he liked growing up in
Newark, N.J. With the original comp
duplicated, the student can
fellow the professor’s telling how the
orition
Newark youngster
failed to develop
ideas, didn’t produce enough evidence
persuasion in the mind of
the reader and was too general and
unspecific to achieve any focus on his
to sustain
subject matter.
The slide and tape were a first-rate
job of teaching.
A college-qualified
youngster couldn’t fail to learn something after a few hours in the lab.
The lab course is set up so a student
studies on his own time and then
takes three, 1' a -hour each theme-examinations. He selects his topic from
a group offered and writes away.
(Continued on Page
3)
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
College Begins
Many
For
Every summer
B. S.
In
for the last eleven
a small number of students
have begun their college experience
at
Bloomsburg State in late June.
In the summer freshman program
at
BSC a student begins college dursummer main session, taking a
math and an English composition
course. He also takes a course of his
choice during post session, which begins in August, then returns to school
on a regular basis in January if he
meets the requirements of the sum-
mer program.
the program was aimed
giving students with a scholastic
weakness, who would not otherwise
be admitted to college, a chance at
higher education.
Initially,
at
‘Probies’ No Longer
Over the years, however, the
pro-
gram has changed.
Current Director
of Admissions, T. L. Cooper, presently
in charge of the program, stated “as
the program has grown, the quality
of the incoming summer freshmen
has improved.”
Cooper
noted,
the
summer freshmen were referred to
as “trial freshmen” or as “probationary freshmen,” which as things
go on campuses, led to somewhat
derogatory nicknames like “proby.”
Previously,
Now, although
the program
the central concept
still to admit a
group of students in the summer who
of
is
normally
cannot be accommodated
semester, the program is
no longer referred to as a “trial” or
probation
program
“This year there were 4,251 applications for 1,000 spaces for freshmen
in the
fall
‘
’
’
‘
Also, the summer frosh express
pleasure at the reception they received from upperclassmen, especially
C. Freshmen
Bloomsburg.
to
No Cars
years
ing
ing.
Summer
in September,” Cooper said, explaining, “the 279
freshmen admitted this year were unsuccessful
summer
Several facets of the summer program differ from the regular semesSummer freshmen cannot have
ter.
automobiles on campus, they mus:
reside on campus, and they must
achieve a 2.0 oi “C” average to return in January.
These factors. Cooper said, aid the
student in doing as well as he can.
Residing on campus, for instance,
provides easy access to the library,
the help of other students, and morning classes.
Prohibiting autos can
aid in keeping the student’s mind on
studying.
Requiring a “C” average
keeps the student from starting off on
the wrong foot, builds his confidence,
and helps him when he enters the
stronger, regular semester competiJanuary.
Researching ‘Success’
John L. Walker.former director of
admissions and current dean of students, said his personal observation
indicates the program has been successful.
Walker noted that a study
of the program is underway through
the college research center which
tion in
will reveal in detail just
how
success-
it has been.
Although figures are not yet available on the number of students who
enter college through the
summer
program and complete a foui’-year
program. Walker said he believes
frem his own observation that about
the same percentage
of
students
entering in the summer graduate as
ful
who
Head of
the
change
in
those
to
enter in the Fall.
program when it began
the
1965, Walker said
ment, recommendations, and personal
college
deemphasized
admitting
students with a weakness through the
program because it became a “matter
of fairness.”
Matter of ‘Fairness’
“Since five years ago,” Walker said
“the applications for freshmen spaces
at BSC have tripled. We were faced
with a large group of applicants with
good qualifications but not quite good
interview.
enough
in competing for those 1,000 spaces,
but most had the necesary qualifica-
tions for admission.”
Applications, Cooper said are evaulated by five criteria:
class
rank,
standardized test results (such as
college boards), high school achieve-
The most highly
qualified students
in all areas are accepted for the fall
semester.
Others are offered
the
summer program, and
if
they
are
are admitted in January
withdrawals, graduations
and
to
make
it
in
September, and
yet not poor enough to be admitted
ir.
the summer program. They were
the next in line and we asked ourselves, how fair are we
being
to
for
them?”
As an example of the general success of the program Walker quoted
Many of the students admitted to
the summer program at BSC
this
the following figures:
in 1968, 129
students were admitted in the summer
and 117 qualified for January admis-
year, Cooper said, had been accepted for the fall semester and regular
admission at other schools, but they
sion; in 1969, 136
qualified: in 1970,
and 154 qualified.
wanted
Summer freshmen, although many
complain about Commons food, having
to stay on campus, and lacking automobiles, agree that summer sessions
allow a more relaxed pace for study-
successful,
when
academic
failures
make
room
them.
to
come
to
Bloomsburg.
Others, he said, because of financial
or other reasons, would not go to
college at all if it were not for the
summer program which admits them
SEPTEMBER,
1971
were admitted. 119
181 were admitted
the members of the orientation committee, which guides rather than hazes
incoming students.
“Hazing is a thing of the past, we
just don’t do it anymore,” said one of
three co-chairmen of the orientation
committee.
It seems to have worked well for
the frosh. “I like the upperclassmen
a lot,” one lad said, looking at pretty,
shapely Mary Wachter, a committee
chairman with the freshest freshman
gleam his eyes could muster.
(ENGLISH LAB,
Continued)
When he passes
three exams he’s completed the course. Many students do
this early in the semester, completing their English comp course in a
hurry and devoting the rest of the
term to their other college studies.
The Bloomsburg experiment was set
up by Dr. Louis F. Thompson, head of
the English Department. He was as
tired of the old lecture hall composition courses as the past 10 generations
oi college
students.
Mrs. Virginia Duck was one of his
faculty members who applied imagination in making the tapes and slide
presentations.
Another on the staff
is Richard Savage who was a professional
writer for the Saturday
Evening Post. Savage now concentrates on poetry.
Bloomsburg’s new president, Dr.
Robert
J.
Nossen
is
humanities mind-
ed and welcomed the experimental lab
project. Not only is it more efficient
but it is a desirable method of handling large numbers of students. Bloomsburg isn’t a little school anymore.
With 3.800 students, it is now twice as
big as it was in 1960.
NEW FACULTY FOR
1971-72
Dr. Walter A. Simon, Director of
Education Opportunity Program and
Piofessor of Art.
William G. Williams, Professor of
Business and Coordinator of Legal
Affairs
Frederick
J.
Carberry, Temporary
Assistant Professor of Sociology
Dr. Stephen D. Beck, Professor and
Chairman. Dept, of Mathematics
Dr. Robert R. MacMurray, Professoi
of
Economics
Thomas W. Wheeler,
Instructor of
Speech with responsibilities as Technical Director of Theatre.
Dr. Gerald W. Powers, Professor of
Communication Disorders and Director of Deaf Education
Miss Karen S. Tesreau, Temporary
Assistant Professor of Physical Education
Dr. Chang Shub Roh,
Sociology
Professor of
Page three
—
DEGREES AWARDED
514
AT JUNE COMMENCEMENT
“We
live in an age of mediocrity
widespread mediocrity in key
places in business or education and
even in the armed forces, can be deadening, even destructive, to any country,” Dr. John A. Hoch told the grad-
and
uating seniors of Bloomsburg State
College at the May 30 commencement
exercises held at the Bloomsburg Fairgrounds.
Dr. Hoch, Vice President and Dean
of the Faculties, said a few of the
causes of mediocrity in many instances are the result of labor union regu-
by seniority of
unqualified politicians and non-interested voters, broad results of taxation
policies and the adjustment of school
curriculum to the ability of the average or below-average pupils.
“We have moved almost unconsciously toward achieving the greatest
good for the greatest number,” he
said, “but we have neglected that
small group of potential readers
through whom human happiness has
in the past been attainable and attained. For Americans it is at the moment vital to provide a cultural climate
lations,
$2.7
promotions
in which exceptionally high intelligence is detected and subsidized ac-
cordingly.
“Somehow
our
national leadership
in religion, in education
craft should rise to the
and
in state-
occasion and
counteract the blight which mediocrity has been casting over our boasted
culture.”
Following the awarding of degrees,
which included 23 Master of Education
degrees and 491 bachelor degrees,
William A. Oluley, President of the
Class of 1971, delivered the response.
He pointed out that as a result of the
physical growth his class has seen it
is no longer correct to refer to B.S.C.
as “the friendly college on the hill”
because it will soon occupy not one.
but two hills.
He also cited the growth of the college in terms of enrollment and in the
development of the fraternity and
sorority system, but said it is not
on these that B.S.C. should place its
greatest emphasis.
“In the final analysis” he declared
“any college must stake its reputation
on
its
fulfillment of its
primary
BILLION RECEIVED IN
FINANCIAL AID AT BSC
Financial Aid Statistics for fiscal
year 1970-71 indicate Blomsburg State
College students have received $2.7
million toward educational expenses.
The aid was distributed among
2,783
students according to need. Included
in the trial figure is $1,200.00 in Guar-
anteed Loans provided by local banks.
Nationally, these loans total $1.5 billion and are the main source of funds
for higher education.
PHEAA
Scholarship accounting
the
for $846 000 in direct aid to BSC students. This fund is contingent upon action by the state Legislature each year.
iation.
to
Once accepted as a student, the key
most assistance is the Parent’s
Confidential Statement filed through
the College Scholarship Service. Notable exceptions are the State Scholarship and Guaranteed Loans which
have separate applications to PHEAA.
Full details are available in the office
the Director of Financial Aid,
of
Bloosmburg State College.
Page four
my
my
dynamic existence.”
Welcoming remarks by Dr. Robert
as a
Nossen, president of the college, followed the invocation by Rev. Jay
Rochelle, Protestant Campus Minister.
Candidates for the bachelor degrees
presented by Dr. Hoch, and
those for master degrees were presented by Charles H. Carlson. Dean of the
School of Graduate Studies. President
Nossen and William E. Booth, vice
were
president of the Board of Trustees,
conferred the degrees.
FORMER ATTORNEY GEN.
IS NAMED TO FACULTY
William G. Williams, Former Attorney General, General Counsel to the
Department of Education and the
Civil Service Commission for the Commonwealth of Pensylvania. began his
new duties as Professor of Business
and Coordinator of Legal Affairs at
BSC on June 7, 1971.
A native of Williamstown, Pennsylvania, Williams received his early
education in the schools of Harrisburg
and Williamstown. He was awarded
his Bachelor of Arts degree from
Gettysburg College in 1942 and received his Doctor of Jurisprudence
from Dickinson School of Law in 1946
In addition to the position he held
with the Commonwealth of Pensylvania, Williams has been in general law
practice in Harrisburg for the past
eighteen years. He has also served as
Assistant Attorney General on th"
Board of Review for the Unemployment Compensation Bureau from 1963
to 1970.
From December. 1953 to 1957
he was associated with the Bureau of
Social Security for Public Employees
The second largest source remains
Other sources include part-time employment during the school year
which provides $317,000 to 800 undergraduates, National Defense Loans.
Educational Opportunity Grants, and
loans provided by the Alumni Assoc-
that of providing an intelfunction
lectual community in which students
and faculty can creatively learn to
grow together, to advance the ideas
of education and individual growth.
fellow gradcharge to
“It is
uating seniors that in the future we
make an effort to bridge some of the
gaps which exist in our world today
and continue to search within ourselves for the means to continue to
grow educationally and creatively as
individuals who must deal with life
of the
Commonwealth
Department
of
of
Pennsylvania
Labor and Industry
in
the capacities of counsel for a year
and a half, acting director for a year,
and special advisor to the Bureau for
a year.
Dr. John A. Hoch, Vice President
and Dean of the Faculties at Bloomsburg State College, has asked that he
be relieved of his administrative responsibilities and that he be given a
classroom teaching assignment. Dr.
Hoch indicated that he was acting on
the advice of his physician.
Dr. Robert Nossen, President of BSC
said he would hold Dr. Hoch’s request in abeyance pending action by
the Board of Trustes.
Upon his graduation from Dickinson School of Law in 1946, Professor
Williams taught for seven years a!
that institution. He has written several articles which have appeared
the Dickinson Law Review.
in
HOMECOMING DAY
SATURDAY, OCT.
9,
1971
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
New head
football coach. Bill Sprou-
have to find some key replacements on both the offensive and defensive units for players lost through
will
graduation.
Wingback Bob Warner,
vania
back
tack.
found
Paul
All PennsylConference Selection, will be
to lead the Husky ground atReplacements will have to be
for his running mates, fullback
Skrimcovsky, and tailback Bill
Firestine.
IS
NAMED
HEAD FOOTBALL COACH
Husky Football Squad
1971
le,
BILL SPROULE
On
Key Positions Open
On
will
NAIA Honorable Mention
tackle Bill
Nagy, and defensive ends Ted Schmittel and Mark Sacco, along with Hugh
Jones and John Davis, key defenders
in the backfield.
Mike Devereux may
more duty at quarterback, although he could be shifted to a running position with sophmore Bob
Two key
Better calling the signals.
returnees are punter Dan Stellfox, who
averaged 40.6 yards per boot, and
place kicker Neil Oberholtzer, who.
in addition to kicking the extra points,
booted six field goals, two over 40
yards.
If the returning veterans, along with
incoming sophomores, can fill the
vacancies of those mentioned above,
the Huskies should be in for another
winning season. Last year's record
see
was 5-3.
In addition to the regular Pennsylvania State College opponents, the
University of Scranton returns to the
FORMER BSC BASKETBALL
COACH GETS UTAH POST
Bill Foster, BSC coach from 1960-63.
was named head basketball coach at
the University of Utah in early spring.
Foster served as head coach at Rut-
gers University for eight years after
leaving BSC. His 1966-67 team finished
third in the National
Invitational
Tournament
New
York. The enviable record
was accomplished by Foster during his three years
in
of 45-13
BSC.
Dick Lloyd, Foster’s star eager at
BSC and freshman coach at Rutgers,
was named to the head mentor position at Rutgers when Foster accepted
the Utah appointment.
Lloyd. Class
at
of 1962, set numerous BSC records during his undergraduate years, many of
which still stand. He w as named to the
Conference All-Star team in 1960 and
1962.
His younger brother Bob was
selected as Rutgers’ first All-American
r
in 1967.
SEPTEMBER,
College at Homecoming on October 9,
a team they haven’t played since 1957.
Blcomsburg has yet to defeat the University of Scranton, having been defeated four times, while the Huskies
have the edge in the series with California 5-3-2.
CROSS COUNTRY
the offensive line, re-
be neded for split end
Mike Kclojejchick. center Steve Harmanos. and guard Joe Bottiglieri.
Defense may present the biggest
problem to Sproule with the loss of
placements
schedule after an absence of 17 years.
The Huskies entertain California State
1971
Following two very successful seasons 11-1 and 10-1) under the direction of Dr. Clyde Ncble. the 1971 edition of the Husky thinclads appears to
<
have a bright future.
Only one runner. Dave Kelter, has
been lost through graduation. Leading the returning veterans are tw o
junior outstanding runners. Tim Waer
chter and Terry Lee. who alternated in
the one and two finishing positions
Strong
for the Huskies last year.
support is expected to come again
from seniors Paul Pelletier and Larry
Strchl, last year’s captain, along with
sophomore Larry Horwitz. Another
sophomore. Mike Hippie is also being
counted on strongly and two fresh-
men, Don Nauss and Bob Faux may
well work their way into top spots.
Coach Noble indicates it wall be extremely difficult to improve on the
records of the past two years. The
is expected to
Millersville, the only team
to defeat BSC last year. Lock Haven
S. C., Bucknell U., and Susquehanna
U. are also expected to field strong
toughest
competition
come from
aggregations.
Chuck Daly is another former BSC
eager who has “arrived” in the
coaching profession. Daly, Class of
1952, who played his BSC basketball
under Harold Shelley in the 1950’s,
was named this spring to succed Dick
Harter as head basketball coach at the
University of Pennsylvania. He previously served as freshman coach at
Duke University for two years, then
replaced Bob Cousey as head coach
at Boston College before being named
to the Penn position. Daly played his
high school basketball at Kane High
School in western Pennsylvania under
Dr. Stuart Edwards, current Dean of
the School of Professional Studies at
BSC.
William J. Sproule, Assistant Professor of Health and Physical Education, was appointed Acting Head
Football Coach for the 1971-72 academic year during the latter part of June.
Sproule, a native of Lansford, Pennsylvania, has been a member of the
faculty since August, 1969, and has
served since that time as Assistant
Football Coach and Assistant Wrestling Coach.
A
graduate of Syracuse Univerw here he received a Bachelor of
Arts degree in Physical Education,
Sproule played football under Coach
of the Year Floyd “Ben” Schwartzwalder. He was a member of Schsity,
r
wartzwalder’s 1959 National Championship Football Team which played
in the Cotton Bowl.
While at Syracuse, Sproule was named “Outstanding Senior” in the Department of
Athletics
and Physical Education,
Teacher Training Division, and achieved academic recognition for six
semesters on the Dean’s List.
Sproule received his Master of Scidegree in Physical Education
ence
from
then
Brooklyn College, and since
has
completed postgraduate
work at New York University and the
State University College at Cortland.
New York. His previous coaching experiences include positions as Head
Football, Track and Baseball Coach
at Waterville Central High School in
New York, and as Assistant Football Coach at Smithtown High School.
Dr. Charles H. Carlson, Dean, School
Graduate Studies and Director of
Research Activities, has been elected
to a second term as president of the
Pennsylvania State College and University Graduate Deans Asociation.
of
New
A veteran
Army as a
2nd Lieutenant, Sproule was a member of the U.S. Army Football Team
at Fort Dix, New Jersey, and served
Smithtown,
GETS SECOND TERM
York.
of service with the U.S.
as Director of the Post Football Clinic.
He is married to the former Joanne
Pavlick of Coaldale, pensylvania, and
is the father of three children.
Page
five
AGENDA FOR HOMECOMING WEEKEND
Friday, October
8:30 P.M.
—
8,
1971
Name
Entertainment Committee will present the “New York Rock Ensemble” in concert
All seats reserved— $2.00 per person.
Tickets may be secured in advance by writing to John Trathen, Comptroller, Community Activities, Box 37, Bloomsburg
State College, Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815. The Homecoming Queen will be crowned at
Big
in
Haas Auditorium.
the intermission of the concert.
Saturday, October
9,
1971
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
service.
P.M. — Football — Millersville State College — Town Athletic Park, 7th and Iron Streets.
Admission — Adults $1.50; Students — $1.00.
P.M. — 5:30 P.M. — Residence Halls will be open to visitors.
P.M. —Dinner for Alumni and visitors — cafeteria service — Scranton Commons — $1.25 per person.
P.M. —Semi-formal Dance — Two locations:
West Dining Hall (Blue Room) — Scranton Commons — “URSA MAJOR” — suggested for students and recent graduates.
East Dining Hall (Gold Room) — Scranton Commons — “THE STAGGS” — suggested for
faculty and less recent graduates. Admission — $1.50 per person; Current Alumni Membership
A.M. 5:30 P.M.
Registration and Refreshments
Student Union Building.
A.M. 12:00 Noon
All College Buildings except Residence Halls will be open for inspection by Alumni
and Visitors.
*10:15 A.M.
Homecoming Parade begins at Parking Area, Centennial Gym.
12:00 Noon
Luncheon begins for Alumni and visitors Scranton Commons
cafeteria
$1.25 per person
8:30
8:30
2:00
4:30
5:30
8:30
Card or Faculty Activities Card will admit member and guest free
and Alumni are welcome to attend the dance of their choice.
of charge.
Students, faculty,
"The parade will form at Centennial Gym, proceed down Second and Main Streets to Market, south on Market to the Bloomsburg Town Park. The theme for Homecoming Activities will be “It Was a Very Good
Year.” All Alumni and friends are urged to come to Bloomsburg early to see this gala procession.
DEGREE APPROVAL
BSC has been
DR.
notified
by the De-
STATE ADVISORY GROUP
CommonEducation,
of
wealt of Pennsylvania, that the approval to offer the Bachelor of Science
degree in public nursing in the
School of Professional Studies has
been renewed. Although the program
for the degree in public school nursing
has been offered at BSC for nearly 20
years, the program has been revised
to conform to present standards re-
partment
commended by
the State
Board
of
Dr. Robert J. Nossen, President of
Bloomsburg State College, has been
appointed a
Danville.
Page
six
Holiday
of the Advisory
to the State
Education for the
Council of Higher
academic year, according to
an announcement by Dr. W. Deming
Lewis, Chairman of the State Board
of Education of the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania.
The appointment is
pursuant to the 1971 Master Plan for
Higher Education and in accordance
1971-72
Ed-
OVERNIGHT ACCOMODATIONS
Bloomsburg Highway;
member
Committee on Planning
ucation.
Reservations for overnight accomodations for Homecoming Weekend
should be made directly with the MaHummel’s
gee Hotel, Bloomsburg.;
Motel, Route 11, Bloomsburg; Riverview Motel, R. D. 1, Berwick; Stone
Castle Motel and Restaurant, R. D. 2,
Bloomsburg; Keller’s Motel, R. D. 4,
Danville; Pine Barn Inn & Motel, Danville; Reichard’s Motel, R. D. 4, Danville; Red Maple Motel, R. D. 2, Berwick; Hotel Berwick, Berwick; Tennytown Motel, Berwick Highway, Bloomsburg; Brair Heights Lodge, Berwick-
NOSSEN APPOINTED TO
with agreement of the State Board of
Education and the Council of Higher
Education. As a member of the Advisory Committee, Dr. Nossen represents the Board of State College Presidents.
of
William H. Rea. Chairman, Council
Higher Education, has indicated
that the major responsibilities of the
Advisory Committee
Ellamae Jackson, who
Dean
of
Women
with students at
retired
as
summer chats
a Summer Session
this
Inn,
picnic.
will
be to meet
periodically with the Council of Higher
Education, work to improve communication with all segments of Higher
Education in Pennsylvania, and make
more effective and productive the
planning function of the Council.
TIIE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
A portrait of Dr. Francis B. Haas, former BSC President. was presented to the college recently by Mr. and
At left are Mrs.
Mj-s. William A. Lank, shown at right.
Mary Haas Gailey and Francis B. Haas, Jr., daughter and
son of Dr. Haas. Presentation was made on occasion of
official naming of the auditorium as the Francis B. Haas
Center for the Arts.
B. S.
9 18
U. of Scranton
H
Lock Haven
A
A
H
H
A
H
A
Mansfield
California
West Chester
Millersville
Cheyney
Kutztown
East Stroudsburg
Play off East
—
H
SWIMMING
11
15
Temple
H
Wilkes
A
A
A
H
H
A
A
Kings
Millersville
8
Kutztown
29
E. Stroudsburg
Indiana
2
5
9
12
16
23
25
CROSS COUNTRY
BASKETBALL
9 25
1
Andruss, President Emeritus.
C. Fall and Winter Sports Schedules
VARSITY FOOTBALL
10 2
10 9
10 16
10 23
10 30
11 6
11 13
11 20
Miss Ethel Wilson, of the Business Office staff holds
certificate of service presented her at a luncheon in July
recognizing her 40 years of employment of BSC. With her,
from left are: C. M. Housknecht, former Business Manager: Paul C. Martin, Business Manager; Dr. Harvey A.
Lock Haven
S. Rock and California
West Chester
H
H
Trenton
A
H
12 2
12 4
12 8
12 11
12 14
12 16
12 18
12 29
1
8
1
25
29
2
5
9
12
16
19
22
24
26
29
Baptist Bible
H
9
Cheyney
A
Shippensburg
West Chester
H
A
A
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
11
11
Cheyney
Millersville
H
& 19 S. Hampton (Tournament)
& 30 Berwick (Tournament)
E. Stroudsburg
Baptist Bible
H
Mansfield
A
A
A
Cheyney
H
Shippensburg
West Chester
A
Kutztown
A
Kutztown
Lock Haven
H
A
A
H
A
ALUMNI CHAIRS
Note: Schedules for all Fall and Winter sports, except Football, are ten-
Alumni Chairs are now available at
the College Store.
We have a Captain’s Chair with Cherry Arms for
$40.95 plus tax and shipping, and a
Boston Rocker for $31.95 plus tax and
shipping. The chairs are black with
a gold BSC Seal. Please write the
College Store at Bloomsburg State
College and we will be glad to send
you more information, or stop in to
see the chairs on Homecoming Day,
tative.
Saturday, October 9th.
10
Clairon
&
11
Penna. Conference
Meet—
Clarion
3 23,
24
&
25
NAIA Championship
Meet
SEPTEMBER,
1971
Lock Haven
E. Stroudsburg
& Kings
>>a>a>w>>
Kutztown
Susquehanna
E
.
Stroudsburg
Millersville
NAIA Millersville
—
Mansfield
Bucknell
Penna. Conference
W. Chester
>x
Meet
H
Millersville
E. Stroudsburg
Mansfield
Kings
Shippensburg
Mansfield
Cheyney & Wilkes
WRESTLING
12 11
12117
11 8
1115
1 19
Quadrangular
Quadranguler
Oregon State
Oswego
Clarion
State
122
Shippensburg
28
1 29
2 3
2 5
California
1
2110
2 19
Waynesburg
Millersburg
Kutztown
Lock Haven
E. Stroudsburg
2|25
&
26
3
&
4
3
1
3|
9,
College
West Chester
10
Penna. Conf. Meet
NCAA
&
11
Championship Meet
NAIA Championship
Meet
Page seven
NEWS ABOUT YOUR CLASSMATES
Your classmates and friends are inwhere you are and
what’s happening to you. So, if you
change your adress, start a new job,
get married, or welcome an addition
to the family, send the news to the
Alumni Office, Bloomsburg State
College, Bloomsburg, Pa., 17815 and
Square, London. S
terested in knowing
we’ll publish it in the next issue of
the Quarterly. The news should reach
the Alumni Office by any of the fol-
lowing dates:
1,
May
1,
November
or August
1,
February
1915
August
(Mrs.
Michelini), 113 Orono St., Clifton,
New Jersey, is the mother of Dr.
Francis Michelini, who became President of Wilkes College on July 1.
1970.
1923
The Rural Group
the Class of
1923 enjoyed a very pleasant day at
Ralph
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Beagle, R. D. 5. Danville. Pa, on
June
A
5,
of
1971.
delicious
I,
England.
Kenneth E. Wire, 4104 Walnut St..
Harrisburg, Pa., 17109, w'as recently
reappointed as Controller for the Harrisburg Steel Co., a Division of the
Harsco Corporation.
covered
dinner
dish
was served to
D.l.
Seely,
R.
Annie Bronson
Drums; Sarah Levan Leighow, R. D.
3, Catawissa, Pa.; Ruth Geary BeaR. D. 5, Danville, Pa.; Dr. Elma
Major, R. D. 2, Dallas, Pa.; Emily
E. Craig, R. D. 3, Catawissa, Pa.
Leona Williams Moore, Simsburg,
Conn., a member of the group, extended greetings by telephone.
John Rowlands is married
former Alma Corman, ’27.
address is 505 Park Ave.,
port. Pa. 16915
Marjorie
Smith
address of
(Mrs. Roderick Reber) is 215 Surrey
Road, Chalfont, Pa. 18914
The
Clarence Meiss, ’50 and Elizabeth
at
Walters Meiss, ’51, are living
Catonsville, Maryland, with son John,
age 13. Clarence is head of the Guidance Department at Catonsville Senior H. S.
1954
Betty Hoover (Mrs. Stephen Wolfe
earned a law degree from the University of California at Davis this
spring and accepted a position as
law clerk in the U. S. District Court
Her husband earned
in Sacramento.
his Ph.D. in Biology at Johns Hopkins University in 1962 and is associate
professor of biology at the University
of California at Davis. They and their
children, Andr a and Eric, reside at
1133 Dartmouth Place, Davis, California 95616.
1955
Shirley Redline
Thomas
(Mrs. C.
Fenstermacher) was awarded
the
Master of Education degree by Western Maryland College in June. Her
address is 983 York Street. Hanover.
Pa.
17331
to
1957
the
Their
Couders-
William J. Pohutsky and wife (Mary
Grace, ’58) now live at 222 West End
Avenue, North Plainfield. New Jer-
1929
Dorothy Schmidt wall be at 7-14
Denenchofu 3-Chome, Ota Ku, Tokyo
December
15,
1971.
From
then until April 15, 1972, her
address will be 47 Claremont Ave..
N. Y.. N. Y. 10027
1939
Alfred P.
members
Koch
of
one of seventeen
Lehigh University
honored in May for
is
the
faculty and staff,
25 years of service to the University.
A certified public accountant, he is a
professor of accounting at Lehigh.
1940
Mrs. Eleanor Sabota (Eleanor Beckis now living at 303 East Ann
St., Valdosta, Georgia. 31601
ley)
The address of Mr. and Mrs. CharNew Delhi.
les R. Bakey, Jr., is
Department of State. Washington. D.
C. 20521. Mrs. Bakey is the former
Charlotte Gearhart,
’41.
1941
Irene
Konrad)
Diehl
is
Page eight
now
Klusman earned
(Mrs.
William
living at 13
A.
Codogan
is
ville,
Pa.,
degree
from
Rutgers
1963
in Business Administration
nell University in May.
Pekala
J.
at R.
D.
1,
(Mrs.
Plaza) is
Park.
Woodlawn
Hazleton, Pa. 18201
Joseph
W. Johnston, 60 Sylan
Drive, York, Pa., 17402, received the
Master of Education degree
from
Shippensburg State College in May.
Charles F. Dye, R. D.
17315,
will
join
the
5,
by Buck-
1964
Robert R. Erdman received
the
Master of Science degree in August
at Bucknell University.
Reginald
J.
Arnold
7205 Parkview
Virginia. 22042.
Howard
Rising Sun
J.
to
Ave.,
now
is
Falls
living at
Church
Frear has moved from
R. D.
2.
Box
302. Street.
Maryland, 21154
Roy A.
Peffer, 701
Green Acre
Mechanicsburg. was awarded the Master of Education degree in
Elementary Education at Shippensburg State College in May.
Street,
1965
Dr. George T. Barthalmus. assistant professor of zoology at North Carolina State University, is
one of thirty
members chosen by
their
and recent alumni as Outstanding Teachers for 1970-1071.
Carol S. Hoover (Mrs. Ronald R.
Yoder) has changed her address to R.
D. 1. Huntingdon. Pa. 16652.
Donna Eckhart (Mrs. Lester Mease
now living at R. D. 1. New Holland.
Pa. 17557
18049
Nancy
Dan-
his
Gordon Vanderslice Thomas was
awarded the Master of Science degree
is
Robert A. Bottorf picks up his mail
at 673 North Street, Emmaus. Pa.
living
5,
Master’s
University in
received
June.
located at
60048
Illinois.
at
1962
1959
Joseph R. Yocum. IH,
Liberty ville,
the Master
Science degree in Education
Bucknell University in May.
of
faculty
students
sey. 07063
until
J.
Kerry E. Reidinger, R. D.
1926
Japan
1961
John
1950
gle,
145,
College in September. His address is
R. D. 1. Washington Boro, Pa. 17582
1.
Marchetti
Angeline
W
1949
Dover, Pa.
faculty
of
York
College (Penna.) in September as assistant professor in business education.
1960
Dr. William J. Yurkiewicz. a proffessor at Millers ville State College,
will assume additional duties as adjunct associate professor of biology,
a parttime position at Elizabethtown
1966
A
son was born to Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Mandak (Gertrude Hoffer) on
March
1.
The Mandaks and
their
three sons live at 577 North Locust
St., Hazleton, Pa. 18201
Karl K. Sheaffer was awarded the
Master of Education degree and John
R. Gotaskie the Master of Science
degree in Education at Bucknell University during
cises in May.
commencement
exer-
James A. Edwards, Penndel, Pa.,
and Wayne Marek. Levittown. Pa.,
received the Master
Education
of
degree from Rutgers University in
June.
1967
Second Lieutenant Eugene P. Miller was awarded his silver wings at
Vance AFB, Oklahoma, following
graduation from U. S. Air Force pilot
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
He earned
training.
the
Master
of
Science degree at Bucknell in 1969.
Drew
West
B. Poslock
4th Street. N.
is
Y„
.
WEDDINGS
.
.
.
1938
Florence Snook
March
was
married
in
to
4930
1958
Michael J. Marcinko, Fern Glen,
Michael
and Adalgisa P. Vagnoni.
teaches in the Hazleton Area School
District at the Rock Glen Jr. H. S.
Address: 239 Main St., Fern Glen. Pa.
University in
May. Classmate Ace T. Faust was
also in the same line of graduates to
receive the Master of Science degree
in Education.
Bucknell
Genevieve
Recia
resides at 17
Y. 12550
Roe
(Mrs.
St.,
Schmitz)
Newburgh. N.
Nester
Education
of
Master
the
in Reading at Shippensburg
State College in
May.
Susan C. Strine (Mrs. DoletskK is
Heather Road. Huntingdon Valley, Pa. 19006
living at 1578
1969
Thomas M. Eastep was awarded the
Miami
Master of Arts degree by
University (Oxford. Ohio)
His residence is Star Rt.
ensburg. Pa. 17257
Airman
Class Lee
First
in
2,
J.
June.
Shipp-
Berry
named Outstanding Airman
unit at Albrook AFB. Panama
has been
in his
1964
Marie Smolen (Mrs. Solensky).
Address: 1053 Alter St., Hazleton, Pa.
Janet Bohstedt (Mrs. Greenleaf).
Road.
Address:
2318
Catasauqua
Bethlehem, Pa. 18018
Canal Zone. A computer operator.
Berry was cited for his outstanding
performance of duty and exemplary
conduct.
Elaine F.
Zalonis
earned
tne
Master of Science degree at Bucknell University in May.
1970
Joyce Ann Brobst is a candidate for
a Master's degree in Biology at Illinois State University.
Holder of a
two-year Fellowship, she expects to
complete the degree requirements by
June, 1972.
Thomas C. Bedisky has been commissioned a second lieutenant in th°
U. S. Air Force.
He has been assigned to Mather AFB. California.
95655 for navigator training.
1966
Mary
Alice Woodruff and Kenneth
Dumbauld.
Address:
1902 Bellevue
Road, Harrisburg. Pa. 17104
1967
Carl G.
Hack and Susan Ann
Jas-
Both are teachers at Twin
Valley High School.
Susan graduated from Elizabeth College. Address:
Templin Road, Glenmoore. 19343
insky.
Karen Shivelhood. Williamsport ’70
and Larry Swisher, Fairless
Hills.
Both are employed by Union County
Schools in the area of special education. Address: 20 South 18th St., Lew-
1970
Pa.
Priscilla Zimmerman (Mrs. Kayes)
Address: Apt. 5, 1205 Phaestos Drive,
Whitehall, Pa. 18052
Sandra K. Sanford, '69, and .Joseph
Gribbon, ’70. Joe works for the
American Cancer Society. Address:
J.
P. O.
Box
1072. Oil City,
Pa. 16301
Barbara A. Dagle (Mrs. Beaver'.
Three well known theater, film, and
personalities appeared on the BSC
TV
summer
sessions.
Lillian Gish, one of the first stars of
motion pictures in the silent era.
spoke in conjunction with film clips of
some of her early movies. In the sum-
mer
theater productions. Robert Alda
appeared in the “Impossible Years”
and Lee Kurty appeared in “St. Joan.”
1971
Sheryll Ebeler and Wayne D. FredAddress: Apt. 3-D, 60 Vanderbeck St.. Hackensack, N.J. 07601
rick.
Harry K. Berkheiser,
Address:
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Bloss,
’71.
New
Jersey.
Mary
will
begin
her fourth year of teaching second
grade in Franklin Township, N. J. Her
husband is a cost control analyst
for Mobil Chemicals in Edison.
He
will attend Rutgers University this
fall.
Address: 70 JFK Blvd.. Apt.
26 K. Somerset. New Jersey. 08873
1969
Lynn Hall,
Marcella
Montoursville
and David G.
Moharter, Berwick.
Address:
Glenn
and
Washington
Avenues. Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Suzanne E. Dillman and Warren J.
Peel.
Address: Fairground
Street.
Lavelle. Pa.
Linda
and Juno
Fair
St..
’70, and Beverly
Address: R. D. 3.
John B. Parker,
Ann Boston,
’71.
Susquehanna, Pa. 18847
Andrysick and Fred KresAddress: R. D. 1, Orangeville.
Shirley
sley.
Pa. 17859
1971
Mary Lee
Williamsport,
and Edward G. Conway, North Plainfield.
’70
341
17943
Cressman.
Sandra Jefferson, Spring City and
Robert W. Rupp. Bloomsburg. Both
are 1971 BSC graduates. Address: 1016
Chestnut Street, Apt 3. Lebanon, Pa.
17042
Bloomsburg and
Address: 172 Bissets Lane. Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Jane O.
James H.
Rupert,
Fisher.
Cynthia Sharretts, Bloomsburg and
John W. Sibole. John will begin his
senior year at Lehigh University this
fall.
Address: Will be living in Bethlehem, Pa.
E. Johnson. Berwick, and
Lyons, Berwick. Address:
c/o Airman 1/c Wm. J. Lyons, 195-424447. 5921 Security Group, Box 1423.
APO San Francisco, Calif.. 96210
Paula
William
J.
Quakertown and
Barbara Hershey, (Mrs. Myer). Address: 1211
Pa. 17603
Wabank Road.
Lancaster.
Robert Hauck. ’69. and Gloria Altemose, ’70.
Address: 617 North 7th
St., Allentown, Pa. 18102
GUEST STARS
the
bury, Pa. 17801
Ruth Ann Babb and Clark W. Hack.
1968
Steffen,
268 South Street, Carlisle. Pa. 17013
SEPTEMBER,
Street,
Cathy Ann Getty, Berwick and RobAdert D. McQuown, Shickshinny.
dress 15 North Main St., Shickshinny,
isburg, Pa.
James G. Fargu.s, Williamsport, both
members of the class cf 1969. Address:
campus during
Radcliffe
Address: 432 North Ninth Street, Sun-
Nan Carolyn Good
Mrs.
earned
degree
C-10, 1032
Bristol. Pa. 19007
Raymond
H. Barrett. AdLocust Lane, Colonial
Park Gardens, Harrisburg, Pa. 17109
dress:
1968
at
Pa. 17543
St., Lititz,
dress:
Donald R. Schnaars and Glenn E.
Halterman were awarded the Master
of Science degree in Business Administration
Broad
324 N.
.
Joanne Maletsky (Mrs. Owens) Ad-
residing at 235
N. Y. 10014
Correct address for Sue A. Chambers (Mrs. Griffiths) is 529 Chestnut
17844
St., Mifflinburg. Pa.
Donna Carson (Mrs. Olah) Address’
.
Nancy E. Geiger and Richard C.
Smith. Address: Apt. 13, 1340 Green
Valley Drive. Pittsburgh. Pa. 15220
Sharon Enslin and Gordon C. DodAddress: 75 East
First
St.,
Bloomsburg. Pa. 17815
son,
Salley Dever (Mrs. Sypek.)
Address: 17 Chestnut St., Tresckow, Pa.
18254
NEW GRADUATE PROGRAM
for a new graduate
in biology, leading to the
Approval
gram
ter of
pro-
MasScience degree at Bloomsburg
was received in early
Department of Education at Harrisburg. The program,
which is the first leading to the Master of Science degree at BSC, is being
State College,
summer from
the
offered during the 1971-72 college year.
Page nine
HUmnrtam
Jtt
ANNOUNCE NEW POLICY
FOR ISSUING TRANSCRIPTS
Robert Bunge, Registrar, has announced the following concerning re-
1892— Mrs. Eva McKevy, Montoursville,
Pa.
G.
1898 Laura Snyder (Mrs. U.
Mor grain) Lewisburg, Pa.
One of Dan1899 Rush Shaffer.
ville’s oldest citizens and one of the
oldest graduates of BSC. At the time
of his death, he was 95 years old.
1900 Phoebe Wightman (Mrs. A. F.
John) Mt. Carmel, Pa.
1901 Lela M. Shultz
(Mrs. Infred
T. Madsen)
1909 Emeline Schooley ( Mrs Ralph
L. Hazletine)
1909 Mary
Hughes (Mrs. H. N.
—
.
Lake) Carbondale, Pa.
1910 Margaret Jones, Dalton, Pa.
1916 Margaret E. Rutherford (Mrs.
Herbert Dygert)
1916 Ana Line (Mrs. Bowersox)
1916 Ruth Clark (Mrs. John Gum-
—
—
—
mer
1916 Roy D. Leidick, Tremont
1917
1919—Agnes Treon (Mrs. Willard J.
Davis) Danville, N. J.
1917 Mrs. Hester Saltzer
Fagan.
Mays Landing, N.
J.
Ruth Pope, Nanticoke, Pa.
1918
1918
quests for transcripts:
“Effective September 1, 1971, the
Office of the Registrar at Bloomsburg
State College will not release a transcript of any student or former student, without the live signature of the
student, authorizing the release of this
information. Verbal requests, including school districts, must have the
student’s authorization as well.
“This change in policy is necessitated to maintain the confidentiality
of student records.”
*
74anh.
you
Contributions to the Loyalty Fund to
July
1, 1971, not previously reported.
1909—
1901
1911— Mrs. Mary C. Ratajski
1903 Howard K. Houtz
1906 W. Raymond Girton
1907 Mrs. Sadie R. MacCulloch
—
—
Mary Southwood, Mrs. Adka
1908
Florence Altmiller (Mrs. Conrad Walters) Catonsville, Maryland
Mildred E. Stover, Scranton.
Pa.
1926 Evelyn Bomboy 'Mrs. Cour-
M. Westfield
Fred W. Diehl
Mrs. Fred W. Diehl, Mrs. Edward J. Robinson. Mrs. John S. Helt,
Mrs. Pauline S. Harper, Ruth Harris.
sen)
Ciass Gift
1912 P. Clive Potts, Floyd Tubbs
1913 Mrs. John B. Bradford, Homer
W. Fetterolf
1915 Mrs. D. J. Spiegel, Mrs. Invin
R. Weaver
1916 Mrs.
Margaret H. Porter,
Rachel C. Cappelle
1917 Allen L. Cromes, Mrs. Ruth
Freas Downing
Mildred A. Dietrick
Laura E. Mann
Kathryn Munroe 'Mrs.
Paul
Diehl
Ellen M. Whitehouse
1927 Martha Tasker (Mrs. Theron
Cook) Allentown, Pa.
1928— Mrs. Beulah Fairchild Mann.
North Brunswick, N.
—
1953 Edward
ington, Pa.
J.
J.
Campbell,
Ed had been head
football
Downcoach
since 1966
at
Downingtown High
School, after serving as
assistant
coach for 13 years. He suffered a
heart attack while coaching on Sep-
tember 19, 1970. He is survived by
his wife, a daughter, Sally, and a
son, Edward, Jr.
1970 Karen E. Campbell, Wyalusing, Pa.
Karen died of injuries sus-
—
tained in an automobile accident.
1923—
Smith
1919 Rhoda L. Crouse, Mrs. Eva
F. Ellis
1920 Mrs. Foster L. Pannebaker.
Mrs. William R. Turner. Mrs. BenjaJ. Eshleman. Mi's. Ruth E. Deit-
min
rick
1921
Mrs. Harry W. Scott, Mrs.
Earl D. Utt. Grace Griffiths, Class
Gift
Emily E. Craig. Mrs. W. Paul
Blancher
1924 Mr. and Mrs. Carl D. Blose
1926 Mrs.
Allen Earnhart, Mrs.
Ruth
Miller, Leora V. Souder,
Mrs.
1932—
Marion
1933— Eschenlauer
1927 Doris
G.
Palsgrove,
Mrs.
Alma Rowlands
EVENING ADULT CLASSES
Bloomsburg
College began
Continuing Education
Classes in September for high school
graduates who wish to broaden their
cifering
State
adult
interests, add to their knowledge of
specific subjects, or review certain
skills.
Persons enrolled in this program are not matriculated for a degree, but credits earned through Continuing Education may be accepted
at some later date for persons approved for admissions as regular students
by the Admissions Office.
Page
ten
1928
1929
Mrs. Martha D. Watkins
Mrs. H. C. Brockman, Mrs.
Raymond Goodwin
Mrs. Dorothy Foote Pihlblad.
Thursabert Schuyler Mrs. C. J. Coleman. Mrs. William J. Jones
1931 James B. Davis, Mrs. Naomi
Eble, Kenneth E. Hawk. Thomas J.
Henry, Mrs. Esther Y. Castor, Class
1930
Gift in
Memory
of Dr. Edward DeVoe
Dr. Henry J. Warman
Raymond Stryjak
Mrs. Joseph P. Davis
Sara M. Berger, Mrs. Ruth
1936
1937
Radcliffe
Dickerman
1938
1939
Mrs. R. H. Barrett
Robert P. Hopkins.
Pearl
Pcust
1940 Charles R. Bakey, Jr.
1941 Howard T. Williams, S. Frederick Wonnan, Mrs. Charles R. Bakey.
Jr.
1949
1953— Kenneth E. Wire
1950 Mrs. Dale H. Reichart,
Mrs.
Richard A. Ammerman
John T. Bogdan
1954 Mrs.
Patricia B. Hollings1957—
worth
1955 Jacob E. Slembarski
1956 Mrs. Carmel Casper
1960— Mrs. W. W. Hinkle
1958 James F. Snyder
1959 Robert
Murray,
W.
Mrs.
James M. Gustave
Mrs. Robert W. Murray
1961 James H. Kitchen, Mrs. Jane
Wilkouss. Mrs. Barbara M. Gasser
1962 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Enney
1963 Margaret Ann Hosey, Lynn E.
Shoop
1964 Dorthy P. Eisenhart
1965 Frank C. Doroman. Mrs Alan
S. Hoffman. Mrs. James H. Kitchen
1966 Mrs. Frank C. Doroman, Drew
.
B
Poslock. Mi's. Connie, L. Donahue
Lorraine M. Savidge, Stephen
1967
G. Korcl
1968 David V. Gerhard. Mr. and
Mrs. Dennis W. Byrne, David C. Gerhard
1969 Mark J. Ferraro, Mrs. Gary
F. Pender. Paul W. Canouse, Jr.
1970 Elizabeth A. Jones, Mary M.
Ratchko, Ellen R. Arnioine. Mrs. Karen R. Swasher
FORMER BLOOMSBURG STARS
NOW IN PRO GRID RANKS
One
out of
come
Bob Tucker, Class of
of the greatest athletes to
BSC
is
who had a great year as a rookie
with the New' York Giants of the NFL
Tucker set several natlast year.
ional NAIA college records as a tight
end for the Huskies in 1967. He continued his record breaking performances in leading the Atlantic Coast Foot1968,
League in 1968 and 1969 in pass
receptions.
He was signed by the
Giants after serving on the taxi squad
of the Philadelphia Eagles.
Two BSC teammates of Tucker’s,
quarterback Rich Lichtel and split
ball
end Stan Kucharski, have been members of the Atlantic Coast Football
League, and expect to be playing for
the Schuylkill Coalcrackers this season.
Lichtel w'as a college division
passing leader in 1967 and Kucharski
was a leader in pass receptions and
scoring until he w as injured in the
third game against Susquehanna University and was lost for the season.
Another gridder. Bill Nagy, 6’3” 250
lb. defensive lineman on the 1970 BSC
team, is expected to see considerable
action with the Norfolk (Va.) Neptunes of the Atlantic Coast Football
League this season. Nagy, who was
named best defensive player by his
BSC team members, received honorable mention on the 1970 NAIA AllStar American football selection.
r
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
ANNOUNCE RETIREMENT
OF 2 FACULTY MEMBERS
Two BSC faculty members, Miss
Ellamae Jackson. Dean of Students,
and Herbert H Reichard. Associate
Professor of Physics, recently retired.
NEW HEAD OF EDUCATIONAL
ADDRESSES UNKNOWN
OPPORTUNITY PROGRAM
you know' the address of any of
the following alumni, please send it
If
the Alumni Office, Bloomsburg
State College, Bloomsburg. Pa. 17815.
Gallagher (Mrs.
1895 Genevieve
to
—
Miss Jackson came to BSC in 1961
Dean of Women and was elected
to one of the Dean of Students positions created in 1970 when Elton Hun-
Mundy)
Wm.
1905—
singer became Associate Vice-President for Student Affairs. She was previously at Mansfield State College for
eleven years and had also been Assistant Dean of Women at Penn State.
She was also a member of the faculties of high schools in East Greenville.
Pennsylvania and Harrisburg. In 1944
Miss Jackson joined the American
Red Cross as Club Director in the
Her
China, Burma. India Theatre.
retirement was effective as of August
— Cecilia McMenamin (Mrs. Arthur Gilmore)
1926 — Fae Womelsdorf (Mrs. Tubickt
as
28.
Professor Reichard retired June 1
after 40 years of teaching service in
colleges and secondary schools in
1904
Mae
Wolfe (Mrs.
sion on
Klegmam
1910
Shovlin (Mrs. John Carr).
Pow'ei’l
Isaac, Gertrude
(Mrs. Norris Miller), James W. Jones,
Florence
Margaret
Helen Goulden
<
Mrs
Sachs
.
)
Mary
,
(Mrs. McEthenny), Eleanor
Roderick, Hazel Smith (Mrs. Stookey).
1959—Davis (Mrs. Durna)
Emily
1928 Mrs. Teloiv Wetzel
1960—
1933 Walter Jarecki
1950 Deryl J. Samois
1961—
Maher
—
—
—
1957— Robert DeWolfe
1964—Mrs. Bernadine McCoy, Ralph
F. Wetzel
Pennsylvania and Maryland.
Prior to
joining the BSC faculty in 1961. he was
a member of the faculty of William
Allen High School, Allentown, for a
period of 20 years.
He previously
served as Chairman, Department of
Mathematics,
Beall
High
School.
Frostburg. Maryland, as an Instructor
in Physics at Muhlenberg College, as
an Assistant Instructor at Penn State,
and as a Physics and Mathematics
Instructor at the Hazleton Undergraduate Center of Penn State.
In adition to his many years as an
outstanding classroom teacher, Reichard served as a Research Engineer
with the Fuller Company, as a Research Assistant in Electrical Engineering at Harvard University, as a
Graduate Assistant at Lehigh University and the University of Michigan, and as a Student Engineer of the
RCA Victor Company at Camden. N.J.
Bessie Goodale (Mrs. Charles
Thielman)
Tlhomas
E.
Stover,
CBivia
Greenway (Mrs. Henry Orband)
Judith Bole
(Mrs. Klaus Lu-
eth)
Mary
L.
Miskevich,
Wm.
Dr. Walter A. Simon, former assistant to the President, California Institute of the Arts at Los Angeles,
began his new appointment as Director of the Education Opportunity Program and Professor of the Arts at BSC
at the start of the main summer ses-
O.
Kraftchak
1965 Lynald E. Silsbee, Thomas J.
Miller, David R. Eyster, Kevin R.
Weaver. Alex M. Kozlowski
1967 William F. Skinner.
Janice
Galea, Carolyn E. Bennett, Lynn R.
Brownlee, Sara R. Hoffecker
1968 Marian R. Harris (Mrs. David
1970—
Eisenhower),
Ruth A. McGinley,
1969 Dale
A.
Clark.
Elizabeth
Gladkow'ski, Leona A. Parsons, David
L. Boster, John W. Mallin, HI. Mrs.
John W. Mallin, HI (Linda Watts),
George A. Ziolkow'ski. Jean G. Long.
Mi's. John M. Hutchings
(Patricia
Buiocchi), John M. Hutchings. Gerald
F. Sheperis
Mrs. Jane L. Corbin (Reed).
Mrs. Dale A. Clark (Dorothy Merz).
Charles J. Macunas. Thomas S. Troup
June
28.
Dr. Simon w as associated with the
California Institute of the Arts for a
period of two and one-half years. For
the previous eight years he served
with the United States Information
Agency of the Foreign Service in
Cairo, United Arab Republic; Kabul.
Afghanistan; and in Colombo. Ceylon.
He previously taught art in Georgia
State College in Savannah and Virginia State College at Petersburg and
New Jersey State College in Paterson.
His paintings have been exhibited
in the Wittenborn Gallery in New
York City, the Brooklyn Museum,
and at other exhibitions throughout
eastern United States and the countries in which he served with the U.S.
Foreign Service.
The Educational Opportunity Program was initiated on the campus of
r
BSC
in
August 1968 and
for
two years
was under the direction of Dr. Lee Aumiller, who at that time was Director
of Field Experiences and was later
named Chairman, Department of Secondary Education.
college year, the
by
Tom
During the 1970-71
program was headed
Cooper, Director of Admis-
sions.
REAPPOINTED
Dr. Percival Roberts. IH, Chairman,
of Art, has been reappointed Eastern Representative for
the Higher Education Section of the
National Art Education Association
by William Bealmer, President of
Department
NAEA
FACULTY SABBATICALS
Eleven faculty members will be on
sabbatical leave either part, or all, of
the 1971-72 college year.
Those who
will be on leave for the full academic
year are: Dr. Lee Aumiller, Chair-
man, Secondary Education:
Robert
L. Bunge. Registrar: Dr. William L
Jones. Director, Division of Human
Resources and Services;
Gerald H.
Strauss, Dept, of English.
Those who
will
be on leave during
the first semester only will be:
Dr
Margaret Leffevre, Communication
Disorders:
Theodore M. Shanoski.
Dept, of History; Miss Eleanor Wray.
Dept, of Physical Education.
The four members who will be on
leave during the second semester will
be:
Dr. Bruce E. Adams. Dept, of
Geography; Thomas R. Manley. Dept,
of Biological Sciences:
George G.
Stradtman. Dept, of Mathematics; Dr.
Louis F. Thompson. Chairman, Dept,
of English.
Eight faculty members will be re-
SEPTEMBER,
1971
FRESHMAN ORIENTATION
RECEIVES GRANT
Four three day orientation sessions
were scheduled this summer at BSC
for over 1.000 freshman who will be
matriculating
at
the
College
this
September. The first group of approximately 250 freshman arrived on Campus on July 11. Three other sesions
began on July 18. July 25, and August
The Department
of
Communication
Disorders received a grant of $10,120
from the Pennsylvania Department of
Public Welfare in support of the special training program and guest lecture
series held during the 1971 summer
sesion.
1.
turning to their duties following a sabbatical leave for either all or part of
the 1970-71 college year.
They are:
William K. Decker, Dept. i>f Music;
Craig L. Himes, Biological Sciences;
Clayton H. Hinkel, Dept, of Business
Education; Dr. Lee C. Hopple, Dept,
Geography; Mrs. Margaret J.
Hykes, Dept, of Business Education;
Miss Alva W. Rice, Dept, of English;
John F. Schrimgeour, Dept, of Mathematics; Dr. William B. Sterling, Dept,
of Geography.
of
VISITORS
FROM FRANCE
Eight French college students began a summer visit in the United
States by spending two weeks at
Bloomsburg State College in July.
The students came to B.S.C. under
the auspices of the Experiment in
International Living and in conjunction with the International Education
Club of Bloomsburg State College.
Page eleven
B. S. C.
ANNUAL GIVING CAMPAIGN
Traditionally, colleges each year seek and gratefully receive gifts from
alumni, parents, businesses and friends who have an interest in the well-being
of the institution. The Bloomsburg Foundation, which serves Bloomsburg State
College and the BSC Alumni Association, has assumed the responsibility of
soliciting gifts
from private sources.
This year Bloomsburg State College will conduct an Annual Giving CamThe Campaign began September 1, and hopefully will conclude Nov-
paign.
ember
Four areas
20, 1971.
of institutional
need
will
be the focus
of this year's
campaign.
ALUMNI DEVELOPMENT.
1.
to
as
Contributions in this area will be used
promote communication between the college and the Alumni, as well
maintaining the office of the Alumni Association.
ALUMNI SCHOLARSHIPS.
2.
increase the existing
Contributions in this area will be used
Alumni Association scholarship program.
ATHLETIC GRANTS.
3.
promote intercollegiate
to
Contributions in this area will be used to
at BSC thru grants
individual
to
athletics
athletes.
UNRESTRICTED. Gifts in this area piovide funding for a variety of
programs, seminars, institutes, research, etc.
Requests for funds are
received by the Bloomsburg Foundation from students, faculty, depart-
4.
ments and administrators.
A
contribution of $5 or
Alumni Association.
more
will
renew your annual membership
card will be forwarded.
in
the
A renewed membership
The Bloomsburg Foundation
is
also prepared to receive gifts of corporate
and bonds, and personal property. Interested individuals are urged
contact the Executive Director for more information.
stocks
to
(detach here)
Please
make checks payable
to:
Address:
THE BLOOMSBURG FOUNDATION
Bloomsburg State College, Box 292
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Please use
my
gift for
17815
the following purpose:
ALUMNI DEVELOPMENT
ALUMNI SCHOLARSHIPS
ATHLETIC GRANTS
UNRESTRICTED
Name
Class
(Middle or Maiden)
(First)
(Last)
Address
Zip
(_J
Page twelve
Please check
if
adove address
is
new.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR — Boyd F. Buckingham
ASSISTANT EDITOR — Kenneth Hoffman
BOARD OF DIRECTORS OFFICERS
—
PRESIDENT
Howard
Eerm Expires 1973
VICE PRESIDENT —
Term Expires 1972
F.
Fenstemaker T2.
Millard Ludwig
— Col. Elwocd M. Wagner
— Term Expires 1973
SECRETARY
Pa. 16801
TREASURER
—
—
Pa. 17815
Earl A. Gehrig
Term Expires
’37,
110
Terms
102
Terms expire
expire 1972
’34
—
R.
D
1.
John Thomas ’47
68 Fourth Street
Hamburg. Pennsylvania
Clayton H. Hinkel
643 Wiltshire
Read, State College,
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie ’35
509 East Front Street
Berwick. Pennsylvania 18603
1973
Glen Mills. Pa. 19342
Miss Elizabeth H. Hubler
Dr. Kirnber C. Kuster T3
140 West Eleventh Street
Bloomsburg. Pennsylvania 17815
'43,
Pa.
Millville,
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Dr. Frank J. Furgele
Colonial Farm Box 88
West Street
East Main Sldeet,
Robin Lane Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg,
’52
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
625
1973
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
'48
Bloomsburg, Pa.
242 Central Read,
Dr. Alexander J. McKechnie. Jr. ’39
19 N. 24th St
Camp Hill. Pa. 17011
Park and Oak
Sts.,
’29
Apt. 2
Gordon, Pennsylvania. 17936
Mrs. Jean Zenke Foster
’66
W. Grove St.,
Clarks Summit, Pa. 18411
914
Terms Expire
19526
1974
Francis Galinski
Mrs. Verna Jones ’36
111 Plant Avenue
Wayne. Pennsylvania 19087
’40
224 Leonard Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Volume LXXII, Number
3,
90
Tower
’52
Hill Rd.,
Doylestown. Pa. 18901
1971
As announced in the June issue of the Alumni Quarterly, the pubyour Alumni magazine has been taken over by the Office of
Development and External Relations. Some changes are being made in
this issue, and others will be made from time to time.
I am confident
that you will enjoy reading the Quarterly, and hope that it will deepen
your loyalty to your Alma Mater.
lication of
In the future,
all solicitations
for contributions to the Loyalty
Fund
be made through the Bloomsburg Foundation. During the past five
years, you, the Alumni, have contributed in the neighborhood of $50,000
This has been used to cover the expenses of maintaining
to the fund.
the Alumni Office, and in addition has made possible a great number of
projects approved by your Board of Directors.
The new arrangement
should make possible financial support more in keeping with what is
being done in other colleges and universities.
I
hope that you will continue to support your College and your
Alumni Association.
will
President,
Alumni Association
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE
BLOOMSBURG, PA. 17815
Non-Profit Org.
U. S.
POSTAGE
PAID
Address Correction Requested
1.7c
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Permit No. 10
LOYALTY FUND FOURTH YEAR
October
Class
No.
Ex-faculty 2
1892
1896
1901
1903
1904
1905
1903
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1923
1
1
3
3
1
2
3
5
4
5
10
12
9
12
4
5
15
8
5
11
8
5
10
11
1,
1970 to July
Amt.
Class
No.
150.00
10.00
10.00
50.00
22.00
2.00
7.00
27.00
24.00
45.00
220.00
92.00
324.00*
105.00
156.00
25.00
35.00
72.00
75.00
73.00
68.00
72.00
328.00 *
65.00
82.00
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1933
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
1948
10
5
9
12
18
11
11
15
4
9
4
5
4
6
6
6
4
9
14
11
6
4
3
3
6
Includes class gifts presented on Alumni
1,
1971
Amt.
Class
No.
Amt.
78.00
40.00
68.00
95.00
149.00
274.00
86.00
186.00°
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1931
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
11
13
6
7
3
9
128.00
82.00
75.00
43.00
60.00
58.00
40.00
30.00
75.00
91.00
57.00
49.00
73.61
35.00
91.00
137.00
136.00
91.00
177.00
195.00
239.00
138.00
817.00
115.00
63.00
24.50
72.00
170.00
70.00
60.00
48.00
50.00
134.00
140.00
80.00
65.00
45.00
20.00
20.00
51.00
Day
7
6
11
11
13
7
12
5
17
19
26
20
25
38
38
6
5
The Alumni Quarterly
Governor Shapp
Visits
Campus
Semester Plan
May Be
Revised
Changes
Top
In
Administrative Posts
Senator Church
Will
Be Speaker
New
2
Coaches For
Winter Sports
Volume LXXII
Number
3
DECEMBER,
•
e
1971
7
.
,
THE PRESIDENT’S PAGE
The “Year for Assessment and Planning^
moving forward according to schedule. A
Steering Committee has been established
which includes the following: Mayor Martin
is
Lutz of Bloomsburg; Dr. John Magill, Superintendent of Bloomsburg public schools, representing the Alumni; Dr. William Carlough,
President of the College Senate; Mr. Michael
Siptroth, President of the Community Government Association; Dr. Don B. Springman,
Vice-President for Administrative Services;
Dr. Hobart Heller, Acting Vice-President for
Academic Affairs; Dr. Jerrold Griffis, VicePresident for Student Life; Mr. Jack Naus,
Secretary of the Bloomsburg Chamber of
Commerce; Mrs. George Thompson, President of the Bloomsburg Chamber of Commerce; Mr. William E. Booth, Chairman
of the Board of Trustees; and myself. The
major thrust will be through existing Senate
committees, augmented hy administration,
the community and the alumni.
Every
policy, every procedure, every phase of
our operation will be open to question and evaluation; planning, specifically,
will be directed towards the years 1975, 1980, and 2000. Hopefully, accumulated
information can be interpreted and assembled during the coming summer, and
by the end of 1972 be available for general distribution.
On November
3, Dr. Frederic K. Miller, Commissioner for Higher Educarelinquished his office to assume duties as Chairman of the Commission
on Independent Colleges and Universities. For four and one half years, Dr.
Miller provided leadership for all of Higher Education in Pennsylvania, and
most particularly played a key role in the development of the State Colleges
shall, of course, miss him, but we look forward
and Indiana University.
to working with him through public and private cooperative efforts within the
Higher Education community. As of this writing, his successor has not been
tion,
We
hamed.
The Bloomsburg Foundation was established a year ago in order to pro
At
vide those funds which cannot or should not be expected from the State.
the time that the Foundation was initiated, virtually no guidelines, and less
guidance, were available; consequently, the Foundation had to develop its
own policies and procedures, and to refine these in the course of operation.
The Foundation exists solely for the development and improvement of the
College community. It is the only source for unrestricted funds, and it does
allow the College to engage in activities which would otherwise not be possible.
A full report of the Foundation will be forthcoming in a later issue of the
QUARTERLY. In the meantime, your support of the Alumni Association is in
fact a support of the Foundation.
I
can think of few ways in which you can
more actively assist ongoing activities of this College not covered by the regular
operating budget.
Tio-c^t ~n
President,
Bloomsburg State College
Gov. Shapp Urges
Voters to Take Part
4216
Young
B.S.C.'s
A total of 4216 full time undergraduate students completed registration for the 1971-72 college year at
Bloomsburg State College, according
to Robert Bunge, Registrar.
Three hundred eighty five full time
and part time graduate students are
enrolled with 38 of this number being
Another 231 part
full time studens.
time undergraduate students, Continuing Education students and Public
School Nurses raises the total enrollment for the college to over 4800
which is the largest enrollment in the
in Politics
Milton J. Shapp’s first
a State College campus, and
address to students following
lowering of the voting age to 18, was
at Bloomsburg State College September 30.
The governor, in his address, stressed the young voters’ ability to change
the shape of state and national politics
He told of
through participation.
changes in the Democratic State Committee’s procedures in the selection of
delegates to the Democratic National
Convention which will help redress
imbalance of young people, member's
of minority groups or other segments
of our society.
He told also of his appointment of
Governor
visit to
his first
history of BSC.
Of the 4216 full time undergraduate
students, 1934 are men and 2282 are
women. The 385 graduate students
break down into 165 men and 220 wo-
men.
Approximately
2,282 men and woare being housed in campus
Over 2,400 students
residence halls.
are served their meals through the
facilities of the Scranton Commons.
A total of 286 faculty and administrative personnel are on duty during
the semester.
men
young men to positions of responsibility. citing particularly his appointment of 31-year-old Bob Ford as
State Director of Selective Service.
He spoke also of his philosophy on
education which would “prefer people
and “education to
buildings’’
to
schooling.”
During his address Shapp presented
C.G.A. President Mike Siptroth with
a letter concerning his intention to
appoint a student to the Board of
Trustees of each of the State Colleges
and inviting Bloomsburg students to
nominate five candidates for the position. He declared that the student appointees would serve not merely to
represent students, but to act as trustees in the fullest sense of the word.
The nominations of four Bloomsburg students have since been forwarded to the Governor. The candidates are: Douglas McClintock,
a
junior from Doylestown, president of
the junior class and a member of the
steering committe for the Simulated
Democratic Convention to be held
next April; Robert Parry, a senior
from Dallas, a member of Circle K
and Sigma Pi fraternity who has participated for three years on the BSC
varsity football and basketball teams;
Joseph L. Romano, a sophomore from
Norristown, a member of Pi Kappa
Delta (speech fraternity), member of
the Visitation committee, treasurer
sophomore class, member of
the debate team and vice president
of the Forensic Society; and Michael
J. Torbert. Allentown, a member of
the Judo club and the Veterans Assothe
of
ciation.
Appointment
full
will
be
made
for
a
six-year term.
JOHN HOGH HONORED AT
TESTIMONIAL DINNER
owned and
state-related colleges
and
universities.
Under the
bill
Trustees would
a State
Board
become
a
of
central
state-owned and stateAny requests for
new degree programs or a change in
status, such as a change from a Colcome
lege to a University, would
board
under review of the state
which would act as final authority.
All operating budgets wr ould also be
subject to approval by the state board.
Shapp is supporting a study of a
proposal for a single admission sys-
agency for
all
related institutions.
r
tem
for the 13 state colleges
and
diana University. He believes neighboring colleges must avoid competi-
programs and that instead of
duplicating faculty and facilities he
suggests an exchange of students
tive
and
faculty.
He
said the higher education comin Pennsylvania will get along
better with his administration
munity
much
abandons what he
calls “educaimperialism.”
He describes
this as the “tendency of every branch
campus of every community college to become a four-year institution,
of every four-year institution to add
masters programs and then Ph.D.’s,
and of every university to become a
if
it
tional
multiversity.”
Shapp answered questions from
audience concerning changes in
PHEAA Scholarship program, effect of the state income tax on college
students, the freeze on state jobs and
patronage problems.
When he entered the auditorium
Shapp accepted a petition bearing
2000 signatures requesting an investigation of the problems confronting
BSC.
More recently, in addressing the
Pennsylvania Association of Colleges
and Universities Shapp discussed Senate Bill 30 which wall have broad implications
for
DECEMBER,
Pennsylvania’s
1971
state-
ATTENDS MEETING
Dr. Robert
J.
Approximately 250 members of the
Bloomsburg State College community
attended a testimonial dinner October
28 honoring Dr. John A. Hoch, former
Vice resident for Academic Affairs
and Dean of the Faculties.
During the summer Dr. Hoch asked
reassignment to classroom teach-
for
ing duties. He is now a member of
the history department staff.
Howr ard Fenstemacker, president of
the Alumni Board, was master of
ceremonies, and speakers included Dr.
Harvey A. Andruss, president emeritus, and BSC President Robert J.
Nossen Dr Andruss told about hiring
John in 1946 as an assistant football
.
In-
Following his address to the students
the
the
UNDERGRADUATES ARE
REGISTERED AT RSC
Nossen, President of
Bloomsburg State College, attended
the annual meeting of the Pennsylvania Association of Colleges
and
Universities on the campus of The
Pennsylvania State University, Unibeginversity Park, Pennsylvania
ning Sunday, October 17 and extending through Tuesday, October 19. The
PACU is an organization of all the accredited colleges and universities in
the Commonwealth which are essentially represented by their chief administrative officers.
.
coach.
Dr. Hoch was presented with a travel certificate and a set of luggage in
aggregation for his many years as a
college administrator.
VISIT BSC SUITE
IN ATLANTIC CITY
Bloomsburg State College is planning to have a hospitality suite at the
Dennis Hotel in Atlantic City February 12, 13 and 14 during the annual
convention of the American Association of School Administrators.
BSC alumni and friends are cordially invited to visit the BSC headquarters.
College officials will be
there afternoon and evenings of the
three days to discuss admissions,
housing, placement and other questions pertaining to the college.
Plans for the hospitility suite are
necessarily subject to final official
state approval.
ON THE COVER
Miss Lori Johnson,
’71,
BSC Home-
coming Queen; Bloomsburg High
School band passes Carver Hall during
Homecoming parade; and Husky running back Bob Warner is the man in
the middle of a pileup during
coming game with California
Huskies won,
HomeState.
35-26.
Page one
Proposals for Dropping Semester
Calendar Plan Are Being Studied
Editor’s note:
Dr. Hobart Hel-
became Acting Vice President for Academic Affairs and
Dean of the Faculties in Septemler
ber succeeding Dr. John A. Hoch.
The College Senate currently has
under consideration four proposacademic calendar changes
als for
aJt
BSC.
By Dr. Hobart Heller
Bloomsburg is making a study of
academic calendar with a view
possible improvement.
its
to
It is almost trite to say that a calendar should be a framework within
which faculty and students can best
work together to the end that effective
Some of the
learning is promoted.
qualities that a calendar should enstudents should
courage are these:
be as free as possible from periods
cf undue pressure, students and fac
ulty should find it natural for efforts
to flow evenly through the days and
weeks of the terms and should have
maximum opportunity for efficient
use of classrooms and laboratories;
encourage studenMaculty
communication.
The B.S.C. Senate is considering the
it
should
of an unconventional calendar, one which sacrifices the strict
symmetry of semesters, quarters, or
trimesters in favor of improved teachpossibility
By tradition, an
ing and learning.
academic year comprises nine months
from Labor Day to Memorial Day.
Christmas vacation must come at
about the two-fifth’s
iod;
therefore the
mark
in this perremainder of the
weeks fellow New Year’s. It would
be advantageous to close a term
shortly before Christmas, and open a
new term after New Year’s. Obviously, one cannot have two equal terms
within nine months if this line of demarcation is observed. The most efuse of the period after New
Year’s challenges one who would plan
a calendar.
The semester plan makes it necessary to interrupt the first semester
Stuto provide a Christmas recess.
dents on the semester plan must be
fective
thinking of their semester examinations during the Christmas vacation;
this is not conductive to sound learning experience.
College students and faculty need a
break between New Year’s and June.
It would be advantageous to have this
break come between two terms rather
than within a term. Furthermore, as
a college grows, more time is needed
between terms for the processing of
grades; as a result, this requires a
recess between terms. It is economical to have such administrative vacations coincide with natural vacation
periods.
Under the semester plan which
Bloomsburg has followed, the student
carries five, six or even seven courses
at one time. Since most courses meet
three hours a week there is a tendency
to concentrate classes on
Monday,
Wednesday and Friday. As a result,
the Bloomsburg calendar discourages
an even flow
Page two
of faculty
and student
energies through the week, and it requires that both faculty and students
handle more courses at one time than
can be dealt with efficiently.
These and other considerations
might make it desirable to have a
calendar which divides
the
nine
months into three terms, with a vacation at the end of each of the terms. In
such a calendar a student and a faculty member would be responsible for
fewer courses in any term.
The
quarter system can achieve this, but
it requires
a late fall start, and a
spring term which closes well into
June, if a term is to close at Christ-
mas.
A
modification of the quarter sys-
tem
is under discussion, one which
might provide a solution; but it is at
the sacrifice of symmetry.
The final examination periods under
such a plan would be shorter in duration, yet provide more time for serious preparation. Because of the reduced number of classes carried by a
faculty member, there would be more
efficient opportunity for utilization of
faculty energies in examinations.
The semester hour is a common
measure of courses; the semester hour
traditionally represents a class exercise of one hour per week for a semester.
Traditionally, a semester represents half of a nine-month academic year.
After deducting holidays,
vacations, registration periods, examination pericds and other necessary
activities, a nine-month period nets
thirty and thirty one weeks
between
for actual class meetings, plus the
final examinations: this is equivalent
to fifteen weekly class meetings plus a
final examination for each semester
hour credit. A calendar which uses
the semester hour as the unit of measure should provide fifteen class
meetings of fifty minutes each plus a
final examination for each semester
hour credit.
class can be taught in
a shorter period of time than a semester by increasing the number of hours
A
per week proportionately. Accrediting
agencies commonly favor a standard
which provides that a student may
earn credit at the rate of one semester
hour per week. In planning shorter
periods than a semester, therefore,
there are two quantitative tests:
there must be fifteen class meetings
plus a final examination for each semester hour cf credit; student loads
must permit earning credit at the
ra e of one semester hour per week.
|f
Hobart Heller
Dr.
the viewpoint regarding a semester
hour of credit may be that it meet the
two quantitative tests.
Other principles to be observed in
constructing a calendar are these:
the total elapsed time for a course
should be such that there is optimum
opportunity for the integration of the
when a term
learning experience
is too short the course is compressed
so that it becomes little more than a
cram session
if the term
is too
long, as is the case when a fall semester is divided by a two or three
week Christmas vacation, the learning experience is spread so that integration of learning is difficult.
A student should not have too many
courses at one time.
Students at
Bloomsburg have had five, six or even
seven courses; three or four courses
at one time provide a better learning
experience, and faculty members who
teach three courses at once have a
better opportunity to prepare, to plan
—
—
sound examinations and to read the
papers than faculty members with
more
courses.
colleges have found advantages in having two or three so-called
“dead days” between the close of
classes for a term and the opening of
the final examination period. Where
this has been experienced, there is
often a significant reduction in the
amount of cheating.
These then, are principles for calendar construction. Whether Blooms-
Many
burg
will
adopt a new calendar has
it is being
The whole procedure of measuring
progress toward a degree by semester
hours and courses passed is occasion-
not yet been decided, but
studied
ally
find
ARTICLE PUBLISHED
criticized,
but
it
is
difficult
to
a substitute for this kind of measurement in a mass education system.
Consequently, in calendar proposals
currently under consideration,
the
standards described above will be ob-
served
A
.
class meeting is no more than,
and no less than, an opportunity for
learning. There can be no guarantee
that learning will take place, for
learning depends upon the teaching,
the students and the conditions; but
An article entitled
of Interaction Who’s
—
"The Dynamics
Got the Closed
Mind?” written by Professor Hbward K. Macauley and Richard
O.
Wolfe of Bloomsburg St^te College
was published in the April, 1971 issue of Phi Delta Kappa and now
appears
a book of readings entitSibboleths,” which
was published by Simon and Shuster
in August, 1971.
led.
in
“Shamans and
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
ENVIRONMENT EDUCATION
CONFERENCE IS HELD
A state wide conference on environmental education was held on the BSC
campus November 19, 1971. The conference was sponsored by the BSC
Biology Department in cooperation
with the Pennsylvania Biologists AssAdditional financial support
was received from the BSC Community Government Association, Pennsylvania Power and Light Company, and
ociation.
Roaring Creek Water Company
Shamokin, Pa.
the
of
attendance
In
at
the
conference
were elementary, secondary, and
Dr.
Dr. Griffis
Dr. Bresett
Mayer
Administrative Changes
Administrative changes at BSC for
the
the 1971-72 college year include
appointment of Dr. Jerold Griffis as
Vice President for Student Life; Dr.
Hobart Heller as Acting Vice President for Academic Affairs and Dean
A.
of the Faculties; and Dr. Evelyn
Mayer as Associate Dean for Student
Life.
Another appointment made at the
beginning of the College year was
that of Dr. Stephen M. Bresett. Associate Professor of Health and Physical
Education, as Acting Chairman of the
Department of Health. Physical Elucation and Athletics.
Dr. Griffis, a native of Susquehanna
Pa., served previously at Ohio University as Dean of Resident Life. He
received his bachelor’s degree from
West Chester State College, his mas-
degree from Ohio University and
and Psychology, from the Pennsylvania State
ter’s
his doctorate, in Counseling
University
As Vice President for Student Life.
Dr. Griffis wdll coordinate the areas
of Student Life formerly handled by
Associate Vice President Elton Hunsinger and Miss Ellamae Jackson.
Mr. Hunsinger assumed duties at Associate Vice President for Campus Services and will coordinate all health
services, security and conferences on
campus.
Miss
Jackson
retired
in
August.
Dr. Heller,
curricula;
Education at Lock Haven
State College, her master’s degree in
Guidance and Counseling at ShippensHealth
Education degree in Counselor Education
at the University of Virginia where
S. C..
and her Doctor
served
last
ity.
Dr. Bresett. who came to Bloomsburg in 1969. received his bachelor’s
degree and doctorate from Springfield College in Massachusetts and his
master’s degree from Rutgers UniHis teaching and coaching
versity.
include positions in the
Ridgewood Public Schools in New
Jersey, Springfield College and South
Brunswick High School, Monmouth,
N.J.
As acting department chairman he
is responsibile for the total Physical
Education and Athletic program at
BSC. His appointment followed the
resignation of Dr. Clarence A. Moore
as Chairman of Health and Phvsical
Education, and the request of Russell
Houk to be relieved of duties as Director of Athletics.
experience
DRAMA CLASS PLANS
who served last year as
professor-at-large, was named Acting
Vice President after Dr. John A. Hoch
NEW YORK CITY TRIP
asked to be relieved of the duties of
that office and be returned to class-
sburg State College
room teaching. He will serve until
a permanent replacement for Dr.
Hoch is selected. A native of Berwick, Pa., he earned his bachelor’s degree at Gettysburg College and his
master’s and doctor’s degree at Columbia University. He began his tea-
ching career at Berwick High School
and then went to Eastern Illinois
University where he served as Academic Vice President. Upon retirement he returned to Pennsylvania and
served in the Department of Education’s Bureau of State Colleges and
Universities at Harrisburg before com-
of
year as Assistant
Dean of Students. She is a native of
Mifflin, Pa., the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Mayer of that communshe
The Modern Drama class at Bloomatre trip to
13
and
14.
planning a theCity on March
The students will be seeing
is
New Yory
OLD TIMES by
the following plays:
Harold Pinter; SLEUTH by Anthony
Shaffer;
STUART by Schiller
MARY
and adapted by Stephen Spender;
NO
SOMEBODY by
THE EFFECT OF
GAMMA RAYS ON MAN IN THE
MOON MARIGOLDS by Paul Zindel;
SOLITAIRE DOUBLE SOLITAIRE by
Ribert Anderson THE BASIC TRAINING OF PAVLO HUMMEL by David
PLACE
education programs
teaching materials; aids;
environmental
She
ministrative structure at BSC.
received her bachelor’s degree in
burg
col-
lege teachers, representatives of state
and federal education and environmental agencies, and representatives
of companies exhibiting materials relevant to environmental education.
Major objectives of the conference
were to provide the two hundred participants with a current assessment of
TO
BE
Charles Gordone;
;
Rabe; HAIR, JESUS CHRIST SUP-
sources of financial aid; and future
expectations in environmental education pertinent to schools at the elementary, secondary, and college levels.
The conference opened with a key“ECOLOGY AND SURVIVAL. A LIFE SUPPORT SYSTEMS
note address
APPROACH”, delivered by Dr. William A. Nearing, Connecticut College.
New London, Connecticut. The participants then went into special sessions.
Chairing the session on Elementary Environmental Education
was Dr. James E. Coles, Professor of
Biology, BSC.
Resource specialists
participating W'ere Mrs. Eleanor Bennett, Penna. State Department of Education, Harrisburg; Dr. John Horst,
State College; and Dr.
John W. Hug, Bear Run Nature Reserve, Millrun Pa.
The session on
Secondary Environmental Education
was chaired by Dr. J. R. Krosehewsky. Professor of Biology, BSC. Resource specialists participating were
Dr. Irwin T. Edgar, Penna. State Department of Education, Harrisburg;
Millers ville
Dr. Peter Gail, Stoney-Brooks Millstone Watershed Association. Pennington, N.J.; and Mr. Jack Hershey and
Mr. Alan Sexton, Project CARE, Blue
Bell, Pa.
Dr. Louis V. Mingrone
chaired the session on College En-
vironmental
Education.
Resource
specialists taking part were Dr. John
McLain, Clarion State College; Dr.
John Moss, Franklin and Marshall
College,
Lancaster, Pa.; and Dr.
Charles L. Remington, Yale Univers-
New Haven, Connecticut.
At the luncheon meeting, the Honorable Franklin L. Kury of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
spoke on “EDUCATION AND THE
ity,
FUTURE OF THE ENVIRONMENT”.
The afternoon program consisted of
an address given by Mr. George E.
Low e of the U.S. Office of Education,
Washington, D.C. explaining “IMPLIr
CATIONS OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION ACT OF 1970”. The
conference heard summary reports
of the special
elementary, secondary,
and college sesions.
In
the
evening,
the
participants
ERSTAR.
heard Dr. Charles
ing to/BSC.
Former drama students who are
interested in making the trip are invit-
Professor of Biology, Yale University,
speak on “LAND USE SOLUTIONS
Dr. Mayer’s position is a new one,
created under the reorganizational ad-
ed to contact Dr.
lish Department,
DECEMBER,
1971
Susan Rusinko, EngBSC.
L.
Remmington,
FOR A FRAGILE ISLAND WILDERNESS”.
Page three
SCHOOL ADMINISTRATORS
ATTEND SYMPOSIUM
Casey Agrees Meeting Needed
To Set Foundation
Put more emphasis upon cooperperformance obsupervision and
Guidelines
atively developed
Combine
jectives.
Avoid, as
assessment.
Robert B. Casey, state auditor general, has agreed to a suggestion by
Dr. Robert J. Nossen, BSC president,
that “it would be helpful to hold an
early meeting of representatives of
the several state college foundations,
and other appropriate state officers
to review the functions of the foundaestablishing
tions with an aim of
proper guidelines for their operation.’’
Dr. Nossen’s suggestion followed an
exchange of letters concerning recommendations made by the auditor
general’s office in a report of an audit of the Bloomsburg Foundation in
first state
September.
It was the
audit
a state college foundation,
of
and the report stressed the legal
questions concerning interpertation of
the law as it applies to foundations.
It also recommended action to prevent the possible co-mingling of College and Commonwealth funds.
The auditor general stated that “the
Foundation, as a separate and distinct
legal entity, is entitled to receive
gifts, grants and other moneys it applies for, solicits, or receives in its
own name.” He contended, however,
that “any gifts or grants received by
the College in its own right should remain within the control of the college.”
Under
mended
he recomapproximately $45,000
this interpretation
that
from the Endowed Lecture Fund,
est-
ablished in 1958, should be returned to
the control of the College.
These
funds had been transferred to the
Foundation, with the Board of Trustes authorizing the Foundation to administer the funds as specified by the
grantors.
The audit report also recommended
that
balances
remaining
grams involving use
of
from
pro-
state-owned
should be forwarded to the
instead of being placed in the Foundation account. To prevent the possible co-mingling of College and Commonwealth funds, the
report recommended that a distinct
rental charge for use of Commonwealth property be established.
The auditor general suggested also
that a legal ruling be obtained on
whether Federal grants could be placed in the Foundation account or whether all such grants should be transferred to the Commonwealth.
Casey said Dr. Nossen had confirmed to him that until such time as we
(Bloomsburg State College) can get
further clarification or appropriate
facilities
Commonwealth
we shall conform to your
recommendations
the College has
and will continue to operate within the
framework of law and Commonwealth
time, to get satisfactory answers to a
number of questions.”
Dr. Nossen said the Foundation was
conceived as a way of holding several college accounts and to simplify
the bookkeeping procedures, that the
Board of Trustees is represented on
the Foundation board, that all moneys
are always restricted to the intention
of the grantor, and that all funds are
He pointed
properly accounted for.
out that the Foundation’s by-laws call
not only for a private audit, but also
for an audit by the state auditor general’s
office.
The audit report
also raised the
question of interlocking directorships
and recommended that they be discontinued to eliminate any actual or potential conflict of interest.
The
inter-
locking directorships referred to concerned William Lank, member of the
Board of Trustees, and President Nossen, an officer and director respectively of the United Penn Bank, one of
the depositories for College funds.
Dr. Nossen informed Casey that
prior to his accepting a position on
the advisory board of the United
Penn Bank, he had consulted the office of the state Attorney General. He
said the then Deputy Attorney General William G. Williams had advised
him informally that he “saw no legal
difficulties.” Dr. Nossen also pointed
out that the United Penn
Bank is
only one of several depositories for
college funds, the major depository
is and has been the Bloomsburg BankColumbia Trust Co.
Dr. Nossen, in his letter to Casey,
stated that “we have believed, and
continue to believe, that the Foundaprovides the most efficient
tion
method for handing a series of heretofore scattered College accounts.
Casey’s press seretary stated that
the audit of the Blomsburg Foundation just happened to be the first one
made and that all State College Foundations will be audited.
Dr. Nossen stressed the need for
private funds to enable the college to
Alumfulfill several of its objectives.
ni gifts now are deposited directly
with the Foundation which, in turn,
guarantees operating capital for the
Alumni Association. Hopefully, alumni will respond to the basic need of
the college for unrestricted gifts, in
accord with the current fund drive.
All
alumni should have received
mailings on this subject.
.
.
.
guidelines,
.
.
.
policy.”
Dr. Nossen stated that the Founda"was deliberately established to
serve the needs of the college in ways
that could not otherwise be accomodated;
at the time of the establishment of the Foundation we sought
guidelines, but were unable to get
appropriate assistance ... in fact,
we have been unable, even at this
tion
.
Page
.
four
ing.
presentation of Dr. George B.
Redfern, Associate Secretary. American Association of School Administrators, speaking to school administrators
and supervisors meeting in a symposium on instructional accountability
meeting at BSC October 28 - 29.
Dr. Redfern, in promoting the concept of evaluation by objectives or
job targets, stressed the need to clearly understand duties and responsibilities. An analysis of the expectancies
of the position will reveal needs, areas that should be improved. This will
lead to the formation of specific per-
formance objectives.
Planned action
achieve the goals makes it necessary to tie supervision and assessment closer together. Goal assessment requires bi-lateral action by the
teacher and his evaluator, i.e. selfassessment and estimates of accomplishment by his evaluator. The entire
process culminates in an evaluation
conference by the two parties.
“Performance objectives evaluation.” said Dr. Redfern, “will necessarily change the roles of supervisors
to
and principals.” Uni-lateral onerway
assessments will be de-emphasized.
The evaluator will become less of an
“instructional umpire” and more of a
“diagnostician, coach, facilitator, exand helper.”
Some of the outcomes of evaluation
by objectives, concluded Dr. Redfern,
will be clearer understanding of Job
expectancies, more emphasis upon
professional growth and development,
better communication, higher motivation, and a closer coordination of objectives of the school system and the
personal and professional goals of the
pediter,
individual.
LISTENING LABORATORY
FOR STUDENTS, FACULTY
Dr. Margaret Sponseller, coordinator of the Reading Clinics at Bloomsburg State College, has announced the
opening of the new “Listening Laboratory” which is located in the Benjamin
Franklin building. The new “Listening Laboratory” may be used by all
faculty and students.
The facility has been made possible
through the cooperation of Dr. John
A. Hoch, former Vice- President for
Academic Affairs and Dean of the
Faculties; Dr. C. Stuart Edwards,
Dean, School of Professional Studies;
Dr. Charles Carlson, Dean, School of
Graduate Studies, and Director of
Activities;
and
Thaddeus
Piotrowski, Director of the Learning
Resources Center, Andruss Library;
60.
professor of business education and
office practice at Ball State University, died in early November, 1971 at
Fort Wayne, Indiana following an
illness of several months.
Prior to coming to Ball State, she
had taught at Elmira College, 1961-62;
West Virginia University, 1957-61;
and Bloomsburg State College, 194754.
as pos-
note
Research
FORMER PROFESSOR DIES
Dr. Honor a MacAuthur Noyes,
much
post-performance ratThis was the essence of the key-
sible, unilateral
the
Reading
staff
and graduate
stud-
The installation and
ent assistants.
operational capability of the laboratory was perfomed by Harold Spotts.
College electronics technician.
The laboratory operates for the
small group listfollowing purposes
ening assignments; individualized instructional listening assignments; genassignlistening
instructional
eral
ments; and personal listening.
:
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Sen. Church
For
Is
Gymnasium
at
Bloomsburg
State
College on Saturday, April 22, 1972.
keynote
Senator Church was the
speaker at the 1960 Democratic NatAngeles
Los
ional Convention in
which nominated John F. Kennedy
as the Democratic presidential canElected to the U. S. Senate
didate.
at the age of 32 in 1956, he was one
of the youngest men ever to win a
Senate seat.
The mock convention will be the
second to be held on the BSC Campus by the college’s political science
department. The first was held in
1968 and was attended by over 1,300
students from BSC. twelve other colleges and Central
Columbia High
School. The keynote speaker for that
event was
Representative
Gerald
Ford of Michigan, the minority leader of the U. S. House of Representatives.
addition to Senator
Church’s
address, the 1972 program
will include two evenings of films
featuring Spencer Tracy
in
"The
In
keynote
Last Hurrah”, and Henry Fonda in
“Advise and Consent”; a guest speaker who will appear under the auspices of the Artists and Lecture Series;
meeting of the Platform Committee
to draft resolutions
tion; an exhibit of
convencampaign items
the
for
from past Presidential elections; a
seminar on
Pennsylvania
politics
conducted by the members of the
State Legislature; and the convention
itself.
The 1968 convention simulated the
Republican National Convention, and
the 1972 events are planned to simulate the Democratic Convention. Its
purpose will be to determine the
students’ choices for President and
Vice President on the Democratic
ticket.
“The College
is
not interested in ad-
vancing the cause of any party or candidate,” Prof. James W. Percy of the
science department stated,
“nor is the College interested in the
participants’ personal political affiliation. The intention is to give young
people some exposure to political participation in as realistic a manner as
possible.”
political
Area high schools and
all
colleges in
Pennsylvania are being contacted to
send delegations to the convention.
The delegate
fee of $1.50 will include:
admission to events, membership in a
State delegation, and lunch on the day
of the convention. The pulbic is invited to observe all proceedings at no
charge for admission.
Additional
information regarding the convention
can be obtained by writing to James
Percy, Department of Political Sci-
Bloomsburg
DECEMBER,
1971
State
College,
Bloomsburg, Penna.
A political and legislative pacesetter, Senator Church draws on 15
years of experience
in the
Senate.
He
Chairman of the Senate Special
Committee on Aging and, in addition,
is
holds senior positions on the Senate
Interior Committee and on the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee.
In the Senate, Church found a major
calling in safeguarding the nation’s
environment against the ravages of
mismanagement and waste. He authored the bill which, in 1968, created
the National Wild and Scenic Rivers
System. He was Senate floor leader
of the bill which established the National Wilderness System and of the
legislation which set up the Land and
Water Conservation Fund to stimulate
expansion of outdoor recreation facil-
by state and local governments.
Among the many awards he has received is the coveted designation
“outstanding conservation legislator”
by the National Wildlife Federation.
As a member of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, he became one
of the earliest opponents of American
involvement in Vietnam. He is especially well known as the co-author
with Republican Senator John Sherities
—
man Cooper of Kentucky
Cooper-Church amendment
By
—
of
of
the
1970.
prohibiting the use of U.S. ground
in Cambodia, Laos, or
combat troops
Thailand, without consent of Congress,
the
amendment became an
the
first
statutory
Northumberland, Snyder and Union
Counties. As of July 1, 1971. Pennsylvania abolished the Office of County
Superintendent of Schools, and created
These
Intermediate Units instead.
Intermediate
Units
are
the
bridge
between the local school districts and
the Department of Education in Harrisburg. There are 29 Units throughout the state of Pennsylvania.
Dr. Toole discussed the services of
these new units, the purposes of their
creation, and the benefits which the
local school districts will derive from
He
the organization of these units.
also emphasized innovative programs
within the local schools and services
to the local school districts.
BLACK STUDENTS TAKE
PART IN CONFERENCE
President Robert Nossen of Bloomsburg State College, along with nine
members of the Department of English and 20 black students attended
the 15th annual conference of Pennsylvania Council of Teachers of English at The Pennsylvania State University, October 15 and 16.
Dr. Nossen. Dr. Louis Thompson,
department chairman, and Dr. Cecil
Seronsy participated as speakers at
the two-day conference
Dr. Thompson is serving as Vice
President for colleges.
historic
milestone in U.S. Constitutional history,
Patrick Toole, Executive Dirthe Central Susquehanna
of
Intermediate Unit (Unit 16) was the
guest speaker at the October 19
Bloomsburg Chapter AAUW meeting.
Unit 16 includes Columbia, Montour,
Dr.
ector
Campus Mock Convention
of
U. S. Senator Frank Church
Idaho will be the keynote speaker at
National
the Simulated Democratic
Convention to be held in Centennial
ence,
INTERMEDIATE UNIT
SERVICES DISCUSSED
Keynoter
limitation
ever imposed on an American theater
of war.
HIGH SCHOOLS SEND
EDITORS TO CONFERENCE
25
The second annual Journalism Inwas held at BSC October 21-23.
stitute
BSC PLANS SEMINAR
FOR SCHOOL DIRECTORS
Twenty-five high schools attended the
A seminar for the public school directors will be offered as part of the
non-credit Continuning Education offering at BSC, beginning February 1,
1972.
The ten sessions will be held
each Tuesday evening from 7:00 to
9:00 p.m. and will conclude April 18.
The seminar will deal with the following areas: the duties and responsibilities of school directors, the rights
of teachers, and the rights of the
“youth culture” with reference to their
impact and possible future applications; a description and analysis of a
nationwide trend toward open space
schools; Pennsylvania’s professional
certification regulations, including the
various instructional certificates
specialist certificate, emergency, interim, and permanent.
Finally, the
dynamics of interpersonal relationships will be dealt with through the
use of case studies, simulations, roleplaying, and critical incidents.
The seminar will meet in the faculty
lounge of the Bakeless Center for the
Humanities. Seminar size will be limited to insure personal attention and
to allow sufficient time for discussion
A fee of $25 will be required.
—
Institute sponsored by the Department
of English and Alpha Phi Gamma,
honorary journalism fraternity.
Featured speakers at this year’s institute were Robert Fawcett, editor,
“Bloomsburg Morning Press,” and Edward Schuyler, Jr., an Associated
Press sports writer in New York City
for
more
than
six years.
Philip
of The Pennsyl-
Thomas, president
vania Scholastic
also participated.
Press
Association,
AWARDS SCHOLARSHIP
The Campbell Soup Company reawarded the college $250 a
year for “The Campbell Soup Company Unrestricted Scholarship” to
cently
begin with the 71-72 college year.
will be permitted to set up its
criteria
for the
scholarship.
In
BSC
own
ad-
William Himmelright, West
Chester, Penna., who will enter BSC
as a freshman this September, received a scholarship of $750 each semester
for a total of $6,000 during his four
years in college. Himelright is one
of twelve students who received the
scholarships given by the Campbell
Soup Company to children of its emdition,
ployees.
Page
five
New
Coaches Named For Wrestling, Basketball
Charles Chronister, former assistant basketball coach at Gettysburg
College, launches his career as a college head basketball coach, taking
over the reins at BSC from Earl Voss,
who has joined the Physical Education
Department at West Chester State
College as assistant basketball coach.
A native of East Berlin, Pennsylvania,
Chronister attended Bermudian
Springs High School where he was a
standout athlete. He matriculated at
East Stroudsburg State College, and
played varsity basketball and baseball for the Warriors. He earned both
his Bachelor of Science and Master
of Science dergees in Health and
Physical Education at ESSC.
Dring the 1962-63 season at East
Stroudsburg, he served as freshman
basketball coach and guided the team
to a 17-2 record. He went to Gettysburg after three successful years at
Hanover (Pa.) High School. At Hanover, his jayvee and varsity teams
were 59-9 while winning county championships and participating in the
PIAA District in Class A playoffs.
In addition to coaching the freshm'an
team at Gettysburg, one of his chief
responsibilities was recruiting talent
for head coach Bob Hulton. This aspect of his coaching career should enable him to oversee and participate in
the obtaining of future talent for BSC.
Chronister is married to the former
Carol L. Strausbaugh of Hanover, Pa.
They have two daughters, Lee Ann
age 4 and Garyn Lynn age
2.
The
Chronisters reside at 1248 Old Berwick
Road, Bloomsburg, Penna.
HUSKY CAGERS TO HAVE
NEW LOOK’ THIS YEAR
New head
coach Charles Chronister
Burt Reese and
“Doc” Herbert are introducing a new
spstem for the Huskies. The new mentor points out that although BSC has
been very successful using a zqne defense, he favors a man-to-man style
of defense.
In addition, he is employing an offense, which will be “a
new look” for Bloomsburg.
Chronister feels he has ideal co-capbains in two senior returning starters
from last year’s squad, 6’5” Howard
Johnson, New Castle. Delaware, and
6’3” Paul Kuhn, Lebanon.
Johnson
averaged 15.9 points in 20 games and
last year was the team’s leading rebounder with an average of 13.8 rebounds yer contest. Kuhn was the
team’s third leading scorer, averaging 14.4 points per game and also was
extremely proficient in guarding and
playmaking.
Another regular performer from last year is junior Art
Luptowski, Ridley Park, who again
will perform his ball handling magic
as the team’s No. 1 playmaker. Two
other members from last year’s squad
who saw action as reserves and who
and
his
assistants
should see considerable action this
year, are 6’5” junior Dennis Mealy,
Levittown, and 6’3” senior Bob Consort!, Chester The big plus this year
will be the tallest player that Bloomsburg has had in recent years, 6’8”
sophomore John
Page
six
Willis,
formerly of
Carl Hinkle, Assistant Professor of
Health, Physical Education and Ath-
and freshman football coach at
Bloomsburg State College, has been
appointed Interim Coach of wrestling
letics,
1971-72 season.
Hinkle, who joined the BSC faculty
at the start of the present college
year,
wrestled
High
at Berwick
School and was a member of the varsity team at Montana State University, competing in the 166 lb. class.
Prior to coming to Bloomsburg, he
was an assistant in wrestling at the
State University of New York, College
at Cortland, and previously held posiions in the health, physical education,
and coaching assignments at the Amsterdam and Fulton City school dist-
for the
Coach Hinkle
Coach Chronister
Manville,
N.J.
and
now
living
in
Willis did not particiOarbondale.
pate on last year’s freshman squad
well
perfomed
already
has
but
enough to have the inside track as
the starting center.
Supporting Lupowsky in his playmaking role will be Tony DaRae, a
5’10” sophomore from Allentown. The
balance of the squad is made up of
three other sophomores, 6’3” Gary
Petcavage; 6’4” Dave Jones, Shavertown; and 6’0” Gary Choyka, Clarks
Summit, plus 6’1” George Hamilton, a
junior from Philadelphia who is a
transfer student from Temple University.
In analyzing the team’s prospects
at this early stage. Coach Chronister
feels that the Huskies will be right in
there fighting for the top spot in the
tough Pennsylvania Conference. “We
have the talent to do the job, providing we can put it all together,” he
stated. His main concern in the early
practice sessions
is for
the players to
adapt to his style of play, and learning the different strengths and attri-
ricts
in
New
York.
Assisting Hinkle will be James McCue, a veteran wrestler during the
past four years at Bloomsburg. As a
sophomore, he was Pennsylvania State
College champion, and last year he
won the Wilkes tournament for his
weight division.
In mid-season, he
injured his shoulder and was unable
to continue in competition.
He remains at the college, however, completing degree requirements. Training
for the wrestling season is now under
way and involves approximately thirty
candidates.
A graduate of Montana State University where he received a Bachelor
of Science degree in physical education, Hinkle also hold's the Masters
degree in physical education from
Ithaca College, Ithaca, N.Y.
He is married to the former Patricia Meyers, of Berwick.
The Hinkles reside at 245 West Eleventh Street
in
Bloomsburg.
butes of his players.
NEW COURSE OFFERED
YOUNG BUT OPTIMISTIC
course
WRESTLERS THIS YEAR
titled “Individualized Instructive Activities in the Elementary School” is
A
In his initial year as head wresting coach, Carl Hinkle has a young but
optimistic squad.
The Huskies suffered the loss of
eight starters from last season’s team
through graduation and will rely
heavily on the six returning lettermen
Showing the way for the rest of the
squad will be the two junior co-captains, Floyd Hitchcock and Ron Sheehan. Hitchcock, a native of Stevensvllle, Pa., placed first in the Pennsylvania Conference and second in NAIA
competitions last season, wrestling in
the 190 lb. division in the PC and the
177 lb. class in the NAIA.
Shean,
from Drexel Hill, Pa., placed first
in the PC last season, wrestling in the
177 lb. class.
Another
BSC
standout, James Mcco-captain of the Husky
in 1968, will serve as assistant
coach.
“The threesome should provide the experience and maturity to
lead the rest of the squad in continu-
Cue,
who was
squad
ing its winning ways,” observed Coach
Hinkle.
The main loss through graduation is
Wayne Smythe, who placed first in
the NAIA last season at 142, Mike
Shull, who finished third in the NAIA
at 118, and Jim McCue, who compiled
new
in
undergraduate
elective
Elementary Education en-
currently being offered at BSC. The
idea for this offering originated in
1968 when research for a course of a
workshop nature was first undertaken by Dr. Donald A. Vannan, Professor of Education, and the instructor
for the course.
Very few colleges
offer such a program in this country.
a first-place finish in the PC and
fourth in the NAIA in 1968-69 before
being injured.
Other returning lettermen for the Husky squad include
Bob Dibble, a sophomore from New
Albany, Pa., who competes in the 165
lb. class; Randy Watts, a sophomore
from Turbotville, Pa., who weighs
158
Dan Burkholder,
a 170 lb. sophomore from Denver, Pa.; Douglas
Grady, a 182 lb. senior from Hatboro,
Pa.
Bloomsburg ranked second in the
NAIA and fifth in the PC last year
with a record of 12 wins and 8 losses.
As in the past years, the Huskies face
a schedule which includes some of
the strongest schools in the East. In
addition to the regular strong competitors of the PC, will be Miami of Ohio.
Eastern Michigan University, Appalachian State University, Oswego, and
lbs.;
Waynesburg.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
SWIMMING COMPETITION
IS GETTING TOUGHER
“There’s no question about
it,
comp-
opponents, becomes stronger each
year”, BSC coach Eli McL»aughlin
“More
stress in
swimming
is
being applied at both the high school
level, which is resulting in
better competition everywhere.”
Bloomsburg State embarks on another ambitious schedule of nine Pennsylvania Conference opponents plus
Mcfive non-conference contests.
and college
Laughlin and his Huskies will be hard
pressed to improve on last year’s 10-5
Bloomsburg
shooting for its
seventh straight winning season. “We
were particularly proud of our third
place finish in the PC meet last year.
We were fortunate in edging out East,
Stroudsburg, a team that defeated us
McLaughlin
competition,”
in dual
stated. In addition to ESSC, four other
teams that defeated Bloomsburg in
Temple, Mondual competition
mouth, West Chester, and Clarion
Bloomsburg’s
greatest
comprise
challenges this year.
record.
is
—
—
Leading the group of returnees, is
BSC’s first All American swimmer,
freestyler Dave Gibas, a junior from
West Mifflin. Pa., where he also
earned high school All American honGibas,
ors.
who was named NAIA
50
yd. freestyler champion, will continue
to perform in the 50 and 100 yd. events
and anchor either the 400 yd. medley
or freestyle relay teams.
In addition, Jack Feyer, Bob Herb.
Jones, Ken Narsewicz, Jon Ston-
Bob
and Doug Yocom
will be counted
spread their talent over several
events and carry the bulk of the load.
There are four sophomores and five
er,
on
to
freshman also battling
to
make
the
squad.
McLaughlin is blessed with the best
diving prospects he has had in a number of years. Steve Coleman and Bob
Myers are back along with newcomers
Eric Cureton, Dan Legosky, and Jim
Smith.
Although the Huskies will be spotting in
some
events, overall
team
bal-
ance should provide keen competition.
Everyone has shown an early desire
and
enthusiasm
and
McLaughlin
points out with that type of attitude.
Bloomsburg should have another successful season.
SOPHOMORES TEAM WITH
WARNER ON GRIDIRON
In his initial year as head football
coach of Bloomsburg State College,
Bill Sproule directed
the
Huskies,
comprised chiefly of sophomores and
juniors, to a season’s record of 4-5.
In concluding the season, the Huskies lost to a powerful East Stroudsburg team, 26-7. Victories were recorded over the University of Scranton, Mansfield, California, and Cheyney while the other four losses were to
Lock Haven, West Chester, Millers-
and Kutztown.
Despite a losing season, there were
some bright spots for the Huskies,
ville,
Bob Warner,
showed why he
prospect.
The
6’2”
230
lb.
tailback,
considered a pro
Stroudsburg senior
led the squad in rushing
with 635
DECEMBER,
is
1971
in 180
of 3.5
etion in the Pennsylvania Conference,
along with that of our non-conference
states.
attempts for an average
yards per carry. Warner also
finished second in the receiving department, garnering 10 passes for 124
peards and ranked behind quarterback
Joe Geiger, in total points scored with
6 TD’s to his credit.
Joe Courter, a sophomore wide deceiver from Willow Grove, Pa., was
the favorite target of Geiger, catching
21 passes for 241 yards to lead the
team in receptions. Geiger, a sophomore from Lancaster, Pa., connected
for 630 yards in the air and collected
291 yards on the ground. He ran for
7 touchdowns and 1 two-point conver-
yards
sion, tallying a total of 44 points. Fullback John James, Bristol, was the second rusher with a total of 364 yards
and a 3.8 per carry average.
The Huskies were also strong in the
kicking department with place kicker
Neil Obersholtzer and punters Dan
Stellfox and Warner.
Oberholtzer, a
junior from Columbia, Pa., who recorded a number of field goals as a
freshman and sophomore, kicked 14
extra points this season while senior
Gleno'lden,
averaged 40.1
yards in 45 kicks. Warner, who punted 17 times when Stellfox was injured,
averaged 40.6 yards per boot.
Stellfox,
Linebacker Ken Klock, Trevorton
the team in tackles followel by
middle guard John Cox. a junior from
Levitt own.
Rich Walton, a junior
from Berwick at right tackle, was considered the top linesman on offense.
The loss of only six seniors through
led
graduation, points to a
enced Husky squad
in
more
experi-
1972.
BOR TUCKER ONE OF
NFL’s TOP RECEIVERS
By Tom Huntington
Sports Edi'or. Berwick Enterprise
Guess who is one of the tri-leaders
in pass receiving in the National Conference of the NFL?
It’s not Gene Washington of the San
Francisco 49ers nor Bob Hayes of the
Dallas Cowboys. It’s Bob Tucker of
Bloomsburg State College, Pbttstown
Firebirds and Hazleton vintage.
Tucker, the New York Giants’ tight
end, has 34 catches for 373 yards. Of
course. Ted Kwalick, 49ers, and Dick
Gordon, Chicago, have more yardage,
465 and 469 respectively, but they too
have 34 receptions which leaves the
three in a flatfooted tie.
However, of the three, Tucker came
into the NFL the less heralded.
Bloomsburg State isn’t the most famous name in college footballand Tucker stuggled for three years in the minor leagues, being rejected twice by the
Philadelphia Eagles, before the Giants recognized that here was an end
with potential.
One of the big knocks that the Eagles had against Tucker was that he
couldn’t run and he couldn’t block.
There was no question about his ability to snatch a football out of mid-air.
His acrobatic catches while at BSC
have yet to be duplicated.
Now, after four years of hard work
to improve himself, no one is saying
Tucker can’t block or run with the
football.
In fact, he’s being boomed
for All-Pro!
In an article which appeared in the
New York Daily News, written by
Larry Fox, Fran Tarkenton was quoted as saving:
“Without question, Bob’s the best
tight end in football,” Tarkenton said.
“There’s not one who can block with
him especially with the way he handles those big defensive ends like Eller
and Humphreys: he never drops the
football, and he can run with it once
he catches it.
“There he is, up there among the
leading receivers even though he’s
missed two games and even though
our opponents know I’m going to be
throwing to him. If he doesn’t make
all-pro there’s something wrong”.
Tarkenton is not an altogether disinterested observer.
Tucker is not
only his teammate and favorite target (twice as many catches as any
ether Giant), but also his roomie on
the road where they while away the
hours playing either a juvenile game
called Battleship, or chess. Tucker is
the chess master known for his nonstop series with on Johnson and he’s
initiating Tarkenton into the game.
Alex Webster seconds Tarkenton’s
of Tucker, pointing out that
“he can catch the football and also do
what a tight end has to do
block;
you get very few who can do both.”
praise
—
CROSS COUNTRY^TEAM
HAS A 6-4 RECORD
The Bloomsburg State College cross
country team ended its dual meet
competition for the season with a 6-4
record
The Maroon and Gold thjnclads
posted their 3rd straight winning season.
The 1969 and the 1970 records,
11-1 and 10-1 respectively, were the
best ever posted in the history of the
The charges of Coach Clyde
Ncbel got off to a slow start back
early October due to a series of
illnesses and were defeated in their
first two meets by Mansfield
and
Lock Haven.
The only other loss
was to the strong Millers ville team.
Three seniors were in their last
year of competition for the CC team.
They are: Larry Strohl, Hazleton:
Rod Dewing, Warren Center;
and
Paul Pelletier, Woodbridge, N. J.
Juniors Tim Waechter, Camphill, and
Terry Lee. Malvern, are again expected to lead the Huskies in the competion next season.
college.
in
SPEECH DISABILITY
TEACHING AID PROJECT
A two year project of training and
special teaching to help children with
language disabilities was formally
launched with an orientation conference held at Bloomsburg State College
September
17.
The project, to be directed by the
Department staff on behalf of Intermediate School Units 16, 18 and 29,
has been funded by a
first
year
grant of $135,000 from E.S.E.A. Title
m, Federal funds administered by
the Pennsylvania State Department of
Education. The Central Susquehanna
Intermediate Unit is receiving the
special funds for participating school
areas.
The purpose
of
the
project
is
to
from the schools
to administer newly available
programs to aid children with language
and speech problems.
train professionals
Page seven
NEWS ABOUT YOUR CLASSMATES
Your classmates and friends are inwhere you are and
missioned in 1952 through
Officer
Candidate School, and earned his Master of Science degree in 1960 at the
University of Maryland.
terested in knowing
what’s happening to you. So, if you
change your adress, start a new job,
get married, or welcome an addition
to the family, send the news to the
Alumni
Bloomsburg
Office,
1953
Dr. Jack Rittenmeyer is principal
of
Conestoga Senior High School,
State
College, Bloomsburg, Pa., 17815 and
we’ll publish it in the next issue of
the Quarterly. The news should reach
the Alumni Office by any of the following dates: November 1, February
1, May 1, or Augtist 'l.
Conestoga and Irish Roads, Berwyn,
Pa.
S. Scrimgeour, Jr. was awarded the Master of Education degree in
Counselor Education on Sept. 16 at
Penn State. John and his wife Jean,
’54 live at 441 East Third St., Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815. He is a member of
1905
Mae Wolfe
(Mrs. Klegman) is living
at 2250 South Beverly Drive, Los AngCalifornia
eles,
the
elopment division
Edward
joined
Evelyn is still living at 332
Maple Ave., Morgantown, West VirOur
ginia
26505, and we’re glad!
edition.”
apologies for a grievous error!
1910
Robert C. Metz has moved to 443
North Gates Ave., Kingston, Pa. 18704.
Bob serves as his class representative
for the Alumni Association.
The address
is 7
Reynolds
1912
Bina W. Johnson is residing
Mariyln Apt., 400 North Gates
Kingston, Pa. 18704.
at
St.,
1913
Cassell (Mrs. Irvin
living at R.D. 2, Hum-
is
melstown, Pa. 17036.
1926
The
adress of Fae Womelsdorf
(Mrs. Tubick) is 50 Samboume St.,
Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 18702
(Mrs. Raymond
a new home in
Sunken Heights, Bloomsburg, Pa.
17815.
Betty is class representative.
Katerman
moved
to
1949
Clifford J.
this
Kendall was graduated
summer
from
Management Program
the Advanced
of the Harvard
University Graduate School of Business Administration. The class was
composed of 154 senior executives,
including high-ranking businessmen,
military officers,
and government
officials.
home
Clifford’s
is
at
47
Washington St., Sherbom, Mass. 91770
he is Vice President of the National
Shawmut Bank
of Boston.
1951
John A. Klotsko has resecond award of the U.S.
Air Force Commendation Medal at
Sheppard Air Force Base, Texas,
where he serves as chief of training
Lt.
Col.
ceived his
operations
division
ait
Health Care Sciences.
Hazle Smith Stookey resides at
Dalrymple, Dover, N. J. 07801.
Smith
Kingston, Pa. 18704.
Algatt) has
Anna Elizabeth
F. Keller)
St.,
1943
Betty
1911
Dr. Harry A. Smith, 259a South
Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, has been
chosen Penna. Physician of the Year
by the Governor’s Committee on Employment of the Handicapped.
Dr.
Smith was chosen over a number of
physicians because of his outstanding
record as an orthopedic surgeon over
a period of 45 years in the Wyoming
Valley Area. He will also be nominated to compete for national awards.
1932
of Catherine A.
of
Bethlehem
Steel
Corporation industrial relations department, effective October 1, 1971. He
J. Connolly, ’55
1909
17086.
faculty.
Edward J. Connolley was appointed
director —management development in
the personnel and management dev-
Ida Flgley (Mrs. John Lyons) has
been a guest in the Gold Star Nursing
Home, R.D. 4, Danville, Pa. for the
She celebrated her
past two years.
83rd birthday on April 20, 1971.
Pa.
BSC
1955
90034.
1906
Sue Toole Bassler is a guest in
Mengel’s Nursing Home, Richfield,
19312.
John
the School
of
He was com-
15
Bethlehem
Commander
Reserve
Steel
in
1967.
A
the United States Nav-
In
—Air
Intelligence, he is
officer of
Operational Control Group W-l, at
the Naval Air Station, Willow Grove,
The Connolleys reside at 996
pa.
al
also currently
Hexer
commanding
Ave., Allentown, Pa. 18103.
Miss Pearl S. Borchers has changed
her address to 509 Norway St., Berlin.
New Hampshire 03570 c/o Donald
Borchers
Thomas J. Welliver has been apointed a counselor in the Division of
Counseling at the Penn State UniverHe expects to receive his docsity.
tor’s degree in counseling and guidance from the State University of N.
Y. at Albany in June, 1972. Tom has
adminbeen dean of student affairs
istration at Post Junior College, Waterbury Conn.; has served two years
in the U.S. Army, and has been a teacher and wrestling coach at Lewisburg High School.
1956
Dr. Larry Fiber, associate professor of business at Shippensburg State
College has been appointed acting director of business education while Dr.
Max Cooley is on leave from Sept. 9th
—
January
Dr. Cooley is
Dr. and Mrs.
Phber and son, Larry, live at R.D. 3,
Shippensburg, Pa. 17257.
to
also a
15,
1972.
BSC alumnus.
1957
Charlotte K. Deebel (Mrs. Rissier)
Mrs. Mary Maher McBlhenny gets
a vote of thanks for sending her current address: 459 New Market Road.
Piscataway, New Jersey 08854.
Price was awarded the
Doctor of Education degree in Aug..
1971 by the Dept, of Special Education of the University of Arizona at
Tucson. He is now a member of the
faculty of San Fernando State College
as assistant professor of special education. Dr. and Mrs. Price live at 1776
Mary Marg. Henmigan (Mrs. Gallagher) makes her home at 784 Clinton
and Alisen,
is
living
at
Century
Edge, Apt. 21B,
Florida.
33401
Village,
West Palm Beach,
Ave., Newark, N. J.
eight
D.
Lydia
Circle, Simi, California 93065
with their daughters Laura Anne, 9
7.
1958
07108.
Evelyn Bomboy (Mrs. Rolland Corson) has written to help us correct an
error in the September Quarterly, in
which she was reported “deceased”.
She writes “All is forgiven but please
print correction in your forthcoming
Page
James
Soft’s
Col. Klotsko, ’51, right, receives
U.S.A.F. Commendation medal from
Col. Jerrold Wheaton.
Lt.
William A. Welliver was recently
elected Superintendent of Springford
Area School District, Royersford, Pa.,
and is also working on his doctor’s
degree at Temple University. Bill’s
address is R.D. 2, Mennonite Road.
Oollegeville, Pa.
19426.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
USAF.
1959
C.
Thomas Fensttermacher was
a/-
John R. Hatton was awarded the
Master of Education degree in Elementary Education at Penn State
warded the Doctor of Education degree in Elementary Education at Penn
Tom’s address
State in Sept.. 1971.
is 513 Baer Ave.. Hanover, Pa. 17331.
17109.
Kenneth H. Parker has accepted a
position as UniServ Director for the
St. Louis Suburban Teachers Association. He taught for ten years in the
schools of Riverside and Orange Counties prior to serving for one year as
President of the Placentia Teachers
Association and Salary and Negotiations consultant for the California
Southern SecTeachers Association
tion. He and his wife. Jane, and sons
have
Keith 4. Scott. 4 and Jeff, 1,
moved to 7306 Princeton, University
City Missouri 63130.
—
1961
Joe McGroorty is serving as an
Education Specialist with the Federal
Government. He is currently residing
at 1310 Grovania Ave., Abington, Pa.
19001.
Jane Reinaker (Mrs. Russell Wilwas awarded the Doctor of
hour)
Philosophy in June. 1971. The title
of her thesis was “Behavioral Object-
Reading in the PriJane, and her husband lives at 209 Cole Blvd., Charles.
Missouri 63301
ives for Teaching
mary Grades”.
1962
Ann Brown, Class of 1968) became
parents of a baby girl, Jennifer Rae,
John is now enrolled in a
in April.
doctoral program in educational administration at Penn State. He te'aches 6th grade in the West Shore School
Shiban,
’67
Miller,
’70
August, 1971.
His address at that
time was 610 South Locust St.. Oxford.
Ohio. His address in the Alumni Office at BSC is 356 S. Poplar St.. Hazleton. Pa.
18201.
Walter H. Veranda is presently employed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Pood and Nutrition Service.
He was promoted recently to
the position of senior budget analyst
in the Budget and Planning Division.
Walter and his wife, Joy, and their
daughters Lois and Lisa are living at
9461 Catfeet Court, Columbia, Maryland 21043.
Robert J. Strunk has been named a
UniServ staff representative by the
Penna. State Education Association,
and will serve a cluster of associations
in western Delaware County.
Since
1964, he has been a teacher in the
Rose Tree Media School District. Bob
and his wife, the former Betsy Whitenigh* live with their family at 17 War
Trophy Lane, Media. Pa” 19603.
Mechanicsburg
District in
1968
Mr. and Mrs. George Chellew (she
Virginia C. Heasel. 400 Riverside
Drive, Apt. 3A, New York City, received her Master of Arts degree at
Teachers College, Columbia UniverMiss Heasel
sity in August, 1970.
teaches African Studies at the New
Lincoln School.
was Patricia Swartz, Class
are living at Continental
B-6, New Castle, Delaware
George received the Master of
Education degree in July, 1971 from
the University of Delaware.
Richard
(Mrs. George Zach-
Steible
managing
1971.
tor or
1,
Donna Maria Barbara (Mrs. Mcis residing at 5817 Morrowfield
Ave., Pittsburkh, Pa. 15217.
her some news.
Marie
NOW!
Mayer (Mrs. Donlou) was
previously
listed
incorrectly
in
the
Alumni Office files as Ann Marie
Moyer. The Editor of the Quarterly
and the Alumni Office staff are grateful to Marie for setting the record
straight and for sending her address:
1003 F Charles View Way, Baltimore,
Maryland
21204.
1967
of Captain
Fowles. 199-36-1951, is
The address
Thomas
S.
HQ USARV DCS
OPS
I&S,
APO
San Francisco,
96375.
edi-
Views, a weekly
Louella Davis, R.D. 1, RichPa. 17086, received the Master
of Education degree in Elementary
Education at Penn State in Sept., 1971.
Flo
field,
on Aug.
1966
Benyo has also served as
TV News N
18229.
ar-
Jean Zehnke (Mrs. John T. Foster)
has moved to 626 Sunset St., Clarks
Summit. Pa. 18411. Jean is representative for the Class of 1966 and is
a member of the Board of Directors
of the BSC Alumni Association. Send
the
entertainment supplement and is editor of a new local weekend magazine,
Saturday. He won the 1971 Keystone
Press Award of the Penna. Newspaper Publishers’ Association in the
His address
local column category.
Center St., Jim Thorpe, Pa.
is 207
Rae)
rivel of their daughter. Dawn Marie,
21, 1971. Both Joe and Karen,
who reside at 25 Tudor Ave., Pine
Beach New Jersey 08741. are 1965
grads of BSC.
was appointed
Times-News
Benyo
S.
editor of
& Record, Lehighton, Pa. on October
arda) has moved to 34 Oak St.,
Wilkes-Barre. Pa. 18702. George has
assumed duties as coordinator of the
Metropolitan Lutheran Council and is
pastor of St. Paul’s Lutheran Church.
They are the parents of Andrew, 4.
and Rebecca. 1% years of age.
was Karen Baumer) greeted the
Apartr
19720.
1965
Nancy
1969)
of
Arms
ments
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Zavaglia (she
John Pesda was awarded the Doctor of Philosophy degree with a major
in history by Kent State University in
His address is 3217 A
Pa.
Harrisburg,
Road,
The Hattons (she was Viringia
1971.
in Sept.,
Wakefield
1960
*
A son was born to Itfr. and Mrs.
David Knouse (she was Donna Fenstermacher, Class of 1968) on July 5,
The Knouses have a new ad1971.
R.D. 1, Northumberland, Fa
dress:
17857.
1969
Nancy James (Mrs. Brubaker)
living at
Route
3,
Towanda, Pa.
is
18848.
Gregory A. Kanaskie, 1243 Pulaski
Ave., Shamokin, Pa. 17872 was awarded the Master of Education degree in
Earth Sciences at Penn State in
1971.
Sept.
E. Hall, 2019 Roosevelt
Williamsport, Pa. 17701, was
awarded the Master of Education degree in Elementary Education at
Penn State in Sept., 1971.
Cherie
Ave.,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Drumm
(she Was Linda Unger) have moved
to 420 East Sixth St., Laurel, Dela-
.
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent P. Raupers
was Virginia Nark) are living at
18 Tedd Lane, Old Tappen, New Jersey 07675. Both are 1962 grads.
(she
1963
The address of Theresa
(Mrs. Ray W. Lewis) is Box
Bloomfield,
Pa.
Biagiotti
256,
New
17068.
1964
George A. Weigand. who has been
serving as dean’s representative of
the College of Education on the York
Campus of the Penn State University,
of
has been appointed coordinator
Student teaching at the University.
His address is 489 Park Lane State
College, Pa. 16801.
,
DECEMBER,
1971
Mr. and Mrs. James McKinley (she
was
Salley Hoffecker)
are living at
Kings wood
Apartments, 502 Steven
Drive. Apt. B, King of Prussia, Pa.
19406. Jim was graduated from BSC in
1964, and has started his eighth year
as a teacher at Upper Merion High
School; he also coaches basketball.
Sally is busy caring for their baby
boy and teaching swimming at the
high school as part of the Comunity
Aquatics Program
ware
19956.
The
address of SP/5 George A.
Ziolkowski 165-40-7494 is ‘A’ Battery,
Artillery,
APO, New York
George returned to the USA
from Vietnam in March, 1971 and left
2175th
09165.
Germany in April, 1971. Mail will
reach him at his mother’s home: 137
Honey Pot St., Nanicoke, Pa. 18634.
for
The Reverend and Mrs. Ralph Edward Cope (she was Sherryl Shaffer,
Class of 1966)
Second
Lieut.
Eugene
P.
Miller,
U.S. Air Force, has arrived for duty
at Clark Air Base, the Philippine Islands. A pilot, Lt. Miller is assigned
to a unit of the Air Force Communications and air traffic control for the
baby
girl,
are the parents of a
Ann Marie, born August
3,
The couple has one other child,
Paul Edward, age 2. The family re-
1971.
sides at R.D.
1,
Windsor, Pa. 17266.
1970
Hilda K.
Yocum
(Mr's.
Morgan)
is
Page nine
residing at 330
Mahoning
St.,
Milton,
Pa. 17847.
.
.
WEDDINGS
Lincoln Ave.,
.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry K. Berkheiser,
Jr. (she Was June E. Bloss, Class of
1971) are making their home at 22
Camelot Road, Parsippany, New Jersey 07054. Both are teaching in the
New
Bloomfield,
Box
Education degree at
his
BSC
Master
of
in 1971.
Dorothy Pichel is now Mrs. DoroAddress: Route
1,
thy Schneider.
Hellertown, Pa.
1957
Anna Romanczyek is now Mrs.
Anna Woodward. Address: 814 Delaware
Vera E. Kovalich, 41 Spring St.,
Glen Lyon, Pa. 18617, was awarded
in
the Master of Science degree
speech pathology and audiology at
Penn State in Sept., 1971.
Monique H. Cavalliero,
307 11th St.,
Honesdale,
Pa. 18431 received the
Master of Arts degree in French at
Penn State
in Sept., 1971.
Second Lieutenant Vincent J. Shiban has been awarded his silver wings
following graduation from U.S. Air
Force pilot training. After specialized training, Lt. Shiban will be assigned to MacDill AFB, Oklahoma,
Where he will fly the F-4E Phantom
bomber With a unit of the
Tactical Air Comm'and. His wife is
the former Theresa DeRenzis.
fighter
1971
Angeline T. Carrato (Mrs. Babatis living at 27 South Ferguson St.,
Shenandoah, Pa. 17976.
sky)
The address of Cynthia Sharretts
John W. S'ibole) is Second
Floor, 616 West Union Blvd., Beth(Mrs.
lehem, Pa. 18018.
Joan M. Gabuzda (Mrs. Reese) is
living at Nittany Garden Apts., Apt.
F-10, 445 Waupelani Drive, State College, Pa. 16801.
$4,500 OIL
IS GIVEN
PAINTING
Bloomsburg State College received
an oil painting by the noted Japanese
artist Tetsuro Sawada in October. The
gift was made possible through the
generous efforts of Miss Toshiko Takaezu, well known American Craftsman. and Mrs. Kathyrn Trubeck, of
the Hunderdon Art Center in Clinton,
New
Jersey.
Selection of the painting
was made by Dr. Percival R. Roberts,
in, chairman of the department of
art at BSC.
Dr. Roberts described the gift as a
“stunning example of structured color
field abstraction, one that will greatly
enhance our college’s permanent art
collection.”
The Hunderdon Art Center featured
an exhibition of his work in March of
1971 and it was from this collection
that the BSC painting, valued at
$4,500, Was selected.
CHAIRS AVAILABLE
at
Alumni Chairs are now available
the College Store.
We have a
Captain’s
Chair
Cherry Arms
and shipping, and
with
for $40.95 plus tax
a Boston Rocker for $31.95 plus tax
and shipping. The chairs are black
with a gold BSC seal. Please write
the College Store
Bloomsburg
at
State College and we will be glad to
send you more information.
Page ten
Forest City, Pa. 18421
St.,
1958
Eloise Kaminski is now Mi’s. Eloise
Canfield. Address: R. D. 1, Box 202,
Vestal, New York. 13850
1959
Joan Dalton is now Mrs. Joan
Riverside
Decker.
(Address:
2555
Drive, Duboistown, Pa. 17701
Lorraine J. Taylor is now Mrs. Lor-
Thomo. Address: R. D. 1, Box
Dushore, Pa. 18614
Ruth A. Moser is now Mrs. Ruth
Seksinsky.
Address: R. D. 2, Watsontown, Pa. 1777
Mary Tier is now Mrs. Mary Kelley.
Address: 2326 Prospect Ave., Croydon, Pa. 19020
raine
5,
1962
Nancy
is now Mrs. Nancy
Address:
5579
Highland
Avenue, Millport, N. Y. 14864
Joyce Redcliff is now Mrs. Joyce
Michael.
Address: 321 Harry Ave.,
Robesonia, Pa. 19551
Kathryn Kerlish is now Mrs. Kathryn Ellis. Address:
10746
Linden
Ave., Seattle, Washington. 98133
Joni Ann Petrie is now Mrs. Joni
Frie.
Address:
5303
Ravens worth
Road, Springfield, Va. 22151
"ersia Anita Berardi is now Mrs
Robert A.
Penna.
Address:
415
Foulke Lane, Rolling Green Estates,
Springfield, Pa. 19064
J.
Case
Dr. Larry R. Eckroat, ’64 is married
to Cozella E. Harvey.
Address: 1584
West 42nd St., Erie, Pa. 16509.
1965
Carole J. Snook is now Mrs. Carole
Sadowski. Address: R.D. 2, Selinsgrove, Pa.
17870
Alberta R. Pealer is now Mrs. Alberta Makary.
Address:
1743 W.
Union Blvd., Bethlehem, Pa. 18018.
Baymbam
now Mrs. Mar6,
Dan-
Jane L. Kaszowicz is now Mrs. Jane
Trochimowicz.
Address:
110 King
William St., Newark, Delaware 18711.
Carol Ripa is now Mrs. Carol R.
Oliver. Address: 75 Huntsville Road.
Dallas, Pa.
18612.
1967
Carla Overhiser is now Mrs. Carla
Auten. Address. 403 South Main St..
Muncy Pa. 17756.
Margaret Chrismer is now Mrs.
Stewart Hopkins. Address: R.D. 1,
Dcylestown, Pa. 18901.
Angelica Sacco is now Mrs. Angelica
Mahoney. Address: 322 Beverly Court,
Sp ringside Manor, Shillington, Pa.
19607.
’67
1968.
Dave teaches
82520.
Darlene H. Bastress is now Mrs. DarAddress: 610 North Fifth
17801.
St., Sungury, Pa.
Jo Ann Eister is now Mrs. JO Ann
Fry. Address: 107 West Sunset Ave.,
Ephrata, Pa. 17522.
Loretta Waskevich is now Mrs. Loretta Shimko. Address: 124 East Avon
Road, Parkside, Pa. 19015.
Timothy J. Hoffman, ’68 was married to Mary Sue A. Petrole on September, 4, 1971. Address: 389 First St.,
Warminister, Pa. 18974.
SaJllie L. Swoyer is now Mrs. Sallie
Feussner
Susanne Saurman, ’68 is married to
Barry Sutter, a senior at BSC. Address:
33 East Third St., Blomsburg.
Pa. 17815.
Dale Lamar Kreischer, '68 was married to Linda Jane Patterson on June
Address: 523 Railroad St.,
26, 1971.
Danville, Pa. 17821.
Elaine Barlow, ’68 is now Mrs. Bert
Address:
19 West
R. Parker, HI.
Knowles Ave., Glenolden, Pa. 19036.
1969
Laura Reynolds is now Mrs. Laura
Address:
Lake Winola
Warnken.
Road, Facto ryv file, Pa.
18419.
Brenda Bowman is now Mrs. Brenda Stutzman.
Address:
704 East
Main St., Hegens, Pa. 17938.
Linda Biduck is now Mrs. Linda
Address:
Roscoe.
6038
Carpenter
East Petersburg, Pa. 17520.
Paul G. Clothier, ’69 is married
St.,
to
Carol A. Sladin, (Wilkes College, ’69).
Both are teaching in the schools of
Anne Arundel County, Maryland. Address: 7873 American Circle, Apt. 101.
Glen Burnie, Maryland 21061.
Catherine Bryan is now Mrs. Catherine Roscoe. Address: 254 Ft. Fairview St., Bethlehem, Pa. 18018.
Virginia Davenport, ’69 is now Mrs.
Donald F. Yoder. Address: R.D. 2,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
Oheri Ziegler, ’69 is married to
Adam J. Skelding, ’71. Address: Apt.
M-l, Mayflower Apts., 290 River Road
Piscataway, New Jersey 08854.
Karen
was married
’67
on October
for the
to
19,
Perkiomen
Valley School District and Eileen
teaches at Lansdale Cathodic High
School; she received her Master of
Education degree at Temple University in August, 1971.
Address:
218
J. Kroll,
’70
was married
to
Horwath
on August 14,
1971.
Address: 5544 North Morgan
Street, Apt. 301, Alexandria, Va. 22312
Ann E. Dalto, ’70 and William R.
Heckman,
Jr
Address:
Guam,
Jeffrey
L.
Pacific Islands. 96910
M. Obzut,
Bernice
’70
and Mich-
ael Roy Linn, ’71.
Address: 184%
Schuylkill
Avenue,
Shenandoah
Heights, Pa. 17976
Maria Pellegrino, '70 and Joseph
Vezendy, Jr., ’70. Address: 237 West
Front Street, Berwick, Pa. 18603
Sylvia Silvetti, ’70 was married to
Havlish, Jr., on September 4, 1971.
Sylvia is teaching at
Emmaus High School. Husband will
Norman
graduate
.
from
Business
Allentown
January, 1972. Address:
Sussex #10
2444 Mountain Lane,
Allentown, Pa. 18103
Elizabeth Ann Hodek, ’70 and Jack
W. Sharbaugh, ’70.
Susan Force. ’70 and David Schneider.
Address: Hatfield Village.
El-9, Hatfield, Pa.
19440
Arlene Kipp, ’70 is now Mis. Arlene
College
Eileent Fertig,
Wyoming
1970
is
liyn Steinhart. Address: R.D.
vllie, Pa.
17821.
David Hildenbrand,
18964.
lene Winn.
1966
Marilyn
Pa.
1968
Robbins.
1964
TO COLLEGE
Lander,
764,
1951
Jersey School Dis-
Harry earned
trict.
Souderton,
Margaret M. Laudig, ’67 is married
to Robert S. Vaughn. Address: P.O.
.
in
,
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
1924—
teaching in the QuakAddress: Box 52,
ertown Schools.
Pleasant Valley. Pa. 18948
Kathleen Martin is now Mrs. Kath-6
53
leen Weaver. Address: Apt. C
Sweinhart Road, Boyertown, Pa. 19512
Barbara Skocik is now Mrs. BarAddress: 1801 Center
Nestor.
Shubert.
She
bara
17921
Pa.
Street, Ashland.
now Mrs. Betty unAddress: Rear 3 East 11th
Betty Weiss
is
derwood.
Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
17815
1971
Susan I. Beyer, ’71 and Thomas C.
NorParr. Address: 259 Third Street,
thumberland, Pa. 17851
is
Karen E. Dow.
Karen Gallaway. Address:
’71
now
11
Mrs.
Honey-
Lane. Chester, N. J. 07934
Jacqueline Ann Lewis, ’71 to Richteachard J. Camuso, ’70. Richard is
Noring at Rittenhouse Jr. High in
ristown. Pa. and Jacquie is doing subView
stitute teaching. Address: High
Gardens. Apt. B-305. Spring City. Pa.
hill
19475
’71 and Kathy Lutz
1971
were married September 4.
Craig returned to Ft. Benning, Ga
where he was attending Officers
R3710
Address:
Candidate School.
Old Berwick Road, Bloomsburg, Pa
Craig Searfoss,
17815
Carol
Rainick,
3u UJrmnrmm
is
Sturgin,
’71.
’71
„
and Joseph S
Address: Laporte, Pa.
18626
Shirley J. Geisler,
’71
Emil
and
151
Address:
Moskovich, Jr., ’70.
West Eighth Street. Bloomsburg, Pa.
17815
Sharon Hayman, ’71 is now Mrs.
Larry E. Yost. Address: R. D. 1,
Stillwater, Pa.
17878
Esther Jane Bassett, ’71 and Kenneth E. Herman, ’71. Address: 332
SelinsSouth High Street, Apt. 6
grove. Pa. 17870
Penny K. Faux, ’71 and Randall N.
Fetterman. Address: Oatawissa, Pa.
1900 Lydia Zehner (Mrs.
1901—
Shuman), Bloomsburg. Pa.
Sara
Brenda L. Stoneback is now' Mrs.
303
Address:
Brenda Shoemaker.
Main Street, Emmaus, Pa. 18049
1971
Shirley A. Beaver, ’71 is
Shirley A. Troy.
Address:
Box
513,
Ringtown, Pa.
now Mrs
R.D.
1,
17967.
Shirley J. Geisler, ’71 is married to
Emil Moskovich. Jr. Address: 151
West Eighth St., Rloomsbrugurg, Pa.
17815.
Diane Pupkiewicz
is
now Mrs. Diane
Cuirle.
Address: c/o Keta Business
College, Box 65, Keta, Volta Region,
Ghana, Africa.
Nancy S. Sherlock is now Mrs.
Nancy Husted. Address:
R.D. 1,
Port Royal, Pa.
17082.
Dorothy Voy stock is now Mrs. Doro40 South
Rurnbel.
Address:
Penn St., York, Pa. 17404.
Gayle Thrope, ’71 is married to
119
Address:
Robert Phillips, Jr.
Oak St., Scranton, Pa. 18508.
thy
Parents attended the opening
game of the season with
ball
foot-
BSC
entertaining the University of ScranFollowing the game a picnic
ton.
was held at Town Park.
DECEMBER,
1971
Catawissa,
Hamlin,
(July, 1971)
1902 Bess Long.
15, 1971)
Bloomsburg (Nov.
Mrs. Blanche A. Gibbons. Wilkes1905—Pa.
Barre,
1903
Howard
Houtz,
Sioux
City,
Iowa
Alice L. Small Danville. Pa.
(Nov. 11. 1971) Miss Smull served as
a teacher in the Danville schools for
She had
46 years, retiring in 1951.
.
the BSC Alumni
Association for 37 years, held numeroffices in the Trinity Methodist
ous
1906—
Church, and taught in every depart1908—
of the Sunday school, and was
ment
active in many community projects
in Danville.
Lillie Miller (Mrs. Otto Parr),
been an officer
in
Nescopeck Pa. (July, 197P
Martha Herring (Mrs.
Elliot
Tomlinson). Harrisbm-g, Pa.
Mabel Clark (Mrs. Orrie Pollock).
Wilkes-Barre. Pa. (April 30, 1970'
1909 Julia Simpler (Mrs. E. P.
Aurand'. Fullerton, Pa. (Aug. 11,
J.
1971)
Walter
1911—
Bloomsburg
Welliver.
C.
(Nov. 1971)
1912—Enola Snyder (Mrs. Morris S.
1910
Evans). Long Island. N.Y.
Ira
Burton Shuman, Honesdale.
(May 31. 1971). Ira taught school for
a number of years, then operated a
farm until he retired in 1947.
L. May Steiner (Mrs. George
E. Gamble. Jr.
(Aug., 1971)
1916—Mary M. Watts
Laura HouhtOn (Mrs. Peacock) East
Stroudsburg. Pa. (Sept.
Wakeman
Lucille
7.
1971)
(Mrs.
Rair)
(Sept., 1970)
1913 Messina Patterson (Mrs. Fay
Daley)
Dr. Kimber C. Kuster, Bloomsburg,
Pa.
(Aug. 1971)
Kathryn Reed (Mrs. Ray C.
Kase), Georgetown, S. Carolina (Oct.
1970)
1917 Veda Kester (Mrs. Irvin L.
Miller), Alexandria, Virginia (Aug.
30. 1971)
John L. Richardson, Jr., San Gabriel, California (May 13, 1971
7,
Stuart Button, Johnson City, New
York (Aug. 9, 1971) Mr. Burton retired in 1961 after teaching 47 years.
Dr. J. Loomis Christian, Paxtang,
Pa. (Sept., 1971) Dr. Christian practiced general medicine for 41 years
and participated extensively in civic,
professional,
religious,
and fraternal
Clarence
(Sept.
18,
the U.S.
an
T.
1970)
Hodgson, York, Pa.
Clarence served in
Army from
elementary
P9
Is-
—
Bloomsburg
1928 Teloiv Wagner (Mrs. Teloiv
Wetzel), Bloomsburg (Aug. 1970) Mrs.
Wetzel had taught second grade for
many years in the Conynham School
of the Hazleton Area School District.
1931—
George Evancho
1929 Myron D.
(Sept. 1971)
Helen L.
Moss, Shickshinny,
Pa.
Maynard (Mrs. Lot
Lake)
Mrs. Sarah Hartt, Bloomsburg
Mrs. Hartt is survived
by a daughter, Mrs. Edward Kitchen,
Bloomsburg, Pa.; a son, Robert Hartt,
Harrisonburg, Virginia; four grandand seven gre(at grandchlildiiien
1932
1971)
(Oct.,
children
.
Samuel Sacus, Ranshaw, Pa.
1933
1934
Frederick T. Jaffin, Ambler,
Pa. (Dec. 24, 1970) Fred participated
varsity football, basketball, and
track while at BSC from 1930-1934;
he was captain of the football squad
during his senior year.
He Was a
member of College Council, Phi Sigma
Pi fraternity, the Maroon & Gold
staff and served as assistant dean of
men in Old North Hall during 1933-34.
Temple University awarded him the
in
Master
of
Education degree
in
guid-
ance.
His teaching career included appointments to the faculties of Augusta
Township, Canton, and Youngs ville
High Schools. During World War H,
he was a supervisor at National
Forge and Ordinance (Warren, Pa.)
and taught mathematics courses for
Penn State. For a quarter century he
was well-known for his coaching and
teaching in the Wissahickon School
District, and officiated in both football and basketball games in Montgomery County and adjacent counties.
Fred is survived by his wife, Elfrieda, who attended BSC and is a teacher in the Wissahcikon District a
son, Lt. Frederick T. Jaffin, Jr., U.S.
Navy; a daughter, Barbara, and several brothers, two of whom are also
BSC alumni.
;
—John
1938
New
J.
Maczuga,
Franklin,
Jersey (Dec. 3, 1970)
1940—William Wertz, St. Charles,
Mo. (Sept., 1971) William was a longtime resident of Berwick, Pa. and was
transferred to St. Charles when the
ACF
He
closed its Berwick plant.
active in church affairs and in
He
civic and fraternal oranizations
was
.
survived by his wife, Kathryn; two
daughters, Salley and Janet; a son,
William, Jr.; a brother; and a grandis
activities.
York
The first annual Parent’s Weekend
was held at Bloomsburg State College Saturday and Sunday, September 18 and 19. John Mulka, Director
of Student Activities was in charge.
A.
Pa.
,
17820
R.
F.
Mar jory McHenry, Long
New' York (Sept., 1971)
Josephine Maurer (Mrs. Francis
Laut)
1925 Beatrice Geisinger (Mrs .Johnson), Millerburg, Pa.
1926 Olive Henrietta Watts, Millersburg, Pa.
Geraldine Aul (Mrs. Carl M. Davis)
land,
1917-1919
school
and was
principal
in
,
Hugh E. Bolye (March
23, 1971)
Carlton C. Sherman, Hanover-Green, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. (July
1971)
Carlton taught nearly four
decades in Hanover Township; he is
a
survived by his wife, Louise;
daughter, Marion Price; a son, Fred;
six grandchildren.
1923 Helen
(Mrs. Reher)
Kline
1922
(July, 1970)
son.
1949
(July,
1950
Harold E. Dodson, Orangeville
1971)
Clarence
Meiss,
Catons ville,
Clarence was chair(Oct., 1971)
of the guidance department at
Catons ville Sr. H. S. He earned his
M.S. degree at the University of
Delaware in 1962, and was a doctorcandidate at the University of
al
Maryland at the time of his death. He
was an active member of professional,
civic, and fraternal groups, and was
Md.
man
Page eleven
HERRE WILL RETIRE,
ON FACULTY SINCE 1947
serving as Treasurer of the Metropolitan Baltimore Association for childHe
ren with Learning Disabilities.
is survived by his wife, Elizabeth; a
son, John; his parents; a brother; and
a sister.
DR.
Dr. Ralph S. Herre, a member of
the faculty at Bloomsburg State College since 1947, has announced Ms retirement effective at the end of the
1971-72 college year.
Dr. Herre joined the faculty as a
Professor of History and has also
served as an Assistant Dean of Men
During his 25 years at
since 1948.
—
Elizabeth A. Kroupa (Mrs. W.
Gunn) (Aug. 20, 1971) Elizabeth
was fatally injured in an automobile
1965
J.
accident, along with Trista, her 7
old daughter in Port Hood, Texas. She is survived by her son, Brett,
month
age
and her husband, Captain W.
J. Gunn.
Beth’s mother wrote recently “Her years at Bloomsburg
were happy ones and a pleasant mem-
BSC he has served
2,
ory for the family”.
Thomas
1967
(Nov.,
B. Stitely, Milton, Pa.
1970)
Peace Corps
INSTITUTE
Tom Gorrey
in
—
Ecuador.
SOCIAL STUDIES
Dr. Herre
TOM GORREY TO LEAVE
SUPERINTENDENT’S POST
Thomas
1968 Richard D. Leahy, Canton,
Pa. (Aug., 1971)
We received word
recently that Richard lost his life in
an accident while serving with the
on numerous facincluding
being
chairman of Homecoming and Freshman Parent’s Day. He served as advisor to the commuting men on campus for over 20 years and participated
for many years in high school Career
and College Day, visiting as many as
35 schools in a year.
For the past
year he has served as curator of the
committees,
ulty
A. Gorrey, superintendent
and grounds at Bloomsburg State College since 1959, has
announced his retirement effective
January 28, 1972.
of buildings
reporting
resignation, Dr.
Robert J. Nossen, president, lauded
Gorrey highly and the board went on
record to Commend him for Ms ser-
In
the
Columbia County Historical Museum
in Bakeless Center
Humanities on campus.
located
for
the
Following his retirement, Dr. Herre
be the curator of the
Columbia County Historical Museum.
The Herres plan to do some traveling
in this country and abroad.
will continue to
The Bloomsburg State College Infor Social Studies Teachers
held a conference on “Afro-Americans
in American Life” on Friday, November 19. The Institute is a cooperative
education program between
Bloomsburg State College and thirtyfour public school districts which involves around eight hundred elementary and secondary social studies tea-
School in 1921.
was associated With his father, the
late John J. Gorrey, in the general
contracting business until his father’s
death in 1947. He continued in that
business until he was named to the
cher's
college post.
O’Neill (Mrs. Redington).
1928 Lois M. Odell (Mrs. Wallace
His twelve-year tenure corresponded with the period of greatest physical
growth in the history of the college. In
addition to being responsible for maintenance of all buildings, both old and
new, he actively participated in the
design and construction of numerous
buildings and other campus facilities.
Robert
Lacoe); Ruth Avery (Mrs.
Kellerman; Bernard Gallagher.
1957—
1929 Anna Rose Farrell
stitute
The
.
George A.
Associate Professor of History, said the conference was concerned with various approaches and methods which would enable teachers to
recognize and include Afro-Americans
in the social studies curriculum.
The keynote address, “Introducing
Afro-American Studies Into the Curriculum for Teachers,” given by William Green, curriculum specialist in
African and Afro-American Studies
in the Philadelphia School District.
Green, in his talk, pointed out that
the history of Africans and Afro-Americans has been omitted, distorted
and presented in such a biased manner that myths and stereotypes have
become the central core of a racist
ideology which has denied a sense
of humanity to the person of African
ancestry.
Institute’s Director,
Turner,
Others participating were Dr. waiter A. Simon, Professor of Art at BSC;
James Pescy, Associate Professor of
Political Science at BSC; Mrs. Helene
C. Broome, Associate Director of Instruction
ir|
tfle
Hiaifriisiburg
City
vice.
A
native of Bloomsburg, Gorrey
graduated
from
was
Bloomsburg
High
Prom that time he
The addition
of new buildings has
a significant increase in
of employes in the build-
resulted in
the number
ings and grounds department.
The
staff includes custodians, tradesmen,
and other buildings and grounds personnel.
One
college
noted Gorrey
and his staff have earned the praise
official
of visitors for the
appearance of the
in which the
campus and the manner
facilities have been maintained.
Werkheiser, are parents of a daughter., Mrs. Thomas Madden, town, and
they have two grandchildren and one
great grandchild.
25th
ANNAUL CONFERENCE
and Steven S. McLaine, a
teacher at Trenton Central High
School.
The Bloomsburg State College Black Student Society presented
views and reactions to history and its
“Student Perspective of Black Studies,” discussing views and reactions
to history and its presentation.
Jay
Rochelle, Bloomsburg State College
Chaplain, gave a program “Simulation Games in a Classroom Situation.”
Approximately
50
departmental
programs under the School of Business and School of Professional Studies were available to participants
at the 25th Annual
Conference for
Teachers and Administrators held at
Bloomsburg State College Saturday,
October 30, according to Dr. C. Stuart Edwards, Dean, School of Professional Studies and conference dir-
This was the first of three conferences on the topic of “Minorities in
American Life,” sponsored by the
Bloomsburg State College Institute
for Social Studies Teachers.
In addition to the divisional programs and the general session, there
were specially-schoduled group breakfasts, exhibits and refreshments, and
Schools;
Page twelve
ector.
ADDRESSES UNKNOWN
If you know the address of any of
the following alumni, please send it
Bloomsburg
Office,
to the Alumni
State College, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1898— Blanche C. Dawson
1923 Joy E. Sheats
1924 Michael P. JanMcelli;
1951—
1938
—Stasia
Anna
Zola
1940— William H. Miller
1963—
1950
Edward
1954
Michael Hemlock
Mrs. Kenneth Gunton
—
J.
Mitros
Den-
mon
Doris Krzywlcki (Mrs. Philip
1956
Glenna Gebbhard
Smith);
William D. Kautz
1961— Alfred Ford; Mary Downey
1967—
Mrs. O’Donnell)
Charles J. Gelso; Rosemary
M. Timory
1964 Jo Ann Hoffman (Mrs. Gary
Sprout); Joseph B. Mockaitis; Mar1969—
tha E. Timlin
1965 Elizabeth Yokl;
Hayden C.
Jones
Judy Gross (Mrs. Robert FarA. Fogarty; Karen
M. Eckert; Robert T. Ballentine
William J. Shope;
John C.
Carr; Robert D. Harvey
1968 Larry R.
Phillips;
Bonnie
Wallos (Mrs. Jan D. Keller); Charles
E. Rhoades, Jr.; Mrs. Lisbeth Deal
1966
ina);
Rosemary
Cepes; Judith A. Bower
Thomas R. Bennuhoff; Barbara A. Ruffing; Richard L. Bailey
1971 Cynthia A. Basta;
Barbara
—
and George Duchemin
ALUMNI DAY
SATURDAY, APRIL
29,
1972
an informal luncheon.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR — Boyd F. Buckingham
ASSISTANT EDITOR - Kenneth Hoffman
BOARD OF DIRECTORS OFFICERS
— Howard F. Fenstemaker ,12. 242 Central Road, Bloomsburg, Pa.
Term Expires 1973
17815
VICE PRESIDENT — Millard Ludwig, ’48, 625 East Main Street, Millville, Pa. 17846
Term Expires 1972
PRESIDENT
— Col. Elwood M. Wagner
643 Wiltshire Road, State
— Term Expires 1973
TREASURER — Earl A. Gehrig,
110 Robin Lane, Sherwocd Village,
burg, Pa. 17815 — Term Expires 1973
SECRETARY
College,
’43,
Pa. 16801
Blooms-
’37,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Terms
Terms
expire 1972
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
’34
102 West Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Vacancy
to be filled
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie ’35
509 East Front Street
Berwick, Pennsylvania 18603
expire 1973
Dr. Frank J. Furgele ’52
Colonial Farm Box 88
R. D. 1. Glen Mills, Pa. 19342
Miss- Elizabeth H. Hubler ’29
Park and Oak
Dr. Alexander J. McKechnie, Jr. ’39
19 N. 24th St.
Camp Hill, Pa. 17011
John Thomas ’47
68 Fourth Street
Hamburg, Pennsylvania 19526
Terms Expire
111 Plant
’40
Francis B. Galinski,
’36
Avenue
Volume LXXII, Number
I
wish
to
4,
express
Apt. 2
Mrs. Jean Zenke Foster ’66
626 Sunset St.
Clarks Summit, Pa. 18411
90
Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087
224 Leonard Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Sts.,
Gordon, Pennsylvania. 17936
1974
Mrs. Verna Jones
Clayton H. Hinkel
—
Tower
’52
Hill Rd.,
Doylestown, Pa. 18901
December, 1971
my
personal sorrow for the recent loss of Dr. Kimfoer
C. Kuster.
I first
came
to
know Dr. Kuster
as a fellow student in the
fall
of 1910.
We
were both day students, and our headquarters were the “Check Room,”
a dingy area in the basement of Noetling Hall. I spent a week-end at his
home, and he, in turn, spent a week-ent at my home.
After graduation, our paths separated for several years, until he returned
Bloomsburg as a member of the faculty, following the retirement of
Professor Hartline.
We worked together as colleagues on the faculty, as members of the
same church, and a member of the Board of Directors of the Alumni Assn.
Dr. Kuster did a wonderful piece of work as Chairman of the Awards
Committee. He handled all of the countless details involved in selecting the
recipients of the Distinguished Service Award.
Dr. Kuster was also very active in community affairs. He served for
several years as Chairman of the Bloomsburg Chapter of the Red Cross. He
also was active in many other organizations in Bloomsburg.
We are happy that his name will be perpetuated in the Kuster Auditorium of the Hartline Center, thus joining the names of two persons who have
loomed large in the history of the Bloomsburg State College.
This is my personal tribute to a man whom I shall always remember as
a beloved friend.
to
President,
Alumni Association
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE
BLOOMSBURG,
Non-Profit Org.
POSTAGE
U. S.
PA. 17815
PAID
Address Correction Requested
1.7c
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Permit No. 10
6.S.C.
Once
ANNUAL GIVING CAMPAIGN
was a
there
turtle.
He was
handsome, inventive,
brilliant, aggressive,
accomplished, inquisitive, amorous, composed, and loyal to his Alma Mater.
He was rarely given to turtlenapping, woolgathering, daydreaming, revelry,
absentmindedness, or procrastination. He was the epitomy of turtle purposefulness.
of
a
One day the turtle received a short note from Mr. Aesop who was Director
Alumni Affairs of the turtle’s college “Old Mill Pond.” Mr. Aesop asked for
contribution to the Annual Giving Campaign and also the turtle’s biography.
He
suggested that the
The
fellow.
turtle
turtle’s
was
classmates might be interested in such an unusual
He took pen in hand to comply with Mr.
delighted.
Aesop’s request.
At that precise moment a neighborly hare hounded him to have a race.
Reckless in his zeal to answer the challenge, the turtle neglected Mr. Aesop’s
appeal.
When he won the race against overwhelming odds, the Director of
Alumni Affairs had no biography for his 16-page, quarterly edition of the
Alumni Quarterly, and although the race became famous, the turtle did not.
Please don’t be a turtle unless
Send a contribution
will
make
to the
name
sure your
is
it
is
a thaumaturgical turtle.
BSC ANNUAL GIVING CAMPAIGN and we
Summer edition of 1971 CONTRIBUTORS.
in the
QUARTERLY
We’ll even include some “news” in one of our
you send
may not make you famous, but we hope
you have helped Bloomsburg State College.
This
that
mailings
if
to us.
it
it
make you
will
feel
good
(detach here)
Make check payable
THE BLOOMSBURG FOUNDATION
to:
Address:
BSC, Box 292
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Please use
my
gift for the
following purpose:
— ALUMNI DEVELOPMENT
— ATHLETIC GRANTS
17815
— ALUMNI SCHOLARSHIPS
— UNRESTRICTED
Name
Class
(first)
(middle or maiden)
(last)
Address
Zip
please check
is
Please enclose some news on a separate sheet.
new.
if
address
in
2016
https://archive.org/details/alumniquarterly100bloo_32
BI
!
n tn
iS! n
State Normal School, Bloomsburg
A CENTURY OF TEACHER EDUCATION AT BLOOMSBURG
The Senior Member
Looks
at Public
of the
Board
of Presidents
Higher Education in the State
After
40 Years
Pennsylvania State Colleges
in
By
HARVEY
President,
Public Higher Education
education in
of higher
Pennsylvania, with specific reference
to State Colleges, must consider at
A
least
history
two historical factors.
Colleges and universities began as
academies, seminaries, or institutes
sponsored by the various religious
groups who came to a colony where
religious toleration existed.
In time,
these early academies became colTheir origleges and universities.
inal purpose of training ministers for
the various church groups was broadened on the assumption that what was
good for the shepherd was good for
the flock.
The requirements
for admission and
for attending private colleges
were relatively high, and were only
waived for sons and daughters of
costs
ministers or missionaries. This early
start of private colleges gave status.
Thus the general opinion that private
education was better than public education.
It was assumed that since
there was a direct outlay for tuition,
private education was worth more.
The second factor affecting the
development of the State Normal
Schools (1911), now State Colleges,
was the fact that they were, by law,
part of the public school system.
Public Schools in Pennsylvania began, as in England,
as
“pauper”
schools. As early as 1790, there was
a provisional law which read: “The
legislature shall provide by law for
the establishment of schools throughout the state in such a manner that
the poor may be taught gratis”; included was the clause, “As soon as
conveniently may be.” James Pyle
Wickersham
writes,
“Such a system
of class education necessarily failed
in a state where the
doctrine
of
equality had always been strongly
held.” He further states that, “The
idea that public schools should be
open alike without disrimination or
partiality to all children of all classes and condition of men” continued
with the passage
of
the
Public
School
Law
of
1834.
(James Pyle
Wickersham, Superintendent
mon
Schools
in
of
Com-
Pennsylvania
from
1866 to 1881, also was associated with
what is now Millersville State College.)
The early Normal Schools, sometimes organized on a county basis,
were operated for short periods of
time; finally, after 1857, they were
authorized by the State. These two
historical factors, namely, the status
created by the early beginning of
A.
ANDRUSS
Bloomsburg State College
private colleges and universities under
church sponsorship, and the identification of the Normal Schools with
the public schools which were organized for the poor, continue to linger in
the minds of the citizens of Pennsylvania.
It is against this background that
educators of other states question,
and sometimes are amazed by the reof
luctance of the Commonwealth
Pennsylvania to educate as large a
number of its young people beyond
the age of eighteen years as is done
by many other states in our country.
On the other hand, it can be argued,
and with basis, that the western migration, after 1800, caused populations
first to organize territories, and then
And at this time, except for
states.
a few mission schools, originally organized for Indians, the newer states
had a clean slate. Since there was
no private higher education, they
were forced to provide Universities,
Land-Grant Colleges, Normal Schools,
and later, State Teachers Colleges.
However, it must be urged that only
an increase in public higher education
enable the Commonwealth
of
Pennsylvania to realize its responsiwill
in providing opportunities of
higher education for all worthy youth.
Otherwise Pennsylvania will continue
bilities
to lag.
After Forty Years
Pew people remember that
der Dumas wrote a sequel
best-selling
novel,
MUSKATEERS.
entitled
The
THE
Alexanhis
to
THREE
second
book,
TWENTY YEARS AFTER,
continues the story of D’Artagnon and
his three companions. It suffered the
fate of most sequels in that it was
never as well known as the original.
Twenty years ago a doctoral
dis-
attempted to
sketch
the
“Development of Pennsylvania State
Teachers Colleges as Institutions of
Higher Education (1927-1948).”
sertation
The authoi
the dissertation is
the task of giving
his impressions of the last forty years
of the development of the institutions
now known as the Pennsylvania State
Colleges.
These comments are personal in nature, and limited in scope
by the observation, philosophy, and
memory of one man. Particular attention is given to the second score of
years (1948-1968), although the general framework is that of the original dissertation.
Certainly, the State Superintendent
of Public Instruction, as the Chief
School Officer of the Commonwealth
of
now undertaking
of Pennsylvania, has had a marked
from the
effect on the transition
State Normal School, to State Teachers Colleges, to State Colleges, and
now a period in which at least one
of the institutions has become a university.
Superintendents of Public Instruction
The State Normal Schools, according
law, were part of the public school
system of Pennsylvania. Their original purpose was the education and
These institutraining of teachers.
tions were the outgrowth of efforts of
the County Superintendents to increase
the period of training and the educateachers.
tional background of the
to
After 1920, the certincation of teachers came under state control. Therefore, the State Superintendent of Public Instruction was in a powerful position.
While
it is
very difficult to evaluate
the influences of the chief public school officer of Pennsylvania on
the institutions which were originally
Normal
Pennsylvania
the
State
Schools, a few impressions will serve
the
of
to indicate the importance
InState Superintendent of Public
struction.
all of
When these institutions became
State Teachers Colleges in 1927, the
Superintendent of Public Instruction
was Dr. John A. H. Keith, formerly
Principal of the Indiana State Normal
School. His experience, as a member
of the faculty of Columbia University,
as head of a campus training school
at DeKalb, Illinois, and as President
oi a college at Oshkosh, Wisconsin,
fitted him for the administration of
the Pennsylvania State Teachers Colleges.
The building oi several campus laboratory schools during his administration is a reflection of his interest in the student-teaching activity.
Many of the decisions made during
his administration regarding the organization of student government associations and the operation of college
bookstores are still in effect. Faculty
policies, such as salary
schedules,
leaves of absence every third summer with pay, and sick leave policies,
were originally developed during the
administration oi Dr. Keith.
Under the administration of Dr.
James N. Rule, the difficult problems of trying to adjust the institutions to decreased state appropriations were faced, and the first system of student fees for instruction
was inaugurated. Salary schedules
(Continued on page five)
Dr.
Andruss Announces Retirement
Dr. Harvey A. Andruss, President
Bloomsburg State College since
August 1939, announced his plans for
retirement dating from September of
1969, during the mid-year commencement exercises held at the College on
His
Wednesday. January 22. 19G9.
thirty years of service as President
has seldom been equalled in the col-
of
leges and universities of the nation,
and has only been approached at
Bloomsburg by that of Dr. David J.
Waller. Jr., who served as Principal
Normal
State
of the Bloomsburg
School for two periods totalling 27
years. Before coming to Bloomsburg
as head of the Business Department
in 1930, Dr. Andruss was for three
years in charge of the Accounting Department at Indiana State Teachers
College which is now Indiana University of Pennsylvania.
the
Commonwealth
He has served
of Pennsylvania a
total of 43 years.
A
native of Texas, Dr. Andruss was
raised and educated in the state of
Oklahoma. He earned the Bachelor
of Arts degree at the University of
Oklahoma, the Master of Business Administration degree at Northwestern
University, and the Doctor of Education degree at The Pennsylvania State
University. His service to education
spans a period of 46 years, including
four years as a teacher and administrator in the public schools of Oklahoma, as a special lecturer at some
of the nation’s leading
universities,
and as the author of a number of text-
books which have been widely used in
business education.
During his Presidency, a number of
significant changes took place in all
phases of the academic and physical
aspects at Bloomsburg State College.
Bloomsburg, as a teachers college,
granted only the Bachelor of Science
degree in education until 1960.
It
now grants the Bachelor of Arts
degree in Business
Administration,
the Master of Education degree, and
recently authorization has been received to grant the Master of Arts
degree in certain fields.
Dr. Andruss, in cooperation with the
college Board of Trustees, developed
the first approved campus plan for a
Pennsylvania State College. In the
past 10 years, a continuous building
program has been under way at
Bloomsburg. The present and proposed building program at the college will
cost more than $40,000,000.
During his administration, the enrollment at the college increased almost seven times. The total enrollin September 1969 will probably
exceed 4.500 students including 3,700
undergraduates.
Accomfull-time
panying the increases in student enrollments, there has been a corresponding increase in faculty and noninstructional personnel.
On his retirement. Dr. Andruss can
look back with pride to the facilities
and opportunities in higher education
that B.S.C. has made available to the
students of the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania.
157
COMMENCEMENT
forty-two seniors and
fifteen graduate students were awarded degrees at the mid year commenBloomsburg
cement exercises
of
o’clock
State College held at two
Wednesday afternoon. January 22, in
One hundred
Auditorium.
Dr. Harvey A.
Andruss, president of the College for
the past thirty years, delivered the
charge to the graduates.
The following seniors were graduated with academic honors: Summa
cum laude (3.75 to 4.0) Galen Quick,
3618 Old Berwick Road, Bloomsburg;
Bachelor of Arts degree in Arts and
Sciences with a major in English, 3.84;
Judith DeFant. Hazleton, Bachelor of
Science degree in Special Education
with a major in mental retardation,
3.79; magna cum ladue (3.60 to 3.75)
Betty
McCutcheon,
Conyngham,
Bachelor of Science degree in Business Education, 3.63; Linda L. Heckman, Boyertown, Bachelor of Science
degree in Elementary Education, 3.62;
Cum laude (3.50 to 3.60) Barbara A.
Masich, Sixth avenue, Berwick, Bachelor of Science degree in Business
Education, 3.56; C. Donnell Walther
Kelly, Sunbury, Bachelor of Science
degree in Elementary Education, 3.53: Charlotte Tourney, Newark, Del.,
Bachelor of Science degree in Business Education, 3.50.
Dr. John A. Hoch, dean of instruction. presented the candidates to Dr.
Andruss, who conferred the degrees.
The presentation of the diplomas was
made by the various divisional direc-
Haas
—
—
tors.
Presentation of the seniors to be
honored was made by Charles M.
Brennan, advisor to the senior class,
Presentation of awards was made by
Elton Hunsinger, dean of students.
James Creasy,
ter of
ed.
Education degrees were award-
WELCOME ALUMNI TO
SPRING ARTS FESTIVAL
GRADUATE AT
MID-YEAR
ness Education, thirty-eight in the
Division of Elementary Education,
fifty-one in the Division of Secondary
Education, thirteen in the Division
of Special Education, thirteen in the
Division of Arts and Sciences, and
one public school nurse. Fifteen Mas-
assistant to the presi-
commencement marand William Decker, chairman
Department of Music, was the organist.
Dr. Andruss also gave the
dent, served as
shall,
invocation.
Diplomas were presented to twenty-six seniors in the Division of Busi-
The Community Government Assoc
and the Spring Arts Festival
committee welcome the Alumni to the
ciation
events of the 1969 Festival. We regret
that The Quarterly will reach you
after some of the events have taken
The program includes;
March 10— Paul Engle, poet director of the Program for International
place.
—
Writing.
—
—
10 a.m. Projection Room Andruss
Library. Topic “Poetry and People.”
2:00 p.m. Projection Room Andruss Library. Informal meeting with
poetry and creative writing classes.
8; 15 p.m.
Haas Gallery. Topic
“The Writer in Today’s World.”
M^rch 13— Exhibition of paintings
—
—
—
—
•
by Simmie Knox.
—
March 13 Maroon and Gold Band,
Symphonic Band Concert. 8:15 p.m.
Haas Auditorium.
March
Company.
April
—
25 Pennsylvania
Ballet
8:15 p.m. Haas Auditorium.
18 Gallery talk by Simmie
—
Knox, artist from Wilmington. Delaware, whose painting will be on exduring the festival period.
April 24. 25, 26 Bloomsburg Players “My Sister Eileen.”
8:15 p.m.
hibit
—
Haas Auditorium.
May 1— Bloomsburg
State
College
Concert choir, Sacred Service
bv
Earnest Bloch. 8:15 p.m., Haas Auditorium.
COL.
EISENHOWER TELLS
OF WHITE HOUSE YEARS
“From
the hurly-burly of politics
I
have beer a part of for the past two
weeks to the relative calm of an academic institution and the orderly
manner of the students at Bloomsburg
State College
air.”
Col.
is like
John
S.
a breath of fresh
D. Eisenhower,
prefaced his talk at the twenty-second annual Conference for Teachers
and Administrators at BSC in Haas
Auditorium.
Dr. C. Stuart Edwards, conference
chairman, introduced Col. Eisenhower, who spoke to a packed auditorium
of teachers, adminisrators and students on “The White House Years.”
Published quarterly by the Alumni Association of the Bloomsburg State College, Bloomsburg, Penna.
17815.
Second-Class Postage Paid at Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania.
Send P.O.D. Form No. 3579 to the ALUMNI OFFICE, BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE,
—
BLOOMSBURG, PENNA.
MARCH,
1969
17815
Page one
A HUNDRED YEARS OF TEACHER
EDUCATION AT BLOOMSBURG - 1869-1969
The basis for teacher education at
Bloomsburg was laid by chance in
the autumn of 1867 when the then
Superintendent of Public Instruction,
T. P. Wickersham, passed through the
town by train and saw the newly
on the hill
erected Carver Hall
“ablaze with light.” The location of
a new Normal School in the Sixth
District was under consideration; so
Wickersham returned to Bloomsburg,
addressed a meeting of the citizens,
and said that the Literary Institute
location would be ideal for a State
Normal School. The Board of Trustees
concurred, and on March 9, 1868, the
following
resolution
was
adopted;
“Resolved that the Trustees of the
Bloomsburg Literary Institute agree to
establish in connection with the same
‘A State Normal School’ ...”
Establishment of the Normal School
necessitated the erection of a dormitory, and plans for the building were
submitted by Principal Carver on
April 15, 1868, which called for an estimated cost of $36,000. The laying of
the cornerstone on June 25, 1968, was
a memorable occasion. Prayer was
offered by D. J. Waller, Sr.; Governor Geary laid the cornerstone and
made an appropriate address. Other
participants
included
Superintendent
Wickersham, Principal Carver, and
the Honorable William Elwell, President Judge of the County Courts.
Early in February 1869, the trustees
requested that a committee be appointed under the Act of 1857 to consider chartering the Literary Institute
as a State Normal School. On February 18, the committee examined facilities and the proposed curriculum
and the next day submitted a favorable report
and
recommendation.
Thus February 19, 1896 can be considered the birthday of Teacher Education at
Bloomsburg, although the
proclamation of the State Superinten-
dent was signed and sealed three days
later, and the first prospective teachers were not enrolled until September.
At first the curriculum consisted of
the traditional high school subjects
supplemented by courses in the methods of teaching. Normal School students did not even have to be
high
school graduates. But, as time went
on, the required terms were increased
from 21 to 42 weeks, high school graduation was made an admission requirement, and “professionalized content” courses were introduced.
A
Model School was opened relatively
early in the program and existed in
various locations until the opening of
the
Benjamin
Franklin
Training
School in 1930.
The Literary Institute and State
Normal School continued to perform
its dual function of college preparation
Page two
and teacher training until after its
purchase by the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania in May 1916 after three
years of negotiation. From this time
on until 1960 its purpose was wholly
First,
ihe preparation of teachers.
for the elementary school only, and
later for teachers of junior and senior
high school. Since 1960, non-professional degrees in Arts and Sciences
have been authorized, but eighty-five
percent of the college’s enrollment is
the four teacher education curriculums.
still in
A
change
in
name, the privilege
to
grant degrees, and the mandate to
train high school teachers was dramatically announced by Principal Reimer at a faculty-student party in May,
From that date, the name of
1927.
the institution was to be Bloomsburg
State Teachers College.
In many ways the history of an institution and its functions reflect the
personalities and leadership of the
men at its head. With rare exception
Bloomsburg has enjoyed enlightened
and progressive leadership from the
indomitable Henry Carver, who starts
ed the Normal School movement, to
Harvey A.
the present President,
Andruss.
Carver was followed by
two short-term Principals, Charles G.
Barkley and John Hewett, each of
whom served a year. Hewett was
succeeded by T. L. Griswold, who
served four somewhat controversial
and stormy years.
In 1877, at a low point in the schools
morale and prestige, D. J. Waller,
Jr., assumed the Principalship and
lifted the facilities and the curriculum
to a new and more progressive plane.
Waller served until his appointment
in 1890 to the State Superintendency
and retur-ned in 1906 to serve through
the maturation of its teacher educathe
tion programs and its sale to
State, retiring in 1920. Judson Welsh,
a Bloomsburg graduate, succeeded
Waller in 1890 and served until Waller’s return in 1906, his tenure marked particularly by the addition of several buildings to the
campus.
most and major changes have taken
place.
Not only was the program for business teachers inaugurated and it and
all other areas consistently strengthened dux-ing these years, but the special challenge of World War II was
met and the survival of the college assured. With only a handful of women
as a nucleus in teacher education,
Andruss assured the use of facilities
and the maintenance of faculty by obinstructional
taining
assignments
from the Navy in its V-5 and V-12 programs. Thus, the plant and faculty
were intact to service not only the
post-war flood of ex-G.I.’s, but even
to instruct several sections of Penn
State freshmen. The years that followed have shown this same foresight
and dedication to the future of the
college.*
In the Centui-y
has progressed
past
Bloomsburg
the education of
teachers from high school level work
to the extension of the preparation
time to one to two to three to four
yeai's, and from the preparation of elemenary teachers only thi-ough the
training of special education teachers,
speech correctionists, teachers of business subjects, as well as those of
practically all the academic areas of
the junior and senior high school program of studies. In fact, the enroll-
ment
in
in
Masters
Degree piograms
alone in the various areas of teacher
education now
exceeds
the
total
student body of the institution in
some years past.
From meager
instruction in high
school subjects and a token exposure
to methods, the College’s curriculum
has evolved to the point where almost
half of its program is in general education of high qualilty liberal ai-ts
character, a little less than one-fourth
devoted to pi’ofessional education
carefully planned and culminated by
a semester of full-time student teaching in one of a hundred schools
and the rest, some 42 or more ci'edits,
devoted to a major in the students’
—
—
chosen field of specialization, whether
elementary education, Business education, secondary education, or spec-
Waller was succeeded in turn by
Charles H. Fisher (1920-1923), G. C.
L. Reimer (1923-1927), and Francis B.
in
Haas
of the past decade
can serve as indicators of things to
come, and if the ferment of change all
around us in the world have meaning
(1927-1939), the latter leaving
the Presidency to become Superintendent of Public Instruction.
Haas
holds the distinction of being the last
Principal of Bloomsburg and the first
President of the College.
During the Haas tenure, in 1930,
Harvey A. Andruss joined the administrative staff to organize the Division
of Business Education.
He succeeded from this to become Dean of Instruction, and later, in 1939, Px-esident of the College. Under this ad-
minisration, the longest presidential
tenure in the college’s history, the
ial education.
If the changes
for education, the outlook at the beginning of the second century of teacher education at Bloomsburg
looms
even more exciting, challenging, and
rewarding than the hundred years
which have passed.
GIVE TO THE LOYALTY
FUND
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Hit lUruuiriant
1900—Lena Kitchen Bateman, ElMichigan.
1902—Ruth Hall Harris. Lansford.
well,
Pa.
1902— Rev. P. P.
Fritz,
Nashville,
Tenn.
1906—
1904— Alvirda Davenport, Plymouth,
1907—
Pa.
Pastorious,
O’Hara
Ethel
Scranton, Pa.
Helen L. Roat (Mrs. Albert
Harrison) Titusville, Fla.
1909 Sue A. Bennett (Mrs. H. S.
Leathers), Knoxville, Pa.
Frances
1909—Joseph B. Gordon,
O’Neill
1925— Donavan, Samuel J. Steiner.
1913— Ruth Fox (Mrs. Eugene W.
Fegley*. Pittsburgh, Pa.
1916 Marjorie
RumKingsbury
mage, Nanticoke, Pa.
Abbye Roberts, Plymouth, Pa.
1926 Josephine
Gavey
Swithers,
Glen Lyon, Pa.
1928 Rachel Klapp Woody, Forty
Fort, Fa.
1931 Ruth Snyder Clifford, Lewistown, Pa.
1931 Mary Rosanski Draper, Plymouth, Pa.
1936 Joseph F. Visotski, Mt. Carmel, Pa.
1945— Sarah Hummel (Mrs. Charles
J. Shaffer), Bloomsburg, Pa.
1957— Kathryn Crew Woyniec, Williamsport, Pa.
1942 Jemima
Mt.
Eltringham,
Carmel, Pa.
1951—James L. Whitney, Mt. Carmel, Pa.
1957 Mrs. Helen Brown, Oley, Pa.
—
—
—
—
—
—
also pianist for years for the
Alex-
ander Orchestra.
She played the organ in many area
theatres, and last played at the Capitol, Bloomsburg, until the organ was
removed several years ago. She had
also played dinner music for diners
at Rock’s Steak House some years
ago.
J.
J. Atlee
5,
Atlee Cr.vder,
’09
Cryder, Bloomsburg R. D.
well known attorney, died Janu-
ary 15 in the Boone Nursing Home,
Eyersgrove, after an illness of more
than three years.
He was born in South Centre Town-
home.
He was born September 7, 1879 in
Mahoning township. He was graduated from Bloomsburg Normal Schooi
1900 and taught in
Keller
the
School, Mahoning township, and Mt.
Zion School. He retired a number of
in
years ago.
He was a member of St. Peter’s
Lutheran Church, Gro vania; Danville
Lodge IOOF and Montour township
fire
company.
He served several
terms as a Mahoning township area
school director.
Grace Housel Church ’03
Mrs. Grace G. Church, eighty-four,
Bloomsburg, one of the area’s most
widely known and talented musicians,
December
MARCH,
1969
21 at the
Bloomsburg
Company.
Anna Rusk Fitzpatrick,
Anna Rusk (Mi’s. Paul J.
’16
Fitzpat-
Avenue, Lancaster,
December 26,
suddenly
1968, at St. Joseph’s Hospital, LanShe held a Master’s degree
caster.
from Catholic University, Washington, D. C., and was formerly librarian at the Graduate School of Nursdied
Pa.,
ing, Catholic University.
is survived by her husband, who
a Professor Emeritus of Catholic
University, and is widely known as an
antiquarian and writes on historical
She
is
subjects.
ship and lived all his life in that area.
A member of the Mifflinville United
Methodist Church, he was a graduate
of Bloomsburg Normal School, Syracuse University and the University
of Pennsylvania Law School.
He was a member of Knapp Lodge
462 F. and A. M. for over 50 years;
—
2 at his
retired in 1956.
rick), 617 College
She was a member of the First
Church of Christ, and the widow of
Ned F. Church who died fifty-three
years ago.
Margaret Oliver Walton, ’10
Mrs. Margaret O. Walton, seventyeight, 335 East Second Street, Ber-
Guy A. Mowery,
Guy A. Mowery, eighty-nine, Danville R. D. 4, died Monday, December
died
years he also grew turkeys for the
local market.
His death severed a marital union
He was a memof fifty-three years.
ber of Lightstreet Methodist Church,
Oriental Lodge, F. and A. M., Caldwell Consistory and Lightstreet Fire
—
’00
For many
letics.
She was an accomplished musician
and was well known in the Bloomsburg area as a theatre organist and
Columbia County Bar Association,
Elks Club and Caldwell Consistory.
During his career he was solicitor for
several townships and served in legal
capacities for the county.
At one
time he taught for a three year period in the Berwick school system.
Carrie Flick Redline ’99
Mis. Carrie S.
eightyRedline,
died
seven, Bloomsburg R. D.
5,
Monday, December, 16 at the home of
her daughter, Mrs. H. C.
Shuman.
Mi's. Redline was born June 16, 1881,
in West Liberty Township, Montour
County. She resided at Bloomsburg
R. D. 5 for the past 40 years and was
a life member of the Order of Eastern Star, Chapter 228, Berwick.
He
Hospital.
wick, died December 13 in Berwick
Hospital.
She was born in Berwick
and lived in that community her entire life.
She formerly taught in the
West Berwick school system.
She was an active member of Bower Memorial United Methodist Church
and of the Chancel Choir of the
church for many years. She was also
a member of a circle of the church;
WSCS and the 20th Century Club;
Cup Chapter of Delphians
Daughters of the American Revolution; Berwick Garden Club; Eastern
Star, where she was a past matron,
and past high priestess of the Order
of White Shrine of Jerusalem.
Council
Active in community service,
was a
board
stine’s
’17
resident of 262 Madison Street, Wilkes-Barre, died Thursday, November
7.
Born in Wilkes-Barre, she was educated in the city schools and was a
graduate of Bloomsburg State College.
Miss Search received a master’s degree in education from the University
of Toledo.
Miss Search taught school in the
for
Toledo
elementary schools in
more than 40 years, retiring six years
ago and returning to Wilkes-Barre.
She was a member of the Memorial
Presbyterian Church, and its women’s
Association.
member
iliary,
tion
She also was an active
Army Aux-
of the Salvation
having participated in Salva-
Army community
projects.
Helen Knouse Long, ’18
Mrs. Helen K. Long, 350 Center
Street, Bloomsburg died November
Her hus3 at Bloomsburg Hospital.
band, Sheldon C. Long, died September 3, 1967.
She was born in Benton and was a
graduate of Benton High School and
Bloomsburg Normal School.
She was
teacher,
having
a retired school
taught for many years, some of whicli
were spent in New Jersey.
she
member and
chairman of the office of volunteers of the
Berwick Red Cross and won the award
as the Berwick Woman of the Year
foi 1963; Berwick Historical Society,
and secretary of the Meadowbrook
Sunday School Association of Fleckenlife
Margaret E. Search,
Miss Margaret E. Search, a retired
Toledo, Ohio, school teacher and a
Grove.
Falla Linville Shuman, ’19
Mrs. Falla L. Shuman, Catawissa,
died in Geisinger Medical Center on
December 29, of complications. She
had been in ill health for the past
five months and hospitalized on several occasions.
She
was born August
9,
1899
in
Philadelphia and had been tax collec-
Carl G. Wanich, ’12
G. Wanich, seventy-four, of
Lightstreet, retired teacher and widely known area resident, died in the
Bloomsburg Hospital October 27. He
began a successful teaching career
in New Jersey, then continued in the
Center Junior High School, where he
Carl
built
many programs,
including ath-
tor for Catawissa Borough for the
past seven years.
A charter member of the Catawissa
Chamber of Commerce, she was a
member of St.
John’s
Lutheran
Church; Lutheran Church Women;
Delta Society; Order of Eastern Star,
Catawese Chapter; Welfare Board;
Bloomsburg Hospital Auxiliary and
Page three
Quakertown.
Catawissa Hose Company Auxiliary.
Church
Deborah Williams Griffith, ’25
Mrs. Walter R. Griffith, sixty-two,
Crestwood R. D. 2, Bloomsburg, was
found dead November 25 at her residence when her husband returned
home from work. She had been in ill
health for the past year and one half.
A
She was born in Taylor, Pa.
State
graduate of the Bloomsburg
College, she received her Master’s
Degree at Columbia University. For
a number of years she taught at the
Ben Franklin Training School at the
Lois Laubach Webster, ’38
Mrs. Lois L. Webster, 54, a school
teacher at Lewisburg Area Junior
High School, died October 26. She
was born March 21, 1916 at Terre
She resided with her
Haute, Ind.
family for a time at Pittsburgh before
moving to Berwick as a young girl.
Mrs. Webster was graduated with
School.
honors from Berwick High
She received a Bachelor of Education
degree frfom Bloomsburg State Coldegree from
lege and a Master’s
Bucknell University.
College.
of Christ,
faculty consists of 144 w'ho have been
at the college for a period of one to
five years, sixty-five from six to ten
years, twenty-one from eleven to fifteen years, six from sixteen to twenty years, and eight who have been
at the college twenty-one years or
longer.
TWO
BUILDINGS TO
BE DEDICATED
An important feature of Alumi Day.
Saturday, April 26, will be the dedication of tw'o new buildings on the
well Hall,
Mrs. Maude F. Fahringer, ’26
Mrs. Maude Fenstermacher Fahringer, eighty, Pine Street, Catawis-
January 3 at the Bloomsburg
Hospital. She was born in Catawissa
and taught school three years in Montour County, five years in Rupert, one
year in Mifflinville and thirty-two
sa, died
years in Catawissa.
She was a devout member of St.
John’s Lutheran Church, Catawissa,
a member of the Lutheran Church
Women and had taught a Sunday
School Class. She was a member of
the Retired
Teacher’s Association,
Auxiliary of the fire company and
Auxiliary of the Bloomsburg Hospital.
Grace Neyhard Stranger,
’28
Mrs. Grace Neyhard Stranger, sixty-one, died December 10 at her home
in Clayton, N. J., after a long illness.
Seh was born September 16, 1907,
in Bloomsburg. She began her teaching in Rush Township. Two years later
she went to Clayton, N. J., and had
taught in the public schools of Clayton since that time.
She was a member of the Methodist
Church and active in the work of the
church.
Dorothy Colley Brewington, ’29
Mrs. Dorothy C. Brewington, sixty,
Third Street, Benton, died unexpectedly at her home Thursday, November 7. She had been in ill health since
sustaining a heart attack on July 29.
She was born in Sugarloaf Township and was the widow of Howard
S.
Brewington.
former
Columbia
County sheriff and Benton cafe owner.
She had spent most of her life in
She taught school for eigh-
Benton.
teen years, the last ten years in the
fifth
grade
in
Benton
elementary
school.
She was a member of Benton Christian Church,
the
Columbia-Montour
Teachers Association, the
Pennsylvania State Education Association and
the National Educational Association.
Howard O. Waite, ’36
Howard O. Waite, Quakertown, Pa.,
died Tuesday, May 7, 1968. He was
born
in Hazleton and had taught at
Quakertown High School for 11 years
before joining the Atlas
Overhead
Door Co., Quakertown. The deceased
was a member
Page four
of the
First United
INSTRUCTORS HAVE WIDE
RANGE IN PREPARATION
A substantial increase in the salary
scale of faculty members of Bloomsburg State College is revealed in a
report covering the 1963-64 and the
1968-69 college years.
During the five year period, the
low' salary was increased frfom $5,680 to $6,910, an increase of $1,230.
At the same time, the high salary
scale increased from $9,720 to $15,820 for an increase of $6,100.
In the same period it is also interesting to observe the high degrees of
faculty members earned in states and
In the 1963-64 college year,
nations.
with 128 faculty members, the degrees
were earned in a total of 17 states
During
and the country of Hungary.
the present college year, of the 244
faculty members the highest degrees
w’ere earned in thirty-four states and
the countries of England, Spain and
Cuba.
In both the college years of the
the
led
comparison, Pennsylvania
other states with 90 degrees earned
in that state in the 1963-64 period and
117 represented in the 1968-69 group.
placed
In both periods, New York
second, 14 in 1963-1964 and 24 in the
present period.
The average age of faculty members
in the comparison is very close. In
ranged
the 1963-64 period, the ages
from 23 to 66 years old with an average of 41.27 years, while the 1968-69
year has a range of ages from 24 to
65 years with an average age of 41.18
years.
During the earlier period the average mean salary for nine months, excluding the administrative field, was
and for the present period, excluding the administrative fees, the
average mean salary is $11,190. Including adminisrative fees, the comparison is $7,866 against $11,303.
$7,777
Today’s faculty at BSC is made
up of forty-tw'o full professors, 105
associate professors, seventy-three assistant professors, and twenty-three
instructors.
In an analysis of their
educational backgrounds, this group
is made up of seventy-one members
who have received their Doctor’s degree, 167 who have
earned
their
Master’s degree, and six who have
been awarded a Bachelor’s degree.
In an additional
breakdown of
years of service at BSC, the present
One building is Elnamed after a distinguish-
BSC campus.
ed Bloomsburg family, closely connected with the history of the College
This is
through three generations.
the
across
the men’s dormitory,
street from Long Porch.
The other is the Hartline Science
Hartline
the
Hartline was for
many years the head of the Science
Mrs. Hartline was a
Department.
member of the faculty, and their son,
Dr. H. Keffer Hartline, ’20. was a
recent recipient of the Nobel Prize
in Medicine.
The principal speaker at the dedication ceremonies will be Dr. Edward
Center,
family.
named
after
Mr. D.
S.
Ford MacNichol, Jr.
Dr. MacNichol was appointed Director of the National Institute of NeurBlindness
and
Diseases
olgical
(NINDB) and Acting Director of the
newly-formed National Eye Institute
A few weeks
in September, 1968.
later, Congress changed the Institute’s
name to the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Stroke.
He received the AB degree in physics ffrom Princeton University in
He was a graduate student at
1941.
the Eldredge Reeves Johnson Foundation of the University of Pennsylvania from 1947 to 1948; and he received the Ph.D. Degree in biophyin
sics from Princeton University
sity in 1952 under the supervision
of Dr. H. K. Hartline, who received
the Nobel prize in Physiology and
Medicine in
From
1967.
1941 through 1946, Dr.
Nichol was a staff
member
of
Macthe
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Radiation Laboratory. After receiving his Doctorate, Dr. Mac NichHopkins
ol remained at the Johns
University, where he became a professor of biophysics.
Known internationally for his research on the physiology of the eye,
Dr. MacNichol has published scientific papers on the electi-ophysiology of
eyes
invertebi-ate
Veitebrate and
and on the measurement of pigment
in single vertebrate photoreceptors.
Further details of the dedication
cex-emonies will be released later.
NEW MEMBERS OF FACULTY
Mrs. Jacqueline B. Rube, Assistant
Professor of French, B.A., M.A., University of Wisconsin.
Nancy E. Gill, Instructor in English,
B.A., M.A., Washington State
University.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
AFTER 40 YEARS IN
PENNSYLVANIA STATE
COLLEGES
(Continued from front cover)
were either frozen, or in some cases
discounted at the rate of 10'.( or more
from the adopted schedules, and
summer sessions were expected to be
self-supporting, insofar as the student
fees were to cover the faculty salarIn addition, numerous attempts
ies.
were made by the private colleges
to restrict the area of teacher training of the State Teachers Colleges.
For instance, one proposal was made
Colleges
Teachers
that the State
would train only elementary teachers and secondary teachers in such
special fields as Business, Music, and
Art, whereas the private universities
would train secondary teachers of
academic subjects, and the graduate
work would be allocated to three universities of Pennsylvania. This effort
was defeated by the astute administrative abililty of Dr. Rule, and should
not go unnoticed.
Dr. Lester K. Ade came upon the
scene from the Presidency of the New
Haven
State
Teachers College,
and
with his experience as Dean of West
Chester State Teachers College, and
his connection with the Muncy Normal School, a period of building expansion began.
The first General
State Authority Program resulted in
building and expansion in the State
Teachers Colleges which was unparalleled until that time. Attention was
given to removing of fire, safety, and
health hazards in the older buildings;
curriculums were revised; and a degree of uniformity
was developed
among the fourteen institutions. Numerous publications regarding public
schools, as well as the curriculums oi
were distributed, and
unusual pericd of growth was
State Colleges,
this
followed by the liquidation of the first
General State
Authority
Program
with the paying off of the outstanding
bonds during the administration of
Governor Edward Martin.
With the beginning of the adminis-
Governor Arthur H. Jamwho appointed Dr. Francis B.
Haas as State Superintendent, we had
tration of
es,
a four-term (more than sixteen years'
administration of one well versed in
state government.
Dr. Haas
had
been a member of the Department,
of Public Instruction in the Teacher
Bureau, had a first-hand knowledge
of teacher certification and finance,
and had served twelve years as President
of
Bloomsburg State College.
He brought
to the Office of the State
Superintendent a range of experience
and abililty which has not been paralleled
up
to this time.
While there was a very evident policy on the part of the governors of
Pennsylvania during this period to
limit the functions of State Teachers
Colleges to that of the education of
MARCH,
1969
teachers, there was also a seeming
reluctance to grant them the opportunity to offer the curriculums leading
to the Master’s degree. The influence
of the private colleges through representatives on the State Council of
Education was very evident during
But there was some inthis period.
crease in faculty salaries, and in an
effort to reduce the amount of political influence on appointments, a prooverlapping
for
vision was made
terms for members of the Board of
remembered
It must be
Trustees.
that World War II intervened during
this period, and it was proposed that
some of the colleges be closed, or
converted to other uses.
This was a period of consolidation
of the gains previously made, rather
than launching into new areas. During this period, the faculties of the
State Teachers Colleges were organized as an association which sponsored the first legislation governing salqualifications,
rank,
aries, faculty
promotions, and, in subsequent years,
leaves of absence and sick leave.
The period of greatest development
in recent years was launched during
the administration of Dr. Charles H.
Boehm, who came to the State Supof
erintendency from the position
County
Bucks
of
Superintendent
Schools. In the short period of less
than two terms, Dr. Boehm was responsible for the changes in the name
State
of State Teachers Colleges to
Colleges, the broadening of the curri-
culum
to
cover Bachelor degrees in
the fields of Arts
and Sciences, the
launching of graduate programs leading to the degree of Master of Education, and the present or second General State Authority Building Prog-
ram.
All of this indicated that the
of Pennsylvania was
interested in expanding the fourteen
state-owned institutions to serve 100,000 or more students.
With the appointment of Dr. David
Kurtzman as State Superintendent,
Commonwealth
greater emphasis is being given to
planning and budgeting. To some extent, this is made necessary by the
change of the fiscal year of the Commonwealth from a biennial to an annual basis. Faculty salaries have
been augmented on three occasions
by two increments by action of the
Executive Board of the Commonwealth.
Increases in student fees
along with increases in appropriations
are other evidences of the concern of
the present administration with fiscal
and budgetary affairs. An association of alumni has been set up on a
state- wide basis, and the overall organization of trustees, faculty, alumni,
presidents, and students is now known
as the Association of State College Organizations. Much is expected of this
group.
advanced degrees, can be viewed in
terms of seven-year cycles:
1913—This is the date when the
purchase of the several Normal
Schools began.
—
1920 Most of the present institutions
had become the property of the State
admissions
and, for the first time,
were uniform. Curriculums were required to be similar, if not uniform,
and for seven years this continued
until in
1927
—the
Schools
name
the
of
to State
was changed
Normal
Teach-
Four-year curriculums
ers Colleges.
leading to the degree of Bachelor of
Science in Education were inaugurated; however, the two-year and later
the three-year curriculums were continued until
1934 In this year the two-year and
three-year certificate holders walked
in the commencement procession for
the last time with the four-year gradThis
uates who received degrees.
pericd of transition from a State Teachers College (in name) to a State
Teachers College (in fact) continued
—
until
.
1941—when America went to war,
and many of the colleges were rapidly
denuded of their male population. Replacing students who were in the Armed Services were many men in uniform. At Bloomsburg, for example,
a thousand people learned to fly, and
deck officers and other personnel also
were trained. After World War H, a
new post-war period was in full swing
by
—
1948 the returning G. I.’s came to
the State Teachers Colleges in large
numbers since federal legislation provided educational advantages at low
At this time, freshmen
tuition rates.
admitted to Pennsylvania State College (now University) attended classes
for one year at a State Teachers College and then went on to the mother
This was a
institution.
pericd of experimentation
tion. Then
seven-year
and transi-
—
1955 marked a milestone in the attitude of the Commonwealth of Penn-
Teachers
sylvania toward its State
Colleges. Construction since 1925 had
old
consisted mainly of renovating
buildings and adding a few other neccampus
essary buildings, including
laboratory schools. In this year, the
State seemed to reach the' decision
that it must expand its own public
higher institutions, and the second
General State Authority program began. This period of expansion in plant
was followed
1962
in
—with the beginning of graduate
programs leading to the Master’s degree and the admission of students
who, at the end of four years, would
Every Seven Years
receive the Bachelor of Arts degree.
(The name of the schools had been
changed in 1960 from State Teachers
Colleges to State Colleges.)
This process of slow development
from
two-year
certificate-granting
schools to four-year degree-granting
colleges, and now the rapid development of graduate institutions granting
State
Certainly the alumni of any
College can, in the not too distant future, envision the change in name of
their Alma Mater to that of a State
1969— What can we expect
this
year?
Page
five
University.
We
in
Stages of Development
are able to make certain com-
ments and possibly hint at certain
seven-year
conclusions when these
stages of development are viewed in
relation to the following five educaand
tional factors: 1) Organization
Control, 2) Financial Support, 3) Students, 4) Faculty, and 5) Curricular
Offerings.
Organization and Control
The organization and control of the
Pennsylvania State Teachers Colleges,
for the first twenty-one years of thenexistence, changed only to the extent
that provision was made for overlapping terms for the members of the
Board of Trustees. Originally, the
Governor appointed the Trustees with
During
the approval of the Senate.
this period, in the counties in which
the colleges were located, chairmen of
the political party in power had great
influence in suggesting, urging, or, in
fact, nominating persons appointed to
Sometimes
the Boards of Trustees.
the senator of a local district also had,
and in fact still has, the veto power
in this area.
For these and other reasons, various proposals have been made to constitute
a new policy-making body for
fourteen institutions, known as the
State Board of Regents, Trustees, or
Directors, which would limit the fourteen local Boards of Trustees to a
consultative or advisory basis. At the
same time, it was recognized that
there was a need for greater autonomy at the local level. For too long
the State Colleges have been subject
to the same budgeting,
purchasing,
and other administrative procedures
developed over a period of time for
prisons, hospitals, or mental institutions. Since students provide the fees
in an increasing amount for instruction, housing, food, and medical services, the State Colleges cannot be
administered in the same way as institutions for inmates, patients, and
prisoners. Little or no progress has
been made in developing new organizational and control patterns for the
State Colleges in the last forty years.
This is a matter of prime concern, as
these fourteen institutions are serving
fifty or sixty thousand students, and
all
will
probably double in enrollment in
the next decade.
Financial Support
The increasing reliance on local fees
collected from students is the chief
characteristic of the financial basis
of operation.
Only recently has the
State appropriated more money than
the institutions have collected from
students under one guise or another.
A general guideline or polilcy needs
to be developed so as to determine the
portion of the total cost to be borne
by the students, with the remainder to
be appropriated by
the
Commonwealth. Probably, auxiliary
enterprises, including food service and resi-
dence
hall
maintenance,
should
be
self-supporting.
All future arrangements should keep
Page
six
mind the economic level of the famfrom which the students of State
ilies
Colleges come. Consideration should
also be given to the funds available
in the form of loans and scholarships
or grants-in-aid for all college studThe recent forty percent inents.
crease in student fees ($250 to $350)
at State Colleges, with a corresponding reduction in state appropriations
requested by the institutions, cannot
be continued as a device for balancing
the State’s General
Fund Budget.
Students
A
more or less uniform statement
for admission of students to the State
Normal Schools was formalized in
1920.
It was reviewed again in 1927,
and the admission policy continued to
attract greater attention; but numbers
had been limited by the capacities of
Rank in high school
the colleges.
graduating classes and college board
scores seem to indicate that the abilities and achievements of the students
admitted to the Colleges have been
slowly improving. Five or six times
as many applications are received as
the number of places available for the
entering freshman classes. Academic
and graduation requirements have
been gradually improved; and the student-teaching experience in the senior
year has moved from the campus to
cooperating public schools located, in
many cases, beyond the commuting
area of the college.
With the great pressure for admitting increasing numbers of students
to public institutions of higher education, the balance between the number
of students and the number of available faculty can only be maintained
on the basis of a reasonable studentfaculty ratio. This means restricting
the enrollment of students, or overloading the faculty either by increasing class sizes or by increasing the
number of classes. These choices must
be considered along with a program
for new buildings, which is usually
delayed beyond the planned completion dates.
Sometimes plans
for a building procoordinated with the
concurrent completion of classrooms,
dining halls, and dormitories. There
have been attempts to accomodate an
ever-increasing number of students in
or near the towns in which the colleges
are located, through the building of
private dormitories, and, in
a few
cases, private dining halls.
Faculty
With the growth in enrollment, the
number of faculty has increased more
rapidly than the number of students.
This increase has also been marked
by an improvement in the degree-holding status of the faculty. In other
words, there are more who hold the
doctor’s degree, and fewer holding just
bachelor’s degrees. The present law
provides standards for academic rank.
Accrediting agencies evaluate the institutions in terms of the degrees held
by faculty members and their graduate preparation along with teaching
and/or related experience, which is
required for employment and promo-
gram are
not
tion.
In the 1967-68 college year, there
were 659 Professors,
1,149 Associate
Professors, 995 Assistant Professors,
and 491 Instructors in the Pennsylvania State College system. The last
the
Faculty
basic amendment of
State College Salary Act was approved July 30, 1963, and since that time
there have been upward revisions of
the salary schedule by the Executive
Board of the Commonwealth. Although
in each session of the legislature the
Pennsylvania
State
Association of
College and University Faculties, has
caused a bill to be introduced to in-
crease salaries, Pennsylvania ranks
high only in salaries paid to Instructors. Needed improvements in salaries are overdue.
Another problem is that when
increases have been granted in the
past they have become effective so
late in the academic year that while
providing more compensation for faculty members employed the previous
year, they have not been available to
attract new faculty members at the
time when the employment process is
in full swing.
With budgets in the process of being
reviewed, and in many cases reduced
in amount, either in terms of dollars
available or number of new employees
allowed, adminisrators are left with a
great number of vacancies to fill even
after the college year is opened. This
means that there is a difficult choice
between filling positions with applicants who are available late in the
spring or summer for the academic
year beginning in September, or leaving the positions vacant until likely
This
candidates can be considered.
results not only in vacancies, but also
in the employment of many temporary
faculty members who are deficient in
the amount of teaching or related exSomeperience required by
law.
times the temporary appointments
amount to ten percent or more of the
Delay in making new apfaculty.
pointments means choosing between
or
reducing
expected
enrollment,
creating a faculty overload by accepting a pre-determined number of students, then not being able to employ
the authorized number of faculty.
Curricular Offerings
The transition from the two-year
enrollment curriculum to the four-year
baccalaureate degree program was
made by authorizing a new grade of
teaching certificates which permitted
the student to teach in the elementary
schools at the end of two years of preparation, but required the earning of
a certain number of semester hours
sessions,
of credit during summer
through extension courses, or in some
other part-time manner.
Later the
level of preparation for those beginning to teach in
the
elementary
schools was raised to three years. The
general effect was to expect a certificate holder eventually to
earn a
Bachelor’s degree and become eligible
for the issuance of a college provisional certificate.
The same procedure was followed
when the four-year level of prepara-
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
tion
leading
to
a Bachelor’s degree
and the college provisional certificate
were made the requirements for all
teachers on both the elementary and
Within a certain
scondary levels.
number
of years following his gradua-
tion, an alumnus of a State College,
in addition to his teaching, must earn
twenty-four semester hours of credit
to qualify for a permanent teaching
certificate.
Master of Education
Since the
degree began to be offered by the
State Colleges, a great preponderance
of public school teachers have chosen
to earn the additional semester hours
along with a thesis, or other requirements, to receive a Master’s degree.
The net result is that all the State
Colleges offer a Bachelor of Science in
Education degree in the elementary
and most of the secondary subject
matter fields; and almost all offer
the Master of Education degree in
certain specified areas. Some are now
offering the Master of Arts degree in
subject matter fields.
This is a far cry from the threeyear Normal School that would accept
students from eighth grade, and graduate them in three years with a normal school diploma, or high school
graduates who would complete the requirements in two years. All of the
colleges are now accredited by the
Middle States Association of Colleges
and Secondary Schools, the National
Council for Accreditation of Teacher
and the Pennsylvania
Education,
State Board of Education.
Summary
Broad generalizations are difficult
since there are many exceptions. However, one cannot avoid having impressions spanning four decades; the
State Normal School, the State Teachers College, the State Colleges, and
instituthe emerging multi-purpose
tions as universities.
While there has been a decided improvement among students, faculty,
and curricular offerings, there has
been a lag in the State’s financial support; although support has improved
in recent years, this area needs further attention. Unless larger amounts
of money are available in the form
of
increased State appropriations,
more students cannot be accomodated. If these increased appropriations
are to be made effective for educational purposes, the influence of the
governing bodies, be they known as
Trustees,
Regents, Visitors, Overseers, or Directors, must be limited to
the development of policy.
The organization and control of
Pennsylvania State Colleges has not
changed in any perceptible degree in
the last half-century; though the matter of organization and control has received some attention in the last decade, attempts at change have been
more or less unsuccessful.
Overlapping terms for members of the
local Board of Trustees are only partially successful, since the filling of
vacancies has sometimes been delayed to the point that the majority of
MARCH,
1969
the Trustees can be appointed by an
The continued
Incoming governor.
influence of the county chairman of
the party in power still causes the political affiliation of the Trustees to be
one of the determining factors in their
appointment.
Growth
in
in
numbers
presents
also
<
lltanJz tyau
The following are the names, not
previously reported, of those who have
contributed to the Loyalty Fund up to
preserving or improving
a qualilty of instruction in present and
proposed curricular offerings. Graduate programs leading to the Master
of Arts, Master of Education degrees,
along with transfers of two-year graduates from the Community Colleges
may result in greater enrollments in
the junior and senior years.
The Pennsylvania State Colleges
have made remarkable progress in
the last four decades, and they now
outstanding
the
represent one of
groups of institutions of higher educaUnited States.
tion in the eastei'n
December
They have better students, better facilities, and better offerings than ever
F.
problems
before.
Forty years ago even the most opprophet hardly would have
timistic
envisioned the threshold of the future
faced by Pennsylvania State Colleges
in the nineteen seventies.
The Commonwealth is fortunate in
having fourteen such institutions in
which its youth may be educated.
CROSS COUNTRY
BSC—30
BSC—40
BSC— 38
BSC—41
BSC—40
Kutztown
Lock Haven
Susquehanna
BSC—Cheyney
BSC— 15
BSC— 19
26
15
17
Millersville 18
Kutztown 15
(forfeited by Cheyney)
Kings 45
Luzerne Co. Community
College 40
FOOTBALL
BSC— 13
BSC— 24
BSC— 13
BSC—
BSC— 13
BSC— 34
BSC— 24
BSC— 14
Lock Haven
27
Mansfield 6
Susquehanna
West Chester
East
13
41
Millersville 21
Cheyney 12
Kutztown 12
Stroudsburg 70
GOLF
(Quadrangular Meet)
Mansfield 6
BSC 12
BSC—6 1-2 East Stroudsburg 11 1-2
Kings 4 1-2
BSC— 13 1-2
RECEIVE
WORD DEATH
DR., MRS.
RUSSELL
Dr. H. Harrison Russell, for many
years a valued member of the Bloomsburg State College faculty, died on
September 6 at the age of eighty-six
at a nursing home at Petone, HI, following a stroke. Mrs. Russell died
in her sleep at the nursing home in
the spring of 1967, about two months
after the esteemed
couple entered
the home.
Both Dr. and Mrs. Russell took an active role in community lilfe while residents of Bloomsburg.
31,
1968.
We want
to ex-
press the thanks of your Board of
Directors for your loyal cooperation.
Ex-Faculty Margaret E. Waldron.
Non-Grad
Francis X. Antonelli
1900—
—
—
1897
1898
Mrs. Thomas York.
Charles H. Weaver, Mrs.
S.
L. Richards.
Mrs. Anna S. Rubrecht, S.
B. Landes.
1901 Mrs. A. T. Lowry, William R.
Lams.
1903—H. Walter Riland, Howard K.
Houtz.
1905
Mrs. Sue T. Beaver, Rowland
Hemingway.
1906 Mrs. H. J. Schuchart, Mrs. J.
C. Shawfield, Mrs. John Lyons, Mrs.
1909—A. Frantz.
Harry
Mrs. Helen M. Hemingway,
Ralph Howell, Mrs. H. M. Chisholm, John Dano.
1908
1911— Mrs. C. Oliver Moore, Florence G. Beddall, William Ranch.
Mrs. P. W. Mann, Mrs. G. G.
Reichley, Walter C. Welliver.
1910 Mrs. Herbert
Edwards,
G.
Mrs. Thomas Otwell, Mrs. Lee A.
1907
Mi’s.
Perry.
Mrs. Earl H. Cortright, Mrs.
Ella Buffington, Donald
F.
Ikeler,
Mrs. E.
J.
Robinson, Mrs. Chase M.
Herrick.
1912 Mrs. E. B.
Landis,
Clinton
Fisk Brill, Mrs. Walter Elison, Harold
N. Cool, Clarence E. Barrow.
1913 Frank B. Cotner, Mrs. Mary
D. Comerford, Dr. Kimber C. Kuster,
Catharine P. Boyle, Kathryn Malloy,
Jacob F. Wetzel.
1914 Osborne C. Dodson.
1915 Dr. C. L. Hosier, Mrs. George
Moore.
1916 Mrs. John G. Hopkins,
Jr.,
Mrs. Laura Brundage, Mrs. Shirley
Robbins, William A. Thomas, Mrs.
Rachel Cappello, William D. Taylor.
1917 Mrs. W. C. Carter, Mrs. Alice
Tiffany Gardner, Mrs. Lena Fischer,
Nan R. Jenkins,
Dr. J.
Loomis
Christian, Ruth Smith.
1918 Mary M. Gillespie, Mrs. Ruth
Mason Ancker,
Griffith, Mrs. W.
1921—
Mame C. Richardson, Mrs. Clyde J.
Blecker.
1919
Mi’s. J. F.
Labach, Hurley O.
Alma R. Bachman, Mrs.
Margaret S. Brock, Edna F. Maurer,
Patterson,
Olive O. Robinson, Mrs. Helen W.
Mainwaring, Margaret T. Reynolds.
1920 Mi’s. Grayce
M. Newhart,
Mrs. Chester E. Vastine, Mrs. Ralph
W. Morgan, H. Keffer Hartline, Lawrence V. Keefer, Mrs. William R.
Turner, Mrs. Clarence E. Barrow,
Mrs. Myron F. Garney.
Anna L. Swanberry, Mrs.
Mary Sue Shaler, Mrs. Ralph Moser,
Mrs. A. C. Sutcliffe, Mrs. Mary D.
Strieker, Mrs. Raymond R.
Moyer,
Mrs. Lillian N. Yerkes, Grace Grif-
Page seven
Dr.
1928 Mrs. F. P.
Pretty leaf,
1929—
Margaretta
M. Bone, Mrs. Louise B.
Stevens, Mrs. Herbert Kneller, Mrs.
Gladys H. Lyon, Mrs. Thomas HanReilly,
Mary A.
lon, Mrs. Edna
Laird, in memory of Rachel Klapps
Woody, Mrs. Charles D. Blair.
1931—Mrs. John D. Taylor, Mrs. Anthony Walaitis, Mrs. Alfred E. Cox,
Mrs. Margaret E. Watkins.
1932—John D. Taylor, Mrs. Earle
1930
Charles, Mrs. Walter J. Gordon, Loretta
A. Fleming, Anne H. Morgis,
1933—
Karleen M. Hoffman, Mary Frances
Morton.
Mrs. Cyril P. Lewis,
Mrs.
1935—Y. Castor, Mrs. Robert Stover,
Esther
John J. Wilkes, Mrs. Frank Castor.
1936—Dr. Chester C. Hess, Dorothy
M. Gorrey, Mrs. John E. Wise, Ezra
Harris.
1937— Mrs. Benedict A. Stein.
1934 Mrs. Joseph C. Conner, Gene1938—
vieve G. Morges, Mrs.
Morris A.
Greene.
Mrs. Roderick Hines, Mrs.
Helen Markley, Mrs. Helen B. Cimbala.
Mrs. Kenneth
R.
Malick,
Mrs.
Harold Wertman, Mrs. Verna
1940—
E. Jones.
Mary E. Palsgrove, James
L.
Marks, Donald A. Watts.
Anne Curry, Robert H. Hill,
Willard S. Kriegh, Mrs. Nicholas M.
Cassano, Aerio M. Fetterman.
Willard
A.
Christian,
Jr.,
Frank Brink, Benjamin J. Stodt,
Minnie M. Hahn, Mrs. Ronald R.
J.
Guttendorf, Col. Victor
Ferrari,
J.
Margaret L. Deppen.
Mrs. Fay G. Clark.
1941
Howard
J. Williams,
Eshmont, Mrs. John H.
James H.
Peter J.
Uhl,
Jr.,
Deily, Jr.
Mrs. John W. Thomas, DomR. Pino, John W. Betz,
Mrs.
Willard B. Fritz, H. Burnis Fellman,
Howard W. Brochyus, Bertha A. Hindmarch, Mrs. M. Levitt.
1943 Mrs. Lee C. Brown, Philip R.
Yeany, Robert C. Zimmerman, Mrs.
H. Burnis Fellman, Bernard M. Pufnak.
1942
inic
Page eight
Wayne Von
Stetten,
Dr.
Emory
R.
Stanley.
1951—Leonard E. Grechoski, RobMrs. Wesley D. Castner,
1952—L. Hoar, Robert E. Montague,
Donald
Henry C. Talarsky, Mrs. Josephine
ert Balent,
Chevalier.
Mrs. Beverly C. German, Ed-
ward
Harry Dickstein.
1939
Mrs. Lois W. Farr, Mrs.
1947—
Jeryl
F. Moyer.
John W. Thomas, Joseph J.
Barchock, Vincent F. Washville, Mrs.
Joseph R. Kula.
1948 Paul N. Baker, Jr., Mr. and
Mrs. Frank W. Dudzinski, John F.
Magill, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Harry E.
Reitz, Jr., Mrs. John R.
Schieber,
1949—
Mrs. Vincent F. Washville, Mrs. Sol
Bones, Mrs. John S. Keenan.
Ruth I. Bath, Richard E.
Grimes, John M. Purcell, Mr. and
Mrs. Wilmer F. Nester, Dr. Eugene
Nuss, Mrs. Pauline L. Schueler,
M.1950—
John H. Reichard, Francis J. Radice,
1944
Mrs. Marie K. Harris, Mrs.
E. C. Giere, Edna S. Harter, Mrs.
Martha Y.
Sweppenheiser,
A. P.
Jones, M. Jane Fuller.
1924— Mrs. LaRue Drake, Ann J.
1923
Jarrett, Mrs. Lillian D. Kline.
Mrs. Leroy Bugbee, Mrs.
Herbert Laise, Mrs. Emily L. Roberts, Mrs. Ruth J. Kissinger, Mrs.
E.
Adelene
Ruth Jenkins Harris,
Swineford, Mrs. Laura H. Eberhard,
Max E. Long, Olga A. Nelson, Mrs.
Charles F. Johnson, Jr., Mrs. R. W.
McLaughliln, Mrs. George Reger,
Mrs. Mary L. O’Connell, Mrs. James
Mrs.
Poust,
P. Brussberg, Pearl
1927—H. Greenly.
Rhoda
1925 Mrs. Nelson Y. Lewis, Mrs.
Margaret Price Miller.
1926 Mrs. Robert Dwyer.
Mrs. Willard L. Bowman,
Mrs. Isadore Spitz, Catherine M.
Dean, Mrs. Cyril J. Sweeney, Mrs.
W.
1962—
—
1922—
fiths.
T. Wassel.
Viola
M. Blue,
C.
W. Trout-
Babcock, Andre
Vanyo, Mrs. Henry McLaughlin.
1953 Mrs. Alfred S. Massilio, Clyde
C. Adams, Dr. David N. Newberry,
Edwin L. Pauzer, Mrs. C. W. Trout1955—
Dr. William H. Stontenburgh,
man,
Richard
C.
Shirley M. Carmody,
Knause.
1954 Mrs. Nancy Phillips, William
E. Nunn, Jerome Kopec, Mrs. Ann
G. Anerweck, Feme Soberick Kro-
man,
James
R.
the.
Thomas E. Persing, Mrs.
John Shirey, Joseph J. Shemanski,
Mrs. Charles Brehm, Jr., Mrs. Joseph
H. Heard, Mrs. Johanna Roskoski.
1956 David M. Cole, Mrs. Thomas
1958—
E. Persing, Mr. and Mrs. John Churney, Eleanor Hess Austin, Mrs. Vincent Dalta, Lake L. Hartman, John
E. Shaffer, Jr.
1957 Donna R. Wilcox, Mrs. MariBoychuck,
Daniel
lyn J. Rozelle,
William E. Dupkanich, Mrs. William
P.
Mrs.
Theodore
D. McFeeley,
Smith, George J. Back, Jr.
Mrs. Margaret Ann Wightman,
Alfred F. Miller, Jr., C. J. Spentzas,
Rev. Donald S. Nice, George T. Herman, Albert L. Heller, Mrs. Joseph
N. Correo, Mrs. Helen Kerstetter.
1959—Kenneth A. Swatt, Ronald P.
Davis, John Fenner, Mrs. Rose Ann
Radzinski, Mrs. A. B. Fishel, Mrs.
Fred D. Delia, Mx's. Charles C. James,
Mrs. Margaret Price, David L. Barnhart, Joseph J. Kessler, Otto H. Donar, Ronald P. Davis,
Mrs. James
Gustave, Mrs. James C. McGlade, Jr.
1960— Fred Ballentine, Jr., Mrs. Eugene Hankee, Lt. Col. Paul H. Kellog,
Elizabeth B. Puckey, Lawrence M.
Troutman, Dale A. Krothe, James J.
Peck, Mrs. Ruth L. Kessler, John Dinich, Victor A. Miller, Gary F. Anderson, John E.
Benfer,
Mrs. John
Lindner, Jr., John R. McCarthy.
1961 Mrs. Richard W. Thomas,
Albert C. Cecco, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
D. Edwards, Albert W. Dazley, Ray
L. George, Mrs. Douglas Yohe, Sr.,
Mrs. Douglas B. Knorr, Mrs. Rudy
Harrer, Mrs. Martin R. Knorr.
—
Mrs. Bruce Kindt, Jr., Mrs.
Patrisian, Mrs. Jane Anne
Foltz, Glenn H. Gruber, Gary R.
Kahler, Mrs. Anthony Cicero, Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph A. Enney, Mrs. Paul
C. Boyer, John T. Kovich, Paul C.
Boyer, Thomas J. McHugh, Clyde
G. Baker, Thomas J. McHugh.
1963 Sterling R. Smith, Mrs. Marjorie B. Krapp, Mrs. Kenneth DeFancis, Mrs. Christine E. Haehnel,
Mrs. James L. Hart, Donald B. Hawthorne, Jr., Mrs. Richard C. Scarese,
Mrs. Donald A. Murray, Gerald E.
Malinowski.
1964 Mrs. Betsy R. Graybill, Mrs.
Dolores F. Mays, Mrs. Karen N.
Rosenberger, Edward A. Wallish, E.
Edward Sill, Karen L. Haywood, Mrs.
Robert J. Couture, John J. Rankin,
C.
Jr., John R. Schneider, Sandra
Thornton, George A. Weigand, Raymond G. Bradish, Mrs. Ronnee J.
Moyer, Joan M. Dahlhausan, Mrs.
John E. DeFinnis, Mrs. George F.
Miller, Ralph V. Carlone, Walter E.
Gatchell, Ann M. Hocker, Donald T.
Watkins, Richard C. Scorese, Kenneth
R. Miller, Helen M. Sobota, Robert
H. Hensley, Dorothy P. Eisenhart.
1965 James M. Sahaida, Robert M.
Farina, Randolph S. Kurzinsky, Mrs.
Dona E. Maier, Jerome J. Lanuiti,
John R. Klees, Jr., Glenn R. MorriReidinger, Joseph
son, Edward A.
Stevens, Allyn E. Hostetter, Mrs. Judith Borowski, Peggy J. Walter, Kathy
J. Woodring, Thomas J. Kaczmarek,
Robert E. Barfield, Mrs. Charles M.
Robert
Plummer, George F. Miller, Wayne
L. George, Mrs. Francis A. Pineino,
Betty J. Girven, Charles A. Moleski.
1966 Lola M. Hunsinger,
Audrey
M. McClure, John S. Mulka, Thomas
H. Diehl,
Rosemary A. Fogarty,
Darryl W. Lanning, John W. Kerlish,
Barbara L. Robison, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry L. Spering, Peggy J. Walter,
Kathy J. Woodring, Larry L. Edwards, George J. Machinchick, Mrs.
William H. Scheirer, Mrs. John F.
Makoravitz, David C. Beishline, Mrs.
Frank J. Mika, Barbara L. Robinson, Joseph P. Fizzari, Mary
E.
Croughn, Judith E. Mann, Susan C.
Hammerquist, Rita C. Bradish, Mrs.
Michael J. Farrell, William H. Hoffman, James H. Misirian, Jr.
1967 Ronald R. Jackson, Linda B.
Johns, Suzanne R. Reiff, Mrs. Mary
Gifford, Sharon A. Mac Quiston, LeRoy F. Ritmiller, Jr., Cheryl Berninger, Robert F. Hally, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank G. Kline, Philip D. Landei's,
Michael V. Mellinger, Mrs. Joyce A.
Mordan, Mr. and Mrs.
Mai'k
R.
Moyer, Jr., William L. Solava, Diane
M. Butera, John B. Caldwell III,
P'rank V. Gilotti, Sara Ruth Hoffecker,
Mi's. P. Frank Ricci, Mrs. Malina E.
Savage, Mrs. Richard Wilcox, Mrs.
Thomas J. Kaczmarek, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward B. Kern, Sylvia M. Plotts,
Mrs. Thomas Joxdan, Stephen
G.
Korol, Mrs. B. Edward
Marquardt,
Pati'icia
E.
Szymanck, Joan E.
Mitchell, Samuel J. Haixd, Judith A.
Heffelflnger, Charles E. Wagner, Mx s.
(Continued on page sixteen)
-
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR
F.
II.
Fenstemaker T2
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Grace Foote Conner,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Terms expire
PRESIDENT
Howard
F. Fenstemaker
242 Central Road
’12
18
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Term
expires 1970
J.
Furgele
Term
1971
Dr. William L. Bitner
33 Lincoln Avenue
Glen FaUs,
New York
Elizabeth H. Hubler
SECRETARY
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie
509 East Front Street
Berwick, Pennsylvania 18603
205
’35
III
37 N.
Kimber C. Kuster T3
West Eleventh Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Dr.
140
Deily, Jr. ’41
Bausman Drive
John Thomas ’47
68 Fourth Street
Hamburg, Pennsylvania 19526
Earl A. Gehrig ’37
Robin Lane, Sherwood Village
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Clayton H. Hinkel
Volume LXX, Number
Riland,
1891
A
recent letter from Mrs. Norwood
Fleck, R. D. 4, Danville, states that
while visiting the Johnstown Lutheran
Home she met Mrs. Frona Schrader
Bennett ’91, who is 98 years of age.
As far as we know, Mrs. Bennett is
Blooms-
burg.
1900
Minnie E. Ent (Mrs. Ross Marley)
lives at the Bond Hotel, 357 Second
Street, St. Petersburg, Fla.
33731
11
dale, N. Y.
1
March, 1969
Warwick Avenue, Scars10583
Etta Schatzel (Mrs.
lacher) lives at R. D. 2,
therly, Pa.
—
W. H. HorBox 13, Wea-
18255.
1905
Representative: Vera Hemingway Housenick, 503 Market Street,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Mrs. Blanche Miller Grimes is living at the U. S. Naval Home, 24th
and Grey’s Ferry Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. 19146
Class
1902
1906
Jenunie Rosenstock (Mrs. D. C.
Francisco) is living at A-7,
Belle
Grove Trailer
Park,
Brandenton,
D.
Champlin,
627
West
Fairmount Avenue, State College, Pa.,
16801, recently spent 33 days in Florida.
Dr. Champlin, former member
ol the faculty at
the Pennsylvania
State University, is busy with speak-
Florida. 33505
1903
Class
MARCH,
Representative:
1969
H.
’40
Leonard Street
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
224
expires 1970
the oldest living graduate of
’34
West Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
’29
110
Term
’48
102
Lancaster, Pennsylvania 17603
TREASURER
1969
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
12801
McKnight Street
James H.
Terms expire
Millard Ludwig
Center and Third Streets
Millville, Pennsylvania 17846
Gordon, Pennsylvania 17936
expires 1970
expires 1970
Glenn A. Oman ’32
1704 Clay Avenue
Scranton, Pennsylvania 18509
Mrs. Verna Jones '36
West Avenue, Apartment C-4
Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087
’52
Colonial Farm Box 88
R. D. 1, Glen Mills. Pa. 19342
Term expires 1970
Term
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Col. El wood M. Wagner ’43
643 Wiltshire Road
State College, Pa. 16801
VICE PRESIDENT
Dr. Frank
—
’34
Walter
Carroll
ing engagements, and also writes a
column for the Centre Daily Times.
The Hicksville High School Alumni
Association, Hicksville, N. Y., has established an annual scholarship for a
worthy Hicksville High School graduate.
This is to be known as the
Mabel R. Farley Scholarship. Miss
Farley was Principal of the Hicksville High School for a number
ol
years, and is held in high esteem by
the Alumni Association and by residents who knew her.
1907
Class Representative:
Edwin M.
Barton, 353 College Hill, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
Blanche Hoppe (Mrs. Herbert M.
Chisholm) lives at 44B Linden Avenue,
Page nine
She writes
Springfield, N. J. 07081.
that a group of members of the class
of 1907 started a round robin, which
has been maintained for sixty-one
years.
The original group included
sixteen members; the following are
still
living:
Mrs.
Edna
Chisholm,
Brundage Pentecost, Alma Noble
Hensler,
O’Brien
Leiby, Margaret
Ella A. Best, Bessie Taylor Cogswell,
Gertrude Vance Barber and Caroline
Muth Rose.
1908
Florence G. Beddall is living at
248 W. White Street, Summit Hall,
Pa.
1909
Representative:
Class
Bloom
Diehl, 627
17821
W.
Fred
Street, Danville, Pa.
1910
Class
Representative:
Robert
E.
Metz, 23 Manhattan .Street, .Ashley,
Pa. 18706
Patterson, 315 West Street,
burg, Pa. 17815
Pa. 17821
We are very sorry to learn that A.
K. Naugle, always an active member of the Alumni Association, has
recently suffered a stroke. Mr. and
Mrs. Naugle live at 119 Dalton Street,
Roselle Park, N. J. 07204
1912
Howard F.
Representative:
Central
Road,
Fenstemaker, 242
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Ruth Kendall (Mrs. Edgar B. Landis) lives at the Elm Tree Apartments, Garmington, Connecticut.
06032.
1914
Representative: J. Howard
Deily, 518 West Third Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Hazel Wayne (Mrs. Grover Shoemaker) lives at 150 Scott Avenue,
Bloomsburg, Pa.
is
No.
living at
3,
Class
Creasy,
Leroy W.
Berwick Road,
Representative:
3117
Old
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Harry
Bloomsburg,
Class Representative: Mrs.
Cole, 100 Leonard Street,
Pa. 17815
Mary (Dresse) Strieker, McClure,
Pa., is teaching in the Eastern York
ninth
This is her
School District.
year in this position. She has previously taught in Altoona, Dauphin,
Beaver Springs,
and
Harrisburg,
Beaver Township, McClure, Pa.
and Margaret Swartz
1923
mond
Mrs. RayFriar Road,
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Representative:
Class
P.
Sherwood
Kashner,
Village,
Street, Millville, Pa. 17846
is
now
San
living at 2404 Loring
Diego, Cal. 92109
1931
Representative:
1924
Class Representative: Edward F.
Ridge Avenue,
Schuyler, 236 West
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Earl J. Brotherston, former member of the Class of 1924, will be remembered as an outstanding athlete.
He later transferred to Western MichMich.,
igan University, Kalamazoo,
A
and received his degree in 1927.
Alumni Magrecent issue of the
azine has the following:
Earl J. Brotherston ’27 this spring
became the first individual person
ever to be honored by the Boyne
City, Mich. Rotary Club since the
organization began annual testimonBrotherston, a teacher
ial dinners.
at Boyne City for 41 years, served 25
football
and basketball
years as
athletic director.
Mary Eisenhower (Mrs. Leroy
Bugbee), 557 Charles Avenue, KingsPa., 18704, is Dean of Girls at
Wyoming Seminary, Kingston, Pa.
Bloomsburg
for
forty
moved to Milton in January.
Mr. Cromis was with the Metropolitan
Life Insurance Company for thirtyseven years. The Cromises marked
years,
fiftieth
wedding
anniversary
January 16. They have three children: Mrs. Bruce (Dortohy) Losch,
Washingtonville;
Mrs.
Robert W.
(Helen) Warrington, Harrisburg and
Mrs. James A. (Allene) Krum, State
College. There arc six grandchildren
and two great grandchildren.
their
1918
Representative:
J.
1925
1933
Representative:
Miss Lois
Lawson,
644
East Third
Street,
Bloomsburgfi Pa. 17815
Claire
Representative:
Esther
Evans McFadden (Mrs. Joseph), 154
East Fifth Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
Class
17815
1935
Representative:
Class
154
East 4th
William I.
Blooms-
Street,
burg, Pa. 17815
1936
Kathryn
Representatives:
Vanauker (Mrs. Nicholas Moreth) 34
Class
Linden Road, Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey 07432. Co-chairmen: Ruth Wagner (Mrs. Laurence Le Grande) 126
Oak Street, Hazleton, Pa. 18201 and
Mary Jane Fink (Mrs. Frederick McCutcheon) Maple Avenue, Conyngham,
Pa. 18219
1937
Class Representatives: Mr. and Mrs.
Earl A. Gehrig 110 Robin Lane, Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Earl T. Hunter has been appointed as General Manager of OperaCompany,
Reading
tions for the
Reading Terminal, Philadelphia. He
started with the Reading Co. as a
Brakeman and was employed
in various train service positions. In 1957
he joined the executive group of the
Company as assistant superintendent,
Philadelphia Division, and later became Superintendent of the Philadelof
superintendent
phia Division,
transportation and manager of operations.
17801
1938
1926
Marvin M.
Wapwallopen, Pa. 18660
Class Representative:
Bloss, R. D.
and
Street,
Class
Reed,
now
retired
J.,
Class Representative:
James B.
Davis, 333 East Marble Street, Mechanicsburg, Pa. 17055
125
17815
is
Luther W.
Bitler, 117 State
1934
Edna S.
Representative:
Class
Harter, R. D. 1, Nescopeck, Pa. 18623
Class Representative: Pearl Rader
Bickel, Masser Street, Sunbury, Pa.
Allan
L.
Cromis, Mahoning Manor, R. D. 1,
Milton, Po. 17847
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Cromis, who
Page ten
1930
Representatives:
Karleen M. Hoffman has
from teaching in Newark, N.
1921
Cleve-
1917
Class
Lebo) Nelson Stauffer, 88 John St.,
(Arline)
Kingston, Pa. 18704. Mrs.
Parish
Frantz) Walter Covert,
20
Street, Dallas, Pa. 18612
Class
ton,
1916
Laura Welch Brundage
in
Class Representatives: Mrs. (Elsie
1920
coach and
1915
Class Representative: John H. Shuman, 368 East Main Street, Bloomsburg. Pa. 17815
had lived
1929
Class Representative: Miss Catherine A. Reimard, 335 Jefferson St.,
WMU
1913
Class Representative: Dr. Kimber
Kuster, 140 West 11th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Sylvia Gross Freeman, 168 Centre
Street, New Rochelle, N. Y. 10708
Class
poems.
1922
Class Representative: Pearle Fitch
Danville,
Street,
Diehl, 627 Bloom
22431 Fairlawn Circle
land, Ohio 44126.
songs, and has published three books
of
1919
1911
Class
Blooms-
2,
Class Representative: Paul G. Martin,
710
1939
1928
Class Representative: Mrs. Ralph
Dcndler, 1132 Market Street, Berwick, Pa. 18603
Arthur
Callender
(Mrs.
Phyllis
R.
Michael), Oak Haven,
D.
3,
Shickshinny, Pa. 18655, has been honored by having her name included in
the fifth edition of the Dictionary of
She has
International Biography.
taught in Berwick and In the Northwest Area Schools, Luzerne County.
She is also a teacher of piano, organ,
theory, and voice. She Is the writer
of several hundred hymns and gospel
East Third Street, Blooms-
burg, Pa. 17815
Willard A.
Christian, Jr., 803 Logue Street, Williamsport, Pa. 17701
1940
Class
Representative:
Class Representative: Clayton II.
Hinkel, 224 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1941
Representative:
art Edwards, R. D. 4,
Pa. 17815
Class
Dr.
C.
Stu-
Bloomsburg,
Mr. and Mrs. William A. Konrad
(Irene Diehl) are now living in Caracas, Venezuela, where the former Is
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
employed by the Creole
Petroleum
Corporation. Their address is Creole
Petroleum Corporation, Apartado 889,
to
Previous
Caracas, Venezuena.
moving to Venezuela, Mrs. Konrad
was Dean of the Nancy Taylor Secretarial School.
James H. Deily, Jr., 37 North Bausman Drive, Lancaster, Pa., has
been elected senior vice president and
trust officer of the Lancaster County
Farmers National Bank, Lancaster.
Deily served as vice president and
trust officer of the Bloomsburg BankColumbia Trust Company from 1963
to 1965. He has been a banker since
1944, when he joined the staff of
Farmers Bank and Trust Company,
Lancaster, known as Lancaster County
Farmers Bank since its consolidation
with The Lancaster County National
Bank in 1963.
Deily is a former instructor in the
School of the American Institute of
Banking, a member of the Pennsylvania Bankers Association, trust division, and has lectured in the PBA
trust school at Bucknell University.
He holds pre-standard and standard
certificates in the School of the AmHe is
erican Institute of Banking.
Lancaster
the
also a member of
Chamber of Commerce, the Lancaster County Bankers Association, the
Hamilton Club and Conestoga Country Club in Lancaster.
1942
Class Representative: Mrs. Ralph
165
(Jean Noll),
H. Zimmerman
Pa.
Kready Avenue, Millersville,
17551
1943
Elwood M. Wagner, BSC graduate and holder of the local alumni
Award, has
Distinguished Service
been named professor of Air Force
aerospace studies at The Pennsylvania State University, and has come to
the University from Wiesbaden, Germany, where he was assigned to HeadCol.
quarters,
United States Air
Force,
Europe.
He entered
after
State
the Air Corps in 1943
graduating
from
Bloomsburg
College where he majored in
busmess education. He attended flying school and was then assigned to
the
China-Burma-India Theatre where
he flew 444 combat missions in the
Battle of Burma and the “Hump.”
Requesting release from active duty
Wagner attended grad-
where he worked
uate
the
University
of
in a private school in Philadelphia. In 1947,
he re-entered the Air Force as a regular officer and held various staff
school
at
positions until 1951 at which time he
was assigned to the University of
Pennsylvania to complete his work to-
ward a master’s degree.
His mas-
ter’s degree in education was awarded in 1951.
Colonel Wagner then was assigned
to Air Force ROTC at Ohio
State
University as an assistant professor
of air science. He was then assigned
to Japan and subsequently to Hawaii
MARCH,
1969
Ser-
Statistical
1949
Representative:
Richard E.
Grimes, 1723 Fulton Street, Harrisburg, Pa. 17102
The addresses of many members of
Your class
the class are unknown.
representative requests that, if you
have a new address, or know of one,
please send it to him or to the Alumni
Class
After attending the Air Force ComColonel
and Staff College,
Wagner was assigned to the Pentagon
as a Data Systems Analysis Staff
mand
In 1964, he was ordered to
Officer.
the Industrial College of the Armed
pursued
concurrently
Forces and
graduate studies at the George Washwhere he was
University
ington
awarded a master of science degree in
Office.
Dr.
Emory
Street,
New
Main
R. Stanley,
81
Milford, Pa., 18834, is
business administration.
After this schooling. Col. Wagner
was assigned to Wiesbaden where he
remained for three years prior to his
assignment to the University.
During this tour there he held a job
unique for a military man. He was
Education,
Dependents
director.
Headquarters United States Air Force
In this position he was
in Europe.
responsible for the operation of 100
schools located in eight countries, requiring 2,000 teachers and supporting
personnel to educate 45,000 pupils.
Col. Wagner’s decorations include
the
the Distinguished Flying Cross,
Air Medal and the Air Force Com-
Dunham. They have two
mendation Medal.
Originally from Hamburg, Pa., the
courses.
now
resides at 643 Wiltshire
in State College, with his wife.
Colonel
Road
Kay, and son.
1944
Representative: Mrs. (Poletime Comuntzis) Carl Demetrikopoulos. Friar and Robin Lanes, Sherwood
Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
No formal reunion plans are being
made for this year. We will probably join with 1945 next year.
Florence Faust Yeany, 1000 Butler
Avenue, Ambler, Pa., 19002, is teaching business subjects in the Upper
Moreland High School, Willow Grove,
Pa.
Class
1945
Mary Lou
Class Representative:
John, 257 West 11th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1946
Anastasia
Representative:
Pappas (Mrs. John Trowbridge), 102
VV. Mahoning Street, Danville, Pa.
Ethelda M. Klingaman (Mrs. Robert L. Smith) lives at 2707 Keswick
Court. Wilmington, Del. 19808
Class
.
Wanda Kehler
mann>
(Mrs.
Mark
J.
Edel-
lives at 719 Centre Street, Ash-
land. Pa. 17921
in 1946, Colonel
Pennsylvania while teaching
in
vices.
1947
Robert L.
Bunge, 12 West Park Street, Carroll
Park, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
Representative:
Dawn Eshelman
(Mrs. Eugene B.
North Palesades Drive, Signal Mountain, Tennessee 37377.
McCord)
is
living at 417
1948
Class
Representative:
Harry G.
John, Jr., 425 Iron Street, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
William M. Troutman, Pennfield
Manor, Apt. C-16, 2700 Elroy Road,
Hatfield, Pa. 19440, is Director of
Secondary Education for the North
Penn School District, Lansdale, Pa.
Assistant Superintendent and Adminthe
of Federal Funds
for
istrator
Ridge School District.
Dr.
Stanley received his Master’s and
Doctor’s degrees at the Pennsylvania
State University.
Dr. Stanley is
L.
married to the former
Sai’ah
Blue
sons.
Robert W. Pick, R. D. 5 Danville,
has been appointed cashier of the
First National Bank of Danville, Pa.
He has been associated with First
National since 1951.
He holds a standard certificate
from the American Institute of Banking, and has
graduate
completed
He
is
a
member
of the offi-
board and trustee of the United
Methodist Church of Rushtown and
treasurer of the Danville Chapter of
Red Cross. He served with the U.S.
Navy in the Pacific in the last World
cial
War.
Dr. Eugene M. Nuss, USAID, El
Salvador, care American Embassy,
San Salvador. El Salvador, C.A., is on
leave from the University of Bridgeport, and is helping to organize teacher-training programs for El Salvador.
1950
Class Representative: Jane Kenvin
(Mrs. George Widger), R. D. 2, Catawissa, Pa. 17820
James H. Boyle, 38 Ski Hill Drive,
Bedminster, New Jersey, has been
elected a member of the Board of
Directors of Ortho Pharmaceutical
Corporation,
Raritan.
Mr. Boyle
joined Ortho in 1951 as a Salesman
in the Harrisburg area and was later
transferred to Washington, D. C. In
1956 he was appointed Regional Diagnostic Representative. Mr. Boyle later became Eastern Divisional Manager of the newly formed Diagnostic
Division. Since 1963 he has held his
present position of National
Sales
Manager of Ortho Diagnostics.
While a Divisional Manager, Mr.
Mr. Boyle was a three-time winner of
the President’s Trophy and was Ortho
Diagnostics’ first recipient of the Ortho Distinguished Contribution Award.
Mr. Boyle was made a member of
Kappa Delta Pi, national honorary
educational fraternity. He is also a
member of Sales Marketing Executives International American Association
of Blood Banks, and the Elks.
He
and his wife the former Miss Susan
’50
Dreibelbis
have two children,
Mary Sue, 14 and Elizabeth Ann, 9.
1951
Class Representative: Dr. Russell
C. Davis, Jr., Sullivan County Com-
Page eleven
munity College, South Fallsburgh, N.
sities,
Y. 12779
lanova.
George D. Donachy, a native of
Northumberland, and former head
coach there, resigned his post as superintendent
of
schools
of
Stratford,
N. J., effective February 1. For the
past three years he has neen superintendent of the Stratford Schools, and
has been associated with schools in
New Jersey for the past twelve years.
Following graduation from Bloomsburg State College, Donachy became
the first elementary supervisor of the
former Northumberland Area Joint
Schools, now a part of the Shikellamy
district.
1952
Class Representative:
Francis B.
Galenski, 350 South York Road, Hatboro, Pa. 19040
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred S. Marsilio
(Mary Elizabeth Patton ’53) are living at 8415 Thornton Road, Lutherville, Maryland. 21083
Penn State and
including
Vil-
He was
the only teacher in
Pennsylvania in 1966 to be awarded a
three-year
graduate fellowship to
study at the university of his choice.
One of the grants he received was
from the Lehigh Valley Heart Association.
1956
Class Representative: Dr. William
Bitner, III, 33 Lincoln Avenue, Glen
FaUs, N. Y. 12801
Larry Fiber, an associate professor
of business education at Shippensburg
State College, has published an article
in the Spring, 1968, issue of The Observer, a publication of the New Jersey
Business
Education
Association.
Fiber’s article, “Effective Public Relations
for
Business
Education,”
stresses a triangular approach to business education public relations program involving educators, students
and business and professional organizations.
1953
Class Representative: John S. Scrimgeour, 411 East 3rd Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Donald Blyler lives at R. D. 2,
Bloomsburg, Pa. He is teaching at
the Shikelammy High School, Sun-
Rodney Kelchner has been appointed acting dean of men at Mansfield
State College during the absence of
Dean William Hurley, who was grants
ed a leave of absence in order to
study at Indiana University in Bloom-
bury.
ington, Indiana.
Class Representative:
William J.
Jacobs, Tremont Annex Apartments,
2 West Main Street,
Lansdale, Pa.
Class Representative:
William J.
Pohutski, 544 Oakridge Drive, North
Plainfield, N. J. 07606
Thomas L. Ohl, now a member of
the BSC faculty, lives at R. D. 2,
Bloomsburg, Pa. He had been teaching in the South Eastern School District, York, Pa.
He taught mathematics and science at
Kennard Dale
High School. He also coached J. V.
football and was head of the Department of Mathematics. His wife is the
former Cecile Yeakley, a graduate
of Susquehanna University.
Mr. and
Mrs. Ohl have three children.
1955
inger, 302
19312
Arnold Gar-
Greene Road, Berwyn, Pa.
Dr. Thomas
Persing,
associated
with Allentown School District for
about 15 years, has moved to Wyomissing Hills, Berks County.
Dr. Persing is assistant superintendent of schools in the Wyomissing
Area School District. Since beginning
his job there in September, he has
been awarded his doctorate in educational administration
from Lehigh
University.
While with Allentown School Disthe taught chemistry and biology
in the public schools.
He coached
rict,
football, wrestling, and track, and
also served as a defensive line coach
for Muhlenberg College. He was also
on the faculty of the Pennsylvania
University Center.
Before earning his doctorate, he received a master’s degree in arts at
Lehigh. He is a major in the U. S.
Marine Corps Reserve, with Headquarters and Supply Company,
4th
Service Battalion, Freemansburg.
He is a member of Phi Delta Kappa,
the National Education Association,
the Pennsylvania State Education Association, the National Biology Teachers Association, the American Association of School Administrators, the
Pennsylvania Association of School
Administrators, and national and state
supervision and curriculum organizations.
He has received a number of fellowships to study at various univerPage twelve
1958
..Class
Representative:
Danville, on September 20,
They are parents of another
son, Mark Stephen.
the former Sherry
of Danville.
Mrs. Barnhart is
Kostenbauder ’59,
Robert S. Asby, 21 Lehigh Street,
Shavertown, Pa., is associated with
P. John Hagan, M. D. in the combined practice of Otology (diseases and
surgery of the ear) and Audiology
(evaluation and rehabilitation of hearing loss.)
Mr. Asby was formerly Director of
Audiology and Speech Therapy ait the
Geisinger Medical Center where he
has been located for the past seven
years.
Mr. Asby holds Bachelor of Science
and Master of Science Degrees in Audiology and Speech Pathology and has
achieved Certification by the American Speech and Hearing Association.
He has attended Bloomsburg State
College, the University of Maryland
and West Virginia University and has
taken post graduate course work at
the Pennsylvania State University,
University of Denver, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, University
Miami, Walter Reed Army Hospital, the University of Maryland and
of
the
1957
Class Representative:
1968.
Veterans Administration,
Wash-
ington, D. C.
1954
19446
Center,
Raymond
Hargreaves, 37 Dell Road, Stanhope,
N. J. 07874
Carl E. Shively has recently completed requirements for the Ph.D.
degree in Bacteriology and Biochemistry at St. Bonaventure University. Dr.
Shively has taught in
public
the
schools of Pennsylvania and New
York., at Cortland
College,
State
Cortland, N. Y., and is now assistant
professor in the Biology Department
at Alfred University.
He, his wife
(the former Sylvia K. Brocious), of
Sunbury, Pa., and their three children, reside at 28 Chapel Street, Almond, N. Y. 14804.
1959
Class Representative: William F.
Swisher, Box 245, Cincinnatus, N. Y.
14340
Clarence B. Barnhart, R. D.3, Woodland Drive, Spring Grove, Pa., received his Master of Education in geography from BSC in August, 1968. He is
teaching 8th grade social studies (history and geography) in the Spring
Grove Jr. High School. Mr. and Mrs.
Barnhart are parents of a son, Todd
Kevin, born at the Geisinger Medical
Prior to holding a staff position at
Geisinger Medical Center, Mr.
Asby was employed as a County
Speech and Hearing Therapist and
served as Consultant to a Crippled
private
Children Clilnic, and to a
medical practice. He has served as
a college instructor and has been a
program participant at various state
and national meetings.
the
Dolores Wanat Palladino is living
at 10 Welsley Lane, Smithtown, N. Y.
11787
Mary Jane Whalen (Mrs. Frank
A. Rowland) lives at 1018 West 19th
Street, Hazleton, Pa. 18201
R. Francis Buck, R. D.l, Stevens,
is head teacher in the Denver Elementary School of the Cocalico School District, Denver, Pa. He
has the degree of Master of Science
Pa., 17578
from Syracuse University.
Mary A. Shuletsky (Mrs. Charles T.
Jenson), 1952 Crandall Circle, Salt
Lake City, Utah.
Filomena L. Crocomo (Mrs. James
McGlade, Jr.) is living at 1828
Highland Street, Allentown, Pa. 18104
C.
F. Swisher, Bloomsburg
and widely known in local
scholastic, collegiate and
amateur
sports in this area, has been awarded a Master of Arts in Education De-
William
native
gree by Colgate University, Hamilton,
N. Y. Swisher is presently principal
of the Cincinnatus, N. Y.,
Central
School, a position he has held for the
past two years.
Prior to that time the educator was
a sixth grade teacher and basketball
coach in Hamilton, N. Y., 1959-62 and
from then until 1956, when he ac-
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
cepted a post in Cincinatus, was elementary principal and guidance counselor in Mt. Upon Central School.
1960
James J.
Representative:
Class
Peck. 335 Red Coat Lane, Wayne, Pa.
19087
Thomas
Stover has been appointed
to the position of director of continu-
ing education at Rochester Business
Stover will have responsiInstitute.
bility for all facets of the continuing
education program; industrial relafaculty
registration,
tions, student
supervision and curriculum develop-
ment.
Following his graduation from BSC,
Stover took additional graduate study
In addition
at Syracuse University.
public school teaching experience
Bainbridge, Mr., New York and
Syracuse, N. Y., he has also held positions in the areas of inventory control,
and
adjustment,
insurance claims
personnel supervision.
Stover joined the Rochester Business Institute in September, 1967 as
an admissions counselor. He resides
at 11 Kathy Wrive, Pittsford, N. Y.,
with his wife and two children.
to
in
William J. Yurkiewicz of the biology
department at Millersville State College has an article in a recent Annals
of the Entomological Society of America: Glass Fiber-Silica Gel Sheets
for Inert Phospholipid Fractionation.
1961
Represetnative:
Edwin C.
Class
Ruser, R. D. 1, Box 145-C. Bechtelsville, Pa. 19505
Joan C. Bugel (Mrs. Edward T.
Sarisky) lives at 88 Ross Hall Boulevard, Piscataway, N. J. 08854
Rudy
Marion
Schaffroth
(Mrs.
Harrer) reports her address as Cedar
Hill Road. R. D. Ambler, Pa. 19002
Beatrice H. Fought (Mrs.
Roberts) lives in Benton. Pa.
E.
L.
in
served
He previously
Vietnam. He has an M. S. degree
from the Wright-Patterson Air Force
Base, Ohio, through the Air Force
Institute of Technology program. Captain O’Donnell’s wife is the former
Mary Downey, of Shenandoah, Pa.
mand.
Carimar Shultz To wanda, Pa. 18848
Joseph A. Enny, 320 Hazlett Road.
Castle, Delaware, 19720, is currently an agent with the State Farm
Insurance Company. Married to the
former Dorothy M. Anderson, also
from the class of ’62, they have a
Deborah
daughter,
old
four year
Lynne.
This past May,
earning the
Career Achievement and Convention
Awards, Joe and Dot were participants in State Farm’s National Convention in Montreal, Canada with expenses paid by the Company.
Dot does secretarial work in Joe’s
office,
and Communicative Disorders at The
University of Wisconsin,
has been
granted a tw o year leave of absence
from his position to pursue research
on the mechanics of respiration. Hixon
has assumed an appointment as Research Fellow in Physiology, Harvard
r
University School of Public Health,
Boston, Massachusetts, where the research is being conducted. Support
for his work is being provided through
a special research fellowship
from
the Department of Health, Education,
and Welfare.
Dr. Hixon, his wife
(the former Suellen Smith) and their
two children, are residing at 243 Daniels Street, Franklin, Mass.
after
and some substitute teaching.
Joe has been a teacher in the Mount
three
Pleasant School District for
years.
During that tenure he produced
three
state
championship
swimming teams plus one Blue Hen
Conference track championship team.
1963
MARCH,
1969
Spain.
Karen D. Supron (Mrs. Vincent
Serafino)
is
living
gard
Street, Apt.
Virginia. 22312
J.
BeaureAlexandria,
4939
at
201,
Margo Bolig Brabson lives at 324
Central Drive, Lansdale, Pa. 19446
at
Karen Homan Rosenberger lives
Buc-Le Farm. R. D. 2, Coopers-
burg, Pa. 18036
Walter E. Catchell. 2820 Chichester
Ave., Apt. D-5, Boothwyn, Pa. 19061,
was married June 30, 1968 to Miss
Marie Boulden.
sics
at
He
Chichester
is
teaching Phy-
High
School,
in
Boothwyn, and also coaches baseball.
He has been doing graduate work at
West Chester, U.C.L.A. and Temple
University.
Edward Azary
is
currently
com-
Philosophy
degree in bio-chemistry at the University of Western Ontario in Canada.
Since graduating from BSC where
he majored in physical sciences and
mathematics, he has studied under
Research and Teaching Fellowships
Alberta
at both the Universities of
pleting
his
Doctor
of
Class
Representative:
Pat Biehl
(Mrs. Ronald Cranford), 206 North
lltli Street, Sunbury, Pa. 17801
Claire (Dilley) Dale lives at 3618
East Altadena,
Phoenix,
Arizona.
and Western Ontario.
85028
Miss Charlene Rae Ammon, Baltimore, Md., became the bride of John
.
M. Brown (Mrs. Donald A.
Murray) lives at 158 North Ewing
Irene
Avenue,
Louisville,
Kentucky.
40206
Captain Richard K. Maurey has
been graduated from the Air University’s Squadron Officer School, at
Maxwell Air Base, Alabama. He has
been reassigned to Tinker Air Force
Base, Oklahoma.
1964
Representative:
Ernest R.
Holly
Glen Road,
52-B
Somerville, N. J. 08876
Janice Aemens DeFinnis and her
husband. Capt. John DeFinnis are
living in Columbia, South Carolina.
Capt. DeFinnis, a graduate of Temple University School of Dentistry, is
stationed at Fort Jackson.
Before
moving to South Carolina, Mrs. DeFinnis had been teaching in CheltenClass
Shuba,
ham
2
Township.
Patricia
Conn., and
M.
Lello,
Greenwich,
Robert J. Couture, of
were married Feb-
Springfield. Mass.,
They are now living
17, 1968.
1519 Hinman Avenue, Evanston,
111. 60201.
Mrs. Couture is teaching
fourth grade in Evanston, and her
ruary
at
husband
is
Midwest Sales Manager
and Engineers maga-
for Contractors
zine.
Captain William K. O’Donnell has
arrived for duty at Wiesbaden Air
Base, Germany. He is a ground electronics engineer, and is assigned to a
unit of the Air Force Logistics Com-
to
summer
New
1962
Richard
Representative:
Class
Lloyd, 6 Farragut Dr., Piscataway,
N. J. 08854
Associate
Dr. Thomas J. Hixon,
Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine
the
during
participate,
Univerof 1968, in Faireld
sity’s Institute for Advanced Study in
chosen
Mr. and Mrs. Frank D. Lapos (Mary
Lou Buck ’64) live ta 51 Jupiter Point
Road, Groton, Conn. 06340. Mr. Lapos,
teacher at Ledyard High School, was
1965
Class
Representative:
1156 County
N, Y. 14564
ler,
George Mil-
Road No.
8,
Victor,
Eugene McGovern, Jr., Baltimore,
Md. in a ceremony performed December 14, at St. Joseph’s Church,
Coraopolis.
The bride is a graduate of Indiana
University of Pennsylvania and is affiliated with
sorority, and
Delta Omricron, music
Alpha Sigma Alpha,
She is employed by
social sorority.
the Baltimore County Board of Education.
The bridegroom is a member of
Phi Sigma Pi, professional honorary
fraternity. He too is employed by the
Baltimore County Board of Education.
Lt. and Mrs. Francis A. Pineno announce the birth of a son, Christian
Francis.
Mrs. Pineno, the former
Joanne Nelson, taught second grade
in Kingston, Pa., and Virginia Beach.
Lt. Pineno, a 1965 graduate of Penn-
sylvania State University, is serving
with the U. S. Navy aboard the aircraft carrier U.S.S. Forrestal, currently on duty in the Mediterranean.
The address of Lt. and Mrs. Pineno
is 1872 First Colonial Road, B-4, Virginia Beach, Va. 23454
Miss Dawn Ensley, Bloomsburg,
and Wayne Paxton Michael, Berwick,
were married December 21 in the
First English Baptist Church, Bloomsburg, by the Rev. Vincent Siciliano.
The bride is an elementary teacher in
Berwick schools. Her husband graduated from Berwick High School and
Page
thirteen
He
State University.
quality control supervisor at Berwick Fabricating Plastics Division.
Pennsylvania
is
St. Paul’s Church, Scranton, was
the setting on Thanksgiving morning
for the wedding of Miss Mary Faith
Walsh, Scranton, to Robert Wayne
Snyder, Catawissa.
The bride graduated from St. Paul
High School and Marywood College
and is a teacher in Selinsgrove
schools. Her husband, a graduate of
Catawissa High School and BSC, did
graduate work at Towson State College, Towson, Md. He is a teacher in
South Williamsport High School. Mr.
and Mrs. Snyder are living at 234
Vine Street, Milton, Pa.
Dona Searfoss Meier
White Haven, Pa.
1,
lives at R. D.
18661.
George F. and Molly Clugston Mil’64.
are living at 1156 County
Road No. 8, Victor, N. Y. Mr. Miller
is head of the Mathematics Depart-
ler,
ment
in the
Victor Central
Mrs. Miller taught
tor for three years.
George
Jr.,
born November
Andrew Kacyon, Andover,
Putteney
Corning,
Street,
Schools.
grade in VicThey have a son,
first
13, 1968.
3-D,
West
N.
Y.,
chemist for Ann Page at
Horseheads, N. Y.
14830, is a
18643
Henry L. and Mary Sipe Spering
are living at R. D. 2, Little Elk Lake,
Springville. Pa. 18844. Mary is teaching in the Elk Lake Joint Schools and
Henry is a graduate student at BSC.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald DiPaolo
(Al-
berta Harabin) are living at
2131
South Fountain Street, Allentown, Pa.
18103
Mr. and Mrs. Roy C. Bowen
Miss
Jane
Louise Hartzel, Wapwallopen. to Robert LaPorte Garrison,
Nescopeck.
was solemnized August 24 in United
Church of Christ, Berwick. The bride
graduated from Newport Township
High School and was a laboratory
technician at Kirby Health
Center,
Wilkes-Barre.
Her husband is a
member of the science department at
Valley Forge Junior High School. He
is also assistant basketball and baseball coach.
Mr. and Mrs. Garrison
of
are living at Apt. N-301,
Courts, Audubon, Pa. 19407
Audubon
Larry E. Drum is currently enrolled at the Lutheran Theological Seminary at Gettysburg, Pa., pursuing a
course of studies that will lead to a
Bachelor of Divinity degree.
Charles
W.
Werner,
R.
D.
5,
Bloomsburg, has assumed his duties
Page fourteen
Greensburg, Spring Mills and ThomasHe graduated
ville, Pennsylvania.
from Spring Grove High School in
York County and attended York Junior College and received his Bachelor
of Science degree in speech correc-
Pa. 19401
tion from Bloomsburg State College
in May, 1966. During the 1966-67 college year, he had a year of graduate
study as a recipient of a U. S. Office
of Education Grant to graduate students in speech pathology. He contin-
ues graduate work during the current
college year.
Werner was a speech correctionist
in schools of Snyder County for two
years prior to coming to Columbia
County, and also worked as counselor
and assistant camp director for the
Pennsylvania Society
for
Crippled
Children and Adults in various sum-
mer programs.
Susan K. Louchs (Mrs. Michael
J.
Farrell), lives at 6 Vinsmith Avenue,
Aston Manor, Chester, Pa. 19014. She
and Mr. Farrell are teaching at the
DelaSchool,
Ridley Senior High
ware County.
Scheirer
were
married
August
19,
1967 at St. Luke’s Lutheran Church,
Scheirer,
a
Allentown, Pa.
Mr.
graduate of Millersville State College,
at
Tulpehocken High
is teaching
School, Bernville, Pa., and Mrs. Schgrade
in
eirer is teaching third
Reamstown, Pr. They are living at
214 Springside Drive, Shillington, Pa.
27, 1967.
Mark R. Moyer and Bonnie Brandon Moyer are living at the Audubon
Court Apartments, C-104, Audubon.
Upper Darbv,
Edward B. Kern
and Sandra K Burkhardt. Montgomery, were married June 15 at St.
John Evangelical Lutheran Church
has
Mrs. Kern
in Montgomery.
taught at the Williamsport School of
Commerce and is now secretary to
the Vice-President of Harleco Division, American Hospital Supply Corporation, Philadelphia. Mr. Kern has
been in the Coast Guard Reserve and
is now a field agent for the Internal
Revenue Service, Philadelphia. They
are living at 8125 West Chester Pike,
Aut. C-4, Upper Darby, Pa. 19082
The marriage of Miss Nickola J.
Hoosty, Arlington, Va., to Alan J.
Oram, Arlington, took place November
30 in St. Mary’s R. C. Church, Berwick.
The couple reside at Apt. 12, 500
S. Walter Reed Drive, Arlington, Va.
The bride is teaching seventh grade
life science classes in Fairfax CounThe bridegroom, a graduate
ty Va.
of Berwick High School and Mt. Saint
Mary’s College in Maryland, is a
third year medical student at George
Washington School of Medicine, Washington, D. C.
Thomas H. Diehl, 138 Bainbridge
Street, Sunbury, Pa., 17801, is coach-
Donald and Brenda Crebs Ulrich
are living at 100 Market Street, Lewisburg, Pa. 17837.
Don is teaching
fourth grade science at the Mifflinburg Elementary School. Mifflinburg,
Pa.
ing track and basketball in the Shikellamy School District, Sunbury.
West
Joseph A. Cortese
is living at 18
5th Street, Hazleton, Pa. 18201
1967
1968
Representative:
Robert T.
Lemon, Meadowvale Apt. No. 12, 903
Quarry Road, Harve de Grace, Md.
Class Representative: Thomas W.
Free, R. D. 1, Box 34, Kintnersville,
Pa. 18930
21078
Edward and Elizabeth Beck Marquardt are living at 420 East Philadelphia Avenue, Boyertown, Pa. Both
are teaching in that area.
(Sal-
Adams) are living at 3 Patrician
Lane, Orangewood Park Apts., Levittown, Pa. Roy is teaching at Del
Haas High School.
ly
The marriage
Northumberland, Pa. 17857. Mr. and
Mrs. Guthrie were married August
Anne M. Michelson and William H.
1966
Class Representative: Anthony
J.
Cerza, 180 Mason Street, Exeter. Pa.
Deborah L. Hile (Mrs. Russell W.
Guthrie), lives at 630 Prince Street,
as speech correctionist in the Benton
Orangeville
area,
area,
Millville
area, Orangeville, Centre and Lime
Ridge Schools.
Born in Pottstown, Werner attended elementary schools in Annville,
Class
Machel V. Mellinger and Karen J.
Salliday, ’68, were married August 10.
1968 at St. Peter’s Lutheran Church,
North Wales, Pa. Mrs. Mellinger is
teaching in the elementary grades at
the Allen Road School in North Syracuse, N. Y. Mr. Mellinger is a doctoral candidate at Syracuse, majoring
in Botany.
Their address is B-35,
Apt. 5, New Slocum
cuse, N. Y. 13210.
Heights,
Syra-
Judith Vineski (Mrs. Michael Brozowski( 230 Redington Avenue. Troy.
Pa.. 16947,
is
teaching
advanced
mathematics at the Troy Senior High
School. She had previously taught in
Wilkes-Barre City School District. Her
husband is serving in the U. S. Army.
Marilyn Ann Yeager (Mrs. David
L. Houck) lives at Apt. 12-J, Graduate Circle Apartments, University
Park, Pa. 16802
In a recent ceremony in Ss. Peter
and Paul Church, Plains, Miss E.
Kathleen Fedin was married to Stanley Thomas Pacewicz, Plymouth.
The bride was graduated from Berwick High School and BSC and is a
social studies teacher. Her husband,
a graduate of Plymouth High School,
attending
Electronic
Computer
Programming Institute.
He served
in Okinawa for two years with the
Army. He is employed at Gent-J
is
Manufacturing
Co.,
proprietor of Bull
Plymouth, and
is
Run Restaurant and
Tavern.
In a
ceremony performed November
First
Presbyterian
United
Church, Berwick, Miss Gail Patricia
Wagner became the bride of Terry
30
in
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
William Robinson, Danville R. D. 4.
The couple reside in Bethel, Conn.
The bride is a teacher in the Bethel
Her
Public Schools, Bethel, Conn.
husband is teaching in the schools
of New Milford, Conn. He is a member of the 399th Civil Affairs Group,
U. S. Army Reserves, Danbury, Conn.
Thomas Sipe is teaching at Del
Haas High School, Levittown, Pa.
His address is Kenwood Court Apartments, Apt. C-14, Haines Road, Levittown, Pa.
Thomas Taber,
751 Belvedere Ave-
nue, Plainsfield, N.
Bernardsville, N. J.
J., is
teaching in
M. Betsy Spering, Box 592, Richboro, Pa., is teaching fifth grade in
the North Penn School system in
Montgomery ville
Charles Mowery, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Doyle Mowery. Bloomsburg, enlisted in the U. S. Navy and is taking
his training at Great Lakes. His address is B44 54 18 Co. 741 USNTC.
Great Lakes, 111. 60088.
First United Methodist Church, Berwick, was the setting August 17 for
the marriage of Miss Jean Ann Dunn,
Berwick to Carl G. Sponenberg, Berwick.
The couple reside at 214 W.
Chapel Street, Canastota, New York.
Mrs. Sponenberg was graduated
from Berwick High School in 1964 and
Bloomsburg State College in 1968,
Her husband, also a graduate of Berwick High School in 1964, received his
B.S. Degree in music from Wilkes
College in 1968. Both have accepted
positions
New
as
teachers
at
Canastota,
Chillisquaque Presbyterian Church
the setting on August 3 for the
marriage of Miss Connie Joan Geiser,
Pottsgrove to James Edgar Clewell,
Danville R. D. 1. The bride formerly
taught in Milton schools. She is teaching this year in Danville. Her husband, a graduate of Milton
High
School, will graduate from Penn State
University in 1969. He was employed
at Milton Steel and Supply Co., before
entering college. He is now serving
in the National Guard Unit, Milton.
Mi-, and Mrs. Clewell are living at
was
584
West Third
Bloomsburg.
Street,
Donald E. Houck, R. D. 4, Bloomsburg, is working in the BSC Business
Office as Budget Analyst.
The Obiter would like to know the
addresses of Betsy Davis, Anne E.
Clemens, and Steven L. Zeigler. Their
yearbooks are being held for them,
but the books must be claimed by
May,
1969.
S.
Benyo has had an
arti-
cle published in the December issue
of Philadelphia Magazine
on
the
eighth annual Grand Prix of the United States for Formula One for the
World’s Championship of Drivers held
at Watkins Glen,
York, in early
New
October. Benyo is presently employed as Associate Editor of the Carbon
County Times-News
was formerly editor
and Gold.
&
of
Record,
the
and
Maroon
Paul M. Allen, presently employed
as sports editor of the Carbon County
Times-News & Record, is spending
much of his free time doing public
relations work for the Pocono International Raceways, Inc.
MARCH,
1969
riage of Miss Bonita Marie
Berwick Christian Church was the
marriage of
Miss Emily V. Cook, Berwick, to W.
John Strong, also of Berwick.
The
bride graduated from Berwick High
School and ICS and has been employed at Berwick Bank. Her husband
graduated from Berwick High School
and BSC. and will teach in Coates ville.
setting recently for the
Rev. and Mrs. Michael KlinofT, of
Nanticoke, announce the marriage of
their daughter Karla,
to
Charles
Howard Bowman, 3d, Williamsport.
The marriage was solemnized in the
Covenant-Central Presbyterian Church
of Williamsport on August 18.
The bride is a graduate of West
Pittston High School and Bloomsburg
State College.
Mr. Bowman is a
Bloomsburg State College,
a member of the Naval Reserve, and
senior at
will pursue
graduate
Princeton Seminary.
studies
at
Uram,
of
Gerald Thomas Anderson,
Mrs. Anderson teaches in
Hazleton. Her husband, a graduate
of Berwick High School and East
Berwick,
Berwick.
to
Carolina University, is employed as
teacher and head basketball coach
at St. Gabriel’s High School, Hazleton. He is a second lieutenant in the
Pennsylvania Army National Guard.
Rear
The couple reside at 722
North Church Street, Hazleton.
Barton
Miss Joan Muriel Thrasher became
the bride of Roger Howell Zeisloft
on October 5, at St. Paul’s Episcopal
Church, Montrose. The former Miss
Thrasher attended Bloomsburg State
College and Syracuse University. She
is a sister of Pi Beta Phi Sorority.
Mr.
Zeisloft
graduated
from
Bloomsburg State College and is a
member of Beta Sigma Delta Fraternity.
He is presently employed at
Gunning-Bedford High School in Newark, Delaware, as a business educa-
S.
Watts
is
living in Apart-
3306 Paxton Street, Harrisburg, Pa. 17111
ment
106
,
In a recent ceremony at First Lutheran Church, Watsontown, Miss Kay
was
Watsontown,
Elinor Bowman,
married to Gary Lloyd Laidacker,
The bride’s
Watsontown R. D. 1.
father, the Rev. Harry S. Bowman,
officiated.
The bride was graduated from
Warrior Run High School and attends
BSC. She will be employed by the
Sullivan Review, Dushore. Her husband, a gradutae of Warrior Run
High School and BSC, teaches in the
Sullivan County School District. Mr.
living in
and Mrs. Laidacker are
Eagles Mere.
Miss Linda Lou Wallace, Riverside,
and Joseph Martin Gerst, were married in a ceremony at Pine Street
Lutheran Church, Danville.
The bride graduated from Danville High Schol and Mansfield State
College where she was a member of
Alpha Sigma Tau. She teaches the
third grade at New Berlin schools.
Her husband, a graduate of Danville
High School and BSC where he was
a member of Sigma Iota Omega fraternity, is special education teacher at
Mifflinburg High School.
Miss Ruth Gordner, Orangeville
R. D.l, was married to Douglas F.
Kahler, Bloomsburg, recently.
The ceremony was performed
in
the chapel of the U. S. Naval Base,
Gulfport, Miss. The bride was grad-
All Saints’ Episcopal Church, Herwas the setting June 5 for the
marriage of Miss Elizabeth Heyward
uated from Millville High School and
BSC. She is teaching in the Loyalsock Township High School, Williams-
James Harold
Neiswender, Palmyra, R. D. 1. The
bride graduated from Hershey High
School and frfom Meredith College.
Her husband, a graduate of Palmyra
High School, Hershey Junior College
port.
and Bloomsburg State College,
employed as a graduate assistant
BSC. He is an Air Force veteran.
Miss.
shey,
Constable, Hershey, to
Richard
Joseph R. C. Church, Berwick,
the setting July 6 for the mar-
York.
tion teacher.
Geraldine R. Welker (Mrs. Ronald
L. Hubler) lives at 603 1-2
Dorey
Street. Clearfield, Pa. 16830
St.
was
is
district.
third class petty officer serving with
the U. S. Navy Seabees in Gulfport,
at
United Methodist Church, Orangewas the setting on August 10
for the marriage of Miss
Beverly
Jane Evans, Orangeville R. D. 2, to
Roddy Allen Fisher, R. D. 3.
The
bride graduated from Central High
School and is employed at the Ames
Snack Bar.
Her husband teaches
English in the Northern Tioga School
ville,
Her husband was graduated from
Bloomsburg High School and Stevens
Trade School, Lancaster.
He is a
NAMED TO FACULTY
The following BSC graduates have
of
been appointed to the
faculty
Kutztown State College:
Miss B. Renee Paul, ’47, Assistant
Professor of Special Education.
A.,
M.
Lehigh University.
Harry Humes,
64,
M.F.A.,
English.
North Carolina.
Samuel E. Keiser,
English.
Instructor
University
'63,
in
of
Instructor in
Page
fifteen
HAVE LONG BEEN
SERVING COLLEGE
35
bread
administrators each have
a total of ten years or more of service
at Bloomsburg State College and a
combined total of 155 years of service
Nine
BSC
at the college.
They are Boyd F. Buckingham,
director of Development and Public
Martin,
G.
Relations (1953); Paul
business manager (1950); Dr. John A.
Hoch, dean of instruction (1946): Dr.
Harvey A. Andruss, president of
Bloomsburg State College (1930); Dr.
Royce O. Johnson, director of elemenE.
Russell
tary education (1958);
Houk, director of athletics (1957);
Thomas A. Gorrey, superintendent of
buildings and grounds (1958); Dr. C.
Stuart Edwards, director of secondary
education (1958); and Dr. Donald D.
Rabb, chairman of biology depart-
ment
of the
ten years
college.
or more of service at the
They are: Dr. Bruce E. Adams (1956);
Mae
Beckley (1943); Mrs.
(1958); Miss Beatrice Engelhart (1956); Dr. Ralph S.
Herre (1947);
Clayton
H.
Hinkel
(1947); Warren I. Johnson (1955); Dr.
Harold H. Lanterman (1946); Miss
Mary E. Macdonald (1949); Mrs. Margaret McCern (1954); Miss M. Beatrice Mettler (1939); Nelson A. Miller
(1953); Dr. Francis J. Radice (1957);
Miss Gwendolyn Reams (1954); Kenneth A. Roberts (1958); Dr. Martin
A. Satz (1958); Tobias F. Scarpino
Mrs. Iva
Virginia A.
Duck
(1958); Dr. Gilbert W. Selders (1957);
Dr. John J. Serff (1955); Dr. Cecil C.
Seronsy (1953); Dr. William B. Sterling
George B. Stradtman
(1947);
(1955); Dr. E. Paul Wagner (1950);
Mrs. Elizabeth B. Williams (1952);
and Miss M. Eleanor Wray
(1957.)
ADDRESSES WANTED
Robert S. Probert ’68, Harry J.
Drennan, Jr., ’50, Carole L. Miles ’67,
Paul R. Styer ’63, Mary Bogenrief
Seely ’00, Edith O’Neill Killgore ’21,
Gloria J. Rogers ’62, Philip A. Denite
’67, Barbara A.
James ’62, Helen
Baldy Bachman ’02, Elizabeth Waring Colvin ’03, Muriel Jones Peffer
T8, Jennie Leone West ’41, Robert
Fisher ’62, Dale Bittenbender ’65.
Elaine Reifsnyder Bower ’61, Mary
Ann Alarcon (Mrs. Donald W. Donnelly) ’51, Dorothy Dildine ’62, Benjamin Wilson ’61, Edgar Berry ’54,
Judith G. Dampman ’64, Ruth Richards Hadyson ’26, Margaret Fitzsimmons Baltinghouse ’52, Mrs. John
Bower ’04, Margaret Mary Ward ’29,
Mrs. Edward Krajnik ’49, Joseph W.
Johnston ’59, John W. McCarkill ’64,
Keith L. Kramer ’64, Paul R. Brosious
’64.
Edward Brower
’59,
Mary W. Walsh
Griselda Davis Jacobus ’04, Sister M. Cletus Kriedler
’24,
Letha
’59,
Crispell
Schenck
Darrell Frey
Page sixteen
’34,
’64,
Edna Keim
Norma
R.
J.
Ethel
’64,
T5,
Reiss
’65. Daniel P. McGrew ’51, Irene W.
O’Donnell ’56, Herman H. Howard,
Jr., ’59, Nelson K. Turanica ’66, Donno K. Ritter, ’65, Mrs. Kay Reber
Kimmel ’68, Neil J. Mussolline ’66,
Larry H. Ruckle ’66, Ann G. Shep’62,
herd ’68, Gordon F. Williams
Roger G. Fitzsimmons ’61, Marjorie
Ann Genneck (Mrs. Thomas Stover)
’61, Joanne M. Kaczmarek
Masanotti Kallander ’42.
’63,
Adrian
THANK YOU
Members
members
who have had
faculty
Ruth C. Zeller
Helen Berry
Quinn ’22, Muriel E. Reese ’30, Nellie
Maslusky Gibbons ’31, Stanley C.
Krzywicki, ’48, Mary G. Aimers ’38,
Ruth Paul Jones ’55, Lorraine Riofski ’66, Mrs. Margaret J. May ’62.
Raymond E. Hendershot, Jr., ’61,
Grace T. McGeehan ’61, Joseph A.
Dellegrotto ’64, Henry E. Fetterman
(1957).
Other Veteran
There are 25 other
BSC
’64,
M. Henry ’06, Grace
Alice M. Sweet ’20,
’54,
White-
(Continued from page eight)
Barbara D. Lemon, Emerson J.
Schnable, Sharon A. McQuiston, ErnPoploskie,
C.
John
est A. Cole,
Leatrice Sunaska, William F. Skinner, Donald E. Ulrich, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert F. White.
L.
1968 Joyce E. Brobst, Roger
George, Catherine A. Kosloski, Rosemary B. Lubinski, Mrs. John Strong,
Mrs. John S. Mulka. Harold J. Albertson, Richard J. Keefe, James L.
Poechmann, Lisbeth D. Copes, Linda
K. Dietz, Louis J. Guarino, Palma A.
Katharina M. Amacher,
Terruso.
—
Z. Heupcke, Dawn S. SchulMrs. Theresa A. Fasnacht, Elaine
M. Strong, Richard Yost, Marguerite
Pinter,
A.
N. Bradwell, Elizabeth
Mary E. Phillips, Raymond B. Wolverton, B. Edward Marquardt, Marjorie Lynn Malick, Joseph D. Perilli, Mary L. Steffen, John J. Ondish,
Carol R. Gesalman, Mrs. Ronald L.
Hubler, Charles J. Miskar, Jr., Mrs.
Orwilda L. Shoemaker, Ronald E.
Hock, John S. Woytovich, Mrs. C.
Philip Moser, Lawrence F. Faran.
Renee
tin,
BSC OFFERS EUROPEAN
TOURS FOR CREDITS
The seventh annual European
Cul-
ture Tour sponsored by Bloomsburg
State College will be conducted this
summer from June
This
study
30, to
August
11.
be devoted
economics, sociology,
project
recorded history. The effort will be
to understand the great trends
that are shaping the world. All students, whatever their major fields of
interest, will benefit frcm personal
contacts with other civilizations and
made
The overall goal is ur.dei'standing ... a prime requisite for
the educated citizens of tomorrow’s
world.
A total of six credit hom-s (graduate
or undergraduate) may be earned by
participants who, in the judgment of
cutlnres.
the director and deans of the CoUege,
qualify on the basis of their academic
achievement and personal characteristics.
The countries in which the area of
study will be conducted include DenGermark, West Germany, East
many, Austria, Italy, San Marino,
England.
Switzerland. France, and
Students will see many points of interest in these countries and will have
observe
many
opportunities
to
Europe’s famous culture areas.
Attendance at plays and musical
performances will provide a cultural
view of the life of Europe on an informal level. The effort will be made
to provide opportunities for meeting
Europeans at student get-togethers,
swimming parties and folk-lore entertainment. Housing will be in Univertourist
sity residnces and standard
hotels.
STUDY IMPROVEMENT
BSC COMMUNICATIONS
IN
The Board
of Trustees and the adState
Bloomsburg
of
continuing their study
and efforts to improve lilnes of communication in order to keep abreast
of the rapid growth of the entire college community and to accomodate
ministration
College are
all
concerned.
ACTING DIRECTOR OF
PLACEMENT AT COLLEGE
Thomas
A. Davies has been appointdirector of placement at
Bloomsburg State College. Davis joined the BSC faculty in 1964 as an assistant professor of education with the
responsibilities of supervising student teaching. In August 1967, he was
appointed assistant director of admissions
ed
acting
.
will
Western
European countries, including two
weeks at Oxford University. The program director is Dr. Edson J. Drake,
Dr. Marguerite Kehr, former Dean
Women at BSC, is now located at
3824 Vanderbilt Drive, Lake Charles,
Louisiana 70601, where she is living
with her sister, Mrs. George W. Sev-
associate professor of history at the
ier.
to the poliltics,
history, and culture of nine
of
college.
This European study project has
been planned so that students can
review at first hand the remarkable
metamorphosis of post-war Europe.
In the political sphere they will study
governmental systems, shifts in the
world power structure and the Communist posture. Economic aspects
will stress the common market, coof
labor
operatives, and the role
against a background of 2,000 years of
Arthur Schlesinger,
Jr.,
noted his-
and adviser to assassinated
President John F. Kennedy, spoke to
a large audience Thursday evening
.January 9, in Haas Auditorium at
Bloomsburg State College.
His address entitled “Illusion and
torian
Realty in Foreign Policy” chronicled
emergence of the United States
and Soviet Russia as world powers in
the
the decade following
World War
II.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
ALUMNI WEEK-END
FRIDAY, APRIL
25
Dinner for the Class of 1919
Bloomsburg Players
— “MY SISTER EILEEN"
A
ALUMNI DAY
SATURDAY, APRIL
Dedication cf
Two New
26
Buildings
Class Reunions
Meeting of Board of Directors
ALUMNI LUNCHEON
Annual Meeting
Bloomsburg Players
If
ycu expect
to attend the
of
-
Alumni Association
MY
SISTER EILEEN”
Alumni Luncheon, please send reservations by
April 15.
More
ed
in the
detailed information regarding time
and place
cf events will
College Letters, to be mailed early in April.
DON’T FORGET THE LOYALTY FUND!
be includ-
12
Fensteuaker
242 Central Road
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania
Mr. Howard F.
Entered As Second Class Matter
August 8, 1941 at the Post
Office at Bloomsburg, Pa.
Under the Act of March 3, 1879
17815
LOYALTY FUND-THIRD YEAR
When
the final figures for the
paign were available, the grand
first
two years
total for the
of the Loyalty
period wos $20,608.82.
Fund Cam-
Up
to
Dec-
31, 1968, additional contributions had brought this total up to $25,641.27.
shall need a little less than $5,000 by October 1 to maintain an annual aver-
ember
We
With the continuing support
age of $10,000.
yand
of the Alumni,
we hope
to
go be-
that goal.
The money received during
the second year made possible the granting of
the broadcasting of athletic events, and lettering to be placed
Funds have also been set aside to provide for the
on the new buildings.
radio station on campus. Also, a tree-planting project is
installation of an
underway, to provide for the planting of trees and shrubbery where new buildings have been completed.
six scholarships,
FM
The
$2.00 contributed by a graduate in any one year will entitle the
membership privileges in the Alumni Association for one year;
any amount in excess of the $2.00 will be put into the Loyalty Fund for proYour Board of Directors will be glad
jects approved by the Board of Directors.
io consider any suggestions as to the manner in which the funds may be used.
first
graduate to
full
Active members of the Alumni Association will be admitted free to the
Alumni Luncheon on Alumni Day, on presentation of their paid-up membership
card.
Please make your checks payable to the B.S.C. Alumni Association and
return with the coupon below. Your contribution will be acknowledged.
Sincerely yours,
PRESIDENT
TO BE DETACHED, FILLED OUT, AND RETURNED
Signature
Name
while
.
in
college
Address
(street)
Zip Code
(town)
If
above address
'
<
;
1
o[
is
graduation
new check here
n
Amount
Mail checks to Alumni Office, Box 31, B.S.C.
To
insure tax deductions, make checks payable to
B. S. C. ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
n
William A. Lank. President of the Board of Trustees,
Volume
LXX
Number
2
and
retiring President
JUNE
Harvey A. Andruss
1969
THE PRESIDENT SPEAKS TO MEETING OF THE
GENERAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
COLLEGE COMMONS
APRIL
26,
1969
TO THE
3.
FACULTY DINNER
MAY
is a substantial span
time in anybody’s life, and after
more than forty years in Pennsyl-
Four decades
of
vania’s State Colleges, I am naturally
tempted to look backward. Though
it has been said that we talk about the
of time when we have nothing
else to talk about, there is value as
well as satisfaction in recalling the
past.
So let us only glance back at where
we have been to credit those to
passage
whom
credit
is
due, but let us look
forward in terms of where we are now
and where we want to go.
Someone has said that the Andrusses
are a State College family. The father
and mother of Mrs. Andruss were both
graduates of the old Indiana State
Teachers College; in fact, he was the
first trustee to be appointed from outside the town of Indiana. My brotherin-law, the husband of my wife’s twin
sister, was for twenty-five years Dean
of
at
to
Men
and, later. Dean of Instruction,
Shippensburg State College. I came
Pennsylvania from Illinois in 1926
and joined the faculty of the then InFour
diana State Normal School.
years later, I moved to Bloomsburg.
Since I have mentioned my wife, let
me say this before I turn to other
matters: No man can succeed without
a good wife. I have been particularly
fortunate. Since she grew up near a
college campus, my wife played college girl in the classrooms before she
went
to public schools. Over the decades, her kindness, sympathy, sense
of social values and unwavering loyalty to Bloomsburg State College, its
President, and its students has been
most noteworthy.
debt before
I
acknowledge
this
all.
There have been many changes
in
the State Colleges over the past fortythree years, and though almost all of
them can be pin-pointed as progressive, there are certain general attitudes on the part of the public (i. e.,
taxpayers, citizens, and
politicians)
that still prevail and color comments
that are made from time to time.
1. Since public education in Pennsylvania in the lower schools was meant
for “paupers,” or children of the poor
who were unable to attend private
schools, the general consensus is that
private education is better because it
costs more.
2. Since the normal schools were an
extension of the State public school
system, and were one-purpose
institutions originally for training only ele-
mentary school teachers, they became
known as
little
institutions
to
train
10,
1969
teachers of little children.
Since these colleges are all state
institutions, they are supposed to be
Even though all of them
educate teachers for elementary and
in
curriculums
secondary schools,
such areas as art, physical education,
and business were established in only
some of these colleges. While the fourteen institutions have uniform control
the same.
the form of state appropriations,
budgets, and salary schedules, each
is affected by the region within a fiftymile radius of the college. As these
regions differ, so do the colleges, particularly in the kind and type of day
and commuting students which they
in
background
general
With these
statements and the perspective of
more than forty years, we can look
forward with some hope that:
FIRST
—
All of these colleges will
in fact as
time become universities
well as in
name. To become universithey must have graduate
ties in fact,
schools, and offer curriculums leading
more professions than that of teaching.
This does not mean that all of
them will be renamed or reborn overnight. Up to the present time, the redesignation of a State College as a
University has been a result of a political, or more euphemistically, legislaThis process seems to
tive process.
grow out of getting a Senator, or a
powerful member of the House of Representatives, appointed to the College
to
Board
of Trustees,
sponsor
special
and then have him
legislation,
or
a
change of name, rather than relying
upon the State Board of Education for
developing a plan for what the college
has to do to become a university.
after the name “University” is
authorized, increased financial
support must be given for libraries, laboratories, and faculty salaries (this
last, so as to be competitive in the
educational market.) They will need
forward-looking
administration
a
which tries to offer Pennsylvania’s
youth an opportunity for an education
which will make them more useful
members of society, as leaders in the
community, and at the same time, increase their earning power so that
they will be able to pay taxes to the
state which made such growth and
as
development possible.
So far
Bloomsburg is concerned, the oft-quoted advice that one should “Be not the
first by whom the new is tried, nor the
last to lay the old aside” seems to be
sound and appropriate.
Even
The problems involved
development of a second, or
upper, campus at Bloomsburg, not the
least of which is the number of students enrolled, will be met and solved.
Access is important; Roads to and
from this campus must be of sufficient
width to accomodate traffic to a campus accomodating 6,000 or more students in a town where the present population, including resident and college
students, is only 10,000. The kind and
the
type of building to be constructed onl
the upper or new campus will require
consideration. Dividing physical and
recreational activities into intra-mural
and inter-collegiate programs
may
seem
attract.
in
—
SECOND
in
simple, but the overlapping of
classes in physical education, recreational facilities for all students, team
and practice areas, and competition
in inter-collegiate sports will need to
be given careful consideration. Shall
we have only living accomodations for
students on the upper campus, that is
to say, shall we build only dormitories
and dining halls in this area, or
shall classrooms and laboratories also
be provided? Access to Interstate 80
through Buckhorn, as well as LightFinally,
street, is most important.
will
some
facilities
need
to
be dupli-
cated?
THIRD
—
Overdue
administrative
at
take
place
Bloomsburg in terms of an undergradschool,
a
uate school, a graduate
school of education, and a school of
business, with a dean at the head of
each, along with a vice-president in
reorganization
will
charge of instruction.
FOURTH
— Earlier
faculty recruit-
ment, a necessity, will become easier.
At the present time, 161 of a Bloomsburg faculty of less than 250 have
served the college for less than five
years, and of this group, almost ten
percent are lacking in the amount of
teaching and/or related experience required by law for appointment. Since
the State Colleges have been growing
at a rapid rate in recent years, requiring greater numbers of faculty in
a competitive marketplace, we must
develop new procedures to meet today’s needs. State Colleges cannot be
operated on the same basis as hospitals, prisons, and mental institutions.
This is true of budgeting., purchasing,
and the appointment of non-instructional employees as well as
Finally, legislative
faculty.
ments are necessary
hiring
enact-
to provide facwith greater assurance of continuous employment (tenure) than now
(Continued on page twelve)
ulty
Alumni Day
Mrs. Vera Hemingway Housenick.
class of 1905. who has devoted a full
and active life to church and civic
activities and who has been a loyal
supporter of her alma mater and a
member of the board of directors for
over thirty years, most of it as secretary, was awarded the Distinguished
Service Award of Bloomsburg State
College Alumni at its annual dinner
who will
coming autumn, was com-
retire this
A.
Andruss,
the association for his two
score years of service— thirty as presiby
dent in a resolution presented
Clayton H. Hinkel, and was made a
life member of the association.
mended by
—
In an address “Looking Forward,”
he envisioned the progress, demands
and problems of the future in the life
of the institution and expressed gratitude to the founders and contemporaries at the college, the residents and
business of the community, churches,
regional school districts, trustees, faculty, college employes, state superin-
tendents and graduates.
Dr. Kimber C. Kuster is chairman
of the committee on alumni awards
and the presentation to Mrs. Housenick
was made by Edward F.
Schuyler.
A resident of Bloomsburg since 1897
when she came here with her family
from Carthage, Mr., Mrs. Housenick
graduated from Bloomsburg High
School in 1903 and the Bloomsburg
Normal School
in 1905. After teaching
a year in Mifflinville and three in Atlantic City, she became the bride of
the late Charles C. Housenick and has
since resided in this community.
A member of the Presbyterian
Church since 1897, she taught church
school for a number of years, was the
first women named to the board of
deacons and the second woman selected for the board of trustees. She has
held many offices in women’s associations and is a charter member of the
Study and Service Literary Club and
Delta Literary Club.
She is a member of the Bloomsburg
Hospital Auxiliary, on the board of
directors of the Public
Library,
a
founder and directors of the Bloomsburg Chapter of the American Red
Cross for over forty years, on the
committee that founded the Columbia
County Council of Girl Scouts and its
second commissioner and early in the
present centery worked for the suffrage for women.
Given an ovation by the graduates,
Outstanding
Mrs. Housenick in her response said
She
she was “proud and humble.”
recalled she started in War I days
and asserted that ‘‘It is a poor citizen who cannot be counted upon when
needed.” She served as alumni secretary under Bruce Albert, Dr. E.
Nelson, Fred
sent president,
II.
W. Diehl and the
Howard
F.
pre-
Fenste-
maker.
meeting
Dr. Harvey
Is
Reminiscing, she recalled there
less than 500 students when she
were
was enrolled
at
Bloomsburg Normal.
She spoke of the
fitting dedication
of the science center to the Hartline
family, recalling that
Prof. D. S.
Hartline was the instructor of
Dr.
Kuster and the later had been a teacher of the present head of the science
department, Dr. Donald D. Rabb.
‘‘Each has given inspiration to others.”
graduate school.
The year immediately ahead will
find 4,000 full and part time students
enrolled and this will require the adding of thirty-five to forty faculty members.
One of the great problems in
securing faculty is that in the past
and at the present time college head
has
to
search for
teachers
without
knowing how much money will be
available to pay them. “ You can’t
run a college this way,” he declared.
Many of the students today receive
aid through grants, employment and
scholarships. There are more sources of aid but, he pointed out, there are
also more students.
During the meeting the 762 graduates of the past year were voted into
association. The roll call of reunion
classes concluded the session.
Renamed
to the board of directors
three-year terms
were Millard
Ludwig, Mrs. Joseph C. Conner, Dr.
Kimber C. Kuster, John Thomas and
Clayton H. Hinkel.
Earl A. Gehrig reported that during
the year ending March 31 the receipts
from alumni dues and contributions to
the loyalty fund were $13,000, the best
since the program was initiated four
years ago. There is $43,000 in trust
for scholarships and $152,000
in the
McNinch fund for student loans. During the past year there were thirtytwo regular and eleven temporary
loans from the fund and there will be
$25,000 available in the coming year
tor
for
new
loans.
Dr. Andruss paid tribute to his
wife for her contributions through the
years.
He spoke of
more than two
the
changes
in
his
in state
score years
college education, said that all of the
state colleges will in time become universities in name and touched on the
rapid growth of the local college.
He said each institution is different
because of the region which is serves
and that “what Bloomsburg has achieved is the result of the region sending good people to the school who have
gone out to do good things.”
Dr. Andruss spoke of the fact that
bids are to be opened for the new field
and gymnasium, first major
development on the upper campus,
and of the utility lines that will have
house
be placed in that area.
The future will bring the need for
reorganization, with vice presidents
and deans of the colleges of arts and
science, business, education and the
to
CLASS REUNIONS
Reunions are the reason for alumni
day and there were some outstanding
get-togethers of BSC grads during
the spring festivities that was blessed
with exceptionally fine weather.
Among those on campus were Eva
Mrs. Nellie
Faust McKelvy, 1892;
Schweppenheiser Worman, Danville,
1903; Mrs. Lillian Buckalew Rider,
Mrs.
1904; Edwin M. Barton, 1907.
Clyde S. Shuman, whose husband was
a member of the class of 1906 was a
guest. These and others of the early
the
luncheon
classes who were at
were recognized by Howard F. Fenstemaker, president of the general
body.
1909
The oldest class in reunion was
1909. They joined the class of 1919 at
the dinner in the College Commons on
Friday night, and had a busy day on
Saturday. Ten persons were present.
1914
Three persons from the class of
1914 were present at the activities on
Alumni Day.
The honor
1919
class in
reunion,
1919,
had an outstanding weekend, opening
with a dinner at College Commons on
Friday evening, at which the general
BSC Alumni
Association was host, and
following with a breakfast
the
at
Hotel Magee and then activities on
campus as the “old grads” marked
the numerous changes of the past half
century.
Forty-eight were present.
Published quarterly by the Alumni Association of the Bloomsburg State College, Bloomsburg, Penna. 17815. Second-Class Postage Paid at Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania. - Send POD. Form No. 3579 to the ALUMNI OFFICE, BLOOMSBURG STATE COL-
LEGE, BLOOMSBURG, PENNA.
JUNE,
1969
17815
Page one
Class of 1924
of 1924 had one of the
largest turnouts and one of the most
weekend.
the
active programs of
There were eighty-five to dinner Friday night at the Hotel Magee, fiftythree at the breakfast and sixty-three
at the general alumni luncheon. The
class gave $152 to the BSC loyalty
fund.
In addition to the always interesting
roll call of Friday night, color slides
of the forty-year reunion were shown
by Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Laise, Little
Neck, N. Y. Also shown were films
of an African safari taken by Mr. and
Mrs. R. Wayne McLaughlin, Staun-
The class
Va.
Mrs. S. L. Wilson, whose husband
ton,
was
the class advisor,
was guest
of
honor on Friday evening.
Frank Buss, Wilkes-Barre, presided
at the breakfast. William Partridge,
Bethlehem, made the class report at
the general meeting.
Members came
from
California,
New York, New Jersey, Virginia,
Washington, D. C., and from all sections of Pennsylvania.
There were student guided campus
tours during Saturday morning.
Ninety-six participated in the reunion.
Class of 1929
The
of ’29 had a splendid
turnout
of
sixty-five.
When introduced at the general meeting they
waved paper flowers and reported
they were the “flower children” of
their generation.
Fifty-seven members were in attendance for the fortieth year reunion.
class
Class of 1934
The class
had forty back
year reunion and
topped
day with a dinner
on Saturday evening in the Keystone
room, Briar Heights Lodge.
for the
of
1934
thirty-fifth
off a busy
Class of 1939
The thirty-year
class,
1939,
had
twenty-eight participating in a memorable day climaxed with a get together late Saturday afternoon at the
home
of
Mrs.
and then dinner
Ruth
in the
Dugan Smeal,
Rainbow room
at the Elks.
Class of 1944
The class of 1944 was graduated during the World War II years and was
small.
Classes of that period were
reported planning a get together for
the spring graduate festivities next
year.
The class
Class of 1949
of 1949 had a fine repre-
sentation of some three score. In addition to participating in the general
festivities they had an enjoyed dinner
on Saturday evening at the Blooms*
burg American Legion.
Class of 1954
The class of 1954 marked its fifteenth year reunion with a delightful
get together, dinner and program at
the Bloomsburg Moose on Saturday
evening after participating in activities on the campus through the day.
Twenty-eight members were pres-
Page two
Three Buildings Dedicated
The new classroom building now
under construction on the BSC campus on a site between Haas Auditorium and Andruss Library will be named the Bakeless Center for Humanities, William A. Lank, president of the
board of trustees announced at the
dedication ceremonies, in the auditorium, for the Hartline Science Center and the El well Residence Hall.
The new building, scheduled for
completion in May of 1970 will be
named in honor of a family long identified with the institution of higher
learning. The late O. H. Bakeless was
one of the beloved “Old Guard” of
Two of his
Bloomsburg Normal.
children, John Bakelsss, author, journalist and historian and Mrs. Katherine Bakeless Nason, hold the Meritorious Service Award of the Alumni
Association.
“Unless a large portion of our ordinary citizens and our leaders in in-
who
families
contributed much to the school. ReinCollege
of
hold Schultz, president
Council, represented the Community
Government Association.
Then came the presentation of the
keys, the acceptance by Dr. Andruss
and then the acceptance of the buildings by Lank. Dr. Andruss, who has
announced his retirement in the coming fall, expressed thanks to the many
who have contributed to the advancement of the College. It was noted that
the lecture hall in the science center
has been named for Dr. Kimber C.
Kuster, former head of the science
been named for two
department.
Dr. MacNichol paid tribute to Dr.
Hartline who was his instructor while
pursuing graduate studies.
He commented that “one
marks of a great teacher is
of the
that he
honored famililes, Dr. and Mrs. H.
Keffer Hartline, New York City, the
former a Nobel prize winner in
science, and G. Edward Elwell Jr, of
able to inspire his students towards
careers in which they will use their
talents to the fullest. Keffer Hartline
has done this.”
Dr. MacNichol went on to state that
Dr. Hartline is a living example of the
effectiveness of inspiring our young
people with the curiosity about the
universe and everything in it.
“It is the citizen through his representatives in Congress who makes
It is the teacher
the final decision.
who inspires others to research and
teaching to push forward the frontiers
of knowledge or to have an interest in
and understanding of our complex
society, with its expanding population
diminishing natural resources, prob-
Bloomsburg.
lems
program the Maroon
and Gold Band entertained with a
concert. The Rev. Dr. Frank W. Ake,
wealth enough to have all our citizens
The imhealthy and well-satisfied.
portance of a well-educated citizenry
cannot be overestimated. Decisions
will be wise only if those who will
make them totally understand their
implications. We must have informed citiznes if we are to survive as a
dustry and Congress obtain a broad
scientific education which will enable
to understand the major issues
of our complex, technological society
and reach wise decisions, we are in
them
serious trouble,” Dr. Edward F. MacNichol, Jr., director, National Institute of
Neurological
Diseases
and
Stroke, asserted in his address at the
dedication convocation of the science
center and residence hall.
In attendance were members of the
Prior to the
pastor of the Wesley United MethoChurch, gave the invocation and
Dr. John A. Hoch, dean of instruction,
introduced guests.
Sen. Preston B. Davis predicated a
great future for Bloomsburg State
dist
College.
John Mowery, Burean of
State Colleges and Universities, said
tha there have been 500 projects of
the General State Authority in the
past twenty years totalling
a half
billion dollars.
George Hemingway, vice president
council, said
problems between
College and town have been satisfactorily resolved from time to time by
meeting and discussing the matters
and said this method can be employed with profit by other groups. Howard F. Fenstemaker, president of the
graduate body, said the buildings have
of
ent at the reunion.
Class of 19G4
The class of 1964 had a get-together
at 5:30 P. M. at the Elks Club. This
was followed by a dinner and dance.
A
large
number
activities.
participated in
the
is
of air
and water pollution and
nation.”
The benediction was by Rev. Joseph
T. Kofchok, pastor of St. Columba’s
Catholic Church.
HSC STUDENTS WIN
FORENSIC AWARDS
Tim Shannon, Bloomsburg State
College, won a gold medal with a ratextemperaneous
in
ing of superior
speaking in Pi Delta Kappa’s NationArizona
al Forensic Competition at
State in Tempe, Ariz. There were 220
competing in the division.
Another BSC student, Karl Kramer,
was awarded a certificate in excellance in discussion with over 166 participants. BSC was one of 186 colleges
and universities competing in the national event.
ADDRESSES WANTED
Edward
L. Yost 1922
John J Ilonelnicky 1929
Evelyn M. Keefe 1969
T1IE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
/
lj(U4-
*lltanJz
Contributions to April
1.
1969
opchak,
1903— $100.00 Westinghouse)
1904—
1890 Myrtle Swartz Van Wie.
1905—
1901— Gertrude Follmer Lowry.
<
1906— L. Ray Hawk.
1907—
Mrs. Harry E. Rider.
Jesse Y. Shambach.
1909— Dr. Carroll D. Champlin.
Mrs. Ada M. Bittenbender,
Mrs. Helen M. Hemingway, Mrs. Albert Henseler.
1911—Mrs. G. G. Reichley, Fred W.
W. Milton Brown. Edward
Eisenhauer, Mrs. H. N. Lake.
R.1913—
B.
1910 Sara F. Lewis, Mrs. F.
Stieg,
1914—I. Burton Shuman.
Mrs.
Diehl,
Mrs. Fred W.
1916—
Glenn
W. Hasbrauke.
Mrs. E. F. Sorber, Mrs. Clar1917—
Harry
Mrs.
J.
ence J. Tallman,
Diehl, Mrs.
Wright, Elizabeth Sturges.
Mrs. J. A. Gossman, Mrs. Alfred W. Sturman.
1919— Mrs. William
S. Prizer,
Mrs.
H. L. Mensinger.
Edwin
—James
S. Heller.
Mrs. George M. Griffith, Mrs.
J. S. Wiant, Harold J. Pegg, Helen
Miles
P. Ruddy, Vida E. Edwards,
1918
Walter
S.
Bruno
A.
1943
1948
1944
JUNE,
1969
Assistant
Jr.,
Clarence Gourley,
Director of Admissions. B. SC., Slippery Rock State College; M. Sc., Indiana University of Pennsylvania.
Robert L. Rosholt, Professor and
Chairman,
Department
of
Political
Science. B.A., Luther College, Decof
University
orah, Iowa; M.A.,
of
Minnesota;
Ph.D.,
University
Dominic W. Flamini,
Associate
Professor of Psychology. B.A., Juniata College; M.Ad., Temple University; Ph.D., University of Oklahoma.
Joseph T. Skenan, Associate Professor of Economics. B.A., Syracuse
University; Fulbright Scholar, Louvain University; Diploma in German,
Heidelberg University; Ph.D., Georgetown University.
J. Weston Baker, Assistant Professor of Business Education.
B.Sc.,
University of California at Berkeley;
M.Sc., Washington State University.
Mary A. Tolan, Acting Dean of
Women. B.Sc. State University College at Geneseo, N. Y.; M. Sc., State
University of New York at Albany.
Burton Reese, Assistant Professor
of Physical Education. B.Sc., M.Ed.,
Stroudsburg State College.
Russell C.
Brachman.
Charles Brennan.
1956—
1954 Mrs.
Lawrence
Anenveck,
Mrs. Michael Homiak. Sheldon N. Erwine, Mrs. R. B. Hollingsworth, Mrs.
Charles Brennan.
1958—
1955 Jacob E. Slembarski,
June
C. Lukac.
Charles V. Kiviatkowski, Mrs.
Peter S. Pennington, Curtis R. Eng-
F. Long.
Mrs. F. S. Reese, Mrs. Bernard Burnat, Mrs. J. L. Cohen, Mrs.
Alberta Green, Marian E.
Young,
Mrs. Andrew J. Brennan, Mrs. Alfred
E. Cox, Caroline E. Petrullo, Mrs.
Eugene Hayes, Mrs. William Hester,
Mrs. Foster L. Carter, Mrs. Fanny
E. DeMott, Lottie Miller, Mrs. Ernest
Stackhouse, Mrs. Raymond Swallow.
1930 Mrs. W. C. Symons.
1931 Elizabeth Hubler.
versity.
Minnesota.
Mrs. Eloise N. Fasshauer.
Frederick D. Young, Jr., (In
memory of Katherine
McDonald
1953— Edward F. Messa.
Young),
1951 Mrs. Edwin J. Hulzter, Parents of Mrs. Jack Harner (in memoriam), C. J. Persing.
U. Grant Ewell, Mrs.
1957
Nancy E. Gill, Instructor in English.
B.A. and M.A. Washington State Uni-
Mrs. Clyde C. Deels..
1950
1952
NEW MEMBERS OF
THE FACULTY
James J. Dormer.
Mary Louise Madl.
A. Reimard, Mabel G. Decker, Mrs.
Elizabeth
Rentschler,
H.
George
Steele Aurand, Mary Hess, Grace B.
McCoy, Mollie Jeremiah Payne, Elsie
M. Pfahler, Mrs. Robert B. Penman,
Mrs. Elizabeth Eltringham, Mrs. W.
D. Powell, Mrs. Paul Bredbenner,
Olive O. Robinson, Mrs. Catherine
Wilkinson, Alma L. Bachman, Mrs.
William Brock, Anna N. Conboy.^Mrs.
George M. Kunkel, Mrs. Eva F. Ellis.
Mildred E. Stover, Mrs. Wesley E.
Davies.
1920 Mrs. Roy O. Frey, Mrs. Foster L. Pannebaker, Mark H. Bennett.
1921 Warren L. Fisher.
tob.
1929
Chesney.
Novak,
1939 Mrs. Clifford R. Young, Isaiah D. Bomboy, Edith May Eade,
Col. Victor J. Ferrari, Mrs. Claude
Zehner.
1940 Clayton H. Hinkel.
1942 Bertha A. Hindmarch, Jack
L. 1949—
Mertz, Howard W. Brochyus.
lish.
Freyermuth, Mary E. Learn.
1924 Mrs. Helen L. Noakes,
Mrs.
Arline J. Banker, Mrs. George Reger,
Mi's. Burdella Honeywell. Mrs. Charles H. Roberts, Mrs. Grace W. Beers.
1925 Pearl Poust, Helen V. Cashmareck.
1927 Mrs. Earl McCloughan.
1928 Margaret L. Lewis, Mrs. Charles D. Blair, Mrs. Miltona B. Kline-
Mrs. Russell
O’Connell.
Pollock.
F. Ralph Dreibelbis, Catherine
1923 Joseph Zelloe, Mis. Frances
F. Harrell, Rev. Raymond Edwards,
Alice Shipman Edwards, Mrs. Ann F.
J. Johns,
Michael
Prokopchak.
1938 John F. Hendler, Mrs. FlorR.
Mrs.
Ellen
ence S. Wallace,
1935
FACULTY— George G. Stradtman.
MATCHED GIFTS— Michael Prok-
—
1932
F. 1934—
Todd.
James
George W. O’Connell,
Mrs.
Harold J. Steltz, James H. Vowler,
Jr., Dorothy Jean Cooper.
1959 Otto H. Donar, Larry A. Fisher, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence B. Barnhart, Donna M.
Hutchinson,
Mrs.
Richard Moore, Rev. Ray W. Schloyer, Mrs. Sandra P. Brown, Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas J. Fleck.
1960 Paul T. Paliscak, Mrs. Robert
E. Bucher, James H. Williams.
19G1 Thornton Grove, William
S.
Morgan, Marian L. Huttenstine, Mrs.
John J. Seksinsky.
1962 Jon E. Reese, Mrs. Charles
H.1967—
Evans, Jr., Gerald J. Wright, D.
James Donald.
1963 Mrs. Henry
Benscoter,
F.
John J. McCoy.
1964 Shirley E. Kline,
Roger S.
Schropp, Mrs. James R. Woods, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard P. Dopovic, Robert
A. Mayefskie, Richard N. Faust.
1965 Mrs. Richard N. Faust.
1966 Victor R Campbell, Barbara
A. Urbas, Jack L. Keller, Robert J.
Bicombe, James L. Derr.
Mary S. Gifford, Richard R.
Leonovich, Patricia Conwell, David
J. Hollingshead, Mrs. Alan M. Schwartz, Kenneth H. Mertz, Charles E.
Wagner, Raymond L. Kunkel, Jr.,
—
Judith A. Yarnall, Barbara Sabulski.
1968 Mr. and Mrs. Arthur A. Steiner, Caroline S. Taby, David W. Bowen, Cherie
E. Vaughn. Ruth A. Slon-
READING CONFERENCE
Dr. Paul Witty, professor emeritus,
Northwestern University
and Dr.
Russell Stauffer, professor of psychology and director of the
Reading
Clinic, University of Delaware, delivered the feature addresses
at
the
Fifth Annual Reading Conference held
on the Bloomsburg State College campus Friday and Saturday, March 28
and 29. Group demonstrations for the
first session 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. on Fri-
day were conducted
in the
Benjamin
Franklin building.
Dr. Gilbert Selders, professor of
education at BSC, served as overall
chairman of the session. Dr. Gilbert
Schiffman,
Prince George County
Schools, Upper Marlboro, Md., showed
films on “Teaching Dyslexic Children’’
which was followed by a discussion
period.
The main speaker for the general
was Dr. Witty, whose topic
was “Reading for the Gifted and
Creative Student.” Dr. Harvey A.
session
Andruss, president of BSC, spoke at
this session.
Dr. Charles Carlson,
director of graduate studies, BSC,
served as chairman.
The featured speaker for the general session Saturday morning was
Dr. Stauffer, who spoke on “What is
the Future in Early Reading?”
Dr.
John A. Hoch. dean of instruction, addressed this group.
aker.
1969
Frances Demnicki,
T. Yockey, Daniel D. Nester.
Gregory
Send your check for your contribuLoyalty Fund.
tion to the 1969
Page three
iltt
Miniumum
1911—Mrs. Margaret Simmons Yost,
Hazleton, Pa.
—
1891 Mrs. Fiona Schiader Bennett,
Home, JohnsAllegheny Lutheran
town, Pa. October 10, 1968.
1929 Mildred Ruck Tippins, Fort
Atkinson, Wis.
1929— Margaret Anstett (Mrs. Edward Heltzer), Kingston, Pa.
1928 Nicholas! Polanesky Philadelphia, Pa.
1950 Leo J. McDonald, Ringtown,
Pa.
1909 Emma Eaton (Mrs. William
Purego), Dallas, Pa.
1914 Edward Bringenberg,
West
Hazleton, Pa.
1909 Frances W. Garrison (Mrs. C.
H. Danforth),
Stanford
University,
—
—
—
—
—
—
,
California.
Dr. Adelaide Ellsworth Weston ’94
Dr. Adelaide (Ellsworth)
Weston,
95, of 516 Spring Street, Jamestown,
N. Y., a well known physician in Jamestown for many years, died November 11 1968 in W.C.A. Hospital.
Dr. Weston was born December 25,
North Moreland
Township,
Wyoming County, Pa., the daughter
of Chester L. and Susan White Ells1872,
in
worth, both of pioneer stock.
Her
progenitors were of English extraction, tracing their ancestry to
Sir
John Ellsworth of England, of the
time of Edward III. The line in this
country began with
the
Winsor,
Conn., colony in 1635, from which they
migrated to northeastern
Pennsylvania.
After several years of teaching in
public schools,
she
entered
the
Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, from which
she received her degree in medicine.
She served as intern in the Woman’s
Hospital of Philadelphia and later did
postgraduate work at University of
Michigan.
She was connected with
the State Hospital in Warren, Pa. for
a number of years.
In 1923 she was married to
Dr.
Paul G. Weston, and with him came
to Jamestown where
both
doctors
practiced for many years. He died in
Dr. Weston was a
of the
Association,
the
Medical
Society,
Medical Society,
Voters.
Dr. Weston was a devoted member
of St. Luke’s Episcopal Church and a
few years ago provided funds for remodeling, repairing the bell tower and
electrifying the carillon of bells.
She was well traveled, a patron of
he arts and helped many young peo
I
Page four
Association of
University
Women;
the Mozart Club; and the boards of
Agnes Home and Warner Home.
The Chautauqua County Medical
the
Society honored her with a citation
for 50 years devoted service in the
profession.
The Woman’s Medical
College also gave her a citation for
her 50 years in medicine.
Clara Cougliliu Iloselle
’06
Mrs. Clara C. Roselle, 78, of 90
Yeager Avenue, Forty Fort, passed
away January 6 at her home after a
week’s illness. Born in Luzerne, she
was educated in the borough schools
and was a graduate of Bloomsburg
State College. Mrs. Roselle taught in
the elementary department of
the
Courtdale and Kingston schools and
was a teacher in the Forty Fort
School District from 1942 until retiring in 1959.
A resident of Forty Fort 48 years,
she was a member of Forty Fort
Methodist Church and the Official
Board. Mrs. Roselle was serving as
secretary of the Commission of Missions of the church and belonged to
(he Harmony Bible Class, the WSCS
and Adult Fellowship. She was a
member of the Forty Fort Women’s
Christian Temperance Union and the
Retired Teachers Association of Luzerne County and Pennsylvania.
Catherine Jameson Burr ’ll
Mrs. Ralph Burr, a Danville native,
was
killed
instantly
March
4
when
she was struck by a car while crossing a street in Troy, Pa.
Mrs. Burr, the former Catherine
Jamieson of Danville, reportedly was
watching a car approaching from another direction when she was struck
by a car. Mrs. Burr was the widow
of Ralph Burr, a prominent Troy
banker and since her husband’s death
had resided with a sister, Mrs. John
Colwell, also of Troy, her only sur-
member
and various other medical organizations.
She was also on the medical
staffs of W.A.C. Hospital and Jamestown General Hospital.
She served for several years on the
welfare board under the former Mayor Samuel A. Carlson and was an
early president of
the
League of
Women
Jamestown Branch, American
tion;
vivor.
1939.
American Medical
New York State
Chautauqua County
pie to educations.
Her proteges included the fields of music, medicine,
dentistry and law.
She added much to the cultural life
of Jamestown. She was a member of
the Fortnightly; Jamestown Chapter,
Daughters of the American Revolu-
Myra
S.
Sharpless
’30
Miss Myra S. Sharpless, a devoted
teacher in Columbia County schools
for thirty-eight years thirty-five of
those in the Bloomsburg Junior High
School died unexpectedly at Bloomsburg Hospital at
Saturday,
7:30,
March 1 from a heart attack.
She was a graduate of the Bloomsburg High School and the Bloomsburg
State College and took graduate work
at the Pennsylvania State University.
She started her teaching career in
Scott Township High School, now part
of Central Columbia, and three years
—
—
was named to the faculty of the
Bloomsburg district.
She was a member of the Wesley
United Methodist Church and the Pals
later
Sunday School Class of that congregation and often a teacher of that
class.
Other affiliations were the
Woman’s Society of Christian Service
of her church, the Daughters of American Colonists, the Bloomsburg Busiess and Professional
Women, the
and the handicraft class.
AAUW
Aula Hoiter Harman
Mrs. Aula Frances Harman, seventy-one, of 124 East
First
Street,
Bloomsburg, was dead on arrival at
Bloomsburg Hospital February 22'. She
was born October 28, 1897, in Mifflin,
Pa., and had been employed as bookkeeper-accountant at BSC for thirtyseven years. She was retired.
She
was a member of St. Matthew Lutheran Church.
Kathleen M. Jones T3
Miss Kathlene M. Jones, died on
April 17 in Wilmington Medical Center, Del.
Born in Berwick, she was
a daughter of the late Henry E. and
Laura Krug Jones. She graduated
frfom Berwick High School at the age
of sixteen.
She received a BA from
Bloomsburg State College and an MA
from New York University.
She was principal at the Fourteenth
Street School, Berwick, until her retirement ten years ago.
She had
taught at
ten years.
New
Castle, Del., the last
Dean D. Oliver ’15
Dean D. Oliver, seventy-two,
169
South Maple avenue, Kingston,
died
recently at Nesbitt Memorial Hospital at Kingston where he had been a
patient for ten days.
He was born in Sweet Valley, son
of the late Franklin and Lillian Bronson Oliver.
He was a resident of
Kingston for forty-three years. Oliver
operated the Franklin Oliver and Son
General Store in Kingston. He was
employed by the Hobart Manufacturing Company of Ohio for some time
and operated the Hurry Back Coffee
Shop,
Kingston,
for
twenty-three
years and retired in 1955.
He was a member of Sweet Valley
Christian Church and attended Kingston United Methodist Church.
He
was a member of Sylvania Lodge 363
of Shickshinny, member of Keystone
Consistory of Scranton
Irem
and
of Wilkes-Barre.
He was a
veteran of World War I, a member of
American Legion Post 396 Kingston
and of the Last Man’s Club of the
Temple
Legion post.
Gerald C. llartman ’32
Gerald Clayton Hartman,
fiftyeight, Catawissa, chief administrator
of the Som hern Columbia School District and widely known in the fields of
education and music died Wednesday,
April 16 in
Bloomsburg Hospital.
in ill health for some
He had been
time but carried on his school duties
months.
He was born January 9, 1911, son
of Emanuel and Martha Clayton Hartuntil recent
T1IE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
man who reside in Catawissa.
A member of Catawissa Lodge
F. and A.M., he was also affiliated
with the Royal Arch Chapter 178 of
which he was a past presiding officer, and Caldwell Consistory, where
he was long choir director of holder
ol the Meritorious Service Award for
his contributions to this Scottish Rite
Body.
Professionally he was affiliated with
School
the American Association of
Administrators; the Pennsylvania Association of the Chief School Administrators; associate member of the
Pennsylvania School Boards AssociaPennsylvania State
tion, Inc.; the
Education Association; National Education Association; Susquehanna Valley Reading Council and president of
the Susquehanna Valley Elementary
Supervisors.
He was a member of the Catawissa
High School Alumni Association and
in recent years in recognition of his
contributions that bcdy presented him
with a chair.
In
the years
when Catawissa had
a Rotary he served a term as president. He was a charter member of the
Catawissa Chamber of Commerce.
Throughout his life he was active in
the St. John’s Lutheran Church. Catawissa, where he served as choir director and organist for the past twelve
years. For much of his life he gave
other churches of the area the benefit
of his musical talent and for a substantial period
was organist
of First
Church,
Bloomsburg.
Presbyterian
and First Methodist Church, Berwick.
For many years he taught a Sunday
School class in his home church.
He was a graduate of Catawissa
High School, the Bloomsburg State
Teachers College, received his Master
of Education Degree at Bucknell University and his music degree at Susquehanna University.
In addition he took graduate work
at the Pennsylvania State University.
His career as a teacher was launched in the Millville schools and he
started his educational career in his
home community
in 1935.
1904—Bessie Derr (Mrs.
Skea), Lake Forest, Illinois.
Norman
Ethel Creasy Wright ’09
Mrs. Ethel Louise Creasy Wright,
Bloomsburg, died Tuesday, April 8 at
two o’clock at the Bloomsburg Hospital where she had been a patient one
week.
She was born in Bloomsburg, a daughter of the late Clifton and May
Wells Creasy.
She graduated from
Bloomsburg Normal School in 1909
and Dickinson Seminary, Williamsport, in 1910.
She was a member of Wesley United Methodist Church, Friendship Sunday School Class, WSCS and Alumni
Association of BSC. She was a former member of Fort McClure Chapter DAR and the Ivy Club.
Her husband, Dennis Daniel Wright of the
class of 1911 died in 1945.
JUNE,
1969
TESTIMONIAL TO
1)11. ANDRUSS
WEDDINGS
349
1962
Barbara Jean Kolet and John Anthony Nied, February 14. Barbara teaches English in Danville, Pa., JunHigh School and her husband is
ior
librarian there.
1963
Darlene F. Scheidt, Pottstown, and
Mr. Derkits is a
Robert Derkits.
with
auditor
supervisory
the
U.
S.
General Accounting Office. Mrs. Derkits is an instructor with the Federal
Government. Address; 6209 N. 22nd
Arlington, Virginia 22205.
St.,
Suzanne Halkyard and Thomas L.
Logan. March 15. Suzanne was graduated from BSC summa cum laude,
and holds memberships in eight national honor societies. She is a graduate of Lankenau Hospital School of
Nursing, Philadelphia, has done graduate work in nursing at Teachers College. Columbia University, New York
City; and post graduate work at BSC.
Her husband is a physics teacher and
head basketball coach at Towanda
Area High School. The couple plans
to live in Towanda. Pa.
1966
Larry E. Drumm and Bonnie Ann
Brobst ’69, January 25. Address: 2145
N Street NW, Washington, D. C. Larry
is
serving a one-year internship at
Augustana Lutheran Church and is
employed by the Lutheran Cooperative Parish in Washington; he is a
third-year student at the
Lutheran
Theological Seminary in Gettysburg.
1968
Edward
Shepperson and
Dorothy Jane Kessler ’68. Dorothy
Charles
is
teaching in the Bloomsburg School
Ned is employed at Kawneer.
They reside on R. D. 1 Bloomsburg.
Kathy Jane Reimard ’69 and Douglas Clark Hippenstiel. April 12.
The
groom is a teacher in the Danville
Senior High School.
E\elyn K. Fedin, Berwick and Stanley T. Pacewicz, Plymouth. The bride
is a social science
teacher.
Mr.
Pacewicz is proprietor of the Bull Run
Restaurant and Tavern. Address: 174
East Main Street, Plymouth.
Linda K. Dietz, Riverside, Pa., and
Jay L. Bush, Pittsburgh, April 12.
Linda is teaching mathematics at the
Gettysburg High School. Address: 211
North Washington Street, Gettysburg,
District;
Pa.
1969
Jacqueline
Washburn
and
Jack
Fisher, January 25. Jacqueline teaches second grade at Berwick.
Linda Jane Frye and Edward RobThe groom is employed by
Highway Department.
Betty Louise Seidel
Doyle
and
Frederick Dietz, January 25. Betty
teaches in the Panther Valley School
ert Hess.
the State
The couple lives in Lansford.
Gloria Jean Janasik and Lt. (jg>
Gerald Anthony Gurick. Mrs. Gurick
is a substitute teacher in the Beeville
School District. The couple resides at
District.
Blueberry
78102
Hill
33,
Beeville,
Texas.
Dr. Harvey A. Andruss, who has anhis retirement in the coming
fall after thirty years as president of
Bloomsburg State College, was honored at a testimonial dinner at Briar
Heights Ledge that was sponsored
jointly by the Business Division faculty of the College; Phi Omega Pi.
the national honor society in business
education and Phi Beta Lambda, the
student organization of the Business
nounced
Education Department.
Dr. Andruss, associated
with
the
local institution of higher education
for two score years, was the first head
Education Departof the Business
ment, a post he occupied prior to becoming dean of instruction and then
dead of instruction and then president.
Over a hundred attended.
The invocation was given by James
Creasy, assistant to the President and
a
member
faculty.
of the Business Division
Following the dinner Dr.
Emory W.
Rarig, Jr., director of the
Business Education Division,
intro-
duced special guests present, including Charles Henrie and Earl Gehrig,
Dr.
former BSC faculty members.
Rarig also read telegrams and letters
from Dr. S. Lloyd Tourney and Dr.
Thomas Martin, former division directors and from Walter Rygiel, for-
mer member.
The first speaker presenting a testimonial to Dr. Andruss was Dr. WilSupervisor
of
liam Selden,
State
Business Education, Department of
Public Instruction, and a graduate of
BSC..
The second testimonial to Dr. Andwas given by Dr. Rarig H.
Cowley, ‘‘Name a great American
college or university and you will find
russ
commanding leader or
who held its presidency,” as
in its history a
leaders
an indication of truth describing BSC
and its president, Dr. Andruss.
Following Dr. Rarig ’s address, a
a portable typewriter was presented to the guest of honor to “assist
him in his asserted ambition to do a
great deal of writing and traveling in
the near future.”
gift of
Robert Goralski,
NBC news
corres-
pondent, was the guest speaker at a
dinner given by President and Mrs.
Harvey A. Andruss, Bloomsburg State
faculty
members and
and board of trustee
members and their wives in the College
Commons Saturday evening,
March 15. Goralski spoke on “The
Changing World and the Challenge to
College,
for
their wives,
U. S. Leadership.”
Bloomsburg State
College, in
the
proposed outlays for colleges compared with estimated
expenditures
for the current year, will get an increase from the 1968-69 budget figure
of $3,237,000
1970.
to
$5,344,000
for
Page
1969-
five
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR
H. F. Fenstemaker ’12
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Grace Foote Conner,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Terms
Howard
P. Fenstemaker T2
242 Central Road
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Term
expires 1970
Colonial
R. D.
1,
Term
El wood M. Wagner
’43
Dr. William L. Bitner
33 Lincoln Avenue
Glen Falls,
expires 1970
SECRETARY
New York
III
12801
Elisabeth H. Hubler
’35
expires 1970
TREASURER
205
’29
McKnight Street
Gordon, Pennsylvania 17936
James H.
37 N.
Deily, Jr.
’41
Bausman Drive
Lancaster, Pennsylvania 17603
Earl A. Gehrig ’37
Robin Lane, Sherwood Village
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
110
Term
expires 1970
Glenn A. Oman ’32
1704 Clay Avenue
Scranton, Pennsylvania 18509
Terms
expire 1972
Millard Ludwig ’48
Center and Third Streets
’52
88
Mills, Pa. 19342
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie
509 East Front Street
Berwick, Pennsylvania 18603
Term
Term
expire 1971
643 Wiltshire Road
State College, Pa. 16801
Farm Box
Glen
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Mrs. Verna Jones ’36
18 West Avenue, Apartment C-4
Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087
Col.
VICE PRESIDENT
Dr. Frank J. Furgele
—
’34
Pennsylvania 17846
Millville,
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
102
’34
West Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Kimber C. Kuster T3
West Eleventh Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Dr.
140
John Thomas ’47
68 Fourth Street
Hamburg, Pennsylvania 19526
Clayton H. Hinkel
’40
Leonard Street
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
224
expires 1970
Volume LXX, Number 2 — June, 1969
1890
Commonwealth
The Honorable James H. J. Tate, Mayor, City of Philadel
phia; The Rev. Robert J. Marshall,
President, Lutheran Church in America: The Rev. William
A.
Janson,
P. Shafer, Governor,
Frona Schrader Bennett, 98 years
Miss Eleanor Hayman, a guest at
the Lutheran
Home, Germantown,
celebrated her one hundredth birthday on April 8, 1969. Many friends
joined with her to celebrate the oc-
of Pennsylvania:
age, a guest at the Allegheny Luther-
casion.
President, Southeastern Pennsylvania
Synod of the Lutheran Church in
America; The Honorable Richard S.
Miss
Hayman was
born April
8,
1869, in Catawissa, Pa.
For 45 years
she taught in elementary grades and
high schools in Pennsylvania, retiring
in 1932.
Since 1897 she has been a
member of the Turbotville Lutheran
Parish, Turbotville, Pa.
At the age
of 80 she came to live
at Lutheran
Home.
Greeting cards poured in by the
hundreds and special messages were
received from: President and
Mrs.
Richard Nixon: The Honorable Robert
Finch, Secretary of Health. Education
and Welfare: The Honorable Raymond
Page
six
Sweiker, United States Senator.
Mrs. Verna Jones brought remarks
representing the alumni of Blooms-
burg State College,
Miss Hayman’s
alma mater.
We
an Home, Johnstown, Pa.
of
have
since been informed that Mrs. Bennett
died October 10 1968.
1903
Class
Ililand,
Representative:
dale, N. Y.
Mary
II.
Walter
Warwick Avenue, Scars-
11
.
10583
A. Good, former
member
of
the Bloomsburg faculty, is a guest at
the Creveling Convalescent Home, 321
East Fifth Street Berwick, Pa.
1905
Miss Eleanor Hayman, born in Catawissa, Pa., April 8, 1869, is a guest at
the Lutheran Home in Germantown,
Pa.
1891
The March number of the Quarterly
had a statement concerning Mrs.
Representative: Vera Hemingway Housenick, 503 Market Street,
Class
Bloomsburg,
I*a.
17815
1907
Class Representative:
Edwin M.
Barton, 353 College Hill, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
TIIE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
1909
Class
Diehl,
Fred
Representative:
Bloom
(!27
W.
Street, Danville, Pa.
17821
1910
Class Representative:
Robert E.
Metz, 22 Manliatton Street,
Ashley,
Pa. 18700
1911
Class Representative:
Diehl, 027
Pa.
Bloom
Pearle Fitch
Danville,
Street,
17821
1912
Representative:
Howard F.
Fenstemaker,
242
Central
Road,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17821
Class
1912
Class Representative: Dr. Kimber
Kuster, 140 West 11th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17821
The lecture room in the recently
dedicated Hartline Science Center has
been named the Dr. Kimber C. Kuster
Hall. He was formerly Chairman of
the Science Department at BSC.
served for twenty-five years on the
Overbrook Avenue, Shavertown, Pa.
Secretary: Gertrude
Gordon
18708.
Davies, 60 East Overbrook Avenue,
Shavertown, Pa.
Out-of-state Classmates back for the
reunion were: F. Ralph Dreibelbis,
422 West Highland Avenue, Wooster,
Ohio 44691; Ruth Doyle Moore, 336
Bender Avenue, Roselle Park, N. J.
07204; Eva Ferguson Ellis, 2764 Fed-
State
eral Street, Camden, N. J. 08105; Betty Steele Aurand, 4200 Cathedral Avenue N. W., Washington, D. C. 20016;
Olive Robinson, 1117 Morningside Avenue, Schnectady, N. Y. 12308; Frances E. Kinner, 3204 Verdun Avenue,
End well, N. J. 13760; Margaret Summers Brock, Rosenhayn, N. J. 08352.
Representative:
J. Howard
West Third Street, Blooms-
Deily, 518
208 East
burg, Pa. 17815
Main
Street,
Blooms-
1917
Class
Representative:
Cromis, Mahoning Manor,
Milton, Pa. 17847
Allan
L.
R. D. 1,
1918
Class
Representative:
Claire
J.
Patterson, 215 West Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Mr. and Mrs. J. Rutter Ohl, 25 East
Eleventh street, Bloomsburg, observ-
ed their golden anniversary at an
open house at their home. Mrs. Ohl
is a native of Lake Township, Luzerne
county. The former Edna Davenport,
she is the daughter of the late Mr.
and Mrs. Dana Davenport.
Mr. Ohl, son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Ohl, was born in Hemlock township. He is now retired after thirtysix years as a mail carrier in Blooms-
burg.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Ohl are members
Matthew Lutheran Church. Mrs.
Ohl was organist at the church for
thirty-one years and later served in
ol St.
the same capacity
at
St.
Peter’s
Church, Riverside, for four and onehalf years. She is currently organist
at United Church of Christ, Bloomsburg, where she has served for five
years. Their son, John, class of ’41,
is professor of English at Highland
Park Junior College in Michigan. They
have two grandchildren.
1919
Class Representative:
Miss Catherine A. Reimard, 235 Jefferson St.,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Miss Reimard requests her classmates to furnish her with information
such as change of address, marriages,
deaths, etc.
At the class meeting on Alumni Day
the members of the class contributed
S65 to the campus tree and shrubbery
program.
JUNE,
1969
Mrs.
Edwards
Mr. and
vention.
were a two-week evangelistic team
in Puerto Rico, and in the summer of
1967 he attended Mansfield College,
Oxford, England.
Mrs. Edwards, the former Alice
Shipman ’23, served seven years as a
member of the Executive Board of the
Woman’s American Baptist Home Society.
The Edwardses have a son, Robert,
who with his wife and children live at
Centerreach, Long Island, N. Y.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwards are living
at 2024 Old
Berwick Road, Espy.
Class Representative:
Edward F.
Schuyler, 236 West
Ridge Avenue,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1921
1925
Mrs. Harry
Cole, 100 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
1922
Class Representative: John H. Shu-
man,
of
1924
Representative:
Leroy W.
Road,
3117
Old
Berwick
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
Creasy,
burg, Pa. 17815
1915
Managers of the New York
Convention,
several
Baptist
years on the Executive Committee,
and finally as President of the ConBoard
1920
Class Representative:
1914
Class
The following officers were elected:
President: Wesley E. Davies, 60 East
Edna
S.
Representative:
Class
Harter, R. D. 1, Nescopeck, Pa. 18623
Ruth Hutton, DSA, 'Mrs. W. Mason
Aucker) 5124 45th Street, Washington, D. C., 20016, is chairman of the
Competition
Scholarship
Sculpture
(Washington Chapter National Society
She is preparof Arts and Letters).
ing new works for a coming sculpture
exhibition! September 6) at the Willilam Penn Memorial Fine Arts Museum, Harrisburg.
1923
mond
RayRoad,
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Mrs.
Representative:
Class
P.
Sherwood
Kashner,
Village,
125
Friar
17815
The Rev. Raymond H.
Edwards,
D.D., semi-retired Baptist pastor
living in
Bloomsburg, has
been
now
The Rev. and Mrs. Edwards are
special representatives of the Missionaries and Ministers Benefit Board of
Convention,
Baptist
the American
working four months of the year in
Delaware
and
Bickel,
17801
Representative: Pearl Rader
Masser Street, Sunbury, Pa.
Charles J. Daly was recently named
head basketball coach at Boston College.
A native of Kane, Pa., Daly
played his high school basketball in
that community under Dr. C. Stuart
Edwards, now Director of the Division
of
Secondary
Education
at
Bloomsburg State College. He attended St. Bonaventure for a year and
then transferred to Bloomsburg State
where he was a court star under
Coach Harold Shelley.
Following his
graduation
from
Bloomsburg, he taught and coached at
Punxsutawney High School where he
remained several years before going
to Duke University as freshman basketball coach.
He was later named
assistant basketball
coach
at Duke prior to his
pointment at Boston College.
Bubas
to
Vic
new
ap-
act-
ing as supply pastor of the First Baptist Church, Milton.
Pennsylvania,
Class
West
Virginia.
He is a native of Bloomsburg, attended public schools in Bloomsburg,
and was President of the Class of 1923
at the Bloomsburg Normal School. He
was later graduated from Bucknell
University and Colgate-Rochester Divinity School.
For the past forty years, has served in the State of New York, concluding with a 31-year pastorate at the
First Baptist Church, Ossining,
last
June. While in Ossining, he served
seven years as a member of the Village Recreation Commission, and two
years as its chairman, and was for
six years Chairman of the Ossining
Voluntary Ambulance Corps. He was
also President of the
Community
Council and Phelps Memorial Hospital Chaplains’ Association.
During his ministry in Ossining, he
Abbye Roberts
Bet Mar Nursing
is
a patient at the
in Plymouth,
Home
Pa.
Mr. and Mrs. David T. North, formerly of Bloomsburg, are making
their home in Fargo, N. D., where he
is in research as a radiation biologist
with a government laboratory connected with the Department of Agriculture
and Mrs. North is teacher of nutrition
in University of North Dakota.
They are also in business with “The
Burlap Bag” an art gallery and boutique, which specializes in handmade
lounging outfits, caftans and hostess
gowns, water colors, miniatures, ceramics, woodcuts and photos.
Mr. North is an active photographer
and has had a number of exhibits of
his work.
Mrs. North, the former
Barbara Bundens, is a member of the
Fargo-Moorhead Junior League which
does much volunteer service in the
community.
The present
Russell Looker
address of
is 6
the Rev.
Street,
West Water
Lock Haven, Pa. 17745
1926
Class
Representative:
Marvin M.
Page seven
2, Wapvvallopen, Pa. 186G0
Ralph
Class Representative: Mrs.
BerDendler, 1132 Market Street,
wick. Pa. 18G03
Bloss, R. D.
1957
William A. Griffiths has been promoted to assistant professor at the
State University of New York Agricultural and Technical College at Alfred.
Professor Griffiths is a member of
the faculty of the Secretarial Science
Department at Allred State College.
received an associate degree in
business administration from Keystone Junior College in 1959 and went
on to obtain his B.S. in business education at Bloomsburg State College.
Currently, he is completing requirements for his master’s at Alfred Uni-
He
versity.
Professor Griffiths is married to the
former Lyn Thomas of Eastchester,
N. Y. They have two children and
reside at Jericho Hill in Alfred Station.
1928
Mrs. (Elsie
Nelson Stauffer, 88 John St.,
(Arline
Mrs.
Kingston, Pa. 18704.
Parish
20
Frantz) Walter Covert,
Street, Dallas, Pa. 18612
Eleanor Sands Smith, Market Street,
Benton, Pa., 17814, who is remembered by her classmates for her ODE to
BLOOMSBURG, set to music by Ella
Sutton, and performed at our graduation ceremonies in 1928, and who was
poetry editor of the Maroon and Gold,
has kept her constant tempo and concern with her art through literary
publications, and especially as poetry
Morning Press of
editor for the
Bloomsburg, for the past thirty years.
She has reviewed poetry for several
manuscripts
poetry journels, edited
for the Falmouth Publishing Company,
participated in poetry readings before
the Poetry Society of America, New
York, and in 1938 gave a reading before an audience at Bloomsburg State
College, where she received a citation
for her work with Unicorn, a magazine of Verse, which she edited. She
is the author of two books, “St. MarClass Representatives:
Lebo)
tin’s
Summer,” and “Everywhere
Is
Mis. Smith
Here and Lonesome.”
was a recipient of a Pennsylvania
Poetry Society award last year.
At the 40th anniversary dinner of
the class she composed a ballad, honoring her class. This piece was reminiscent of Francois Villon’s ‘‘Where
Are The Snows of Yesteryear.”
She
promised to give a repeat performance at our 50th reunion!
1929
Walter M. Siesko has retired and is
living at Apt. 901, The Cambridge,
1221
Massachusetts Avenue, N.W.,
Thirteen years ago she returned to
teaching and last year, when her husband retired, they went to California.
She is teaching third grade at the
present time.
Among those present on Alumni
Day was Dorothy L. Schmidt.
Miss Schmidt, who was appointed
in 1937 by the former Board of ForPresbyterian
eign Missions of
the
Church, U.S.A. and assigned to Japan,
is a professor in the Tokyo Woman's
Christian College, where she teaches
English, serves as advisor to a group
of juniors, and does evangelistic work
through the city churches.
When Miss Schmidt first went to
Japan she taught at Hokusei Gakeun,
a girls’ high school and junior college
in Sopporo.
When the war made it
necessary to leave Japan, she was
Philippines
to
transferred to the
to teach English at Silliman UniverShe had taught
sity, Dumaguete.
there for only three weeks when the
Pearl Harbor attack made it necessary to flee into the mountains.
She
was later taken prisoner by the Japanese and spent three years in various
interment camps.
As soon as possible after the war
she returned to her work at Hokusei
Gakuen, where she was Head of the
Education Departments until 1953
when she was transferred to Tokyo.
From 1954 until 1968 Miss Schmidt
taught English at Meiji Gakuin UniApril
versity, until her transfer in
1968 to her present position as Professor of English in the Tokyo Women's
Christian College.
Miss Schmidt, who is from ScranBloomsburg
is a graduate
of
ton,
State College.
In 1937 she received a
Master’s Degree
in
Religious Educa-
(now
Seminary
tion from Biblical
The New York Theological Seminary),
New York City.
1930
Class
Representatives:
and Margaret Swartz
Luther W.
Bitier, 117 State
Street, Millville, Pa. 17864
1931
Representative:
James B.
Class
Davis, 333 East Marble Street, Mechanicsburg, Pa. 17055
Dr. Chester C. Hess was appointed
to the Board of Trustees of Woodville
State Hospital by Governor Raymond
P. Shafer.
Woodville Hospital is a
the
state mental hospital serving
mentally ill of Allegheny County.
Dr. Hess is a medical doctor and
has practiced in the South Hills section of Pittsburgh for the past twenty-eight years.
He and his family
reside at 1066 Bank Street, Bridgeville. Pa.
15017.
Class
Representative:
Miss Lois
Lawson,
644
East Third
Street.
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
The address of Sister M. Gervoise
(Mary M. Walsh) is Sisters’ of I.H.M.
She received her Bachelor’s and Masdegrees at Penn State University.
She is married and has one son and
42,
three daughters.
Page eight
Philadelphia,
Pa.
1934
Class
Representative:
Esther
Street,
154
Pa.
Bloomsburg,
17815
Arden H. Blain, 200 Horace Mann
Avenue, Red Lion, Pa., 17356, is a
member
of the staff of the
Red Lion
Area School.
1935
Reed,
William I.
East 4th Street, Blooms-
Representative:
Class
154
burg, Pa. 17815
Dr. Howard E. DeMott, Professor
of Biology at Susquehanna University,
was recently honored for twenty-one
years of service to that institution.
Dr. DeMott holds the M. S. degree
from Bucknell University, and the
Ph.D. from the University of Virginia.
1936
Kathryn
Representatives:
Vanauker (Mrs. Nicholas Moreth) 34
Linden Road, Ho-IloKus, New Jersey 07432. Co-Chairmen: Ruth Wagner (Mrs. Lawrence Le Grande) 126
Oak Street, Hazleton, Pa. 18201 and
Mary Jane Fink (Mrs. Frederick McCuteheon) Maple Avenue, Conyngham,
Pa. 18219
Class
1937
Class Representatives: Mr. and Mrs.
Earl A. Gehrig, 110 Robin Lane, Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1938
Class Representative: Paul G. Martin,
East Third Street, Blooms-
710
burg, Pa. 17815
1939
Representative:
Class
Willard A.
Christian, Jr., 803 Logue Street, Williamsport, Pa. 17701
Harriet L. Kocher, P. O. Box 181,
Springfield, Va., 22150, is
Secretary
College
of the
All
Pennsylvania
Alumni Association of Washington, D.
and Joseph A. Kulech ’49 is Treas-
C.,
urer of the organization.
Both are
of the Executive Committee.
The association held its annual Citation Luncheon on Saturday, February 1. The recipient of the 1969 was
Dr. Calvert N. Ellis, President Emeritus of Juniata College. The late Dr.
Francis B. Haas, President of BSC
from 1927 to 1939, received this honor
members
1952.
in
1940
Ilinkel,
Representative:
224
Leonard
Clayton
Street,
II.
Blooms-
burg, Pa. 17815
Ruth E. Boone McSweeney is living at 1660-A Wilikina Drive, Wehia-
wa, Hawaii 96786.
1941
Representative:
art Edwards, R. I). 4,
Pa. 17815
Class
Dr.
C.
Stu-
Bloomsburg.
1942
Representative:
Zimmerman (Jean
Class
II.
Krcady
Eleanor Zydonowicz Cooke, 1536 S.
State Street, Space 62, Hamet, California, sends her greetings
to
her
classmates. After graduation,
she
went to teach in Detroit, Michigan.
2240 South 71st Street.
East Fifth
Class
1932
1933
ter’s
Evans McFadden (Mrs. Joseph),
Avenue,
Mrs. Ralph
Noll),
Millersville,
165
Pa.
17551
1943
With a view to providing a continuous educational opportunity for college students in the Hartford area. Dr.
Arthur C. Banks, Jr., President of
Greater Hartford Community College,
announced the appointment of Bernard Pufnak as the new Director of
TIIE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
the Summer School. Mr. Pufnak has
been teaching for many years in the
Hartford school system and also at
Central Connecticut State College. In
addition to his new duties, he is currently head of Secretarial Studies at
He is a member of the
the college.
Eastern Business Teachers’ Association. the Connecticut Business Educaveteran of
tion Association, and a
World War II and the Korean War.
With his wife and family, he resides
Newington, Conn.
at 82 Elton Dr.,
06111.
1944
Representative: Mrs. (Poletime Comuntzis) Carl Demetrikopoulos. Friar and Hobin Lanes, Sherwood
Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
('lass
1945
Class Representative: Mary Lou
John, 257 West 11th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1946
Anastasia
Representative:
Pappas (Mrs. John Trowbridge), 102
W. Mahoning Street, Danville, Pa.
Class
1947
Bunge,
Robert L.
Representative:
Class
12
YVest
Park
Street.
Carroll
Park, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1948
Harry G.
Representative:
Class
John. Jr., 425 Iron Street. Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
1949
Class Representative: Richard E.
Harris1723 Fulton Street,
burg, Pa. 17102
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kulick are
living at 1542 North Danville Street,
Mrs. Kulick is
Arlington, Virginia.
the former Irene Kornaski ’43.
Grimes,
1950
Class Representative: Jane Kenvin
(Mrs. George Widger), R. D. 2, Catawissa, Pa. 17820
Rod Morgans, a veteran of regional football coaching ranks, has submitted his resignation as head grid
coach at S. Williamsport High School.
Morgan, an exponent of the single
wing formation, piloted the Mounties
for fourteen seasons. He will become
assistant principal of South Williams-
Katherine McDonald Young, wife of
Frederick D. Young, Jr., 7511 Lawrence Road, Dundalk, Maryland, and
daughter of Anthony McDonald, ’21,
1968.
Pa.,
died
She attended
November
BSC
2,
in 1948-49.
1951
Class Representative: Dr. Russell
C. Davis, Jr., Sullivan County Commuity College, South Fallsburgh, N.
Y. 12779
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin J. Hutzler
(Marie Mattis ’51) are living at 3419
Clearfield, San Antonia, Texas. 78230.
1952
Class Representative:
Francis B.
Galenski, 350 South York Road, Hatboro, Pa. 19040
1953
Class Representative: John S. Scrimgeour, 411 East 3rd Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1954
Class
JUNE,
Representative:
1969
19446
William
J.
His memberships include the Middle
State Association of Collegiate RegisOfficers, the
trars and Admissions
Garinger, 302 Green Road, Berwyn, Pa.
National Council of Measurements in
Education, and the National Association of Student Personnel Administra-
19312
ors.
1955
Class Representative: Arnold
1956
Representative:
Class
William
Dr.
The Bloomsburg Area School Disthas hired Dr. John N. Magill, Jr.,
as curriculum coordinator and assist-
Bitner, III, 33 Lincoln Avenue, Glen
Falls, N. Y. 12801
Larry R. Fiber, Hirwon Drive, R.
rict
Shippensburg, Pa. 17257, was
awarded the Doctor of Education
degree by New York University on
February 25, 1969. Dr. Fiber’s disseroi
tation was entitled "The History
Business Education in the Public SecHe
ondary Schools of New Jersey.”
earned the Bachelor of Science degree
lrom Bloomsburg State College in
1956, the Master of Education degree
from Rutgers University in 1958, and
Education degree
the Specialist in
from Rutgers in 1962.
in
Dr. Fiber began his teaching
New Brunswick Senior High School,
New Brunswick, N. J. In 1951 he became Chairman of the Business Education Department at Franklin High
School, Somerset, New Jersey.
He
joined the Business Education Department at Shippensburg State College.
Shippensburg, Pa., as an Associate
Professor in 1966.
Dr. Fiber is a member of the honorary fraternities Delta Pi Epsilon,
Kappa Delta Pi, and Phi Delta Kappa. He is a life member of the National Education Association and a
member of the American Vocational
Association, National Business Educa-
rict.
D.
33,
tion Association, American
Association of University Professors,
Penn-
sylvania Education Association, Eastern Business Teachers
Assn.,
Vocational Administrators of Pennsylvania. New Jersey Business Education Association,
and Pennsylvania
Business Education Association.
1957
Class
Representative:
William J.
Pohutski, 544 Oakridge Drive, North
Plainfield, N. J. 07606
1958
Class
port High School next year.
Centralia,
Jacobs. Trcmont Annex Apartments,
Lansdale, Pa.
2 West Main Street,
ant superintendent for the school distDr. Magill was supervising principal at Fleetwood Area Schools and
He
is a native of Luzerne County.
served with the Paratroops during
World War II which interrupted his
education at BSC.
He has since served as a science,
was a
social studies teacher and
supervising principal at Black Creek
Township and
later
degree at Penn State
in 1953
ied for his doctorate at
1963 and 1964.
Union
Blan
at
Schools in Perry County.
his
Dr. Magill obtained
masters
and stud-
Penn
State in
John J. Schaefer, 4 Citadel Drive,
Jackson, N. J., 08527, has received the
M. A. degree in Business Education
at Rider College, Trenton, N. J.
1959
William F.
.Class Representative:
Swisher, Box 215, Cincinnatus, N. Y.
14340
In September 1966, Moritz L. Schultz
was appointed Chief Audiologist of the
Rehabilitation Center for Children and
Adults in Palm Beach, Florida, where
he initiated a new program in clinical
audiology
the first in Palm Beach
and surrounding counties. Prior to
—
was the
to Florida, Morey
Geisinger
senior audiologist at the
Medical Center for 6 years.
He was the recipient of an Office
of Vocational Rehabilitation grant for
graduate study at the Penn State University where he received a Master’s
moving
degree
in
Audiology in 1963.
In 1967 he served as Chairman for
the Committee on Audiological Standards with the Florida Speech and
Hearing Association and
last year he
editor of the Association
year term of office. He is
was elected
Raymond
Representative:
for a 2
two
member
Hargreaves, 37 Dell Road, Stanhope,
also
N. J.
Speech and Hearing Association and
07874
Appointment of Paul H. Anderson,
Trenton, N. J., as registrar of Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa., has been
announced. Mr. Anderson has been
the registrar at Trenton State College.
with that institution since
1961, first as an assistant registrar
and assistant to the president and for
the past two years as the registrar.
He has also served as the assistant
director of the New
Jersey
State
He has been
Scholarship Commission.
A
native of
Maple Shade, N. J., he graduated
from Cheltenham High School, Elkins
Park, Pa., in 1954 and from Bloojisburg State College in 1958
After a
year of study at Drew University, he
earned a master’s degree in educational measurements at Southern Illinois University and is now a candidate
for the Doctor of Education degree at
Rutgers University.
.
a
of
the
American
holder of the Certificate of Clinical
Competence in Audiology.
Morey is married to the former
Barbara Lentz (BSC 1957) and they
reside in Palm Beach Lakes South
with
their
three
school-aged
daugh-
ters.
Earl C. Levengood is Program Coordinator of Business Sciences, with the
rank of Associate Professor of Business Administration and Secretarial
Science, at
the
Tompkins-Cortland
Community College, 176 Main Street,
Groton, N. Y. 13073. He has previously taught at the State University of
New York at Cobleskill and at the
Corning Community College.
1960
Class
Representative:
James J.
Peck, 335 Red Coat Lane, Wayne, Pa.
19087
Page nine
James
manager
J. Peck, formerly district
of Atlantic Richfield Co., at
Springfield, Mass., has been named
The
manager at New Haven, Conn.
Springfield district serves western
portions
of
Massachusetts
and New
Hampshire and all of Vermont. The
New Haven district serves southern
Peck, of 58 Oakland
Connecticut.
Street, Wilbraham, Mass., 01095, joined Atlantic Richfield in 1961 as a marketing trainee at Reading, Pa., followed by assignments as assistant to the
vice president of marketing and service station development coordinator.
He was named Springfield district
manager last year. He is a native
of Pottstown, Pa.
Dr. William J. Yurkiewicz, associate
Millersville
professor of biology at
State College, has written more than
twenty scientific articles since receiving the PhD from Penn State in 1965.
Many of the papers were co-authored
by students from the biology departat Millersville who had worked
closely with Yurkiewicz in special research projects.
1961
Edwin C.
Representative:
Class
Kuser, R. D. 1, Box 145-C, Beehtelsville, Fa. 19505
Philip S. Houser, 1272 Oxford Road,
Somerville, N. J., 08876, is Principal
of the Randolphville School in Piscatoway, N. J. He received his M. A.
ment
degree from Seton Hall University in
1965 and his 6th year level in Guidance in 1967, also from Seton Hall.
His wife is the former Joyce Morgan,
’61.
Mr. and Mrs. Houser have a son
and a daughter.
Mrs. Jane Reinaker Wilhour, Assistant Professor of Education and PsySt.
chology at Lindenwood College,
Charles, Missouri, has been named as
the 1968 Outstanding Young Educator
in Missouri by the Missouri Jaycees.
Mrs. Wilhour received her local and
state award for her excellent effort in
the St. Charles City School Title III
Project, which consists of conducting
workshops in the St. Charles area.
Her efforts have resulted in new
school organization and curriculum
and parochial schools
in the St. Charles area. Mrs. Wilhour
has a Master of Arts degree in Education from East Tennessee State University, and is working for her docShe
torate at St. Louis University.
and her husband, Russell, reside at
209 Cole Boulevard, St. Charles, Mo.
lor both public
1962
Class
Representative:
Richard
Lloyd, 6 Farragus I)r., Fiscataway,
N. .1. 08854
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Little
(Kay Gaglione ’61) are living at 16
York
19803.
Little
Road,
Wilmington,
Delaware,
They have three children. Mr.
was recently elected to the
Delaware House of Representatives.
He manages an investment business
and teaches at Deleware Technical
Community College. Since his graduation, he has been Secretary of the
Sunbury Y. M. C. A. and taught at
Fage
ten
Brandywine High School.
1964
Representative:
Class
Robert and Nancy (Sarisky) Pelak
are now living at 38 Marriewold Lane
Robert reN., Monroe, N. Y. 10950.
ceived the degree of Master of Arts
from Indiana University in 1967, and
is teaching chemistry at Spring ValMr. and Mrs. Pelah have
ley, N. Y.
a son, Robert Allen Pelah.
1963
Pat Bielil
Representative:
Class
(Mrs. Ronald Cranford), 206 North
11th Street, Sunbury, Fa. 17801
Dr. Herbert A. Leeper Jr., of Lewistown R. D. 3, was awarded the
degree of doctor of philosophy at the
January graduation at Purdue UniDr.
versity at West Lafayette, Ind.
Leeper received his bachelor’s degree
in speech correction from Bloomsburg
State College, and received both his
master’s and doctoral degrees from
Purdue University. His dissertation
was “Pressure Measurements of Articulatory Behavior During Alterations
He has joined the
of Vocal Effort.”
staff of The Jewish Hospital of St.
Louis as a speech pathologist in the
division of speech pathology, department of otolarynology.
Ronald T. Walters received a Master’s Degree in Business Education at
the March, 1969, commencement at
Colorado State College, Greeley, Colo.
John W. Knorr, Willingboro, N. J.,
formerly of Bloomsburg, received the
degree of Master of Arts in Business
Education on January 26 at Rider
College in Trenton, N. J. He received his BS degree in general business
education at BSC in 1963 and is a
teacher in the schools in the Willingboro area.
Robert L. Evans has been named
Law Enforcement
Coordinator
of
Training for the University of Geor-
Mr.
gia’s Institute of Government.
to his new position from
Washington, D. C., where he served
with the Federal Bureau of Investigation from 1961 with responsibility for
a variety of investigations including
matters of national security and covering such areas as anti-trust, Federal
Evans comes
Tort Claims Act and government employees security.
A native of Shamokin, Pa., Mr.
Evans will be responsible for coordinating various law enforcement training programs throughout Georgia and
Mr.
the Southeastern United States.
from
Evans has earned
degrees
Bloomsburg State Teachers College
and from Dickinson School of Law at
Carlisle,
Pa.
Mrs. Joan Boner Shultz, Easton R.
D. 1 and formerly of Reading, received a master of arts degree in business
education from Rider College, Trenton, N. J. She obtained her bachelor’s
degree in 1963 from Bloomsburg State
College. For the past six years she
has taught at the Easton Area High
School and worked part time at the
Northampton County Area Community
College.
Shuba,
1
Ernest
R.
Gaston Avenue, Raritan, N.
08869
J.
Marie Osinski Vouakes, 275 Prospect
Street, East Orange, New Jersey, is
enrolled in the graduate division at
BSC.
Paul L. Conard has been appointed
campaign chairman of the 1969 heart
fund campaign in Columbia county.
He has been associated with the
heart cause in varying capacities for
three years.
A resident of Bloomsburg for the last twelve years, he
has been assistant manager
at
Bloomsburg State College
five years.
a member of St. Matthew
Lutheran Church, treasurer of Church
Council and Sunday school superintendent, and teacher. He is also a member of Bloomsburg Jaycees a past president of that organization and presently state director; member board
of directors and treasurer for Columbia-Montour Home Health
Services
He
is
vice
president
of
Columbia
County Big Brothers and a PIAA offiInc.;
cial for 15 years.
Conard, thirty-five, was named the
of
town’s Outstanding Young Man
1966-1967.
He was selected for the
1968 Edition of “Outstanding Young
Men
of America.”
Conard is a graduate of Turbotville
High School and Bloomsburg State
College. He served with the U.S.M.C.
in Korea and is married to the former Elizabeth Ann Menges, Turbotville.
Mr. and Mrs. Conard are the parents
of three daughters and reside
on
Country Club Drive.
Shirley E. Kline, P. O. Box 128, McClure, Pa., 17841, is now teaching in
the dependent schools at Ramey Air
Force Base. Puerto Rico. Miss Kline
had previously been teaching in the
Mifflin County School District, Lewistown, Pa.
1965
George MilRoad No. 8, Victor,
Class Representative:
1156 Countv
N. Y. 14564
ler,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry W. Ravert are
Road, Camp
residing at 626 Erford
Pa. 17011
Hill,
Thomas
J. Kaczmarek and his wife
Pat Zehner Kaczmarek ’67, are living at 830 High Street, Williamsport.
Pa. 17701
1966
Class Representative: Anthony J.
Cerza, 180 Mason Street, Exeter, Fa.
18643
James Derr is head teacher of
School,
Ringing Rocks Elementary
He is currently enPottstown, Pa.
in the graduate program
West Chester State College.
rolled
at
1967
Robert T.
Representative:
Lemon, Meadowvale Apt. No. 12, 903
Quarry Road, liarve dc Grace, Md.
Class
21087
Raymond
C.
Zindel,
Jr.,
of
944
Willopenn Dr., Southampton, Pa., has
been commissioned a second lieuten-
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
ant in the U. S. Air Force upon graduation from Officer Training School at
Lackland AFB,
Lieutenant
Texas.
Zindell, selected for OTS through competitive examination, is being assigned to Webb AFB, Tex., for pilot training.
The lieutenant, a graduate of
W. H. Tennent Senior High School
in
Johnsville, Pa., earned his B. S. Ed
degree from Bloomsburg State College.
Kathryn Ann Apple (Mrs. B. Frank
Ricci)
Road,
lives at Apt. C-6, 315
Festerville. Pa. 19048
Edward
B.
Kern are
Pike,
19082
Steele
and Sandra Burkhart
West Chester
living at 8125
Apt. C-4, Upper
Darby,
Pa.
at Special Children’s Center, Ithaca,
New York. She lives at 7 Candlewyck Park, Apt. C-4, Ithaca.
1968
Class Representative: Thomas W.
Free, K. 1). 1, Box 34, Kintnersville,
18930
Mrs. Judith Konsur Kelley, Susbeen
quehanna, Pa., has recently
named a Peace Corps Volunteer. She
and her husband will be teaching in
Their
provincial schools in Peru.
Care of Peace
overseas address:
Corps Director, American Embassy,
Lima, Peru.
Stanley Kucharski, former flanker
and defensive back at Bloomsburg
State College, has been signed by the
Atlanta Falcons of the National Football League as a free agent, according to Jan Van Duser, public relations
director of that organization.
Kucharski, who is a teacher, football coach, assistant basketball and
track
coach
at
Manville
High
School, Manville, New Jersey, indicated the Falcons have openings in
their defensive backfield unit and that
they are interested in him at a safety
position. Kucharski, whose 1967 brilliant college career was cut short by
a knee injury, signed a year ago with
the Green Bay Packers as
a free
agent.
Stan was hampered by his
knee in the early summer training
sessions and
was released.
Theresa Pavone Fasnacht lives at
Manor Apartments, E-9,
the Country
Levittown, Pa. 19056.
1969
The United States Air Force announces the selection of Gary Reichenbach into its Officer Training
School Program as a communicationsElectronics Officer.
Reichenbech, who is a January ’69
graduate of Bloomsburg State College,
Earth and Space Sciences Dept., made
application for the Air Force
OTS
program
in November of 1968 under
the new officers selection priority
that allows men without an engineering degree to apply for scientific and
engineering fields, based on their test
JUNE,
He
1969
report to Lackland
AFB,
where he will begin the 3-
will
Texas,
years ago as a teacher at State Teachers College, Bloomsburg, Pa., she
didn’t w'ant to vegetate so she came
to Florida with plans to establish a
month training program. Upon completion of training, he will be commissioned a second lieutenant, and will
then report to Keesley AFB, Miss., for
44 weeks of electronics school before
assuming his duties as a communications-electronics officer.
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Reichenbach, Bloomsburg.
but she
a related line appealed to her, “just a little
something to keep mind and time occupied.”
The antique business itself was too
complicated. It would mean a store,
Airman Thomas R. Bender Jr., 420
Avenue E, Riverside, Pa., has com-
and lots of
inventry, bookkeeping
other involvements.
Miss Ranson’s older sister had a
pleted
basic
training
Lackland
at
AFB. Texas. He has been assigned
to Chanute AFB, Illinois, for training
weather service.
in
Mary Gifford received her master’s
pathology
from
degree in speech
Ohio University in December, 1908.
She is presently a speech therapist
I‘a.
scores.
Charles G.
burg,
school.
is
Mowery,
Blooms-
of
storekepeers
attending
He graduated from Blooms-
burg High School
1964
in
and from
BSC
He entered the service
in 1968.
on December 5, 1968. His address is
B445418 USN. Class 56902, U.S. Naval
Supply School. Bldg 381, U.S. Naval
Base, Newport, R. I. 02840
Second Lieutenant Willard F. Kelchner III, Beach Haven, Pa., has
completed operational readiness training at
Vandenberg AFB,
Calif.,
for
Minutemar.
Weapon System.
Lieutenant Kelchner is being assigned to Malmstrom AFB. Mont., for
duty with a unit of the Strategic Air
Command. He was commissioned
upon completion of Officer Training
School at Lackland AFB, Texas.
the
FORMER RSC: FACULTY
MEMBER KNOWN AS
HAVILAND LADY’
‘Tittle
business.”
Her experience
liked antiques.
was
nil
Something
in
“Ranson White” Haviland and
was having trouble replacing broken
set of
pieces. That’s all it took to give the
retired teacher her idea, and a busi-
nes was born.
Little did she dream that her noninvolvement enterprise would become
is now the largest private Haviland collection in the world. Nor did
she think she would be doing a mail
order business that extended around
the globe.
Starting with just a few pieces of
Haviland the collection now can be
counted in the thousands. She has
waist
wall-to-wall Haviland almost
what
high in her home.
She converted her carport into a
storage room, then built a room to the
back to her house.
The collection
spilled out to her garage and finally
took over a little house at the bacx
oi her property.
Haviland and Co.,
New York
City,
American,
day to the Orlando woman.
Every
day the mails are filled with requests
for pieces to match
specific
sets.
Miss Ranson uses Arlene Schleiger’s
four books on Haviland as a refeience, but they contain only 200 pat-
Miss Ethel A. Ranson, for many
years a valued member of the faculty
of the Bloomsburg State College, and
terns.
with numerous friends in this area,
attained international fame as
"The Haviland Lady” of Orlando,
Fla.
She now does an international
business in Haviland china with re-
PLAN FOR SEVEN NEW
BUILDINGS AT COLLEGE
has
gard
to
replacements
in sets
self owns the largest
tion of Haviland.
and her-
private collec-
She has been the subject of a number of interesting
and informative
articles.
The most recent was published in the Orlando, Fla., Sentinel,
with illustrations in color.
It was
written by Virginia Loog and a copy
was sent to us by Ed. E. Hippensteel,
Orlando, and a native of this section.
The article follows:
The legend of The Haviland Lady
has become a part of the fabric of
Orlando. It’s woven from bridge
club gatherings, parties,
from all
events over the past
have brought
women
15
years that
together.
When
broken, when a guest comments on a china pattern, discussion
centers on ‘‘The woman with all the
china” who can finish out a set or has
the replacement for a treasured broken saucer.
When Ethel A. Ranson retired 15
a dish
is
oi
refers people every
The first in a series of three planning conferences for seven new buildings which are to be constructed on
the campus
of
Bloomsburg State
College was held in the Alumni Room
at the college.
The seven projects include a classroom building, two residence halls
for women, two residence halls for
men, a dining room-kitchen, and a
maintenance building-garage.
Five of these structures are to be
located on the upper campus, formerly the Bloomsburg Country Club and
the other two, a classroom
building
and a dormitory for 300 women are
to be located on the lower campus.
The estimated construction cost is $9,738,600, according to Boyd F. Buckingham, Director of Development at
BSC.
The primary purpose of the preplanning
conference
was
to
gather
and discuss information regarding the
proposed site of each building and the
availabililty of necessary utilities.
Page eleven
PRESIDENT SPEAKS TO
ALUMNI, FACULTY
(Continued from front cover)
exists.
—
Fees collected from studFIFTH
ents shall be related in some ratio to
the appropriations made by the state,
and not increased from time to time
merely to make up for budget deficWe regret that even when
iencies.
legislators cannot seem to find the
to accomodate more students,
they still clamor for the admission of
certain individuals, especially sons or
daughters of their constituents.
In addition to looking forward with
money
hope for change,
We, Mrs. Andruss and I, are grateful for a community such as Bloomsburg which gave birth to the Literary Institute which became the
State Normal School, then a State
Teachers College, and most recently a State College. The iaith of the
citizens
of
this
community
in
the
development of the college as it became a state-wide institution, and
the patience with which they have
looked upon recent changes (even
those they have not fully understood), has required confidence and
a willingness to accept change at
its face value even though sometimes it has meant the taking of
private property and an increased
demand lor such public utilities and
services as water, sewage, and police protection.
We
are grateful for
those householders in the town
numbers of our
ever-increasing
student teachers, offering them an
opportunity to observe and participate in the actual teaching process
before they embark upon their car-
Bloomsburg who have accomodat-
ed students in their homes when
dormitory facilities have not been
available at the college. In many
cases, these homes have provided
an atmosphere for college living
which has been the most wholesome
possible.
We are grateful for
the businessmen of Bloomsburg who
have adjusted to the college market,
by changing their store hours, carrying articles to meet the students’
wants as well as those of the ordinary citizen, and showing a willing-
ness to sponsor community activities in which college students participate. In sum, we appreciate their
kind understanding ol the changes
in college policy.
are grateful for
the churches of Bloomsburg
who
have had to assume an additional
burden to accomodate students. In
some cases, this has meant that
when requests were made of Church
olficials, in terms of additional finances for personnel who work with
college students, the local churches
have set themselves to the task of
trying to meet these religious and
We
moral needs.
We
are grateful for
the surrounding
schools districts,
which have provided playing fields
inter-collegiate
contests
and
other athletic activities while these
facilities were being constructed at
the college, and
have welcomed
for
Page twelve
Temple University
Edward K. Allen ’63, M.S.
in
Edu-
in
Edu-
cation.
William
eers.
Keller
J.
’63,
M.S.
cation.
We
are grateful for
Trustees who have held the college
above party politics and personal
Almost forty in numpreference.
ber over the years they have been
affiliated with both political parties,
and have given unstintingly of their
time, money, and counsel. Support
Frank R. Harris ’64, M.Ed.
Stephen W. Hartin ’64, M.Ed.
Richard W. Burkett ’65, M.Ed.
Jacob E. Dailey
Doctor of Edu-
’52,
cation.
Kenneth L. Cook
’50,
Doctor of Edu-
’61,
Doctor of Edu-
cation.
Gensemer
Ira B.
ing policies which were subject to
scrutiny, they have been largely responsible for the longest continuous
administration in the history of public education in the Commonwealth
cation.
Pennsylvania.
The names of
Reg. S. Hemingway, Esq., Judge
Wm. Kreishsr, Mr. Fred Diehl, and
Mr. Wm. A. Lank, will be remembered as Presidents of the Board of
Trustees for the last three decades.
Lowell A. Tinner ’64, Master of
Education.
William A. Welliver ’58, Master of
Education.
Jonah Goobic ’58, Master of Edu-
of
A
and well-deserving tribute is due them, not only from an
outgoing President, but from the
whole college community.
special
James
H. Joy
’57,
Master
Paul H. Spahr
’59,
Master of Edu-
Edu-
of
cation.
cation.
cation.
George Gorda
’51,
Master
Edu-
of
cation.
Millersville State College
L. Ohl ’57, Master of
Thomas
Edu-
cation.
We
Lehigh University
are grateful for
faculty, past
and present, who have
served students, not only as instructors, but as mentors and counselors.
In time, some of our recent and
present faculty will rival the memories and names of Carver, Waller,
Sutliff, Hartline, Bakeless, Dennis,
Cope, and Albert.
all of
ol
ADVANCED DEGREES
We
are grateful for
college employees who have made
the campus and its facilities a sub-
favorable comment by all
those who visit our campus. Certainly, the names of Nevin Englehart and Tom Gorrey will be ever
green in the memories of those who
love grass and trees on our college
hilltop. Business
Managers Paul
Martin, and Chester Hausknecht
have piloted us through the shoals
between the two rocks of income and
expenditures without a wreck or
even a threat of breakers.
ject
of
We
are grateful for
State Superintendents interested in
State
State Normal Schools and
Colleges. The names of John Alexander Hull Keith, David Jewett
Francis
BuchWaller, Jr., and
mann Haas are recalled in awe, for
these men have served as leaders,
personal mentors, and examples to
many
We
of us.
many
of
Education.
Lee F. Higgins
whom were
stud-
dents in our own time. These are
the candles which we have lighted,
and now they shine to cheer us.
And we must make
special mention
of Alumni Association Presidents R.
Bruce Albert Elna H. Nelson, and
Howard Fenstemaker, for their love
and devotion to their Alma Mater
can be appreciated bul never fully
rewarded.
’65,
’55,
Doctor of
Master
Edu-
of
cation.
Pennsylvania State University
’35,
323
John
Street, Elizabeth, N. J., Doctor
of
Education.
Samuel R. Bashore, Milford Street,
Port Royal, Pa.
Anthony E. Conte
logy.
Robert
Cohen, 162 S. Pine Street,
Pa. (BS> MEd, counselor
J.
Hazleton,
education
Robert L. Foster, 11118 Fifth Avenue, Berwick, Pa.
L’ENVOI
my
“Come,
friends,
’Tis not too late to seek a
newer
world
Push
off,
and
sitting well in
smite
The sounding furrows; for
pose holds
To
order
my
pur-
beyond the sunset, and the
sail
baths
Of
the western stars, until
be that the gulfs will
all
may
It
I die.
wash
us down:
may
It
be we shall touch the Happy
Isles,
And see the great
we knew.
Tho’
are grateful for
Alumni,
Thomas E. Persing
much
and
We
is
w'hom
Achilles,
taken,
much
abides;
tho’
are not now' that strength which
in old
Moved
days
and
which we are, we
One equal temper of
Made weak by time
earth
heaven;
that
are:
heroic hearts,
and
fate,
but
strong in will
To
strive, to seek,
to yield."
to find,
and not
—Tennyson
TIIE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
From "THE
PASSING THRONG” Column
THE MORNING PRESS,
No alumni association is what
those in charge want it to be or.
in
most cases, what
it
should be
but most of them are progressing
toward that elusive goal and included in the latter category is the
friendly
graduate body of “the
College on the hill " — Bloomsburg
State College.
There
will
be hundreds and per-
haps even a couple of thousand
here for all or part of the weekend
to participate in
the ceremonies
either from the status of graduate
or husband, wife or offspring of a
diploma holder.
BSC
has had a graduate bod\
time but it hasn't been
so many years since that organization was just one that went through
the motions.
lor a long
A number
withered
Great
Depression of the thirties but it
was in that period that tin
of
things
and many died during the
bloomsburg State Alumni Association actually came alive and started to go some place.
Up to that time alumni day was
one of those occasions when the
graduates who cared to come back
to the school, they met in the auditorium, elected officers and didn’t
do a thing from that time until
they met on the hill the Saturday
prior to
commencement
of the fol-
lowing year.
The fellow who got
body going was the
Albert.
He
was
the graduate
late R.
a
Bruce
dedicated
of
1969
April 28,
Bloomsburger and son of one of
“Old
institution’s
beloved
the
Guard” — Prof. Charles H. Albert.
Things were going reasonably
vears has been the shifting of the
alumni festivities of the spring
from the Saturday prior to com-
when the centennial of the institution came along in 1939. Bruce
May. Considering the time
well
saw an opportunity for the graduates to do something concrete. Up
to that time there had been some
funds contributed to the alumni
student loan fund. Bruce believed
that the centennial was the time to
build that fund to a point win re
it had real substance.
A
goal was set and the
was on. By and large it was
Bruce
a one-man promotion but
stuck to it and to the total raised,
while not up to his expectations,
was still substantial and gave the
solicita-
tion
association reason for being.
The organization has been growing in activity ever since. The late
Dr. E. H. Nelson, one of the most
dynamic and popular
grads and
teachers of the school, followed
Albert as the president. “Doe’ had
lots of ideas and the ability to make
them
click.
dent of the
Montour County
Schools, long a trustee at BSC and
always a loval alumnus, took over.
He relinquished the post for reasons of health after a successful
tenure and the torch was taken up
F.
Fenstemaker who
has been setting a brisk pace since
One
for
many
to late April
or early
it takes
to adjust, this shift
more than a
caused
We
didn’t
notice any drop in attendance the
fu st year the new date was operative and chances are good that it
will lead to a real build up in attendance.
Certainly the potential
little
ripple.
is there.
Along with the change of
has
date
come
the establishment of the
school’s loyalty fund.
In this BSC
is not a pioneer.
Frankly it is
copying from other institutions in
the conference. The returns have
been good but nothing sensational.
have a long w^ay to go to get
up to the pace set by some other
State Colleges and a much greater
distance to travel to get these annual contributions to where they
should be. But the move is toward
that point.
We
By the way,
fund which got
that
scholarship
to respectable size
the time of the centennial, is now
invested and the earnings go to
scholarships. In more recent years
Miss Mary McNineh gave to the
association a huge sum that was
to be used for loans, and only for
loans.
This has been more than
adequate to take care of loan
demands in this era when there is
money available on that basis from
federal and state governments.
at
Upon Dr. Nelson’s death, Fred
W. Diehl, now retired superinten-
by Howard
mencement
of the
changes of
recent
—Edward
F.
Schuyler
’24
Entered As Second Class Matter
August 8, 1941, at the Post
Office at Bloomsburg, Pa.
Under the Act of March 3, 1879
THE LOYALTY FUND - THIRD YEAR
The figures below show the amounts of the contributions made in the
third year of the Loyalty Fund, up to April 8, 1959, when the copy was submitted to the printer.
to express our thanks to all those who have supported
that those who have done not so will send us a contribution
Once more we wish
the fund.
soon.
We hope
An Alumni
for
its
Association that
fails to
support
its
Alma Mater has no
reason
existence.
The classes ending in 0 and 5 will have their reunions next Alumni Day. The
success of your reunion will be dependent upon the enthusiasm and the efforts
of someone who is able and willing to carry the ball.
There will be a new President of the College next year.
substantial evidence of the fact that we ar behind him.
Class
1896
1897
1898
]900
1901
1902
1903
1904
1905
1906
1906
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
Amt.
No. of Cont.
1
3
3
3
2
3
2
5
5
5
11
4
9
8
10
9
14
6
6
9
12
14
34
14
11
No. of Cont.
Class
10.00
10.00
35.00
14.00
22.00
7.00
17.00
50.00
35.00
32.00
32.00
64.00
23.00
158.00
27.00
94.00
62.00
153.00
138.00
42.00
32.00
103.00
75.00
244.00
187.00
65.00
1
10
17
21
12
1922
1923
1924
1925
1926
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1946
1947
Amt.
59.00
86.00
200.00
82.00
2.00
2.00
65.00
94.00
168.00
84.50
62.00
220.00
47.00
83.00
126.00
55.00
99.00
97.00
80.00
25.00
71.50
139.00
337.00
23.00
5.00
54.50
1
1
9
17
30
13
15
15
8
10
7
7
9
13
14
4
7
18
7
4
1
6
Let us give him
Class
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
15
17
12
10
9
13
12
13
17
29
22
21
21
17
39
31
47
66
30
3
Others
TO BE DETACHED, FILLED OUT, AND RETURNED
Signature
Name
while
in
college
Address
(street)
Zip Code
(town)
II
above address
is
new cheek
here
Q
Amount
Year of graduation
_
Mail cheeks to Alumni Office, Box 31. B.S.C.
To
insure tax deductions,
B. S.
C.
make cheeks payable
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
No. of Cont.
to
3
Amt.
102.50
108.13
175.00
61.00
39.50
100.00
58.00
66.50
184.50
170.00
173.00
177.60
89.00
388.50
225.00
154.00
231.00
276.00
231.00
9.00
112.00
Almost a century and a half cf service in the field of education is represented by the above faculty members of
Blcomsfcurg State College, all of whom are rearing this year. Dr. Andruss, President of Bloomsburg State Coliege,
has been associated with the College for the past 39 years; (L-R> Miss Mary Macdonald, Assistant Dean of Women
and a member of the counselling staff at B.S.C. joined the faculty 20 years ago. Mrs. Elizabeth Williams, Assistant
Dean cf Women, has been associated w'ith B.S.C. for the past 17 years. Miss Beatrice Mettler, Assistant Professor of
Health and Physical Education, has been at B.S.C. for the past 30 years.
NEW
PRESIDENT APPOINTED
Robert J. Nossen, Vice-President of Academic Affairs, State UniCollege, Fredonia, New York, has been named President of the
Bloomsburg State College, to succeed Dr. Harvey A. Andruss, who has
held the office for the past thirty years.
Dr.
versity
Announcement of the appointment was made after the printing of this
The Quarterly had been completed, with the exception of this page.
The December issue will feature the story of Dr. Nossen’s background, as no
details were available at the time this was written.
issue of
The members of the Alumni Association salute the retiring President, Dr.
Harvey A. Andruss, and thank him for a job well done. Your Alumni President
was a member of the faculty when Harvev Andruss came to Bloomsburg to set
up the newly created Division of Business Education. We cannot forget the
days of World War II, when three Navy programs were initiated, nor the days
after the war when, for a short time, there were 153 students on the campus.
Since that time, the growth of the College has been phenomenal. Not only has
there been enormous growth in the student body and the faculty, but there has
also been a great broadening of the educational facilities of the College.
Ten
new buildings have been erected, and three more are now under construction.
President Andruss has shown a great capacity for seeing future trends, and
being prepared to meet those trends when they materialized. Therefore
BSC as it is today stands as a lasting memorial to a great administrator.
for
To
new
we
extend our heartiest congratulations
No man would accept this
office without being conscious of the tremendous challenge that faces him. He
will need the support of the student body, the faculty, the general public and
last but not least, the Alumni.
Dr. Nossen, the
and best wishes
President,
for a successful administration.
We suggest that graduates of BSC write personal letters to Dr. Nossen, extending their congratulations and their pledges of support.
AYE ATQUE VALE!
518 Degrees Are
received degrees
State College at
commencement exercises held at the
grandstand at the Bloomsburg FailGrounds Sunday afternoon. May 25.
Of those twenty-three graduate students received Masters Degrees and
the others Bachelor Dedgrees.
This is the first time the exercises
have ever been held at the Fair
Grounds. The College now has fine
facilities on the campus at Haas auditorium but even that is not large
A
total
from
of 518
Bloomsburg
enough
to
to attend.
5.000.
accomodate all who wish
The grandstand seats over
Dr. Harvey A. Andruss,
president
of the college, delivered the charge
to the class at Commencement, and
the Rev. Kermit L. Lloyd, pastor of
Paul’s Episcopal Church, delivered the message for the morning serSt.
vice.
Baccalaureate Program
for the baccalaureate
The program
service: Processional, “Now Thank
We All Our God.” Kee; invocation,
the Rev. Bernard H. Petrina, Newman campus chaplain at BSC; hymn.
“Faith of Our Fathers,” Henry-Walton; Scripture, Dr. Andruss; baccal-
aureate address “We Live With Our
Eyes Open.” the Rev. Fr. Lloyd;
“God Is My Shepherd,” Dvorak,
benediction,
Beth Powlus, soprano;
Rev. Bernard H. Petrina; recessional. Psalm XIX, Marcello.
solo,
Commencement
The commencement opened with the
processional, “March,” Harris, and
the invocation by President Andruss.
Elton Hunsinger, dean of students,
presented the senior honor list. Dr.
John A. Hoch, dean of instruction,
presented the candidates for the Bachelor of Science in Education Degree.
Dr. Andruss conferred the degrees.
The presentation of diplomas was by
Dr.
Emory W.
Rarig, business educaDr. Royce O. Johnson, elementary education; Dr. C. Stuart
Edwards, secondary education and Dr.
William L. Jones, special education.
Dr. Hoch presented the candidates
for Degree of Bachelor of Arts and
Dr. Andruss conferred them. Diplomas were presented by Dr. Alden
Bucher. Dr. Andruss then delivered
his charge to the graduates.
The presentation of candidates for
the degree of Master of Education
was by Dr. Charles H. Carlson, director of graduate studies.
Dr. Andruss conferred
the
degrees
and
awarded the diplomas. The assembly
sang “Alma Mater” and the recestion;
sional
Awarded
was “Fugue
in
C Major.”
Stephen Wallace directed the music;
William K. Decker was the organist
and James B.
Creasy,
honorary
marshal at both programs.
Fourteen seniors were
graduated
with academic honors. Thirteen were
awarded BSC Service Keys, the high-
SEPTEMBER.
1969
est
the college comTwenty-one were presented
award given by
munity.
certificates indicating their inclusion
Who’s Who in American Colleges
and Universities, and nine lifetime
athletic passes were given to senior
athletes who had participated in a
Dr. Andruss
Honored
in
varsity sport for four years.
Graduating with honors were: Sumlaude (average ranging between 3.75 and 4.00) David Feather,
Fullerton, B.S. in Business Education:
ma cum
Magna cum
—
laude
(3.60-3.74)
—Ann
M. Hutz, Wilkes-Barre, B.S. in Secondary Education; Dolores
Slavik,
West Hazleton, B.S. in elementary
education;
John
Hamblin,
Swiftwater, B.S. in secondary education;
Charles E. Hestor, Trevorton, B.S. in
secondary education; Esther Zabitz,
Avenue E. Riverside. B.S. in secondary education, and Leland Smeltz,
Lewisburg R. D. 1, Bachelor of Arts
in Arts and Sciences.
The Cum laude (3.50-3.59) graduates were: Anna Krushinski,
Shamokin. B.S. in secondary education; Darlene Yocum, Catawissa R. D. 3, B.S.
in elementary education;
Rebecca
Gilliam, Danville, B.S. in elementary
education; Kathy Hippenstiel, Bloomsburg, B.S. in elementary education;
Elaine Mueller, Bloomsburg R. D. 4,
B.S. in secondary education;
Linda
Hellerman, Perkasie, B.S. in secondary education, and Elaine Zalonis,
Bloomsburg, B.S. in secondary education.
NINETY-FIVE PERCENT
ARE TEACHING
By Legislators
Further evidence of the high esteem
w'hich Dr. Harvey A. Andruss is
held by his colleagues was displayed
when present and former members of
the administrative staff honored the
retiring
President
Bloomsburg
of
State College with a dinner at Cox’s
Restaurant, Elysburg.
In addition to a gift presented to
Dr. and Mrs. Andruss by the adminin
istrative staff, special tributes were
also paid by two other guests, Kent
Shelhamer,
Representative to the
General Assembly from the 109th Dis-
and Preston B. Davis, Senator
from the 27th District.
Dr. John Hoch, dean of instruction,
presided as master of ceremonies and
presented the gift to Dr. and Mrs.
Andruss. Rep. Shelhamer presented
Dr. Andruss with a citation from the
House of Representatives of the Commonwealth while Senator Davis expressed the appreciation of Dr. Antrict
russ’ 39 years of education service to
the Commonwealth by presenting a
Resolution from the Senate.
Boyd Buckingham, director of development at the college, introduced
Rep. Shelhamer and Senator Davis.
In addition to Hoch and Buckingham
the planning committee consisted of
Paul Martin, business manager, and
George Birney, personnel director.
Citation
A recent survey reveals that 95
per cent of the 1968 January, May and
August teacher education graduates
WHEREAS,
Doctor Harvey A. Andruss, the President of Bloomsburg State College for the past
thirty years, and a man who has
spent forty-eight years of his life
in the field of education is retiring
BSC
available for teaching, have
in that profession, according to Thomas A. Davies, acting
director of placement at the College.
of
been employed
this year;
The total number of graduates of all
divisions for 1968 was 709.
There
were 654 graduates enrolled in education curriculums, 51 in
arts
and
sciences, and 4 in public school nursing and dental hygiene. Of the 654
who were enrolled in teacher education, 59 were not available for teaching duties due to beginning graduate
studies, entering the armed forces, or
being married; 30 graduates entered
into business or other occupations.
Of the 565 graduates who are teaching, 442 or 74 per cent are teaching
in Pennsylvania and 127 or 21 per cent
in other states.
The
salaries
of
those
Doctor Andruss, an
author of several widely read textbooks, a man who holds Master
of Business Administration
and
Doctor of Education degree, and a
man who was a consultant and
department head at the First
Am-
erican Army University in England in 1945, has served the youth
of Pennsylvania
years
for
NOW THEREFORE.
so
many
The House
Representatives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, joins
with the hundreds of others who
of
teaching in
Pennsylvania average $5,608; for those
out-of-state the average salary is $6,189.
This gives a $5,898 average salary for all the graduates teaching
and a difference of $581 for those
teaching out-of-state over the Pennsylvania teachers.
and
WHEREAS,
Published quarterly by the Alumni Association of the Bloomsburg State College,
Bloomsburg, Penna. 17815.
Second-Class
Postage Paid at Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania.
Send P.O.D. Form No. 3579 to the AL-
—
UMNI OFFICE, BLOOMSBURG STATE
COLLEGE, BLOOMSBURG, PA. 17815
Page one
are bidding farewell
to
Doctor An-
man whose
educational
abilities have been recognized by
druss,
a
his election to Phi Beta Kappa,
his fraternal membership having
recognized by his being a thirtythird degree Mason, and his civic
endeavors having been recognized
by his election as a director of
the Bloomsburg Hospital and the
Bloomsburg Public Library, And
further directs that a copy of this
Doctor
citation be delivered to
Harvey A. Andruss.
Sponsored by:
Kent D. Shelhamer;
Signed by:
Herbert Fineman,
Speaker of the House of Representatives
Resolution
In the Senate, Harrisburg, July 15,
1969.
This year marks the end of an outDr.
standing education career for
Harvey A. Andruss who is retiring
after having served as President of
Bloomsburg State College for the past
thirty years.
Dr. Andruss, an author of sevreal
widely read textbooks in the field of
business law and accounting has spent
the last forty-eight years of his life
He has been awarded
in education.
degrees from the University of Oklahoma, Northwestern University and
Penn State. In 1921 he became a principal of an Oklahoma high school. In
1930 he began his career at Bloomsburg and in 1939 he was elected to the
presidency.
We here in the Senate are proud of
men like Dr. Andruss. He has devoted his life to the teaching of our youth
and rightly deserves recognition.
We in Pennsylvania are so much
better off because of this great educator; therefore be it
RESOLVED, That the Senate of
Pennsylvania pause in its deliberaDr.
tions to pay its respect to
Harvey A. Andruss for a job well
done and to wish him all of the
happiness and success possible in
his retirement years; and be it
further
RESOLVED, That a copy of this
resolution be presented to Dr. Andruss upon his retirement as President of Bloomsburg State College.
I certify that the foregoing is a
true and correct copy of a Senate
Resolution introduced by Senators
Preston B. Davis and Zehnder H.
Confair and adopted by the Senate of Pennsylvania.
(Signed)
Mark Gruell, Jr., secretary, Senate of Pennsylvania.
George W. Heffner, Pottsville, has
been appointed to the Board of Trustees at BSC. He succeeds Judge Harold L. Paul, who has resigned.
Mr.
Heffner’s term will expire in 1973.
Mail your check today
Loyalty Fund.
Page two
to the
BSC
FACULTY MEMBERS
RETIRE
Two members of the Bloomsburg
State College faculty, Miss Mary Macdonald and Miss Beatrice Mettler, retired as of June 1.
Miss Macdonald
A native of Berwick, Miss MacdonArts
ald received her Bachelor of
degree with a major in Latin and a
minor in French from the University
cf Michigan. She began her teaching
career at Harter High School, Plymouth Township following her graduation from the University of Michigan. Two years later, she joined the
teaching staff at Berwick High School
In
where she remained nine years.
1939 she joined the faculty of Winthrop College, S. C., as a head resident
on the dean of women’s staff.
During World War n she was a
member
of the first class of
women
at
Smith College to become commissioned officers in the United States Navy.
Miss Macdonald held the rank of lieutenant junior grade and remained in
the service for 40 months.
In 1946 she went to Barnard College,
Columbia University, as a director of
resident halls with
full
faculty status.
Three years later Miss Macdonald became associated with Bloomsburg
State College where she has been an
assistant dean of women and a counselor, and has also taught English.
She has headed freshmen orientation
and Parents’ Day committees and is
a past president of the Faculty Asso-
Her professional memberciation.
ships include National Association of
Women Deans and Counselors, Pennsylvania Association of Women Deans
and Counselors, and Pennsylvania
State Education Association.
Miss Mettler
Miss Mettler was born in Elysburg,
and received her Bachelor of Arts
degree in biological sciences at Buckof
nell University and her Master
Science degree from the University
of Pennsylvania in health and human
She took additional gradrelations.
uate work at the University of Pittsburgh and the University of Chicago
and is a graduate of The Johns Hopkins School of Nursing, Baltimore.
Prior to her joining the faculty of
BSC in 1939, she was educational director at the Bloomsburg Hospital for
one year and was also associated
with The Johns Hopkins Hospital in
Baltimore. At one time, she served
as a resident director nurse and a coordinator of health at the college and
for many years has been an assistant
professor in health and physical education.
Miss Mettler holds memberships in
Alpha Chi Omega, Order of Eastern
Star, Bloomsburg Branch of the AmUniversity
Association
of
the Bloomsburg Club of the
Business and Professional Women and
the Pennsylvania State Education Aserican
Women,
sociation.
Miss Macdonald resides in Berwick
and Miss Mettler is living at the Mettler
farm, Elysburg.
Ifou
^JltGSth
(Contributions to Loyalty Fund to
July 1, not previously reported.)
1900— Mrs.
(In
Wenner,
C.
from Weatherly
William
Memoriam:
gifts
Area Teachers Association,
Univer-
of Pennsylvania Dental School,
1903—
Rural Electric Assn.
Northwestern
Inc.)
1905—
1902 Lourissa V. Leighow.
1909—Mrs. S. K. Worman.
1904 Mrs. David Sloan.
Blanche M. Grimes.
1908
1911—Florence G. Beddall.
Mrs. Clinton Herring, Mrs. H.
Brown, Mrs. G. G. Reichley.
A. 1912—
1910 Maurice E. Hauck, Mrs. S. C.
Pa1913—
rnpntpr
Mrs. P. H. Monaghan, Mrs.
Anna Kocher, Mrs. Alice D. Beavers.
William H. Davis, Mrs. Lena
Leitzel Streamer, Laura Williams.
Mrs. Fred Patten, Nellie M.
sity
Denison.
1914 J. Howard Deily, Gen. Idwal
Edwards, Mrs. J. A. Gossman,
H.1916—
Mrs. A. W. Sturman, Glennes H. Rickert, Mrs. Emily M. Jamison, Mrs. G.
Hassert, Mrs. George Lawton, J.
Lee
1917—
memoriam),
(in
Madeline Henrie
Mrs. Bess Maddy.
1918—Mrs. Frank S. Hutchison
1915
Mrs. Edson A. Potter, Mrs.
Jennie R. Morris, Frank S. Hutchison,
Earl B. Hartman, Mrs. Lela D. Hemingway, Lorena E. Thomas.
Mrs. Willard J. Davis, Mrs.
John W.
Alice T. Gardner, Mrs.
O’Toole.
Mrs. Robert D. Berninger,
Mrs. T. Edison Fischer.
1919 Edwina Evans, Mrs. Monroe
Eves, Mrs. James J. Martin, Mrs.
M. Drumm, Frances E. Kinner,
Ruth
1920—
Mi’s. William C. Kistler, Mrs. Mary
O.
Barklow, Marjorie Crook, Olive
Robinson, Mrs. Charles V. Miller,
Class Treasurer, Ann Baum, KatherGriffith,
ine Dougherty, Mildred E.
Mrs. Harry Hartman, Mrs. Harry ItW.
ter, Linda Kreidler, Mrs. John
1923—Mrs. B. C. North, Mrs. C. F.
Moore,
Mrs.
Taylor, Mrs. Marie Tumbach,
J. F. Laubach, Rhoda L. Crouse.
Mrs. Benjamin L. Eshleman,
Mrs. Laura C. Peters.
Sr.,
1921 Mrs. Allen L. Beaver,
Mrs. Josephine A. Moyer, Mrs. Hester H. Aten, Mrs. O. M. Girton, Mrs.
Lillie E. Moser, T. Edison Fischer,
Miller I. Buck.
1922 Esther J. Saxe, Mrs. E. S.
Weed, George B. Rhawn.
Mrs.
Mrs. Russell Padgett,
Fred W. Nicholls, Mrs. M. H. Kohler,
Stephen A. Lerda, Mrs. W. Paul
Blancher.
Mrs.
1924 Kathryn J. Dechant,
Rutter Keller, Miriam Lawson, Mrs.
John C. Brumbach, Class Treasurer,
Mary F. Amesbury, Mis. Alex E.
Armstrong, Mrs. Kenneth Conway,
Mrs. Alice M. Davies, Mrs. Mary O.
Earley, Mrs. Laura V. Eberhard. AgMrs.
nes Fahey, William M. Hess,
Catherine Huttenstine, Mrs. Teressa
TIIE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Jones.
Johnson. Mrs. Lawrence
R.
Elizabeth
Krolikowski,
Helen
Krusinski, Louis Lerda, Mrs. R. W.
McLaughlin, Mrs. Dorothy P. Marsh,
Mrs. Maude S. Meyer. Mrs. Ruth M.
Miles, Mrs. Margaret S. Morris, Mrs.
Consuelo Noz. Mrs. Ross Osborn, William H. Partridge, Mrs. H. C. Pearson, Mrs. Sheppard Pierce, Mrs. Bertelle Richards, Mrs. Maurice K. Ridall, Gertrude M. Roberts. Mrs. Adda
S.
M. Salesbury, Edward F. Schuyler,
1925—
Watters, Mrs. Sarah D. WhitEva
lock, Mi's. E. D. Williams, Adeline
1927—
E. Swineford.
Mrs. James P. Bussberg.
1929—
1926 Mrs. Hugh Campbell.
Doris G. Palsgrove.
Mrs. Edna M. Long. Sterling
Strausser. Mrs. Harold T. Davis.
Mrs.
Mrs. Hilton Anthony.
Walter Covert. Jack B. Fortner, Roy
D. Haring, Mrs. Beatrice Harrington,
Mrs.
John
Mrs. Rollin Moorhead,
Morton, Mrs. John E. Reese, Mrs.
Theron Rhinard. Mrs. Dale W. Sitler.
Mrs. George Thomas. Mrs. Ellis M.
Turner, Oliver S. Williams, Esther F.
Wright. Class Treasurer, Mrs. R. J.
Goodwin, George A. Matthews, Mrs.
Johns.
Franklin Bacon. Mrs. Carl
Mrs. Donald Wallace, Mrs. Grace K.
Hoover, Mi's. Margaret T. Beidleman.
Mrs. Nelson Stauffer, Mrs. Doris
Stewart. Mrs. Mary A. Harry, Mrs.
Harlen Leitzel, Mrs. C. H. Carls, Jane
B. Evans, Mrs. Freda Griffiths. Mrs.
Alice V. Smalser, Mrs.
Paul
J.
Mrs.
Bruch, Mi's. David L. Cooke,
Allan F. Mensinger, Mrs. Paul Rar1928
ich, Mrs. Lucille M. DeVoe,
Mrs.
Otis Adams.
1930 Mrs. Dorothy Foote Pililblad.
Edna Novak. William B. Yeager,
Jr.,
Richard O. Frymire. Mrs. William J.
Jones, Mi's. Paul H. Kepner.
1931 Minnie Olshefsky, Mrs. Sheldon A. MacDougall.
1932 Mrs.
Mildred
Hinebaugh.
Mrs. Ralph Krause.
1933 Lois Lawson. Mrs. Paul Turek.
1934 Mi's. Edward Cobleigh,
Edward F. Doyle, Mrs. Samuel W.
Mack, John W. Partridge, Mrs. Wm.
A. McDermott. Mrs. John S. Coldren.
Jr., Mrs. Arnold Embleton, Mrs. Roy
D. Masser, Nevin W. Rovenolt, Mrs.
John Troy, Mrs. Ivan L. Smith.
1935 Gerald C. Harter, Clarence S.
Slater.
1936 Mrs. N. W. Moreth.
1937 Josephine M. Magee,
E. Palsgrove,
Mary
Mary
J.
T. Smith, Sara E. Tubbs, Class Treasurer.
1940 Mildred A. Bonin, Mrs. Fay
G. Clark.
1941 Mi's.
George
Samuel F. Worman.
1943 Mrs. Irene
M.
Virginia M. Shambach.
1944 Joyce E. Hay.
1945
Mrs.
Douglas
Horvath,
J.
Smoczynski,
G.
Jackson,
Nancy Berlew Lyhne.
1946 Mrs. F. A. Ungermann, Mrs.
Thomas Bowman,
SEPTEMBER,
1969
1948 Stanley C. Krzywicki. George
1949—
E. Menarech.
George M. Dotzel, Jr., John
G. McNelis, John H. Reichard, Mrs.
E. C. Barrett, Jr., W. Eldon Berry.
Mario L. Berlanda, Mrs. George R.
Myers, John J. O’Donnell, Carson
Whitesell,
Thomas E. Bowman, Ken-
Mrs.
Billie
D.
WEDDINGS
1961
Patricia J. Bernard!, Pittston, Pa.,
and Nino J. Gaiomini, Taylor, Pa.
Now living at 218 Grace Street, Old
Forge, Pa. 18518
neth E. Wire.
1950 Mrs.
Richard
Ammerman,
1952—F. Pachalec, Vincent W. Karis,
Henry
Leonard B. Gricoski.
1951 Mike Masanovich.
Mrs. Nancy Lychos.
1954 Edna R. Keim, Mrs. Frank
Andrews, Mrs. Benjamin J. Lewis,
Mrs. Thomas M. O’Neill, Mrs. Gloria
Peiffer.
1955 Mrs. Joseph P. Feifer, Mrs.
1958—
Paul
L. Dunkelberger, Mrs. Vincent
W. Karis.
1956 Mrs.
Judith
S.
Schauffeli,
Richard A. Bittner, Paul R. Peiffer,
Michael Homick, Mrs. Walter Casper.
Mrs. C. A. Rebernik.
1962—
1959 Charles R. Hoyt. Mrs. James
L. Baumgardner, Mrs. Fred P. Delia.
1960 James R. McCarthy.
1961 Anthony A. Alastick,
Mrs
Adda C. Smith. Mrs. J. W. Lor ah.
Frank W. Deaner.
David W. Barbour.
1963 Richard C. Scorese. Mr. and
Mrs. Richard D. Rhoads, Robert C.
Houck. Jessie
Reppy, Mrs. Bernard Elliott.
1964 William R. Helgens, Sr., Mrs.
Richard C. Scorese, John H. Brausch,
Jr., Mrs. Carl L. Millard. Virginia C.
Hesel, Mrs. Bernard J. Marchilonis,
1967— P. Miller, Sandra C. ThornKenneth
ton, Mrs. Dieter Rosch, Mrs. Nancy
B. Erway, Mrs. Darlene O. Weber.
1965 Philip M. Thomas, Mrs. Howard T. Watson, Jr.. Randal F. Romig.
1966 Mrs. Marilynne Welsh, John
S. Mulka, Gary L. Russell, Wayne C.
Smitz, Mrs. Philip A. Smith,
Mrs.
Robert J. Donahue.
Robert O. Samsel, Mrs. Leatrice S. Becker, Marjorie A. Milani,
James M. Reilly, William F. Skinner,
Mrs. Willard E. Hoffman, Lt. Thomas
S. Fowles, Lorraine M. Savidge.
1968 Dona M. Houck, Barbara A.
Leta, Linda L. Fryling, Carole
A.
Marone, Ellyn S. Torregian, Diane
W. Dawson, Kathleen A. Elliott, Victoria A.
Mikell,
Mrs. Donna L.
Knouse, Robert T. Moran, Jr.
M
1964
Eugene Steinruck, Bloomsburg and
The
Wilma Kitchen, Bloomsburg.
bride has been a medical secretary
Mr.
at Geisinger Medical Center.
Steinruck, who has received his M.A.
at Bucknell, is teacher of physics at
Gettysburg Senior High School.
1965
Arlan LaRue Baer and Gwendolyn
Lea Borner. Mr. Baer teaches in the
Hughesville School system.
Donna Maria Barbaro and David
Andrew McRae. The bride has been
working on her dissertation for Ph.D.
Sociology at the University of Pittsburgh. Mr. McRae is Sales Representative for the Wells Jewelry, Inc.
Address: Antetam Apts., 103- A Carsonia Avenue, Reading, Pa. 19606
in
1968
Bonita D. Yoder and Jerome Bassion.
Mrs. Bassion teaches at Lawrence Junior High School in Chatsworth, Calilf. Address: 15900 Bryant
St., Sepulveda, Calif.
Michael J. Cromley and Linda KenMr. Cromley is employed as a
case worker in the social service department of Danville State Hospital.
Address: 20 W. Market St., Danville,
Pa.
and
Henry Edward Bernatonis
Phyllis Ruth Meeker.
The couple
will reside in Shenandoah, where Mr.
Bernatonis is teaching.
vin.
1969
Noreen Mensch, Bangor, Pa., and
Mr.
John W. McKinery, Pottstown.
McKinery is a senior at BSC and
Mrs. McKinery is employed by the
Vocational
Columbia-Montour Area
Technical School.
Ann Buiocchi, Dickson
and John M. Hutchings, Allentown. Both are employed as elementary teachers in the Bristol Township
Patricia
City,
School District, Levittown.
BSC FACULTY HONORS
PRES.
AND
MRS. ANDRUSS
The BSC Faculty Association paid
tribute to Dr. Harvey A.
Andruss,
president, on his coming retirement
at a banquet held at the college commons. Gifts of a color television, silver bowl and illuminated testimonial
by Dr. Edson Drake, president of the
association, were presented to
Dr.
and Mrs. Andruss.
Dr. Andruss addressed the group
and George A. Turner was introduced
new
Association
president.
Musical entertainment was by
the
Madrigal Singers.
as the
Ann
and
Mr.
Kishbaugh will teach biology in Kenai
Borough School District, Kenai Pen
Borough School District, Kenai Peninsula, Alaska.
The bride will graduate from BSC in January.
Sally
Reisler.
Frank Brink, Mr. and Mrs.
Ray O. Zimmerman, Leonard E. Barlik, Harriet L. Kocher, Sister M. Laurentia (Helen Mayan), Mrs. James
1939
Pugh.
Duncan
J.
Scheirer, Allentown,
Kishbaugh, Berwick.
Charlotte Elaine Tourney and Lt.
Gerald Patrick McBride ’67.
Mrs.
McBride teaches at Mt. Pleasant
School District, Wilmington, Del. and
her husband is presently stationed at
Fort Bragg, N. C.
Bette L. Hari'ison, Benton,
and
Charles C. Ryan ’68, Danville.
The
bride is teaching in Berwick and the
groom is a teacher in Central Luz-
Page three
erne School District.
Joan Ann Molnar and James E.
Laubach. Mrs. Laubach will teach
in Newark Valley School in September. Her husband is a programmer
IBM. Address: 118 Franklin
Owego, N. Y.
for
St.,
1939.
1900—
1892 Grace Blair (Mrs. Charles N.
Kerstetter), Milton Pa. Died October
3,
1968.
Mrs. Leona Wagner Seesholtz,
Stillwater, Pa. Died April 7, 1969.
1911 Lillie G. Sheard (Mrs. L. A.
Died
Newgard), Boyds Mills, Pa.
November 16, 1968.
1913 Hazel Hughes
(Mrs. James
—
—
1967.
Barton). Died December
1915 — Fred W. Faux, Shamokin,
4,
—
—
—
Pa.
1895 Olive E. Meyer, Drums, Pa.
1899 Martha E. Dodson, Berwick.
1902 Essene Hollopeter (Mrs. Ernest Martin), Kingston, Pa.
1902 Sallie Ormsby.
1907 Maree C. Higgins, Harrisburg,
—
Pa.
1907 — Reba
Lerch,
Jr.,)
Died April
5,
1969.
burg, Pa.
1900 Anna Redeker (Mrs. Percival
Erisman), Washington, D. C.
1917 Margaret
Williams
Davis,
—
Nanticoke, Pa.
Alice Feidt, Millersburg, Pa.
1900
1901
Orabel Mengel (Mrs. Samuel
Rarick), Schuylkill Haven, Pa.
1891 Carrie Meyer (Mrs.
Joseph
—
Bruna).
1894—Bertha L.
John J. Kelly).
Johnston
(Mrs.
Euphemia Monroe.
1929— Edith Fay Blud (Mrs. D. H.
1894
Saoni).
1929—Dorothy C. Colley (Mrs.
H.
Brewington), Benton, Pa.
1893—
1929 Jane P. Evans, West Pittston,
Pa.
1929 Julia Kelechaw, Mrs. Nestor
—
—
Schlanta).
1929 — Ruth A. Scanlon.
1929— Mary G. Ferry.
1906— Maude Boust Shawfield,
Har-
risburg, Pa.
1895 Mary H. Everett (Mrs. E. F.
Carpenter)
— John
Brace.
W. Williams (Mrs.
Richard Roderick).
1895 Bina Malloy (Mrs. Edward J.
1897
S.
Eleanor
—
Ryan
)
1895—Claude M. Stauffer, Howard
1894
1906
Mary Monaghan.
— Florence
Erdley,
New
Ber-
Pa.
Instructor of Nurses, Protestant Episcopal Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa.
1931 Marie Foust Merrell, Drexel
lin,
—
Pa.
Died January 2,
1969.
Taught 30 years.
1958— George Vivacqua, Levittown.
Hill,
Coordinator for Special Services at
the Witherspoon Elementary School,
age four
Director of the Bloomsburg Water Company; a member and
former Director of the Associated Petroleum Industries of Pennsylvania; a
member and former Director of the
Jobbers
Association
National * Oil
which recently honored him for forty
years of service.
An active participant in a variety
of civic endeavors, he was serving at
the time of his death, as Director of
Bloomsburg Public Library, as
a long-time trustee and currently a
Ruling Elder of the Bloomsburg Presbyterian Church, as a life member of
the Board of Directors of the Columbia County Cancer Society, and as a
the
member of the Bloomsburg Historical Society.
He was a past preHospital
sident of the Bloomsburg
Board. He served as Secretary of
the Board of Trustees of Bloomsburg
State College from 1940 to 1944.
veteran of two years’ service with
A
Army during World
he was past Commander-inChief, Valley of Bloomsburg, American Legion.
the United States
War
I,
outstanding leader and member
Masonic organizations, Mr. Hidlay
was a past Commander-in-Chief of
presently
Caldwell Consistory and
Chairman of its Board of Trustees.
On September 25, 1946, he was made
an honorary member of the Supreme
An
of
Council, 33rd Degree. He was affiliated with Washington Lodge No 265,
Chapter,
F. and A.M., Royal Arch
Crusade Commandery No. 12, the
Irem Temple Shrine, and the Craftsman Club. He was a member and
Past Sovereign of Orient Conclave,
Red Cross of Constantine. He was for
many years a member of the B.P.O.
E. and Loyal Order of Moose.
He is survived by his wife, Eugenia
Terwilliger Hidley; a son, William C.
Hidlay, Jr., of Bloomsburg; a daughter, Carvel Hidlay Moore, of New
York City; and five grandsons.
Mr. Hidlay received his education
in the Bloomsburg schools, was a
graduate of the Bloomsburg
State
Normal School, and earned the Doctor
of
of
Pharmacy defree from
Pharmacy degree from
the Philathe Phila-
Science.
Traub.
J.
He was a
life
Quick (Mrs. Frank H.
Jackson Heights, N. Y.
Lucy Kline Brobst, Blooms-
1901
/
—
JUgntDriam
3ln
Princeton Township School District.
W. Clair Hidlay
W. Clair Hidlay, former Secretary
of the BSC Board of Trustees, died at
the Blocmsburg Hospital,
Tuesday,
July 1, 1969. He was President of the
Hidlay Oil Company which he founded in 1929
Chairman of the Board of
Directors of the Bloomsburg BankColumbia Trust Company since 1960,
and a member of that board since
GerroUl W. Hart
Gerrold W. Hart, Bloomsburg R. D.
2, died May 25 at Wilkes-Barre VetSince 1962, he had
erans Hospital.
been on the faculty of the Department
oi Education, audio-visual services,
Bloomsburg State College. He had
been promoted to associate professor
this year.
He had been a
patient at the veter-
ans hospital about one month. Prior
he had been a patient for two
to that,
weeks at Bloomsburg Hospital.
He was born in Newark, N. J., son
of Stanley and Vivian Hart.
He
graduated frfom Springfield College,
Mass., in 1949 and received his M.A.
degree from American International
College, Mass., in 1956. He received
his M.E. degree in 1968 from Temple
University.
Before coming to Bloomsburg, he
taught high school for three years in
Connecticut and five years at BullardHaven Technical School in the field of
audio-visual aids. He taught summer
school at Temple University last year.
Mr. Hart served three years in the
Navy during World War II, receiving
numerous citations including the Distinguished Flying Cross, Gold Star
and Air Medal with three stars.
Dr. Eugene D. Thoenen
Dr. Eugene D. Thoenen, fifty-nine,
847 Lower Chester road, Charleston.
W. Va., for six years a professor in
history at
Bloomsburg State College.
1958-1965, died in Charleston on May
31.
native of West Virginia, and
the writer of an authoritative book
on the History of the Oil and Gas Industry in West Virginia, Dr. Thoenen
returned to his native state in 1965.
where he last served as director of
the Office of Veterans’ Training and
Education in the West Virginia Department of Education.
A
Dr. Thoenen attended Swarthmore
College and later West Virginia University, from which he received the
Ph.D. degree in History. Both he and
his
the
wife, Grace, were prominent in
of the Bloomsburg Episcopal
life
Church.
Bessie Derr Sked ’04
D. Sked, 85, a retired
school teacher and club leader, died
Mi-s. Bessie
February 28 in the Ogden Nursing
Home. A former Pennington resident,
she lived at 19 Delaware Avenue, Ewing Township.
Mrs. Sked taught in Pennington.
Princeton and Milton, Pa. She was a
member of the WSCS, United Church
Women and the Socialites of Pennington Methodist Church. She was a past
president of the Kleio Club of Pennington and had been a district officer
of
Federation
the New Jersey
Women’s Club.
in
G.
Edward
Elwell, Jr. ’05
George Edward Elwell, Jr., eightythree, one of the most prominent, best
known and active Freemasons in the
Northern jurisdiction and long active
in the religious, business and civic
life of the communuity died in June
in the Bloomsburg Hospital.
His last public appearance was at
of
the Bloomsburg State
College,
which he was a graduate, during the
Alumni Day festivities on Saturday,
April 26, and when one of the features
was the dedication of Elwell Hall,
named in recognition of his family’s
contributions to the development of
His grandfather and
the College.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Shrine, Bloomsburg; Eastern Star,
Iris Club, Golden Age Club, Business
and Professional Women’s Organiza-
the
of
trustees
father both were
school and he was a faculty member
for some years early in the present
century.
A native of Bloomsburg, he was
born April 19. 1886. the son of Geo-
Association.
A. McKelvey
sixth generation in direct line of descent from
Jabez Elwell who, like his son. John,
was active in the defense of the Colonies during the Revolutionary War.
He was a grandson of Judge William Elwell. twenty-six years presidistrict,
dent judge of this judicial
and one of the state’s foremost jurHis father, a lawyer and newsists.
paper publisher, was long a leading
Edward and Mary
He was of the
rge
Elwell.
citizen of
Bloomsburg.
He received
education
his early
under private tutors and was graduated from Bloomsburg State College
and later from Trinity College, Hartford. Conn., in 1909 as a Bachelor of
active in many extracurricular activities at Trinity where
he was a member of the Delta Psi
Arts.
He was
fraternity.
Upon his return to Bloomsburg he
became associated with his father in
the commercial printing business, established in 1837 and the oldest business house in Bloomsburg. His father
from 1872 to 1910 had also published
a
newspeper
weekly
“The
Colum-
bian.”.
He took an active and continuing interest in Bloomsburg’s intellectual life, and for nine years taught
French at BSC.
He made a hobby
autographs
of collecting rare
or letters of every head
government having to do with
America, from Ferdinand and Isabel-
of
present administration. In
1958 he presented the entire collection
la to the
to
Sunbury, and Retired Teachers’
tion,
Caldwell Consistory.
He served
for around a dozen years
on the Bloomsburg school board, during which time he held the offices of
both president and treasurer, and also
served on town council.
For many years he was junior warden of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church
and senior warden for six years. He
was a vestryman for a long period.
Christella
F. Masten ’06
Miss Christella F. Masten, eightyone, a native of Washingtonville. who
taught two generations of Binghamton
school children, died recently in Loudes Hospital. She went to Binghamton in 1909 after teaching for three
years in Pennsylvania schools and
for the next 44 years taught in six
different schools, retiring in 1953.
Miss Masten received a bachelor’s
degree from Syracuse University in
1939.
She was a member of the
Daughters of the American Revolution
and a member
the
Good Shepherd.
of the
Church
of
Lavona Megargell Chapin ’ll
Lavona M. Richards Chapin,
seventy-eight, Main street, Orangeville, died June 15.
She had been in
failing health for years, however her
death was unexpected. She was born
in Orangeville and resided in ScranMi-s.
many years before returning
Orangeville in 1949.
ton for
to
A graduate
of
Bloomsburg Normal
School, she taught for several years
in the early part of her life.
More
recently she had been employed by
the Bloomsburg Hospital, retiring in
1960.
member of the OrangeUnited Presbyterian Church.
She was a
ville
Kathleen M. Jones ’13
Miss Kathleen M. Jones died April
17 in Wilmington Medical Center, Del.
Born in Berwick, she graduated from
Berwick High School, received a BA
from Bloomsburg State College and
an MA from New York University.
She was principal at the Fourteenth
Street School, Berwick, until her retirement ten years ago.
She had
taught at New Castle, Del., the last
ten years. She was a former member of the Bower
Memorial
UM
He was married December 12. 1911
to Sara B. Milleisen.
Her death occurred in Key West, Fla., on Febru-
Church. Berwick and Asbury United
Methodist Church, New Castle, Del.
She was a member of the Soroptomist Club and Alpha Delta Kappa Soc-
ary
iety.
18, 1956.
Freemasonry he held the treasured Thirty-third degree, and was a
In
past commander-in-chief of Caldwell
Consistory. During his term as commander-in-chief Caldwell observed its
diamond anniversary. In 1966 he was
chairman of the Caldwell Centennial
observance and the class received at
that time was named in his honor.
Amy
S.
LeVan
’06
Miss Amy S. LeVan, ninety-one, of
Sunbury, died June 5 in Blue Hill
Nursing Home, Selinsgrove R. D. 2
She was a member of St. John’s
Methodist Church, Sunbury.
A retired teacher, she had taught school
for a number of years in the Sunbury
area.
She was a member of the
Rebecca
Lodge,
Sunbury;
White
Ethel Ravert Keck ’14
The death of Mrs. Boyd Keck, seventy-two of Gulf of Mexico Drive, Sarasota, Fla., occurred May 25 in the
Sarasota Memorial Hospital. Born in
Rock Glen, she came to this area at
an early age. Prior to moving to
Florida about 15 years ago, she and
her husband owned
and operated
Keck’s Linen Shop in Bloomsburg and
Berwick. She was a member of the
Church of Christ, Berwick.
.
SEPTEMBER,
1969
Peter Sincavage ’24
Peter J. Sincavage, Sugar Notch,
a retired teacher and for thirty-six
years basketball coach in the Ashley
and Sugar Notch School Districts,
died May 27 at his home following
an
illness of
He was a
some time.
native of Sugar Notch,
where he lived
and was
all of his life
a member of SS. Peter and Paul’s
Church, and the Holy Name Society
He was a
of that congregation.
member of the Lions Twin Borough
Club, Ashley-Sugar Notch.
Sincavage was a standout athlete
High School
at Hanover Township
and BSC.
Through most
ing career he
ful athletic
of his teach-
was a highly success-
coach.
Miriam Lehman Martin
’27
133
Martin,
Mrs. Miriam Irene
East Front Street, Berwick, died May
She was
21 at Berwick Hospital.
born in MifTlinville July 29. 1907 and
was married to Stanley Martin who
died in 1967.
She taught in Mififlinville for three
Later she was employed at
Berwick Shirt Company, Mifflin ville
Knitting Company, and until her illness at Bennett’s Restaurant, Berwick. She was a member of Mifflinand
ville United Methodist Church
Berwick Ladies of Moose auxiliary.
years.
William E. Letterman ’33
Willilam E. Letterman. fifty-seven,
Harrisburg, died April 30 at the PolyHe was
•clinic Hospital, Harrisburg.
born in Lewistown,
a
graduate
of
Bloomsburg State College, he received his Master’s Degree at Bucknell
He taught in BloomsUniversity.
burg Schools for several years.
Elmira Bankes Shaffer ’36
Mrs. Elmira Bankes Shaffer, of
Bloomsburg R. D. 5, died in June.
She had been in ill health for the past
year. She had done substitute teaching in the area school systems the
past ten years.
Edna Crouse Harrison ’06
Mrs. Edna C. Harrison, eighty-five.
Forks, Orangeville R. D.
2,
died at
Bloomsburg Hospital on July 7.
She was born in Nescopeck and lived in Fishingereek Township most of
her life. She was a graduate of the
township school, and Bloomsburg Normal School. She was a teacher in the
schools of Fishingereek, Mt. Pleasant
and Salem Township in the early part
of her life.
At the time of her death she was
president of Neil S. Harrison, Inc.,
operator of two stores, one at Forks
and the other in Benton.
Frances Dymond Gay ’33
former
Gay, the
Sheldon
Mrs.
Frances Dymond, Bloomsburg R. D.
a lengthy
5, died July 5 following
illness. She had been a school teacher in the Central Columbia District
and was widely known for her work
with ceramics. Mrs. Gay was a member of the Lime Ridge First United
Methodist Church, the Lightstreet
Grange and the Pennsylvania State
Education Association.
Page
five
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR
T2
H. F. Fenstemaker
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Grace Foote Conner,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Terms
Howard
P. Fenstemaker
242 Central Road
’12
expire 1972
Millard Ludwig ’48
Center and Third Streets
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Term
Millville,
VICE PRESIDENT
Pennsylvania 17846
El wood M. Wagner
Clayton H. Hinkel
TREASURER
Terms expire
Volume LXX, Number 3
’40
—
1903
Class Representative:
II.
Walter
Riland, 11 Warwick Avenue, Scarsdale, N. Y. 10583
Class Representative: Mrs. Pearle
Fitch Diehl, 27 Bloom Street, Danville. Pa. 17821
1910
1911
1905
1912
Class Representative:
Mrs. Vera
Hemingway Ilousenick, 503 Market
Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Representative: Howard F.
Central
Road,
Fenstemaker,
242
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1907
1913
Class Representative: Dr. Kimber
Kuster, 140 West lltli Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17821
Mr. and Mrs. E. K. Masteller (Renna Crossley), R. D. 1, Bloomsburg,
recently celebrated their golden wed-
1909
W.
Street, Danville, Pa.
They operated a
Columbia County for thirtyeight years and retired in 1967.
farm
in
1914
Representative:
J. Howard
Deily, 518 West Third Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1915
Class
Representative: John
man, 368 East Main
Street,
Shu-
II.
Blooms-
burg, Pa. 17815
Class
Class Representative:
Edwin M.
Barton, 353 College Hill, Bloomsburg,
Pa.
six
expires 1970
ding anniversary.
Class Representative: Robert E.
Ashley,
Metz, 23 Manliatton Street,
Pa. 18706
Page
Term
Glenn A. Oman ’32
1704 Clay Avenue
Scranton, Pennsylvania 18509
September, 1969
17821
1901
Fred
James H. Deily, Jr. ’41
Ba usman Drive
1971
Esther
Abbott
(Mrs.
Benjamin
Reist), Catawissa, Pa., is now a guest
at the Boone Nursing Home, Eyers
Grove, Pa.
Bloom
Gordon, Pennsylvania 17936
Mrs. Verna Jones ’36
18 West Avenue, Apartment C-4
Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087
expires 1970
Representative:
’29
McKnight Street
19526
224 Leonard Street
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Earl A. Gehrig ’37
110 Robin Lane, Sherwood Village
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Class
205
Lancaster, Pennsylvania 17603
Hamburg, Pennsylvania
expires 1970
12801
37 N.
John Thomas ’47
68 Fourth Street
’43
New York
Elizabeth H. Hubler
140 West Eleventh Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
643 Wiltshire Road
State College, Pa. 16801
Diehl, 627
Glen Falls,
’35
HI
Dr. William L. Bitner
33 Lincoln Avenue
’34
Dr. Kimber C. Kuster T3
SECRETARY
Term
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie
509 East Front Street
Berwick, Pennsylvania 18603
102 West Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Dr. Frank J. Furgele ’52
Colonial Farm Box 88
R. D. 1, Glen Mills, Pa. 19342
Term expires 1970
Term
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
expires 1970
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
Col.
—
’34
1916
Class Representative: Mrs. Russell
Burrus (Emma Harrison) R. D. 2,
Orangeville, Pa. 17859
1917
Class
Cromis,
Representative:
Allen
Mahoning Manor, R. D.
L.
1,
Milton, Pa. 17847
1918
Class
Representative:
J.
Clair
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Patterson. 315 West Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Ruth Hutton, DSA, (Mrs. W. Mason
Aucher) 5124 45th Street, Washington.
D. C. 20016, is chairman of the Sculp
ture Scholarship Competition (Washof
ington Chapter. National Society
Arts and Letters). She is preparing
new works for a coming sculpture
exhibition (September 6) at the Wii
liam Penn Memorial Fine Arts Museum, Harrisburg.
Schools.
She had been a public school teacher since 1923 and an administrator
former Sunbury
since 1934 in the
School District and since July 1, 1965,
has served as elementary principal of
the Shikellamy School District.
She is the dean of elementary school
principals in the Central Pennsylvania area, and is widely known through-
Miss CathClass Representative:
erine A. Keimard, 335 Jefferson St.,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
At the meeting of our class on Alumni Day, it was voted that I re-
main your Class Representative,
gard.
nishing information
Quarterly.
for
the
fur-
College
—
I can do this
only, if
you,
my
classmates, furnish me with the information you would like to share,
such as: (1) Change of addresses, (2)
Marriages; (3) Deaths, etc.
At our class meeting, the 1919er’s
contributed S65.00 to the Campus Tree
and Shrubbery program.
Officers elected were:
President.
Wesley E. Davies, 60 E. Overbrook
Ave., Shavertow n. Pa. 18708.
Secretary, Gertrude
Gordon Davies. 60
Overbrook Ave., Shavertown, Pa.
T
18708.
Out of state classmates back for
the reunion festivities were: F. Ralph
Dreilbelbis. 422 W. Highland Ave..
Wooster, Ohio. 44691:
Ruth Doyle
Moore, 336
Bender Ave., Roselle
Park, N. J. 07204:
Eva Ferguson
Ellis. 2764 Federal St., Camden. N.
J. 08105; Betty Steele Aurand. 4200
Cathedral
Ave.,
N.W..
Apt.
706,
Washington. D. C. 20016: Olive Robinson, 1117 Morningside Ave., Schnectady, N. Y. 12308; Frances E. Kinner, 3204 Verdun Ave., Endwell, N.
Y. 13760; Margaret Summers Brock.
Rosenhayn, N. Y. 08352.
1920
Leroy W.
Old Berwick Road,
Bloomsburg. Pa. 17815
Class
Creasy,
Representative:
3117
A
recent issue of Science, publication of the American Association for
the Advancement of Science, carries
the text of the address of Dr. H. Keefer Hartline, which he delivered at
Stockholm, Sweden, last December 12,
when he received the Nobel Prize in
Science.
1921
Class
Representative:
Cole, 100 Leonard Street,
Pa. 17815
1922
Class
Representative:
Edna
S.
Harter, R. D. 1, Nescopeck, Pa. 18623
1923
Class
Representative:
Mrs. Raymond P. Kashner, 125 Friar. Road,
Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg,
Pa.
17815
A
span of 46 years of working with
school children in the Sunbury area
came to a close in June with the retirement of Miss Grace S. Beck, 1014
E. Chestnut St., who retired as elementary
principal.
Shikellamy
SEPTEMBER,
1969
career, she received
awards from The
Freedom Foundation, as an
outstanding teacher and the “Citizen of the
Year” aw'ard by the people of Sunbury.
1925
Mrs. Pearl
Radel Bickel, 909 Masser Street, SunRepresentative:
Class
bury, Pa. 17801
1926
Class Representative:
Marvin M.
Bloss, R. D. 2, Wapwallopen, Pa. 18660
1928
Class Representatives: Mrs. (Elsie
Miss Beck attended Shamokin Twp.
elementary schools and was graduated from Shamokin High
School in
1921.
She
was graduated from
Bloomsburg Normal School in 1923.
and began teaching in Sunbury that
Nelson Stauffer, 88 John
Lebo)
Kingston, Pa.
18704.
Mrs.
Frantz) Walter Covert,
20
Street, Dallas, Pa. 18612
Street, Millville, Pa. 17864
She holds an elementary principal’s
certificate and a supervising principal’s certificate.
She was cited in
1964 in that year’s edition of “Who’s
Who
in American Education.”
She
listed in this book because of her
outstanding work in education.
Starting in 1923, Miss Beck taught
in elementary grades four to eight
until 1934, when she was named ele-
was
mentary principal at Maclay School.
She served
in this position until 1947.
to 1961, she served as
elementary supervisor in the Sunbury
District. In 1961, she was named dir-
From
1947
ector of elementary
education and
curriculum coordinator of the Sunbury
School District.
During this period,
she developed two curriculum guides
for kindergarten through 12
grades,
and guides for language arts and social studies.
She was also an instructor in sum-
mer
school and extension classes for
Bucknell from 1949-1961.
In 1963, she was named elementary
principal of the Sunbury district.
Esther Ludwig Stokes lives at 1516
Sycamore
Street,
Harrisburg,
Bitler, 117 State
The elementary faculty and retirees
Columbia Schools re-
of the Central
cently honored Elfed Jones at a dinner held at the Hotel Magee.
Jones,
elementary supervisor,
is
retiring
after thirty-nine years of service.
A graduate of Nanticoke High
School in 1924, Jones got his BS degree from Bloomsburg State College in
1930 and his MS at New York University.
He also worked on his doctorate at NYU.
He started his teaching career at
Nanticoke High School in 1930.
In
1937 he went to Wilkes-Barre where
he taught history and coached basketball.
While at Wilkes-Barre, he was
elected
principal
of
the
Dodson
School.
He also taught extension
courses for Bloomsburg State College
and Penn
State.
He was
co-author of a pamphlet
put out by the
Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania entitled “Self-Evaluation
in the Elementary Schools of Pennsylvania,” and contributed to the “New
Elementary Curriculum in Pennsylvania” and the “28th Yearbook of the
NEPA.”
1931
Class Representative:
James B.
Davis, 333 East Marble Street, Mechanicsburg, Pa. 17055
Pa.
17105
Parish
Luther W.
and Margaret Swartz
She later received a bachelor of
science degree in education at Bloomsburg State College in 1940, and master
of science degree in education from
Bucknell University, Lewisburg, in
1952.
St.,
(Arline
1930
Representatives:
Class
year.
1933
Representative: Miss Lois
Lawson, 644 East Third
Street,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1924
Mrs. Harry
Bloomsburg,
6th
after
retired
Street, Sunbury, has
forty-five years of teaching in the
Sunbury schools. During her teaching
out the state for her interest in the
elementary curriculum.
In her associations with young people, area educators said that
Miss
Black has done much to influence and
guide young people in their education
endeavors. Shikellamy Area elementary teachers hold her in high re-
1919
Muriel, plan extensive travels.
Helen E. Barrow, 117 North
Class Representative:
Edward F.
Schuyler, 236 West
Ridge Avenue,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Harold R. Miller, who is retiring
this year as teacher of eighth grade
geography at Bloomsburg Junior
High after 43 years in the profession,
was honored recently by the faculty.
Tributes were paid the retiring teacher by Supt. Warren E. Fisher and Assistant County Supt. Harold Hidlay,
among others. Miller, who has taught
two generations of Bloomsburg students, is highly regarded in the state
as a teacher of geography. He has
traveled in forty-seven
and
states
during retirement, he and his wife
1934
Representative:
Esther
Evans McFadden (Mrs. Joseph), 154
East Fifth Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
Class
17815
1935
Class
Reed,
burg,
William I.
East 4th Street, Blooms-
Representative:
151
Pa. 17815
1936
Representatives:
Kathryn
Vanauker (Mrs. Nicholas Moreth) 34
Class
Linden Road, Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey 07432. Co-Chairmen: Ruth Wagner (Mrs. Lawrence Le Grande) 126
Oak Street, Hazleton, Pa. 13201 and
Page seven
Mary Jane Fink (Mrs. Frederick MeCutchcon) Maple Avenue, Conyngham,
Pa. 18219
1937
Class Representatives: Mr. and Mrs.
Earl A. Gehrig, 110 Robin Lane, Sher-
wood
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Village,
1938
East Main Street, Blooms-
710
burg, Pa. 17815
1930
Willard A.
Class Representative:
Christian, Jr., 803 Logue Street, Williamsport, Pa. 17701
The
’39
of
thirtieth
reunion of the Class
was attended by
and friends
39
of Class of ’39.
members
A
fine
time was had by all who attended the
various events on the campus. At the
dinner $55.50 was collected and turned
over to the Alumni Fund for restoring
trees to the campus.
Some of those who were not in attendance sent us information about
themselves, and I will pass it on to
you.
Colonel Victor Ferrari will be stationed at Wright Patterson Air Force
Base in Ohio after July, 1969. He is a
professor of aerospace studies in the
United States Air Force.
Willhelima Peel Scheffler is living
in Indio, California where she is employed as a teacher of the mentally
retarded.
Dick Nolan is living in Salinas, California where he is employed as an
office manager. He is a retired Army
officer after serving 22 years.
be moving to Easwill be teaching at
the Churchman School of Business.
Harriet Kocher is living in Springfield, Virginia and has opened her own
business called “People Incorporated”
dealing in placement and resorts.
Sister Laurentia (Helen Mayan) is
an elementary principal at Pocono
Central Catholic School in Cresco, Pa.
Peggy Johnson Davis is living in
Faget West, Bermuda, and invites all
of us to stop in to see her sometime.
Eddie Mulhern is living in RockEddie received a
ville, Maryland.
prize at the reunion for the most
Roy Evans
ton, Pa.,
you have any news, please send
on and we will see that it is properly taken care of.
If
it
Sincerely yours,
Willard A. Christian
1940
Class Representative:
Clayton II.
Hinkcl, 224 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1941
Representative:
Zimmerman (Jean
Class
Kready
Avenue,
17551
Pngo eight
is
Mrs. Ralph
Noll),
Millcrsville,
165
I’a.
a
graduate
of
sales, regional
sales manager of Philadelphia in 1956
and sales superintendent in New York
In 1963 he became director
in 1960.
of sales for Prudent American Life In-
ed to director of
life
He was named
surance Company.
director of recruiting in 1965 for the
Western Reserve Life Insurance Company and more recently held the posi-
agency manager
Woodsmen of America.
for
tion of
Modern
1944
Representative: Mrs. (Pole
time Comunutzis) Carl Demetrikopoulos, Friar and Robin Lanes, Sherwood
Cillage, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1945
Mary Lou
Class
Representative:
John, 257 West 11th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
ces in district and commerical officHe is also faculty sponsor of the
student-operated school store and has
served in the past as both Attendance
Coordinator and as District Coordinator of Business Education.
es.
The Bristol Township educator received his masters degree from BuckHe has completed
nell University.
Penn
at
additional graduate work
State University, Lehigh
and Rider College, and
Junewood, Levittown, with his wife,
and their three children,
Harry III, Kim Marie, and Edward.
Connie,
Jane Keller Malinaro (Mrs. Frank)
and family now reside in Lightstreet.
Jane and her brood are waiting for
Frank to quit commuting to Washington, D. C. and settle to work in or
around Bloomsburg.
Nerine Middlesworth is now on the
faculty of Kutztown S.C. where she
is in charge of the fates of elementary student teachers.
Don and Betty (RiddalP Wagner
have moved into their new home,
2624 Point Breeze Drive Barkley, Wilmington, Delaware 19803. Bets teaches business in one of Wilmington’s
High Schools.
Ruth Shoup Beadle now lives with
her husband and five sons at 15 W.
Plum Street, Westerville, Ohio 43081.
Dick teaches math at the Westerville
High School.
1951
Representative:
Anastasia
Pappas (Mrs. John Trowbridge), 102
W. Mahoning Street, Danville, Pa. Cochairman: Mrs. Charles W. Creasy
(Jacqueline Shaffer,) R. D. 1, Catawissa, Pa. 17820
Class
1947
Robert L.
Bunge, 12 West Park Street, Carroll
Park, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
Representative:
Representative:
Harry G.
Class
John, Jr., 425 Iron Street, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
1949
Richard E.
Grimes, 1723 Fulton Street, Harrisburg, Pa. 17102
Class Representative:
J.
Gobora,
Jr.,
tor of Education degree in Educational Administration by Temple University.
a
member
Woodrow Wilson High School
of
busi-
ness education department, has been
elected president of the Bucks County
Business Education Association, Bucks
County, Pennsylvania, for the 1969-70
term. He has served in the past as
treasurer of the organization for two
years, and as vice president for three
years.
Gobora has taught in Pennsylvania
schools for 19 years, including the
past ten years at Woodrow Wilson. He
is currently Bristol Township
Business Education Work Experience Coordinator, supervising Wilson students
during their on job-training experien-
McNamee was
educated in the
schools of
Bloomsburg and
Bloomsburg State College. He began
his teaching career in Maryland and
concurrently began graduate studies
at Bucknell University completing his
public
Master of Education degree in 1954.
Since moving to Delaware in 1956,
McNamee
has held positions as
Social Studies
Department Chairman
Dr.
1950
Class Representative: Jane Kenvin
(Mrs. George Widger), R. D. 2, Catawissa, Pa. 17820
Harry
Class Representative: Dr. Russell
C. Davis, Jr., Sullivan County Community College, South Fallsburgh, N.
Y. 12779
Francis R. McNamee, 1027 Crestover Road, Graylyn Crest, Wilmington, Del., has been awarded the Doc-
Dr.
1948
the
University,
presently
is
work at
enrolled in graduate-level
Temple University.
Gobora lives at 19 Jonquil Lane,
1946
will
where he
children.
Would you believe ten? I
also noticed that Mulhern’s record for
in
still
the 440 established in 1939
standing. He ran the distance in 50.0.
Also, the one-mile relay, of which he
was a member, still standns at 3:23.2.
I also notice that the 100-yard dash
record of 9.7 set by VanDevander in
1939 still stands.
II.
Bloomsburg State College, BS Degree, and
Bucknell University, MS Degree. He
served as a teacher and coach at the
High
School,
Township
Fair view
Mountain Top. During World War H
Flying
he wore the Distinguished
Cross, Air Medal, Oak Leaf Cluster
and Three Battle Stars while he was
a pilot for the United States Air Force.
His insurance career began as an
agent for Nationwide Insurance Company in 1949. In 1953 he was promotMagill
Representative: Paul G. Mar-
Class
tin,
1943
Magill, Sugarloaf, has
been appointed as director of agency
for the Columbia Life Insurance Company, in Bloomsburg. He will specialize in recruiting and training representatives.
Andrew F.
and head basketball coach at the
Senior High School level. Subsequent
appointments included being named
Acting Elementary Principal. AssisSchool Principal
tant Junior High
and Assistant Junior High School
Principal and Assistant High School
Principal prior to setting up and directing the personnel office in his present assignment as Administrative Assistant for Personnel in the Alfred I.
duPont Special School District.
Dr. McNamee holds memberships
in the following professional organizations: the Alfred I. duPont School District Education Association, the Delaware State Education Association, life
membership in the National Education
Association, Public Personnel Associa-
TIIE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
and Phi Delta Kappa.
of
formerly
His wife, Dorothy,
Berwick, graduated from Bloomsburg
State College in 1951, majoring in elementary education. In 1963 she received her Master’s Degree in reading from the University of Delaware.
tion,
The McNamees have two sons, Patrick. twelve, and Brian, eight.
1952
Francis It.
Class Representative:
Galenski, 350 South York Road. Hatboro, Pa. 19040
Charles J. Daly was recently named head basketball coach at Boston
College. A native of Kane, Pa.. Daily
played his high school basketball in
that community under Dr. C. Stuart
Edwards, now director of the Division
Secondary Education at Bloomsburg State College. He attended St.
Eonavenlure for a year and then
of
Bloomsburg
to
where he was a court star
Coach Harold Shelley.
transferred
State
under
from
graduation
Bloomsburg, he taught and coached at
Punxsutawney High Schodl where he
remained several years before going
to Duke University as freshman basHe was later named
ketball coach.
assistant basketball coach at Duke
prior to his new appointment at BosFollowing
his
ton College.
Mi*, and Mrs. David T. North, formerly of Bloomsburg, are making
their home in Fargo, N.D., where he
is in research as a radiation uiologist
with a government laboratory connected with the Department of Agriculture and Mrs. North is teacher of
nutrition in University of North Dakota.
They are also in business with "The
Burlap Bag,” an art gallery and ooutique, which specializes in handmade
lounging outfits, caftons and hostess
gowns, water colors, miniatures, ceramics, woodcuts and photos.
Mi*. North is an active photograph-
and has had a number of exhibits
work. Mrs. North, the former
Barbara Bundens, is a member of the
League
Junion
Fargo-Moorehead
er
01 his
which does
the
much
volunteer service in
community.
1953
Class Representative: John S. Scrimgeour, 411 East 3rd Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
17815
1954
William J.
Class Representative:
Jacobs, Tremont Annex Apartments,
2
West Main
Street,
Lansdale,
Pa.
19446
1955
Class Representative:
Arnold Gar
Harvey’s Lake, Pa. 18618
R. Arnold Garinger, who had been
principal of the Valley Forge Junior High School, has been appointed
inger,
to the faculty of College Misercordia,
Dallas, Pa., where he will teach and
Mr.
teachers.
supervise
student
Garinger, his wife, and four children, will reside at his birthplace at
Harvey’s Lake, Pa.
like to hear from members of the class of ’55 as to then* in-
He would
SEPTEMBER,
1969
terest in a banquet reunion such as
Would a regular
afternoon session on Alumni Day serve
was held
in
1965.
tem where he has taught in the Social
Studies Department for the past six
years.
the purpose?
1956
Representative: Dr. William
Bitner, III. 33 Lincoln Avenue, Glen
Falls, N. Y. 12801
Class
1957
Representative:
William J.
Class
Pohutski, 544 Oakridge Drive, North
Plainfield. N. J. 07606
Shirley Seiler Vivacqua, 66 Outlock Lane, Oak Tree Hollow, Levittown. Pa., is teaching at the Bensalem High School.
William A. Griffiths has been pro-
moted
assistant professor at the
State University of New York Agricultural and Technical College at Alfred.
Professor Griffiths is a member of the faculty of the Secretarial
Science Department at Alfred State
College.
He received an associate
to
degree in
business
administration
from Keystone Junior College in 1959
and went on to obtain his BS in business education at Bloomsburg State
College. Currently, he is completing
requirements for his master’s at Alfred University.
Professor Griffiths is married to the
former Lyn Thomas of Eastchester,
N. Y. They have two children and
reside at Jericho Hill in Alfred Sta-
Pessie M. Repy, 6 East Main Street,
Plymouth, Pa., was awarded a Master
Teaching of French and
of Arts
Teaching of English as a foreign language, in December 1968 from TeachColumbia University.
ers College,
She was the recipient of a full tuition
Teachers College scholarship. Since
completing her studies in August of
last year she has taught in programs
at both Columbia and New York Uni:
versities.
Robert Joseph Sewell, formerly of
1232 Scott Street. Kulpmcnt. Pa., has
been awarded the silver wing of an
American Airlines flight officer after
completing training at American’s
A
flight school in Fort Worth, Tex.
native of Ashland. Sewell was grad-
uated from Catholic High, Mount
Carmel, in 1957 and Bloomsburg State
College in 1963. Prior to joining American Airlines, Sewell served in the
United States Air Force for five years,
from 1964 to 1969, attaining the rank oi
captain.
He and his wife, Virginia, and their
children, Kristie and Julie, will make
tjieir home in the New York City area,
where Sewell has been based.
tion.
1964
1958
Class
Representative:
Raymond
Hargreaves, 37 Dell Road. Stanhope,
N. J. 07874
1959
Class Representative:
William F.
Swisher, Box 245, Cincinnatus, N. Y.
14340
1960
Class
Representative:
James J.
Peek, 100 Hull Road, Madison. Conn.
06443
1961
Class
Representative:
Edwin C.
Kuser, R. D. 1, Box 145-C, Bechtelsville. Pa. 19505
1962
Class
Representative:
Richard
Lloyd, 6 Farragus Dr., Piscataway,
N. J. 08854
Carol Stenson (Mrs. Stefan Werba)
lives at 185 Glen Road,
Woodcliff
Lake, New Jersey. 07675
1963
Class
Representative:
Pat Biehl
(Mrs. Ronald Cranford) R. D. 1, 77
Hawthorne Ave., Boyertown, Pa. 19512
The
Scotch
Plains-Fanwood,
New
Jersey, Board of Education, has announced the appointment of Terry K.
Riegel to the position of Senior High
School Assistant Principal.
Mr. Riegel was educated at the
public schools of Berwick and at
Bloomsburg State College, where he
received the Bachelor of Science degree in 1963 and the Master of Education degree in 1965. He is presently
matriculated in a doctoral program in
the Department of Secondary Education at New York University.
He began his education career in the
Scotch Plains-Fanwood School Sys-
Shuba,
J.
Ernest R.
Gaston Avenue, Raritan, N.
Representative:
Class
1
08869
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Scorese are
living at 4 Marston Road. Flanders,
N. J. 08736, has accepted a position
as teacher of Physical Education and
Driver Education in Netcong, New
Jersey. Mrs. Scorese is the former
Betty Scaife, of the class of 1963.
Estelle Josephine Loll (Mrs. Dieter
is now living at 4008 N. E.
129 Place, Portland, Oregon. 97230
Roesch)
1965
Ann Carol Raynock has been
appointed dean of women at Penn Morton College of PMC Colleges, at Chester, Pa. 19013. Since September, 1968,
she has been residence hall staff coordinator at Pennsylvania State University’s main
1,300 coeds.
campus,
in
charge of
Miss Raynock earned the master’s
degree with a major in student per-
from Penn
administration
is currently enrolled
She
as a Ph.D. degree candidate.
formerly taught English in Weatherly,
Pa. high school and at the Roosevelt
High School in Levittown, Pa.
sonnel
State,
where she
Jack B. Stanton. 525 Harting Circle,
Warminster, Pa. 18974, has been appointed Elementary School Principal
in the Lower Moreland School, Huntingdon County. He received his
degree from Temple University.
Mary Louise (McCutcheon)
MS
Topol-
ski lives at 31 Sackse Avenue, Conyngham, Pa. 18219
Page nine
1966
18643
1967
Robert T.
Representative:
Lemon, Meadowvale Apt. No. 12, 903
Quarry Road, Harve de Grace, Md.
Class
21087
Airman Durwood E.
Slusser, Nescompleted basic
Pa., has
He
training at Lackland AFB, Tex.
copeck,
Sheppard AFB,
Tex., for training as a medical serhas been assigned
to
vices specialist.
1968
Class Representative:
Thomas W.
Free, R. D. 1, Box 34, Kintnersville,
Pa. 18930
Second Lieutenant Willard F. Kel-
Beach Haven,
Pa., has completed operational readiness training
at Vandenberg AFB, Calilf., for the
chner
III,
Minuteman Weapon System. Lieutenant Kelchner
being assigned to
Malmstrom AFB, Mont., for duty with
a unit of the Strategic Air Command.
Training School
at
Lackland AFB, Texas.
Charles G. Mowery, Bloomsburg, is
attending storekeepers school.
He
graduated from
Bloomsburg High
School in 1964 and from BSC in 1968.
He entered the service on December
His address is B445418 USN,
5, 1968.
Class 56902, U.S. Naval Supply School,
Bldg 381, U.S. Naval Base, Newport,
R. I. 02840.
tion
Officer
of
Robert T. Moran, Jr., is serving
on active duty with the U. S. Naval
Reserve. His address is Robert T.
Moran, Jr., Supply Department, U. S.
Naval Submarine Base, F.P.O., San
Francisco, Cal. 96610
Donna
L.
Fenstermacher
David A. Knouse),
(Mrs.
teaching mathematics in the Line Mountain School
Mr. Knouse, a graduate of
District.
Lewisburg High School and a veteran
of four years service in the Air Force,
is Assistant Manager of the Beneficial
Finance Company, Sunbury. They are
living at 468 Third Street, Northumberland.
Airman
is
First Class Lauren E. Mil-
Water
Northumberland,
1968—
Pa., has graduated from a U. S. Air
Force technical school at Kessler
ler, of 885
AFB, Miss.
St.,
He was
trained as
a
radio repairman and assigned to a
unit of the Strategic Air Command at
Westover AFB, Mass.
01022.
1898
1895
Margaret Armstrong Parsons
L. Wolfe, Martha Rom-
—Ada
berger Fichinger
1967 Phillip A. Dente
Marly nn A. Meyer
1899 Grace Oliver (Mrs.
Hagersville).
1895— Mary Detwiler (Mrs. F. E.
Bader), Hattie Jones (Mrs. D. John
Price)
1961
— Elizabeth
Zdep)
[’age ten
Toto, Philadelphia, a senior
secondary education who participated in basketball; Ralph Moerschbacher, Camp Hill, a junior in arts
and sciences who participated in
swimming; David Moharter, son of
Mr. and Mrs. George Moharter, 1519
Fairview Avenue, Berwick, a sophomore in secondary education who participated in baseball; Thomas Houston, Waverly, N. Y„ a senior in busi-
who
participated in
and Ronald
track;
Russo, Seaford, N. Y„ a senior in secondary education who participated
in wrestling.
education
ness
swimming and
SWIMMING
Temple U.—54
Monmouth 47
Wilkes—40
BSC—50
—
BSC— 56
BSC—62
BSC— 80
Millersville
BSC—45
BSC—53
BSC— 52
BSC— 75
BSC—62
BSC— 54
BSC— 74
BSC— 78
West Chester—59
E. Stroudsburg—51
St. Joseyh’s— 52
Lock Haven—29
California—36
Slippery
Rock—50
Trenton—29
Howard U.—25
Rock—West
Meet—Slippery
State
Gauz (Mrs. Stanley
—24
Chester 90, BSC 86.5, Millersville
E. Stroudsburg 31, California 28.
32,
BASKETBALL
BSC—77
BSC—7
BSC— 78
BSC— 86
BSC— 93
West Chester—97
Shippensburg— 78
Kutztown— 77
Millersville—96
—
—
Glassboro 77
Washington and Lee 87
Mansfield—69
Mansfield—60
BSC—75
BSC— 89
BSC—62
BSC— 93
BSC—93
BSC—69
BSC— 80
Cheyney—82
Towson—86
West Chester—67
Shippensburg— 70
Kutztown 77
Lock Haven— 79
BSC— 79
BSC— 104
BSC— 118
Millersville
BSC— 75
BSC—47
BSC— 105
BSC— 77
State
BSC
Philadelphia
—BSC —89,
—
Textile — 108
Towson— 73.
BASEBALL
Quadrangular Meet
Appalanchian State 15
BSC 18
BSC—27
Old Dominion College
Ashland College— 14
BSC— 27
Mansfield—
BSC—27
Terre Haute 12
BSC 24
—
—
—
So. Illinois
U.—23
Wilkes Tournament
placed second. N. Y. Athletic
club placed first
Millersville—
BSC— 35
BSC
BSC— 19
BSC—30
BSC—40
BSC—22
BSC—
BSC—
BSC—
BSC—
BSC—
BSC—
BSC—
BSC—
BSC—
BSC—
BSC— 10
BSC—
—
Kutztown
Mansfield
—
—
Lock Haven—
Lock Haven—
Kutztown—
Bucknell —
Lock Haven
E. Stroudsburg—
Mansfield
E. Stroudsburg—
TENNIS
BSC— 7
BSC—
BSC—
BSC— 7
BSC—
BSC—
—
—
Lock Haven—
Millersville
Kutzton
1-2
—1
1-2
Susquehanna—
E. Stroudsburg—
Kutztown
1-2
1 1-2
E. Stroudsburg
Shippensburg
—
—
Shippensburg Tournament
Won by East
Stroudsburg.
BSC—5th.
GOLF
BSC— 9.5
BSC— 11.5
BSC— 11
BSC— 8 1-2
BSC— 15
BSC— 12
BSC— 15
BSC— 13
BSC— 11 1-2
BSC— 12 1-2
BSC— 16 1-2
E. Stroudsburg
—8.5
—
—
Kutztown 7 .5
Susquehanna U.
Deleware College—9 1-2
Millersville—
Kings
Mansfield
—
—
Shippensburg—
Kutztown 7 1-2
—
—5
Lycoming —1
Mansfield
1-2
1-2
State Meet, Hershey, Pa.
West Chester 325, BSC 326, Clarion
331, Kutztown 331, California 333, Edinboro 333, Shippensburg 347, Millersville 352, Mansfield 353, Slippery Rock
363.
Trianguler Meet, Susquehanna Valley
Country Club
BSC — 11
BSC—8 1-2
Susquehanna
Delaware Valley 9
Delaware Valley
—8
—
—
1-2
Susquehanna— 10
TRACK
BSC— 113
BSC— 31
BSC— 37
BSC —60,
Cheyney—31
1-2
1-2
Millersville— 114
Lock Haven
E. Stroudsburg
—
43,
— 103
Kutz-
town— 78
WRESTLING
—
—
placed Seventh
— 110
Mansfield—94
Cheyney 48
East Stroudsburg—97
Meet
—
—
—
in
BSC—9
George
Shippensburg— 13
Lock Haven—25
West Chester— 17
BSC— 17
State Tournament Clarion
Lock Haven 96, Clarion 78, BSC 68
NAIA Tournament
U. of Nebraska
BSC— 15
Palmer
—
ADDRESSES WANTED
E. Stroudsburg—22
BSC—28
Five Bloomsburg State College athletes have been selected for inclusion
in the 1969 edition of Outstanding College Athletes of America. They are
is
He was commissioned upon comple-
BSC — 14
SPORTS
Anthony J.
Class Representative:
Cerza, 180 Mason Street, Exeter, Pa.
BSC—Third
BSC—97
BSC— 90
place in Penn Relays
Mansfield—48
Shippensburg 55
—
Meet
Millersville 108, Lock Haven 92, Slippery Rock 68, Cheyney 58, Kutztown
58, Clarion 46, Bloomsburg 43, ShipState
pensburg 34, Edinboro 12, Mansfield
E. Stroudsburg 2.
Cedar Cliff Relays
West Chester
Bloomsburg 17
Shippensburg
36,
1-2,
6,
Millersville
15
Kutztown
Clarion
5,
27,
1-2,
4.
Oswego— 16
Clarion—
Kutztown
—
Waynesburg—
Send your class news
Representative.
to your Class
Interesting notes are
always welcome.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
NEW MEMBERS
OF FACULTY
Dr. Ray C. Post. Associate ProfesB.S., Washington
sor of Education.
Rutgers
M.Ed.,
University.
State
University; Ed.D., Brandeis University.
Ronald F. Bower, Assistant ProfesM.Ed., Kutztown
sor of Art, B.S..
State College.
Willilam J. Sproule, Assistant Professor of Health and Physical Education. B.S., Syracuse University; M.S.,
Brooklyn College.
Raymond E.
Babineau. Assistant
Professor of Education. B.A., M.A..
Montclair State College.
Dr. Bryan B. Valett Associate ProB.S..
fessor of Biological Sciences.
Cornell College; M.A., University of
Oregon: Ph.D., Oregon State University.
Carroll J. Redfern, Instructor in the
B.S.,
Division of Special Education.
Johnson C. Smith University; B.S. in
Special Education, BSC.
Joseph T. Skehan, Associate ProB.A., Syrafessor of Economics.
cuse University Magna Cum Laude
Studied at
and Phi Beta Kappa).
DipLouvain University, Belgium.
loma in German. Hiedelberg Univeri
PhD. in Economics, Georgetown University.
John P. Sikula. Assistant Professor
B.A., Hiram College;
of Education.
M.A., Case Western Reserve University.
sity.
Richard
Mus.,
ProPhiladelphia
J. Stanislow, Assistant
of Music.
College of Bible;
fessor
B.S.,
B.
Mus. and M.
Temple University.
Ralph Smiley, Associate Professor
B.A., Brooklyn College;
M.A., Rutgers University.
James
J.
O’Toole,
Associate
Pro-
Marquette
B.S.,
Wayne
State Uni-
versity.
Michael E. Stanley, Director of
Publications.
B.A..
University
of
Missouri at Columbia; M.A., University of Missouri at Kansas City.
Dr. Halbert E. Gates, Chairman,
Department of Physics.
B.S., Milwaukee State Teachers College; Master of Physics. University of
sin; Ph.D., Michigan State
WisconUniver-
OPPORTUNITY PROGRAM
special
In September the Bloomsburg State
College initiated an Educational Opportunity Program for high school
graduates from economically deprived
backgrounds.
The group admitted
consists of approximately twenty-five
individuals, both Negro
and white,
who have been selected by the college
in close cooperation with high school
guidance counselors.
Plans for the Educational Oppor-
Program were initiated in August, 1968, when a special committee
was appointed by Dr. Harvey A. Antunity
druss,
president of the
College,
to
“survey and make recommendations
for promoting more opportunity for
economically deprived
students
at
Bloomsburg State College.”
The committee consisted of Dr. John
A. Hoch,
Dean
of Instruction; Dr. H.
M. Afshar, chairman. Department of
Education; Dr. Lee E. Aumiller, Coordinator of Field Experiences;
Dr.
Robert Miller, director of federal programs; John Scrimgeour, director of
student financial aid, and John Walker, director of admissions. This committee met bi-weekly throughout the
winter months to consider all aspects
of the program.
In order to have a
better overall evaluation of prospective students, it was decided that insofar as possible all students would
be contacted through high school guidance counselors.
program will
be
partially
funded with Economic
Opportunity
Grants.
Work-study programs, provided by the college, will be initiated
during the summer of 1969. Special
courses to improve communication
skills will be available during the summer, and tutorial services will be
available if requested.
All students admitted
under the
Educational Opportunity Program will
be required to maintain the same academic standards as other students, although the time usually required for
completing the degree programs may
be extended from four to five years.
GRADUATE DECREES
sity.
Harold J. Bailey, Assistant Professor of Mathematics.
B.S.,
Albright
College; M.Ed., Pennsylvania State
University.
James H. Neiswender, Instructor of
History.
B.S.,
M.S.,
Bloomsburg
State College.
Stephen Bresett, Associate Professor of Health and Physical Education.
B.S., Springfield
College;
M.Ed.,
Rutgers University.
Frank J. Davis,
Jr.,
Director
Computer Services, with rank
of
of AsProfessor.
B.S.,
M.Ed.,
Shippensburg State College.
Dr. Ralph R. Ireland,
Chairman,
Department of Sociology. B.A., M.A.,
University of Toronto; Ph.D., University of Chicago.
Robert L. Duncan, Associate Pro-
sociate
SEPTEMBER,
RECEIVE AWARDS AT
MAY COMMENCEMENT
The
of History.
fessor of Speech.
University; M.A.,
fessor, Assistant Dean of Students.
B.S., Depaw University; M.S., Butler University.
I960
—
University Richard
K.
Rutgers
Lloyd ’62 (Ed.M.); Eugene R. Malinowski ’62 (Ed.M.);
Franklin
L.
Moyer ’63 (Ed.M.)
Drexel Institute of
Technology
Carolyn M. MacFarland ’62 (M.S.)
University of Delaware Master of
Education Joy Louise Dreisbach Belles ’59; Neil Charles Belles ’64; RobA.
ert E. Borfield III ’65; Joseph
Dellegrotto ’64; Mary E. Barrall ’67;
Philip E. Pientka ’64;
Robert P.
Reeder ’61.
Montclair State College Master of
Arts Edward G. Shustack ’57.
University Master
of
Bucknell
Science Robert P. Blyler ’55; Rich-
—
—
—
—
—
—
ai'd
A. Foster
ski ’63.
’67;
Thomas
J. Shelin
Twenty-two BSC seniors x-eceived
awards at the May commencement exercises at the Bloomsburg
Fair Gi'ounds.
service
presented
Thirteen were
keys which are given for “outstanding
service to 10 per cent or less of the
senior class who accumulate a min-
imum
of 20 points for participation in
activities during their four
of college.” This is the highest
various
years
award given by
the college
commun-
ity.
Recipients of the key wex e; Sandra
-
M. Eckberg, Glenolden; Connie MarRobert T.
ene Fike, Warminster;
Hauck, Mifflinville; Max'y Kay Keys.
Hatboi’o; Gail Bower Landers, Williamsport; Virginia E. Lesevich. Catawissa, R. D. 2; Frank L. Mastroianni,
Matulis,
P.
Antoinette
Scranton;
Russell.
J.
Philadelphia; Bai’bara
Jersey Shore; Reinhold A. Shultz, Hatboro; Nancy K. Strauss, Lansford;
and
Russell W. Walsh, Levittown
Robex-t L. Wynne, Bangor.
Nine lifetime passes, given to senior
athletes who have participated in a
varsity sport for four years, were presented to Charles Bowman, Bloomsburg; Thomas Castrilli, Bath, N. Y.;
:
;
Gerald Fulmer, Bloomsburg; Wa-i'ne
Heim, Columbia; Dale Houck, Williamsport; Edward McNertney, HazleDouglas McRobei'ts, Hegins;
ton;
Frank Mastraianni, Scranton and Roy
Smay, CleaxTield R. D. 1.
Twenty-one recipients of certificates, indicating their inclusion in the
publication “Who’s Who in Amei’ican
Colleegs and Univex'sity,” were an-
nounced.
ITEMS PLACED IN BOX
OF HARTLINE SCIENCE
CENTER
A number
of
current and
recent
publications at Bloomsburg State College, a student directory, along with
several newspaper items pertaining
to Dr. Halden Keffer Hartline were
placed in a copper box which was
placed behind the date stone in the
new Haxtline Science Center on the
BSC campus.
Similar boxes containing various
materials for posterity were placed
behind the date stones on other recently completed buildings, including
Hall,
Elwell
the Andruss Librax-y,
Haas Auditorium, and South Hall.
In the box are 1968-1969 student directory, 1968 Obiter, 1968-1969 College
calendar, 1968-1969 Student Pilot, 19681969 BSC General catalog, 1968-1969
BSC graduate catalog; 1968 fall sports
brochure, 1967-1968 sports brochures,
1988 spring and fall letters to alumni,
1968 Olympian, Sept. 18, 1968 Max newspaper,
student
oon and Gold
1968 placement bx-ochure, Sept. 1968
-
Alumni Quarterly, Oct. 19, 1967 issue
concerning
Pi'ess
of The Morning
Hartline Nobel Prize; May 10, 1965
issue of The Morning Press showing
Dr. Hartline receiving BSC Alumni
Page eleven
Award;
anniversary brochure,
Guide, Bloomsburg State
about bureaucratic state government
played a big part, he said.
Columbia County
and Homecoming
In addition to the state college presidents, Dr. Eric A. Walker of Penn-
125th
Campus
College in brief,
tourist
brochure
Football Program.
The cost of construction of this building is $1,894,000.
BSC FACULTY HAS
ARTICLE PUBLISHED
Dr. Donald A. Vannan, professor of
education at Bloomsburg State College, has an article entitled “The Teaching Testing Bulletin Board’’ which
was published in the March, 1969 issue of Audiovisual Instruction. The
article deals with the methods used
by a classroom teacher to construct a
—
bulletin
board which can be used for
teaching concepts and later as a drawing which can be used in testing situations for identification purposes.
Thaddeus Piotrowski, of the Audiovisual Material Center at the College,
has a fine review of “The Practical
Audio-Visual Handbook for Teachers”
in the February, 1969
issue of Andiovisual Instruction.
The Audiovisual Instruction is a
monthly; educational media publithe
of
cation which is an organ
National Education Association.
which appears
PRE-SESSION
A total of 1,500
undergraduates and
graduate students registered on the
opening day for the first three weeks
of the 1969 summer session at Bloomsburg State College. Late registrations
were expected to boost the total to
nearly 1,550 which will be the largest
pre-session enrollment in the history
of the college.
There were 618
men and 591 women
Graduate
students.
students total 291 with 152 being men
and 139 women. Of the 1,209 undergraduate students, 977 were students
who were enrolled at BSC during the
undergraduate
previous semester.
Over 400 men and
women
were
housed in campus dormitories and
were served their meals in the College Commons. There were 390 day
women and 413 day men undergrad-
sylvania
State
University,
has
an-
nounced he will retire at the end of
Junue 1970. Miler emphasized that
he did not feel presidents of the staterelated institutions like Penn State
had as many bureaucratic troubles
as the state college presidents.
“Private schools
recruit
faculty
from October to January for the following September,” Dr. Miller said.
But state colleges might not know
what their budgets will be
Here, they’re admitting students and are never sure they’re going
until later
like.
have enough faculty.
“It takes long to process purchas“And then there’s the whole
es,”.
capital building program. The average time it takes to get a dorm is
four to five years from the time need
By that time you have
is established.
a whole new generation of students
to
in the school.”
Finally, there was the comparison
salaries, which at state colleges
are in the $20,000-$29,000 range, Miller
The state official said this
said.
of
range was “not to be compared with
private institutions,” which pay more.
“You’ll never find a private college
president taking over a state college,”
“It would be to Pennsylvanadvantage to upgrade the stateowned institutions. There is a growing awareness of raising faculty and
he said.
ia’s
administrative salaries.”
The problem. Miller said, is the current budget squeeze. In his proposed
1969-70 budget, Gov. Shaffer recommends $131,341,000 for the 13 state colleges and Indiana University up 26
million from the previous year.
—
The governor recommends
consid-
no
there’s
but
increases,
chance in this session of the legisla“Yet in order to
ture,” Miller said.
recruit and retain a properly qualified
administration and faculty, salary and
infringe benefits must be greatly
erable
creased.”
ANNOUNCE LOW BID
uate students.
FOR NEW BUILDING
MANY CHANCES IN
COLLEGE PRESIDENTS
The General State Authority in Harrisburg announced the unofficial low
bids totalling $2,435,787 on the field
The frustration of working under
the state’s bureaucracy and red tape
is
causing
among
an
alarming
turnover
presidents of the 14 state own-
ed colleges, Pennsylvania’s Commissioner of High Education says.
Dr. Frederick K. Miller said new
presidents must be found within 18
months at West Chester, Kutztown,
Bloomsburg, Lock Haven and Calilfornia.
Within the past
year-and-a-half,
presidents were named at Slippery Rock, Indiana, Kutztown, East
Stroudsburg and Mansfield.
Miller noted that wo of the vacancies were caused by deaths and some
by old age. But there was no mistaking the fact that the usual complaints
new
’age
twelve
house-gymnasium complex plannned
for the upper campus at Bloomsburg
State College.
The new complex
will
house a
full
basketball court with a fixed
seating capacity of 2,600 and room for
folding bleachers, at either end, to
size
accommodate
another 2,000 to
3,000
spectators.
In addition, the plans call for a
six-lane swimming pool with a seating capacity of between 500 and 600.
There will be two handball courts
and space for at least twelve officers
for faculty use.
The new field house will have four
locker rooms for the college and visiting varsity and jayvee teams as well
as storage space
for
uniforms
and
training room.
Several buildings are under construction at present at the college’s
main campus, but the field housegymnasium will be the first construction on the upper campus
known
locally at the Golf Club, a tract of
land that was acquired some years
ago for future expansion.
If accepted by the
General State
Authority the upper campus complex
will greatly enlarge the athletic facilities of Bloomsburg
State College
and will eliminate much of the parking problems now encountered at
sports events on the hill.
Due to the increased enrollment at
the college the present facilities are
inadequate to take care of all the ath-
—
letic
programs being scheduled.
ONE HALF STUDENTS
RECEIVING AID
Approximately 1,500 or nearly onehalf of all undergraduate students at
Bloomsburg State College received
some kind of financial loan, amounting to a total of $1,037,121, during the
according to
1967-68 college
year,
John Scrimgeour, director of financial
aid.
Loans which include National Defense Loans, Alumni Loans, and State
Guaranty Loans, accounted for the
largest percentage of the financial
assistance with a total of $518,318.
There were 251 recipients receiving a
total of $114,800 in National Defense
Loans for an average of $457 per stuAlumni
dent; 39 students received
Loans amounting of a total of $13.295 or a per-student average of $341.
State Guaranty Loans, which are not
obtained through the college but by
the student himself, totaled $390,223
for 461 recipients or an average student loan of $846.
The next largest amount of financial
aid was the scholarships and grants
area which amounted to $321,900. Of
Pennsylvania
in
this total, $256,850
State Scholarships, administered by
Education
the Pennsylvania Higher
Assistance Agency, was awarded to
518 students for an average of $496
per student.
Grants
Educational
Opportunity
totaled $49,200 for 101 students at an
average of $487; another $49,200 was
available in EO Grants through matching funds from the Pennsylvania
Higher Education Assistance Agency,
National Defense Loans, student employment, and private outside sourcBSC Alumni Scholarships awardes.
ed in the Spring of ’67 for use during
’67-68 totaled $3,225 for 23 individuals
or a $140 per student average.
Employment was available in three
areas for Bloomsburg State College
students and this amounted to a total
of $196,903, broken down as follows:
Pennsylvania State Student Employment program $100,467 for 296 students for a $339 average; work study—
$80,723 for 296 students for a $300 avgraduate assistance—$15,713
erate;
for 21 recipients for a $747 average.
—
TIIE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Statement of College Policy
Bloomsbury; State College is proud of its history and traditions, its faculty
A statement at this time does not indicate any special concern in regard to possible activities on our campus such as have been witnessed
on college campuses across the country. However, in view of the temper of the
times, we believe it proper to reassure our students, faculty, alumni, and friends
by a clear statement relative to the following:
and student body.
1.
Eloomsburg Stale College is a State-owned and State-operated college. It
has grown and expanded through the years with State funds. In accordance with State law, its management and control is the responsibility of
the
2.
Board of Trustees.
Bloomsburg State College proudly affirms its belief in, and support of,
the philosophy of individual freedom and responsibility. Acadt mie freedom is not academic license, and the right to criticize and protest is not
the right to disrupt or interfere with the freedom of others. Bloomsburg
State College believes in a government of law and not of men.
It is the
right of any citizen to criticize, protest, and attempt t6 change the law in
accord with constitutional procedures. It is not his right, however, to disregard or disobey the law even under the excuse of his own conscience.
3.
student enters Bloomsburg voluntarily.
He applies presumably because he wishes to further his education and because he believes Bloomsburg State College, with its traditions and reputation, is capable of advancing his intellectual development. Any student who is not in agreement
with the rules and regulations, traditions and policies of the College is
always welcome to suggest changes in an orderly manner; however, having been accepted and having decided to enroll, he is expected to abide
by the laws of our nation and comply with the rules and policies of
Bloomsburg State College until change is accomplished by proper pro-
A
cedure.
4.
Moreover, the administration of the College pledges unequivocally to
give full and prompt attention to proposals presented in a serious and
orderly manner. The use of violence, disturbances, or force of any kind
—whether bv a single student, a minority or a majority group— will not
be
tolerated.
Accordingly, the Board of Trustees formally announces this College offers
no sanctuary to anv individual or group which condones, advocates, or exercises the taking over, or damaging, of Commonwealth property or the use of intimidation or physical force. Any who engage in such activities will be held
and individually responsible. Corrective steps may include suspension,
expulsion, and/or prosecution in the court of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
legally
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE
(Adopted June
27, 1969)
Entered As Second Class Matter
August 8, 1941, at the Post
Office at Bloomsburg, Pa.
Under the Act of March 3, 1879
LOYALTY FUND - THIRD YEAR
Since the Loyalty
Fund was
Fund have amounted
been used
initiated in October, 1986, contributions to the
to $28,000, in
round numbers. Some
to defray the expenses, including printing of
of this
money has
The
Quarterly, salary
of the office secretary, Loyalty Fund publicity, dues to the Association of
Teachers Organizations and the Council of Alumni Associations, telephone, and
office supplies, and the sponsoring of broadcasts of athletic events.
Increasing
costs have made it necessary to dip more deeply into the Fund than we had
originally intended.
believe that these expenses are necessary in order to
prevent the Association from going out of business as an active organization.
We
Seven Alumni scholarships were presented last Spring. Four were in the
amount of $300 each, two to the amount of $200, and one to the amount of
$100. The recipients were carefully screened by a faculty committee.
We
wish to express our thanks to
all
those
However, when you read the tabulation
Fund.
who have
contributed to the
by classes, you can
easily see that only a small percentage of the Alumni have been involved.
Although larger gifts would be appreciated, what we most desire is more givers.
We
hope that the
to a substantial gift
LET’S
of gifts
classes in reunion in 1970 will give serious consideration
when
they meet in reunion.
KEEP THE BALL ROLLING.
TO BE DETACHED, FILLED OUT, AND RETURNED
Signature
Name
while in college
Address
(street)
Zip Code
(town)
li
above address
is
new check
here
Q
Amount
Year of graduation
Mail checks to Alumni Office, Box 31, B.S.C.
To
insure tax deductions,
B.
S.
C.
make checks payable
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
to
new President of B.
view the trophy shelves with Mrs. Nossen.
Shortly after assuming his duties as the
the
Alumni Room
to
S.
C.,
Dr. Robert J. Nossen visited
THE PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE
Not very many years ago, a state college essentially served a limited geographic region, its graduates were prepared for a single occupation, and for the
most part they continued to live in the area served by the institution.
Currently, of course, virtually every state-operated college recruits its students from
a wide population, prepares its graduates for diverse roles in society, and finds
its alumni scattered throughout the nation.
The era, therefore, of cohesive
alumni units is gone; it has become increasingly difficult to establish and to
maintain traditional alumni loyalties. Contact, for the most part, is continued
through publications such as this.
If, however, close community of interest has faded, there remains for every
graduate a responsibility for participating, even remotely, in the continuing
operation of his college, by supporting alumni programs.
One need not be reminded of the rapid rise of costs for higher education;
yet even with increased fees, the current student pays less than 25% of the
annual operating costs for Bloomsburg State College, exclusive of capital construction.
In all probability, you paid a lower percentage of the instructional
The demand for college opportunity has hardly
costs for your education.
abated; rather, the need for scholarship aid, loan funds, and grants-in-aid
becomes increasingly important. Today’s student should be able to look to
alumni for such assistance, as they, in turn, should help those who follow. Again,
with needs for more sophisticated facilities and equipment, essential for effective
and efficient operation, and with necessary limitations imposed upon the use
of available state funds, the need for unrestricted, discretionary funds becomes
increasingly important. The college itself should be able to look to alumni for
such assistance.
have been particularly aware of the fine Alumni Office at this college,
have watched its Board of Directors give of their time and assume responsibilities designed to fulfill the objectives of the Association.
The entire college
community joins in thanking them, and in hoping that you will support their
I
and
I
goals.
In order to keep the alumni abreast of college philosophy and college
operation, I believe it appropriate to comment briefly upon the so-called
Moratorium held on October 15. On that occasion classes were not dismissed,
On the
nor was there any disruption of the normal instructional program.
other hand, students organized and ran a series of panel sessions throughout the
day dedicated to a review of questions relating to military activity and foreign
policy, featuring participants representing a wide variety of attitudes and
approaches. The events were peaceful, constructive and represented an academically sound review of matters pertinent to common welfare.
The college can and does have no official position in matters of controversy.
should, however, provide a forum for intelligent and objective review of
pertinent issues. The date of October 15 provided one such opportunity.
It
ROBERT NOSSEN
President
ALUMNI SEE BSC PROGRESS
Alumni
lege
of
Bloomsburg State
returning
tivities
for
homecoming
Colfes-
saw more students and more
new buildings.
were the
The latter, of course,
most obvious with virtually every
segment of the campus experiencing
the construction of new buildings to
meet the needs of expanding educational opportunities.
The total cost of construction
way is $12,500,000.
under
Pour structures are already scheduled for completion in 1970. A dining hall-kitchen, facing East Second
Street, is expected to be ready for use
in January, 1970.
The dining areas
are completely air-conditioned and
will seat 1,000 students and feed 2,000
at each meal.
The present College
Commons was built in 1956 to accomodate only 720 students but is currently serving more than 1,700.
The maintenance building-garage
which
be completed in April,
provide offices, working
areas, and storage space for the
growing number of personnel who
must maintain the campus for use
during the entire year. The building
is being constructed on the site of the
former Heiss property facing Light1970,
street
is
to
plans.
This
project
the administrative staff will be located on the site now occupied by the
former Dillon House. Prefinal plans
are nearing completion, and construction could begin during the summer
In addition to the air-con1970.
ditioned office area, the project will
house a central receiving, supply, and
storage area.
The area extending east of Dillon
House to the new maintenance building will become the site of eighteen
all-weather tennis courts, a baseball
diamond, and a football-soccer field.
This area is to be used by health
and physical education classes and
for recreation activities. Preliminary
plans for these facilities and for a
of
new road and parking areas have
Road.
been completed by the project engineer.
The completion date has not
been determined.
The multi-level parking area in the
vicinity of Penn and Second Streets
will feature a new concept for parking cars at BSC.
Its purpose is to
building which
the Bakeless Center for
the Humanities, is located between
Haas Auditorium and Andruss Library.
Completely
air-conditioned,
the Center will provide 36 classroom
or seminar rooms, offices for 66 faculty members, a faculty lounge, and
storage areas. Occupation and use of
the builing are expected to begin during the 1970 Summer Sessions.
Most of the steel has been erected
for a nine story residence
hall
to
house 400 women, four resident advisers, and a member of the student
personnel
staff.
Lounges,
study
become
rooms, and storage areas are a part
of the residence hall which is expectto open its doors next August.
Final plans for a student center are
expected before the end of 1969 with
beginning construction anticipated in
the spring of 1970.
The three-story
structure will be air-conditioned and
will house a formal lounge, the College Store, a snack bar and dining
area, space for four bowling alleys,
lockers and mail-boxes, a multi-purpose room, a TV room, a listening
room, an infirmary or health center,
officer for a variety of student organizations, a recreation or
game
room, offices for student personnel
staff, a vending machine area, and
storage areas.
One of the major projects on the
Upper Campus
and
on prefinal
must be designed and coordinated
with the design and construction of
all future structures on the Upper
Campus.
New quarters for some members of
will
A new classroom
will
es
utilities
provide both roads
for residence halls,
a
dence hall for women on the Lower
Campus, two residence halls for men
and one for women on the Upper
Campus, a maintenance building-garage and a dining hall, also located on
Upper Campus.
To fulfill the provision of the Campus Plan to accomodate an enrollment
the
nearly 6000 in the 1970’s, there will
be need for other buildings on the
Upper Campus. These will include a
research and learning center,
a
science laboratory building, general
of
classroom and library
19G9
facilities.
ALUMNI DAY
April 25, 1970
Class ending in 5 and 0 will be in
will
dining hall, classroom buildings, and
auxiliary facilities.
Engineers are
currently putting the finishing touch-
DECEMBER,
provide a maximum number of spaces on a minimum amount
site
of
space. It was also felt that a parking garage, carefully designed to
blend with existing terrain, will be
more attractive than the usual amesited parking areas.
Pre-planning
for
the
additional
seven buildings is nearing completion.
Nearly $10,000,000 will be needed in
the next several years to construct a
classroom building and another resi-
reunion.
ALUMNI MEET DR.N0SSEN
Alumni returning for homecoming
at Bloomsburg State College had the opportunity of meeting
activities
the
institution’s
new
Dr.
president
Robert J. Nossen, who September 5
succeeded Dr. Harvey A. Andruss,
whose tenure covered a thirty year
span and who was on the faculty ten
years earlier.
Dr. Nossen came to
Bloomsburg
from Fredonia, N. Y., where he was
vice president for academic affairs of
State University College in that com-
munity.
Dr. Nossen was also the first Dean
of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Freedonia. From 1954 to 1960 he was professor and chairman of the English
Department. Lamar State College.
Beaumont, Texas. From 1950 to 1954
he was an assistant professor in English at Creighton University, Omaha,
Neb. from 1948 to 1950 and he was
an assistant professor of English at
Northwestern University.
Dr. Nossen was born in San Francisco, Calif., and received his early
education in the California
school
system. He received his B.A. degree
from the University of California in
1944, his M.A. degree from Northwestern University in 1948, and his Ph.D.
from the same university in 1951.
Dr. Nossen has served as a college
consultant
for
the
New York
State
Education Department and for the
Bureau of Teacher Education, and
the Bureau of Higher Education. He
has also had experience in working
with State Colleges in Pennsylvania
through the Middle States Commission.
Mi's. Nossen is
right, having
an educator in her
served on faculties
at the secondary and college level.
She is the author of numerous artic-
own
les in the field of
English Literature.
She holds A.B. and M.A. degrees.
BRINKLEY SPEAKS AT
COLLEGE CONFERENCE
“The answer to our problems is reform within the existing structure; we
need a peaceful resolution to make
the present system work because it
is still
the best in spite of
its
faults,”
David Brinkley, nationally known
news analyst and commentator, asserted at Bloomsburg State College
recently.
He addressed around 1,500 educators in Haas auditorium on
the BSC campus.
Brinkley’s address was a highlight
of the Twenty-Third annual Conference for Teachers and Administrators
sponsored by the College. He spoke
on “The State of the Nation.”
Page one
Nossen Outlines His Policy
Dr.
Asserting there is no standing still.
Dr. Robert J. Nossen, new president
of BSC, addressing the members of
the faculty and administrative staff
asked that faculty and students join
with him in a review of every phase
of the operation of the College.
The educator said he will review
some of the more pressing problems
of education including the “so called
campus
unrest,
its
causes and factors
involved in resolution, society’s expectations from the colleges and universities and the responsibilities of
higher education to society. Finally,
1 will review the possible application
of some of these to Bloomsburg.”
Tribute was paid to the marked
advancement of the college under Dr.
Andurss by the new president who
declared “The roles that this College
must play must be factored into its
long-range academic plan, and that
plan must be up-graded at least annually.”
Dr. Nossen prefaced his remarks
with this statement, “I wish to express my appreciation to the Board of
Trustees, for whom I hold great respect; to the faculty members and
students who worked with the trustees during the long, difficult,
and
sometimes tedious process of selecting a president; and to all
and
they are encouraging, numerous, and
from all areas of the College and the
region
who have made us feel fully
—
—
welcome
to
Bloomsburg.
“I am indeed pleased and proud to
be a part of BSC and the Bloomsburg
Area community. We have not been
here long, yet we already feel close
to both.”
Dr. Nossen continued his address
by noting that, “Dr. Andruss accomplished many things during his tenure: the College will long be grateful
for his years of effort, but I most appreciate his leaving a campus well
alone in the making, the buildings
and grounds that reflect care and nurturing and, above all, a fine staff with
whom
to
work.
“Assuming a new
never
have been minrole
is
easy: the difficulties
imized, thanks to those whose presence here assures a relatively smooth
period of transition.
“The past decade has been one of
lapid change in higher education, and
Bloomsburg State College reflects, in
many ways, the nature of such
change. There is no standing still,
even though some find comfort
in
a
status quo.
“I ask only that faculty and students join with me, and let me join
with them, in reviewing every phase
of the operation of the College, every
practice, every tradition, every concept.
When a new approach seems
warranted, let’s approach it carefully,
but deliberately; whatever
doesn’t
fulfill our expectations, let’s discard
Page two
and try an alternative.
“There are a number of areas
which I hope will be among our priconsiderations. Many of these
have already started and this statement will simply be a reaffirmation;
others will demand new consideration
and,
perhaps,
renewed tolerance
from you.
“Full procedures for faculty participation in goverance, the role of
students in College operation, curricula revision, the use of Library of
libCongress classification in the
configurainstructional
rary, new
tions and techniques, the implementation of a pass-fail option and, of
course, challenge procedures and an
administrative reorganization are just
a few of the considerations we must
confront openly and objectively.”
mary
HOW NEW
PRESIDENT
WAS CHOSEN
Dr. Robert J. Nossen, the new president of Bloomsburg State College,
was elected in a manner differing
Both
from that of his predecessors.
faculty and students had a part in
this election.
When
Dr. Harvey A. Andruss announced his intention early this year
oi retiring after thirty years as president, the Board of Trustees decided
both students and faculty should have
a part in naming his successor.
As a result, they invited the faculty
to name three instructors and invited
the student body to name three students to serve, along with three trustees, as a “screening group.”
The nine had an opportunity to
meet with the leading candidates
from the field of sixty who applied
There were interviews
for the post.
in which all took part. At the end of
the last interview the nine voted by
secret ballot for the top five. Dr. Nossen received the top number of votes.
The entire Board of Trustees, of
which William A. Lank of Bloomsburg is President, then met with the
two top-rated candidates and their
respective wives.
They recommended Dr. Nossen as first
choice
to
Governor Raymond Shafer. The latter announced his approval, Thursday,
August
To give
in
7,
1969.
to
a college
humanity—to
is to invest
offer health to
the sick, justice to the oppressed.
opportunity to the underprivileged, a richer and fuller life to all
and to build for oneself a
—
memorial carved
enduring of
all
the hearts and
in the
most
materials,
minds
of
men.
GRADUATE DEGREES
Bucknell University
Eckley Z. Swartz, ’67, R. D.
Bloomsburg. M.S. in Education.
Eugene P. Miller, ’67, R. D.
Master of Science.
1,
1,
Elys-
135
Pine
burg. Pa.
William H. Herald,
Lewisburg, Pa.
’64,
Master
Street,
of
Science.
Barry O. Smith, ’64, 110 South
Spruce Street, Lititz, Pa. Master of
Science.
G. Richard Garman, ’68, 114 Gearhart Street, Riverside, Pa. Master of
Science in Business Administration.
M. Thomas,
Philip
’65,
Avenue,
Williamsport,
of Science.
532
Pa.
Rural
Master
Teachers College, Columbia Univ.
’68,
M.A. in
Speech Pathology.
Shippensburg State College
Malina E. Savage, ’67, M.A. in
Business Education.
William J. Beery, Jr., ’64. M. Ed.
in Business Education.
Loreler Reed Hauck,, ’60. M. Ed.
in Business Education.
Roger G. Brumley, ’66. M. Ed. in
Rosemary Lubinski,
English.
Wayne
Smith,
’66,
John P. McElhoe,
’56,
C.
M.Ed.,
in
M.Ed.
in
English.
Reading.
Frederick L. Baker,
’64,
M.Ed.
in
Social Studies.
Ann Louise Cavanaugh,
’66,
M.Ed.
in Social Studies.
Michael Homick,
ial
’56,
M.Ed.
in Soc-
Studies.
Southern
Illinois
University
George Chebro, ’50, Master’s degree
in Secondary Education.
Lehigh University
Jane E. Hartman, ’68, Catawissa,
Pa. M.Ed., major in Elementary
Education.
Mabel L. Heffelfinger, ’43, Conyngham, Pa. M.Ed., major in Reading.
John J. Roberts, ’66. M.Ed., major
Reading.
Marie A. Solensky, Hazleton. Pa.
M.Ed., major in Reading.
Pennsylvania State University
Larry R. Eckroat. ’64, Ph.D. (Zooin
logy).
Jean M. Zelonis,
’66,
M.A. (Span-
ish)
'65,
Barbara E. Makar,
M.Ed.
(Business Education)
State University of New York at
Cortland
Neil B. Beisher, ’61, 104 Poplar St.,
Sayre, Pa. M.Sc.Ed.
Carole L. Miles, '67, 2122 Liberty
Street. Allentown, Pa. M.Sc.Ed.
Todd T. Morris, ’62, 26 Floral Avenue, Cortland. N. Y. M.Sc.Ed.
Genesco University, Genesco, N. Y.
Danielle Koury (Mrs. Jon Parker),
'66,
Master’s degree in speech and
hearing therapy.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
New York
J0nmtriam
3tt
1908— Edith Sturdevant iMrs. George R. Leonard' North Miami. Fla.
1914 Mrs. Olwen Argust Hartley.
Lenoxville. Pa.
—
1906— Amy
Levan, Sunbury, Pa.
H.
H.
1913— Anna Adams (Mrs.
Rohrbach', Northumberland. Pa.
(Mrs.
Breisch
1913— Dorothy M.
Helen J. Dresher*, Tamaqua, Pa.
1908 Eleanor Piekarski Mich.
1910— Mrs. Kate Schooley Stock.
1902—
Pa.
Trucksville,
—
— Edna
1906
Averill
(Mrs. Carl
T.
Philadel-
1895—
Wissinoming,
Apperman),
phia. Pa.
Elizabeth
Pittsburgh. Pa.
Kirkland.
Pollock
Anna Follmer (Mrs.
O.
E.
Hess) Taft, California.
1900 Jennie Beagle (Mrs.
W. C.
Leach). Maccmb. 111.
1899— D. Eleanor Gill.
1896—
1899 Mae E. Harker (Mrs. J. J.
—
—
Brandon
—
—
)
Norman
1904 Bessie Derr (Mrs.
Sked'. Pennington. N. J.
1886 Mary E. Riley (Mrs.
1900—
Thomas
Mack).
Mary Gallagher
Anna A. Brown
1898
(Mrs. J. H.
Kenney)
1899 Veronnica Conlan (Mrs. George Holliday).
Sophia M. Ferry
1900
(Mrs. Thomas E. Shaffer). Bloomsburg, Pa.
1895 George Norman, Mendenhall.
Pa.
—
1897 Bess Davis
1901 Bertha Appleman
1901 Augusta Hinkelman,
da, Md.
1901 Claude L. Moss
—
Bethes-
—
1901— Ralph E. Smith
Mollie Moran
(Mrs.
Johnson), Honolulu, Hawaii.
1903
1903
—Winifred
—
—
McGowen
J.
J.
(Mrs.
Gaugham), Mainscott, L. I., N. Y.
1903 Susie Cook (Mrs. Charles
C.
Morgan)
1903 Rae Hagenbuch
1903 — Elizabeth Waring (Mrs. Leon
Colvin), Mabel Silvius.
1901—Charles T. Belles
Benjamin E. Troutman,
Sunbury,
Pa.
E. A. Reams
The death of E. A. Reams, who
taught for more than a quarter century at
Bloomsburg State College,
ochis
curred July 26 at the home of
daughter with whom he resided in
Whittier, California,
Mrs. Virginia
Roberts. Born July 29, 1890, Reams
came
Bloomsburg in 1925,
His field was social
retiring
studies.
his AB degree at Kansas Wesleyan, and
at Columbia
University and took graduate work at
the University of Southern California,
Pennsylvania State University and
to
in 1952.
He received
DECEMBER,
AM
1969
167
Pound Ave.,
Whittier.
Helen Roberts Truscott ’20
Mrs. R. J. Truscott, of 703 Madison
Avenue. Jermyn, passed away Nov-
ember
21, 1968 after
a long illness at
Carbondale General Hospital.
Born
in Jermyn, she was educated in the
borough schools and was a graduate
of
Bloomsburg State College and took
graduate work at the Pennsylvania
State College. She is survived by her
husband. R. J. Truscott, retired chief
school administrator, and one son,
Dr. William Ray Truscott.
She was a member of the First
Methodist Church and was superintendent of the Primary Department.
Other affiliations were financial secretary,
Women’s
Society of Christian
life time member of
the Official Board of her church. She
was also active in all charity drives.
Service and a
Earl B. Hartman ’16
Earl B. Hartman, seventy-four, 2100
63rd avenue south, St. Petersburg.
Fla., died in St. Petersburg August 24.
He taught for two years in Riverside
before entering World War I in the
U. S. Army.
He served with the 312 Machinegun
Bn. 79 Position, AEF in World War I
and was wounded in action in France.
He was employed by Firestone Tire
and Rubber Company
Margaret Monahan
— Miles Pollock
— Elmira A. Bankes
1918
1936
World War
University.
Survivors include his wife.
Following retirement Mr. and Mrs.
Reams resided with their daughter at
of
Reading and
Ben
Franklin Consistory, Philadelphia.
Willliam
II.
Rowlands
’49
William H. Rowlands, a teacher at
Northwest Area High School, died at
the Wilkes-Barre General Hospital on
October 8. He graduated from Harter
High School in 1936, and also from
Bloomsburg State College and Bucknell University.
He was a member
of
PSEA,
local
and state chapters; National Congress
of PTA, St. Peter’s. Episcopal Church,
Plymouth; Shawnee Post 463, American Legion, Plymouth and Pennsylvania State Association of Township
supervisors.
He was a veteran of
World War II in the U. S. Army.
Dr. E. Paul Wagner
Dr. E. Paul Wagner, professor of
psychology and director of testing
program at BSC, died at his home.
140 East Twelfth Street, Bloomsburg,
September 1. He was born in Charleroi, a son of the late Henry N., and
Adnia Martin Wagner.
He earned his bachelors, master and
doctor degree from Penn State University, and also attended Washington
and Jefferson College.
He
Donora Lodge 626 F and AM; Coudersport Consistory; Irem Temple, WilKes-Barre; Pennsylvania State Education Association;
Association
of
Pennsylvania State College and University Faculties; Bloomsburg State
College Faculty Association; American Psychology Association; Phi Delta
Kappa Fraternity; Kappa Sigma Fraternity; and chairman of the scholarship committee of the Jacques Weber Foundation.
Wagner coached the BSC baseteam to a State College champion-
Dr.
ball
ship in the middle 1950’s.
During the second
semester
of
1968-69 Dr. and Mrs. Wagner toured
the South Pacific area during the prothe
fessor’s sabbatical leave from
college.
Harriet Bittenbender ’01
Miss Harriet Bittenbender, Berwick,
died September 7. She was born in
Nescopeck township and resided in
the Berwick area her entire life.
She taught school at Nescopeck and
Berwick for 55 years, retiring in 1956.
A member of the Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, Berwick, she was a
.
member
of all the women’s coordinate functions of her church.
for thirty-eight
years, retiring in Florida ten years
ago. He was a member of the Pasadena Commuunity Church, St. Petersburg; Loyalty Lodge 645, Akron, O.;
Rajah Temple
II.
Following the war he
taught at State University
College,
Utica, N. Y., and was athletic director
there before coming to BSC in 1950.
He was a member of the American
Legion Post 273; Bloomsburg Elks;
National Rehabilitation
Association;
taught physical education and
coached the track team at Donora
High School, prior to serving as a
naval officer in the South Pacific in
Harriet
McAndrew Murphy
’16
a
Mrs. Harriet M. Murphy,
76,
for
32
Washington area resident
years, died August 21 in Doctors Hospital.
She had undergone surgery
two weeks before. Mrs. Murphy was
the former Harriet McAndrew. She
was a graduate of Bloomsburg State
had taught
Teachers College and
school in Hawley, Pa.
She was a member of the Ladies
Guild of the Sisters of Our Lady of
Catholic
Africa, Blessed Sacrament
Church, its Sanctuary Sodality and
Her
also the Christ Child Society.
husband, George W.. an attorney, died
in 1952.
Anna Kane Crosby
’24
Vincent Crosby, the former
Anna Kane, of Frackville, a former
teacher in the West Mahoning TownMrs.
ship schools, died July 21.
Crosby was employed by the Lebanon
Valley school district at the time of
her death.
Mrs.
Rose E. Monahan ’96
Miss Rose E. Monahan, 91, of 440
Carey Avenue, Wilkes-Barre, retired
Wilkes-Barre City school teacher and
an active Girl Scout leader for many
years, died in the Suunnyside Nursing
Home, where she had been a guest
the past few months.
Miss Monahan taught in the WilkesBarre City School District for 48
years. She was a teacher at both the
Parrish and Henry M. Hoyt schools.
A
Girl Scout leader 41 years, she
Page three
of Girl Scout Troop
of St. Aloysius Church and previously had been a leader for the Girl
Girl
Pioneers, a forerunner of the
was the founder
Edith H. Dawson, Mrs. Lillian D.
Leon Krauser, Mrs. Helen
Margaret B.
H. McNaught,
Dr.
Parke, Mrs. Rachael E. Kline, Mrs.
Kline, Mrs.
17,
John Brown
Scouts.
She had been a member of the
board of directors for Wyoming ValIn 1962, she
ley Girl Scout Council.
was selected to appear or. the cover
of the annual report of the Wyoming
Valley Girl Scout Council which marked the 50th anniversary of Girl Scouting.
She was honored at a “Honor
Your Founders” dinner in October,
1960.
Miss Monahan was a member of St.
Aloysius Church and its Altar and
Rosary Society. She served as the
superintendent of St. Aloysius Sunday
School and also was a Sunday School
teacher at St. Leo’s Church, Ashley.
She served as district deputy of the
Catholic Daughters of America for
several terms and also was grand
regent for Court Gate of Heaven,
CDA.
The Wilkes-Bare Times Leader had
the following editorial comment:
“The death
of
Miss Rose Monahan,
South Wilkes-Barre,
the
recalls
made
mendous contribution she
treto
youth during a long career spanning
nine decades. She was an outstanding figure in Girl Scouting, education
and religion.”
Theron Watts
Theron Watts, 74, Bloomsburg, died
summer of a heart attack
his home.
A receiving clerk at
BSC for thirty -three years, he retired
twelve years ago. He later operated
the Watts Evergreen Nursery
in
during the
at
Benton Township. He served as parttime polilceman for thirty-five years.
3856
A
ENROLL AT COLLEGE
total
of
3,559
undergraduate
completed
students
registration for
the 1969-1970 college year at Bloomsburg State College, according to Robert Bunge, registrar.
In
addition,
297 graduate students are enrolled at
the college, which give a grand total
of 3,856
undergraduates and graduate
students, the largest enrollment in the
history of the college.
Contributors to the Loyalty Fund,
to October 1, 1969, not previously reported
1897— Mrs. Edward A. Reams (in
Others
memory of Prof. Edward A. Reams)
1896
E. Van Wie
1900— Mrs. F.
1901— Mrs. Isabel York, Jessie Gil:
—
christ
1898
Mrs. S. L. Richards
Mrs. Louise Lewis
Gertrude Fullmer (Mrs. A. T.
1903—
Lowry), Nevin E. Fuunk, William R.
Lams, Mrs. J. E. Ratajski.
1906—
1902 Bess M. Long, Mrs. E. W.
McHugh
L.
1904
1905
Ray Hawk
Mrs. Griselda D. Jacobus
Bessie Coughlin
D.
Carroll
Dr.
Mabel R. Farley
1907 Mrs. Robert
B.
Champlin,
Fleischer,
George M. Lehman
1908
Mary South wood,
Hartman, Mrs.
1909
Mrs.
J.
C. O.
Saida
L.
Moore
G. Morris, Walter C.
Welliver
1910 Julia Gregg Brill, Mrs. Fred
W. Zane, Sara F. Lewis, Mrs. Anna
K. Edwards, Mrs. Clarence N. Fisher, Maurice E. Houck, Mrs. Helen T.
Perry, Mrs. Harold Davis, Mrs. Clarence N. Fisher
1911 Alfred K. Naugle
1912 Mrs. Florence G. Carl,
Mrs
1914—
Walter Elison, Mrs. Guy F. Smith,
Mrs. Lera M. Yard, Ercel D. Bidleman, Mrs. Abbie Leh, Mrs. Alfaretta
Wilner, Mrs. William Peacock, Harold N. Cook
1913 Dr. Kimber C. Kuster, Hon.
Bernard J. Kelley, Mrs. L. L. Lister,
Mrs. Florence L. Conard
Mrs. F. J. Wyant
1915 Ramon Selles Roldan,
1918—
Mrs.
Dallas C. Baer, Mrs. Irwin R. Weaver, Joseph Cherrie
1916 Mrs. Jennie R. Morris, Mrs.
A. J. Munro, William D. Taylor, D.
Emerson Wiant
1917 Ralph W. Kindig, Mrs. Anna
M. Smith, Mrs. Alice T. Gordner,
Mrs. R. S. Burr, Dr. J. Loomis ChristJohn R.
ian, Clarence T. Hodson,
Richardson, Jr., J. Frank Brink
been named
Clyde A. Miller
Mrs. J. F. Labagh, Mrs. Priscilla A. McDonald, Alice M. Burns,
Mrs. Veda H. Lewis, Mrs. Victor G.
Mrs.
Patterson,
Long, Hurley O.
Catharine Wilkinson, Mrs. Norman A.
1923—
Fox, Sr., Olive O. Robinson.
1920 Mrs. Myron F. Garney, Margaret V. Hower, Mrs. Muzetta L. Morgan, Mrs. Helen S. Roach, Mrs. William R. Turner
1921 Mrs. Margaret J. D. Martin,
Mrs. Mary Shaler, Mrs. A. C. SutM.
cliffe, Miller I. Buck,
Lillian
Yerkes
1922 Mrs. Joseph E. Adams, Mrs.
Mary Emmanuel, Martha Y. Jones,
Mrs. Mary L. Paetzell, Mrs. Bertha
K. Flinchum, Mary C. Getty, William
tion
T.
Of the 3,559 undergraduate students, 1,884 are men and
1,675
are
women. The graduate student total
of 297 breaks down into 137 men and
160
women.
Approximately
men and
1,695
women are housed in campus dormitories and will be served their meals
through the
facilities
of
the
College
Commons.
Paul
S.
Riegel,
former
Students at BSC, and
ent Personnel at the
Illinois
of
at
Dean
of
of StudUniversity of
Dean
Urbana-Champaign,
has
to the newly-created posiassistant vice chancellor for
administrative affairs.
I’age four
1919
Payne
Mrs. Marion W. Evans, Mrs.
1924
Viola M. Stadler, Margaret J.
Jones,
Adaline E. Swineford,
Mrs.
K. Rolland, Clara D. Abbett
Gladys R. Stecker, Laura A.
Mrs. James S. Jordan. Mrs.
Y. Lewis, Mrs. Wayne Turner
Mrs. Maurice Zeisloft, Mrs.
Louise
1925
Davis,
Nelson
1926
Robert M. Dwyer, Martha M. Lingertot, Christine
Mrs.
B.
Roeder,
Thurston Smith, Mrs. Neal W: Wormley, Mrs. Claud F. Avery
1927 Naomi K. Bender,
Alice E.
Burdon, Beatrice
Englehart,
Mrs.
Ralph G. Davenport, Orice Dodge
1928 Mrs. F. P. Prettyleaf, Ellen
G. Davis, Mary K. Heintzelman, Mrs.
Ralph E. Dendler, Helen Kramer,
Mrs. Russell Tressler, Mrs. Walter
F. Vorbleski, Lois A. Watkins, Mrs.
Earl J. Smiley, Mrs.
Mildred
S.
Weiss, Mrs. Foster Furman, Francis
A. Garrity, Mrs. Louise B. Stevens
1929 Mrs. Leonora G. Reese, Walter M. Sieski, Mrs. James N. Wilson
1930 Helen E. Snyder,
Mary F.
Morton, Richard T. Sibley, Margaretta M. Bone, In memory of Armand G.
Mrs.
Keller, Mrs. Daniel G. Bouse,
Myrtle Ker, Mrs. Ruth L. La Rue,
Anne H. Morgis
1931 Mrs. Robert M. Shoemaker,
Mrs. Stanley C. Zybort, Mrs. Catherine S. Acker, Rev. Thomas L. Henry,
Mrs. Robert L. Stover, Mrs. Esther
Y. Castor
1932 Ezra W. Harris, Mrs. Lois H.
McKinney, Dr. Clarence L. Hunsicker, Mrs. Dorothy Ward, Wilhelmina
M. Cerine, Frank J. Gerosky, Mrs.
John E. Wise
1933 John
Lewis, Mary A.
V.
Stahl, Walter M. Kritzberger, John
A. Early, Mrs. M. E. Howells
1934 Robert H. VanSickle, Gladys
M. Wenner, Genevieve G. Morges
1935 Mrs. Stephen Cimballa, Catharine A. Mensch, Mr. and Mrs. William S. Reed, Unora B. Mendenhall.
Donald A. Ruckle
1936 Mrs. Harold Wertman, Mrs.
W. K. Mann, Mrs. G. C. Moore
1937 Mary E. Palsgrove, Mr. and
Mrs. Earl A. Gehrig
1938 Mary T. Quigley, Mrs. Joseph
1943—
Gillen,
Mrs.
Dorothy Kreinheder,
Mrs. N. M. Cassano, Dr. Clyde L.
Klinger, Vance S. Laubach
1944—
1939 Mrs.
Anna O. Guttendorf,
Victor J. Ferrari, Mrs.
Wilhelmina
Scheffler, Willard A. Christian Jr.
1940 Mrs. Glenn Hyssong, Clayton H. Hinkel, William W. Wertz
1941 Leo J. Lehman, Mrs.
Mae
M. Hackenburg
1942 Jack L. Mertz, William
P.
Wanich, Dominic R. Pino
Mrs. Lee C. Brown. Mrs.
Gertrude
H.
Grabowski, Martha
Wright, Mrs.
R. Yeany
Raymond
Algatt, Philip
Mrs. John Gallagher, Walter
A. McCloskey, Mrs. Philip R. Yeany,
Mrs. Lois W. Farr
1945 Mrs. Harvey
Huber,
Mrs.
Betty L. Dietrich, Joseph R. Gula
TI1E
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
1946—
1947— Mrs. Betty Linn
William E. Horvath. Vincent
Washville. Robert P. Martin, Mrs.
F.1948—
Joseph Kula.
Henry E. Crawford. Mrs.
1949— F. Washville. Paul N. BakVincent
er, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Reitz
Clifford J. Kendall. Richard
E. Grimes. John H. Reichard, WilM. Purcell.
lilam R. Miller. John
John Kunutza, Francis J. Radice,
Mrs. Patrick J. Flaherty
1950 Mrs. Thomas L. Gunn, Robert
MacJ. Kashner, Mrs. Robert A.
1951— Mrs. Hazel M. Guyler, MurMillan.
ray A. Hackenburg, Patrick J. Flah1952—
erty, Mr. and Mrs. William J. Brennan, Edward J. Kreitz
Mrs. Barbara J. Miller. Mrs.
Robert Fritz. Mrs. Clarence Meiss
Mrs. Pavil Cerula, David
Jenkins
1954— III. Calvin W. Kanyrick, Dr.
Maynard L. Hairing. Francis J.
W
Stanitski
1953 Mrs.
Frank
J.
Mary
Furgele,
Mrs.
Fowler.
Robert W. Ger-
hard. Jr.
1956— Mrs. Nancy E. Phillips, JerS. Kopeck, Robert L. Garrison.
William J. Jacobs. Mrs. L. H. Anerweck
1955 Joseph J.
Shemanski.
Dr.
John E. Kosoloski. Jr., John C. Panichello. Jacob S. Slembarski
David M. Cole, Karol E. Ruppel. Mary R. Moser,
Harrison
J.
Morson, Jr.
1957 Mrs. Edwin R. Hawk
1958 Mrs. Dolores
M. Plummer.
George E. Renn, Paul H. Anderson.
1961—
Mrs. Margaret A. Wightman
1959 Mrs. Jean Paxton, Otto
H.
Donar, Paul H. Spahr,
Ronald P.
Davis. Mrs. T. L. Radzinski. Ronald
F. Romig.
1960 Albert P. Francis, Mrs. Glenn
L. Porter. James W. Blair, Mrs. Carl
Janetka, Victor A. Miller, Paul T.
Paliscak. Mrs. Robert Jones
Mrs. E. L.
Roberts,
Mrs.
Paul Bickelman,
Robert L. Deibler, Mrs. E. R. Mullen, Ray L. George, Armand L. Sebastionelli, Robert
ome
H. Walters
David W. Barbour, Mrs. Teressa Y. Hartman, Judith A. Blair,
Mrs. Edward J. Demeter, Mrs. S. G.
Thomas, Thomas J. McHugh, Mrs.
Donald Vannan, Elaine J. Anderson,
Daniel Kwanoski,
Walter H. Ver1962
anda. Mrs. Elizabeth M. Cicero
1963 Gail L. Allen,
Thomas V.
Nawrocki, Robert A.
Koppenhaver,
Mrs. Richard C. Scorese, Mrs. D. R.
Wimmer,
Mrs. John
Windsor,
Charles L. Ditton, Lee R. Jackson,
Mrs. Beatrice B. Robinson, George
E. Weiser, James K. Sample
1904 Mi's. V. J. Serafino,
Helen
M. Sobota, Richard C. Scorese, Ray
C. Oman, Bonnie L. Zehner, Edward
Eill,
Floyd W. Walters,
Raymond
G. Brodish. Ann M. Hocker, Mr. and
Mrs. David W. Sharpe, Mr. and Mrs.
George A. Weigand, Mr. and Mrs. C.
Edward Crim. Dorothy P. Eisenhart,
Mrs. Gloria J. Froelick, Mrs. Kenneth
L. Richter, Mrs. Estella L. Roesch,
Mr. and Mrs. David A. Yergey, Harold C. Andrews, Ronald P. ColarusJr.,
—
DECEMBER,
1969
so.
William
Jeffrey
1965—
J.
O’Brien, Mr. and Mrs.
M. Garrison, Mr. and
George A. Weigand.
Mrs.
John
W. McCaskill.
Joseph Schein, Robert W.
Hertzig,
Alvin W. Balchunas, Donna M. Eckhart, John R. Klees. Jr., Nancy R.
Troutman, Neal L. Bower, Robert A.
Stevens. Mrs. Carol A. Straub, Mrs.
James K. Sample, Robert M. Farina. Wayne W. Smith
1966 Mrs.
Kenneth
Bartoo,
G.
Mrs. N. D. McLean, John S. Mulko,
Mrs. Robert Paul, Gareth T. Kase,
Jo Anne
Sill,
Mary
Alice
Wocdriff,
Zarski, Mrs. Clareen BeamE. Croughn, Darryl W. Lanning, Robert B. Lastka.
Robert L.
Letcavage, Rose M. Chiki, Joseph W.
Kurowski. Mrs. Judith
Makaravitz,
Mr. and Mrs. Spering, Mrs. Wilbur
1967—
Carlson. Gerard Dick,
Mary Ann
John
er,
J.
Mary
Dowd. Frederick J. Klock. Audrey M.
McClure, Suzanne Miller. Dolores M.
Revtyak. Mrs. Ronald P. Colarusso,
Edwin N. Johnson,
Jr.
Jane
E.
Schoenerberger,
Harry M. Saxton. Jr., Susan Shepherd,
Phillip D. Landers. William X. Ash,
Jr., Mary S. Gifford. Susan P. Hicks,
Mr. and Mrs. Irwin F. Zoblocky, Mrs.
Floyd W. Walters, Harold A. Swigart,
Dorothy J. Tiley. Eugene D. Shershen, Harry P.
Balliet.
Wilbur J.
Carlson, Allen W. Handwerk, John R.
Holton. Ronald G. Jackson. Mr. and
Mrs. Frank G. Klein. Carlann Nelson,
Mr. and Mrs. David A. Rudisill, Mrs.
Malina E. Savage, Mr. and Mrs. Regis
C. Sterling
1968 Mrs. Charles H. Fulton. Margaret M. Walsh, Mrs. C. David Shivery, Mary Virginia Hower, Mrs. John
Mulka, David M. Forney, Jr., Mrs.
David M. Forney, Jr., Mr. and Mrs.
Richard L. Hartman, Katherine M.
Ansacker, Betty Ruth Keller, Rosemary Lubinski, Aracelia E. Schlegel,
Gerald Somerday, Diana M. Cray,
Mrs. June L. Gallo, Thomas C. Kline,
Carol Ann Kopp, Dawn S. Schulter,
Mary L. Steffen, Karen Undeck, Joseph G. Alansky, Mrs. Leabetta E.
Mortorff, Mrs. Frank Plonski, Ronald
G. Kashlak, Vicki F. Colton, Mr. and
Mrs. James K. Sample, Mrs. Ruth E.
Kahler, Eugene E. Kline, Douglas C.
Hippenstiel. John J. Ondish, Mrs.
Janet E. Pursel, Mrs. Joan M. Puschauver,
Raymond B. Walverton,
Mi's. Carl J. Cobb, Charles J. Greco,
James L. Poeehmann,, Joseph T.
S.
Austin, Jr.
1969 Mrs.
Phillip
D.
Landers,
Sharon K. Logue, William R. Parker,
Beverly Ann Jones. Linda E. Wimmer, Elizabeth J. DeLance, Noble C.
Quandel, Jr., Bonnie
Rae Taylor,
Randy W. Hackenburg, Carl J. Cobb,
David W. Arnold, Frances R. Dennicki, John P. O’Brien, Frederick C.
Richards, Jeffrey A. Taylor, Lois J.
Goncoer, Kenneth C. Stanton, Albert
J.
MRS. WILLIAMS RETIRES
Mrs.
Fisher, Jr.
Mrs. Elizabeth Williams, Assistant
of Women at Bloomsburg State
College, retired at the end of August
after thirty-eight years in the field of
Dean
education.
A native of South Williamsport, Mrs.
Williams received her early education in the schools of that community
and earned a Bachelor of Science degree in education from Slippery Rock
State College where she majored in
English and social studies. The Pennsylvania State
University
awarded
her a Master of Education degree
with a major in psychology and student personnel work.
She has taken
additional graduate work in psychology at Bucknell University and in
student personnel work at Syracuse
University.
While at Bloomsburg she taught
psychology and sociology, chaired
orientation programs
and Parents
Day for many years, served as President of the Faculty Association at the
college and President of the Bloomsburg Branch, American Association
of University Women.
She has served on the executive board of the
Fennsylvania Association of Women
Deans and Counselors and holds memberships in the Pennsylvania State
Education Association, the National
Education Association, and the Order
of Eastern Star 321.
NEW DEPARTMENT
HEADS ARE NAMED
Dr. Martin Satz, a
BSC
member
of the
and a professor of psychology, has been named
acting chairman of the Department of
faculty since 1958
Phychology, replacing Dr.
Merritt
Sanders, who has become the new
director of Research and Evaluation
Center.
Dr. Edwin Drake, a member of the
staff since 1964 and a professor of
history, has been
arts and sciences
named
director of
succeeding
Dr.
Alan J. Buker, who accepted a position of dean of liberal arts at Robert
Morris College, Pittsburgh.
The former Department
of
Social
chaired by
Dr.
William
Carlough. has been spit into two departments
the Department of Philosophy, Dr. William Carlough, chairSciences,
—
man, and the Department of SocioDr. Ralph Ireland, chairman.
The former Department of Physical
logy,
Science, chaired by Dr. Norman E.
White, has also been divided into two
departments the Department of Physics, Dr. Halbert Gates, chairman,
and the Department of Chemistry,
Dr. Norman E. White, chairman. In-
—
creases in enrollment and expansion
curriculum has necessitated the
dividing of these two departments.
of
ALUMNI DAY
April 25, 1970
Class ending in 5 and 0 will be in
reunion.
Remember
to
in
your contri-
Bloomsburg State College
Alumni Loyalty Fund. Do it now!
bution to the
Page
five
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR
T2
H. F. Fenstemaker
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Grace Foote Conner,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Terms
242 Central
Road
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Term
expire 1972
Millard Ludwig ’48
Center and Third Streets
Millville,
VICE PRESIDENT
Dr. Frank J. Furgele
R. D.
1,
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie
509 East Front Street
Berwick, Pennsylvania 18603
Pennsylvania 17846
Dr. William L. Bitner
33 Lincoln Avenue
’52
88
Mills, Pa. 19342
Glen
SECRETARY
John Thomas ’47
68 Fourth Street
Hamburg, Pennsylvania 19526
’43
Term
Clayton H. Hinkel
expires 1970
’40
224 Leonard Street
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
TREASURER
Earl A. Gehrig ’37
110 Robin Lane, Sherwood Village
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Term
205
expires 1970
Terms
’35
III
12801
Elizabeth H. Hubler
’29
McKnight Street
Gordon, Pennsylvania 17936
James H.
Delly, Jr.
’41
Bailsman Drive
Lancaster, Pennsylvania 17603
37 N.
Term
State College, Pa. 16801
New York
Glen Falls,
Dr. Kimber C. Kuster T3
140 West Eleventh Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
expires 1970
Elwood M. Wagner
643 Wiltshire Road
’34
102 West Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Farm Box
Term
Col.
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
expires 1970
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
Colonial
—
’34
expires 1970
Glenn A. Oman ’32
1704 Clay Avenue
Scranton, Pennsylvania 18509
expire 1971
Mrs. Verna Jones ’36
18 West Avenue, Apartment C-4
Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087
Volume LXX, Number 4 — December, 1969
Hill, Pa., after
1900
Anna Bywater
the
a guest at
Ribaudo Convalescent Home, R. D. 2,
Waymart, Pa.
Class
Riland,
is
18472
1903
Representative:
Walter
H.
Warwick Avenue, Scars-
11
1905
Class
Representative:
Vera
Market
Mrs.
Ilouscnick,
503
Street, Bloomsburg, I’a. 17815
1907
(127
Representative:
Bloom
Fred
W.
Street, Danville, Pa.
six
in
the
Drexel
burg, Pa.
17821
1914
Margie Reese Penman is in the
Delaware County Hospital, Drexel
Hill, Pa., after a fall which resulted
in a broken hip.
Representative:
Robert E.
Class
Metz, 23 Manhattan Street, Ashley,
Pa. 18700
Class Representative: Mrs. Pearle
Fitch Dielil, 027 Bloom Street, Danville, Pa. 17821
1912
Representtaive: Howard F.
Fenstemaker, 242 Central
Road,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17821
1913
Margie Reese Penman is
Delaware Cominty Hospital,
Page
that resulted in
Class
1909
Class
fall
1911
Class Representative: Edwin M.
Barton, 353 College Hill, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
Diehl,
17821
a
hip.
1910
dale, N. Y. 10583
Hemingway
a broken
Class Representative: Dr. Kimber
Kuster, 140 West 11th Street, Blooms-
Representtaive:
J. Howard
Deily, 518 West Third Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1915
Class
Representtaive: John H. Shu-
man, 368 East
burg, Pa. 17815
Main
Street,
Blooms-
1916
Class Representative: Mrs. Russell
Burrus (Emma Harrison) R. D. 2,
Orangeville, Pa. 17859
1917
Class
Representative:
Cromis, Mahoning Manor,
Milton. Pa. 17847
Allen
L.
R. D. 1,
1918
Class
Representative:
Clair
J.
Patterson, 315 West Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Dana H. Young, 335 South Market
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Me Alley)
Box
Street, Shamokin, Pa., is confined to
He would be
his home by illness.
very glad to hear from his classmates.
1919
Haroldl
Miss CathRepresentative:
erine A. Reimard, 335 Jefferson St.,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
and Margaret Swartz
Class
1920
Leroy W.
Representative:
Berwick Road,
Old
3117
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
Creasy,
1921
lass Representative:
Cole, 100 Leonard Street,
Fa. 17815
1922
Edna S.
Representative:
Class
Harter, R. D. 1, Nescopeck, Pa. 18623
1923
Mrs. RayRepresentative:
Kashner, 125 Friar Road,
Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa.
Class
mond
P.
17815
Mrs. Helen Hower McNaught, War-
85,
Sparks,
1930
Class
Representatives:
Luther W.
Bitler, 117 State
Street, Millville. Pa. 17864
1931
Representative:
James B.
Class
Davis, 333 East Marble Street, Mechanicsburg, Pa. 17055
Robert C. Bobby) Wilson, former
<
star
Mrs. Harry
Bloomsburg,
is
Nevada. 89431
Bloomsburg
at
athlete
High
School and Bloomsburg State College
and one time teacher and coach of
the Bloomsburg High football team,
retired after almost three decades
of service with the State Department
of
Education.
Wilson, chief of the Child Accounting Division, Bureau of School Administrative Services, is credited with
the development of the child accounting forms presently in use throughout
Oak Street, Hazleton, Pa. 18201 and
Mary Jane Fink (Mrs. Frederick McCutcheon) Maple Avenue, Conyngham,
Pa. 18219
Robert J. Rowland, Assistant Superintendent
of
Schools,
Luzerne
County Schools Office, Wilkes-Barre,
Pa., was appointed to fill the position
of County Superintendent of Schools
effective July 1, 1969.
He succeeds
the retiring Wesley E. Davies T9, who
has been County Superintendent for
the past five years and an Assistant
County Superintendent for twenty-nine
years.
1937
Class Representatives: Mr. and Mrs.
Earl A. Gehrig, 110 Robin Lane, Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1938
Class Representative: Paul G. Mar710 East Main
burg, Pa. 17815
lin,
Aerio Fetterman
Street,
Blooms-
chief
adminisSchool
the division.
A resident of 3514 Schoolhouse Lane,
Harrisburg, the former local resident
was honored in special retirement
trator of the Southern
District.
Miss Margaret Hower, Riverside,
Pa. Those present were:
Leona Williams Moore, Simsbury,
Conn.; Anna Bronson Seely, Drums,
R. D.; Lillian Derr Kline, Millville,
R. D.; Rachael Evans Kline, Orangeville; Ruth Geary Beagle, Danville.
R. D.; Sarah Levan Leighow. Emily
E. Craig, Catawissa R. D. and Helen
Hower McNaught, Warwick. R. I.
Mrs.
Guests of the group were:
Betty Crouse, Simsbury, Conn.; Mrs.
Dale Leighow and daughters, Sally
Kay, Suann Lea and Suzet Lea, Catawissa R. D.; Miss Margaret Hower,
ceremonies held during a general staff
meeting of the department.
In his twenty-seven years of service
he was a child accounting advisor
The
and school business specialist.
Willard A.
Christian, Jr., 803 Logue Street, Williamsport, Pa. 17701
Dr. James V. DeRose, Head of the
Riverside.
and coach
Rhode
Island, entertained the
members of the Rural Group of the
Class of 1923 at the home of her sis-
wick.
ter,
Kurtzman.
Wilson in his years in Bloomsburg
was an all around athlete at the
Bloombsurg High School and also
active in varsity athletics at Bloomsburg State College. Early in his
career in education he was a member
of the faculty of the local high school
team.
1924
Class Representative:
Edward F.
Schuyler, 236 West
Ridge Avenue,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1925
Class Representative:
Mrs. Pearl
Radel Biekel, 909 Masser Street, Sunbury, Pa.
17801
1926
Marvin M.
Class Representative:
Bloss, R. D. 2, Wapwallopen, Pa. 18660
1927
Ralph
(Verna Medley), 16
Ransom Street, Plymouth, Pa. 18651
Class Representative: Mrs.
G.
retirement certificate was presented
by Secretary of Education David H.
Davenport
169
The address
DECEMBER,
(Mrs. John Catterall)
Goodwin
of
Street,
San
Ruth Gardner (Mrs.
1969
the
Panther
football
left
—
1932
Lois
Heppe McKinney,
1903
Man-
ada Street, Harrisburg, Pa., 17104,
has been a teacher in the Steelton
Highspire School District for twenty
years. She has been chairman of the
PSEA Public Relations Committee for
Representative:
Science Department of Marple Newton Schools has been named for the
American Chemical
James Bryant Conant Award
51.000
Representative:
Miss Lois
Lawson,
644
East Third Street,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
78
River
Road,
with the Wilkes-
Barre Times-Leader since
1936.
1934
Representative:
Esther
Evans McFadden (Mrs. Joseph), 154
East Fifth Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
Class
17815
1935
Class Representative: William I.
Reed, 151 East 4th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1936
Society
for high
school chemistry teaching.
The honor was announced at the
Chemical
the
New York City,
and is sponsored by the duPont Com-
national meeting of
Society recently in
Presentation will be made during the Chemical Society 159th natMay,
ional meeting scheduled
for
1970 in Toronto, Canada.
pany.
Dr. DeRose has received
much
rec-
ognition for his contributions to the
improvement of science teaching in
secondary schools. He has served as
a consultant on overseas projects,
and recently returned from an assignment for the University Grants Commission of India. He also has served
as consultant for the American Association
Advancement of
for
the
Science, and the
National Science
Foundation.
In 1961 the National Teacher of the
listed
Dr. DeRose
among outstanding teachers
Class
Raymon Stryjak,
N anticoke, has been
Area
1939
Class
Year Honor Roll
four years.
1933
Mrs. Dendler requests that members of the class send ideas for the
45th reunion. “Let’s make it a big reunion.”
1929
Class Representatives: Mrs. (Elsie
Lebo) Nelson Stauffer, 88 John St.,
Kingston, Pa. 18704. (Arline Frantz)
Mrs James Wertman, 20 Parish
Street, Dallas, Pa. 18612
Arline Frantz (Mrs. James Wertman) lives at 20 Parrish Street, Dallas, Pa. 18612
Irene Johns
lives at 6616
Diego, Cal.
of
here to begin his successful career in the State Department of Education.
The retired educator plans to occupy the majority of his free time
with his favorite hobbies bowling and
flower gardening.
1928
Martha Davies Watkins lives at
South Maple Ave., Kingston, Pa.
He
is
selected
through the United States Office of
Education. In 1965, Dr. DeRose was
voted Outstanding Science
Teacher
of the Pennsylvania Science Teachers
Association. The educator was elected a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science
in 1966. He received the Distinguished Service Award of the B.S.C. Alumni
in 1967.
At Marple Newtown, Dr. DeRose
has implemented the
Independent
Study Science Program as well as
numerous
innovations
in
science
teaching. Dr. DeRose and his family
reside at 238 Kent Road, Springfield,
Kathryn
Representatives:
Vanauker (Mrs. Nicholas Moreth) 34
Penna.
Linden Road, Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey 07432. Co-Chairmen: Ruth Wagner (Mrs. Lawrence Le Grande) 126
Class Representative:
Clayton H.
Hinkel, 224 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1940
Page seven
William P. Kanasky is Associate
Professor of Library Education
at
the Kutztown State College. Mr. Kan-
asky has an M.S. degree from Bucknell University and the degree of
M.S.L.S. from the Drexel Institute of
Technology.
1941
Class
Representative: Dr. C. Stuart Edwards, R. D. 4, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
Crissman Y. Broderick, son of Mr.
a.nd Mrs. Prank C. Young (Marjorie
Young,) of Rushley Road, has been
awarded a Commercial Credit Company Scholarship. Crissman is one of
69 new students matriculating from
high schools or presently in college
throughout the United States
and
Canada
to
be awarded a Commercial
Company
Credit
scholarship for their
college term.
Crissman graduated June 11th from
1969-70
taught at Rutgers University and is
currently a part-time instructor at the
University of Delaware.
Mr. Von Stetten received his B. S.
degree from Bloomsburg State College and an M.A. degree from Seton
Hall University. He has also attended Millersville State College and the
University of Delaware.
Mr. Von Stetten is married and has
four children.
His address is 105
Aronimink Drive, Chapel Hill, Newark, Delaware. 19711
A
college
English textbook edited
by Robert Baylor has been published
by McGraw-Hill Book Company, New
York City. Titled “Detail and Pattern: Essays for Composition”, it is
designed for use in freshman writing
and reading classes.
The book is dedicated: “To the
memory of a creative teacher, Samuel
Bloomsburg State College,
Baltimore Lutheran High School and
L. Wilson,
will attend Essex Community College
where he will major in Engineering.
Bloomsburg, Pa.” Baylor received a
masters degree in English from Col-
He
is
a
member
of the Methodist
Youth Fellowship and his interests include wood- working, tree husbandry,
mechanical, electrical repair work.
During the past four years Crissman
has given many hours of his spare
time in the intense therapy program
for his injured sister.
1942
Class Representative:
H.
Zimmerman (Jean
Kready
Mrs. Ralph
Noll),
Millersville,
Avenue,
165
Pa.
17551
1943
Class Representative: Mrs.
Raymond A. Algatt (Betty Katerman),
253 Iron Street,
Bloomsburg,
Pa.
17815
1944
Class
Representative: Mrs. (Poletime Comuntzis) Carl Demetripopoulos, Friar and Robin Lanes, Sherwood
Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1945
Class
Representative:
Mary Lou
John, 257 West 11th Street, Bioomsburg. Pa. 17815
1946
Class Representative:
Jacqueline
Shaffer (Mrs. Charles W. Creasy, Jr)
R. D. 1, Catawissa, Pa. 17820
1947
Class
Representative:
Robert L.
Bunge, 12 West Park Street, Carroll
Park, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1948
Class
Representative:
Harry G.
John, Jr., 425 Iron Street, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
umbia University
Kutztown, as assistant trust officer.
A native of Nescopeck, Wagner
was graduated from Nescopeck High
School and Bloomsburg State College
where he served as president of the
college Commuunity Government Association
Who
in
Representative: Richard E.
Grimes, 1723 Fulton Street, Harrisburg, Pa. 17102
and was listed in “Who’s
American Colleges and Uni-
versities.”
After a mathematics teaching career in Nescopeck, Warrior Run and
master’s degree in guidance
from
Rutgers University.
He has completed additional graduate work at
Rutgers.
Elected to Who’s Who in American
Colleges and Universities
Morson made his mark in
in
1956.
college as
an athlete, scholar, musician and
edi-
joined the staff of Abraham
Clark High School, Roselle. N. J., in
September, 1956 as a teacher in the
He
business education department.
was appointed assistant principal in
Morson
1965 and principal in 1966.
also has coached baseball, football
and basketball at the high school.
Recipient of the Roselle Jaycees
Distinguished Service Award for 1967.
Morson is a member of several professional organizations, including the
National Association of
Secondary
School Principals. He served on the
Roselle Fair Housing Committee. He
He
tor.
a member of
Church, Roselle
is
He was
reader.
and
1966
St.
Luke’s Episcopal
and serves as lay
clerk of the vestry in
1967.
In 1968, he was selected to serve on
the committee to conduct the Title V
State Review for the New
Jersey
State Department of Education.
Morson served six years with the
ing as a fraternal insurance counselor
of the char-
Dr. Charles F. Wilson, chief administrator of the
Kutztown Area
School District since 1963, has been
named superintendent of the Allentown School Disti’ict, effective July
Dr. Wilson is the son of Mae
1, 1970.
Callender (Mrs. Lloyd Wilson) ’08,
and the husband of Joan de Orio ’56.
and parts one and three
tered
life
underwriters
study
prog-
ram.
1951
Class Representative: Dr.
Russell
C. Davis, Jr., Sullivan County Community College, South Fallsburgh, N.
Y. 12779
1952
Class Representative: Francis B.
Galenski, 350 South York Road, Hatboro, Pa. 19040
1953
Class Representative: John S. Scrimgeour, 411 East 3rd Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1954
Class
Jacobs,
2
Representative:
William
J.
Tremont Annex Apartments,
West Main Street, Lansdale, Pa.
19446
Brandywine
Representative: Dr. William
Bitncr, HI, 33 Lincoln Avenue, Glen
Falls, N. Y. 12801
Nancy J. Ebersole (Mrs. Dean Allison), lives at 528
Bailey
Street,
age eight
man
pointed director of student activities
and assistant to the dean of Union
College.
Morson, a native of Bryn
Mawr, Pa., is a graduate of Bloomsburg State College and received a
New
1950
Mr. Wayne Von Stetten, formerly
the assistant principal of Brandywine
High School, Delaware,
has
been
named as the new principal of that
school.
Mr. Von Stetten came to
in August, 1966, with 16
years teaching and administrative experience in Pennsylvania and
New
Jersey. He had also been an athletic
director in Pennsylvania.
He has
1956
Harrison Morson Jr., of 877 InAvenue, Edison, has been ap-
J.
Kutztown area schools, Wagner was
named Kutztown-Kempton district
agent for the Lutheran Brotherhood
Life and Health Insurance Company
in 1963.
While with the company,
Wagner completed two years of train-
1949
Class
in 1952.
The Kutztown National Bank has
announced the appointment of
J.
Richard Wagner, 124 N. Maple St.,
Roaring Spring, Pa. 16673
1955
Class
inger,
18618
Representative: Arnold GarR. D. I Harveys Lake,
Pa.
1956
Class
He
Jersey
Army
married
National
Guard.
the former Lillian
Isabelle Pettigrew of Roselle. They
have two sons, Jeffrey Harrison, 6.
and Craig Eric, 2.
is
to
1957
Class Representative:
William J.
Pohutski, 544 Oakridge Drive, North
Plainfield, N. J. 07606
The appointment of Dr. Donald T.
McNelis as Professor of Education at
Lock Haven State College, Penna..
has been announced by Dr. Richard
T. Parsons.
A native of Pennsylvania, Dr. McNelis received his
elementary and
secondary education
in
Kingston.
After graduating from
Bloomsburg
State College in 1957 with a B.S. in
Education, he earned his M.A. and
doctorate in Education at The George
Washington University in 1959 and
1963 respectively.
Dr. McNelis taught at The George
Washington University from 1960 to
1963.
For the next two years he was
Educational Adviser for the U.
S.
Foreign Service in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, and from 1965 to 1966 as Education Specialist for the Office of Eco-
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
in Washington, D.
1966 to 1968 Dr. McNelis was
of Instruction at the Hagerstown
From
Dean
Farragut
N.
joining
State College, Associate Professor of
Education at the College of Steuben-
Ave., Spokane,
ville in
Ohio.
1958
Raymond
Representative:
Hargreaves, 37 Dell Road, Stanhope,
N. J. 07874
Paul H. Anderson is Registrar at
He
Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa.
has been assistant to the President
Class
and assistant registrar at Trenton
State College, and assistant director of
Scholarship
the New Jersey State
Commission. He has an MS from
Southern Illinois University. He also
attended Drew University and Rutgers
University.
1959
William F.
Class Representative:
Swisher, Box 245, Cincinnatus, N. Y.
I)r.,
l’iscataway,
08854
J.
Myles
J.
Anderson, West
19th
99203, is
504,
sity.
is
in
Gonzaga Univer-
of Students at
Spokane, Washington. His wife
the former Myrna J. Bassett, also
of the class of 1962.
The address
Edgar R. Fisher is
APO,
of
Millitary Education
Division.
San Francisco, Cal. 96331
Willliam
Main
K.
Street,
412 West
Pa.,
has
in the U. S.
O’Donnell,
Girardville,
been promoted
major
Major O’Donnell
to
Air Force.
ground electronics
is
a
at Wiesin a unit of the
officer
baden AB, Germany,
Air Force Logistics Command. The
major, who received his commission
in 1963
through
Officer
Training
School at Lackland AFB. Tex., has
completed a tour of duty in Vietnam.
1963
1960
Representative:
Class
reek,
100
Rd.,
Hill
James
Madison,
J.
Conn.
06443
John
Drexel
J. Chidester, Kenwood Road.
Hill. Pa., is Assistant Principal
Radnor Senior High School. He
has previously taught at the Upper
Darby Junior High School. He has a
Master’s degree in School Administration from Villanova University.
at the
John Mascioli of Kingston and
mer Bloomsburg
for-
State College basket-
ball captain has been appointed coach
of Kings College in Wilkes-Barre.
A 1956 graduate of Kingston High
School, he played varsity basketball
there and helped the team to a 22-3
campaign in his senior year.
Entering BSC, he was a starter for
four years and was captain in his junior and senior seasons. He was guard
and playmaker and finished among
the top 20 scorers in the state with a
average.
Mascioli played under coach Harold
Shelly at Bloomsburg
and attained
honorable mention in the State College Conference.
Team’s most successful year was 16-5, w hen Mascioli
17.8
r
was a freshman.
The new frosh coach taught one
year in Allentown on the elementary
level. He received a master’s degree
in education from Temple in 1964 and
is taking graduate work at Temple towards a doctorate. Presently he is
head teacher at the Chester Street
School in Kingston.
1961
Class
Representtaive:
Edwin C.
Kuser, R. D. 1, Box 145-C, Bechtelsville, Pa. 19505
Lowery E. McHenry, a teacher at
the William Allen High School, Allentown. Pa., has completed twelve months of study at the University of Montana.
He has been studying electronic data processing and its impact
on business and education as a Fellow
in the Experienced Teacher Fellow-
Program.
DECEMBER,
Class
Representative:
Pat Biehl
(Mrs. Ronald Cranford) R. D. 1, 77
Haythorne Ave., Boyertown, Pa. 19512
Bernard L. Donegan, Middlesex, N.
J., received his Master’s degree, with
a major in chemistry, at the Summer
Commencement of the College of William and Mary, Williamsburg. Va.
Robert P. Birtley. Bloomsburg, has
been commissioned a second lieutenant in the U. S. Air For.oe upon graduation from Officer Training School
1964
1
Ernest R.
Gaston Avenue, Raritan, N.
08869
Clair M. Rarick, Catawissa,
J.
is
dean
women and
teacher of English at
Northeast Bible College, Green Lane,
a theological college operated by the
Assemblies of God. A Catawissa High
School graduate, she
received her
BS and M.Ed. degrees in English
from BSC. She taught five years in
West End Junior High, Shamokin.
of
John W. McCorkill. 213 South CaroPasadena, Md. 21122, is administrative assistant
at
Brooklyn
Park, Maryland, a suburb of Baltimore. He received his M.Ed. from
Johns Hopkins University in October,
1968 and is doing additional graduate
work at the University of Maryland.
lina Ave.,
1965
Class Representative: Carl P. Sheran, 43 Hazen St., Wayne, N. J. 07470
Mr. and Mrs. Alistor Rae B. (Jean
Davey) live at 4335 Wedgewood Drive,
22003.
Apt. 204, Anndale,
Virginia
They have two childi'en. They have
in
returned from a two-year
stay
Japan, where Mr. Rae was stationed
as Operations Officer
on a mine
sweeper.
Regina Kotch Snyder is living at
1718 Flournoy St., Apt. 500, Chicago,
111.
60612
Neal L. Boyer
is
teaching Spanish
Haven High
oceanology.
Nancy Yulis (Mrs. David M. Johnston) is living at 37 Hawthorne Ave.,
Boyertown, Pa.
19512
Patricia Wetzel Freed lives at 10
Belmont Plaza, E-118, King of Prussia,
Pa.
Donna Bogard (Mrs. Gennaro
urn'
Swatara,
at 1510
17104
lives
burg, Pa.
Gull-
Harris-
Regina Kotch Snyder is living at
Flournoy Street, Apt. 500, Chi-
1718
cago,
60612
111.
1966
Class Representative:
Anthony J.
Cerza, 180 Madison Street, Exeter, Pa.
18643
James
Deir is Head Teacher of
Rock Elementary
School,
L.
Ringing
Pottstown, Pa.
His address
is
117
Oak Lane, Reading, Pa.
Carole Kuzmick Grace reports her
maiTiage and new address: Box 201,
.
Selinsgrove, Pa.
1967
Pa. 18930
Class Representative:
Robert T.
Lemon, Meadowvale Apt. No. 12, 903
Quarry Road, Harve de Grace, Md.
21087
Representative:
Class
Shuba,
at the Schuylkill
1969
Clair, Pa.
Address:
113
Columbia
Street, Schuylkill Haven, Pa.
Jon I. Parker is a science and biology teacher in Union Springs, N. Y.
He is studying for a master’s degree
Dean
Washington
13040
ship
Richard
Representative:
Class
Lloyd, 6
Jr. College in
Maryland and prior to
the faculty at Lock Haven
He was married August 23, 1969 to
Miss Margaret M. Whitford, Saint
1962
nomic Opportunity
C.
School.
John B. Kwasnoski has been appointed to the faculty of the School
of Arts and Sciences at Western New
England College, Springfield, Mass.,
as an instructor in Physics. Mr. Kwasnoski has a Master’s degree from
Fi-anklin and Mai-shall College.
He
has served as lecture assistant at
Franklin and Marshall. He is a member of the American Association of
Physics Teachers, Sigma Pi Sigma
and Kappa Delta Pi.
Harry
512
Balliet,
J.
Avenue, Milton, Pa.,
Shakespeare
a student at
Temple University School of Pharmacy and expects to graduate with
a BS in Pharmacy in 1970.
is
F. Wirdt has been named
of the Alburtis Elementary School, East Penn School District of Emmaus, Pa.
He is cuiTently
emolled in the graduate program at
Lehigh University.
James
head teacher
Thomas
S.
Fowles has been piomo-
ted to first lieutenant in the U. S. Air
Foi’ce.
Lt.
Fowles
is
a weather
offi-
cer at Hunter AFB, Ga. He is assigned to a unit of the Air Weather Service. The lieutenant was commissioned in 1967 through Officer Training
School at Lackland AFB, Texas.
A 1963 graduate of Tunkhannock
High School, he received a BA degree
in mathematics in 1967 from Bloomsburg State College. He has also studied at the University of
Oklahoma.
Page nine
address is 1317 E. 55th Street.
Savannah, Georgia 31404
ginia
His
.
1968
Thomas W.
Class Representative:
Free, R. D. 1, Box 34, Kintnersville,
18930
I'a.
The address of Airman First Class
Lauren E. Miller is care S.A.C.,
Westover A.F.B., Mass.
01022
1969
Cheryl L. Vock Stanker lives at 419
Second Street, Weatherly, Pa. 18255
Gary W. Reichenbach, Bloomsburg,
has been commissioned a second lieutenant in the U. S. Air Force upon
Training
graduation from
Officer
School at Lackland AFB, Texas.
Lieutenant Reichenbach is
being
assigned to Keesler AFB, Miss., for
training as a communication-electronic staff officer.
He is a member of
Gamma Theta Upsilon.
and Patricia
Way Cobb
are
living in New Holland, Pa., where the
former is teaching business education.
Mrs. Cobb is a member of the class
Carl
of 1968.
A
1969
teaching assistantship in the Phy-
sics
Department has been awarded
by Franklin &_,Marshall College to
Linda Biduck, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley Biduck, West Catawissa
During her
Nesquehoning.
Street,
two-year stay at Franklin and Marshall, Linda will be a candidate for
the Master of Science degree in phyIn addition to being a teaching
sics.
assistant, she will serve as a counselor in the Women’s Residence Hall.
FOCUS ATTENTION ON
NEEDS OF STUDENTS
Education
suit of
is
just the purexcellence at Blooms-
burg State College and takes place not
only in the classroom but in all places
where students
interact.
WEDDINGS
Campus
.
Joyce Marion Welker and Gary
William Grubb. Mrs. Grubb teaches
in the Lower Dauphin School system. Her husband is a lineman for
Met. Ed. Co., Middletown. Address:
436 D North Union St., Middletown.
Carol Hartzell and Roger
Dieffenbach.
Address 324 Eckmont St.,
South Williamsoort, Pa. 17701
1964
Beryl M. Hampton, Catawissa R. D.
and David A. Benson, Slippery Rock.
Mrs. Benson has taken graduate work
at Vanderbilt University. Her husband
teaches sociology at Slippery
Rock
State College.
Susan E. Hartman, Catawissa and
John J. Tocks, Emmaus. The bride
a teacher of reading in the Abachua
County Schools, Florida. The groom
is an engineering student at the University of Florida.
Address: 1700 S.
is
W. 16th Court, Apt. C-5, Gainesville,
Florida.
1965
her dissertation for the Ph.D. degree
at the University of Pittsburgh. Mr.
McRae is Sales Representative for
Wells Jewelry Incorporated.
They
are living at Antietam Apartments,
106-A, 850 Carsonia Avenue, Reading,
Pa. 19606
Elaine Roberta
Schraeder,
Glen
Lyon, and Marry Miller Hackenberg,
Mifflinburg. The bride is taking post
graduate work at The Pennsylvania
The bridegroom
is
R.
D.
2,
Douglasville,
Mary
Joanne
Derr and John
Mrs. De Hoff
Grand Avenue Junior High
Louise
Newcombe De
Hoff.
The members of the Dean of Students’ staff focus their attention on the
needs of the individual student as well
as the entire commuunity with the intention of assisting young men and
women to more fully develop their
potentials as they progress towards
their various goals. Thus, this large
staff of qualilfied personnel is respon-
Susan Hammerquist and
Wilbur
Carlson ’67. Both are employed by
the Central Bucks School
District.
They are living at 639 South Broad
Street, Apt. F-6, Lansdale, Pa. 19446
student activities, housing,
food
services,
counseling,
health,
athletics, student financial aid, student government, and many related
areas.
Above all, they are respon-
maintaining an environment
which emphasizes integrity and con-
sible for
sideration of others.
Page ten
19363
1967
Marjorie Melane. Hamburg, Pa.,
and Dr. William McCormick. Address: Box 330, Pluckemin. New Jersey 07978
Nancy J. Tyrens, Hatboro, Pa., and
William R. Hall, Jr., ’66. Mr. and
Mrs. Hall are living in Stockton,
California where the former is working on his master’s degree in Marine
Biology at the University of the Pac1968
Rochelle J. Graziano, Berwick and
Carl T. Warhurst, Jr., Bloomsburg.
The bride is a teacher at the Salem
School, Berwick. Mr. Warhurst is a
case worker for the Pennsylvania
Board of Assistance, and is also selfemployed as a roofing contractor. Address: 3821 Rear Old Berwick Road,
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Donna Kay McHenry,
Orangeville
and William S. Kreisher, Catawissa.
Mrs. Kreisher is teaching at Biglersville. Pa., and Mr. Kreisher is a stu-
Address: Sunrise
Hoosty.
Roselle Park, N. J.
teaches in
School, Merrick, L. I., N. Y.
Her
husband is administrative assistant
for
They are living at D-21
College.
Oxhaven Apartments, Oxford, Pa.
program at Temple University.
They are both teaching at Daniel
Boone Area Schools, near Reading,
and reside at Amity Gardens Apart-
ram.
sible
Kathy Jane Woodring, Secone, Pa.,
Bolling
Lilley,
Jr.,
and John C.
The bride and groom
Springs, Pa.
both are teaching at the Oxford InMr. Lilley is a
termediate School.
graduate of the West Chester State
dent at Dickinson
1966
Alice Bush, Springville, Pa.,
and Alfred L. Mullen,
Muskagee,
Oklahoma.
Their address is 4632
Lauderdale Avenue, Virginia Beach.
Virginia. 23455
Consequently, almost all of the 3,BSC are afforded an
opportunity to explore their individual
potential and find a place for the expression of their talents so that they
may better understand themselves.
Fern R. Shellenberger, Bloomsburg
and James R. Hartman, Bloomsburg.
The bride is a student at BSC. Mr.
Hartman is a teacher at Central ColAddress: 351
umbia High School.
East Street, Bloomsburg.
an alumnus of Susquehanna University and will enroll in the masters
ments, 14-B,
Pa. 19518
650 students at
University.
ific.
Donna Maria Barbaro and David
A. McRae.
The bride is working on
life
includes residence hall and dining
room experiences as well as all of
the various social and cultural events
in the co-cu.rricular activities prog-
Commonwealth
Richmond, Va.
.
1962
State University.
more than
academic
.
for Ski Industries
Address:
City.
America,
New York
147-15
Roosevelt
Ave., Flushing, N. Y.
Linda Stemeling, White Hall, and
Lester G. Jones, Bloomsburg.
The
bride is a graduate of Johns Hopkins
School of X-ray Technology.
Mr.
Jones is doing graduate work at Vir-
Law
School.
Deanna Lee Watts and James
A.
Village,
McCarol Richard and Neal D.
Leon. Mrs. McLeon teaches in the
Mountain Lake, N. J., school system.
Her husband, a graduate of Hamilton College and Columbia University,
is employed as a journalist.
Susan Kay Spotts and Robert Boyd
Mr. Ikeler is social studies
Columbia-Montour Area
Ikeler, Jr.
teacher at
Vocational Technical School. Address:
127 W. Fifth Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
1969
Ann Louise Buggy and Lanny Lee.
Mrs. Lee is a teacher at the Child
Development Center, Bloomsburg. Her
husband is special education teacher
School.
at Bloomsburg Junior High
Address: 351 Center Street, Bloomsburg.
Kandace Ann Caupto, Allentown,
Stephen F. Foltz, Harrisburg. Mrs.
Foltz is teaching kindergarten in the
Central Dauphin School District. Mr.
Foltz is teaching sixth grade in the
630
Their address:
same district.
Humphrey Court, Paxton Park Apts.,
Harrisburg, Pa. 17109
Till:
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Marsha H. Carpenter, Matamoras.
and Charles J. Vogt. Address:
Glenmont Circle, Apt. 205, Glenmont, Md. 29902
Pa.,
2388
Wakefield, Mass., and
AddCarl M. Beagle, Bloomsburg.
ress: Indian Valley Apartment. Souderton. Pa.
Eva
Chitty.
Barbar L. Cramer, Bedminster, N.
and James W. Hufford, Bloomsburg. Mrs. Hufford is teaching specJ..
ial
education
in
Adelphia. Md.
and Michael F.
Kutzmonich.
Address: Pennbrooke
Apt. 6-B., Church Road. North Wales.
Carol A. Coakley
Kathy Ann Dean. Schuylkill Havand Robert G. Mull, Port Carbon.
Mr. Mull is attending the Pennsyl-
en,
vania State Police
Academy.
Kathleen Di Pippa
and Kenneth
Emkey. Mrs. Emkey teaches at West
Her husDeptford School District.
band received a degree from Penn
State
and
is
attending
Hannemann
Medical College, Philadelphia.
Apt
ress: 2011 Ferry Ave.,
Camden, N. J.
AddL-15,
Cheryl Elaine Galford and Robert
Mrs. Kessler teaches in the Warrior Run Middle School.
Address: Millville, Pa. R. D. 1.
Eugene Kessler.
Jane Louise Herring and Wayne
David Drumheller. Mrs. Drumheller
is a sixth grade teacher at Huntington Mills Elementary School of Northwest Area School District. Her husband is serving in the Berwick Unit
of the Pennsylvania National Guard,
and is employed by S. H. Evert Construction Co., Inc., Bloomsburg.
NEW MEMBERS OF
THE FACULTY
Hummel and Leonard
Linda Ann
Thomas,
Both Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas teach in the Lehighton School
District.
Address: 341 Second St.,
Jr.
Lehighton, Pa.
Carol Jean Johnson and Barry L.
’70,
Lopashanski,
Berwick.
The
bride is a teacher in the Salem Elementary School, Berwick. Address:
211 Schley Street, Nescopeck, Pa.
Lawrence
lege.
Candidate for Master’s degree
BSC.
at
town.
Barbara Ann Knorr and Carl R.
Willard. Mrs. Willard is teaching in
the Millersburg Area High School.
Nobel Quandel and Janet Land.
Shirley E. Schuyler, Turbotville
Robert W. Yost, Danville.
Linda M. Unger and
Their address
Drumm.
Robert
and
E.
420 East
6th Street, Laurel, Delaware 19956
is
University of Alabama.
Robert P. Yori, Assistant Professor
of Business Education. B.Sc., Bloomsburg State College: M.B.A., Lehigh
University.
Mrs. Jo Anne Growney. Associate
Professor
Mathematics. B.Sc.,
of
Westminster College: M.A., Temple
University.
Ober Morning, Jr.. Assistant Professor of Sociology. B.A., M.A., Yale
University.
John J. Serff, Jr., Assistant Professor of Geography. B. Sc.. Pennsylvania State University: M. Ed. West
Chester State College.
Eugene D. Shershen, Instructor of
Psychology. B.A., Bloomsburg State
College.
Judith A. Konscol, Assistant
Women.
B.A.. North
University:
College.
M.A.,
Dean
Dakota State
Colorado
State
DECEMBER,
1969
Taichung, Taiwan; Master of Library
Science. Syracuse University.
ADDRESSES WANTED
1902— Agnes V. Brennan
1899— Grace Oliver (Mrs.
1959— Mary A. Pileski
1966 Daniel L. Marks
1968 David C. Keefer
1968 Dennie W. Byrne
1966 William A. Crom
1967 John C. Poploskie
1925 Bessie Herriotts
1963—
1965 Lt. Christopher Fisher
Wilbur
1931 Anna Fowler (Mrs.
—
—
—
—
—
—
Hibbard)
1923 — Hilda Breeze
Zeckhouser
1959—Gary Fisher
Charles W.
University of California at Berk-
1905
1946
Men.
Bloomsburg State
1919
1923
1925
1964
Stetler
— Rhoda
(Mrs.
Wm.
Con-
Thomas Savidge
Robbins Shedd
— Elmer J. Haupt
—Dorothy Herring
Greenway
Stephanie Thurner, Lawrence
W. Wood, Mark F. Mosser
1943— Hazle O’Brien Davis
1952—Walter Troutman
1955 Ronald James Conch
Doris Krzywicki Smith
—
1961 —Gary
1954 Sheldon
Travel Wright
Erwine,
Jeanette
-
Lewis Reddig
1967— Robert E. Logue
1966 Mrs. H. Alan Sechrist
Hilda Breeze (Mrs. Edward Zeck-
Maryland.
Joseph R. Pifer, Instructor of Geography. B.Sc., Clarion State College;
M.A., Arizona State University.
Kay F. Rosencrance, Assistant Dean
of Women. B.A., M.A., West Virginia
Willliams
1929— Ann Taby
1956—
way), Lenore
Col-
Dr. Jack A. Jones, Associate Professor of Physical Education.
B.Sc..
Livingston State College; M.A., University of Alabama; Doctor of Physical Education, Indiana University.
Dr. Maxwell Primack,
Associate
Professor of Philosophy. B.A., Brandeis University; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University.
Roy D. Pointer, Assistant Professor
B.Sc., University of
of Chemistry.
Kansas; M.Sc., University of Michigan.
Philip H. Siegel, Associate Professor of Economics. B.A., Wilkes ColCincinlege; M.B.A., University of
Moyer
—Laura
—Mae Wolfe Klegman
— Kathleen A. Hess
J.
B.Sc.,
Brown
1961— Mrs. Charles
eley.
D. Bryden, Jr., Professor of
Speech Correction and Coordinator
of speech and hearing services. B.A..
College of William and Mary; M.Ed.
and Ph.D., University of Virginia.
Kenneth Whitney, Associate Professor of Education and supervisor student teachers in the
Philadelphia
area. B.Sc., Mansfield State College;
M.Sc., University of Pennsylvania.
John J. Zarski, Assistant Dean of
Edward
(Mrs.
(Mrs.
Schuppert
1967— Priscilla
Howard Finucan)
(Mrs.
1919— Lucia E. Hammond
Robert L. Wheeler)
1965 Jean Weisenfluh Mosser, Timothy C.
Glenn A. Good, Associate Professor of Education. B.Sc. and M.Sc.,
Bucknell University.
George
Hagersville)
1912
A.,
.Assistant
Kelly,
Science, University of Pittsburgh.
Susanna Wen-Cheng Chang, CataCollege
B.A., Providence
loged
John McLaughlin, Associate Professor of English. B.A.. Harvard; M.
nati.
Linda J. Watts, Millville and John
W. Mallen 3rd, Dallas, Pa.
Mr.
Mallen is teacher at the Middlebury
High School. Address: 203 Catawissa
Avenue, Sunbury, Pa.
Margaret Anne
Reference Librarian. B.A., College of
New Rochelle, Master of Library
A..
lege; M.A., University of
Donna Ellen Kennedy, New Cumberland. and John M. Carney, Levit-
ing College.
Jerry K. Medlock, Associate Proffessor of Health and Physical EducaB.A., Stamford University: M.
tion.
of
L. Verdekal, Instructor of
Education.
B.Sc., Lycom-
Business
Wesley E. Blamick, Associate Professor of Education.
B.S.. Bethany
College: M.Ed., University of Pittsburgh; Ed.D. and Education Specialist. University of Florida.
John R. Fleteher, Instructor of Biology. B.Sc.. Bloomsburg State Col-
Dr.
T.
University.
hauser)
E. Houk,
Bloomsburg State College
director
for the
past twelve years, has been
named
Russell
at
athletic
Chairman
of District 19 of the National Association of Intercollegiate AthDistrict 19 includes Eastern
letics.
New Jersey, New
Pennsylvania,
York, Delaware and Maryland.
In addition to serving as District
19 Chairman, Houk was reappointed
last spring to the Executive Committee of the National Olympic Wrestling
Team for the 1972 Olympics; he is
vice president of the Pennsylvania
Conference, a member of the Executive
Committee
the
of
Wrestling Committee, and
sultant to the newly
ling Federation.
AAU
a conformed Wrestis
Page eleven
HOMECOMING
A
the general
well
parade,
colorful
theme
of
executing
“Our American
Heritage,” the football game with
West Chester, get togethers of alumni
and two dances were among the features of the most successful festivities of the Bloomsburg State College’s
outstanding forty-second
ing weekend, with the
cooperating
Homecomweatherman
fully.
Townspeople joined with the grads
and other visitors of the days to view
the exceptionally fine parade of the
morning, now Bloomsburg ’s largest
procession.
graduates were on
Many of
hand for festivities on Friday evening but the majority came on Saturday and the campus was alive with
activity throughout the day and eventhe
ing.
There were get togethers
for
the
grades following the game and two
dances in the evening. Open house
was observed over the weekend and
the BSC concert choir entertained on
Sunday evening.
West Chester Rams, aiming to
move back to the top of the Pennsylvania State College grid conference
used a balanced attack and proved to
be opportunists of first rank as they
moved a step closer that goal on
Saturday when they bested Bloomsburg Huskies, 38-13, at Athletic Park
in the sports attraction of Homecom-
Department of Social Studies, are on
sabbatical leave during the first semester and James B. Creasy, assistant
Royce O.
to the presidnt, and Dr.
Johnson, Director, Division of Elementary Education, will be on leave the
second semester.
COMMUNICATION DISORDERS
CENTER AT BSC APPROVED
Notification has been received from
Dr. John W. Keys, chairman, ProfesAmerican
Services
Board,
sional
Board of Examiners in Speech Pathology and Audiology of the American
Speech and Hearing Association, that
the Center for Learning and CommuBloomsburg
nication Disorders at
State College has been approved as a
public service facility, according to
Richard M. Smith, administrator of
the Center.
This accreditation permits the BSC
Center to be listed in a national directory of Clinical Services which in-
bounded by East Second
Penn Street, Pine Avenue,
and Thornton Avenue. The new parking facility will accomodate approximately 210 cars. A portion of Penn
and Second Streets will be widened
to improve traffic circulation in the
on a
(Act of October
23. 1962;
University of Toledo
Charles H. Hurley, ’67, R. D.
ville, Pa.
Master of Arts.
3.
4.
Location of
2.
Date of
tion;
5.
Class ending in 5 and 0 will be in
reunion.
known
office
of publica-
Columbia
Location
6.
of headquarters
offices
the
of
County,
or general
publishers:
10.
Bloomsburg, Columbia County. 17815
Names and addresses of publisher, editor,
and managing
editor:
Publisher: Bloomsburg State College
Alumni Association, Inc., Bloomsburg,
Pa.
Editor: H. F. Fenstemaker, 242 Central
Road, Bloomsburg (Espy), Pa.
7.
Managing editor: Same.
Owner: Bloomsburg State College
Alumni Association, Inc., Bloomsburg
Pa.
Non-profit corporation no stock
—
8.
9.
issued or outstanding.
Known bondholders, mortgagees, and
other security holders owning or holding 1 percent or more of total amount
of bonds, mortgages or other securities:
None.
Paragraphs
7
and 8 include, in cases
where the stockholder or security holder appears upon the books of the com-
Upper Campus.
members
who
will
A. Total No. copies printed (net press run)
be
artment of Foreign Languages; Eli
McLaughlin,
of
Department
Health and Physical Education; Miss
Susan Rusinko, Department of English and Tobias F. Scarpino and David
A. Superdock, Department of Physi-
W.
Department
of
English, and Robert R. Solenberger,
I’age twelve
ciary relation, the name of the person
or corporation for whom such trustee
is acting, also the statement in the two
paragraphs show the affiant’s full
knowledge and belief as to the circumstances and conditions under which
stockholders and security holders who
do not appear upon the books of the
company as trustees, hold stock and
securities in a capacity other than
that of a bona fide owner. Names and
addresses of individuals who are stockholders of a corporation which itself is
stockholder or holder of bonds, mortgages or other securities of t)ie publishing corporation have been included in paragraphs 7 and 8 when the
interests of such individuals are equivalent to 1 percent or more of the total
amount of the stock or securities of
the publishing corporation.
This item must be completed for all
publications except those which do
not carry advertising other than the
publisher’s own and which are named
in sections 132.231, 132.232 and 132.233,
Postal Manual.
Single Issue
Nearest To
Filing Date
10,650
11,100
3,220
3,340
3,220
3,340
B. Paid circulation
1.
Sales through dealers and carriers,
and counter sales
Mail subscriptions
street vendors
2.
on
sabbatical leave for the entire college
year are Mrs. Mary Lou John, Dep-
cal Sciences.
Richard C. Savage,
United States Code)
Average No. Copies
Each Issue During
Preceding 12 Months
part of the 1969-1970 college year.
Five
39,
pany as trustee or in any other fidu-
filing:
Bloomsburg,
business
area.
Nine members of the Bloomsburg
State College faaculty are on sabbatical leave of absence either all or
Dan-
April 25, 1970
Pa. 17815.
site
NINE AT COLLEGE ARE
ON SABBATICAL LEAVE
4,
ALUMNI DAY
Section 4369, Title
September 29, 1969
Title of Publication: Alumni Quarterly.
Frequency of issue: Quarterly.
1.
Street,
The project, for which $400,000 has
been allocated, also includes a road
which will connect the Upper Campus with Arbutus Park Road.
The
new road will facilitate the flow of
traffic to and from varsity athletic
contests when the Athletic Field and
the gymnasium are completed on the
AWARDED DEGREE
STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT AND CIRCULATION
ing.
Preliminary plans were approved
recently by Dr. Robert J. Nossen,
president of Bloomsburg State College
for a multi-level garage to be located
sures the general public that the professional services available at this
center are of the highest quality. Dr.
William L. Jones, director of the Division of Special Education at BSC.
stated that initial plans for the Center
were started as an outgrowth of the
former facilities of the Division of
Special Education, and that the realization is something that the
staff
members of the Center and the faculty
ol BSC can be justly proud.
C. Total paid circulation
D. Free distribution (including samples) by
mall, carrier or other means
E. Total distribution
(sum of C and D)
F. Office use, left-over,
7.181
7,439
10,401
10,779
249
321
10,650
11,100
unaccounted,
spoiled after printing
—
Gl Total (sum of E and F should equal
net press run shewn in A)
that the statements made by
H. T. FENSTEMAKER, Editor.
I certify
me
above are correct and complete.
TIIE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
IS
SOMEONE
ELSE
PAYING FOR YOUR
QUARTERLY?
11,119 copies of the September Quarterly were sent out in the mail.
The
and mailing the Quarterly is over $4000 a year. The loyalty
those who have contributed $2.00 or more per year has made it possible for
cost of printing
of
us to send the Quarterly to
The
all
Alumni.
Alumni Association have not been subsidized by the
College. We would not have it any other way. We do not wish to give funds
to the College with one hand and get it back with the other.
activities of the
We are
not asking for extremely large
gifts,
but
we do hope
that
more grad-
uates will participate.
We
also urge all the representatives of classes in reunion
April 25,
1970,
to see that their classes are well
on Alumni Day,
represented in the
list
contributors.
Let’s
show President Xossen
President,
that
we
are behind him!
Bloomsburg State College Alumni Association
of
Entered As Second Class Matter
August 8, 1941, at the Post
Office at Bloomsburg, Pa.
Under the Act of March 3, 1879
LOYALTY FUND
The Loyalty Fund Campaign is now entering its fourth year.
received during the first three years are as follows:
First Year
$10,223.12
Second Year
$10,382.70
Third Year
$11,473.57
Total
ing
Contributions
$32,079.39
Some of this money has been used to defray the expenses, including printof The Quarterly, salary of the office secretary, Loyalty Fund publicity,
dues to the Association of Teachers Organizations and the Council of Alumni
Associations, telephone, and office supplies, and the sponsoring of broadcasts
of athletic events.
Increasing costs have made it necessary to dip more deeply
into the Fund than we had originally intended.
believe that these expenses
are necessary in order to prevent the Association from going out of business as
an active organization.
We
Seven Alumni scholarships were presented last Spring. Four were in the
amount of $300 each, two to the amount of $200, and one to the amount of
$100. The recipients were carefully screened by a faculty committee.
We
wish to express our thanks to all those who have contributed to the
However, when you read the tabulation of gifts by classes, you can
easily see that onlv a small percentage of the Alumni have been involved.
Although larger gifts would be appreciated, what we most desire is more givers.
We hope that the classes in reunion in 1970 will give serious consideration
to a substantial gift when they meet in reunion.
LET’S KEEP THE BALL ROLLING.
Fund.
TO BE DETACHED, FILLED OUT, AND RETURNED
Signature
Name
while in college
Address
(street)
Zip Code
(town)
If
above address
is
new check
here
Amount
Year of graduation
Mail checks to Alumni Office, Box 31, B.S.C.
To
insure tax deductions,
B.
S.
C.
make checks payable
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
to
New Dormitory under
construction.
This
is
located on what older graduates will
athletic field.
remember
as the old Mt.
Olympus
TO THE ALUMNI
FROM PRESIDENT NOSSEN
indeed, is a propitious time
accounting and stewardship for
both you and me.
I have been granted the opportunity to serve in a leadership role at
This,
—
for
am proud of the associaam pleased with the chal-
this college; I
tion and I
I
have the responsibility to
help this college develop during the
coming years, not along the lines of
so-called conventional universities, but
as an institution dedicated to students
on the undergraduate level essentially,
and as a college with a potential for
lenge.
distinctive service.
Not the young only
of society.
are searching for service to the public interest; but those of us at every
age level who care and there is no
ills
—
dividing line on an age basis for this
quality
I call upon you to recognize with
us that educational institutions cannot yield to every demand, many of
which have been presented without
prior careful thought; that a healthy
cannot reject admissions
qualified or ignore methods of recording achievement; that it can neither
practice nor preach a philosophy that
institution
My
students are freed from those moral
ember
restraints to which the rest of society
is subject.
colleagues and I need to remthat state colleges today enroll
21 per cent of all students in higher
education, and that between 1954 and
1966, while overall enrollments grew
by 141 per cent, state colleges grew
by 266 per cent.
My
colleagues and I in American
education must prepare, by
1980, for 11.5 million students as opposed to 7.5 million today; for a faculty that will require 1.1 million qualified professionals, as opposed to the
current
for
proportionate
785,000;
costs in salaries and libraries and construction and as yet unidentified new
programs, and new techniques of instruction, and new objectives to ful-
higher
fill.
Your responsibilities are no less
awesome. I call upon you to work
with us, individually, and collectively
within your various groups, to support this college and to uphold the
values of higher education.
that
I ask you to question those
preach the doctrine of a generation
Not
gap that “can’t be bridged.”
the young only want to throw back
the veil of hypocrisy and treat the
upon you to continue to
with a restless spirit; to first
attempt to identify that which is evil,
then oppose it; in your learning, I
ask you to develop a sympathy with
I
call
learn,
human endeavors and an empathy
with other men and women.
I ask
you to reaffirm the truth that a life
worth living demands restraints, that
freedom, to be actual and to survive,
must conform to laws that must be
higher than human whim.
Finally, I call upon you for your
understanding and support, when this
and those within its faculty
and administration make appropriate
efforts to institute changes that are
meaningful and valid, and opposing
forces rise in indignation and condemnation. The building of a better college is not an easy process, or even
one designed to assure popular support. But if you, and the other thousands of alumni with whom you join,
college
are with us,
we
can, both of us,
in-
deed stand with pride in our accountability and our stewardship.
Mid-Year Commencement
“There shines forth fleetingly the
ever-threatened truth that each and
every man builds for all,” Dr. Robert
Bloomsburg
J. Nossen, president of
State College, told the 151 members of
the graduating class at the winter
commencement in Haas auditorium at
BSC and pointed out that “It is not
only the young who are searching for
service to the public interest, but also
those of us at every age level who
and there is no dividing line
care
on an age basis for this quality.”
One hundred thirty-one Bachelor
—
and twenty
awarded.
Master’s
Degrees
were
discussion he asserted that
change is necessary but "must be controlled for a specific purpose, and not
simply as a reaction to threat or
force”; participation does not and canor control:”
not mean domination
curriculum relevancy "does not mean
a curriculum without basis in sound
practice: conformity with the whim
of the moment or a program devoid
of discipline” and “there are many
in current higher education that are
worth preserving, that we can build
In his
—
upon to effect our changes and our
improvements.”
Referring to his topic, the educator
young man visited me in my
few days ago, to review with
me what he considered the ills of the
perhaps not as
I listened,
college.
patiently as I might; and I responded, perhaps a little more vigorously
than I should have. But he said a
number of things, based essentially
his
upon validity, but distorted in
said, “A
office a
understanding.
He
said
many
things
often,
have been repeated so
without analysis, that they have become ingrained in the popular conception, and accepted it as verified.
Change Must Have Purpose
“He believed that change in higher education is necessary, and so, of
course, do I. An education based upon
the study of the classics, a mastery of
Latin and Greek, the standard of a few
decades past, does not begin to fulfill the needs
of those crowding our
that
colleges today. An education designed essentially to train clergy, the goals
of an era not too far from our time,
would hardly fit
the
1970’s.
into
Change has indeed been with us
in
higher education since the first students gathered at Bologna or Oxford.
And the period of the sixties set the
stage for some of the most dramatic
changes that higher education has
ever seen. Changes will continue to
come, but each must be controlled and
for a specific purpose, and not simply
as a reaction to threat or force.
Participation Not Domination
“He stated he thought that students
should share in planning, and be heard
in various facets of administrative de-
ection of a president, as advisor to the
of Trustees, in service on a varPerhaps
iety of faculty committees.
the basis for participation can be
broadened, but the precedent and the
But.
practice have ben established.
and cannot
participation does not
I
or control.
mean domination
hear every so often the term ‘student
power,’ or ‘faculty power,’ and must
Board
—
those upholding such have
wonder
given thought, deep thought, to the
function and purpose of higher education, which must operate less on a
if
concept of power and antagonism, and
ever more on the concept of construc-
Relevancy With Discipline
“He
stated his conviction that curricula need to be relevant, and so do
does
But, curriculum relevancy
I.
not mean a curriculum without basis
in sound practice; it does not mean
conformity with the whim of the moment. It does not mean a program devoid of discipline, of the need for intensive study and mastery of basic
mean that
subject matter.
It does
one gains, even today, his understanding of the man-ness of man, his concept of human dignity and human
worth (even in a world beset with
manifold ills from a study of the past,
from a study of literature and philosophy, from a variety of studies of
man’s activities in the world. It does
mean, too, that one is surely at a loss
to grasp his world without a basic
understanding of mathematics and the
natural sciences.
)
“So this young man and I agreed
on many points, insofar as ends are
concerned, though we interpret them
quite differently; we shared little in
common with regard to means. Were
I to follow his thoughts, there is nothing of value in the current structure of
this college and of higher education in
general; only through its destruction
could it, Phoenix-like, arise from the
in
a
new and more meaningful
and more
effective form.
“Perhaps, despite a so-called generation gap, I can perceive his motivation. I, too, live in his world, and
I, too. can recite the litany of pollution and corruption, crime and hatred, continued warfare among peo-
poverty and ignorance. I, too,
regret that in most of higher education there is a lack of flexibility in
program, there are faculty members
disdainful of teaching and advisement,
and courses are taught that are long
ples,
outmoded.
Need Constant Reform
-making, and so do I.
At
Bloomsburg, students participate in
“There are abuses of society and
of the academic community, and as
such they are in need of our constant
efforts for reform. But we needn’t, in
this, as in any other age, conclude
that because there are wrongs, everything is wrong; or that in destroying
that which is, we can somehow, con-
such varied responsibilities as the
trary to all
cisions
march,
1970
sel-
human
are many things in current higher
education tht are worth preserving,
that we can build upon to effect our
changes and our improvements. There
much at Bloomsburg State that all
of us can share a pride in, and I believe that each graduate before me
can and would testify to that.
“In short, you are important, each
is
of
let
personally and individually;
share with you the words of
fine French
novelist,
Albert
you,
me
that
Camus
tive cooperation.
ashes
from ruins that which is better.
“There are many things that are
right in society, and I am sure all of
you can well enumerate them. There
struct
experience, recon-
“Great ideas,
it has
been said,
world as gently as dovPerhaps then if we listen attenes.
tively, we shall hear, amid the unroar
of empires and nations, a faint flutter
com
into the
of wings, the gentle stirring of life and
hope. Some will say that this hope lies
in a nation; others, in a man.
I believe rather that it is awakened, revived. nourished by millions of soli-
individuals whose
deeds
and
works every day negate frontiers and
the crudest implications of history. As
tary
a result, there shines forth fleetingly
the ever threatened truth that each
and every
man
.
.
builds for all.”
The Program
The invocation was given by the
Rev. Craig J. Dorward. The Concert
Choir sang “Hallelujah Amen,” Handel.
Dr. John A. Hoch, dean of instruction, presented candidates for the
Bachelor of Arts Degree and the degrees.
The degrees were conferred by Dr.
Nossen and the diplomas awarded by
William A. Lank, president of the
trustees,
assisted
by
Edson
J.
Drake, director of Arts and Sciences.
The candidate for the Bachelor of
Science in Education Degree were
then presented by Dr. Hoch to Dr.
Nossen and in presenting them Lank
was assisted by Dr. Emory W. Rarig.
director of Business
Education;
Royce O. Johnson, director
Dr.
Elementary Education; Dr. C. Stuart
Edwards, director of Secondary Education, and Dr. William L. Jones, direcof
Education.
Dr. Charles H. Carlson, director of
graduate students presented the candidates for the Master of Education
Degree to Dr. Nossen and Lank
awarded the diplomas.
Miss Beth
Powlus, soprano,
sang “Father of
Heaven,” Handel. After the address
the program concluded with “Alma
tor of Special
Mater” and the recessional.
Representatives from 18 Pennsylvania colleges and over 50 Pennsylvania school districts from central
Pennsylvania attended the Central
Regional Meeting of the Pennsylvania
Association for Student Teaching held
at Bloomsburg State College on October 29.
Page one
Gov. Shafer Pays
Visit
VISITS CAMPUS
Governor Raymond P. Shafer paid
GOV SHAFFER
a visit to the BSC campus recently,
and among the various features was
a press conference. Because, as is
usually the situation in such circumstances, things were behind schedule
and the hour conference was limited
tc foi'ty minutes.
The Questions were in the usual
areas. Sincee he was at a State College most of the student queries
were similar to those asked by students on campuses of similar instituWhen the reporters had their
tions.
inning their questions were built largely around things they usually inquire about.
The tenor of the session was made pertinent by question that were formed so they included
current developments.
As to a query about putting all the
State Colleges under one board of
trustees, the Governor does not believe that this would enhance the poliHe
tical influence of appointments.
said there would be no basic change
in appoinment which would continue
to be made by the Governor and approved by the Senate. He felt mentioned amendments would cause non
basic change and mentioned an act
of earlier in the day of placing the
student
government presidents of
each college on the board of trustees,
a move he holds will be a step toward
the eliminating of lack of understanding and communication.
Support of Colleges
that he had proposed
He mentioned
millions for the State Colleges
and the Legislature had cut that to $68
millions.
As to why this Commonwealth gives so much aid to private
institutions, he said this is unique in
Pennsylvania and he believes it is
sound. The Governor said that state
has more private colleges, on basis
of population, then any other state
and “it makes sense to aid them to
keep operating and is certainly cheaper than to build state schools from
$83
scratch to replace them.”
Complaint was raised about segregation in the state colleges.
Showing a slight irritation at the statement
Shafer replied that any who held that
opinion was “either misled, misguided presenting a wilful untruth.” He
said the Colleges are not segregated
or separated. He said it is a fact the
Negro enrollment is low “but we are
attempting to bring more blacks in.”
A student brought up the matter of
individual rights believed violated at
the College and the Governor told
him “I just don’t believe it.”
He
added that there are local rules at
institutions and when an individual
enrolls he must accept them “and if
you don’t like them then work to
change them.”
Future Tuition Increases
Asked if there would be future
in-
creases in tuition at the State Col-
Page two
To BSC Campus
Governor said he could not
answer that stating it would depend
on future costs and action of future
leges,, the
Legislatures.
trip around the Colleges, he
to learn first hand from students, faculty, administration and trustees.
Told about Akron U. students
His
said,
was
seizing a building and asked what he
would do if that happened in this state,
he said he would take such steps as
required to remove
the
students.
“Such acts as seizing buildings violate
rights of others and also those of the
perpetrators.”
INSTALLATION FOR DR.
NOSSEN WILL BE APRIL 18
The new president of Bloomsburg
State College, Dr. Robert J. Nossen,
will be inaugurated at a convocation
to be held on Alumni Day, April 18.
The Trustees approved the naming
inaugural planning committee
September meeting. The committee is comprised of representatives of the college faculty, the community, the board of trustees, the student body, and the Alumni Associaof an
at is
tion.
Serving along with Creasy as assochairman is George G. Sradtman, associate professor of mathematRepresenting the community
icse.
are Frank Burnside, president, Fowler, Dick and Walker, Wilkes-Barre;
and John A .Ekey, manager of the
Sears and Roebuck Company store in
Bloomsburg. Other members include
E. Guy
Bangs and William E.
Booth, trustees; Dr. Lee E. Aumiller,
ciate
faculty;
Samuel T. Trapane and Anne
D. Peacock, student body; Mrs. Joseph C. Conner and Dr. Kimber C.
Kuster, Alumni Association.
DR.
ANDRUSS RETURNS
FROM
TRIP
Dr. and Mrs. Harvey A. Andruss
have returned from a three-month
camera safari in South and East Africa. Their main mode of transportation was the “African Mercury,” of
the Farrell Lines, which called at the
ports of Cape town and Durban,
Marques,
Lourenco
South Africa;
TanDar-es-Salaam,
Mozambique;
zania, and
Mombasa, Kenya.
Dr.
After landing at Cape Town,
and Mrs. Andruss flew to Johannesburg and proceeded by safari car
with courier to the Kruger and Hluhlume Animal Parks. They re-boarded
the ship at Durban, where they obsercompetition
ved the Zulu dancing
which involved five teams. In Swaziland they were delayed four hours
by the flooding of the Komati river
and experienced another delay at the
border of the Transvaal. South Africa.
Arriving at the Portugese colony of
Mozambique, the Andrusses proceeded up the Incomati River to take pictures of hippos and crocodiles.
A ten-day delay in the return of the
ship afforded the local couple an opportunity to spend some time in the
Tsavo National Park with a party of
This is one of
five other people.
the largest national parks in the
world, and covers more than nine
thousand square miles in the shadow
of
Mount Kilimanjaro.
Although being chased by a rhino
and followed by elephants added zest
to photography in the African game
preserves where lions, hippos, leopantelopes
and
ards,
wildbeasts,
abound, returning to America, was a
most welcome experience for the Andrusses.
FOCUS ATTENTION ON NEEDS
OF EACH OF BSC STUDENTS
Education is more than just the
at
excellence
pursuit of academic
Bloomsburg State College and takes
place not only in the classroom but
in all places where students interact.
Campus life includes residence hall
and dining room experiences as well
as all of the various social and cultural events in the co-curricular actvities
program.
Consequently, almost all of the 3,650 students at BSC are afforded an
opportunity to explore their individual potential and find a place for the
expression of their talents so that they
may better understand themselves.
The members of the Dean of Students’ staff focus their attention on the
needs of the individual student as well
as the entire
community with
the in-
of assisting young men and
to more fully develop their
tention
women
potentials
as
they progress
towards
their various goals. Thus, this large
staff of qualified personnel is responhousing,
sible for student activities,
food service, counseling, health, athletics, student financial aid, student
government and many related areas.
Above all, they are responsible for
maintaining an environment which
emphasizes integrity and consideration of others.
BSC IN SPAIN
The Bloomsburg in Spain program,
conducted by the Bloomsburg State
College during the past summer, was
study
one of the most successful
abroad programs that has been conducted by the college over the years.
The main objective was to provide
the future Spanish teacher, as well
as the experienced classroom teacher of Spanish, a better knowledge of
the people of Spain and their culture,
ideas and customs.
The trip to Spain was from June 30
September 4 and, in addition to
the study at the University of Madrid. the students travelled to Toledo.
Valle de los Caidos, Monasterio del
Escorial, and they also attended a bull
to
fight in
Dr.
Madrid.
E.
Alfred
Department
at
BSC and
Tonolo,
chairman.
of Foreign Languages
his wife, accompanied the
group.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Jn iWemnnam
1905— Lulu
1894hem. Pa.
Carpter Horn.
Bethle-
Cordina Fisher Mayer,
Sacramento, Pa.
H.
H.
1913— Anna Adams (Mrs.
Rohrbach.* Northumberland, Pa.
1895 Ada Wolfe, Forty Fort, Pa.
1915 Fred W. Faux. Shamokin, Pa.
1925 Bernetta M. Kelly, Scranton.
-Mrs.
—
—
Pa.
1924— Ruth Beaver (Mrs. Daniel G.
Lindemuth) Catawissa, Pa.
1911 Elmira M. Guiterman (Mrs.
John Linner), Philadelphia. Pa.
Evers,
1924 Veronica McNamara
Hawley, Pa.
1915 Nettie C. Dietz (Mrs. John A.
Hayward, California
Luxton
1902— Genevieve Bubb, Williamsport.
—
—
—
i
Pa.
,
—
Robert
1927 Elsie Bossert 'Mrs.
Glonan.)
W.1923—
1908— Edith Sturdevant
1923— Elmer Haupt, West Chester,
Pa.
Albert K. Foster, York, Pa.
1905— George C. Baker, Moorestown.
N. J.
1905— Walter S. Brooke
1918 Helen Lord (Mrs. Arthur Powell), Kingston, Pa.
1899 Jennie C. Smith (Mrs. Clinton Guillot), Lake Worth, Florida.
1902 Helen Reice Irwin. Blooms-
—
—
—
burg
1924 Mrs. Andrew
Glen
Tirpak,
Lyon, Pa.
1895 Jennie
Blandford
Morris,
Kingston, Pa.
1920 Alice F. Cocklin, Shickshinny,
Pa.
1894— Hannah Jones, Nanticoke, Pa.
1908 Edith
Sturdevant
Leonard.
North Miami, Fla.
—
—
—
—S. J.
Pa.
1917 — Sarah
1902
Seesholtz,
Blcomsburg,
Emmitt (Mrs. Sara
E.
Reichard), Riverside. Pa.
Dr. J. Frank
Dr. J.
Dame
Frank Dame, former
Direc-
tor of Business Education at B. S. C.,
died October 30 in Winter Park, Fla.,
where he had moved after leaving
Florida State University as Dean of
the School of Business.
Dr. Dame also taught at Upper
Darby High School for 17 years, was
a professor at Temple University,
and Supervisor of Business Education
oi the Washington, D. C., schools, t
Edwin Kubach
Edwin Kubach, 42 East Fifth St.,
Bloomsburg, Pa., a Bloomsburg State
College professor, was dead on arrival at Bloomsburg Hospital November
23.
He had been an instructor at the
college since August, 1968.
Born in Union, N. J., Kubach received his elementary
and secondary
education in the schools of that community. His Bachelor of Arts degree
was
earned
MARCH,
1970
at
Rutgers
University
and his Masters of Fine Arts degree
was awarded by Yale. He also attended the University of Michigan and
the University of Pennsylvania, and
the course requireDoctor of Philosophy
degree. He was currently working on
his dissertation for that degree.
Kubach began his teaching career
He later joined
at Rutgers in 1940.
has
fulfilled
ments
for
all
his
the faculty at
Moravian College, Beth-
lehem, for a three years period starting in 1947. His next teaching assign-
ment was
West Virginia Institute of Technology, Montgomery, W.
Va., where he remained for seven
years from 1950-57. He then became
at the
a member of the Fairleigh Dickinson
University at Madison, N. J. from
1961-63.
For the past five years he
has been teaching at the Pennsylvania
Mililtary College in Chester.
W.
W.
Clair Hidlay,
Former Trustee
Company, which he founded in 1929;
chairman of the board of directors of
the Bloomsburg Bank-Columbia Trust
Company
since 1960, and a
that board since 1939.
member
of
of
John, Bloomsburg, died in
Bloomsburg Hospital where she had
been a patient since July. She was
born October 23, 1876, in Mtotour
Township, a daughter of the late Peter
Dr. J.
S.
Samantha White Evans.
Long interested in Daughters of the
American Revolution, Fort McClure
Chapter, she furnished awards for the
highest history marks in area schools
A. and
DAR.
A member of the Wesley
through the
Methodist Church, she was
member
United
also
a
Bloomsburg Hospital
Auxilliary and WCTU, and was the
last surviving member of her immeof the
diate family.
Mrs. John .who was one of the oldAlumnae of BSC, was a loyal supporter of
Alumni activities.
She
missed very few alumni meetings during the years that followed her gradest
uation
Clair Hidlay. prominent businessman and civic leader, died at the
Bloomsburg Hospital recently.
He was president of the Hidlay Oil
Mae Evans John ’96
Mae Evans John, widow
Mrs.
.
Leona Seesholtz Wenner ’00
Mrs. Leona S. Wenner, Stillwater R.
R. 1, died April 7. 1969 in the Rest
Haven Nursing Home, Chestnut Hill.
Philadelphia, where she had been a
patient for several weeks. Her death
followed an illness of two and one-half
months during which she was hospitalized several times.
•She was the widow of William C.
He was a director of the Bloomsburg Water Company; a member and
former director of the Associated
Petroleum Industries of Pennsylvania
and a member and former director of
the National Oil Jobbers Association
which recently honored him for forty
years of service.
Wenner. who died in 1935. She was
born in Orangeville, a daughter of the
Seelate Harry and Clara Seibert
sholtz, and spent most of her life in
Fishing Creek Township.
In her early life she taught school
in Fishing Creek Township for sev-
An active participant in a variety
of civic endeavors, he was serving, at
the time of his death, as director of
Bloomsburg State College Alumni As-
Bloomsburg Public Library, as a
long-time trustee and currently a Ruling Elder of the Bloomsburg Presbythe
terian Church, as a
Board
life
member
of Directors of the
of the
Columbia
County Cancer Society, and as a
member
life
Bloomsburg Historical
Society. He was a past president of
the Bloomsburg Hospital Board. Durof the
ing the 1940 ’s he served as secretary
of the Board of Trustees of Bloomsburg State College.
A veteran of two years’ service
with the United States Army during
World War I, he was past commanderin-chief, Valley of Bloomsburg, American Legion.
An outstanding leader and member
of Masonic organizations Hidlay was
a past commander-in-chief of Caldwell Consistory and chairman of its
Board of Trustees.
On September 25, 1943, he was made
an honorary member of the Supreme
He was afCouncil, 33rd Degree.
filiated with Washington Lodge No.
265, F. and A.M., Royal Arch Chapter, Crusade Commander No. 12 the
Irem Temple Shrine, the Craftsman
Club and a member and Past Sovereign of Orient Conclave, Red Cross
of Constantine.
He was for many
years a member of the BPO Elks and
Loyal Order of Moose.
eral years, and was a member of St.
James United Church of Christ and
sociation.
Helen Reice Irvin ’02
Mrs. Helen R. Irvin, Bloomsburg.
died at Maple Crest Nursing Home
on October 25. Born in Bloomsburg,
she lived
years.
in
She taught
Philadelphia
for
many
in Mifflinville, Mainville,
Bloombsurg and closed her career as
a teacher in the Philadelphia school
system. Her husband, James C. Irvin, died in 1917. She was a member
of St. Matthew Lutheran church, of
Bloomsburg.
Rev. Charles L. Hess ’13
The Rev. Charles L. Hess,
83,
a
York
minister of the Central New
Methodist Conference, died at Genesee
Nursing Home, Utica.
A native of Kunkle, Pa., Mr. Hess
served churches in Eatonville, Pa.,
Bridgeport and Syracuse (Woodlawn
Methcdist Church). He was associated with the Methodist Church of Williamson from 1929 to 1939 and subsequently serving at Canasota for 10
years. From 1949 until his retirement
served
the
Methodist
in 1957 he
Church at Clifton Springs.
Since his retirement, he served the
Wall Street Methodist Church, Auburn, and then was a supply clergyman for Freeman Avenue Methodist
Page three
Church, Solvay until his illness about
a year ago.
He
graduated from Bloomsburg
State Teachers College, and Syracuse
University in 1925. He was a former member of a Pennsylvania Grange
and the Odd Fellows and Rotary.
Vincent Karas ’50
Vincent Karas, forty-four, Hazleton,
died January 6 at Hazleton State General Hospital following a long illness.
He joined professional Scouting in
1955 and served as executive Scout
in Bloomsburg and in Baltimore, Mr., before going to Hazleton
in 1963
where he served as Scout
Executive for the Anthracite Council,
Boy Scouts of America.
In 1968 he took a position with the
RCA plant, Mountaintop. He was a
former member of Hazleton Rotary
Club. A veteran of World War II, he
served as a staff sergeant in the Army
and a Master of Science in
Chemistry from Kansas State College
in 1924
in
Manhattan
in 1932.
school in
He taught
before entering the
He served
Curwensville
army
in
April,
France with the
79th Division. Before going to Kansas
1918.
in
he taught at Port Allegheny,
In Kansas, he taught at Syra-
Fowler and went to Medicine
Lodge in 1925 where he taught science
cuse,
He was
Lodge High
also principal of Medicine
School from 1943-56.
affairs.
Martha Creasy ’04
Martha Sloan Creasy, Bloomsburg,
died at her home on December 11. She
v/as born in Bloomsburg and had resided in Bloomsburg all her life.
She was a member of Wesley
United Methodist Church. For many
years she headed the Home Missionary Society of the Church. She was
active in the choir and WSCS.
She was a graduate of Goucher College, Baltimore, Md., and
attended
Peabody Conservatory. She was a
Socity
and was
church
affairs.
active
in
many
Elsie Bossert Gloman ’27
Mrs. Elsie B. Gloman, Wilkes-Barre, wife of Robert W. Gloman, Commander-in-Chief of Caldwell Consis-
She was a member of the Millville
Friends and of the Columbia County
Church
Westminster Presbyterian
and its Webster Class. She also was
a member of the Wilkes-Barre Wom-
1893,
son of the late Charles Daniel
and Ellen Beishline Kindig. He rerecieved a BS degree
from
Fort
Hays, Kansas State Teachers College
Page four
Member
tee,
:
1821-1899;
State
Senator.
U. S. Minister to Ecudor,
U. S. Senator, 1863-1969;
of Congress, 1877-1891: Trus-
Bloomsburg State Normal School.
1874-1890.
Barre General Hospital, having served as treasurer of the latter organiza-
The original part of this house was
constructed of brick and sevral additions have been made to it.
Local
historians want to determine the date
of the first construction, but the facts
are fairly clear that U. S. Senator
Buckalew occupied his home during
his term of service in Washington
tion.
(1863-1869.)
en of Kiwanis, the Wyoming Valley
Women’s Club, the Pennsylvania Educational
iaries
of
and the AuxilIrem Temple and Wilkes-
Association,
Samuel Green
’35
Samuel Green, Berwick, died at the
Bloomsburg Hospital where he had
Survivors include his wife the forQuigley and six children.
mer Ann
Historical Society.
Bruce A. Kindig ’17
Information has been received of the
death of Bruce A. Kindig, seventysix, on November 12 in Kiowa Manor,
Kiowa, Kansas.
He was born in Berwick, October 6,
—
1850-1858;
1956-1861;
Berwick Elks.
Bloomsburg.
an aluminum plaque which appears
cn the lower end of the front of the
house and reads as follows
Buckalew Place
Homes of Charles R.
in
Buckalew
College.
former Century Club
require the construction
of
a
for the President on the newer
or Upper Campus, at the present time
the President’s house or residence on
Lightstreet Road will continue to be
occupied for the purpose for which it
has been used for more than half a
century.
Some years ago Dr. John J. Serff,
then chairman of the Department of
History, did the research that resulted
home
the Dorrance
Township School and later for the
Wilkes-Barre City School District.
Mrs. Gloman was a member of the
November 13.
Mrs Gloman taught at
Miss Elisabeth White ’10
Miss Elisabeth White, seventy-six,
og Bloomsburg, died October 28, at
Bloomsburg Hospital after a lengthy
illness. She was born in Bloomsburg,
April 2, 1893, daughter of the late Heister V. and Clara Aikman White. She
was one of the first women to receive
a degree from Pennsylvania
State
of
of the
Although
the
development
of
Bloomsburg State College in the future
tory, died
been a patient three days. He has
been in ill health three months.
Following his graduation he taught
in the Salem township school system
prior to entering in the U. S. Air
Force in World War II where he serFollowing served as a Sergeant.
vice he was affiliated with his father
in the wholesale meat business of R.
Green and Son.
He was a member of the Berwick
Golf Club, Berwick Duplicate Bridge
Club of which he was a director and
founder; as active patron and booster of the athletics in Berwick; active
in civic affairs, member of the board
of Ohev Sholom Synagogue, and the
member
IS
may
Arlene Weiss Gardner ’19
Hills,
Mrs. J. R. Gardner, Blue
Columbia, N. J., a native of BloomsShe was
burg, died December 22.
a retired school teacher. Mrs. Gardner was a member of Knowlton, N.
J., Prebyterian Church, the Gideon
.
Arlene Weiss Gardner ’19
Mrs. J. R. Gardner, sixty-nine, of
Blue Hills, Columbia, N. J., a native
of Bloomsburg, died in January. She
was a member of Knowlton, N. J.,
Presbyterian Church, the Gideon Society and was active in many church
BUCKALEW PLACE’
HISTORICAL SITE
retirement in 1958.
until his
Air Force.
He was a member of St. Paul’s
United Methodist Church, Hazleton.
He taught in the church Sunday
School and was a trustee and member
of the official board of the church.
of the senior choir and administrative board of the church. He
belonged to the National and Pennsylvania Teachers Associations, Berks
County Teachers of Mathematics Association and the Hamburg Area Education Association.
to teach,
Pa.
official
—
member
Eugene P. Sandel ’59
Eugene P. Sandel, thirty-two, 113
North Fourth Street, Hamburg, died
Monday, December 22, at Reading
Hospital where he had been a pattwo months.
He had taught in the Hamburg
Area High School for the past nine
The Board of Trustees entered into
an agreement of sale to purchase the
Buckalew Place on July 17, 1908 at a
price of $6,000.
The next reference
regarding the sale is several months
later and deals with the seeking of a
right-of-way from the Dillon family
for the “recently acquired Buckalew
Place.”
The affixing of the plaque to the
house is to preserve the historical
nature of the structure for the College and the community of Bloomsburg.
BSC WILL HOUSE
HISTORICAL ITEMS
The Columbia County Historical
Society has approved an agreement
for affiliation with the Bloomsburg
State College.
According to this agreement the
valuable collections of the
Society,
while remaining in the full possession
of the Society, will be housed, cared
for, and exhibited by the College, using its personnel. All of these services will be at no expense to the Society.
ient for
ALUMNI DAY
years
Hew as a member of the Bethany
United Methodist Church, Hamburg;
APRIL
28,
1970
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
i
i
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR
T2
H. F. Fenstemaker
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
’34
Grace Foote Conner,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Terms
242 Central
expires 1970
102
140
John Thomas
’43
Term
expires 1970
Glenn A. Oman ’32
1704 Clay Avenue
Scranton, Pennsylvania 18509
’40
expire 1971
Mrs. Verna Jones ’36
18 West Avenue, Apartment C-4
Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087
expires 1970
Volume LXXI, Number
1899
our oldlest
alumni, lives at Holly Place No. 2,
Shamokin Dam, Pa.
of
1901
Dr. Frank C. Laubach, world-famous missionary-educator, who observed his 85th birthday anniversary, received a telegram of congratulations
from President Richard Nixon.
New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller
and Lowell Thomas are other national
figures who sent personal congratulations.
Syracuse’s
Mayor William
Walsh proclaimed the birthday “Dr.
Frank C. Laubach Day” for his city.
The President’s telegram read:
“On the occasion of your 85th birthday, I want to join the many friends
and admirers who salute your long
years of devotion to learning.
“Eight and a half decades are a
1970
Lancaster, Pennsylvania 17603
19526
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Terms
’29
McKnight Street
James H. Deily, Jr. ’41
37 N. Bausman Drive
224 Leonard Street
TREASURER
17936
Gordon, Pennsylvania 17936
’47
Hamburg, Pennsylvania
Earl A. Gehrig ’37
110 Robin Lane, Sherwood Village
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
march,
204
68 Fourth Street
Clayton H. Hinkel
Pennsylvania
Elizabeth H. Hubler
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
State College, Pa. 16801
Term expires 1970
Rush Shaffer, one
Gordon,
West Street
Kimber C. Kuster T3
West Eleventh Street
Dr.
SECRETARY
Term
Dr. William L. Bitner III
205 McKnight Street
’34
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Dr. Frank J. Furgele ’52
Colonial Farm Box 88
R. D. 1, Glen Mills, Pa. 19342
Term expires 1970
Elwood M. Wagner
643 Wiltshire Road
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie ’35
509 East Front Street
Berwick, Pennsylvania 18603
expire 1972
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
VICE PRESIDENT
Col.
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Millard Ludwig ’48
Center and Third Streets
Millville, Pennsylvania 17846
Road
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Term
—
1
—
March, 1970
milestone in any life. But when filled
with enduring service to your fellow
citizens, they are worthy of our special
admiration and gratitude. May this
day be a most happy one for you, may
the year ahead bring you the fullest
measure of the contentment that derives from such a full, productive
life.”
1901
living at the William Penn Hotel, Harrisburg, Pa. 17101.
She had been a
guest at the Naval Home in Philadelphia, but the home was destroyed by
fire, and the guests were obliged to
move.
1907
Class
Representative:
Edwin M.
Barton, 353 College Hill, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
Gertrude Follmer (Mrs. A. T. Lowry)
is
now
living at 22
James Love
Road, East Hampton, N. Y.
11937
1903
Class
Riland,
11
Class
1909
Class
10583
1905
Representative:
now living with her sisters at 209
South 4th Street, Lewisburg, Pa.
is
H. Walter
Warwick Avenue, Scars-
Representative:
dale, N. Y.
1908
Kostenbauder Weinman, who
has been living in Twin Falls, Idaho,
Stella
Mrs.
Vera
Representative:
Diehl, 627
17821
Hemingway Housenick,
Market
503
Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Mrs. Blanche Miller Grimes is now
Bloom
Fred
W.
Street, Danville, Pa.
1910
Representative:
Class
Metz,
23
Manhattan
Robert E.
Street,
Ashley,
Page
five
Pa.
Bloomsburg, Pa. .17815
18706
1911
Class Representative: Mrs. Pearle
Fitch Diehl, 627 Bloom Street, Danville, Pa. 17821
1912
Representative: Howard F.
Road,
242
Central
Fenstemaker,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1913
Class Representative: Dr. Kimber
Kuster, 140 West 11th Street, Bloomsbury, Pa. 17815
Dr. and Mrs. Kimber C. Kuster, 140
Street, Bloomsburg,
observed their golden wedding anniversary recently.
Dr. and Mrs. Kuster were married
Mrs. Kuster is
in Somerville, Mass.
the former Gladys Teele, native of
West Somerville, Mass., and a gradShe later
uate of Mount Holyoke.
taught English at BSC.
Dr. Kuster attended Bloomsburg
Normal School and received his Bachelor’s, Masters and Doctors degrees
He
from University of Michigan.
taught in several states before coming to BSC in 1935. He was head of
the math and science department at
the local college at the time of his retirement in 1964.
Mrs. Kuster was in YWCA work in
Baltimore, Md., and Ann Arbor, Mich.,
before coming to Bloomsburg. Here,
she served as volunteer chairman of
Red Rross during World War II, was
on the Child Welfare board for many
years and is active in AAUW, Ivy and
Delta Clubs.
A member of Washington Lodge,
F. and A.M., and Caldwell Consistory,
Dr. Kuster also holds membership in
Rotary and Torch Clubs. He served
as chairman of the local Red Cross
West Eleventh
Boy Scouting,
Bloomsburg Hospital
Board and BSC Alumni Board.
They are members of First Baptist
Church, Bloomsburg, serving in many
chapter,
was
member
of
active in
capacities. Dr. Kuster has been trustee and deacon and also served as lay
moderator.
Representative:
J. Howard
West Third Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. .17815
Class
Deily, 518
1915
Representative: John H. Shu-
man, 368 East Main
burg, Pa.
Street,
Blooms-
17815
1916
Class Representative: Mrs. Russell
(Emma Harrison) R. D. 2,
Orangeville, Pa. 17859
Burrus
1917
L.
Representative:
Allen
Class
Cromis, Mahoning Manor, R. D. 1,
Milton, Pa. 17847
Erwin Hobb’s address is 5522 Gracewood Avenue, Unit 816, Temple City,
California 91780.
1918
Class
Representative:
Clair
J.
Patterson, 315 West Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1919
Class Representative:
Miss Catherine A. Reimard, 335 Jefferson St.,
age six
Class
Creasy,
Leroy W.
Berwick Road,
Representative:
3117
Old
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Dr. H. Keffer Hartline, Bloomsburg
native and 1967 winner of the Nobel
Prize in medicine, and Senator Hugh
Scott of Pennsylvania, newly elected
leader of Senate Republicans, were
featured speakers at Lafayette College, Easton on October 24 and 25.
Dr. Hartline, a 1823 graduate of
Lafayette spoke on October 25 at the
ceremony dedicating Lafayette’s new
biology building in honor of Dr. Beverly Waugh Kunkle. Dr. Hartline is
now a biophysicist at The Rockefeller University.
Dr. Hartline won his Nobel Prize
for his research on the optic nerve.
His research began at Lafayette 50
years ago when he studied the reactions of animalsto light under the late
Dr. Kunkel.
When Dr. Hartline and Dr. Kunkel
were honored by Lafayette alumni at
a dinner in New York in 1968, Dr.
Hartline lauded Dr. Kunkel as a man
whose “work showed that intellectual
integrity whichc is now short in supHis was a grim science, but
ply.
one full of zest and enthusiasm.”
Dr. Kunkel,
who
died
March
6
at
the age of eighty-seven, taught biology
at Lafayette for 37 years. He achieved the rare distinction of teaching two
Prize winners in medicine
Dr. Hartline and the late Philip S.
Hench, the winner in 1950 for his work
with cortisone.
He returned to Johns Hopkins in
1949 as a professor and chairman of
Nobel
the department of biophysics. In 1953
he joined the faculty at The Rockefell-
er University.
Dr. Hartline is the author of
than 550 articles and has won
more
many
honors and awards for his
Lafayette awarded him
an honorary Doctor of Science degree
scientific
contributions.
Mildred Ti-everton Zeigler lives at
Barnhart Drive, Snyder, N. Y.
Mi and Mrs. Zeigler recently retii’ed.
They conducted a floral shop in Sny-
250
-
,
der.
Edna
Siegel
Key
1922
Edna S.
Representative:
Class
Harter, R. RD. 1, Nescopeck, Pa. 18623
1923
Leroy A. Richard, 109 N. Second
St., Shamokin, Pa., is l-ecovering from
a very serious illness after a lengthy
stay in Shamokin Hospital.
Harold and Grace Williams Keller,
living at 6 Morris Circle, Trenton 8, N. J., have purchased
who have been
a
new home
in
Mrs. Harry
Cole, 100 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
Laura Boetticher Best, Conyngham,
Pa., recently retired from the retail
fui'niture business which she and her
husband conducted.
Jule Fagan O’Rourke lives at Apt.
6, Sycamore Gardens Apts., Bristol,
Pa.
Beatrice
311
Walnut
Ruth Koch, 551 Lincoln Avenue, HazPa., has retired in 1967 from
teaching at Hazleton High School. She
traveled
extensively since, her
to
abroad, being
trip
She
Portugal and Morocco.
represented in “Who’s Who of
Spain,
is
Village,
Bei'lew Jopling lives at
Street, Moosic, Pa. 18507
1924
Rpresentative:
Edward F.
Class
Avenue,
Schuyler, 236 West Ridge
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1925
Mrs. Pearl
Radel Bickel, 909 Masser Street, Sunburg, Pa. 17801
Dorothy Herring Greenway lives at
928 Blythe Avenue, Drexel Hill, Pa.
Class
Representative:
19026
1926
Marvin M.
Class Representative:
Bloss, R. D. 2, Wapwallopen, Pa. 18660
(Mrs.
Claude
Hazel K. Graham
Avery), lives at 310 DeHai't Avenue.
Endicott, N. Y. 13760
1927
Class Representative: Mrs. Ralph
16
G. Davenport (Verna Medley),
Ransom Stret, Plymouth, Pa. 18651
1929
Mrs. (Elsie
Nelson Stauffer, 88 John St.,
Kingston, Pa. 18704. (Arline Frantz)
Mrs. James .Wertman, 20 Parish
Stret, Dallas, Pa. 18612
Class Representatives:
Lebo)
Class
Representatives:
and Margaret Swartz
American Women.”
Mabel Kraft Reniche,
30-47 81st St.,
Jackson Heights, L. I., N. Y., recently returned from an extended trip to
Spain, where their son Bill is representative of the Fraft Food Company.
Sue McCoy, 425 East Diamond Avenue, Hazleton, Pa., retired form teaching in 1966 and is enjoying retirement
Luther W.
Bitler, 117 State
Street, Millville, Pa. 17864
1931
Class Representative:
James B.
Davis, 333 East Marble Street, Mechanicsburg. Pa. 17055
1932
Dorothy Jones Ward lives at 208
18517
S. Pond St., Taylor, Pa.
Ruth Myers Herman lives at 507
Emmett Street, Scai-nton, Pa. 11229
leton,
has
Sherwood
Bloomsburg.
1930
Class Representative:
most recent
lives at 416 Allegh-
eny Avenue. Arnold, Pa. 15068
hlHRmrr fczf.w..4ti DpA4fllS, 5-rF..
in 1959.
1921
1914
Class
and traveling.
1920
1933
Miss Lois
Representative:
Street,
Lawson,
644
Third
East
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Mildred Busch (Mrs. Howard D.
Linse) is living at 1932 N. W. 36th
Class
Street, Corvallis,
Oregon. 97330
1934
Representative:
Class
Esther
Evans McFadden (Mrs. Joseph),
East Fifth Street,
Bloomsburg,
154
Pa.
17815
1935
Class
Reed,
I.
William
East 4th Street, Blooms-
Representative:
151
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
burg:.
Fa. 17815
studies having significant influence on
the furtherance of the Agency’s mis-
193i>
Class
Vanauker
Representatives:
Kathryn
IVIrs. Nicholas Moreth) 34
Road, Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey 07432. Co-Chairmen: Ruth Wagner (Mrs. Lawrence Le Grande) 126
Oak Street, Hazleton, Pa. 18201 and
Mary Jane Fink (Mrs. Frederick MeCutcheon) Maple Avenue, Conyngham,
Linden
Pa. 18219
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Evans' Kathryn John) are living at 10 Lenox Road,
Rockville Centre, L. I„ N. Y. 11570.
They have returned to the U.S.A. after
a two years’ stay in London. England.
1937
Class Representatives: Mr. and Mrs.
Earl A. Gehrig, 110 Robin Lane, Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1938
East Main
710
In 1969 he received his M.S. degree
Management from George Washington University. He is also
a graduate of the U. S. Army War
College. He had been with the Natin
Financial
Security Agency since 1948.
Mr. Schramm is married and has
two sons.
iinal
1949
Class Representative: Willis Swales.
9 Raven Road, Montvale, N. J. 07645
1950
Frances Cerchiaro Abitanta
Class Representative:
Dr. Russell
Davis, Jr., Sullivan County Community College, South Fallsburgh, N.
Y. 12779
Street,
Blooms-
burg, Pa. 17815
1952
1939
Representative:
Class
Willard A.
Christian, Jr., 803 Logue Street, Williamsport, Pa. 17701
1940
Class Representative:
Clayton H.
Hinkel, 224 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1941
Class
Representative:
Edwards, R. D.
art
4,
Dr.
C.
Stu-
Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
1942
Class Representative:
H.
Zimmerman (Jean
Kready
Avenue,
lives at
N. J.
1046 Cross Avenue, Elizabeth,
07208
1951
C.
Class Representative: Paul G. Martin,
sion.
<
Mrs. Ralph
Noll),
Millersville,
165
Pa.
17551
1943
Class
Representative:
Mrs. Raymond A. Algatt (Betty Katerman),
253 Iron
Street,
Bloomsburg, Pa.
17815
Gertrude Makowski Grabowski
liv-
es at 907 Cedartree Lane, Woodacres,
Claymont, Delaware. 19703
1944
Class Representative: Mrs. (Poletime Comuntzis) Carl Demetripopoulos, Friar and Robin Lanes, Sherwood
Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
Representative:
Galinski, 90 Tower
lestown, Pa. 18901
Hill
Francis B.
Road, Doy-
Frank Furgele and Mildred “Lucky”
have now moved to Glen
Mills, Pa.
Frank is currently Superintendent of Schools in the Claymont
Pliscott
School District in Claymont, Dela.
Following his years at Bloomsburg,
he taught Social Studies in the Baltimore County Public Schools for one
year, and in the Bristol Township
Schools for two years.' He then became Assistant Principal of the Benjamin Franklin High School in Bristol in 1955, and Principal of the Woodrow Wilson High School in Bristol in
1959.
In July of 1968, Frank accepted his current position.
All of his graduate work was at
Temple University where he received
his Masters degree in 1955 and Doct-
rinate in 1965.
Frank is very active in various Educational and Civic organization and is
presently on the Board of Directors of
the Bloomsburg State College Alumni.
His four children also keep him active for he and “Lucky” have three
boys and one
girl.
1946
Class
Representative:
Anastasia
Pappas (Mrs. John Trowbridge), 102
W. Mahoniny Street, Danville, Pa.
17821.
Co-chairman: Mrs. Charles
W. Creasy (Jacqueline Shaffer), R.
D.
1,
Catawissa, Pa. 17820
1947
Class
Representative:
Robert L.
Bunge, 12 West Park Street, Carroll
Park, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1948
Class
Representative:
Harry G.
John, Jr., 425 Iron Street, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
Robert F. Schramm, 6813 Beacon
Place, Riverdale, Maryland, was recently presented the ational Security
Agency Meritorious Service Award by
Nthe Agency Director, Lt. General
Marshall S. Carter.
Mr. Schramm was cited for his outstanding contributions in providing
the continuity and direction required
in the management and plans and
MARCH,
1970
Richard Ledyard is currently reat Gravel Hill Road, Southampton, Pa. 18966. Dick was a Business department graduate and has received his Masters degree in Education from Temple University.
The Army and tour of duty to Germany took some time from Dick’s
plans.
However, for the last fifteen
years, he has been with the Business
Education Department of the HatboroHorsham High School. He is currently the Department Chairman.
Dick was married in 1962 and has
three boys and one girl.
siding
William M. McAloose,
Bucks
a
County resident, now lives at 135
Taifer Avenue, Doylestown, Pa. Bill
received his Masters Degree
from
in 1959 and is now
working on further graduate work.
After
leaving
Bloomsburg,
Bill
taught in the Hazleton City School
Temple University
District until 1957.
He then became
Department Chairman of the Business Education Department in
the
Central Bucks High School in Doylestown, Pa., until 1966. After serving
as Assistant Principal of the school for
two years, he was appointed Assistant
Principal of the newly constructed
Central Bucks
East High School
in
Doylestown.
Bill was married in 1954 and has
one son. He is an active member
of the Doylestown Lions Club.
Maynard Hairing and his wife
Lois, whom he married in 1957, lives
at 105 Division Stret, Valley View,
Maynard and
Lois have three
and two girls.
Since graduating from Bloomsburg
Maynard has attended Pre-Med school
at Muhlenberg College, received his
M.D. from Temple University, and
Pa.
children, one boy
served his internship at Geisinger
Medical Center in Danville, Pa. Since
1960, he has practiced medicine at
Tri Valley Medical Center in Valley
View, Pa.
Civic and community activities are
He is
certainly a part of his life.
active as a director or officer in TriValley Charities Churches, and Youth
Maynard is presently VicePresident and Director of the HeginsValley View Rotary Club. In addition
projects.
to his
many
directorships in the busi-
ness community, he is President and
Director of the First National Bank
of Hegins.
Maynard served two years in the
Army Quartermaster Corps, and one
year with the Army in Korea.
Lola
(Deibert)
Glass now
resides
at 140 Hillendale Drive, Doylestown,
Pa. 18901. While living in the most
scenic county in the State of Pennsylvania, (author’s license), she also has
managed to keep quite busy.
After her graduation, she attended
She did,
a private business school.
however, teach one year in the Doylestown Elementary School, became a
Secretary in the advertising department of Leds and Northrup, and for
ten years was the music director and
organist in her church.
Lola was married in 1953 and has
three children. She boasts two girls
an done boy. She is very active in the
Girl Scouts of America and is presently Service Unit Director in the Doyles-
town Area.
Rocco V. Cherilla, “shortest” graduate of the Class of 1952, is now “long”
with teaching experience. Rocco has
taught for 17 years in the Business
Education department of the Montgomery Area Senior High School in
Montgomery, Pa.
Since graduating from Bloomsburg,
Rocco has received his MA degree
from New York University.
Rocco is a confirmed bachelor, eligible, but does carry rank. He was a
second lieutenant in the U. S. Air
Force. He is outranked only by William I. Troxell, also a member of the
same
class,
who
is
Rocco ’s immediate
principal.
Page seven
Rocco resides at 246 E. First
Hazleton, Pa. 18201.
St.,
a 1946
High
Hazleton Senior
School, Dr. Wilson earned his B.A. in
Spanish and his M. Ed. in educational
Pennsylvania
administration
from
He completed his
State University.
Ed. D in secondary administration at
Columbia University in 1961. In the
spring of 1956, Dr. Wilson took coursat
teaching certificate
es for his
Bloomsburg State College. Before going to Kutztown in 1963, he served for
two years as prilncipal of WheatlandChilli Junior-Senior High School near
Rochester, N. Y. He taught French
and English at Muncy High School
and at Fort Lee High School in New
graduate
Major Edward W. Johnson, Bloomsburg, Pa., has been selected for promotion to lieutenant colonel in the U.
Major Johnson is an
S. Air Force.
operations staff officer with the Inspector General activity at Norton
AFB,
Drums, near Hazleton, and
California.
The major, who served during the
Korean War, has also served in Vietnam. He holds two awards of the
Distinguished Flying Cross, eight Air
Medals, three awards of the U. S. Air
Force Commendation Medal and the
Purple Heart.
1953
Class Representative: John S. Scrimgeour, 411 East 3rd Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Mary J.
Mrs. Don
Butler, daughter of Mr. and
Butler, 315 S. Chapman St.,
Chesaning, Mich. 48616, died on October 16, 1969 of lukemia. Don is Administrative Assistant to the state director of Easter Seals, in charge of
public relations, funud raising and
programming.
of
Jersey.
His wife, mother and two of his
three sisters are graduates of Bloomsburg State College. Dr. Wilson’s father, Lloyd Wilson, Bendertown, died
in 1956. His mother, the former Mae
Callender ’08, of Sweet Valley, still
resides in Drums.
1957
William J.
Class Representative:
Pohutski, 544 Oakridge Drive, North
Plainfield, N. J. 07606
1954
1958
Class
Representative:
William J.
Jacobs, Tremont Annex Apartments,
2 West Main Street, Lansdale,
Pa.
Hargreaves, 37 Dell Road, Stanhope,
N. J. 07874
Class
Representative:
19446.
Raymond
part of an article
concerning a recipient of the Distinguished Service Award at BSC.
The
is
appeared
article
in
the
Indianapolis
Star:
department of otolarynThere he will be actively involved in the evalution and treatment
of communicatively handicapped individuals and will have a major responsibility for continuing and directing research in speech pathology and
logist in the
gology.
speech science.
Alexander R. Stepanski received his
M. A. in mathematics from Central
Michigan University, Mt, Pleasant,
Michigan. He studied for three summers at C. M. U. on a National
fellowship
and
Science Foundation
graduated with a 4.0 average. Alex
is
New York. 13409
Hazel Hunley (Mrs. Dennis Rues),
Munnsville,
a First Lieutenant in the 70th Air Refueling Squadron.
Hazel previously
taught in New Jersey for three years,
edited a weekly newspaper in Mount
Holly, N. J., and spent a year in Seattle, Washington, editing a community
weekly newspaper.
Mr. and Mrs.
Rues have one daughter, Kimberly.
Dale Anthony lives at 11 Tioga Boulevard, Apalachin, New York, with
his wife Hazel (Crain), ’63 and son
Douglas.
Mrs. Ann Olskey Kester reports her
address as Box 5604, Belleville, Penna.
Randall F. Romig, 411 Crump Road,
Exton, Pa. 19341, is teaching English
Boone Senior High
in the Daniel
School, Birdsboro, Pa.
frequently acted as assistant ot the
ed.”
Some of the problems he plans to
study with his students are genetic
technology, population explosion, organ transplants, biological warfare,
space exploration, pollution, conservation, drugs and the process of aging.
In a day when students all over the
United States are asking for “relevance” in their course work, Chiscon is
trying to provide it.
1955
Class
ingcr,
18618
1956
Class
Representative:
Dr.
William
Glen
Bitner, III, 33 Lincoln Avenue,
Falls, N. Y.
12801
Dr. Charles F. Wilson, husband of
De Orio, has been
named superintendent of the Allenthe former Jean
School
Page eight
District.
1960
James J.
Representative:
Peck, 100 Hull Rd., Madison, Conn.
Class
06443
cipal,
principal. The new staff member received his Masters degree in school
administration at Villanova University.
He has additional graduate
credits in administrative subjects from
Penn State, Temple and Haver ford.
In school and college he was a firstteam football player and wrestler.
1961
Edwin C.
Representative:
Class
Kuser, R. D. 1, Box 145-C, Bechtelsville, Pa. 19505
Norman and Barbara Schaefer Shutovich, 1814 Farragut Avenue, Bristol,
Pa., announce the birth of a son, Norman Scott. They also have a daughter,
Representative: Arnold GarR. I). 1, Harveys Lake,
Pa.
A
native
of
Randolph
13040
“The Social Impact
my sabbatical,” Chiscon said, “and came to
the conclusion that most of our broad
social problems are biologically bas-
Morrisville-
lives at 2312
The new position of Assistant PrinRadnor Senior High School, will
be filled by John J. Chidester, of 904
Kenwood Rd., Drexel Hill. He comes
to Radnor from Upper Darby Junior
High School, where he taught, and also
Sciences.”
“I read a great deal during
presently teaching at
Eaton Central Schools, Morrisville,
New York, and lives with his wife
Joyce and two sons in Middle Road,
Class Representative: William F.
Swisher, Box 245, Cincinnatus, N. Y.
Can Purdue humanities majors be
taught biology by reading the poet
Carl Sandburg or examining the plays
of Edward Albee?
Dr. J. Alfred Chiscon of the Department of Biological Sciences thinks so.
Chiscon, who spent last year on sabbatical at the Carnegie Institute of
Terrestrial Magnetism at Washington,
D. G\, returned to Purdue University
last fall and designed a biology course
only for humanities students called,
of the Biological
R. D. 3, Lewwas awarded the
Jr.,
degree of doctor of philosophy at Purdue University at West Lafayette, Indiana. Dr. Leeper received his B. S.
in speech correction from BSC and
received both his master’s and doctoral degrees from Purdue. His dis“Pressure Measuresertation was
ments of Articulatory Behavior During Alterations of Vocal Effort.” He
has joined the staff of The Jewish Hospital of St. Louis as a speech patho-
1959
The following
town
Herbert Leeper,
istown, Pa., 17044,
Amy
Leigh.
1962
Richard
Representative:
Class
Lloyd, 6 Farragut Dr., Piscataway,
N. J. 18854
1963
Representative:
Pat Biehl
Class
(Mrs. Ronald Cranford) R. D. 1, 77
Hawthorne Ave., Boyertown, Pa. 19512
James H. and
Saample
Sandra
live at 23 1-2
Montrose, Pa. 18801
Daskalos
Locust Street,
Street,
Grissom
AFB, Indiana, where her husband
is
17004.
Ronald W. Cranford is presently the
programmer-analyst in charge of data
processing for the borough of Pottstown and the Pottstown School Dist-
He previously taught at William
Allen High School, Allentown, for four
years and spent two years as head of
data processsing for the Shikellamy
School Diserict, Sunbury. He received his master’s degre from BSC. His
rict.
address is 77 Hawthorne
Avenue,
Boyertown, R. D. 1, Pa. 19512
1964
Class
Shuba,
J.
Representative:
1
Ernest R.
Gaston Avenue, Raritan, N.
08869
June A. Houseknecht (Mrs. Joseph
R. Kuzmick) lives at 3524 Nortside
Boulevard, Apt. C-ll, South Bend,
Indiana.
Her husband, Capt. Kusmick,
a graduate student at Notre
University.
Mrs. Margo Bolig Brabson lives at
324 Central Drive. Lansdale, Pa. 19446.
is
Dame
She received her Master’s degree at
BSC in 1968. She and her husband
are teachers in the New Hope-Solebury School District.
Frank R. Harris, Bloomsburg, has
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
been commissioned a second lieutenant in the U. S. Air Force upon graduation from Officer Training School
AFB, Texas.
iOTS> at Lackland
Lieutenant Harris, selected for OTS
through competitive examination, is
being assigned to Vance AFB. Okla.
The lieutenant received his M.Ed.
degree in 1968 at Temple University.
Philadelphia.
1965
Class Representative: Carl P. Slieran, 43 llazen St., Wayne, N. J. 07470
1966
Anthony J.
Class Representative:
Cerza, 180 Mason Street, Exeter, Pa.
18643
John G. Reichenbach
American
is
a teacher
of
Resife,
School
His address: Escola AmerBrazil.
icana do Recife, Caixo Postal 404,
in the
Recife,
Pernambuco,
Brasil.
Sherryl Shaffer Cope, and Ralph
Edward Cope, ’69, are the parents of
a son, Paul Edward, born on July
Mr. and Mrs. Cope are now
25, 1969.
residing in Big Pool. Maryland,
Mr. Cope
where
serving as a student supUnited
ply pastor of the Potomac
Methodist Charge. He is also studyis
Master of Theology degree
Gettysburg Lutheran Theological
Seminary. Their address is R. D. 1,
Big Pool. Maryland. 21711.
Susan C. Hammerquist (Mrs. Wilbur Carlson), lives at 639 South Broad
Street, Apt. F-6. Lansdale, Pa. 19446
Carol Richard (Mrs. N. David Mcing for his
at
Lean i,
lives
at 925
Wooton
Street.
Boonton, N. J. 07005
J. Woodring
Lilley), lives at D-21
Kathy
(Mrs. John C.
Oxhaven Apart-
ments, Oxford. Pa. 19363
David J.
Judith E. Mann (Mrs.
Myers) lives at 401 Eden Road. Apt.
C-6, Lanbaster, Pa. 17601
Mr. and Mrs. John Foster (Jean
Zenke), spent the 1968-69 academic
year in Durham. New
Hampshire
where both did graduate work at the
University of New Hampshire. John
was awarded an NDEA Fellowship for
advanced study in the field of elementary school counseling, and received
a Master of Education Degree in June.
1969. Both returned to their positions
in the Abington Heights School District
at Clarks Summit, Pa., in September.
1969
Jean as a high school mathematics teacher, and John as an elementary school counselor. They are
presently living at 914 W. Grove St..
Clarks Summit, Pa. 18411
—
1967
Class Representative:
Robert T.
Lemon, Meadowvale Apt. No. 12, 903
Quarry Road, Harve de Grace, Md.
this year.
John will receive his Master’s degree at the
Commence-
1968
1964
Linda Berry (Mrs. David Phillips),
lives at 1600 Fairview
toursville, Pa. 17754
Drive,
petitive examination, is being assigned
to Keesler AFB, Miss., to attend a
personnel officer coui'se.
Airman Harry E. Swank. Jr., Fredericksburg, Pa., has completed basic
training at Lackland AFB, Texas. He
has been assigned to Lowry AFB,
Colo., for training in the field of photography.
Josephine Sklanka
(Mrs.
Frank
Plonski), reports her address as Rolo
Court, R. D.. care of Fry, Mechanicsburg, Pa. 17055
Leahetta Taylor Mortarff lives at
611 Vander Avenue, York, Pa. 17403
1969
Class
Representative:
Frank J.
Mastrivanni,
1008
Cooper
Street,
Scranton, Pa. 18500
Edward R. Hess, Bloomsburg, is a
student at Hahnemann Medical College, Philadelphia.
Home address:
145
West Third
Bloomsburg,
Street,
Pa.
Kathleen Di Pippa
(Mrs.
Kenneth
Emkey), is living at 2011 Ferry Avenue, Camden, N. J. 08103
Eva Chitty Beagle is low living at
the Indian Valley
Apartment B-9,
Souderton, Pa. 18964
Dawne Schrantz Pender lives at 100
Woodlawn D-17, Horsham, Pa. 19044
Bonnie L. Zehner (Mrs. Willard L.
Black) reports her address as Route
1, Box 36, French Camp, Miss. 39745
Cheryl E. Galford
(Mrs.
Robert
Kessler) lives at Millville, Pa., R. 1.
Lawrence A. Ward, Jr., 4131-G Beaufort Manor, Fawn Drive, Harrisburg,
Pa., 17112, has successfully completed
the Loop Course with the Bethlehem
Technology.
Mrs. Christian is employed as a librarian at Georgia State University.
The couple reside in Atlanta.
1964
Paula
Jean
Simon.
Berwick
and
Stanley R. Beiter, Berwick,
Lt.
Beiter is a naval aviator and member
of Attack Squadron 72, Jacksonville,
Florida
Lt.
1964
Judith Ann Brewer and R. Scott
Gross.
Mr. Gross is teacher
and
basketball coach at Mount Carmel.
1965
Peggy Ann Semiclose and Robert
Palmer Auker. The bride is a junior
at BSC.
Her husband is a chemical
technician at U. S. Steel Corporation,
Address: Berwick R.
Berwick, Pa.
2
1966
Bonnie L. Search and Kenneth Eugene Yeisley. The bride has been a
member
of the business education facat Susquehanna Valley H. S.,
Conklin, N. Y.
Address: 5339 Broad
ulty
St.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
1966
Sally Ann Brennan and David M.
Schlieder.
Address: 117 Penn Lake,
White Haven, Pa.
1966
Kathleen M. Lutz and Larry Lee
Edwards, The groom is a teacher at
Gorham, N. Y.; the couple reside in
Geneva, N. Y.
1966
Caroll L. George and Robert Mor-
Mrs. Morrison has taught
rison, Jr.
in Madison, N. J., for three years v He
is branch manager of National Bank
of North America, Great Neck, Long
Island, N. Y. The coulpe resides in
Company. Because of his accomplishment, Bethlehem Steel has
Port Washington, N. Y.
awarded BSC an amounj of $2500. In
a letter to Mi-. Ward, President Nos-
Marcia L. Earnhart and Donald E.
Bryan, 156 S. Main St., Perkasie,
“On behalf of this entire college community, may I extent congratulations and best wishes for your continued superior service and in your
sen said
chosen field.”
Duncan
Kishbaugh
Class
Dalfovo,
Meadow, Pa.
Dean
Pa. 18944
1968
Margaret Yabczinski and Glenn W.
Faust.
Address: 190 College Com8. Rochester, N. Y. 14623
II is
Representative:
61
1967
plex. Apt.
teaching
in Kinai, Alaska.
His address is P.
O. Box 2644. Kinai. Alaska. 99611
J.
1970
Street,
18216
John
W.
Beaver
1968
Betsy Davis and Dr. Henry C. Schneider, Jr. Dr. Schneider is serving
a tour of duty as a flight surgeon.
Mrs. Schneider is teaching in the
Address:
Colonial School District.
400 Runnymede Avenue, Jenkintown,
Pa. 19046
1968
ALUMNI DAY
School District, Lemoyne, Pa.
She
received her Master’s degree
from
BSC at the Mid-Year Commencement
APRIL
1970
Gayle A. Richards, Catawissa, Pa.,
and William G. Christian, Birmingham, Alabama. Mr. Christian, a former Peace Corps volunteer stationed
in Nigeria, is now employed as an
instructor of mathematics and is also
enrolled in the PhD.
program in
mathematics at Georgia Institute of
Steel
Pa., 17104, were married June 1, 1968.
Jonelle is teaching in the West Shore
MARCH,
Mon-
Margaret Walsh, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Edmond J. Walsh, 500 East
Hancock St., Lansdale, Pa., has been
commissioned a second lieutenant in
the U. S. Air Force upon graduation
from Officer Training School (OTS)
at Lackland AFB, Texas. Lieutenant
Walsh, selected for OTS through com-
21087
Michael and
Elaine
Brumbaugh
Mehle are living at Apt. C-8, Maple
Garden Apts., Pottstown, Pa. 19464
Jonelle C. Simcox and John C. Edwards, 1934 Chestnut St., Harrisburg,
WEDDINGS
May
ment.
28,
1970
Mary
Hower and William
Mrs. Derr teaches in Selinsgrove H. S., and her husband is a
Virginia
L. Derr.
senior at BSC.
The couple
at R. D. 1, Bloomsburg.
reside
Page nine
1969
Susan Kay Spotts, Bloomsburg and
Robert Boyd Ikeler, Bloomsburg. The
groom is a social studies teacher at
Vocational
Columbia-Montour
the
Address: 127 West 5th St.,
School.
Bloomsburg.
Humk
Contributors
to
Loyalty
the
Annual Giving Program
to
Fund
January
1969
Stephen F. Foltz and Kandace Ann
Humphrey
Address:
630
Caputo.
Court, Harrisburg, Pa.
1969
Lind C. Hellerman (Mrs. John F.
Dietrickson), 603-A Vine St., Berwick,
Ex-Faculty Miss Margaret E. Wal1907—
dron
1901 Mrs. A. T. Lowry
1906 Mrs. Howard Ryder
1910—
1911— Mrs. Helen Moyer Hemingway, Mrs. John R. McCulloch, Mae
Pa.
L.
15, 1970,
James A. ShoeMrs. Shoemaker teaches in
maker.
Area
School District: the
groom is a Sergeant in the U. S.
Marine Corps. The couple resides in
Danville
Millville.
1969
Barbara Ann Masich and John D.
Timbrell.
Mr. Timbrell has been
serving in the U. S. Navy for three
years. The couple resides in Japan.
1969
Joan Marie Woods and Gerald R.
Naugle.
Address:
1100
Colorado
Blvd., Denver, Colo.
Joan Marie Woods, Danville and
Gerald R. Naugle, Danville. Mr. Naugle is attending Precision Measure-
ment
Specialist School in the U. S.
Force.
Their address is 1100
Colorado Boulevard, Denver,
Colo-
Air
rado. 80200.
—
—
MeFee
John
(Mrs.
Mrs. J. G. Luscerieni, Ray
V. Watkins, Mary D. Comerford.
1914 Dr. Jacob Vastine II
1915 Dr. Carl L. Hosier, Mrs. George H. Moore, Mrs. Carl F. Ruck
1916 Marjorie Austin, Mrs. Elmer
1921—
Fairchild
1917 Mrs. Alice F. Gardner, Mrs.
Kathryn Blackstock
1918 Mrs. A. J. King
1919 Mrs.
Thomas Main waring,
Mrs. Alice P. Blair
Anna L. Swanberry
1922 Mrs. Stephen
Bellas,
Mrs.
Herbert Lugg
1923 Mrs. Agnes L. Foster, Mrs.
Albert K.
— Kathryn Merithem (Mrs. G.
C. Lowe)
1928 — Elizabeth Rhoades (Mrs. Russell Tripp)
1930 — Josephine Holuba (Mrs. William C. Hawk)
1950 — Isabel D. Bolinsky
1958 — Rita Krzywicki Ulrich
1957 — Edmund Swartz
1961 — William Stevenson
1969—
1965— Richard C. Dapra
1965 —Thomas J. Storm
1969— Brian B. McLernan
19641965 Ann C.
Raynock, Jean
K.
Weisenfluh
Kreisher)
Karen A. Kallay, Joseph M.
—
Deardorff, 1969 Terrence T. Hatch
1961— Mrs. Charles Stetler
1966
—Gerald
L. Robinson
1963 Nancy Phillips (Mrs. Joseph
Candela)
1965 Mrs. Dorothy Weaver
—
-Elizabeth
Stask,
Susannah
Smith (Mrs. Steve Buckley), Mrs.
Richard Kiehn, Ronald R.
Klock,
Stephanie Turner
— Mrs.
1961 — Mrs.
1905
Jacob Klegman
Page ten
Charles Stetler
Jarrett,
Dickstein
1928 Mrs. Gladys H. Lyon, Mrs.
1933—
Elizabeth C. Williams
1929 Mrs.
Robert
Seletski, Caroline E.
(Mrs.
Walters,
Mae
Petrullo, Mrs.
Earl Fairman
1930 Georgiena L. Weidner,
Alda
Culp, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C. McKenzie
1938—
1932 Mrs. Ruth M. Herman, Mrs.
W. Donald Miller, Mrs. Ralph S.
Knouse, Mrs. Earle N. Stauffer
Raymond Stryjak, Mrs. Howard A. Linse, Frank J. Greco
1934 Mrs. Anna A. Green
1935 Mrs. S. W. Stanulonis, Stanley
Heimbach
1936 Frank A. Rampalo
1937
1943— Marie E. Foust (in
memory
of
Elisabeth A. White)
Mrs. W. R. Wallace, John F.
Hendler
Glenn L. Rarich
Paul B. Kokitas, Mrs. Stetler
H. McCleary
1941 Mrs. Frank M. Taylor, William G. Kerchusky, Mrs. John H.
Uhl, Jr., John E. Lavelle
1942 Mrs. John W. Thomas,
Mrs.
Arnold B. Wagner, Merrill A. Deitrich, H. Burniss Fellman, Mrs. John
A. Dean, Mrs. H. Dorothy Pollock
Frank M. Taylor, William H.
Barton, Mrs. Clyde C. Deets, Reba
1939
1940
Cassandra E. Roush
Wolfe)
J.
1926 Mrs. Ida V. Fisher
1927 Harold J. Baum,
Elizabeth
Reilly, Mrs. Isadore Spitz, Mrs. Ruth
P.
David A. Trout
Donna McHenry (Mrs. William
1968
Ann
H. Ash
1921
S.
Foster,
Mrs. Harold W. Major, Mrs. Marcella
S.
Fisher)
1966
1968
Brill
1913
Sherwood
David R. Schnarr III
Robert Stevenson
Mrs. Eva Reid Embrey
1911— Mina
1912
F.
Mrs. William Allen
Hazel D. Kester
Mrs. Charles A. Nicely, C. B.
1924 Mrs. Ruth J. Harris, Mox E.
Long, Margaret Berlew, Mrs. Charles F. Johnson, Jr., Mrs. M. Roselda
ADDRESSES WANTED
1967
1953
1914
—
Howard
Ella R. Knittle and
les C.
Harmony
1949—
1948 James
not previously reported:
—
1969
Henrie Fellman
1944 Mrs. Mary E. Seybert
1945 Mrs. Mary Lou John, Mrs. C.
W. Epley, Jr.
1946 Mrs. Marvin C. Schappell
1947 Mrs. John W. Thomas, CharJ.
Dormer, Donald N.
Rishe, Betty L. Fisher.
William R. Deebel, John H.
Reichard
1950 Clarence J. Meiss, Mrs. Charles1952—
S. Adlis, Martha G. Bonin, KenGrande.
neth E. Borst, Joseph
J.
Richard E. Jai'man, Jean E.. Stein.
Wayne Von Stetten. Dr. Max G. Cooley
1955— Mrs. H. M. Snyder, Viola M.
Blue, Lola D. Glass
1953 Stephen Tago, Dr. David N.
Newbury, Richard C. Knouse, Donald J. Butler
Mrs. F. R. Kennedy, Michael
R. Bernot
1956
1958— Curtis R. English, Eugene R.
Schulutheis, Elvin C. LaCoe
1957 Mrs. Margaret Keller, William
E. Cranmer, Evelyn M. Kilpatrich,
Donna R. Wilcox, Joseph Wascavage.
Mrs. John Epler
E.
Bernard
Beth Evans,
O’Brien, Fern A. Goss, George W.
O’Connell,
George T. Herman, Mrs.
1961—
Joseph N. Coirao
1959 Robert S. Asby, Otto H. Donor, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Kessler.
Mary E. Labyack, Kenneth A. Swatt
1969 Mrs. R.
Mrs.
E. Bucker,
Ethel M. Hummel, Mrs. Allan Rathbone, Peter D. Ego
Mrs. Robert S. Dayton, Mrs.
Martin R. Knon Mrs. Norman Shutovich, Mrs. William K. Bonta
1962 Arthur B. Comstock,
Ellen
Mae Clemens, D. James Donald, Joseph Jennings, Richard R. Lloyd. Mrs.
E. J. Demeter, Mrs. Frances Petru-
—
-
,
zzi
Mrs. Margo B. Brabson, John
Rankin, Jr.
1965 C. Blair Hartman, Robert W.
Griffiths, Mary D. Brogan, Ray E.
1967—
Gross II, Edward L. Richards, James
M. Sahaida, Mrs. Rita M. Seybert.
Mrs. Regina K. Snyder, Mrs. Laird
D. Shively, Robert W. Herzig
1964
J.
1966 Dean M. Hollern, Donald R.
Beltz, Rita C. Bradish, Mrs. Michael
T.
Brozowski, Mr. and Mrs. John
Foster, William H. Hoffman, John W.
Kerlish, Mrs. David J. Myers, Barbara Ann Urbas, William E. Topolski,
Louise R. Beltz
James F. Windt, William C.
Rowett, Spencer L. Empet, Richard
W. Leonovich, John R. Price, Emerson J. Schnable, Laird D. Shively,
Mrs. Richard Wilcox, Marlin G. Kester, Wm. X. Ash, Jr., Mis. Kathryn
Ricca, James J. Fritz, Mr. and Mrs.
John C. Edwards, Mrs. Peter C. Cailland
1068
— Mark
S.
Goldman, James H.
Neiswender, Mr. and Mrs. Larry GruPhillips,
Mrs.
gan. Mrs. Linda B.
Catharine A. Kosoloski, Roger L. George, Nancy L. Tuzi, Robert T. Maran.
Jr., Sandra K. Roberts, Mrs. Betsy
L. Schneider, Pamela A. Smith, Mrs.
Diane Kazemba, Mrs. Sallie R. Urn-
TIIE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Richard S. Benyo
Mrs. Ruth T. Bennett, Cheryl
L. Dyer, Gregory A. Kanasku, Mrs.
lauf,
—
ADVANCED DEGREES
1969
James F. Windt, James M. Riggs,
Ivan
K.
John Walchonski,
Henderson, Mrs. Verdun
Dinges,
Marsha J.
Thomas, Kathleen K. Horst, Harriet A. Hummell, Connie L. Jarrard
C.
NAME DINING HALL AT
BSC FOR SCRANTON
A new
dining hall nearing completion on the BSC campus will be named for William H. Scranton, Governor of Pennsylvania from 1962 until
1966.
Expected to be ready for occupancy
by February. 1970, present plans call
for the facility to be dedicated during the week of April 12-18, 1970. in
conjunction with the inauguration of
President Robert Nossen, and will be
officially designated the William H.
Scranton Commons.
Former Governor Scranton has been invitd to narticipate in the dedication and the trustees are hopeful that his calendar
will permit him to be on campus at
that time.
The new Commons will include two
new large dining areas which can be
divided into four smaller areas, each
having its own serving equipment.
The seating capacity will accomodate 1.000 students and the food prepration area is designed to serve 2.000 students at each meal. The Commons also includes several offices,
lobbies, a dining room for faculty
and another for food service
employees, a bakery, walk-in refrigeration storage units, a loading dock and
receiving area, employe locker rooms,
and general storage areas. All areas
except the kitchen are air-conditioned.
The cost of construction is approximately $1,645,000.
TEST CENTER AT BSC
Bloomsburg State College was designated as a test center for administering the National Teacher ExaminaJanuary
tion on
for this
Arrangements
31.
were made through
Stuart Edwards.
Secondary Education, and
Dr. Merritt W. Saiders, Director of
the Research and Evaluation Center.
The number of Bloomsburg State
College seniors finding need for the
scores has been increasing.
The escenter
the
efforts
Director of
of
Dr.
tablishing of this center will lessen the
reed for travel to other centers for
these tests.
The
designation
of
Bloomsburg
Lehigh University
1965 Mary D. Brogan, Fullerton,
Pa. Master of Education.
Sandra D. Sample, Allentown. Master of Education.
1967— Alan C. Bartlett, Boyertown,
Pa. Master of Education.
Bartlett.
1967— Katherine Moyer
Boyertown. Pa. Master of Education.
1964 William D. Bartman,
Pottstown. Pa. Master of Education.
—
Bradish,
Hazleton,
1966 Rita C.
1965—
Pa. Master of Education.
1964 Helen Saviolis, Whitehall, Pa.
Master of Education.
Murtin.
Mahanoy
John M.
City. Pa. Master of Education.
1933— Marjorie Bishop Kropp, Canadenses, Pa. Master of Education.
Pennsylvania State University
Ann Weigh, 16 Atherton Hall,
University Park, Pa. Master of EduSally
cation.
Mrs. Donna K. Weigand, Shamokin
Dam. Pa. Master
—George
of
Education.
1546
Weigand,
North Allen Street, State College. Pa.
Master of Education.
James R. Miller, Jr., 616 Martin St.,
Clearfield, Pa. 16830. Master of Edu-
1964
A.
Miami Univ., Oxford, Ohio
1967—
1962— Lawrence James Finn, Master
Arts in Teaching.
1959—ADDRESSES
WANTED
—Shirley Wismer Baker
Charles Loughery
—Eleanor Thomas Savidge
1912—
1951
1958
1929
Robert E. Logue
1969— Joseph R. Bainbridge
1968 Catherine J. Stagick
1911 Mia McFee Fisher
Gary S. Fisher
1942 Edna Zehner Pietroszak
—
—Anna Taby Conway
— Martha S. Grabowski
— Mrs. Anne E. McGee
Laura Williams
1961 — William Stevenson
1968— Margaret J. Golden
1910 — Zora Low Gemmel
1964— James L. Howard
1919 — Katherine M. Dougherty
1929
1927
1966
GRADUATE DEGREES
Shippensburg State College
Alan J. Reily ’67, M. A. in Guidance and Counseling.
in
Hari'y W. Ravert ’65, M. A.
Business Education.
Representatives from colleges, comprising District 19 of the National Association of Intercollegate Athletics
State College as a test center for these
attended an
examinations
Bloomsburg State College
prospective
will give
teachers in this area an opportunity
to
compare
their
performance on the
examinations with candidates throughout the country who take the tests.
Leonid Hambro, famous
pianist,
appeared at Bloomsburg State College
on November 13, in Hass Auditorium
at 8:15 p.m. under the sponsorship
of the Artists and Lecture Series of
the college.
MARCH,
1970
John Robert Quatroche, assistant
director of admissions at the State
University College, Freedonia, N. Y.,
has been named assistant to the preCollege.
sident at Bloomsburg State
The appointment, approved by the
Board of Trustees, was announced by
Dr. Robert J. Nossen, president of
BSC.
Quatroche, who will assume his new
February 2, will succeed
James B. Creasy, who has held the
position since the post was created in
August, 1964. Creasy has been granted a sabbatical leave of absence to
continue his graduate studies at The
Pennsylvania State University during the second semester of the 1969position
1970 college year.
Quatroche, a former resident of
Southampton, Long Island, was appointed to the admissions staff at
Fredonia in September, 1964; named
assistant director in 1967, and promoted to associate director in 1968. He
received both his bachelor’s and master’s degree from the College at Fredonia.
A
veteran of four years service in
United States Air Force, Quatroche has also taught English at Fredonia and Mayville Central Schools.
He is a member of the New York
State Personnel and Guidance Association, the Western New York Personnel
the
cation.
of
ASSISTANT TO
BSC PRESIDENT
initial district
meeting at
to
outline
plans for the 1969-70 colleeg year.
Russell E. Houck, Athletic Director
at BSC for the past 12 years, was recently named Chairman of District 19
of the NAIA, which includes 16 member colleges in eastern Pennsylvanina,
eastern New York, New Jersey, Delaware, eastern Maryland and Virginia.
ALUMNI DAY
APRIL
28, 1970
and Guidance Association, and the
Chautauqua County Counselors Association.
Lloyd Tourney, formerly Dirof Business at
Bloomsburg
College, has been
appointed
President of Goldey Beacom Junior
College, Wilmington, Delaware.
Dr. Tourney was at Bloomsburg
from September, 1962, to June, 1967,
Dr.
S.
ector
State
when he was appointed Academic
Dean of Goldey Beacom. He was
made
vice president of the college in
1968.
He
received his Bachelor’s Degree
of Georgia, Athens, Georgia.
He is a Lieutenant
Air
Colonel in the United States
Force Reserve.
His present residence is Newark,
from the University
Delaware.
Phillip D. Stern, nationally known
author,
astronomer, lecturer and
spoke on the topic “Beyond the Beyond’’ in Hartline Science Center on
October 29, under the auspices of the
Department
Science and
of
Geography and Earth
Theta Upsilon,
Gamma
international
geographical
fraternity
of the college.
The musical organizations
of
the
their
annual
presented
Christmas Concert Sunday, December 7, in Haas Auditorium. Participating in the program were the Madrigal Singers, the Men’s Glee Club,
the Women’s Choral Ensemble, the
Brass Sextet, and the Concert Choir.
College
Page eleven
NEW CAMPUS PLAN
A campus
SPECIAL TRIBUTE TO
that will
accommodations on the two
DR.
campus
As a special tribute to Dr. Harvey
Andruss, former president of
Bloomsburg State College, in whose
honor the new college library was
main campus and former
areas
country club property) of 133 acres
for 6,000 undergraduate students, plus
graduate and part time students at
Bloomsburg State College, has been
approved by the State Superintendent
of Public Instruction and the executive director of the General State AuJudged by past experiences
thority.
this enlrollment should be attained
(
by
1975.
The final signatures of approval
were affixed this month. The plan
had been given preliminary approval
by the BSC board of trustees last September. The plan was developed by
Price and Dickey, Media architects.
of
the fourth in a series
campus plans which had their beginning in 1941. The first plan, develop-
This
is
ed by McCloud and Schatchard, Architects, provided for 1,200 full-time students and used only the land which
extended from
Penn to Chestnut
streets.
Sixteen years later in 1957,
Schell,
John
Bloomsburg architect, develto accommodate an enroll-
oped a plan
ment
of 2,000 on the present campus
wich then had less than 60 acres.
This was the first plan for any of the
fourteen
vania.
State
Colleges
in
Pennsyl-
A
third plan was developed four
years later by Esbach, Pullinger, Stevens, and
Bruder,
Philadelphia.
While in the process of completing
plans, the anticipated enrollment was
increased from 3.000 to 4,000 and provided for the purchase of the Blooms-
Club property.
The
capacity was subsequently increased
burg
Country
to 4,300.
With
two
purchases
adding
A.
named
at dedication ceremonies in
a special collection bearing his
name is being established.
The collection, according to James
B. Watts, director of library services,
will be comprised of books, articles
1967,
appearing in magazines and journals,
pamphlets, and other materials containing Dr. Andruss’ extensive writings in the fields of business education, college
administration, and high-
er education.
At present a number of items that
go into the collection are in var-
will
ious stages of processing.
When
pro-
cessing has been completed, the materials will be placed in a special section of the reserve area where they
will be available to patrons of the library.
Some consideration is being
given to the possibility of microfilming the collection in the interest of
long-range preservation and probable
loans to other college libraries.
A unique feature of the Andruss
Collection will be publications and
other papers related to the First American Army University, located at
England;
Berkshire,
Shrivenham,
Shrivenham Post (student newspaper),
and Shrivenham Silhouettes (edited by
President Andruss and including The
Shrivenhaven Newsletters). Dr. Andruss served on the faculty of the university, which was founded by directive of General Dwight Eisenhower.
When the special project has been
completed, it is planned that a comprehensive bibliography of the Andruss Collection will be issued.
made certain recommendations
the Superintendent of Public Instruction.
They were Dr. Harry W.
Porter, provost, State University of
New York; Dr. Charles E. Bull, Plant
Planning Coordinator, State University of Buffalo, N. Y., and Dr. Thotors
to
mas Robinson, president of Glassboro State University, N. J.
After
giving consideration to the plan since
September, 1967, the BSC trustees
gave their final approval in early
April of last year.
SWIM COACH TAKING
SABBATICAL LEAVE
Eli McLaughlin, Associate Professor of Health and Physical Education
and coach of the Bloomsburg State
College swimming team for the past
ten years, is on sabbatical leave during the 1969-1970 college year pursuing his doctor’s degree at the University of West Virginia.
Northeastern
Smith,
The Bloomsburg State College Concert Choir under the direction of Mr.
William Decker, held its fourth annual “Pops Concert” October 12, in
Haas Auditorium. For the past several years the choir has been extreme-
making appearances at several high schools, on television, and
on the college campus.
ly active,
Pennsylvania’s
Auditor
General.
Robert P. Casey, spoke in Hartline
Science Hall on October 16. His appearance was sponsored by the Young
Democrats
of
Bloomsburg State
Col-
lege.
Bramwell
Fletcher,
international
star of theatre, television, and motion
pictures, presented his nationally acclaimed Bernard Shaw in Haas Auditorium at Bloomsburg State College
on October 8, under the auspices of
the Artists and Lectures Committee.
ADDRESSES WANTED
1969— Yukiji Hachisuka
1962— Robert McAloose
1969 Rebecca J. Spatzer
1966 Gerald L. Robinson
—
—
Pennsyl-
vania’s only accredited and licensed
Nationlal Aeronautics and Space Administration newsman, recently presented a lecture at Bloomsburg State
College, on “The Space Program.”
After giving a few brief introductory
remarks. Smith began a slide lecture where he took the audience on a
journey through the space program
from the first Mercury flight up to
Apollo 11 and a glimpse of what is to
come in future Apollo missions.
Gov. Raymond Shafer has asked the
Senate in Harrisburg to confirm the
appointment of Frank D. Croop, of
Berwick, as a member of the Bloomsburg State College board of trustees.
Croop will succeed J. Howard Deily
for a term which expires in January.
1975.
Notification has been received from
Dr. John W. Keys, chairman, Professional
Services
Board,
American
Board of Examiners in Epeech Pathology and Audiology of the American
Speech and Hearing Association, that
the Center for Learning and Communication Disorders
Bloomsburg
at
State College has been approved as a
public service facility, according to
Richard M. Smith, administrator of
the Center.
Bloomsburg State College was host
at the annual fall meeting of the Marine Science Consortium of Pennsylvania Colleges and Universities on
October 27 in Hartline Science Center.
This is one of only four suclr consortia in the U. S. and is represented by
the following institutions
Bloomsburg State College, Edinboro, S. C..
:
Kutztown
Slippery
S.
C., Millersville,
S. C., West
Rock
C., and
Indiana
Pennsylvania.
S.
68
acres to the present campus the development of another plan was necessary. Before the firm of Price and
Dickey proceeded with plans for both
the lower and upper campus, a committee of three college administra-
Pago twelve
Til
ANDRUSS
provide
plan
S.
C.,
Chester
University
of
1958
Paul
the Dickinson
College registrar, began a two-year
term as treasurer of the Middle States
Association of Collegiate Registrars
and Officers of Admission on February 1.
He was elected at the association’s
annual meeting recently in Atlantic
City to succeed George E. Oettinger,
of Queen College, Flushing,
N. Y.
Sherman
Stanford.
Pennsylvania
State University, was elected presi-
H.
Anderson,
dent.
The Middle States Association, comprising Delaware. New Jersey, New
York. Pennsylvania and the District
of Columbia, is part of a nation-wide
organization and leads all other regional groupings in size of membership.
Anderson plans to attend the natmeeting in New Orleans in
A Bloomsburg State College
ional
April.
graduate, he holds a master's degree
from Southern Illinois University and
took his present Dickinson position
last June after several years as the
Trenton State College registrar.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
ALUMNI DAY
SATURDAY, APRIL
25,
1970
Events scheduled for the week-i nd of April 25 will mark
Day
vlunmi
tion of Dr.
the
The program
as a very special occasion.
Robert
new Commons,
J.
Nossen
to
as the
be named
new
after
year’s
this
includes the Inaugura-
President of BSC, the dedication of
William Scranton, former Governor of
Pennsylvania, the annual Alumni Luncheon and Business Meeting, and reunions of classes of the years ending in 0
and
5.
Alumin graduating before 1920 are invited
to
be the guests of the Alumni
Association at the dinner honoring the class of 1920, the fifty-year class. Those
bringing guests are requested to pay for the guest’s dinner.
It
is
very important that every one attending the 50-year dinner and the
Alumni Luncheon should make reservations by April
back
your class
to the
We
is
not
in
campus and
shall
in
order that
all
the
mav be made.
necessary arrangements
If
15,
reunion
this vear,
it
will
be worth your while
to
participate in the activities.
be expecting you on Alumni Day!
President,
Alumni Association
come
Entered as Second Class Matter
August 8, 1941, at the Post
Office at Bloomsburg, Pa.
Under the Act of March 3, 1879
LOYALTY FUND
PROGRAM OF ANNUAL GIVING
The response
tributors
October
gifts
was
was
At
219.
It
1.
to our
Alumni
With many thanks
made no
that
shall
be
far short of our goal of $10,000
to
those
all
have been able
who have
supported the Lovalty Fund
to those
who have
started.
We
hope
have derived great
satis-
special appeal at this time
list
of those
who, we
feel sure,
is
was
from having supported their Alumni Association and
their
Alma Mater.
IN!
TO BE DETACHED, FILLED OUT, AND RETURNED
Signature
while
in college
Address
(street)
Zip Code
(town)
If
bv
to contact.
contribution to the fund since the campaign
COME ON
Name
of con-
capita giving in previous years has been one
whom we
Annual Giving, our
you will join the
faction
The per
$5.00 or more.
of
we
this rate,
The number
has been gratifying to note, however, that a greater proportion of
dollar for each of the
Program
October appeal was $1740.50.
above address
is
new check
here
Amount
Year of graduation
Mail checks
To
to
Alumni
insure tax deductions,
R. S. C.
Office,
Box
31, B.S.C.
make checks payable
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
to
The
(liiiiiiii
ilnarlerly
Fresident Robert J. Nossen and William A. Lank, President of the Board of Trustees, chat with Ex-Governor
William W. Scranton at the dedication of the Scranton Commons.
The President's Page
Academic
tradition has established a pattern
inaugurated until several months after he assumes
whereby a president
office.
Many have
is
not
question-
ed the rationale, and I, too, will admit to concern during these past few months
But
as we have tried to meet the usual succession of major and minor crises.
there are reasons, good reasons, for the pattern, and I for one am grateful for
the interval.
I have, during this period, come to know my colleagues, those
with whom I work each day; and hopefully, they have come to know and to
some extent at least, to understand me, and the philosophy and the system of
values by which I hope to conduct my office.
By virtue of the time lapse,
therefore, I come to this occasion not as a stranger.
By this time, I have become personally and professionally identified with the College, involved with
it, concerned about it in a way that could not have been last September or
October.
An academic community,
a college community cannot exist without tenFar more dangerous would be complacency, self-satisfaction, fear of
sions.
struggle, or desire for escape.
But
conflict
must be constructive;
it
must be
based, ultimately, upon mutual respect within the academic community, upon
and upon understanding.
tolerance,
We
have much to do as all of us settle down to our daily responsibilities.
will, indeed, exceed our grasp, and the heaven of academia will
continue to be on a distant shore. We will have conflict leading to inevitable
tensions during those years given to us as students, faculty, alumni, administra-
Our reach
tors,
and
trustees,
and
confines of the campus;
the contributions
as those
we
who
represent us and work for us beyond the
will have, too,
we make, however
I
small,
know, our pleasures derived from
to the growth and welfare and
functioning of Bloomsburg State College.
DR.
ROBERT
J.
NOSSEX
Dr.
Nossen
As
Installed
Is
12th President of College
Academic communities and college
communities cannot exist without tenFar more dangerous would be
sions.
complacency, self satisfaction, fear of
But
struggle, or desire for escape.
‘
must be constructive, it must
ultimately
upon mutual
be based
respect within the academic community, upon tolerance, and upon understanding,” stated Dr. Robert J. Nossen after being installed as twelfth
President of Bloomsburg State College Saturday afternoon. April 18.
Presiding since September 1969. he
was formally installed during cereconflict
monies conducted by
Pennsylvania
of Education
David
H.
Kurtzman.
Dr. Nossen built his address around
the word “Tensions,” stating “Conflict must be constructive.
It must
be based ultimately upon mutual resSecretary
pect within the academic community,
tolerance, and understanding.”
He added, “There is as little justification to adopt policies or practices
based upon immature or irresponsible demands as there is to retain a
status quo for fear of changes.”
He
pledged his use of college resources
to reach educational goals as efficiently as possible.
Dr. Oscar Lanford, President
of
State University College,
Fredonia,
N. Y., stated, “Although higher education in the decade of the sixties can
be characterized by the word ‘change’
it
has changed perhaps less during
the immediate past than many other
aspects of our society.
“If higher education is to continue
to be one of the main driving forces
of our society, then it must change
much more rapidly in the decade
ahead than it has during the decade
just entered. Critics of higher education. both friendly
and otherwise,
have asserted that while colleges and
universities have been the principal
agent in social and political reform,
the University itself is very slow to
change or as one has put it
wellnigh impervious to change.
“It is clear that the demands for
reform of higher education are to a
considerable degree justified. Questions concerning the objectives of various levels of education; the varying
of abilities, motivation, and learning
methods;
administration
policies;
courses examination procedures; the
maturity of today’s high school graduate; and the intergrading of constituent groups of college communities
.
.
into decisions regarding policies, call
for answers, and the answers call for
major change or reform.
“It is to the state colleges and universities that the nation will turn to
JULY,
1970
in meeting the
needs of the last quarter of the twentieth and the first part of the twenty
an increasing degree
centuries.”
After an initial processional of
faculty and dignitaries, the invocation was given by the Rev. James T.
Berger, St. Paul’s Episcopal Church,
SCRANTON
first
Bloomsburg.
William A. Lank, President of the
of Trustees of BSC, presided.
Dr. Nossen further commented,
"Tensions do exist among the younger
people for whose education we are
responsible. There have been ’chang
COMMONS
DEDICATED
Board
es,’
many
of
them good, and there
will be others, inevitably and necessarily, but hopefully, they will be
There is as little jusconstructive.
tification to adopt policies or practices based upon immature or irresponsible demands as there is to retain a status quo for fear of changes.
“We have much to do as we settle
down to our daily responsibilities.
Our reach will, indeed, exceed our
grasp, and the heaven of academia
continue to be on a distant shore.
We will have conflict leading to inevitable tensions during those years
given to us as students, faculty, alumni, administrators, and trustees,
and as those who represent us and
work for us beyond the confines of the
campus. However we will have, too,
our pleasures derived from the contributions we make, no matter how small
to the growth and welfare of the functioning of Bloomsburg State College.”
One hundred and ninety delegates
represented colleges, universities, and
learned societies throughout the country in the procession along with other
will
“I am delighted and proud to have
a building named for me where men
and women can ‘come and get it,’ ”
concluded William W. Scranton, former governor of Pennsylvania, at the
dedication program at
State College for the
Bloomsburg
W.
Scranton Commons and the renaming
William
of several residence halls.
He added, “Let
us not be too provin-
and think of Bloomsburg State
College in terms of just the communWe are trying hard to change
ity.
cial
our
multi-type
state institutions to
institutions and we must adopt broad
scope thinking and objectives.
“For generations people have unteaching
derrated members of the
profession. In the Soviet Union teachWe
ers are held in high respect.
They should
still have this to learn.
have our
full
support and understandmake a better
ing in their efforts to
and more informed America.”
Pledging his full support to the college’s new president Dr. Robert Nos“Let
us
sen, Scranton concluded,
never forget this college was dedicated to the teaching profession.”
Accepts Building
In accepting the Scranton
Commons
members
of the college community.
Nearly 1,000 guests attended a luncheon in Scranton Commons prior to
the inauguration. At this function, Dr.
A. Lank, president of the
Board of Trustees, spoke of occasion as “one honoring a man who has
contributed so much to the education
Nossen recognized distinguished guests
and especially relatives and personal
friends with whom he has been asso-
of
ciated in his career.
Edwin M. Barton,
of the
Columbia
County Historical Society, spoke briefly, commenting on the Society’s pleassure in its new affiliation with the college and of the Society’s entrusting its
historical collections to the college’s
care.
Benediction was made by the Rev.
Frank W. Ake, president of the
Bloomsburg Area Community Ministries.
Singing of the Bloomsburg
State
College Alma Mater concluded the
program. An afternoon tea was held
at the college Commons, followed by
the Inaugural Ball Saturday evening,
both being well-attended.
William
Pennsylvania
and
who
has
given so generously of his time for
others.”
Board members presented were:
William E. Booth, Danville; E. Guy
Bangs, Millville; Gerald Beierschmitt,
Mt. Carmel; Edgar E. FenstermachBerer, Berwick; Frank D. Croop,
wick, and George W. Heffner, Pottsville.
Dr. Nossen paid tribute to the efof former Governor Scranton
and former President Harvey A. An-
forts
Published quarterly by the Alumni Association
of the
Bloomsburg State College,
Bloomsburg, Penna. 17815.
Second-Class
Postage Paid at Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania.
Send P O D. Form No. 3579 to the AL-
—
UMNI OFFICE, BLOOMSBURG
COLLEGE, BLOOMSBURG, PA.
STATE
17815
Page one
plans
in the development of
He
which have become a reality.
in
concluded, “I am proud to
be
Bloomsburg making this college a cre-
druss
dit
to
all
of
us,
the
and nation.”
Aware
of
Needs
from the
In extending greetings
Representative
General
Assembly,
Kent Shelhamer observed, ‘‘Our educational program is a passport to the
In Harrisburg we
future for youth.
are aware of the continuing needs of
our schools, and I wish to commend
the men on this hill with the vision to
make possible buildings such as the
Scranton Commons.”
Congratulations from the community were extended by C. Martin Lutz,
mayor, and Dr. George W. Hoffman,
director, Bureau of State Colleges and
DepartUniversities, Pennsylvania
ment of Education, who compared the
growth of state colleges in the past
nine years.
Howard P. Fenstemaker, president
Alumni Association,
ol the General
11,000
brought greetings from the
membership and pledged support
of
the Association to Dr. Nossen.
Fulfilling
possible in the development of its college system.” He paid tribute to Governor Scranton’s interest in the education and the progress the system made
during his tenure.
Greetings were extended from the
College Council by Jean Reese, secretary. Other student participation involved the naming of Columbia Hall,
Anne Peacock; renaming North Hall
Residence
Hall,
Northumberland
South
Stanley Rakowski; renaming
Hall to Luzerne Residence Hall, Linda
Szoke; renaming East Hall to Montour Residence Hall, Renee Zimmerman; renaming West Hall to SchuylResidence Hall.
Cindy Gross, with Frank
kill
S.
Davis,
director, computer service, outlined the purposes of this new center.
The Madrigal Singers, under the
direction of William K. Decker, presented four numbers, while the inJr.,
vocation and benediction were offered
by the Rev. Benjamin Jacobson, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church.
Dr. Robert Miller, chairman, Committee on International Education at
Bloomsburg State College,
accompanied a team
of Latin-American
Development Specialists to the State
of Bahia, Brazil, to explore possible
new programs of cooperation between
Bahia and Pennsylvania on behalf of
the Pennsylvania-Bahia Partners of
the Alliance, and the Committee on
International Education at BSC. The
visit was to result in the investigation
of new projects and the assessment
and development of education projects
which have previously been
Nearly all the events scheduled for
capacity
BSC’s Alumni Day drew
crowds as nature provided benevolent weather for the weekend activities.
Class
and
identified.
—
reunions
featuring
the
Fiftieth get-together
presentation of three Distinguish-
class
of
1920’s
ed Service Awards
day
— marked
the two
affair.
began Friday night with
assembling for dinners, dances and informal at-homes.
The full schedule Saturday began
for
get-together
with an informal
alumni and faculty in the morning
and ended with the play, “The Docby the
of Himself,”
tor In Spite
Bloomsburg Players in the evening.
superintendentDr. John Magill,
elect of the Bloomsburg Area School
of BSC,
District and an alumnus
spoke to the annual meeting of the
He reviewed
Alumni Association.
the number of BSC students and gradFestivities
various
classes
who entered
uates
Responsibility
Senator Preston B. Davis spoke of
evidthe new Commons as ‘‘visible
ence of the State’s determination to
fulfill its responsibility as rapidly as
Page two
AWARDS TO ALUMNI
3
Comomnwealth
World War
II
the services during
and called the
roll
of
who
those
twenty-seven names of
sacrificed their lives during that con-
Alumni Association, a dynamic
church school teacher, and reporter
and editor of The Morning Press,
where his untiring influence was directed toward the progress of the community and the college.”
Schuyler worked on The Morning
Press staff forty years, the last twen-
the
ty-one as editor. He retired April 1.
Prior to presenting Schuyler’s award,
Howard Fenstemaker, president of
the Alumni Association, said Schuyler had been recommended for the
DSA many times, stating, “We’ve
been trying to give Ed a DSA for
about five years now.”
Schuyler accepted the award, stating, “I don’t deserve this award.
I
do appreciate it. Thank you.”
Change In Constitution
Howard Fenstemaker announced a
proposed change in the Association’s
constitution.
This would install a
as an ex-officio member of the Association’s
Board
No
action
proposal until
it is published four times in the Alumni Quartrely.
flict.
He
of Directors.
can be taken on
this
Finances Good
closed with a prayer written by
a Dutch girl, read at Margraten Military Cemetery, Holland, last Memorial Day, dedicated to the twenty-seven
and all others buried there.
Two
lifelong educators
and a form-
er editor of The Morning Press were
presented the Bloomsburg State ColDistinglege Alumni Association’s
uished Service Award at the luncheon.
Miss Grace Beck, Sunbury, class of
1923, was cited as a “distinguished
alumnus”, who was a “dynamic teacher and administrator in elementary
education for forty-six years, a member and officer of civic and professional organizations in her local community and state, loved by students
and colleagues everywhere.”
Miss Beck received her B.S from
BSC in 1923 and her Master’s from
BSC and Bucknell University.
Wesley E. Davies, Shavertown, class
of 1919, was cited as a “career educateacher and administrator for
tor,
forty-three years in Pennsylvania, an
enthusiastic leader in civic, church,
and professional activities of his home,
community and state, and highly esteemed for loyal friendships and applied Christian ethics.”
Davies received his graduate degrees from Pennsylvania State University.
He was associated with the Luzerne
county superintendent of schools office for thirty-five years, as assistant
superintendent and for four and onehalf years before his retirement in
1969 as superintendent of schools.
Edward F. Schuyler, former editor
of The Morning Press, class of 1924,
was cited as a “former member and
secretary of the Board of Directors of
Financially, the Association is in
good shape, although costs of operaslightly
tions
is
This
was
more than income.
attributed to the cost of
printing the Alumni Quarterly and
distributing it to every member for
whom the Association has an address.
was announced dues were being
from $2.00 to $5.00 and that
It
raised
$25,000
would be available
Mary McNinch
in
the
loan fund this year.
Dr. Robert J. Nossen. BSC’s twelfth president, said BSC had undergone
many changes this year and would
undergo many more in the years to
come.
He mentioned the constant
process of reevaluation and revision
college policies
and structures receive.
He mentioned some
changes.
possible future
They included a calendar
change that would prevent the fall
semester from running into January,
more emphasis on the arts and scienwithout de-emphasizing
programs in health
areas, such as nursing and
technology.
He concluded “You’re all a
the ‘now’ of BSC.”
ces
training,
teacher
related
medical
part of
Pass Resolution
The Association passed
a resolution
supporting Dr. Nossen,
Board
of
Trustees, and college administration
in their leadership in all aspects of
BSC’s growth and change in these
"troubled times” for college campuses.
Officers elected to the Association’s
Directors:
President,
of
Howard F. Fenstemaker; Vice President, Millard Ludwig; Secretary, Col.
Elw'ood Wagner; Treasurer, Earl A.
Board
Gehrig.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
CLASS OF
The class
Friday
1920
of
evening,
HONORED
1920
was honored on
April
24,
by
being
the guests of the Alumni Association
at the annual dinner held in the new
Commons.
William
W.
Scranton
Howard F. Fenstemaker, President
of the Alumni Association, acted as
Master of Ceremonies. The invocation was given by the Rev. Foster L.
Fennybacker, husband of Grace GotPennybacker, a
shall
class.
member
of the
Dr. Robert Nossen, new President
was presented to the
guests and addressed the group. Leroy Creasy, president of the class,
gave the response for the class.
Also joining with the class of 1920
were members of the classes of 1905,
of the College,
1910,
and
1915.
guests of the dinner were
of
the
Alumni
Distinguished Service Award, including the following: Mrs. Vera Hemingway Housenick ’05: Dr. Kimber
C. Kuster T3 and Fred W. Diehl ’09.
Dr. Kuster and Mr. Diehl were accompanied by their wives.
Special
former
DR.
recipients
ANDRUSS NAMED
PRESIDENT EMERITUS
“No governing body of this college
has been faced with more problems
then the present Board,” Dr. Harvey
A. Andruss declared as Bloomsburg
State College bestowed the
title
of
“President Emeritus” on him.
In his response he said “
I
fervently beseech every one to support
the new administration and the Board
of Trustees from this day forward so
that Bloomsburg, as it becomes bigger
.
will also
become
.
.
better.”
Dr. Andruss w'as honored in the climaxing event of the first day’s activities marking the formal inauguration
of Dr. Robert J. Nossen as new president of the college.
Dr. Andruss was cited during an
Awards Convocation in Haas auditorium in a ceremony in which over 100
students were recognized for
their
achievements at the college.
The
title was bestowed on Dr. Andruss by
William A. Lank, president of the
Board of Trustees who gave Andruss
“most of the credit for the development and expansion of a small teachers college into a substantial institution of higher learning.
“Under his guidance and foresight,”
Lank said, “our college has grown to
a multi-million dollar educational institution, supported by a faculty of approximately 275 members and serving
as a medium for the training and development of 3,700 members of the student body.”
In his response, Dr. Andruss said he
was “duly impressed” noting that the
only other recipient was the late Dr.
David J. Waller who had served the
former Normal School a total of 27
for this consideration and max-k of
continuing confidence. No governing
body of this college has been faced
with more problems than the present
Board. These Trustees inspire trust
and merit the confidence of the college community.”
Dr. Andruss pointed out that in the
last three decades there have been 30
or more trustees who were all good
men, putting the college and its policies above personal or private considerations. He indicated many of them
have given not only their time, but
also their means to serve the college.
Dr. Andruss mentioned that the late
Reginald S.
Hemingway Esquire,
Judge C. William Kreisher, Superintendent Fred Deihl, all past pi'esidents
of the Board of Trustees and
Lank,
the current president, deserved special
commendation from everyone. He said
that he was happy to have the opportunity to voice it publicly.
Dr. Andruss continued, “A few days
ago. running my finger along a set of
books, I paused at the Russian novel
Turgenev’s ‘Father and Sons’ written over 100 years ago. The title recalled to my mind the modern ‘generation gap.’
More than that, it
brought to mind the use of the term
‘nihilist’ in the present day in conjunction with some of the younger
generation. Turgenev did not oi-iginate the epithet ‘nihilist’ but he did
give it more than the usual political
connotation in Russia at the time the
freedom of the serfs was about to
take place. Nihilist as a word can be
defined in almost as many ways as
those who try to give this Latin word
modern meaning.
Orignally, nihil
meant ‘nothing’ so those youth in
Tui’genev’s day were said to ‘accept
nothing’
or
nothing’
‘x-espect
by
those who wanted the status quo to
be continued or to be changed more
slowly.
“Certainly there is visible evidence
here today in the attendance of these
selected students and their parents
that there still continues an appreciation of scholarship, service and unselfish devotion to this college w'hich bids
fair to offset the publicity given by the
newspapers, radios, and television, to
who want change, want it right
and have no conception how the
desired change is to take place, what
it will entail, and how it is to be finanthose
now
r
,
ced.
“A college is a community organized for living and learning. This week
marks the formal beginning of a new
administration. It is my fervent hope
and expectation that it will surpass the
past. This is possible only if all concerned including alumni, townspeople,
students, faculty and legislators supthe Board of Trustees and the
new president.
poi’t of
“While expressing gratefulness of
honor accorded me today, I fervently beseech every one to support
this
Board
years.
the new' administration and the
“This presentation fills me with the
deepest emotion which is equaled only
by my gratefulness to the Trustees
Trustees from this day forward so
that Bloomsburg as it becomes bigger
JULY,
1970
of
will also
become
better.”
INAUGURAL WEEK
MARKED
IS
BY ACTIVITIES
The Inaugural Week
at
Bloomsburg
State College was ushered in on Sunday, April 12 with an Awards Day
Convocation and dinner, and a concert
by the BSC Maroon and Gold Symphonic Band.
In addition to the numerous other eventse that were held, the
week was climaxed by the Inaugural
Convocation held at 2:30 p.m. Saturday. April 18. at Haas Auditorium.
The Awards Day Convocation was
held in Haas Auditorium at which time
Dr. Harvey A. Andi’uss, who served
for 30 years as president of BSC and
retired last September, was presented
a President Emeritus Certificate by
William A. Lank, president of the
Board of Trustees.
Service Keys
convocation
Also featured at the
was the awarding of service keys to
sixteen seniors. These keys ai'e given
for “outstanding service to 10 per
cent or less of the senior class who
accumulate a minimum of 20 points
for participation in various activities
during their four years of college.”
This is the highest award given by the
college community.
Tw'elve lifetime passes were given
to senior athletes who have participated in varsity sports for four years. The
certificates,
thirty-one recipients
of
indicating their inclusion in the publication “Who’s Who in American Colleges and Universities,” were recognized.
Fourteen BSC scholarships were
awarded and twenty-one students were
recognized for academic honors.
The convocation was followed by a
dinner for college administration per-
awards,
sonnel, the recipients of the
and their parents.
The day was concluded with the
BSC Mai'oon and Gold
Symphonic Band under the direction
concert by the
Stephen C. Wallace.
Other Activities
Other activities during the week inexhibit
cluded Tuesday, April 14
Landscape Artists
of Pennsylvania
w'ith an accompanying talk by Andred Hudson; Wednesday, April 15
the dedication of the new William W.
Scranton Commons, the naming of
the new nine story women’s residence
of
—
hall,
the dedication of the
new RCA
Computer Center, and the renaming of
four residence halls on campus at a
special dedication luncheon, attended
by the former Governor of the Commonwealth, William W. Scranton,
along with other dignitiaries.
Friday, Api’il 17
an outstanding
Dr.
cultural presentation
featuring
Frank Pallano, baritone, and Dr. Robert Marvel, pianist, both of State University College. Fredonia, N. Y., appearing in concert; Satui'day, April
18
an inaugural luncheon for invited guests; the Inaugural Convocation
and an Inaugural Ball that evening;
Sunday, April 19
the week’s activities concluded with a performance
by the Concert Choir of BSC in Hass
Auditorium at 7 p.m.
—
—
—
Page three
AWARDS DAY DURING
INAUGURAL WEEK
awards.
“Inaugural Week’’ was personally
dedicated as “Loyalty Week” by the
Robert J.
college’s president, Dr.
Nossen.
Nossen used the term during the
course of his remarks in the “Awards
Day” ceremony in which a number of
students were honored and Dr. Harvey A. Andruss was designated “President Emeritus.”
The new president stated, “To see
that for which we exist take place and
to see those who understand what education is for, is to understand why we
exist,”
Turning to the honored students,
he said, “This college exists for purposes of sound education. You students who are being honored are the
culmination of our efforts.
“We want parents to participate in
activities of the college and we want
students to honor their parents
for the many kinds of support given
students by their parents.
.
.
Elton Hunsinger, dean of students,
presented “Who’s Who Certificates
and Service Keys” to twenty-seven
students who demonstrated ability,
scholastic
personal
achievement,
traits, leadership, potential usefulness
to society and professional promise.
Lifetime athletic passes were given
whom
to twelve athletes, each of
earned a major award during his college career in one
specific
sport.
These awards were made by Russell
Houk, director of athletics.
Scholarship awards made on aca-
demic achievemtnt in specific areas
were made to fourteen students by
Robert Duncan, director of financial
aids.
Dr. John Hoch, dean of instruction
presented academic honor awards to
twenty-eight students who had attained at least a 3.5 cumulative average for the duration of their college
career.
.
Debt Is Owed
“Things don’t happen by accident.
Dreams are worthwhile but must be
fulfilled with much hard work and
sacrifice.
We have a great debt to
the people of our commonwealth who
are willing to tax themselves to support our colleges and universities. We
appreciate the interest and support of
our alumni.
performed Handel’s orajudas Maccabaus” Sunday
choir
cert
torio
evening, April 19, to conclude the week
of celebration for President Robert J.
Nossen’s inauguration.
The performance, conducted by Wilthe
K. Decker, chairman of
music department, was attended by a
to
large audience including several chor-
who helped make your
college
pos-
is based in some way on
disappointments.
Each of us falls
short of the goals we set. That doesn’t
mean we should give up and say that
our life was not worthwhile.”
Dr. Nossen referred to serious and
difficult problems “but we have much
on which to build. We can work in a
creative sense. There is no hope in
working in a negative snese.”
He said the country is in a time of
stress and “some fail to stand up for
our country. If we are unwilling to
work for our country, it can only become worse.
“All
life
‘Don’t Sell Short’
“There are some who would destroy
our civilization. In the history of mankind, nothing great has come out of
ashes. This has happened only in mythology.”
He declared, “I am personally dedicating this week as ‘Loyalty Week.’
Loyalty to several concepts
to the
College, to your parents,
the
to
Bloomsburg area.
“Don’t sell BSC short
and don’t
apologize for it. If you have no pride
in BSC, you can have no pride in
yourself. If you wouldn’t have come
here, you would have paid far more
than you did or than you might have
been able to afford.”
Dr. Nossen introduced William A.
Lank, president of Ihe Board of Trustees, who also paid tribute to the students
who received honors and
—
.
Page four
.
conductors from throughout Penn-
al
sylvania.
A professional orchestra,
including string players from Philadelphia and Washington, corraborated
with the choir to present Handel’s
work in his original orchestration.
were Mary Decker, sopBeth Powlus, mezzo-soprano;
Richard Stanislaw, tenor;
Timothy
Hoffman, bass, and Lois Sturgeon,
Soloists
rano;
harpsichordist.
Highlights of this very long work
were “Hail, Judea Happyland,” “See
Conquering Hero Comes”,
“O
Wretched Israel”, and “Hallelujah,
the
Amen.”
The
performance was extremely
successful and the audience responded
by giving the singers and orchestra a
standing ovation.
Dr. Charles H. Carlson, director of
Graduate Studies at Bloomsburg State
College, has been elected president of
Ihe Pennsylvania State College and
University Graduate Deans AssociaDr. Carlson joined the faculty
of Bloomsburg State College in 1959
as associate professor of music and
was elevated to a full professorship
tion.
of
Music
ing
in 1962.
director
of
He was named
graduate
June, 1967 and was
named
a
all
act-
studies in
director of
graduate studies in October, 1968. Dr.
Carlson served as chairman of the
Music and as a director of the Maroon and Gold Band and Studio Band.
al-
paid-up
dues card were admitted free
the Alumni Luncheon, and
We
the College paid the bill.
have been informed that the
to
College is now obliged to
continue this policy, and
Alumni Association
the
have to bear the expenses
dent to the luncheon.
Accordingly, the Board of
ectors, at their
dis-
that
will
inci-
Dir-
meeting on Al-
umni Day, voted to raise the
Alumni dues from $2.00 to $5.00.
The first $5.00 of your gift to the
Loyalty Fund will be set aside
as dues, and any amount above
that will be put into the Loyalty Fund for scholarships and
other projects approved by the
Board of Directors.
Proposed Amendment
back and say ‘thanks’
sible.
Throughout the years,
umni who showed
to
Constitution
The Bloomsburg State College con-
liam
those
YOUR ATTENTION
CHOIR CONCERT
CONCLUDES WEEK
“You worked hard and learned in
campus facilities. I hope you will look
all
PLEASE GIVE THIS
(To be voted on at 1971 Alumni
Meeting)
TO: Secretary, Alumni Association of
the Bloomsburg State College
1. At present, Section 2, Article II,
reads as follows:
The Board of Directors shall be fifteen in number, five of whom shall
be elected each year from the membership of the Corporation to serve
Said
for a term of three years.
Directors shall be elected at the
annual meeting, and shall be organthereafter and
ized immediately
elect their officers aforesaid.
2. To effect closer working relationships with soon-to-be and graduates
of the college, we propose that Section 2, Article II read as follows:
The Board of Directors shall be sixnumber— fifteen elected
teen in
members and one ex-officio member. Five Directors shall be elec-
ted each year from the membership of the Corporation at its an-
nual meeting to serve a term of
three years.
At said meeting, a
representative elected by the current graduating class of the college,
will be invited to serve as an exofficio member of the Board until
the next annual meeting of the corporation.
Said Directors shall be
organized immediately after the
annual meeting and elect their
of-
ficers aforesaid.
A
highlight of the festivities of InWeek at Bloomsburg State
Dr.
College was a joint concert by
Frank Pullano, Baritone, and Dr.
augural
Robert Marvel, pianist-composer, on
Friday. April 17, in Haas Auditorium.
Both artists are members of the faculty of State University College, Fredonia, N. Y.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
3tt
ifflmnriam
1918— Helen Lord (Mrs. Arthur Powell) Kingston, Pa.
1902—Helen Reice ( Mrs. James Irvin), Bloomsburg, Pa.
1908 Florence G. Beddell, Summit
—
Hill Pa
1917 —Gertrude
Methodist
Lecher,
Manor, Tunkhannock, Pa.
1925— Mary E. Whalen Mrs. Francis Farrell) Shenandoah Heights, Pa.
1911— Iris Avery (Mrs. George C.
Armitage, Jr.), Harvey’s Lake, Pa.
1949 Bertha Grolf, Kulpmont, Pa.
i
—
1892 — Louise
Moss
(Mrs.
Benson), Haverton, Pa.
—
Elmira Bankes
Bloomsburg, Pa.
1936
D.,
E.
Shaffer,
A.
R.
Cora Shaffer Keller ’01
Mrs. Cora Keller, 1439 Spring Garden avenue, Berwick, died at the Hampie Nursing Home, Nescopeck, April
She was born at Weston and in
il.
her early life lived in Berwick where
she was a school teacher. Later she
taught school for twenty-five years
Fenn Brook, Harrisburg School dis-
m
She was a member of Grace
United Methodist Church, Harrisburg;
and Retired Teachers Association.
trict.
Dr. Howard K. Rarig ’05
Dr. H. R. Rarig died March 2 in the
VA Hospital. Wilkes-Barre, where he
had been a patient one month.
He was born at Catawissa R. D. 1,
on July 23, 1885, son of the late Lloyd
He
and Catherine Mensch Rarig.
from the
received his AB and
University of Michigan in 1910. Surgery was studied at Jefferson Medical College in 1913 and he received a
Master of Science Degree in Surgery
from the University of Pennsylvania
MD
in
1927.
He was also a permanent officer of
the U. S. Public Health Service and
Veterans Administration.
He was
af-
filiated with the Columbia County Medical Society, Medical Society of Penn-
sylvania and Fellow American Medical Association.
Dr. Rarig practiced in Berwick for
over thirty years. He had served as
a captain in the U.S. Army Medical
Corps during World War I, serving
overseas for tw'o years. He had also
practiced medicine in New York and
New Jersey.
Dr. J. R. Brobst ’ll
Dr. J. R. Brobst, 204 East street,
Bloomsburg, widely-known physician
and Columbia County Coroner, died
March
24 in Bloomsburg Hospital.
Dr. Brobst had been a patient at the
hospital since last December 23, excepting for two weeks spent in Geisinger Medical Center.
A native of Bloomsburg. Dr. Brobst
was a general practitioner in this area
for fifty -three years.
He was a graduate of Bloomsburg
High School,
Bloomsburg Normal
School,
JULY,
and Jefferson Medical
1970
Col-
Maude Dent Banghart ’27
Mrs. Lee W. Banghart, the former
After
lege, Philadelphia, in 1915.
inter nshop ill Cooper Hospital,
Cam-
Anna Maude Dent,
den, N. J., and Childrens Hospital,
Flnladelphia, Dr. Brobst began his
practice oi medicine in Bloomsburg,
until the entry of the United States in
World War
204 Park Boulevard, Park Place Village, Berwick,
She had been ill for
died April 6.
several years and had been hospitalized since February 18.
I.
He served
Mrs. Banghart was born in Bowmantown, Tenn., and had been a resident of this area since she was one
year old.
She was a graduate of
Scott Township High School and had
taught school for a number of years
in Columbia County.
in the Medical Corps for
two years in France and attained the
rank oi Captain. Following the war,
he studied at the University oi Edin-
and in St. Louis, Mo.
Upon discharge from the service he
resumed his practice of medicine.
Dr. Brobst was recognized in medi-
boro, Scotland,
cal circles as an astute diagnostician
and worked long hours each day at
his chosen profession.
He was serving his fourth term as
county coroner, being elected last
term with no opposition, and endorsement of both parties. Dr. Brobst was
Irma Miller Nagule
Irma
an avid hunter and fisherman and
spent as much time as his busy sche-
Park from 1917 to 1969. She did subwork in Union and Roselle
Park. She was an active member of
Mrs.
St. Paul’s Lutheran Church.
Naugle is survived by her husband,
two sons, two daughters, and eifjht
dule could allow at these sports.
A member
oi
stitute
Washington Lodge 265
F. and A.M., he was also a member
of Caldwell Consistory; First Presbyterian Church; Loyal Order of
Moose
Veterans of Foreign Wars; American Legion; Izaak Walton League,
Fairmont Township; Columbia CounPennsylvania
Society;
ty Medican
Medical Society; Bloomsburg Hospital
623;
Staff; Alumni Association of Jefferson Hospital, and Pennsylvania Coron-
ers Association.
Helen E. Sutliff ’23, ’34
Miss Helen E. Sutliff, Harrisburg,
died April
Camp
in a convalescent home in
native of Bloomsburg,
a daughter of the late Wil7
Hill.
A
she was
liam B. and Ella Stump
Sutliff.
Her
was dean of Bloomsburg State
Teachers College for many years.
Miss Sutliff taught third grade in
Harrisburg for 44 years. She had also
been a member of Pine Street Presbyterian Church, Daughters of American Revolution, National Education
Association, PSEA of Harrisburg, an
honorary member of the PTA Harrisburg Little Theatre Group, the Harrisburg Symphony and the Scottish
father
Rite Society.
Rachel Balles Malone ’25
Mrs. Rachel Balles Malone, 1304
Tab Street, Odenton, Maryland, died
October 18, 1969 as a result of injuries received in an automobile acci-
grandchildren.
Marion Van Horn Fray
•
’33
Mrs. Marion Van Horn Fray died
March 1 at the Jersey Shore HosBorn in Register, Huntington
pital.
Township, Luzerne County, she had
resided in Avis for the past two years.
She had formerly resided in Beach
Haven, Catawissa and Orangeville
where her husband had served as
pastor.
She was in her twenty-first year of
teaching. She was a fourth grade teacher at Jersey Shore and had also
taught in Catawissa.
She was a member of
United Methodist Church
active in the affairs of
Town
Hill
Avis
the
was
and
WCTU
of the
Methodist Charge.
Dr. Robert A. Ohl ’39
Dr. Robert A. Ohl, 3729 Chili Ave.,
Rochester, N. Y., died in March in
Genessee Hospital. He had been hosone week.
A graduate of Berwick High
High School, and Bloomsburg State
pitalized
College,
he
received
Master’s
his
Degree from Columbia University. He
taught school for a year at Harrisburg
Academy and was employed
dent.
former
Mrs. Malone had been a teacher
secondary schools in her home
state of Pennsylvania for many years
before coming to Jessup, Maryland,
to reside at the time of her marriage
She moved 12 years
20 years ago.
later to Odenton. Although she was an
active member of the Severn Baptist Church, she often attended the
Wesley Chapel Bible Class at Wesley Chapel, which her husband teachShe was a member of the Womes.
an’s Club of Jessup and the Jessup
Homemaker’s Club. She is survived
by her husband, a step-son, three
brothers, and a sister.
lab.
in
’ll
(Mrs. A. K. Naugle)
died January 15, 1970 in St. Peter’s
Hospital, New Brunswick, N. J., after
a lingering illness. After graduating
from Bloomsburg, she taught in the
Ricketts School System for two years.
She and her husband lived in Roselle
Miller
ACF
at
the
Industries in the photo
He was a veteran
of
World War
II.
He was employed as associate professor in the School of Photography
at Rochester Institute of Technology
and was listed in the current edition
of Who’s Who in the East.
While a resident of Berwick, he was
of
Berwick
Baptist
a member
Church, and in Rochester, for the past
12 years, he was a member of the
Church of
First United Methodist
North
Chili,
Rochester, N. Y.
service was held
A memorial
on
April 14 at the Rochester Institute of
Technology. An industrial and scienti-
Page
five
1917—
photographic reference collection is
being assembled at Rochester Institute
oi Technology (KIT) in memory of
lie
the highly esteemed teacher.
Capt. Daniel li. Bonham ’41
Retired Navy Reserve Capt. Daniel
H. Bonham, 5U, who retired in October as administrative officer for the
Navy’s
office
oi
civilian
manpower
management, died January 20 in
Georgetown University Hospital after
heart surgery. He lived at 3702 Ivydale Drive, Annandale.
Capt. Bonham, who was born in
Forty Fort, Pa., was a flight instructor and pilot during World War II.
He was on active duty 13 years and
was a civilian Navy employe 14
years. From 1966 to 1969 he was commanding officer of the Naval Reserve Officer School 5-7 in Alexandria.
Eugene P. Sandel ’59
Eugene P. Sandel, thirty-two, 113
North Fourth Street, Hamburg, died
in January at Reading Hospital where
he had been a patient for two months.
Death was due to complications. He
had been in ill health for fourteen
months.
He had taught in the Hamburg Area
High School for the past nine years.
He was a member of the Bethany
United Methodist Church, Hamburg;
member of senior choir and administrative board of the church. He belonged to the National and Pennsylvania Teachers Associations, Berks
County Teachers of Mathematics Association and the Hamburg
cation Association.
Area Edu-
Dr. Martin Pestei
Dr. H. W. Martin Pestei, 606 Park
Court, Williamsport, husband of Dr.
Hildegard Pestei, reference librarian
a
at Bloomsburg State College for
number
of
years, died in
March
in
Williamsport Hospital.
He was a native of Lititz, Germany
and came from Frankfurt, Germany
to the United States in 1951 and to
the Williamsport area in 1956.
James J.
J. O’Toole,
O’Toole
popular member
ol the Bloomsburg State College faculty, died suddenly at Geisinger MediO’Toole was
cal Center, Danville.
rushed to the emergency center of the
hospital.
An associate professor of
speech at BSC, he began teaching in
James
of last year. He was also
director of the college’s forensic pro-
September
gram and was debating coach.
He came here from Villanova
versity, residing in
Sherwood
O’Toole had served
was a graduate
of
in the
Uni-
Village.
Army and
Muskegon Junior
He received his B.S. degree
from Marquette University and his
M.A. from Wayne State University.
He had completed his course requirements for the Doctor of Philosophy
College.
degree.
In 1962 he joined the speech department of Villanova. He had previously taught in public and parochial
Page
six
schools in Michigan.
He had been president of the Debating Association of Pennsylvania ColAmerican
leges, a member of the
Forensic Association, the Speech Association of America, and the Speech
Association of Eastern States.
O’Toole was a member of St. ColCatholic Church, the Columbia-
umba
Montour Chapter
the Barbershop
Quartets’ Society, and had been active
in
Boy Scout
of
activities.
Ijau
Contributors of the Loyalty Fund to
April 16, 1970, not previously reported:
Others Samuel L. Bredbenner be1902—
quest, Newman Center (by Rev. Bernard T. Petrina).
1892 Mrs. E. E. McKelvey
1896— Mrs. Mrytle A. Van Wie
—
—
Nevin E. Funk
Miss Bess Long
1905 Mrs. Blanche M. Grimes, Mrs.
Vera
H. Housenick, Mrs. Carrie C.
1907—
Myers, Mrs. Helen M. Hemingway.
Dr. Charles L. Mowrer, Mrs. Elizabeth
M. Lesker, Jessie Y. Shambach, Mrs.
1901
Anna Thomas
1906
1909—Dr. Carroll D.
Raymond
Champlin, W.
Girton
Mrs. Ada M. Bittenbender.
Mrs. S. J. Conner, Mrs. H. M. Chisohlm, Mrs. Robert B. Fleischer, Mrs.
Harold H. Hayman
1908 Mrs. H. G.
Williams, Mary
South wood, Mrs. George S. Westfield
Harold L. Moyer, Fred W.
Diehl, Mrs. L Clair Conner, Martha
Black, Mrs. W. Milton Brown, Anna
Kushke
1910 Mrs. Byron Fairchild, Frank
R. Adams, Julia Gregg Brill, Sara F.
Lewis, Mrs. Fred B. Steig, Mrs. Jared
Montanye, Mrs. LeRoy H. Sinquett.
1912—
Mrs.
S. C. Carpenter, Mrs. Fred W.
Zane, Maurice E. Houck. Mrs. Blan-
che M. Berger, Mrs. Anna K. Edwards, Mrs. Harold E. Davis, Mrs.
William L. Allen, Sara F. Lewis, Marion Williams, Earl R. Laubach, Mrs.
Morris S. Evans.
1911 Peter J. Eshmont, A. K. Naugle, Mrs. Fred W. Diehl, Mrs. Edward H. Beavers, Mrs. Chase M.
Herrick, Mrs. P. H. Monaghan.
Mrs. Charles A. Nicely, Harold N. Cool, Mrs. Florence G. Carl,
Mrs.
Mabel D. DeMott
1916—
1913 Mrs. Nellie M. Dennison, Elizabeth Sturges, Mrs. Earl Gooding,
Mrs. Joseph Cherrie, Nellie M. Seidel,
Mrs. J. Harry Wright
1915 Mrs. Henry Mensinger, Ruth
E. Pooley, Mrs. Earl E. Richards,
Esther Dreibelbis, Mrs. Elmer Harrington, Mrs. W. I. Larson. Warren A.
Dollman, Mrs. George H. Moore, Lorena E. Thomas, Mrs. Eulah M. Spiegal, Mrs. Nora A. Oberfell, Mrs. Hoyt
E. Heller, Clara A. Oman, Paul M.
Trembley.
Mrs.
Ruth A. Dreibelbis,
Dwight Folsom. Mrs. Emma H. Burrus, Mrs. Jennie R. Morris
Edwin
S.
Heller,
J.
Frank
Brink, Dr. J. Loomis Christian, Earl
E. Richards, Mrs. John W. O’Toole,
Mrs.
Mrs. Alice Tiffany Gardner,
Veda E. Miller, Anna Pursel
1918 Mrs. Robert
D. Berninger,
Mary M. Gillespie, Mrs. Paul H. Trescott,
Mrs. Jay Lee Funk
Elsie M. Pfahler, Mrs. PrisA. McDonald, Catherine A. Reimard, Mrs. James J Martin, Alice M.
Burns, Mrs. Eva F. Ellis, Mrs. Mar1920—
garet S. Brock, Mrs. Victor C. Long.
Grace B. McCoy, Mrs. Chester E.
Vastine.
Leroy W. Creasy, Mark H
Bennett, Mrs. Grace E. Pannebacker,
Mrs. O. C. Peters, Mrs. Roy O. Fry.
Mrs. William R. Turner, Mrs. Clark
Kennedy. Warren Hendershott, Mrs.
Grayce M. Newhart, Mrs. William R.
Turner, Mrs. Benjamin Eshleman,
Lawrence V. Keefer, Mrs. Paul M.
1922—
Trembley,
Mrs. Guy W. Stearns
1921 Mrs.
Josephine A. Moyer,
Anna
L. Swanberry, Miller I. Buck.
1923—
Mrs. Lillian M. Yerkes, Mrs. Ralph
Moser, Adeline Burgess
William T. Payne. Martha Y.
1924—Mrs. Oren L. Harris, Mrs.
Jones,
Perry L. Smith, Esther J. Saxe
1919
cilla
Mrs. Karl Freyermuth, Emily
E. Craig, Mrs. Ralph R. Maynard.
Mrs.
Helen R. Padgett, Mrs. Dorothy
1925—
Blancher, Mrs. C. F. Hoffmeister.
Mrs. Robert MacNaught, Sr.
Mrs. Mary Bugbee. Mrs. Clare
L. Reger, Margaret J. Jones, Edith
Brace. Mr. and Mrs. Carl D. Blose,
Mrs. Dorothy W. Risley, Adeline E.
Swineford
Mrs. W. L. Baughman, Mrs.
Ira Bogart, Mrs. Wayne Turner, Mrs.
Eugene Walsh,
Pearl
E.
Poust,
Mildred M. Powell,
Mrs. H. J. P.
Lesaius, Mrs. Harry Nicholas, Michael A. Walaconis, Martha A. Fisher,
1927— S. Davey, Mrs. Martha R.
Marjorie
Miers, Mrs. Leslie J. Boone, Helen V.
Cashmarek, Edith May Eade, Mrs.
Kenneth M. Miller. Mrs. Anna R. Sidler, Mrs. Matthew G.
Gray, Lillian
Burgess, Margaret E. Price
1926 Margaret Hobbs, Mrs. Neal W.
Wormley, Mrs. Robert M. Dwyer. Mrs.
Robert A. Walburn, Margaret E. Lambert, Mrs. Vivian H. Hallenback.
Mrs. Mildred A. McCloughan,
Mrs. Russell Smith, Mrs. George A.
Wagner. Doris G. Palsgrove, Mrs. J.
Fred
Giger
1930—
1928 Mrs. M. S. Martin. Mrs. Caroline E. Criswell. Mrs. Walter F. Vorbleski, Mrs. Foster
Furman. Mrs.
Miltona Klinetob, Lehman J. Snyder,
Mrs. Louise B. Stevens, Lois A. Watkins, Margaretta M. Bone, Mrs. Waltei J. Gordon, Mrs. Howard K. Scott
1929 Mrs. Harold Arner, Mrs. Alice
B. Blair, Mrs. Bernard Burnat, Mrs.
Theron Rhinard, Mrs.
Emma G.
Shearer, Mrs. J. L. Cohen, Caroline
E. Petrullo
Mr. and Mrs. Luther W. Bitler. Mrs. Ann Mergo, Helen E. Snyder,
Alda Culp. Mrs. Dorothy Pihlblad.
Pearl Mason Keller (in memory of
Armand G. Keller), Grayce R. Carr,
Charles A. John, Mrs. Margaret R.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
1953—
D'Asidoro, Miriam Edwards, Harold
H. Hidlay, Mrs. Earl G. Hoyt, Virginia
Cruikshank, Mrs. Clyde R. Daubert.
Mr. and Mrs. Jasper M. Fritz. Alex
J. Kraynack, Mrs. Franklin Miller,
Mrs. Grace R. Gardner, Thursabert
Schuyler, Cyril W. Stiner, Mrs. S.
Earl Walker, Mrs. John Kotch, Mrs.
John Schaeberlin, Mrs. Kathryn I.
Mrs. Lawrence Mattern,
Waltman,
1931—
Georgiena L. Weidner, Mrs. Mary L.
Whalen
1932— Mrs.
Helen
C.
McGeehan,
Wilkes, Mrs. Paul H. Kepner,
Emily A. Park, Mrs. Esther Y. Castor
Mrs. H. C. Heinbaugh, Theron
1933— Wilhelmina M. Cerine, Mrs.
F.hinard.
Ralph S. Krouse, Mrs. Stephen Lorks.
Dr. Henry J. Warman, Mrs. Robert
B. Miles
Walter M. Kritzberger, Mrs.
John
J.
1935—W. Zeisloft
Emily
1934 Walter S. Chesney, Robert H.
Van Sickle. Mrs. Robert A. Elder.
Mrs.
George Plowright, Gladys M.
1936—
1937—
Wenner
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer J. Mc-
Kechnie, Mrs. Stanley W. Stanulonis,
Roy
Peterman. Mrs. M. L. Mark-
C.
ley
Mrs. Ruth W. Legrande
1939— Ray G. Schrope, Mary E.
Palsgrove, William E. Zeiss. Mrs. Edgar M. Darby
1938 Aerio M.
Fetterman.
Mrs.
1941— R. Wallace. Mrs. Robert V.
William
1942—
O’Connell. Mrs. N. M. Cassano, Mrs.
C. V. Maslow
Isaiah D. Bomboy
1940 Mrs. Ezra W. Harris, Frank
Koniecko. Charles L. Kelchner, Mrs.
Robert W. Wambach, Mrs. Margaret
McCern
Marqueen White
E.
William E. Booth. Mrs. Eleanor M. Zosler, Mrs. Adrian M. Kal-
Alexander
Hardysh,
Mrs.
1946—L. Ehrhart. Bertha A. Hir.dKevin
march. Mrs. Dorothy C. Dean
1943
1947—Col. and Mrs. Elwood M. Wagner, Mrs. William P. Handy, Anna
M.1948—
Buck, Sara K. Wagner
1944 Mrs. Sarah D. Edwards, Mrs.
Jack H. Reynolds, Mrs.
Leon E.
Grant, Mrs. James S. Powell
1945 Mrs. Mary Lou John, Mrs. C.
W. Epley, Jr.
Nellie A. Kramer, Mrs. Charles W. Creasy, r., Mrs. Lillian H.
lender,
Holland
William E. Harvath, Vincent
F. Washville
1951—
John F. Magill, Jr.. Elroy F.
Dalbert, Class Treasurer, Mrs. Vincent F. Washville.
1949 Ralph W. Baird, Mrs. Donald
F. Schueler, Richard E. Grimes. John
H. Reichard. Leo J. Speicher, Kenneth
E. Wire, John Kuntza, Mrs. Mildred
S. Kowalski, John M. Purcell Mrs.
Julia P. Sterling
1950 Mrs. Dale H. Reighart, Rob-
James Kashner, Mrs. John C.
Chevalier, Jr., Rev. Charles F. Glass,
Leon E. Frant, Warren M. Sterling
ert
Ralph W. Wire
Andre Vanyo, Eleanor R.
Kennedy, Mrs. Joan
Cerula,
Mrs.
John O. Lychos
1952
JULY,
1970
Mrs.
Mary
Stephen Fago,
Fowler, Keith S. Bearde
1954 Mrs. Lawrence H. Auerweck,
Mrs.
Patricia B. Hollingsworth, Wil1955—
liam J, Jacobs
Mrs. Carolyn Y. Karas, Mrs.
David G. Belles, Lt. Cmdr. Philip W.
Gergen,
1956— Mrs. Robert E. Klein, Mrs.
Judith B. Shirey, Jacob E. Slembar-
Mrs. Royce M. Crossman
1957—Mrs. Edward H. Michehl, Mrs.
Mary R. Moser, Mrs. F. K. Schauffele, Harry J. Weist, Elvin C. LaCoe
1958— Walter G. Fox, Thomas J.
Reimensnyder, George J. Bach, Jr.,
Mrs. John L. Epler, Mrs. Donald T.
McNelis. Robert L. Dipipi
George W. O’Connell,
Mrs.
Helen
1960—Kerstetter, M. Donald Miller,
Mrs. Lona F. Wayman, Thomas J.
ski,
Sheehan, Jr.
1959 Larry A. Fisher, Mrs. June L.
Trudnak, Mrs. Charles C. James
Albert P. Francis, Mrs. John
A. Lindner, Jr., Raymond W. Trudnak. Gary F. Anderson, Mrs. Dale E.
Thomas. Dr. Carl
L. Stanitski, Rich1962—
ard A. Staber, Mrs. Carl Janetka,
Mrs. Geraldine Alley, Mrs. Barbara
Buchter. Mrs. Gary
Charles,
Mrs.
Harry F. Powlus
1961 Mrs. William
Sheridan.
C.
Robert L. Deibler
Gerald J. Wright. Mrs. Janet
M. Hoover, Thomas J. McHugh, Walter H. Veranda, Gary
Kahler,
R.
Capt. Robert J. Steinhart
1963 Mr. and Mrs. Ronald W. Cranford. Gail L. Allen, Mrs. Jeanne M.
Shutt, Mrs. Bernard Elliott, George
E. Weiser, John M. DiLiberto, Gerald E. Malinowski
1964 Mrs. Samuel R. Dunkelberegr,
Mrs. James R. Woods, Robert A.
Mayefskie, Lowell A. Tinner.
Mrs.
John H. Stone, Terry L. Beard, Mrs.
James R. Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Edward Crim, Joseph P. Mockaitis, Mrs. George F. Miller
1965 Mrs. Robert M. Hontz, Norman F. Hayl, Mrs. Lowell A. Tinner,
Robert A. Green, Mrs. F. A. Pinero
Carol J. Wertman, Mrs. Janet
U.
Hoffman. Joseph R. Gates, William
J. Megargel, Sally
Weigler,
Mrs.
Patricia Azrazinskas, Robert J. Donahue, Henry E. Fetterman. Arthur M.
Saxe, Fhilip M. Thomas, Mrs. Laird
D. Shively, George F. Miller, Joseph
R. Koons, Susan R. Krier, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry R. Sitler
1966 Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth G.
Cremswell, Jr., Mrs. John C. Lilley,
C. Shaffer, Jr., Mrs. John C. Lilley,
Mrs. Joseph T. Jamiaekowsky, Mrs.
Irene A. Frantz. Barbara A. Urbas,
John S. Mulka, Robert J. Biscombe
Mrs. Wilbur J. Carlson. Mrs. Charles
M. Evans
III,
James R.
Miller, Jos-
eph P. Fazzari, Mrs. Sharon K. Herr,
Nancy E. K. Smith. Mr. and Mrs.
Henry L. Spering, Mrs. Sandra B.
Williams. Darryl W. Lanning
1967 Mrs. Donald E. Bryan, Mrs.
Deborah H. Guthrie, Carol B. Crawford. Donald E. Ulrich, Richard
T.
Brosius, Mrs. Mary M. Lee, David
J. Hollingshead, Charles M.
Evans
III,
Stephen
G.
Karol,
Charles
E.
Wagner, Judith A. Yarnall, Lorraine
M. Savidge, Susan M. Shepherd, Carol
McA. Campbell, Mrs. William M.
Cormick, Laird D. Shively, Mrs. Carl
K. Stine, Ronald P. Jackson, Richard R. Leonovich, Roseann M. Sabulski, Robert O. Samsel, Mrs. Joyce
A. Mordan.
1968 Mrs.
Robert A. Bachman,
Joyce E. Brobst, Cherie E. Vaughn,
Mrs. Wilson A. Shaffer, Carolyn J.
Toby, Mrs. Eileen A. Meiser, Rosemary Lubinski, John J. Trathen,
Karen Undeck, Mrs. Charles E. Shepperson III, Mrs. John S. Mulka, Noelle
A. Cassarella, Mrs. David S. Allen,
David C. Gerhard, Dona M. Houck,
A.
Mrs. Diane Kazemza,
Richard
Philipkoski,
tMyra
J.
Schlesinger,
Martin
1969—T. Smith. Leonard C. Bastian.
Jr., Mrs. William F. George, Mary
L. Steffen, Dale L. Branch. Diane W.
Dawson, Mr. and Mrs. Harold L.
Latchford
George F. Sheperis, James A.
Metzler, Mrs. Robert Lehman. Linda
Kessler,
Lechnev, Mrs. Robert E.
Charles E. Shepperson III, Michael
L. Smith, Eleanor M. Kolet, David S.
Allen. Ann Marie Hutz, Donna J.
Reitz, Sandra K. Sanford, Charles S.
Sherbin, Louis J. Mulka, Thomas F.
1970—
Castrilli. Mrs. Joan A. Laubach, Gail
V. Moyer, Gary F. Pender, Mr. and
Mrs. Reinhold A. Schulz, Robert A.
Mususky,
Wayne
J.
Sekellick,
E.
Ronald
Koch, Galen G. Quick, Mrs.
Charles J. Vogt, George A. Ziolkawski
Regina F. Hepner, Boyd T.
Keiser. Jr., Mr. and Mrs. John J.
Higgins, Jr., Robert A. Shultz
CGA PRESIDENT
Mike Pilligalli, of West Chester,
was elected president of Bloomsburg
GovernState College’s Community
ment Association (CGA) by a vote of
861 to 729 over Dudley Mann. He and
other officers were installed at. the
CGA meeting this year.
terms expire in May 1971.
final
A
Their
total of 1,590 students, faculty
and
administrators cast ballots.
Mike Hock, current editor
of the
college newspaper, won the vice presidency by a vote of 766 to 721 for Marty
Morgis.
Jodi Kohler ran unopposed
Janet Boyancwski defeated Jack Feddock for the
secretary
position of corresponding
for recording secretary.
818-608.
The new treasurer,
Anne
Peacock, won by 852 to 617 for Tom
Baltuskonis. Mark Foucart ran unopposed for parliamentarian.
An article entitled “Subjectivity in
the Art of Eighteenth Century Biography: Johnson’s Portrait of Swift”
by Dr. Jordan Richman, Associate
Professor in the Department of English at Bloomsburg State College, has
been accepted for publication in “Enlightenment Essays,” a journal published by the University of Illinois at
the Chicago Circle and dedicated to
inter-disciplinary
18th century.
scholarship
of
the
Page seven
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR
H. F. Fenstemaker T2
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
’34
Grace Foote Conner,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Terms
242 Central
Road
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Term
expires 1973
VICE PRESIDENT
Millard Ludwig ’48
Center and Third Streets
Millville, Pennsylvania 17846
Term
18
Terms
expire 1971
Mrs. Verna Jones ’36
West Avenue, Apartment C-4
Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Dr. Kimber C. Kuster T3
140 West Eleventh Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
John Thomas '47
68 Fourth Street
Hamburg, Pennsylvania 19526
Elizabeth H. Hubler
’43
205
Clayton H. Hinkel
’29
McKnight Street
James H.
expires 1973
37 N.
Lancaster, Pennsylvania 17603
Earl A. Gehrig ’37
Robin Lane, Sherwood Village
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
space,
of limitations of
personal items have had to be
postponed until the September issue.
This has been made necessary by the
coverage of the events of Inaugural
Week and Alumni Day.
1903
Class
Representative:
Walter
II.
Riland, 11 Warwick Avenue, Scarsdale, N. Y. 10583
Sweppenheiser
Wor-
man, Danville, Pa., was present
Alumni Luncheon.
at the
1904
Lillian Buckalew Rider, Irene Ikeler Sloan and Mabel
Mertz Dixon
were present at the Alumni Luncheon.
1905
Representative:
Hemingway
Page
eight
llousenick,
Mrs. Vera
503
1,
Market
Farm Box
Glen
Camp
Because
Class
R. D.
expires 1972
many
Nellie
Colonial
Mills,
’52
88
Pa. 19342
Dr. Alexander J. McKechnie, Jr.
19 N. 24th St.
Volume LXXI, Number 2
Mrs.
Terms expire 1973
Dr. Frank J. Furgele
Deily, Jr. ’41
Bausman Drive
110
Term
’40
Leonard Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
224
Gordon, Pennsylvania 17936
TREASURER
’34
West Street
102
State College, Pa. 16801
Term
expire 1972
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
Dr. William L. Bitner III
33 Lincoln Ave.,
Glen Falls, N. Y. 12801
expires 1973
Elwood M. Wagner
643 Wiltshire Road
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie ’35
509 East Front Street
Berwick, Pennsylvania 18603
SECRETARY
Col.
—
Street,
—
Pa. 17011
July, 1970
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1906
Marian Groff (Mrs. David
gler), lives at 1048
Hill,
’39
I. SpanN. Fourth Street,
and community
by
of us;
up of
made
many
them
all
is to be envied
his secret of success is
all
aspects and he has used
wisely.”
Reading, Pa. 19601
1909
Representative:
1907
Class
Class
Representative:
Edwin M.
Barton, 353 College Ilill, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
Edwin M. Barton, long a devoted
leader in community affairs, was recognized by
the
Bloomsburg Area
Chamber of Commerce as the “Citizen of Year” during the annual dinner meeting of the Chamber.
The
recipient was described as "one who
is equally talented in many areas; he
is rather hard to describe. His honesty and integrity are beyond question; his devotion to his fellow man
Diehl, 627
17821
Bloom
Fred
W.
Street, Danville, Pa.
1910
Class
Representative:
Robert E.
Metz, 23 Manhattan Street, Ashley,
Pa. 18706
1911
Class Representative: Mrs. Pearle
Fitch Diehl, 627 Bloom Street, Danville, Pa. 17821
1912
Representative: Howard F.
Fenstemaker,
Central
242
Road,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
1923
1913
Class Representative: Dr. Kimber
Kuster, 140 West 11th Street, Bloomsbury, Pa. 17815
Judge Bernard J. Kelley, a member
of the Board of Trustees of BSC, has
relocated his office, the address of
which now is 1004-1 Market Street
East, Philadelphia, Pa. 19100
1914
J. Howard
Class Representative:
518 West Third Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Ileily,
1915
Class Representative: John S. Shu-
man, 368 East Main
Pa.
burg.
Blooms-
Street,
17815
1916
Class Representative: Mrs. Russell
Burrus (Emma Harrison) R. D. 2,
Orangeville, Pa. 17859
1917
Class
Cromis.
L.
Allen
Representative:
Mahoning Manor, R. D.
1,
Milton, Pa. 17847
1919
Miss CathClass Representative:
erine A. Reimard, 335 Jefferson St.,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Esther
eran
Reichart
now
is
(Mrs.
living
Home, formerly
Hotel. 143 West
ton. Pa. 18291
burg, Pa. 17815
38
Marion Watkins (Mrs. T. H. Evans)
East Trenton Avenue. Morrisville,
Pa. 19067, is retiring at the close of
the present school year.
1924
Represtnative:
Edward F.
Class
Avenue,
Schuyler, 236 West Ridge
Bloombsurg, Pa. 17815
Edward F. Schuyler, former editor
Morning Press, whose reof The
tirement severed his record coverage of Columbia County’s affairs
and courts, was honored by those
who have been intimately associated with him in that aspect of his
newspaper
career.
County
offiemployees
and
courthouse
cials.
county attorneys turned out for the
dinner event at Hotel Magee and presented Schuyler and his wife, Florence. with gifts to mark the occassion.
1918
Clair
Representative:
J.
Class
Patterson, 315 West Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Schaffer)
Mrs. Raymond P. Kashner, 125 Forrest Road, Sherwood Village, Blooms-
Broad
Llewellyn
in
the Luth-
the
Altamont
Street, Hazle-
Rhoda Robbins Shedd lives in Carson City, Nevada. Her husband is a
mining engineer.
Doris Morse (Mrs. D. F. Aldrich),
Pa. 18825
Representative:
Leroy W.
Road
3117
Old Berwick
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Mrs.
Pearl
Radel Bickel, 909 Masser Street, Sunbury. Pa. 17801
Adeline
Burgess,
Camp Ground
Road,
Carverton.
Wyoming, Pa.,
18644, has retired from teaching first
grade in the Trucksville Elementary
Class
Representative:
School.
1926
Marvin M.
Class Representative:
Rloss. R. D. 2. Wapwallopen, Pa. 18660
Margaret E. Lambert, 245 Hale St..
Brunswick. N.
J. 08902, will retire
after forty-two years of
Mrs. Lambert is also a
teaching.
member of the class of 1943.
1927
1.
1970,
Representative: Mrs. Ralph
Davenport (Verna Medley), 16
Ransom Street, Plymouth, Pa. 18651
Class
1921
Mrs. Harry
Cole, 100 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg,
G.
Pa.
1928
East Trenton
38
Avenue, Morrisville, Pa.. 19067. is retiring from teaching in the Elementary Grades in Morrisville, where
teaching
she has spent her entire
career.
1929
Class Representatives: Mrs. (Elsie
Lebo) Nelson Stauffer, 88 John St.,
Kingston, Pa. 18704. (Arline Frantz)
Mrs. James Wertman, 20 Parish
Street, Dallas, Pa. 17612
Class Representative:
17815
Myrlyn T. Shafer, 1432 South Main
Wilkes-Barre, Pa., 18702, retired
in 1968. At the time of his retirement
the
at
he was Assistant Principal
St.,
Hanover Township High School, and
Administrator
of
the
Penn
State
Evening School.
Elmer
Mildred Downing
(Mrs.
Major), 106 Davis Street, Trucksville,
Pa., 18708, is a substitute teacher in
the Dallas Area Schools.
Helen Eisenhower (Mrs. H. R. Kocher), recently moved to 34 Underwood Road, Montville, N. J. 07045
Elsie Maust (Mrs. William D. Kelley), is living at 6811
Glenmont Road,
Falls Church, Va. 22042
Warren L. Fisher, superintendent
Bloomsburg Area School District,
on June 30.
Fisher,
Supt.
who replaced J. Claire Patterson as
of
retired
superintendent, has been associated
with the Bloomsburg School District
as a mathematics teacher and administrator for
more than a quarter
of a
century.
1922
Class
Representative:
Edna S.
Harter, R. D. 1, Nescopeck, Pa. 18623
JULY,
1970
1931
James B,
Representative:
Class
Davis, 333 East Marble Street, Mechanicsburg, Pa. 17055
1933
Miss Lois
Representative:
Street,
644
East Third
Lawson,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1934
Esther
Representative:
Evans McFadden (Mrs. Joseph), 154
East Fifth Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
Class
17815
Lois
Watkins,
1930
Class
Representatives:
and Margaret Swartz
1935
Luther W.
Bitler, 117 State
Street, Millville, Pa. 17846
Elfed H. Jones, retired elementary
supervising principal of the Central
Columbia schools, has been appointed as district manager of the 1970
Census of Population and Housing in
the Bloomsburg area, according to
an announcement by Director John
G. Gibson of the Census
Bureau’s
Regional Office in Philadelphia.
Born in Nanticoke, he was graduated from Nanticoke High School. He
holds a Bachelor of Science degree
from
State
Teachers
College,
Reed,
I.
William
East 4th Street, Blooms-
Representative:
Class
1924
July
Class
Creasy,
sociation.
lives in Jackson,
New
1920
Bloomsburg, and a Master in Education from New York University with
sixty credits toward Doctorate. Jones
has served as head coach, teacher
and principal in Pennsylvania schools
and colleges for thirty-nine years.
Over the years he has been active
in church, school and hospital work,
Boy Scouts, United Fund and Rotary.
He is past president of the Luzerne
County Board of the Bloomsburg State
Teachers College Alumni Association
and the Wilkes-Barre Education As-
151
burg, Pa. 17815
Elmer
McKechnie, superintendent
Berwick Area School District
since 1956. has announced his retireof the
ment
effective
July
1.
In
a
letter
which he read at the session of the
Berwick Board of Education, McKechnie said he is retiring in order to devote time to travel and writing. He
has been a teacher and administrator
in the Berwick system for 33 years.
Board President Dan DeFinnis lauded McKechnie as a “dynamic and
and
hard-working superintendent”
speaking in behalf of board members
said they were well pleased with his
work.
1936
Kathryn
Representatives:
Vanauker (Mrs. Nicholas Moreth) 34
Class
Linden Road, Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey 07423. Co-Chairmen: Ruth Wagner (Mrs. Lawrence Le Grande) 126
Oak Street, Hazleton, Pa. 18201 and
Mary Jane Fin (Mrs. Frederick McCutcheon) Maple Avenue, Conyngham,
Pa. 18219
1937
Class Representatives: Mr. and Mrs.
Earl A. Gehrig, 110 Robin Lane, Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
William E. Zeiss and his wife Betty,
R. D. 2, Clarks Summit, have three
daughters, two of whom are Bloomsburg State graduates, and have had
Since graduating
32 foster children.
from Bloomsburg he has obtained a
Master’s Degree from Bucknell University.
He has been very active in
activities of the Pennsylvania State
he
Education Association, where
served as a member of the Retire-
ment Problems committee,
Constitu-
committee, president of
the Department of Classroom Teachers, and is
currently
serving
his
tion Revision
fourth term as chairman of the PSEA
Resolutions committee.
He is also
serving his second year as Northeast
Page nine
Regional Director of the Association
Classroom Teachers of the National Education Association repre-
of
senting
all
Committee
from
states
Washington, D.
of
Maine
to
on the Executive
C.,
National
the
Associa-
tion.
He has been very active in civic
and community activities besides operating a farm. He teaches seventh
and
eighth grade remedial
World
History in the Abington Heights Junior High School, Clarks Summit, Pa.
19.38
Class Representative: Paul G. Mar710
tin,
East Main Street,
Blooms-
burg, Pa. 17815
1939
Class
Representative:
Willard A.
Christian, Jr., 803 Logue Street, Williamsport, Pa. 17701
1940
Class Representative:
Clayton H.
Hinkel, 224 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg. Pa. 17815
Dorothy Derr Tilson lives at 435 W.
119th St., New York, N. Y. 10027
1941
Class Representative: Dr. C. Stuart Edwards, R. D. 4, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
1942
Class Representative: Mrs. Ralph
Zimmerman
II.
Kready
(Jean
Noll),
Millersville,
Avenue,
165
Pa.
17551
Merrill A. Deitrich has been elected
of the National Bank of
Royal Oak, Michigan.
Deitrich,
a
Certified Public Accountant for 20
years, is an executive with Comae
chairman
Co.,
Birmingham,
Michigan-based
Aianagement company, with responsi-
for controllership services for
firm’s 22 banking organizations.
He has been associated with Comae
since April, 1968.
Earlier he was employed for 18
bility
the
Company and a
Ford Motor Credit Company.
His last position with Ford
Motor Comapny was regional manager for Latin America and the Paciyears by Ford Motor
subsidiary.
area.
Deitrich earned a graduate degree
in business administration from
the
Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, in Philadelphia.
He is chairman of the executive
committee and a director of Public
National Bank, Washington D. C., and
a member of American Institute of
Certified Public Accountants and the
Michigan Association of Certified
Public Accountants.
fic
1946
Representative:
Anastasia
Pappas (Mrs. John Trowbridge), 102
W. Mahoning Street, Danville, Pa.
17821.
Charles
Co-chairman: Mrs.
W. Creasy (Jacqueline Shaffer), R.
D. 1, Catawissa, Pa. 17820
Class
Class
A.
253 Iron
17815
Mrs. RayKatcrman),
Bloomsburg,
Pa.
Representative:
Algatt (Betty
Street,
Class
1951
Representative:
Robert L.
Bunge, 12 West Park Street. Carroll
Park, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1948
Class
Representative:
Harry G.
John, Jr., 425 Iron Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Dr. John F. Magill, Jr., serving as
assistant
superintendent
the
of
Bloomsburg Area School District, has
been unanimously named to the chief
administration post, effective July 1,
1970.
Dr. Magill was born in Sugarloaf and is a graduate of Bloomsburg
State College and Pennsylvania State
University where he received his Doc-
Education degree in 1965.
He and Mrs. Magill are parents of
tor of
five children, the oldest now teaching
in Perry County, two in college, and
two in public schools.
a member of the PSEA, the
Blain Fire Company, American Legion Post 177, Newport; The Airborne
He
is
Association, The Military Order of
the Purple Heart, and a member of
Col. V. Porter Adams Post 7463, New
Bloomfield. Dr. Magill served in the
European Theatre in the Paratroops,
and was wounded in action.
He is listed in the 1970 edition of
“Creative and Successful Personalities of the World,” American edition.
1949
Class Representative: Richard E.
Grimes, 1723 Fulton St., Harrisburg,
Pa. 17102
John M. Purcell, 16 Walland Ave.,
Farmingdale, N. Y., 11735, is acting
President of the State University Agricultural and Technical College, at
Farmingdale, Long Island. The college has a day and evening enrollment of over 10,000. Mr. Purcell has
a professional diploma from Columbia,
and is working for his Doctor’s degree
at the same institution. He has been
a member of the staff at Farming
dale since 1952.
1950
Class Representative: Willis Swales,
9 Raven Road, Montvale, N. J. 07645
Dr. Max Cooley, 404 Sunset Lane,
Shippensburg, Pa., has been appoint-
1945
Class Representative: Mary
Lou
John, 257 W. 11th St., Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
Page
ten
Class Representative:
Dr. Russell
C. Davis, Jr., Sullivan County Community College, South Fallsburgh, N.
Y. 12779
Mrs.
Mary Ann Alarcon Donnelly
now
living at 6206 Inwood Street,
Cheverly, Maryland 20785
is
1952
Class
Representative:
Galinski, 90
lestown, Pa.
Tower
Hill
Francis B.
Road, Doy-
18901
1953
Class Representative: John S. Scrimgeour, 411 East 3rd Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1954
Class
Jacobs,
2
Representative:
William
J.
Tremont Annex Apartments,
West Main Strreet, Lansdale, Pa.
19446
Sheldon Erwine, 1927
Corinthian
Avenue, Abington, Pa., 19001, is Principal of the Glenside Weldon Junior
High School, Glenside, Pa.
(Boyle)
Patricia
Hollingsworth,
37
East Lincoln Avenue. Gettysburg, Pa.
17352, recently received her Certificate of Clinical Competance from the
American Speech and Hearing Association.
She is currently assigned
as Coordinator of Speech and Hearing Services for
tysburg, Pa.
Adams
County, Get-
1955
Class
inger,
18618
Representative: Arnold GarR. D. 1, Harveys Lake, Pa.
1956
Class Representative: Dr. William
Bitner III, 33 Lincoln Avenue, Glen
12801
Falls, N. Y.
1957
William J.
Representative:
Class
Pohutski, 554 Oakridge Drive, North
Plainfield. N. J. 07606
1958
Class
Representative:
Hargreaves,
37
Maymond
Dell Road, Stanhope,
N. J. 07874
1959
Class Representative:
William F.
Swisher, Box 245, Cincinnatus, N. Y.
13040
vice president and
director
of
marketing of Ortho Diagnostics with
John E. Nagle, Reading Education
Advisor, Bureau of General and Academic Education, State Department
of Education, spoke on “OrganizaSecondtion and Administration of
ary Reading Programs” at the Sixth
Annual Reading Conference held at
Bloomsburg State College March 13
offices at Raritan, N. J.
and
ed Dean of Continuing Education at
Shippensburg State College. He will
continue as Director of Business Education.
James H. Boyle has been promoted
to
Ortho Diagnostics
1944
Class Representative: Mrs. (Poletime Comuntzis) Carl Demetripopoulos, Friar and Robin Lancs, Sherwood
Cillage, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
award offered by the Company.
1947
1943
mond
was formed in 1960. Promoted to national sales manager in 1966, he was
elected to the Board of Directors two
years later. He was first to receive
the Ortho Distinguished Contribution
Award and has earned every sales
is
manufacturer
quality laboratory reagents for
blood typing, blood coagulation testing, pregnancy testing, as well as speof
tests for infectious mononucleoand sickle cell anemia.
Boyle joined ORTHO in 1951 and
cific
sis
became
manwhen it
the first divisional sales
ager of Ortho Diagnostics
14.
After
attending
Allentown
High
School, Nagle received his Bachelor
of Science degree in education from
Bloomsburg State College where he
majored in English and social studies.
His Master of Education degree
m reading psychology was earned at
Temple University, where he is cur
rently a candidate at that institution
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
for his
Doctor of Education degree
in
reading psychology.
In addition to being a teacher and
native
his
a reading consultant in
school district at Allentown, from the
period 1953 through 1968 Nagle also
served as developmental reading instructor at Lehigh University, as an
off-campus faculty member of The
Pennsylvania State University, as an
at
evening school faculty member
Loyola College, and as an electronics
technician with the United States
Marine Corps.
Jay E. Long, 218 West Frederick
Pa. 17551, beMillersville,
ginning in September, will be a parttime instructor and part-time student
Seminary. Clarks
at Baptist Bible
Summit, Pa., where he will be working on his degree in theology in preparation for the ministry. He has reStreet,
signed his position as chairman of the
of
department
business education
Penn Manor High School. Millersville,
and will have completed eleven years
of public school teaching.
1960
Class Representative: James J.
Peek, 100 Hull Road, Madison, Conn.
06443
1961
Representative:
Edwin C.
Class
Kuser, R. D. 1, Box 145-C, Bechtelsville. Pa. 19505
Charles B. Pomicter, Director of
Special Education for the Board of
Services,
Cooperative
Educational
Oswego County, New York, has developed a unique in-service teacher
training
program which received
publicity in “The Pointer”, an international magazine for teachers and
parents of the mentally retarded. His
wife, the former Ruth Morgan ’62, is
busy caring for their son, John Michael.
The Pomicters are living at R.
D. 2, Lacona, New York. 13083
1962
Class
Representative:
Richard
Lloyd, 6 Farragut Dr., Piscataway,
N. J. 18854
John J. Yastichock is administrator
charge of elementary education
for the Central Columbia School Disin
trict.
A
native
is
Minersville,
County. Yastichock
Sch-
married
to the former Marion Matthews. They
have three children.
They reside
on Bloomsburg R. D. 3.
uylkill
is
Yastichock served four years in
U. S. Air Force and began his
undergraduate studies
Florida
at
State University while in the service.
He received a Master’s Degree from
BSC and has done further graduate
work with Temple University.
He began his teaching career in
Fairfield
School District,
Adams
County, and come to the Central Columbia School System where he worked from 1962-68. In 1968, he assumed
the position as a supervisor for Montgomery County School System where
he served until January 2, 1970.
The new administrator served as
the
president
of
Montgomery
Chapter of Council for
JULY,
1970
County
Exceptional
Children in 1969; member of advisory
board, Rivercrest School for the Mentally Retarded, Mont Clair, 1968-69;
president of Central Columbia Teachers Association, 1965-67 Board of Directors Columbia County Association
for
Retarded
Children
(PARC),
1966-68, and member of Middle Atlantic States Evaluation Team for Williamsport High School in 1967.
The current issue of the Drew
University Magazine carries an article by Dr. James J. Nagle. He is an
Assistant Professor of Zoology and
Botany at Drew with his doctorate
from North Carolina State. His article is concerned with the foundation
course in Biology and bears the title
“New Life for the Science of Life.”
Thomas
L.
Little,
16
York Road,
Delaware,
Deerhurst, Wilmington,
19801, is President of the Investment
Delaware,
Annuity Corporation of
with Executive offices located at 610
Mr.
Delaware Avenue, Wilmington.
Little is also a member of the Delaware House of Representatives, National Officer of the Young Republicans, manager of the Attorney General campaign in Delaware and Instructor of Political Science at Wilmington College. His wife is the former Kay Gaglione, a member of the
class of 1961.
1963
Representative:
Pat Biehl
Class
(Mrs. Ronald Cranford) R. D. 1, 77
Hawthorne Ave., Boyertown, Pa. 19512
Professor Elhannan Keller, assistant professor of chemistry at Trenton State College, has been awarded
a grant to participate in the Louisiana State University Ph.D. program
for college teachers this summer.
The program is aided by the NatFoundation-supported
ional
Sciejice
Research Participation Program and
Institute.
Professor Keller was one
of 40 selected from more than 200 apThis is the third consecuplicants.
tive grant that he has received to
program.
participate in the L.S.U.
Professor Keller holds a bachelor of
science degree from
Bloomsburg
State College and a master of arts
degree from Trenton State .He resides at Penn Park Apartment, Morris ville.
Nancy
(Mrs. Victor Castellani). is living at R. D. 3, Clarks
Summit. Pa. 18411. She is the mother
of tw in daughters, Vikki and Shelly,
four years of age.
Nancy teaches
first grade in the Abington Heights
School District, Clarks Summit, Pa.
J.
Zeiss
T
1964
Earnest R.
Gaston Avenue, Raritan, N.
Representative:
Class
Shuba,
1
08869
Daniels, whose home address
is 607 Bates
Street, Scranton, Pa.,
18509, has been appointed the Student
Personnel staff at the Shippensburg
State College.
J.
Amy
Judy E. Reitz (Mrs. Samuel R.
Dunkelberger) reports her new address as R. D. 1, Box 181, Sunbury,
Pa.
Captain Joseph P. Mockartes is
stationed at Mountain Home Air Force
Base, Idaho. He is in charge of the
TFS Munitions Branch, and has
spent one year in France and tw'o in
Germany with the Air Force.
417
1965
Class Representative: Carl P. Sheran, 59 Vreeland Ave., Bloomingdale,
N. J. 07403
Robert A. Green, 346 Crest Drive,
Fullerton, Pa. 18052, has been awarded a Master of Arts degree from
Temple University. He is the Acting
Supervisor of Itinerant Programs and
Class for the Hard of Hearing, and
Director of the Gifted Program in
Northampton County Public Schools,
Nazareth, Pa.
Barbara Twitmire Smith and Harold W. Smith live at 801 Finch Drive,
Cornu-ells Heights, Pa.
Their son,
Erik, was born October 31, 1969. Harold is now an industrial engineer with
American Sugar Co., Philadelphia.
They had previously been at Fort
Dix. N. J. for two years.
Henry E. Fetterman is a member
Marple Newtown
of the faculty of the
Schools, Newtowm Square, Pa. 19073.
He ur as recently the producer-director
of
of the High School
production
“Annie Get Your Gun.”
Joseph R. Koons has received the
degree of Master of Social
Work,
with a concentration in Community
Organization and Planning, from Virginia
Common wealth
University,
Richmond, Virginia.
A son, Philip, Jr., was born to Mr.
and Mrs. Philip M. Thomas, 532 RurAvenue, Williamsport, Pa.,
al
on
Sunday, March 29, 1970.
The newcomer has a four year old sister, Rebecca Lynn.
Donald E. Stanko, Box 212-T, R. D.
Kingston, N. Y., 12401, has been
promoted to Associate Systems Anal4,
yst at the IBM Corporation’s Manufacturing Division plant in Kingston.
1966
Class Representative:
Anthony J.
Cerza, 180 Mason Street, Exeter, Pa.
18643
Karen M. Zeiss (Mrs. E. N. Hesbacker, Jr.), resides at 5925 Green
St., Philadelphia, Pa.
She is employed as a secretary at the General
Electric Aerospace Center, King of
Prussia, Pa.
Miss Karen Marie Gates, 325 East
Water street, Shamokin, was named
Reading Supervisor of the Southern
Columbia Area Schools. Miss Gates
received her Bachelor of Science Degree in elementary education to College Misericordia, Dallas,
and her
Master
of Education at Bloomsburg
State College.
She holds the certificate “Reading Specialist” issued by
the Department of Education in Harrisburg, and has taken work beyond
her Master’s Degree at the University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania State
Page eleven
Bloomsburg
and
University,
College.
State
ARE YOU EMPLOYED BY A
WEDDINGS
CORPORATION?
We have on file
1967
Representative: R. Thomas
Lemon, Warwick Apt. 3-D, Bel Air,
Class
Md. 21014
Mr. and Mrs. Randall T. Rissinger’s address: 442 Fort Ross Avenue,
Lititz, Pa. 17543. Mr. Ressinger is
teaching in the Warwick High School,
Lititz.
Mrs. Rissinger is the former
Jeanatte Zack, of Gowen City. The
Ressingers have a son, Troy.
1967
Irene D. Davis, Berwick, and Dale
H. Segel, Warfordsburg. Mrs. Segel
is teaching and her husband is an insurance adjuster for Federal Mutual
Insurance Co.
Address: Aurora R.
D. 1, West Virginia.
1968
named
Keller,
Bloomsburg,
Ruth
and Theodore Luchak, Berwick.
Barbara Kay Yale and Michael E.
Downs. Mr. Downs is a faculty member of Susquehanna Community High
trollers
School.
joined Aetna in 1968 at
Harrisburg
and was named supervisor
in 1969.
Marian Harris and David A. Eisenhower. Mrs. Eisenhower is Spanish
teacher at Liberty High School, Bethlehem. Her husband is employed by
Terry L. Rhinesmith
has
been
superintendent in the field condepartment at the Boston,
Mass., casualty and surety division
office of Aetna Life & Casualty. He
lives
at 8
Holly
Ave.,
He
Cambridge,
Mass. 02138
Betty
Bethlehem
Steel.
1969
1968
Class Representative: Thomas W.
Free, R. D. 1, Box 34, Kintnerville,
Pa. 18930
Kenneth D. Weaver, Watsontown,
left recently for naval service.
He
taught school for a year at Susquenita High School at Duncannon and
had been a part-time employe of
Jasper Woll Products Company at
Watsontown.
1969
Class
Represenative:
Frank J.
Mastrivanni,
1018
Cooper
Street,
Scranton, Pa. 18508
Karen Pearson Thomas reports her
address as 63 S.
Landon Avenue,
Kingston, Pa.
Her husband is in
the service.
1970
Class
Representative:
John W.
Dalfovo, 61 Dean
Street,
Beaver
Meadows, Pa.
18216
Mrs. Dolores Politza Higgins lives
at 504 Washington Street, Freeland,
Pa. 18224
The Alumnin Association has received a check for $1000, which is a
bequest provided for in the will of
Samuel L. Bredbenner, Main
Township, Columbia County. The income from this bequest will be used
the late
Graham and Ray
T. Hock,
Mr. Hock teaches physics at
Pennsbury Senior High School.
Karen L. Pearson and Lt. Randall
Mrs. Thomas
F. Thomas, USAF.
taught mathematics at Centennial
School District, Warminster. Her husband is a student navigator with the
USAF, Mather AFB, Calif.
Dianne K. Frey and Stephen J.
Wright. Mrs. Wright teaches second
grade at Alexandria township school
Her husband is a computer operator
The
at Butcher and Sherrod, Inc.
Gail
Jr.
Bloomsburg
Civic
Music Association were introduced to
the work of a true master craftsman
of
Monday evening, March 16 in the
concert presented in Haas auditorium
by Virgil Fox, foremost virtuoso of
the organ.
Noted throughout the world for the
new dimensions he has given the instrument, Fox brought the audience to
its feet twice in resounding ovations.
The Second East Central Pennsylvania College Biology Teachers Conference was
held
Bloomsburg
at
State College on March 7 and 8. Biologists
from
forty
community
col-
leges and universities within a radium
of seventy-five miles of Bloomsburg
met to discuss various problems of
mutual concern
tion.
Page twelve
in
biological
educa
which you are employed is on our list.
Please make your gifts payable to
the Alumni Loyalty Fund.
Two graduate
awarded
fellowships have been
to the
Department
of
Com-
munication Disorders at Bloomsburg
State College by the U. S. Office of
Education for 1970-71.
Those fellowships carry stipends of
$2,200, a waiver of tuition and fees
and an allowance of $600 per dependent to enable recipients to carry full
time graduate study during the academic year. Applicants should have
an undergraduate major in Communication Disorders or Speech Correction, as this curriculum was formerly
called, and should be qualified for acceptance in the Division of Graduate
Studies.
|
Warren
couple resides in Philadelphia.
Class Representative: John M. Dalfovo,
61
Dean
Street,
Beaver Mead-
ows, Pa. 18216. (Class President).
Erwin, a
Dr. Forrest A.
member
of the faculty of the Bloomsburg State
College in the twenties when the local
institution was the Bloomsburg State
Normal
the
New
City,
School, has been honored by
Jersey State College, Jersey
which named
their
new
two
million dollar library for him.
a past president of the
college and is the current honorary
Dr. Irwin
is
treasurer and was active in obtaining
the funds for the
new
Johnson has been serving
of Elefor
the
of the 1939-1970 col-
mentary Education
second semester
Division
at
BSC
lege year.
Johnson
Johnson,
and
is
is
who
replacing Dr. Royce O.
is on sabbatical leave
visiting a
number
of
elemen-
tary schools throughout various parts
of the United States.
Johnson was appointed to the BSC
faculty in September of 1952 as a staff
member of the Benjamin Franklin
School and
has been a supervisor of student teachers of the Elementary Education
Division for a number of years.
Elementary Laboratory
library.
The Society of Physics Students of
Bloomsburg State College installed
a charter group into Sigma Pi Sigma.
National Honorary society in Physics.
The installation was part of an all
day program of activities designed
for both the Bloomsburg college and
local
I.
acting director,
as
1970
for scholarships.
Members
a list of 384 corporations which match gifts to Colleges
and Universities made by their emIf you are employed by a
ployees.
corporation we suggest that you do
one of two things:
Check with the corporation by
1.
which you are employed to see if
they have such a policy.
2. Write to us at the Alumni Ofby
corporation
if the
fice to see
professor
Dr. George D. Spache.
1964—
University of Florida, was
emeritus,
1965—
the principal speaker at the general
session of the Sixth Annual Reading
Conference held at Bloomsburg State
College on March 13 and 14.
ADDRESSES WANTED
communities.
Advice to save
from
students
“drowning in a sea of mathematics”
was given an estimated 300 elementary teachers at a highly successful
Science and Mathematics Conference
at BSC on April 11.
Conference chairman
Dr. Donald
Vannan and Richard Donald announcel plans to hold another conference
next spring.
Speaking were Dr. Lola May. mathematics consultant,
Winnetko, 111.,
public schools and Dr. Glenn Blough,
University of Maryland.
1968— Victoria A. Mikell.
1953 Robert Stevenson
1952 John Peffer
Lt. John J. Owens
Barbara Wendell
1915 Alma Baer (Mrs. John Huff-
—
—
—
1968 — Virginia Styer Moore
1915 — Ramon Seller Roldman
man)
1968— Patricia A. Koerner
1964— Judy Reitz (Mrs. Samuel R.
Dunkelberger)
1968
— Victoria
—
A.
Mikell
1967—Sylvia M. Plotts
1901 Genevieve Burns
TIIE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
RESOLUTION
The
April 25.
Whereas:
following resolution was adopted
It
was approved by
Dr. Robert
Bloomsburg
J.
a
at the meeting held on Saturday,
unanimous standing vote.
Nossen was formally inaugurated as President
College on April 18, 1970, and
State
of
1
Whereas:
Dr. Nossen brings with him a wealth of experience as an educator and administrator, and
Whereas:
He was
Whereas:
The members
selected for his high position by a committee composed
of students, faculty, and trustees, confirmed by the Board of
Trustees, an recommended to the Governor of the Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania for appointment, and
of
the
Alumni Association
of
Bloomsburg State
and
College reflect with nostalgia on their days as students
are becoming increasingly aware of the unrest pervading college
campuses, and recognize that constructive criticism, peaceful
the
demonstrations, and legislative changes may contribute to
growth of a great
Whereas:
The members
Whereas:
The
institution,
and
of the Alumni Association view with concern the
disruptive forces which have torn some campuses asunder, and
said Association has as
its
primary objective the support of
alma mater in developing a dynamic educational program and
that such a program be the first and common responsibility of all
its
members
Be
it
of the college
community
resolved, therefore, that the Board of Directors and members of the Alumni
Association along with all graduates of Bloomsburg State College
support President Nossen and the Board of Trustees in their efforts to develop and implement policies and procedures which
will coordinate the revision and expansion of the program of
instruction, the recruitment and retention of dedicated and able
faculty members, the construction and maintenance of necessary'
physical plant facilities, and the relationships and activities of
members of the college community in order that each student
may achieve his greatest potential growth and educational
development, and
Be
it
further resolved that alumni, individually and collectively, express their
support by communicating their feelings in writing to President
Nossen, and
Be
it
be approved at the annual meeting
Bloomsburg State College on April 18, 1970, and
minutes of the meeting and be published in the next issue
the B.S.C. Alumni Quarterly.
also resolved that this resolution
Signed:
The Committee
Elwood Wagner, Chairman
Mrs. Charlotte McKechnie
Mrs. Grace Conner
Boyd
F.
Buckingham
of
of
Loyalty Fund
OCTOBER
Amt.
No.
Yr.
Others
1892
1896
1901
1902
1905
1906
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1923
1110.00
3
3.00
10.00
3.00
25.00
55.25
25.00
49.00
22.00
179.00
123.00
94.00
53.00
93.00
10.00
140.00
25.00
70.00
60.00
89.00
111.00
52.00
1
1
2
1
7
3
9
3
6
20
8
6
9
1
17
5
10
5
12
14
7
7
12
50.00
78.00
1,
1969
Fourth Year
- APRIL
No.
Yr.
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
13
20
7
9
13
11
32
7
11
5
6
7
2
5
7
2
7
5
13
9
5
3
4
5
16,
Amt.
90.00
117.00
57.00
89.00
85.00
47.50
196.75
60.00
97.50
35.00
82.00
55.00
10.00
80.00
50.00
15.00
33.50
52.00
133.00
52.50
60.00
17.00
40.00
30.00
1970
No.
Yr.
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1982
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
6
12
16
7
6
7
3
9
7
12
11
9
17
6
13
17
13
32
31
36
35
38
4
TO BE DETACHED, FILLED OUT, AND RETURNED
Signature
Name
while in college
Address
(street)
Zip Code
(town)
If
above address
is
new check here
Amount
Year of graduation
Mail checks to Alumni Office, Box 31, B.S.C.
insure tax deductions, make checks payable to
To
B. S. C.
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Amt.
98.91
115.00
121.00
95.00
35.00
82.00
15.00
65.00
38.00
94.00
81.00
46.00
110.00
40.00
114.00
118.00
72.50
178.00
145.00
171.50
224.00
198.50
11.00
Final plans have been completed lor a new Administration Building at Blocmsburg State College. When completed
an estimated cost of $1,350,000, the structure will provide offices, conference rooms, and work areas for the
college business office, members of the Dean of Student’s staff, the Dean of Instruction’s staff, college duplicating
at
services, college mailing
ment.
room and
With the exception
post office, and complete
facilities
of the large storage area, the building will
for the Purchasing and Receiving
be completely air conditioned.
Depart-
THE PRESIDENT’S PAGE
The summer months have been particularly full ones.
Once again, the
college offered three sessions, and enrollment in each continued to increase
over previous sessions. In addition, the college welcomed about 250 students
representing the Pennsylvania Association of Farm Cooperatives, two groups
from abroad representing the Experiment in International Living, and four
groups of incoming Freshmen, with their parents.
Summer sessions provide an excellent opportunity for acceleration, for
make-up, and for enrichment. Starting this year, each offering is calculated
to meet a specific student need, and is being integrated into a two-year plan
Insofar as is possible and feasible, professors
of courses for each department.
from other campuses are brought in for these sessions to provide a greater
breadth of learning experience.
Once again, the college offered a wide range of summer lectures and artists.
Of special significance was the appearance in July of Miss Lynn Bari in a
production of The Little Foxes, and of David Bimey in Hamlet. These, like
productions of previous summers, were directed bv a member of the college
faculty and, except for the lead, utilized college players.
The Farm group spent four days on campus in early July. Highly select
ed, highly motivated, these young people were capable of restoring anyone’s
Particularly concerned with
faith in our public schools and in our students.
cooperation, they demonstrated the pleasures such a group can derive from
learning together, working together, singing together, and losing themselves
completely in an array of activities. Ah who had any association with this
group hope that the organization will return to the Bloomsburg campus in
subsequent years.
Bloomsburg State College has become increasingly concerned with International Education, and, therefore, particularly welcomed the first two foreign
groups to visit the campus through the Experiment in International Living.
The initial group included eleven students and teachers from Japan; the second,
a group of thirteen teachers from Germany.
Each attended classes of their
choice, visited a number of faculty homes, and lived with and studied with
regular Bloomsburg students.
All reports verified the success of the program
both for the visitors and for our own campus community.
And, finally, the college initiated this year Freshmen Summer Orientation.
Replacing the usual rather hectic and certainly crowded, traditional fall Orieri
cation, students and their parents were invited to the campus for a three-day
period in groups of about 250. They were addressed by members of the Administrative staff and faculty, engaged in a number of activities, underwent the
usual testing, and were assisted in preparing their fall schedules.
Special
programs were held for the parents with emphasis upon student personnel
services.
The college has announced its new Administrative Reorganization. Following a year of study, a plan has now been developed which will provide a reorganization of responsibilities, the development of new titles, and a ffexibilitx
which should serve the college well during the coming years of expansion and
development. Further details will be carried in a future issue of the Quarterlv
o
Among
the
new programs
o
o
for the
o
fall
o
will
o
o
be one
in
Medical Technolog\
offered in connection with the Geisinger Medical Center.
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
Although the 1970-71 budget year will be a particularly tight one, the
college, nevertheless, will welcome approximately 4,000 students to the campus.
These students, as I am sure you have already heard, will be paying an additional
$200.00 per year in fee costs.
o
o
o
o
o
o
The much discussed Bloomsburg Foundation
o
is
now becoming
a reality.
Formally approved through all legal channels, the final proposal was presented
to the Board of
rnstces at their July meeting.
The Foundation will enable
die college to engage in meaningful educational projects which cannot or should
not be supported by state funds.
Again, in a later issue, we will provide
further details about the Foundation and about its relationship to the total
I
college operation.
524 IN
will have your achievements
you have a world of sufficient order
in which to live— if you preserve the
basic freedoms you have inherited—
pay and pay, in money and
if you
self, for schools, roads and hospitals
against
fight
—if you continue to
tyranny and hatred— if you hold as
inviolate the doctrine that men and
countries can survive and develop
only under law.”
This was the challenge presented
by Dr. Robert J. Nossen, president,
“You
if
College’s
State
during Bloomsburg
commencement convocation held at
the Bloomsburg fairgrounds.
There were fifty-three candidates
for the Bachelor of Arts Degree. 475
for bachelor of Science Degree, nineteen for Master of Education Degree,
and one for a Master of Arts Degree.
Participating in the commencement
program were: invocation, Father
Bernard H. Petrina. Catholic campus
minister: presentation of candidates.
John A. Hoch, dean of instruction;
Dr.
Nossen:
conferral of degrees,
awarding of degrees. Edgar A. Fenstermacher, of the Board of Trustees,
assisted by Edson J. Drake, director,
arts and sciences: Emory W. Rarig.
acting director of elementary education: C. Stuart Edwards, director of
secondary education, and William L.
Jones, director of special education.
The response for the class of 1970
was given by John M. Dalfovo, president. The benediction was offered by
the Rev. Vincent R. Siciliano, First
English Baptist Church.
Taking as his theme “It’s Your
Move,” Dr. Nossen stated in part:
“The American Bar Association in
its report of the Commission on Campus Government and Student Dissent,
included the statement ‘freedom of
dissent, freedom from disorder.’ We
are just now completing a spring that
has seen dissent, intensive dissent, unfortunately erupting in various forms
and degrees of disorder.
We have
been through not only a struggle to
establish a philosophy or ideology, but
a constant threat of or attempt to
force confrontation.
We have read
or received a super-abundance of
analysis or information, and
have
emerged, I am sure, with about the
same amount of confusion.
Concerned With Future
“But I’m not talking this afternoon
about freedoms or causes or necessary changes. I’m concerned simply
—
with prospects for survival my survival and yours, but especially yours,
because the coming several decades
belong to you, not me; the survival of
higher education, not to protect me
or to educate my children, but you
and your children; the survival of
this country, this land which, despite
all of its problems,
represents the
best
achievement
of
economic
strength, of personal hope and personal freedom, of idealism towards a
better world for the threatened and
SEPTEMBER,
American education
GRADUATING CLASS
1970
short
How
the
the oppressed everywhere, that
world has yet known. I am concerned
not for my economic security or personal safety, but for yours and for
that of your childlren.
"This is a time rather to ask you,
graduating in 1970, moving into ocdecupations which will inevitably
mand from you leadership on a variety of boards, in economic organizations, in government, in business and
industry what are you going to do
with your world? Despite the repeated claims of your disaffection, what
are you going to do now for America?
Because you have reached not a
someday in the future, but a now, and
—
—
your move!
“At a speech at Kent State University several weeks ago, Jerry Rubin
said, ‘Until you people are prepared
to kill your parents, you aren’t ready
it’s
Well,
you are already parents, and
of you will be before too long.
for
the
some
revolution.’
of
most
How
are you going to handle this situation?
It’s Your Move
“Mr. Rubin said further, ‘The
American school system will be end-
ed in two years.
We are going to
bring it down.
Quit being students.
Become criminals. We have to disrupt every institution and break every
law.’ So, for most of you, after this
hour you are no longer students. But
what position will you take? What
do you want? What will you stand
It is, indeed, your move.
“I have given and I believe that
most of my generation have assured
your rights, under reason and law, to
dissent, and the full right to work for
changes as you have viewed their
needs, or to review that which should
be subject to review. But a mob,
no matter what the original intent of
those who have organized it and lead
it,
degenerates inevitably into anarchy.
And through anarchy nothing
can be changed, or developed, or improved in this world.
“We, too, had and have our ideals,
and many of my age have given fully
of themselves for their philosophies.
But we had and continue to have, I
believe, ultimate faith in the economic, social and political structure of
this country.
If you lack that faith,
the result will be simple and inevitable; as the country passes over into
your hands, it will be destroyed. It’s
really that simple; if you want to destroy America, you will have full opportunity when those of your generation control it.
“We, too, wanted to improve higher
education when I and my contemporaries were students, and in the years
since. We saw and see inequity, in-
for?
justice, and weaknesses of all kinds.
And, like you, we still work and hope
for what might prove to be at least
a
partial answer.
But you cannot
improve an institution that doesn’t
exist, and if Jerry Rubin is right.
has
two
but
years of possible lead time.
are you going to spend them?
Confidence in Class
I think
you’ll make it.
spite of all our educational
“I think
that,
in
shortcomings, we have given you a
for values and that we have
assured you of something of value
basis
upon which you can build.
“I think, ultimately, you will stand
I
for this country, and defend it.
think you will be proud of this College
and of the American system of education, despite its never-ending need for
improvement.
“I
what
ultimately,
see,
you’ll
of us have been try-
think
it
is
many
Then it’ll be your
ing to tell you.
turn to tell others. It is now, and for
the next few years will continue to
be, your move until the following
generation needs the kind of anlysis
and understanding you’ll be trying
impart
to
to
them.
“The decision you make,
affect not only
all
generations yet to
upon this earth.”
of
us,
have
then, will
but those
their
time
BACCALAUREATE
The Bloomsburg State College baccalaureate service was held Sunday,
May 14 in Haas Auditorium. It was
sponsored by the Community Ministries, a group of nine local congregations banded together to do ecumenical work.
The Rev. Dr. Gustave W. Weber,
president of Susquehanna University,
Selinsgrove, spoke on “The Inevitable Conniption.”
Liturgists for
the
baccalaureate
service were Dr. Robert Nossen, president of Bloomsburg State College;
the Rev. Bernard Petrina, Roman
Catholic College Chaplain, and the
Rev. Craig J. Dorward, pastor of
Church,
Matthew
Lutheran
Bloomsburg, chairman of the service
committee in charge of arrangements.
William Decker, B.M., M.M., head of
the music department, BSC, was the
organist playing “Darwell” by Willan
and “Fugue in G. Major” by Buxtehude.
Miss Beth Powlus, mezzosoprano, sang “Thou Shalt Bring
St.
Them
In.”
A grant of $58,800 has been awarded to Bloomsburg State College in an
educational opportunity allocation to
benefit 107 students.
The fund will
provide for grants ranging from $200
to
$1,000 for
each academic year
of
study up to a miximum of four years
for students of exceptional financial
need who are eligible for the pro-
gram.
BSC
is
to
determine the
re-
cipinets.
Published quarterly by the Alumni Association of the Bloomsburg State College,
Bloomsburg, Penna. 17815.
Second-Class
Postage Paid at Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania.
Send P O D. Form No. 3579 to the AL-
—
UMNI OFFICE, BLOOMSBURG STATE
COLLEGE, BLOOMSBURG, PA. 17815
Page one
3n Mnttoriam
1896
—Stella
Hughes
Irvin
(Mrs.
Davis) Flushing, N. Y.
1903— Ray L. Hawk, Plymouth, Pa.
1916 Olive M. Aucker (Mrs. Hoyt
—
Glaze) Port Trevorton. Pa.
Toomey
1916— Genevieve
Mow-
bray, Norwood. Pa.
'
(Mrs. J.
Kathryn Walbourn
F. 1924—
Laubach) Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
1920— Claire Herman Ruth, West
1919
Nanticoke, Pa.
Kathryn Wolverton Myers
Blanche Horne Zimmerman,
1923
Halifax, Pa.
1925 Mrs.
Pearl
Radel
Bickel,
Sunbury. Pa.
Everyone
1927— Margaret
Everett, Pa.
1933 Anthony
—
ary Harry Edwards, also of Benton,
tell of the need for missionaries and
decided to enter that field.
He was ordained a minister of the
Congregational Church and went to
the Philippines in 1915. He taught at
in
the Union Theological Seminary
Manila and in 1929 he began his literary work with the Moro tribesmen.
Finding the Moros had no written
language, Dr. Laubach adapted the
alphabet into the Maranaw language
and started a folk school to teach
them to read. Within a few months,
there were 50 teachers on the staff.
During the Depression, the project
was threatened by lack of funds. A
Moro chief said, “Literacy is the best
thing that
ever came
Lanao.
to
Crouse
F.
Derrick,
Carroll,
Mount
Carmel, Pa.
1962— Ruth Stine Lindemuth, Catawissa. Pa.
how
in
my
village
who knows
read must teach
someone
else.”
This gave rise to the “Each
One Teach One” program which
spread literacy to an estimated 70
to
million persons.
In addition Dr.
Laubach developed
teaching materials for use
103
in
countries and 312 languages.
Five
biographies were written about him
and he authored fifty-six books.
His
most recent, “Forty Years of the Silent Millions,” was released on June
22
.
He founded Laubach
Literacy, Inc.,
with headquarters in Syracuse. Decorated
by two nations, he was
awarded seven honorary degrees.
From 1941 to 1954, he was missionary-at-large for the National Council
Churches and in addition did literacy work for the United Nations,
Scientific and Cultural Org. (UNESCO), the U. S. State Department, and
the Peace Corps.
Dr. Laubach’s “home church” was
the
Benton
United
Methodist
Church where he was the featured
speaker Sunday June 7 as the congregation marked its centennial year.
Dr. Laubach was a recipient of the
Alumni Distinguished Service Award
of
in 1961.
Dr. Frank C. Laubach
’01
Dr. Frank C. Laubach. Benton native credited with lifting millions from
the morass of illiteracy, died June 13
of
age
ot acute leukemia at the
eighty-five.
unexpectedly
in
Death occurred
Crouse-Irving Memorial Hospital at
In apparent good
Syracuse, N. Y.
health, he had visited in Benton over
the weekend.
The son of the late Dr.
John Britain
and Harriet Derr Laubach, the worldacclaimed educator was a graduate
of Benton high school.
He received
his bachelor’s degree from Princeton
University
in
1909.
In
he was
Theological
1913
Union
graduated from
Seminary and he was awarded
master’s and Ph D. degrees from
umbia University
in
his
Col-
1915.
Following his
graduation
from
Princeton, he heard the late Mission-
Page two
Russell C. Zimmerman ’16
Russell Carling Zimmerman. 401
East Fifth Street. Berwick, died recently at the Berwick Hospital following a prolonged illness.
Born in
Shickshinny. he had spent most of
Berwick.
A dedicated educator, many of his
former students credited his guidance
in the choice of their life’s work. One
of his outstanding ideas was to use
his
life
in
work of his students
ho
actual vespers at First
dist Church, Berwick, when the Rev.
Aurance Shank, minister, gave his
the
illustrated
MM
in the
evening vespei-s.
A graduate of
School
and
Berwick
High
Bloomsburg
Normal
School, he received a BS degree at
Bucknell University.
He attended
Pennsylvania State University
and
received a master’s degree at New
York University. His teaching career
included subjects from mechanical
drawing finance and business,
penmanship and, at retirement,
was art consultant in the Berwick
Senior High School.
Following retirement he accepted
a position as art directer of the Colwyck Junior High School, New Castle,
Del, where he taught for two
years. At Wilmington, Del., he was
associated with the art department
Owing to ill health
of Wanamakers.
he was forced to return to his home.
A member of the First United
Methodist Church of Berwick, he was
also a member of Knapp Lodge, No.
AM
of Berwick and Cald462 F and
He
well Consistory of Bloomsburg.
was a member of Berwick Historical
Society and Columbia County Mental
Health Association.
Jeanne Stroh Walsh ’20
Mrs. Jeanne S. Walsh, seventy, of
Bloomsburg R. D. 3, died at Bloomsburg Hospital on June 5.
Bloomsburg she was active
the American
Revolution, was formerly a member
Star,
and
of the Order of Eastern
was a retired elementary school
teacher. She was a mamber of the
Lutheran Church, Mainville.
Born
in
in
the Daughters of
Dorothy Barton Cherrington ’23
Mrs. Dorothy Lucille Barton Cherrington died June 17 in the BloomsShe was born July
burg Hospital.
22, 1904, a daughter of the late Harry
S. and Mable- Peacock Barton.
She was a member of the Wesley
United Methodist Church and a graduate of Bloomsburg High School and
Bloomsburg Sttae Normal. She taught
in Hershey and Bloomsburg prior to
her marriage.
Her death breaks a
marital span of forty-four years.
Laura Stevens Graham ’26
Mrs. Laura Graham, sixty-four, of
145 East Sixth Street, Bloomsburg.
died
May
17 at the
Bloomsburg Hos-
She was born in Bloomsburg.
April 1, 1906. She was a member of
the Church of Christ and active in
church work.
pital.
Raber Seely
Raber
Seely, 87 Clifton Avenue.
Kingston, N. Y., a former resident of
S.
Berwick, died on May 6.
A former coach at BSC, he was
an all-around athlete and had captained both the basketball and football
teams at Gettysburg College from
which he graduated. He also attended West Point.
He graduated from
Berwick High School in 1926.
HOME-COMING DAY
Saturday, October
17,
1970
ALUMNI DAY
Saturday, April 24, 1971
art,
he
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
1967—
^Ihanh
5,
l^jau
Loyalty Fund contributions to July
1970, not previously reported:
Faculty Emeritus— Edna J. Hazen,
McCammon.
Lucy
1904—
Howard
Worman.
1903
S.
K. Houtz, Mrs. Nellie
1909— Mrs. David Sloan.
1905 Mrs. Frances L. Davis.
1907— Edwin M. Barton, Mae
Howard, Mrs. W. H. Hile.
L.
1910 Nora Elizabeth Geise, Mrs.
1911—
Vera Housenick, LaRue E. Brown,
Henry S. Conrey, Mrs. Thomas
Mrs.
1912—
H. Keiser, Mrs. J. F. O'Brien, S.
Tracy Roberts.
Thomas H. Keiser, Mrs. Anna
Kline Kocher.
Mrs. Ruth K. Landis, Floyd
Tubbs. Ercel D. Bidleman.
1913 Mrs. John Bradford, Jacob F.
Kimber C. Kuster.
1914 Mrs. Bruce F. Lamont.
1915 S. J. Robbins. Mrs. Elwood
E. Farrell, Mrs. William C. Burger,
Mrs. William J. Prizer, John H. ShuWetzel, Dr.
man,
Mrs. Ray B. Wandel. Mrs. Doro1918—
thy Rice Williams, Lillian Zimmerman, Mrs. Frank S. Hutchison.
Mrs.
S.
J.
Robbins, Dorothy
M. Fritz, Mrs. Florence E. Munro.
1920—
Frank
S. Hutchison.
1917 Allen L. Cromis, Miss Ruth
Smith.
Vida. E. Edwards. Mrs.
T.
Edson Fischer, Dr. Helen E. Becker,
Harold J. Pegg. Dr. Ralph L. Hart.
1919 Rhoda L. Crouse. Mildred E.
Stover.
Mrs. William V. Moyer, Mrs.
R. E. Deitrick, Class Treasurer, Mrs.
Anna D. Barrow. Eleanor H. Griffith.
Mrs. Golden Kehler, Clara N. Santee, Jessie Mensinger. Mrs. Fay Jones
Pugh.
1922 Mrs. Paul A. Morrow, Mrs.
W. F. Barry.
1923 T. Edson Fischer, Mrs.
C.
Ellen Howard. Mrs. Henrietta Souleret, Mrs. Frances H. Harrell. Joseph
Zelloe.
Johns.
Lois Lawson, Raymond Stry
jak, Mrs. William K. Richards, Mrs.
J.
Edwin Krum.
Mrs. H. Pearson Muller.
Mrs. Leonard Baker, Mrs.
Raymond J. Brenner, Mrs. Stephen
Cimbala, Mrs. Robert C. Deisroad.
1936— Myers, Mrs. Donald Stevens,
Naomi
1937—
Mrs.
William Ungemach, Mrs. Kermit D. Witmer, Gift from Class Treasury.
Mrs. W. K. Mann.
Donald A. Watts.
1941—
1938 Paul G. Martin, Mrs. Margaret M. Dickey.
1940 S. Dean Harpe, Mrs. Fay L.
Clark,
1942—Mrs. Ray McBride, Jr., Mrs.
Vivian Payne.
Dr. and Mrs. C. Stuart Edwards, Mrs. M. Rebecca Hackenburg,
S Frederick Warman, Leo J. Lerman. Mrs. Frank M. Taylor.
Howard W. Brochyus.
1943 Frank M. Taylor, Mrs. Pablo
Caban.
1944 Mrs. Wanda Langdon, Mrs.
Carl Demetrikopoulas,
Mrs. Janet
McLaughlin.
1945 Mrs. Albert Kohrherr.
1946 Mrs. Dorothy Pugh, Mrs. D.
T. Walker.
1947 Robert L. Bunge, Mrs. Helen
Roberts.
1948 Mary
Elizabeth Rush,
Lt.
1952—
Col.
James J. Dormer.
1949 George N. Dotzel, Jr., Mrs.
Arthur E. Fasshauer, Dr. Eugene M.
Nuss.
1950 Murray
A.
Hockenburg,
Donald L. Hoar, John J. Sheleman,
1959—
Mrs. Richard A. Ammerman.
1951 Hazel E. Palmer, John Joseph Ryan.
Dr. Frank J. Furgele.
John J. Tilmont.
1963—Mrs. John H. Hessler, Jr.,
Mrs. Walter Casper.
1957 Robert G. Rainey, Thomas A.
1953
1956
Garrett.
1924
Mrs. Alfred L. Wendel, Mrs.
Milton
Sommer, Miriam R. Lawson.
Mrs. Myron M. Trumbower,
1925
1931—
from Class Treasurer.
Rev. Thomas L. Henry, Elizabeth H. Hubler, Mrs. Sheldon A.
MacDougall.
1933— Mrs. William McGuire, James
1932
1934
1935
Mrs. G. G. Reichley.
1916
A. Nevin Sponseller, Catherine D
Mrs. Orva Reinbold, Gift
Reilly.
Mrs. John P. Magee,
Mi's.
Pearl
Bickel, Mrs. Wilbur Deeter,
Mrs.
Esther W. Farrell. Mrs. Leona M.
Kerschner, Mrs. James F. Miller,
Mrs. Pauline Swank, Mrs.
Eugene
Walsh.
1926 Mrs. Claude F. Avery, Mrs.
Helen D. Gustason.
1928 Grace E. Saylor, Mrs. Grace
M. Bucher.
1929 Anna
M. Troutman. Mrs.
Robert J. Walters, Wilbur G. Fischer.
1930
Karleen M. Hoffman,
Mrs.
Frances Y. Leisenring, Mi’s. Harold
A. Walter, Myron R. Welsh,
Mrs.
Myrtle Ker, Mrs. Leona Brunges,
Mrs. Harold A. Davis, Richard D.
Frymire, Mrs. William J. Jones, Dr.
SEPTEMBER,
1970
1958
1960
Mrs. C. J. Tuza, Beth Evans.
Otto H. Donar.
-Robert M.
Rohm,
James
Richard
Wright,
McCarthy,
Donald
Mr. and Mrs. James
H.
J.
Peck.
1962 David W. Barbour, Mrs. Calvin Lehew, Arthur B. Comstock.
Richard D. Walters, Mr. and
1963 Mrs. R. J.
Lauzon,
Lynn
Shoop, Lanus D. Miller.
1964 Mrs. Richard
Bartz,
Floyd
M. Grimm, William R. Helgeno, Sr.
Mrs. Richard C. Scorese.
1965 Randall F. Romig, Mrs. Harold W. Smith, Mrs. Gerri DeMilio,
Mrs. Jack Madery, Mr. and Mrs.
Carl P. Sheran.
1966 John W.
Mi’s. Richard H.
1966
—
Kerlish,
Mr.
and
Fulmer.
Charles S. Lovett, Robert C.
Leidy, Mrs. A. F. Andrews.
Thomas A. Fowles, Mr. and
Mrs. James Stepanski, Mrs. Floyd M.
Grimm, Phillip D. Folk, Alvin J.
Brunner.
1968 Joanne Polega, Ruth A. Slonaker, Pamela G. Wagner, Linda F.
Herbert, Mrs. Phillip D. Folk.
1969 Carolyn T. Weaver, Gene L.
Berkheimer, Randy W. Hackenburg,
Lee J. Berry, Paul W. Canouse, Jr.,
Mrs. T. L. Guy.
1970
Class Treasurer, Elizabeth
A
Jones.
NEW MEMBERS
OF THE FACULTY
Raymond E. Babineau, Assistant
Professor of Education. B.A. and M.
A., Montclair State College. Doctoral
candidate at Temple University.
Harold J. Bailey, Assistant Professor of Mathematics.
B.S., Albright
College: M.Ed.,
University.
Pennsylvania
State
Matthew Zoppetti, Associate Professor of Education.
B.S., California
State College: M.Ed., University of
Pittsburgh; Ph.D.,
University
of
Maryland.
John Robert Quatroche, Assistant to
the President.
B.S., and M.S., State
University College, Fredonia, N. Y.
Joseph A. DeFelice, Assistant Profof Sociology.
B.S.,
Pennsylvania State University;
Master of
Social Work, University of Pittsburgh.
Dr. Arthur Lysiak, Assistant Professor of History. B.S., Loyola; M.A.
and Ph.D., Loyola University.
Michael W. Gaynor, Associate Professor of Psychology.
B.A., Muhlenberg College; M.S., Lehigh University; Ph.D., Colorado State
Univer-
essor
sity.
John E. Hartzel.
Professor of Business.
Assistant
’58,
Bloomsburg State; M.Ed., Lehigh University.
Graduate work at Temple UniB.S.,
versity.
Vjagar Bowa, Professor of Economics. B.A.. Khalas College, Gujranwala; M.A.. Punjab University; M.A.
University of Pennsylvania; Ph.D.,
Cornell University.
Kenneth D. Schnure, Assistant Registrar.
B.S.,
Bloomsburg
State.
Russell W. Guthrie, instructor asComputer Services
signed to BSC
B.S., Mansfield State ColCenter.
lege.
David E. Greenwald, Assistant
Professor of Sociology. B.A., UniverM.A., University of Pennsylvania.
sity of California at Berkeley. Candidate for Ph.D., at Berkeley.
Tommy Lee Cooper, Director of
Admissions.
B.A., Morehead State
University. Kentucky; M.Ed., Pennsylvania State University.
James D. Pietrangeli, Associate
Professor of Phychology, B.A., University of Virginia; M.A., Kent State
University. Additional graduate work
at the University of Florida.
Page three
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR
H. F. Fenstemaker T2
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
’34
Grace Foote Conner,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS — ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
PRESIDENT
Terms
Howard
F. Fenstemaker
242 Central Road
T2
18
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Term
Millard Ludwig ’48
Center and Third Streets
Millville, Pennsylvania 17846
Term Expires 1972
John Thomas ’47
68 Fourth Street
Hamburg, Pennsylvania 19526
Elizabeth H. Hubler
’43
205
Dr. Alexander J. McKechnie, Jr.
19 N. 24th St.
Camp
Ilousenick,
Mrs. Vera
503
Market
1907
Representative:
Class
Edwin M.
Barton, 353 College Hill, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
1909
Bloom
Hill,
Fred
W.
Street, Danville, Pa.
17821
1910
Class
Representative: Robert E.
Metz, 23 Manhattan Street, Ashley,
18706
Pa.
’39
Pa. 17011
September, 1970
1911
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Representative:
3,
Class Representative: Mrs. Pearle
Fitch Diehl, 627 Bloom Street, Danville, Pa. 17821
1905
Page four
Terms expire 1973
Dr. Frank J. Furgele ’52
Colonial Farm Box 88
R. D. 1, Glen Mills, Pa. 19342
Lancaster, Pennsylvania 17603
1903
Diehl, 627
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
expires 1973
Representative:
’40
224 Leonard Street
James H. Deily, Jr. ’41
37 N. Bausman Drive
H. Walter
Class Representative:
Riland, 11 Warwick Avenue, Scarsdale, N. Y. 10583
Class
Clayton H. Hinkel
’29
McKnight Street
Volume LXXI, Number
Hemingway
140
Gordon, Pennsylvania 17936
TREASURER
Kimber C. Kuster T3
West Eleventh Street
Dr. William L. Bitner III
33 Lincoln Ave.,
Glens Falls, N. Y. 12801
Earl A. Gehrig ’37
110 Robin Lane, Sherwood Village
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Street,
Dr.
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
State College, Pa. 16801
Term expires 1973
Class
’34
West Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
102
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie ’35
509 East Front Street
Berwick, Pennsylvania 18603
SECRETARY
Elwood M. Wagner
643 Wiltshire Road
Term
expire 1972
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
expires 1973
VICE PRESIDENT
Col.
Terms
expire 1971
Mrs. Verna Jones ’36
West Avenue, Apartment C-4
Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087
1915
Class Representative: John H. Shu-
man, 368 East
burg, Pa. 17815
1913
Representative: Dr. Kimber
Class
Kuster, 140 West 11th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Elizabeth J. Robbins (Mrs. John
Bradford) lives at Station Road, Newport, Newport, N. J. 08345
1914
..Class Representative: J. Howard
Deily, 518 West Third Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Street,
Blooms-
1916
1912
Representative:
Howard F.
Fenstermaker,
242
Central
Road,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
Main
Class Representative: Mrs. Russell
Burrus (Emma Harrison) R. I). 2,
Orangeville, Pa. 17859
1917
Class
Cromis,
Milton,
Representative:
Allen
Mahoning Manor, R. D.
Pa.
L.
1.
17847
1918
Clair
Class
Representative:
J.
Patterson, 315 West Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1919
Class Representative: Miss Catherine A. Reimard, 335 Jefferson St.,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Lucia Hammond (Mrs. Robert L.
Wheeler) lives at 124 West Fern Avenue. Apt. 3. Redlands. Calif. 92373
Esther Reichard Schaffer lives at
143 West Broad St., Hazleton. Pa.
18201
1920
W
Leroy
Representative:
Road.
Old Berwick
3117
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
Creasy,
Ransom
Street,
Edna
S.
Representative:
Class
Harter, R. D. 1, Nescopcck, Pa. 18623
1923
Nelson Stauffer, 88 John St.,
1’a. 18704. (Arline Frantz)
Mrs. James Wertman, 20 Parish
Street, Dallas, Pa. 18612
Mildred Ann Goodwin lives at 8030
Rancho Fanita Drive, Santee, Calif.
Representative: Mrs. Raymond Kashner. 125 Forrest Road,
Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa.
17815
The rural group of the class of 1923
met at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Leslie Seely, Drums, Pa., for their
annual picnic. The following members and their families were present'
Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Beagle,
Sarah Leighow, Mrs. Dale Leighow
and their three daughters. Mrs. Lillian Kline, Mrs. Rachel Kline, Mr.
and Mrs. Leslie Seely and son. Letters were received from Mrs. Leona
Moore and Miss Elma Major.
Kathryn Harder Edmonds is living
at 2500 East Las
Olas Boulevard.
Apt. 401, Fort Lauderdale,
33301
Kingston,
Out-
standing Citizen Award this year went
to
Stephen A. Lerda, principal of
Westminster. Pa., High School. Lerda
came to Carroll County in 1945 from
Pennsylvania and
the
taught
in
Hampstead schools until becoming
Westminster
High
School in
In
the
Lutheran
Church he has been active in many
principal
areas,
of
1957.
including
teaching
in
the
Sunday School, membership in the
Church Council and serving on the
Executive Board of the Synod. The
National Association
of
Secondary
School Principals honored Lerda this
spring with a special citation for his
contribution over the years both at
the local and national levels.
As chairmen of the Chamber of
Commerce
Education
Committee.
Lerda was the prime mover in the
Adult Education program.
1924
Class Representative:
Edward F.
Schuyler, 236 West Ridge Avenue,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1925
Class
Representative: Michael
P.
Walakonis, Box 222, Ringtown, Pa.
17S67
Mary Esther Whalen (Mrs. Francis
Farrall)
St.,
Shenandoah, Pa. 17976
lives
at 119
S.
Jordan
1926
Class
Representative: Mrs. Pearl
Bloss, R.D. 2, Wapwallopen, Pa. 18660
1927
Class Representative: Mrs. Ralph
G. Davenport (Verna
16
Medley),
SEPTEMBER,
1970
Maple
Class
Representatives:
Luther W.
Class
Representative:
James B.
Davis, 333 East Marble Street, Mechanicsburg, Pa. 17055
1937
Mr. and
Representatives:
Mrs. Earl A. Gehrig, 110 Robin Lane,
Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa.
17815
1938
tin,
710 East Main
burg, Pa. 17701
Class
Representative:
Miss Lois
Lawson,
641
East Third Street,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Raymond Stryjak has been placed
on the substitute teacher list in the
Greater Area Nanticoke School Dist-
Willard A.
Christian, Jr., 803 Logue Street, Williamsport, Pa. 17701
Morgan Foose, formerly Chairman
the
cf
Class
Representative:
Esther
154
Representative:
Clayton
Hinkel, 224 Leonard Street,
burg, Pa. 17815
1941
Class
Representative:
It.
D. 4,
17815
art
John Partridge is principal of the
high school at Pennsauken, New Jersey.
Dr. Harvey A. Andruss, President Emeritus of BSC, delivered the
baccalaureate address at the Pennsauken High School this year.
Pa. 17815
Edwards,
Dr.
II.
Blooms-
C.
Stu-
Bloomsburg,
1942
Representative:
Zimmerman (Jean
Class
If.
Kveady
Avenue,
Mrs. Ralph
Noll),
Millersville,
165
Pa.
17551
1943
1935
William I.
East 4th Street, Blooms-
Representative:
burg, Pa. 17815
Elmer J. McKechnie has retired as
Superintendent of the Berwick area
schools. The Morning Press recently
had this editorial comment:
Retirement July 1 of Elmer J. McKechnie, superintendent of Berwick
Area School District since 1956 and
associated with Berwick schools for
33 years, will be a distinct loss to the
system.
He plans to travel and
write.
School Board President Dan
Finnis appropriately
described
superintendent
as
“dynamic
hardworking.”
Manheim Township High
School, has recently been promoted
to the position of Administration Assistant in charge of Business Affairs
Manheim Township School
in the
District, Neffsville, Pa.
1940
East Fifth Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
151
Depart-
Education
Business
of the
Class
Evans McFadden (Mrs. Joseph),
Blooms-
1939
rict.
1934
Street,
Representative:
Class
ment
1933
Reed,
Conyng-
Class Representative: Paul G. Mar-
and Margaret Swartz Bitler, 117 State
Street, Millville, Pa. 17846
1931
Class
Avenue,
18219
Class
92071
Florida.
Club’s
ham, Pa.
Lcbo)
Class
Rotary
Mrs. (Elsie
1930
Harry
Bloomsburg.
IMrs.
Cole, 100 Leonard Street,
Pa. 17815
1922
Westminster
Mary Jane Fink (Mrs. Frederick McCutclieon)
Class Representatives:
1921
Representative:
Class
Plymouth, Pa. 18651
1929
McKechnie’s
Dethe
17815
Elizabeth Singley (Mrs. Harold R.
Trexler) is teaching in Couer d’Alene,
Idaho.
1944
Representative: Mrs. (Poletime Comuntzis) Carl Demetripopoulos, Friar and Robin Lanes, Sherwood
Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1945
Mary Lou
Class Representative:
John, 257 W. 11th St., Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
and
devo-
to his work resulted in an
tended illness some time back. Naturally he wants no recurrence.
Administering a large area district
is a far more demanding job than was
the supervision of a teaching staff
years ago. Problems multiply with
ex-
tion
Mrs. RayRepresentative:
mond A. Algatt (Betty Katerman),
Bloomsburg, Pa.
253 Iron
Street,
Class
the size of the school.
Berwickians familiar w ith his community activities as well as his school
duties hope that McKechnie’s devotion to travel and writing will still
r
allow his participation in civic pro-
and that he will remain in the
community. The schools are losing
jects
a good man.
1936
Representatives:
Kathryn
Vanauker (Mrs. Nicholas Moreth) 34
Class
Linden Road, Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey 07423. Co-Chairmen: Ruth Wagner (Mrs. Lawrence Le Grande) 126
Oak Street, Hazleton, Pa. 18201 and
1946
Anastasia
Representative:
Pappas (Mrs. John Trowbridge), 102
W. Mahoning Street, Danville, Pa.
Charles
Co-chairman: Mrs.
17821.
W. Creasy (Jacqueline Shaffer), R.
D. 1, Catawissa, Pa. 17820
Class
1947
Robert L.
Bunge, 12 West Park Street, Carroll
Park, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
Representative:
1948
Harry G.
Representative:
Class
John, Jr., 425 Iron Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
USAF
James J. Dormer. Lt. Col.
(Ret.), 2358 St. Charles Drive. Clearwater, Florida 33516. is teaching in
the Largo Senior High School, Largo.
Florida.
1949
Class
Representative:
Grimes, 1723 Fulton
Pa. 17102
Alfred M.
St.,
Lampman
is
Richard E.
Harrisburg,
living at 142
Page
five
E. Sinclair
Florida. 33950
S.
Port
St.,
Charlotte,
School
Levittown
in
named
where he was
the Outstanding Teacher of the
Philosophy at the Pennsylvania State
University.
Year
Homesak,
William
1235
High
Williamsport, Pa. 17701, has
received the degree of
Doctor
of
Education from
the
Pennsylvania
State University.
Street,
1950
Class Representative: Willis Swales,
9 Raven Road, Montvale, N. J. 07645
in 1963-64.
his
University of
doctorate in
He earned
the
education at Penn
native of Harrisburg, Dr.
Kautz presently lives
in
Reeser’s
Summit, Fairview Township,
Pa.,
with his wife, Gladys, and their children Frank and Tobias.
his
State.
A
1951
Class Representative:
Dr. Russell
C. Davis, Jr., Thunder Hill,
ville, N. Y. 12740
1952
Class Representative:
Galinski, 90 Tower Hill
lestown, Pa. 18901
1954
Grahams-
Francis B.
Road, Doy-
Representative: John S. Scrimgeour, 411 East 3rd Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1954
Class Representative:
William J.
Jacobs, Tremont Annex Apartments,
2 West Main Street, Lansdale, Pa.
19446
1955
Class Representative: Dr. William
Bitner III, 33 Lincoln Avenue, Glens
Falls, N. Y.
12801
1957
William J.
l’ohutski, 554 Oakridge Drive, North
Plainfield, N. J. 07606
William C. Harrell has been named assistant director of admissions at
Class
Representative:
Shippensburg State College.
Mr. Harrell holds a master’s degree from Syracuse University and
lias been on the guidance counseling
staff of the Shippensburg Area School
System since 1964.
the former Mollie
He and
his wife,
Hippensteel, ’55,
the parents of
children,
two
Heidi, 3, and Timothy 1.
are
James E.
Harris, Bloomsburg, befull-time administrative duties
as principal of the Main-Beaver Ele-
gan
mentary
Schools,
Bloomsburg Area
School District, on July 1, 1970. Harris received his elementary education
at the
North
Centre
Township
School and graduated from Bloomsburg High School. He received his
Masters of Education degree in elementary administration from Temple
University.
Harris taught three years in Tredyffrin-Eastown School District, Valley Forge Area, and one year at the
Evans Memorial School.
For the
past seven years, he has been head
teacher of the Mainville Elementary
School.
William D. Kautz, 41, has joined
the Pennsylvania Department of Education as a teacher education advisor
in the Bureau of Teacher Education.
Dr. Kautz ’s most recent position
was at The Pennsylvania State University where he was an assistant
professor in education. He also served as a graduate assistant and center
supervisor of student teachers at the
same university. Before that, he
taught at
Woodrow Wilson High
Page
six
masters degree at
Pennsylvania and
1958
Class
Representative:
Raymond
Hargreaves, 37 Dell Road, Stanhope,
N. J. 07874
Fern A. Goss, a member of the
Montgomery
College,
faculty
of
Rockville, Maryland, has received the
degree of Doctor of Education from
George Washington University.
Marianne Angrade (Mrs. Conrad J.
6 Arrowhead Lane
Tuza) lives at
Portsmouth, R.
02871
1959
I.
William
Class Representative:
Swisher, Box 245, Cincinnatus, N.
Gary S. Fisher is living at
Third Street, North Hornell, N.
F.
Y.
365
Y.
14843
1960
Representative:
James J.
Peck, 100 Hull Road, Madison, onn.
Class
06443
1961
Representative: Edwin C.
Kuser, It. D. 1, Box 145-C, Bechtelsville, Pa. 19505
William Stevenson is Director of
Student Personnel Services at Gloucester County College, Sewell, N. J.
Class
08080
Carolyn Ann Wood
Gilligan), 400 Club
(Mrs.
Patrick
House Road, Apt.
1, Binghamton, N. Y. 13903, has received the degree of Master of Education from the Pennsylvania State
University.
Mrs. Teressa
Barrett
Ganoga Lake, R. D.
McDonald,
Benton, Pa.
17814, has received the
degree of
Master of Public Administration from
the Pennsylvania State University.
He did volunteer teaching for disadvantaged students at Prairie View
A and M. College, Prairie View.
Texas, under the funding from O.E.O.
and the Carnegie Foundation. He continued work with disadvantaged students as a volunteer teacher at Opportunities and Industrialization Center, Washington, D. C.
In 1969, he
was awarded a Community Action
Volunteer Service award.
2,
1963
Representative:
Class
Pat Biehl
(Mrs. Ronald Cranford) R. D. 1, 77
Hawthorne Ave., Boyertown, Pa. 19512
The Rev. Robert H. Pursel, formerly of Bloomsburg and for the past
four years pastor of The Chestnut
Street United Methodist Church of
Shamokin, received the degree
of
Master
of
Sacred Theology
in
Church
History at the commencement convocation of The General Theological
Seminary of the Episcopal Church.
New York City, on May 26. He is a
graduate of Wesley Theological Seminary, Washington, D. C., in the class
of 1966.
Michael R. Klick, 310 Joan St.,
South Plainfield, N. J. 07080, has received the degree of Master of Education at Rutgers University.
1962
Richard
Representative:
Class
Lloyd, 6 Farragut Dr., Piscataway,
N. J. 18854
C. Gene Baker, 2207 McCormack St.,
Placentia, Cal., 92670, has received
the degree of Master of Arts at the
University of the South, Sewanee,
Tennessee. He is teaching chemistry
at the Los Angeles High School.
Harry E. Cole, Jr., Bloomsburg,
has accepted a Fulbright-Hays grant
to teach in Greece during the coming
school year.
Cole
was graduated
from
Bloomsburg Area
Joint Higli
the help of a state
competitive scholarship, he majored
in English at Bloomsburg State College, chiefly under the direction of
Dr. Cecil C. Seronsy.
After winning a three-year National
Defense Education Act Fellowship, he
did graduate work at Lehigh Univer-
School.
With
He
sity, Bethlehem.
has
lish at Lehigh University,
taught Eng-
and for the
past four years, he has been teaching at Georgetown University, Wash-
ington, D. C.
James H. Huber, 69 Lyckman Avenue, Albany, N. Y., 12208, has recently received the degree of Doctor of
Richard D. Walters is teaching at
Connetquot High School. Bohemia, Long Island, N. Y. He recently was granted the degree of Master
the
of Arts at Hofstra University,
Hemp-
stead, N. Y.
(Wadsworth), Mrs. Roger
Kimball, reports her address as
5082C Diamond Heights, San Francisco, Calif. 94131. She recently married Dr. Roger S. Kimball who is an
assistant clinical professor of internal
medicine at the University of California Medical Center and has a private
practice in Internal Medicine and CarPat is
diology in San Francisco.
teaching in San Raphael, Calif.
Patricia
S.
Edna Yurick (Mrs. David
Stauffer),
Wenonah.
husband
a newspaper photo-
lives at 289 Alliance Street,
New Jersey 08090, with
David, who is
grapher, and their three children.
Gary Rupert
is an assistant basketcoach at Philadelphia College of
Textile and Sciences, which recently
won the NCAA 1970 Small College
Division championship in Evansville,
Indiana.
Gary and his wife Nancy
(McFerran ’63) live at 1228 Fayette
19428.
Conshohocken,
Pa.
Street,
with their two sons, Gary II and
Gregg.
ball
Elizabeth Pingar Dudinyak lives at
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Box
D.
4.
545- A, Mountaintop, R.
Her husband,
Pennsylvania 18707.
Richard, graduated from Villanova
Law
in
practices
School and now
Their daughter. Lori,
Wilkes-Barre.
was born in November 1968.
San
Paul Ritzinger lives at 35
Diego Drive, Magnolia, New Jersey
08049, with his wife, Carol and son
Jeffrey.
Paul teaches math in the
Collingswood School District and is
a cross-country and track coach.
1964
Shuba,
Ernest K.
Gaston Avenue, Raritan, N.
Representative:
Class
1
Herr, 429 Robin Drive, West Chester,
Pa. 19380, are the parents of a daughter, Jacqueline Ann, born December
Mrs. Derr taught for three
31, 1969.
years in the Central Bucks School
District, and is doing graduate work
at Temple University.
Carl and Janet Hoke Wink11903 Galaxy Lane, Bowie,
Maryland 20715. While Capt. WinkJanet
ler was stationed in Guam,
taught first grade for two years in
native school there. Capt. and Mrs.
Winkler are the parents of a daughter, Amy Heather, born October 25,
Capt.
ler, live at
J. 08869
1969.
John H. and Ann Weed Stone. R.
D. 4, Montrose. Pa., 18001, are the
parents of a daughter, Betsy Ann.
born May 3. 1969.
her
Kathleen Beltz Rarig, Morrisville,
has received her Master’s degree in
guidance and counseling from Rider
College, Trenton, N. J. She has accepted a position as counselor in
the nursing
program at Mercer
County Community College, Trenton
Wright was recently
degree of Master of
Arts in Science at Trenton State ColThe requirements for
lege, Trenton.
part
in
the degree were fulfilled
through participation in a National
Science Foundation Institute in Oceanography at Oregon State University,
Corvalis, Oregon, during the summer
Richard and Betty Scaife Scorese
have a new baby boy, Russell Richard, born April 7,
1970.
Dick is
teaching health and physical educatiion (senior high only) at Netcong
High School and in addition, he is
teaching two classes of driver education.
He is head wrestling coach
but he has given up his position as
assistant football coach.
Kathleen Beltz (Mrs. Neil H. Rarig) 126 Maple Avenue No. 6, Morrisville,
Pa. 19067, has received the
degree of Master of Arts in Guidance
and Counseling from Rider College,
Trenton, N. J.
Mary Lesevich Grant lives at 222
Colony Point Road,
Williamsburg.
Virginia 23185.
Her husband is a
member of the faculty of William and
Mary
College.
John R. Madden was awarded the
of Doctor of Philosophy in
Social Studies Education at commencement exercises held at Syracuse
University on June 6. For the past
three years Dr. Madden has been on
the faculty of Syracuse University.
He, his wife Judy (Whaite ’62), and
infant daughter Kelly
are in the
degree
process of relocating to Wallingford,
Pennsylvania.
Dr. Madden has accepted an administrative post in the
Rose Tree Media
School
District.
Address
410
East Country
Lane, Wallingford. Pa. 19086
:
Club
1965
Class Representative: Carl P. Sher-
man, 59 Vreeland Ave.,
Blooming-
dale, N. J. 07403
1966
Class Representative:
Cerza, 608 Corlie Ave.,
N. J. 07711
1970
Main
Street,
Vincent
awarded
N. Y. 13060
Elbridge,
J.
the
of 1969.
employed as a teacher of earth science in the Pennsbury
School system in Yardley, Pa.
Mrs. Wright
is
1967
Representative:
Class
R.
Thomas
Lemon, Warwick Apt. 3-D, 802 Old
English St., Bel Air, Md. 21014.
Eugene P. Miller, Elysburg, Pa.,
second
a
has been commissioned
lieutenant in the U. S. Air Force upon
from Officer Training
graduation
School at Lackland
The
AFB, Texas.
selected
lieutenant,
for
OTS
through competitive examination, is
being assigned to Vance, Okla., for
pilot training.
Lieutenant Miller, a 1963 graduate
High
Columbia Area
of Southern
School, Catawissa, Pa., received his
B. S. Ed. degree in 1967 from BSC,
and his M.S. degree in 1969 at Bucknell University, Lewisburg, Pa.
Jane E. Schoenberger (Mrs. LowB. Possinger) is now living at 430
Oakwood Avenue, Stroudsburg, Pa.
ell
18360
J.
Wallenhurst,
Va. She received a Doctor of Jurisprudence degree, having earned her
B.A. from Bloomsburg State College.
Jeanne E. Merolla 102 Mt. Airy
Road, Shavertown, Pa., has received
the degree of Master of Arts in Guidance and Counseling at Rider College,
Trenton, N. J.
Class Representative: Thomas W.
Free, R. D. 1, Box 34, Kintnerville,
Pa. 18930
Mary Ellen Margaret Yasalonis,
934 East Centre Street,
Mahanoy
City, Pa., 17948, has received the
degree
(Mrs.
M. Elizabeth Crouthamel
Lawrence L. Conte) reports her address as 207-34-0639, USAAFSB, Box
237,
APO, New York.
of
Master
of
Education
in
09742
have received addegrees from Rutgers University: M. Kathleen Bowen, High
Manchester, Pa. 17345, M.S.W.
St.,
Mrs. Ghislaine Launay, 720A Village
Dr. S, North Brunswick, N. J. M.A.
The
following
vanced
Lynda L. Fryling (Mrs. Danny F.
Herbest) lives at 427 Glenwood Avenue, Williamsport, Pa. 17701
1969
Representative:
Frank J.
Mastroianna, .1018 .Cooper .Street,
Scranton, Pa. 18508
Mr. and Mrs. (Joan Molnar) James
E. Laubach’s addres is 118 Franklin
Street, Owego, P. O., N. Y. 13827
Class
Mr. and Mrs. (Dorothy Kessler
Charles E. Shepperson’s address
106 L.
17821
Mulberry
’68)
is
Street. Danville, Pa.
Mr. and Mrs.
(Karen
Pearson)
3768
Randall
Thomas’s
address:
Malibu Way, Sacramento, Cal. 95826
Shirley A. McHenry (Mrs. Terence
Guy) reports her address as 416th
Heavy Bomb Wing,
2792, Grif13440
fes AFB, N. Y.
L.
CMR
1970
Class
Dalfovo,
Representative:
61
Dean
John
W.
Beaver
Street,
Meadows, Pa. 18216
Blair R. Monie has entered Princeton Theological Seminary, Princeton.
N. J.
Janet Hafer (Mrs. David Moyer)
at 133 North 12th Street, Sunbury, Pa. 17801
lives
Miss Sally Ann Teats, Millersburg,
has been selected by the Susquehanna
Valley Section of the American Chemical Society to receive an outstanding
senior chemistry major
award:
a
National Institute of Health Fellowship for doctoral studies in the field
of Biochemistry at the University of
Wisconsin,
M. Albertson, Bloomsburg,
is among some 850 students who received degrees from the College of
William and Mary, Williamsburg,
Eileen
1968
Anthony
Susan Treaster (Mi’s.
Aaron F.
Andrews) reports her address as Box
95-B. R. D. 1, Etters, Pa. 17319
David A. and Sharon (Kuchinskas)
SEPTEMBER,
Sandra Williams Swetland reports
address as Box 214, 138 East
Counselor Education from the Pennsylvania State University.
beginning
in
September,
1970.
Miss Teats is a member of Sigma
Pi Sigma, Kappa Delta Pi, the American Institute of Physics, and currently serves as President of the American Chemical Society Student AffilShe is also a member
iates at BSC.
of the Mathematics Club, Le Cercle
Francais, the Literary and Film SocDean’s
iety, and has been on the
List since entering BSC in the fall
She is listed in the 1968-69
of 1966.
edition of Who’s Who Among Students
in American Colleges and Universities.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter S. Rygiel have
returned from a three-week tour of
Catholic Europe. They toured Portugal, Spain, France, Italy, Germany
and Switzerland.
Page seven
.
.
.
WEDDINGS
Kinney
.
.
.
1962
Margaret M. Bitner, Nescopeck,
and Walter M. Barski, Berwick. Mrs.
Northwest
Barski is a teacher in
School District.
Mr. Barski is emPulton
Manufacturing
ployed
by
Company, Berwick.
Robinson.
The bride took
graduate work at
Drexel Institute
of Technology, where she received her
Master’s Degree in Library Science.
She is librarian at Lehigh County
Community College. Address: General Delivery, Allentown, Pa. 18105.
Marcia
Earnhart and Donald
Address: 156 South Main
Street, Perkasie, Pa.
Laura M. Ansbach, Bloomsburg and
The
Russell E. Shields, Berwick.
Hatborobride is secretary at the
Horsham Junior High School. Mr.
Shields is a teacher in Hatboro-Horsham High School. Their address is
1136 Limekiln Pike, Ambler, Pa.
David
L.
E. Bryan.
S.
Allen and Sally Ertwine,
1338
New
Address:
Road, Levittown, Pa. 19056
’68.
Rodgers
1967
P. Ranee, Bloomsburg and
Gerald L. Bogart, Columbia.
Mrs.
Bogart, who received B.S. and M.Ed.
degrees from BSC in elementary education, is a teacher in the
Central
Dauphin School, Harrisburg.
Mr.
Bogart is a reporter for Dun and
Bradstreet, Inc., Harrisburg.
Address: East Park
Gardens Apts.,
Carol
Harrisburg.
1963
The Rev. Jere L. Hock, Seven
Valleys, R. D. 2, and Elaine B. Basehoar, Littlestown R. D. 2. The Rev.
Mr. Hock, a graduate of Lutheran
Theological Seminary, Gettysburg, is
pastor of the Hometown-Loganville
Parish. Mrs. Hock, who has a B.S.
and M.S. from Shippensburg State
College, is a teacher in the Southwestern School District, Hanover.
1964
Nancy George, Catawissa and Dale
R. Kratzer, York. Mrs. Kratzer is a
first grade teacher in the Rose Tree
Media School District. Mr. Kratzer
is a graduate in
civil
engineering
from Pennsylvania State University
Ida Gingrich and Barry Smith. Address: 521 Spring Avenue, Lititz, Pa.
17543
1965
Kathleen Helwig and Wayne George.
Mr. George is employed by Berwick
Area School system.
1966
Sharon
Kuchinskas
and
Herr.
Address: 429 Robin
West Chester, Pa. 19380
David
Drive,
Joanna Bette Kreischer, Catawis3, and Lawrence J. Splitt,
Bloomsburg R. D. 3. The bride is a
registered nurse at the Ashland State
General Hospital. Mr. Splitt is employed by the Retail Credit Company,
sa R. D.
Berwick.
Mary Jane Smith,
and
Danville
Franklin A. Rishel, Danville.
Mr.
Rishel is employed by the Alfred I.
Dupont School District, Wilmington,
Delaware. Mrs. Rishel is a graduate
of the Episcopal Hospital School of
Nursing.
1968
Patricia Derr and William F. GeoSquare
rge.
Address: 261 Varsity
Apts., Bowling Green, Ohio. 43402
Jean E. Booth, Milton, and Philip
Stainer,
Mechanicsburg.
Mrs.
Stainer is teaching in the Mechanicsburg High School. Her husband is
employed as a diesel mechanic.
1966
Gail Noreen Masters and Charles
W. Sorber. Mr. Sorber teaches mathematics at Bloomsburg High School.
The couple is residing at Fairmont
Springs.
Jean E. Booth, Milton, and Philip
L.
Stainer,
Mechanicsburg.
Mrs.
Stainer is teaching in the Mechanicsburg High School. Her husband is
employed as a diesel mechanic.
1967
Deanna Sue Woolcock and James
Page eight
Mr. Calinski, an electrical engineer,
a graduate of Penn State Univ.
is
Susan
and
Jane
Palmer M.
Magill, Danville
Toto, Philadelphia.
The
bride attended BSC and Mr. Toto is
teaching in the Bristol Township
School District.
Donna
Rheinhold
Murray and
Address: Peace Corps ColYap, Falalop, Ulithi, Western
L.
Linda L. Fry ling and Danny
Herbst, 427 Glenwood Avenue, Williamsport, Pa. 17701. Mrs. Herbst is
teaching in the Williamsport area and
her husband is with the Grit Pub-
onia
Caroline Islands. 96943
lishing Co.
ert
Schultz.
’70 and RobMrs. Hauck will
teach special education at Parkland
Gloria Jean Altemose
Thomas Hauck.
Marian Harris, Orangeville R. D.
and David A. Eisenhower, Berwick.
Mrs. Eisenhower is teaching Spanish
in Liberty High School, Bethlehem
and Mr. Eisenhower, who served four
years in the U. S. Navy, is employed
by Bethlehem Steel.
Address: 428
Wyandatte Street, Bethlehem, Pa.
ner, both of Berwick.
been employed at the
prise.
Mr. Sterner
18015
Denver, Pa.
Karen Noel Sitler and Thomas A.
P. Hunsinger. Mrs. Hunsinger is an
elementary teacher in the Berwick
schools. Her husband, who attended
Pennsylvania State University and
served four years in the U. S. Air
Force, is a printer for Keystone Publishing Company, Berwick, Pa.
John N. Calleri and Patricia E.
Ashworth, both of Berwick.
They
are both teaching in
Westminster.
Maryland.
Pamela Ann Whitmire, Bloomsburg
The
Blair R. Monie, Bloomsburg.
bride is a graduate of the Geisinger
Medical Center School of Nursing.
Mr. Monie is a student at the Princeton Theological Seminary, Princeton.
2
and Jimmy L. Rupert, Bloomsburg.
Mr. Rupert is a teacher in the Benton High School.
Mrs. Rupert is a
student at Geisinger Medical Center
School of Nursing.
Address:
523
Railroad Street, Danville, Pa. 17821
Judy K. Young and David E. Davis,
Bangor, Pa.
Mrs. Davis
is a superand Chemical,
Inc., Allentown, Pa.
Mr. Davis is
Accounting
Manager at Phoenix
AdClothes, Inc., Allentown, Pa.
visor at Air Products
L.
Anna Louise Buckley, Danville and
Mrs.
Peter J. Calinski, Nanticoke.
Calinski is teaching in Bellefonte.
dress: 2148 S. Ninth
town, Pa. 18103
Street,
Allen-
1969
Darlene J. Yocum, Catawissa and
Gary L. Zimmerman, Bloomsburg.
Mrs. Yocum is teaching at
RCV
Elementary School and Mr. Yocum
is employed by Kawneer,
Inc. Ad143 Main Street,
Catawissa,
Pa.
Kathleen E. Jarrard. formerly of
Berwick, and Richard E. Osberg,
Chelmsford, Mass.
Mrs. Osberg is
a teacher in Chelmsford and her husband is an accountant. Their address
is 70 Boston Road, Chelmsford, Mass.
dress:
School District, Allentown. Her husbusiness subjects at
White Hall School District, Allentown.
band teaches
1970
Mack and David
Kathy
C.
Ster-
The bride has
Berwick Enteris
teaching
in
Janet Hafer and David Moyer. Address: 133 North 12th Street, Sunbury,
Pa.
Sandra Hamstra, Bloomsburg and
N. J.
Marilyn J. Palmer and Brent C.
Address: 215 Washington St..
Toms River, N. J. 08753
Both Mr. and Mrs. Davis will teach
in Toms River School District.
Davis.
Apt. 9,
Patricia Robbins, Bloomsburg and
Kenneth D. Saunders, Levittown. Mrs.
Saunders is teaching in Bristol, and
Mr. Saunders is teaching in the Woodrow Wilson High School, Levittown.
Their address
Bristol, Pa.
is
234 Franklin Street,
Joan Marie Russell and Thomas L.
West.
Gloria J. Altman and
Robert
F.
Hauck.
Ann
Schlieder, Catawissa and
Schwartz, Phiadelphia. Mrs.
Schwartz is a teacher in the Juniata
Joint Area Schools.
Mr. Schwartz,
a graduate of Temple University, is
Jo
Jeffrey
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
elementary principal
Area Schools.
the
in
Newport
Betsy A. Styers, Berwick, and JamAddress:
Gavitt, Conyngham.
Maple Ave., Conyngham, Pa.
es L.
BSC SCOREBOARD
FOOTBALL
Lock Haven 28
25
21
14
13
Mansfield
Adelphia U.
West Chester
Stroudsburg
34
16
38
38
Kutztown
Cheyney
17
28
14
Millersville
7
E
23
.
6
7
CROSS-COUNTRY
l
low score wins)
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
24
21
21
BSC
finished
31
Millersville
24
Kutztown 39
Kings 50
Susquehanna 31
Mansfield 40
Kutztown 38
Shippensburg 44
Shepherd 42
Cheyney 50
20
15
17
18
15
Pa. Conference Meet
seventh. Won by Slip-
pery Rock
Triangular Meet
BSC
BSC
Lock Haven 22
33
21
Mansfield 34
WRESTLING
—Appalachian
Quadrangular
BSC
BSC
BSC
Millegan 0
Old Dominion 3
Appalachian 13
Quadrangular Meet at BSC
BSC 27
Massachussetts 9
BSC 0
Ohio U. 32
BSC 11
Terre Haute 29
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
Oswego
27
9
11
Clarion 23
30
34
Kutztown
California
5
6
Waynesburg
30
25
9
Millersville
7
Shippensburg
8
25
Lock Haven
E. Stroudsburg 20
21
West Chester 17
East Stroudsburg Meet
12
Lock Haven,
1st
place,
BSC— fourth
place.
BASKETBALL
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
103
73
85
74
121
83
86
BSC
55
Baptist Bible Sem. 49
Cheyney
74
E. Stroudsburg 71
Mansfield 87
Shippensburg 86
Millersville 73
Baptist Bible Sem. 74
Berwick Tournament
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
Drexel 61
Highspire Tournament
85
Elizabethtown 83
Towson
72
Millersville
93
Kutztown 68
West Chester 74
State Meet
Eastern Division BSC second place
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
59
Clarion 81
Indiana State 79
West Chester 86
Shippensburg 87
Cheyney
1970
BSC
BSC
67
53
31
26
49
36
41
42
40
30
31
62
39
Monmouth
Wilkes
Kings
Millersville
Indiana U.
E. Stroudsburg
Glassboro
Lock Haven
Slippery Rock
California
West Chester
State
Meet
BSC
NALA Meet
—
—
Akron
of
9 1-2
BSC
Trenton
Lock Haven
Wilkes 10
BSC
Millersville
Slippery
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
Wilkes 4
Mansfield 2
Slippery
Clarion
Rock
first
120
Further
meeting
of
the
General
Alumni
the
Consequently,
change will not go into effect until
it
is approved on
Alumni Day.
1971.
Since the College will
no
longer pay for the Alumni Luncheon. some change will be necessary. The other alternative would
be to keep the Alumni dues at
$2.00 in which case those attending the luncheon will pay for their
luncheon tickets. We invite your
comments on the proposed change.
Association.
6
0
place
third place
Kutztown 4
Kutztown 3
7
7
Mansfield 3
Mansfield 9
Kings 2
4
5
4
4
0
Kings
Shippensburg
Shippensburg
3
9
3
Millersville 3
Lock Haven 9
Lock Haven 8
Mansfield 5
Mansfield 6
Wilkes 10
0
11
10
3
0
1
7
Lock Haven
Lock Haven
Kutztown
Kutztown
8
10
5
3
2
8
E. Stroudsburg
E. Stroudsburg
1
1
BSC
Ursinus
ober.
The letter from D. David H. Kurtzman, secretary of the department in
Harrisburg, to Dr. Andruss stated:
“I am pleased to announce that a
1
0
“In honor of the occasion, we plan
include the ceremony as part of the
49th Education
Congress Banquet.
The affair will be held on October G.
1970 at the Penn Harris Motor Inn
Camp Hill, Pennsylvania. We will
to
Lock Haven
—
The Pennsylvania Department of
Education will honor Dr. Harvey A.
Andruss, retired president of Bloomsburg State College, during the 49th
Education Congress banquet in Oct-
tion certificate of appreciation will
be presented to you for your many
years of dedication and service to
education.
8
assemble in the Keystone
p.m. prior to dinner.
Room
at
6
“You are
cordially
invited
to
be
guest for the evening, and I am
looking forward to your appearance.
“In the event that you are unable
my
TRACK
Indoor Meet
E. Stroudsburg
TO BE HONORED
Pennsylvania Department of Educa-
E. Stroudsburg 8
U. of Scranton 3
Kings 1
1
6
8
ANDRUSS
1
Shippensburg 8
Wilkes 5
Mansfield 8
1
4
DR.
3
6
6
TENNIS
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
to $5.00.
study of our constitution indicates
that dues must be approved at a
9
BASEBALL
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
87
had been raised
second place
BSC
71
71
Announcement was made in the
Quarterly that Alumni dues
1-2
1-2
Lycoming
Rock
92
July
1-2
Susquehanna
127
97
67
Lock Haven 53
Millersville 100
Shippensburg 10
Kutztown 58
BSC
Millersville 3
Kutztown 8
16
11
12
13 1-2
3 1-2
6
Cliff Relays
placed fourth
Shippensburg 32
113
Penn. Conference Meet
BSC
Fourth place
LaCrosse, Wisconsin
19
70 1-2
65
45 1-2
E. Stroudsburg
West Chester
7 1-2
—
BSC finished ninth
Tri-Meet, Kutztown
Kutztown
Scranton U. 9
Shippensburg 1 1-2
E. Stroudsburg 9 1-2
9
17 1-2
48
Mansfield 32
Western Frontier Relays, University
GOLF
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
Cheyney
97
113
Cedar
Temple
37
51
64
74
55
68
63
59
62
84
73
42
65
Kutztown 78
96
106
91
97
89
86
SEPTEMBER,
E. Stroudsburg 64
Mansfield 70
Penn. Conference Championship
Meet
34
33
22
Lock Haven 76
79
73
83
89
74
81
SWIMMING
1989-1970
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
BSC
East Stroudsburg
64
43
18
to attend, please let me know so that
other arrangements can be made.”
Page nine
TWO TEACHERS
ARE HONORED
Two Bloomsburg
State College fac-
ulty
ley
members, Mx-s. Iva Mae Beckand Miss Beatrice
Englehart,
who
will
retire prior to the start of
the next college year, were honored
with special citations for faithful service at the final faculty meeting of
the current college year.
Mrs. Beckley, Assistant Professor
of Education, will retire at the end
of the present college year.
Mrs.
Beckley received her Bachelor of
Science
degree in education from
Lock Haven State College, her Master of Education degree from the
Pennsylvania State University, and
has taken additional graduate studies
in supervision in elementary education
at Teachei-s College, Columbia University.
Before joining the faculty
Bloomsburg State College in 1943,
she was an elementary teacher for
nine years in the public schools of
Tyrone.
She has served as consultant and
conducted workshops during summer
sessions at BSC,
as consultant at
county institutes and for various Parent-Teacher
Assocation
groups
throughout the area. She organized
and directed the Head Start Program of Columbia County during the
of
summer
summer
of 1965, and the following
directed the program in the
Bloomsburg area. When a regional
training office for the Head Start
Program was appi-oved at Bloomsburg State College in March of 1968,
Mi-s. Beckley was selected as a regional training officer. From 1966 to
1968, she served as a consultant for
the ESEA-Title I program in the
public schools of Mount Carmel.
She is a member of the National
Council of Teachers of English, International Reading Association, American
Association
of
University
Women, National Education Association, Pennsylvania State
Education
Association, Susquehanna Valley Super visoi-s, Columbia
County
Mental
Health Association, and has served
as Director and Chairman of the committee on Childhood Mental Illness.
Mrs. Beckley is a past president of
the Central Region Pennsylvania Association of Student Teachers, Susquehanna Valley Reading Council,
BSC College Faculty Association,
and the Business and Professional
Women’s Club
Bloomsburg.
BSC Graduate
Miss Englehart is an Associate
Professor of Education and retired
at the end of the 1970 summer session.
Prior
to
of
joining
the
faculty
of
in 1956,
for a two
primai’y depai"t-
Bloomsburg State College
Miss EnglehaiT had taught
year period in the
ment of Abington Township Schools
in Montgomery County.
She began her teaching career in
Mays Landing, N. J., in 1927, after
completing her teacher-certification
at the then Bloomsburg State Teachers College. In 1929 she returned to
Bloomsburg
Page ten
to
teach
in
the
public
elementary schools, and during that
pei'iod completed the requirements
for the Bachelor of Science degree in
Education.
Miss Englehart
Master
and
was awai'ded the
Education
degree
at
Bucknell Univei-sity in 1953 and qualified for the Elementary Supervisor’s
and Pi-incipal’s Cei’tificates. During
same year she accepted an
the
ap-
pointment as Instructor in the Early
Childhood Elementary Education Department at Temple University and
devoted part of her time to the supervision of student teachers in the
public schools of Philadelphia. Her
career as a teacher spanned a period of foi'ty-three years.
Her professional affiliations include
membership in the Pennsylvania State
Education Association, the National
Education Association, the Association of Childhood International, the
Association for Student Teaching, and
Delta Kappa
Fraternity.
TREASURERS REPORT
is a summary of the
report presented by Earl A. Gehx-ig,
Treasui'er of the Alumni Association,
at the annual meeting of the Alumni
Association on Alumni Day.
During the pei-iod April 1, 1969 to
The following
31, 1970, Loyalty Fund and
dues collected totaled $8,699.53. During the same period, expenditures
totaled $10,310.28, leaving us with a
net decrease in equity of $1,160.75.
The largest area of expenditures has
to do with the printing and mailing
of the Quarterly to all graduates of
the College, whether or not they are
March
currently contributing to the Association.
In the area of scholarships and
grants, out total income for the year
ended March 31, 1970 was $1,356.91 of
which $1,300.00 has been awarded
the form of grants.
Gamma
Citation
IN RECOGNITION of almost three
decades of faithful srevice to Bloomsburg State Teachers
College
and
Bloomsburg State College, We, the
faculty of Bloomsburg State College
desire to accord this tribute to
IVA
MAE BECKLEY
WHEREAS, Mi-s. Iva Mae Beckley
has devoted twenty-seven years to the
teaching of children and the supervision of student teachers in both the
Campus Laboratory School and the
area Public Schools, and
WHEREAS, she has made notable
contributions as an instructor in virtually evex-y phase of
Teacher Education, and
WHEREAS,
she
Elementary
was instrumental
in initiating the first Head Start project in Columbia County, as well as
serving as Regional Training Officer for the program for North Eastern Pennsylvania, and
WHEREAS, her complete trustworthiness and loyalty, her persistent
demand for excellence, and her unqualified dedication as an educator,
serve as an inspiration to all those
who know
her.
THEREFORE, BE
IT
RESOLVED,
that this citation be spread upon the
minutes as a permanent record of this
May 14, 1970, Bloomsburg State College College Faculty Meeting.
Expression of Appreciation
In recognition of fourteen years of
service to Bloomsburg State
College as a teacher and a supervisor of student teaching, as a fi'iend
and counselor of students and faculty,
as inspirational leader among early
childhood specialists, and in recognition of many additional years as a
teacher in the elementary schools of
the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
faithful
this tribute is
presented
to
BEATRICE M. ENGLEHART
by her grateful colleagues upon the
commencement
May
14,
1970.
of
her
retirement,
Scholarships
in
Awarded
Rhodes Scholarship
Alumni Scholarships
Lucy McCammon Scholarship
E. H. Nelson Scholarship
200.00 5
600.00
200.00*
300.00
*These scholarships are taken from
the principal, until the fund is exhausted.
Scholarship Funds
Scholai-ships are pi-ovided by the
income fi*om these funds. Allocations
to these funds are made fi'om Loyalty
Fund contributions.
Centennial Loan Fund
Bakeless Fund
Nelson Fund
Watkins Fund
Earl H. Rhodes Fund
19,294.59
10,001.49
1,390.24
1,390.00
420.00
610.20
95.00
1904.28
3628.04
910.00
3031.45
Lucy McCammon Fund
Henry J. Warman Fund
Wm. B. Sutliff Fund
Paul Thomas Fund
Anna Lowrie Wells Fund
Fenstemaker Fund
42.770.39
Total
McNinch Fund
(According to the McNinch
will, the
principal and income ai e to be used
for loans only).
Equities
128.758.70
Principal Bequest
-
25,748.29
Additions
Total Equities
Student loans, totalling
were outstanding on Max-ch
During the year April 1,
March 31,
was made
1970, a total
to students.
of
154.506.99
$41,601.46
31.
1970.
to
1969
53 loans
Approval of three new Master of
Education degrees has been received
by Bloomsbui’g State College from
the state Department of Education,
according to Dr. Charles Cai'lson. director, division of graduate studies at
BSC.
The new degrees to be offered will
be the master of education in physical science, master of education in
chemistiy, and master of education
in
physics.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
LEGISLATION ON
FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE
As a result of recent legislation enby the Pennsylvania General
Assembly, amending the law which
affects the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency, Dr. Robert
J. Nossen, President of Bloomsburg
Stale College, signed an agreement
with the PHEAA which affects the
acted
continued eligibility
tending the college.
of
students
at-
In a letter from Kenneth R. Reeher,
Executive Director of PHEAA to Dr.
Nossen (preceding the signing of the
agreement by Dr. Nossen i, an extract
from the amendments enacted speci-
that
fy
The Agency may deny
all
forms of financial assistance of any
student
"ll> Who is convicted by any court
of record of a criminal offense which
was committed after the effective
date of this act which, under the
laws of the United States or Pennsylvania, would constitute a misdemeanor involving moral turpitude or a felony; or
(2) Who has been expelled, dismissed, or denied enrollment by any
approved institution of higher learning for refusal to obey, after the effective date of this act. a lawful regulation or order of any institution of
higher learning, which refusal, in the
opinion of the institution, contributed
to a disruption of the activities, administration or classes of such institution; or
3 Who has been convicted in any
court of record of any offense committed in the course of disturbing, interfering with or preventing, or in an
attempt to disturb, interfere w'ith or
prevent the orderly conduct of the activities, administration or classes of
an institution of higher education.
(b) Each institution of higher education shall immediately furnish to
the Agency, the name and address of
any student who is a resident of the
(
»
Pennsylvania who
is expelled, dismissed or denied enrollment for the reasons set forth in
Commonwealth
of
clause (2) (of subsection (a) of this
section) or of whom the institution
of
higher education has knowledge
that he has been convicted of offenses as set forth in clauses (1) and (3)
(of subsection (a) of this section.)
(c) Nothing in this section shall be
construed to limit the freedom cf any
student to verbal expression of individual view's or opinions.
(d Any institution of higher learning w'hich refuses to execute an agreement with the A.gency to comply with
subsection (b) of this section shall be
denied the status of an approved institution under the provisions of this
>
act.”
Mr. Reeher also requested that the
college begin providing the Agency
with the name and address of students
as required in subparagraph b of the
quoted legislation. The effective date
of the legislation wr as October
29.
1969.
A decision as to eligibility of
such students for loans or scholarship
i
SEPTEMBER,
1970
)
assistance will be made upon completion of the Agency evaluation of each
individual case.
The provision for denying an institution approval to participate in either
the PHEAA Scholarship
or
Loan
Guaranty Program will be effective
1970-71
from the
academic year.
Scholarship awards or loan guaranties
cr any renewal thereof will not be
issued to applicants for the 1970-71
academic year unless the institution
(hey plan to attend has executed the
attached agreement.
COLLEGE INSTALLS NEW
SYSTEM FOR EDUCATION
The Department of Education of
Bloomsburg State College has installed an auto-tutorial educational media
laboratory in Hartline Science Center.
The system, which utilizes audiovisual material in a carrel setting w'ill
allow large numbers of students to
receive necessary instruction in audiovisual
machine
operation
and
production techniques. Teachers need
to be familiar with the latest equipment and materials in education and
the new sytem allow's each student to
receive
individualized
instruction
moving him at his ow'n pace.
The system is essentially a prog-
rammed
instruction system that utilfilms, and other visual media that are accompanied by
an audio tape. To learn a particular
machine or production procedure, a
student merely seats himself at a carrel, presses the appropriate buttons
and the program is delivered to him.
He may review the program as many
izes slides.
8mm
times as he likes, until he feels competent in the operation. Professional
assistance is continually available and
the student is responsible for demonstrating
competency
to his instructor
an exam setting.
Although the concept is not new,
this system represents the first time
that such a system has been utilized
in
Bloomsburg State College.
The
system allows the student to come to
the laboratory and have his instructor prescribe for him those experiences which are appropriate to his needs
at
rather than receiving the
mass type
Such systems have been
successfully employed at Purdue University, at Michigan State University
to teach educational media and at
instruction.
numerous other
institutions of higher
education to provide instruction in a
variety of subjects.
The particular system for Bloomsburg State College wr as conceived and
designed by Raymond E. Babineau,
assistant professor of education. Barbineau was a participant in an institute and wr as one of the members who
designed the proto-type for the carrel
that is being used in the new system.
His system incorporates 15 carrel
experiences in v.'hich the student progresses through experiences that are
designed to increase his levels
of
competency in educational media.
The installation of the system culminates a year of planning that commen-
ced when Babineau joined the
BSC
staff last July.
Administration support for the plan
was provided by Dr. H. M. Afshar,
chairman of the education department
and Dr. John Hoch, dean of instruction. Technical assistance was provided by Thaddeus Piotrowski, direcaudio visual materials cenwill become operational during the Main Summer Session.
Interested teachers from the
local area are invited to visit the
facility in Room B-79
Hartliuo
of
Science Hall.
tor of the
ter.
The
system
BSC BUILDING PROGRAM
The 1975 projection of Bloomsburg
State College, involving both the lower and upper campuses, is one of 6,000 students.
To achieve that objective four projects will be completed this year and
during 1970 final designs are expected
to be completed and ready for bids
for the following projects; an athletic
field,
a student center,
recreation
areas, a multi-level parking garage,
and administration building and complete utilities for the upper campus.
It is hoped construction
on these
projects, involving an expenditure of
3>13,000,000 w'ill begin during the 1970
calendar year. Four projects will be
completed in 1970. Food service began in the new College Commons
in February.
A maintenance building-garage w as completed
and the Bakeless Center for the Humanities W'as ready for occupancy in
sometime
r
A nine-story
women will be
June.
residence hall for
used for the first
time in September.
Both the new
College Commons, which was named
for former Governor William Scranton, and the Bakelss Center, will be
completely air-conditioned.
Construction has begun on a new'
fieldhouse-gymnasium on the upper
400
campus.
Preplanning has been completed
a new classroom building, two
for
residence halls for women, 2 residence
halls for men, a dining hall-kitchen,
and a maintenance building.
Preplanning is expected to begin in the
near future for another residence hall
for women and for an extension of
underground facilities.
Progress is the keynote at
BSC and
should continue at
a
steady
rate
throughout the next few years with
the enrollment be.ing regulated by the
growth of the physical plant as well
as the expansion of curriculum necessary to fulfill the needs of students of
the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
The college pledges a continuation of
improved service and progress in
1970.
HOME-COMING DAY
Saturday, October 17, 1970
ALUMNI DAY
Saturday, April 24, 1971
Page eleven
ADDRESSES WANTED
it
received $4,635,000 in the past bud-
White
Robert
Mrs.
Lang) ’67
(Geraldine
James
P. Gallagher
Richard Kitchen ’62
Jerome D. Slavick
’62
Louise M. Ronskey
’29
—
Frank M. Hydro
Joan M. Woods (Mrs. Gerald Nau’66
gle)
receive
year.
’69
Dr.
Connie Jean Cromley ’69
Gloria Janasik (Mrs. Gerald Gurisk)
However, seven of the 14 institusystem will be cut in their
funds from the state.
The three state-related universities
will
—Penn State, Pitt and Temple
tions in the
’64
’69
Rebecca A. Burke
J.
Lonie
'68
’61
BSC WILL GET
STATE INCREASE
Bloomsburg
State
College’s
state
share will rise by $338,000 for 1970-71
despite the state budget allotment of
$73,018,000
for
all
same amount
Harry Gasser, a former
the state colleges
Franklin
Elementary
new budget
Is
coming year, while
Schools.
Upon his return to Bloomsburg, Dr.
Johnson wrote descriptions of the
schools for use in catalog of the Project to Utilize
(PURE).
Resources
in
The information
Education
wall
then
be made readily available to school
boards and administrators who wish
to visit places where experimental
and innovative ideas are in successful
practice. Dr. Johnson will also send
a summary of his findings to the more
than 700 educators throughout the natrecommending
ion who assisted by
schools for visitation.
The Johnsons have
visited
schools
on their way to Florida,
westward through Texas and Arizona
in states
to California.
the Division of
018,000.
Laboratory
School.
The total amount for all the state
colleges will remain the same, according to the austerity budget submitted
by the Shafer administration, at $73,-
$4,973,000 for the
in-
of the faculty of BSC from Septemsupervising
ber, 1950, serving as
teacher, Grade 5, in the Benjamin
STUDY COVERS
SIXTY SCHOOLS
the
last
structor and supervisor of student teachers at Bloomsburg State College,
has been named associate professor
and Indiana University as proposed
by Governor Shafer.
Due BSC under
as
of
Rebecca Spatzer Cunningham
Judith A. Bole ’61
Thomas
the
and
educational
administration
supervisor in the Graduate School at
Villanova University.
Dr. Gasser in currently assistant
county supei’intendent, Montgomery
county, Norristown, a position he has
held since 1956. He was a member
’63
Isabel D. Bolinsky ’50
Department of Education. Dr. Johnwho was on sabbatical leave
from his college position, was accompanied by Mrs. Johnson who was on
leave from her teaching position in
Millville
Area
Elementary
the
son,
get.
Dr. Royce O. Johnson, Director of
They visited in Oregon and proceeded through Washington and then startvia
Utah,
ed their homeward trip
Colorado,
Illinois
Wisconsin,
and
Michigan.
Elementary Education
at Bloomsburg State College has been
visiting more than sixty experimental
and innovative elementary schools in
twenty-eight states as part of a project sponsored by the Pennsylvania
Warren I. Johnson, Supervisor of
Student Teachers of the elementary
division, served as Acting Director
of the Division of Elementary Education during the second semester.
HOME-COMING DAY
SATURDAY, OCTOBER
17,
1970
ALUMNI DAY
SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 1971
Page twelve
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Where Are Our
An
item of mail from the General Alumni Association of the Shippensburg
State College indicates that during the
local
the
Local Branches?
months of February
branches were scheduled to hold meetings.
state,
to July, nineteen
Eight of these were out of
and included Ohio, Chicago, Michigan, Florida, Delaware, West
Virginia, San Francisco
and Los Angeles.
During the past year, only three
local
branches of
BSC have been
Eight other areas, once active, have been inactive for several years.
your Board
been the opinion of
should stand on their
own
feet,
of Directors
that
the
local
active.
It
has
branches
without continuous prodding from Alumni
headquarters.
We
should like to hear from interested Alumni, and learn their opinions
of the advisability of reactivating the local branches,
Lists of
Alumni
It
names
may be
obtained from the
Office.
is
the opinion of your Editor that the time has
should support their
nels as possible.
the
of people living in your area
and what should be done.
Alma Mater
in as
many ways and through
will
as
During these days College administrators need
Alumni are behind them.
Who
come when Alumni
be the
first
one
to start the ball rolling?
many
to
chan-
know
that
Loyalty Fund Fourth Year
October
1,
1969 to July
Class
No.
Amt.
Class
No.
1892
1896
1901
1902
1903
1904
1905
1906
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1
3.00
10.00
1S.00
30.00
12.00
3.00
58.25
25.00
67.00
22.00
1923
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
16
17
1
3
2
2
1
8
3
12
3
7
28
10
8
12
2
25
9
12
10
16
184.00
170.00
101.00
95.00
110.00
15.00
162.00
40.00
82.00
109.00
129.00
243.00
79.50
72.00
23
9
10
(*
1944
1945
1946
1,
1970
Amt.
92.00
103.00
134.00
64.00
89.00
105.00
88.00
588.75
74.00
112.50
50.00
92.00
71.00
20.00
95.00
55.00
15.00
50.50
78:50
138.00
180.00
84.00
27.00
53.00
29
9
9
16
16
45
10
13
9
6
15
3
6
9
.2
11
11
14
12
8
4
7
Class
No.
1947
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1934
19S5
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
Others
7
8
16
20
9
7
8
3
9
10
14
13
10
21
7
16
24
18
38
37
42
42
45
6
5
Includes check presented on Alumni Day)
TO BE DETACHED, FILLED OUT, AND RETURNED
Signature
Name
while
in college
Address
(street)
Zip Code
(town)
If
above address
is
new check
here
Q
Amount
Year of graduation
Mail checks to Alumni Office, Box 31, B.S.C.
To
insure tax deductions,
B.
S.
C.
make checks payable
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
to
Amt.
67.00
115.91
132.00
137.00
120.00
45.00
87.00
15.00
65.00
51.00
289.00
89.0H
47.00
133.00
50.00
136.00
175.50
97.51
195.00
158.00
201.5 L
256.50
230.50
615.00“
1114.00
The new Student Center will include a formal lounge, snack bar, multi-purpose rooms, the College Store, the
student bank, a game room, an infirmary, an information center, mail boxes for students, a locker room for commuting students, offices for administrative personnel who work with student publications and the Student Union
Board, a TV room, a music listening room. The Student Center will be constructed on a portion of the terrace area
between Waller Hall and Montour Hall.
THE PRESIDENT'S PAGE
academic year will
has been a good semester, marking a number of achievements and bringing, of course, a number of problems. For the first time an allorganization,
administrative
college senate is in operation; coupled with the new
For the first time, too, the
college governance is undergoing significant change.
Foundation becomes a reality, and you should be hearing much about its activities
during the coming months and years.
By
the time you read this, the first semester of the 1970-1971
be nearing
its
end.
So far
it
—
The maintenance building was put into service during late October, and plans now
opening of Columbia Hall, a residence for 400 women, immediately after
Thanksgiving. Bakeless was dedicated in an impressive ceremony in connection with
the annual Education Conference in late October, and the field house is rising from
the ground on the new campus site. November marked the opening of bids for the
call for the
Administration Building, and construction should begin prior *o the end of the year.
Of the planning for and the starting of building projects there is no immediate end
m sight, as the college gears itself to carry its share of the growing number of students expected throughout the Commonwealth during the ’70’s.
On
necessary to take
immediate and
reasons essentially known only to
them, decided they did not have to fulfill their contractural obligations. Faculty and
administrative officers spent an inordinate amount of time in attempting reconciliation
prior to dismisal action. During the critical period the campus remained calm, the
instructional program continued unimpaired, ar.d members of the campus community
showed remarkable unanimity in their opposition to the threat oi those who challenged
the orderly and professional conduct of campus affairs.
In this case, as with any
the negative
side,
the college
found
decisive action against two professors who,
it
for
other relative to the operation of Blocmsburg State College, the integrity of operation
and the fulfillment of declared educational objectives remained paramount and governed all decisions and actions. While the incidents in themselves are regrettable, it
would, of course, be intolerable should we fail to meet directly our responsibilities.
Returning
to the affirmative
uate phases of
its
and the constructive, the college continued
curricular organization,
its
calendar of operation,
its
to
eval-
admissions
program, and numerous other matters. While the summer sessions for 1971
man 3-6-3, Mr. James Creasy, Director, has announced that a 6-6 organization
will
re-
will be
instituted for 1972.
Numerous
efforts are being
made
services and in continuing education.
to
expand the role
of the college in
community
A major
undertaking, that of long-range planning, is well under way, and the college, in all probability, because of its resources
and its favorable location in relationship to outstanding medical facilities will further
develop its role in the health-related sciences and services.
On November
14, I participated in a panel discussion at Shippensburg on the role
governance of colleges. This is being written prior to that date, and
In the meantime,
1 plan to report to you in the next issue on some of the conclusions.
we can point at Bloomsburg to an alumni director serving with the Trustees, and to
cwo members of the Association participating as members of the Foundation. Regardless however, it is apparent that those who carry the Bloomsburg degree can continue a role at the college by their interest in and support of their Association, by
assisting the admissions officers, and by writing, on occasion, to any of us offering
your views and your suggestions.
of the
alumni
in
Robert Nossen
President
Homecoming 1970
Activities for the 43rd annual Homeat BSC got under
coming Celebration
way with
the Big
Name
Entertainment
Committee of the College Community
Government Association presenting a
concert package. On Thursday, October 15. Charles Byrd, one of today’s
outstanding Jazz guitarists, performed
in Centennial Gymnasium at 8:00 p.m.
During the intermission of the latter,
the Homecoming Queen was crowned.
The Homecoming Parade began the
festivities on Saturday, October 17.
at 10:15 a. m. with a line-of-march
from Centennial Gymnasium, down
Second and Main streets to Market
street, and south on Market to Town
Park. Jack Mulka. Director Student
Activities,
awarded prizes
for the best
decorated seven floats, three off-campus houses, and a men’s and women’s
residence hall on campus.
A
luncheon for alumni and visitors
in the Scranton Commons
A record
at 12:00 noon, Saturday.
crowd was present at Bloomsburg’s
was held
m. to see the
entertain the Marauders of Millersville State College in an
eastern division Pennsylvania State
College Conference game. In a closely
contested game, BSC defeated Millersville with a score of 23 to 17.
Athletic
Park
Huskies of
at 2:00 p.
BSC
A cafeteria dinner for alumni and
visitors followed in the Scranton Commons. Saturday evening activities featured two semi-formal dances held at
separate locations. Beginning at 8:30
p. m., “Hot Buttered Funk” played
the latest music for students and recent graduates in the West Dining
Hall of Scranton Commons, while at
the same time in the East Dining Hall.
Lee Vincent’s Mcdernaires furnished
the music for the faculty members
and less recent graduates.
Alumni remaining on campus Sunday. October 18, along with students,
faculty members, and the general
public were able to attend a “Pops
Concert” presented by the College
Concert Choir under the direction of
Richard Stanislaw in the Haas Auditorium at 8:15 p. m.
Boyd Buckingham. Associate Vice
President for Development and External Relations was chairman for the
festivities.
AMENDMENT TO
CONSTITUTION
An amendment
the
the
to the Constitution of
Alumni Association, approved by
Board of Directors, will be voted
on at the next general meeting of the
Association on Alumni Day, Saturday,
April 24, 1971. This amendment would
install a member of the graduating
class as an ex-officio member of the
Board of Directors, to serve for one
year.
DECEMBER,
1970
BAKELESS CENTER
IS
DEDICATED
The Bakeless Center
for the
this
completed earlier
ities,
Humanyear on
the campus of Bloomsburg State College, was foi’mally dedicated during
the luncheon of the 24th Annual Conference for Teachers and Administrators held at Bloomsburg State Col-
lege Saturday, October 24.
This
fine
which was
mer
structure,
educational
used during the sum-
first
sessions, 1970, is named for two
of the Bakeless family,
generations
whom are graduates of Bloomsburg State Normal School.
The late Professor O. H. Bakeless,
all of
a member of the Class of 1879, was a
faculty member from 1890-1892 and
Extremely interested in
1902-1929.
students, he was principal for many
years of the Model or Training School
on campus, and taught courses in psychology and history of education. Professor Bakeless solicited $25,000 from
students, faculty, and other donors to
purchase Tiffany stained glass win-
dows in 1920. The windows were installed in Waller and Noetling Halls,
and were removed and placed
druss Library
when
it
in
An-
was constructed
in 1966.
The late Sarah Harvey Bakeless,
Class of 1884. was the wife of O. H.
She served as a faculty
member from 1885-1892 and was a teacher in the Model School.
Dr. John Bakeless, Class of 1913, is
the son of O. H. Bakeless.
He has
gained an international reputation as
an educator, scholar, and Army Colonel.
A review of Dr. Bakeless’ recent book, “Spies of the Confederacy,”
was in the September 13, 1970 issue of
the New York Times Book Review.
His wdfe, Katherine Little Bakeless,
Ciass of 1915, is a noted authoress
and musician.
Mrs.
Katherine
Bakeless
Nason, Class of 1918 and daughter of O. H.
Bakeless, is an educator, artist, and
Bakeless.
benefactress to the College.
Dr. and Mrs. John Bakeless were
present at the dedication ceremonies.
Mrs. Nason is traveling abroad and
was unable to attend.
Centrally located in the
academic
area of the campus, the Bakeless Center for the Humanities is the first
building on campus to feature wallbearing construction with re-enforced
concrete floors.
The exterior walls
consist of concrete block with brick
veneer facing.
Included in the three and a half
story building are 36 classrooms, three
seminar rooms, offices for 66 faculty
members, secretarial areas, a faculty
lounge, storage areas, and an automatic elevator. All classrooms and
offices are air conditioned.
The three large classrooms on the
third floor are illuminated with skylights and will be used by the Art Department. Language laboratories will
be installed in the large classrooms on
the second floor. The stair tower was
specifically designed to enhance the
aesthetic qualities of the new center
and also provides wall space to be
used as an area for paintings. A portion of the building has currently been
designated as the center for the Columbia County Historical Museum,
which will be used jointly by the colege community and members of the
Historical Society.
The architectural firm of Milton Schwartz and Associates, Philadelphia.
Pennsylvania designed the Bakeless
Center for the Humanities, completed
on July 15, 1970. Boyd F. Bucking
ham. Associate Vice President for
Development, co-ordinated the planning meetings between representatives
of the college, the architect, and the
General State Authority during the deDr.
sign and construction stages.
Francis Radice. Professor, School of
Business, served as chairman for the
dedication.
The master of ceremonies at the
dedication luncheon was Dr. Stuart
Edwards, Dean of the School of Professional
Speakers were
Studies.
President Nossen, William A. Lank,
Chairman of the Board of Trustees,
and Dr. John Bakeless
NOSSEN ADDRESSES
FRESHMEN-PARENTS
DR.
“There are many who wish to give
you advice. A true test of wisdom is
how to choose your counselor wisely,”
Dr. Robert
Nossen,
president
of
Bloomsburg State College stated in an
address to freshmen students and their
parents during the seventeenth annual
freshmen-parents day activities in the
campus. Approximately 1,100 parents,
students, and faculty attended.
In a statement directed to parents,
Dr. Nossen added. “This is the most
important advice I can give young
people. I would urge you as parents
to be aware of it and to repeat it often.”
Speaking of those who counsel or
advise students, Dr. Nossen continued,
“There are those who come to the
campus to lead persons to take action
that the counselor wants them to take
for his own narrow purpose.
“There are those who print underground or unofficial papers in the hope
that they can influence students.
“There are those, well-meaning,
of really
good intent, who
will inter-
pert events at they see them, but
don’t understand them.
“All of these influences are on this
campus. Every student here will be
subject to them. The careful choice
of an advisor will be important to you
both now and for years to come.”
Dr. Nossen also discussed plans
Page one
made by
thirteen
student leaders from the
State Colleges and Indiana
University to declare October 15, as
Stae College Day. The students will
Harrisburg to call attention to
the true needs of these institutions of
higher education.
Dr. Nossen noted that plans for Octrally in
ober 15 have been developed by
ponsible student leaders, spokesmen
res-
for the Board of Presidents, and perhaps, Gov. Shafer.
“It is a form of protest, but responsible and guided protest, to help others
understand the importance of these
colleges,” Dr. Nossen said.
“We will not close; we will not put
aside our academic program for any
reason over which we have control.
But in spirit, we will give our support
insofar as ends remain constructive
and means remain objective, responsible, and valid,” Nossen said.
Dr. Nossen expressed his faith in
Michael Pilligalli, president of the
community government association,
and other students at the college.
“They have given me little reason
to feel otherwise,” he said.
John S. Mulka, director of student
activities, presided during the pro
gram.
He reminded those present “Success
may
in life
way street.
be characterized as a two-
“For example, every human being
has certain rights and privileges, but
accompaning these are responsibilities
which must be fulfilled,” he said.
Michael Pilligalli, CGA president,
explained the October 15 student
movement referred to earlier by Dr.
Nossen.
Students are going to Harrisburg not
to protest or act unlawfully, but as
responsible adults who want to impress State officials with the need for
the State Colleges and Indiana University, he said.
Elton Hunsinger, vice president for
student affairs at the college, said,
college youth hold in their hands
three of the most important influences
of all times - love, understanding, and
“Our
responsibility.”
“Our current problems can be overcome,” he said, “with the proper
quantity,
quality,
and application
of
hard
discipline,
and
knowledge,
work.”
“Today’s student,” he said, “will
wake up and defy a gloomy future.
But he must assume a full share of
responsibility for that future.
“He must understand that an eduis one who can differentiate between what you do know and
what you don’t know. He must know
cated person
and
right
the
difference between
wrong, and have the courage to support that which is right.”
Dr. John A. Hoch, vice president
and dean of the faculties, urged parents to encourage their sons and daughters to “solve problems before they
become serious.”
He asked parents
BUILDINGS
Although three new buildings have
been occupied recently and a fourth
is nearing completion, physical facil-
Bloomsburg State College
have to be utilized to the fullest
ities of the
will
possible extent during the 1970-71 college year to accommodate nearly 4,000
full-time undergraduate and graduate students, over 550 part-time undergraduate and graduate students.
282 faculty and administrative personnel, and 272 non-instruotive employees.
The Scranton Commons, Bakeless
Center for the Humanities, and a new
to
residence halls, a dining hall-kitchen
and a maintenance building.
The Upper Campus now
service building were completed during the summer. Columbia
Residence Hall, which will house 400
women,
is
expected to be ready for
of October.
occupancy by the end
In addition to these projects, there
are nine others in various stages of
construction cr design. The total cost
of construction for the thirteen projects is in excess of $13,000,000.
An
additional amount of
for
$3,800,000
four projects is included in the 1969-70
Capital Budget which has not yet been
passed by the State Legislature. A new
gymnasium is emerging above the
horizon on the Upper Campus. It is
expected to be ready for use by September, 1971. A central air conditioning system is now being installed in
the former College Commons, which
will be used as a temporary student
union building until a student center is
completed. Additional space will be
available in Centennial Gymnasium
following completion of an excavating
project now in progress in the basement area.
Final plans and specifications have
been delivered to the General State
Authority to provide for new varsity
(Upper Campus);
athletic fields
util-
roads, and parking areas (Upper
Campus); a student center (Lower
Campus); a multi-level parking garrecreation arage Lower Campus
ities,
(
)
eas, parking
;
and roads (Lower Cam-
pus); an administration - supply building (Lower Campus).
It is hoped that bids will be opened
for several of these projects this fall;
the others will be delayed until late
winter or early spring.
When the 1969-1970 capital budget
is approved, funds are expected to be
available for the design and construction of a new residence hall for 300 women on the site of Waller Hall; a new
classroom building east of Andruss
Library; the air-conditioning of Sutliff Hall; the conversion and addition
of boilers in the heating plant.
Pre-planning of additional projects
Upper Campus is following guidelines established in the Campus Plan
which was completed in 1967. At the
present time, pre-planning submissions have been completed for four
ion
that
need.
should seek the
ask for the help they
students
proper person
to
consists of
approximately 103 acres, which includes the 68 acres purchased from the
former Bloomsburg Country Club and
35 acres purchased this summer. The
latter area will be used as a site for
roads and recreation facilities.
NEW FACULTY
An educator once accused by the
Russians of being an American spy
has been named head of the Foreign
Language department
of
Bloomsburg
State College.
campus
Hoch reinforced Dr. Nossen’s suggest-
give their
children support while the young
people are adjusting to college life.
Page two
NEW
Dr. Ariane Foureman, a native of
Tunisia, has been
of the department.
named chairman
Born of Russian parents, who left
Russia at the time of the revolution
become French citizens in Tunisia,
Foureman attended a private
Dr.
Notreschool in Tunisia,
Catholic
Dame de Sion, and received a French
Baccalaureat. which is approximately
equivalent to two years of college in
the United States.
Her studies in law school in Tunisia
were interrupted by World War II.
She became a war bride of an army
officer, arriving in the U.S. in 1947.
to
and became an American citizen in
1950. She continued her education at
Ohio State University, and was awardMaster of
ed the Bachelor of Arts.
Arts, and Doctor of Philosophy degrees in French.
Dr. Foureman started her teaching
career at Ohio State University as an
Assistant Instructor in 1957. and served as an Instructor from 1962 to 1968.
During the summers of 1964 and 1965
she taught Russian at Ohio State and
was an instructor and co-leader of a
language studv tour to Russia sponsored by Ohio State University.
A year later she was accused in the
Russian newspaper, Pravda. of being
an American spy for the United States
government. In 1968 she was appointed Assistant Professor at Capital Un
iversity in Columbus, Ohio, and served in that capacity until her appoint-
ment
to
Bloomsburg
in 1969.
Although Dr. Foureman
left
OSU
the fall of 1968. the class of 1969
inated her for the Arts Council
in
nomGood
Teaching Award.
Dr.
in
of
the
Foureman holds membership
Modern Language Association
University Professors, Ohio State
University Alumni Association, Societe des Professors Francais en Amerique, Alliance Francaise de Columbus.
Ohio, and the Association of Pennsylvania State College and University
Faculties (A.P.S.C.U.F.).
Her husband. Dr. Roy Foureman.
received a Doctor of Philosophy degree from Ohio State University and
retired from the U.S. Army with the
rank of lieutenant colonel. The Fou remans have two children, Ariane. a
senior at Ohio State, and Alexandra,
a sophmore at the same institution.
Dr. Foureman makes frequent trips
Europe to visit her parents and
t,o
further her education.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
oming Valley Garden Club.
She is
survived by three daughters, three
grandchildren, and two great grand-
3u iUmnrtam
children.
George W. Vansickle ’35
George W. Vansickle, forty-six, of
Vineland, N. J., died Aug. 15 in Wash-
1919— Mrs. Frances Epler Manning.
Cuernavaca, Mexico.
1922— Leah Griffith, Plymouth, Pa.
1927— Eleanore S. Henry, Summit
Hill.
ington, D. C., of a heart attack, while
attending a Moose convention.
Born April 3, 1914, in Jamison City,
he was the son of R. Emory and Nellie
Vansickle.
He was principal of the Norma
School in Vineland. He was active in
the Moose Lodge and was past deputy
governor of the lodge in New Jersey.
Pa.
1932— Ruth E. Jones (Mrs. N. Donald Miller) Havre de Grace, Maryland
1912— Harold N. Cool, Culver City.
Calif. Died August 24. 1970
1958— Bertlette Burrell, R. D. 1, Elysburg, Pa.
Margaret Crouse DerPa.
Marguerite Davey, Wanamie,
•1927— Mrs.
rick. Evert,
—
Pa.
/ 1920 —Jeanne Stroh
June
1970.
1927 — Helen Schaefer
1924
Walsh,
Harold J. Pegg ’18
Harold J. Pegg, seventy-three, Altoona, died in a Pittsburgh Hospital,
died
Sunday, Sept. 20
He was born at Mordansville, a son
of the late Clarence B. and Alice Mordan Pegg.
He graduated from Buckhorn High
5,
(Mrs. George
Jacobs) Minersville, Pa.
Edna F. Maurer ’19
Miss Edna F. Maurer, 519 S. River
St., Wilkes-Barre, former art and penmanship supervisor for the Forty Fort
Public Schools for 43 years, died Wednesday, July 8, in the Nesbitt Memorial
School and Bloomsburg State College
He taught at Pine Summit,
Buckhorn and Fishingcreek Union
High School. He received his BA degree at Gettysburg in 1925 and then
accepted a position in the Altoona Senin 1918.
Hospital.
High School.
In 1931 he received his Master’s degree from the University of WashingIn 1938 he was elected
ton, Seattle.
principal
of Roosevelt Junior High
School, Altoona, a position he held unior
Miss Maurer was a graduate of
Wilkes-Barre High School, and received her bachelor of science degree
from Columbia University.
She also did graduate work at the
University of Pennsylvania, Pennsyl-
He
til his retirement in May
1962.
persued further study toward a Doctor’s degree at the Universities of Wis-
vania State University, Cornell University, Philadelphia School of Industrial
Arts and the Palmer School of New
York
Maine and Wyoming.
4, 1942 he was called
to active duty and served at Valley
Forge General Hospital, New Cumberconsin,
City.
On February
Anthony McDonald ’21
Anthony McDonald, 83, of 7330
Howard Road. Dundalk. Mr., formerly
of West Park Street, Centralia, died
Wednesday, August 12, in the Veterans Administration Hosital at
Reception Center, Philadelphia
Navy Yard, Indiantown Gap and
land
Edge wood Arsenal. He was discharged from the military in 1947 with the
permanent rank of Lieutenant Colonel.
Fort
Howard, Md.
He was born
in Bynesville, October
son of the late Alexander and
Bridget Cleary McDonald. He taught
school in Cor.yngham township before
Luther P. Hess ’13
Luther P. Hess, seventy-seven, of
1025 North Flagler Drive, West Palm
Beach, Florida, died recently at his
summer home at 2558 Old Berwick
Road. He had been in ill health for
12, 1886,
retiring in 1954.
He was a member of St. Ignatius
Church, Centralia and the Holy Name
Society of the Church. He served in
some
He was born
Almedia, a son of
the late Francis W. and Elmira E.
Creasy Hess. He was a graduate of
Bloomsburg State College in 1P13, and
taught school for several years in Columbia County. He then went into the
coal dredging business until his retirement in 1947, at which time he moved
World War I and was in tne Army
Band. At one time he was leader of
the
Elks Band in Ashland.
He
held
memberships in Ashland Elks Lodge.
Central American Legion Post 608 and
was a retired member of National Education Association and Pennsylvania
State Education Association.
Ida
O’Donnell ’01
Ida May O’Donnell (Mi's. George
N. Klein), died April 14, 1970. She was
born in Ashley, Pa. May 7, 1882. Prior
to her marriage she taught in the New
DECEMBER,
1970
in
to his Florida residence.
He was a member of the
May
York City Schools. From 1927 to 1945
she was a member of the faculty of
the G. A. R. Memorial High School,
Wilkes-Barre. She was a member of
St. Ignatus Church and the Alter Society. Mercy Hospital Auxiliary, Wyoming Valley Women’s Club, and the Wy-
time.
Church and the Berwick LOOM.
Fredrick R. Harrison ’29
of Fredrick R. Harrison,
occurred Wednesday, October 14,
The death
66,
at his
home,
at
McKendree,
follow-
ing a lengthy illness.
Mr. Harrison was born at HuntingHe taught in the Northwest Area Joint School for 45 years
and served as principal at the Hunlock Elementary School from 1954 to
1968 when he retired.
The deceased was a member of the
McKendree United Methodist Church,
the Sunday School where he served
on the official board for a number of
ton Mills.
He also was a member of
McKendree Grange and served on
years.
the
the
executive board of that organization
and a member of Luzerne County Retired Teachers Association and National Retired Teachers Association.
Charles H. Weaver ’98
Charles
H.
Weaver,
ninety-one,
Wilkes-Barre, a graduate of BSC in
1898. died in New Hanover Memorial
Hospital, Wilmington, N. C. He was
born in Danville, August 31, 1878.
He was honored by BSC during the
seventieth reunion of his class in 1968.
He was the oldest living High Priest
of the Grand Chapter of the Masonic
Order
in
Pennsylvania.
He was a member of Lodge 61, F
and AM. Wilkes-Barre; Royal Arch
Chapter 182. Dieu Le Veut Commandery.
Chapter
45.
Knights-Templar,
Irem Temple and Keystone Consistory.
He served
State
Masonic conventions
fifty
as a delegate to the
for
over
years.
Helen W. Fenstermacher ’06
Miss Helen Winifred Fenstermacher,
a former U. S. Civil Service officer,
died August 3 at a nursing home.
She lived at 1745 Lombard St., Philadelphia.
Espy Luth-
She entered the federal service as a
clerk in the
Margaret Hower, several nieces and
nephews.
signed to the Philadelphia Navy Yard,
becoming a supervisory clerk.
In 1923 she was transferred to the
Third U. S. Civil Service District as
assistant secretary and appointed acting manager in 1931.
Miss Fenstermacher was a member
of the Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners from 1923 to 1940 and a member of the Customs Promotion Board
James E. Karns
E.
Karns,
’34
fifty-seven,
of
Espy, died recently at the Gold Star
Nursing Home, Danville. He sustaineed an injury while at work January
i
ACF in Berwick. He had been employed a total of 30 years at ACF.
Born August 8, 1912, in Espy, he was
the son of the late Charles O. and
Catherine (Golder) Karns.
His entire life, with the exception of
seven years in St. Louis, was spent in
Espy. A graduate of the Ssott Town
ship and BSC in 1934, he participated
on the track team and had won the
Berwick Marathon three times.
He also worked as a male nurse at
the Danville State Hospital prior to
his employment with ACF. He was a
member of the St. John’s Lutheran
eran Church.
Surviving are his wife, the former
James
*
past seven years.
Prior to that he had worked at the
28, at the
ACF
plant in St. Louis, Mo.,
for the
where he had been employed
ture,
Department
of Agricul-
Washington, and was later as-
Page three
from 1933 to 1940. In March 1940 she
was appointed administrative officer
in charge of personnel at the Frankford Arsenal and in 1946 became executive secretary for the Civil Service
of Examiners for the Arsenal.
Following her retirement from government service in 1950 Miss Fenstermacher served as secretary and office
manager in the department of Christian Education of the Evangelical Luth-
you
^JUank
ADDRESSES WANTED
— Pauline E. Bohg
—Mrs. Mildred Russel Vought
—Richard Paden
— Mrs. Anna Deberstern Cumberland
1954— Shirley Walters
1967 —Larry J. Swisher
NEW MEMBERS OF
1925
1917
1960
1948
THE FACULTY
Moroose II, Assistant
Mathematics.
B. S.
Fairmount State College; M. S. UniJ. Vincent
Professor of
versity of Pittsburgh
David C. Evans, Admissions Counselor. B. S., Slippery Rock State College; M. Ed., Rutgers University.
Ronald J. Bercherb, Asst. Professor
of Art. M. A. in art and art education.
Kenneth Hoffman, Director of Publications.
B. S. Pennsylvania State
University.
Dr. Thomas H. Poulos, Professor of
Communication Disorders. B. S., Milwaukee State Teachers College. M. S.
University of Wisconsin; Ph. D., Michigan State University.
Dr. Vyagar Bawa, Professor of Economics. B. A., Guru Navak Khalsa
College; M. A., Punjob University;
M. A., University of Pennsylvania;
Ph. D., Cornell University.
Dr. Ann Marie Noakes, Assistant
Professor of Education.
Michael A. Bonacci, Assistant Dean
of Men. B. S., Bloomsburg Slate Col-
M. Ed., Bloomsburg.
Harry C. Strine III, Instructor
lege;
of
Speech.
B. A. .Susquehanna University; M. A., Ohio University.
Russell W. Guthrie, Instructor, Assigned to Computer Center, B. S.,
Mansfield State College.
Dr. Michael W. Gaynor, Associate
Professor of Psychology. B. A., Muhlenberg College; B. S., Lehigh University; Ph. D., Colorado State University.
Loyalty Fund contributions to Sep1970, not reported pre30,
tember
viously
1901—
:
—Mrs.
—Mrs.
1903—
1892
1898
Eva
F.
McKelvey
Richards
Mrs. A. T. Lowery, Nevin E.
S. L.
1905—
Funk
1902
1907—Lourissa V.
Leighow
1908—H. Walter Riland
Mrs. Sue T. Beaver
1909—
1906 Mabel R. Farley
1910— Mrs. Helen M. Hemingway
Mrs. E. J. Tomlinson, Dr. Jay
H. Grimes
Harold L. Moyer, Mi’s. Marion
P. Fall, Fred W. Deihl
1912—Theodore D. Krum, Mary Shoulin, Sara F. Lewis
1911 Mrs. G. W. Hasbrouck, A. K.
1913— Hazel D. Kester, Mrs. Fred
Naugle,
W. Deihl
1915— William H. Davis, In memory
of Harold N. Cool, Mrs. Grace W. Arnold, Mrs. Lera F. Yard, B. J. Swartwood
Mrs. C. J. Tallman, Bernard
J. Kelley, Mrs. Fred Patten, Mrs.
Wayne
1917—J. Hughes
Mrs. Frank S. Hutchison, Mrs.
Mrs. George H.
Louis E. Weber
Moore, Anne G. Ruddy, Mrs. Dallas
C. Baer, Mrs. Elwood Farrell
1919—
1916 Frank S. Hutchison, Mrs. Harry B. Welliver, Mrs. Dwight Falsom,
Mrs. Justin Buyauskas
-
,
Alice Tiffany Gardner, Stuart
C. Bulton, Mrs. R. S. Burr, Allen L.
Cromis.
1918
Clude
A.
Miller,
Mrs.
W.
Mason Ancker
Margaret T. Reynolds, Mrs.
Thomas Mainwaring,
Olive O. Robin-
Ralph Dreibelbis, Alma L.
Bachman, Margaret S. Brock, Alice
M. Burns, Mrs. Margaret J. Dyer
1920 Margaret V. Hower
1921 Warren L. Fisher, Mrs. J. A.
son,
F.
Kaiser, Mrs. Elmer R. Martin, Anna
L. Swanberry, Mrs. Lillian N. Yerkes
1922 Martha Y. Jones, Mrs. Joseph
E.
Adams
1926—
1923 Ann J. Jarrett, Mrs. Ralph R.
Maynard, J. J. Welliver, Mrs. Albert
K. Foster
1927—
1924 Mrs.
Donovan F. Aldrech,
Mrs. Charles F. Johnson, Jr., Olga A.
Nelson, Viola M. Statler, Mrs. Leroy
Bugbee
1925 Mrs. James P. Bussberg, Mrs.
Martha A. Fisher,
Otto G. Little,
Priest,
Pearl Poust, Mrs. William
Gladys R. Stecker, Mrs. Wayne Tur-
We
ner
ried name.
In order to
Mrs. Claude F. Avery, Verna
E. Fetterman, Mrs. Margaret Davies,
Christine B. Raeder, Mrs. H. L. Campbell, Jr., Mrs. Helen Gradwell
Mrs. Earl J. McCloughan,
Mrs. Esther W. Copp, Mrs. Isadore
request that all correspondence
with the College or the Alumni Office include the year of graduation.
Married women arc requested to
include both maiden name and mar-
for
credit on
formation
is
properly identified
our records, full innecessary.
be
Spitz
1928
Snyder,
Helen
Mrs.
Kramer,
Earl
J.
Lehman
Smiley,
J.
Sr.,
Mrs. Edna A. Reilly, Mrs. Michael L.
Page four
John H. Caterall, Mrs. James
Mi's.
Board
eran Ministerium of Pennsylvania.
Miss Fenstermacher was active as
a Red Cross Worker and was a board
member of the Methodist Home for
the Aged.
1929—Alice L. Evans
Weiss,
Mrs. R. J. Goodwin, Jack B.
Fortner, Mrs. Nelson Stauffer, Mrs.
Charles J. Shearer, Walter M. Siesko,
Wertman
1930 Mrs. Anna I. Gossler, Helen E.
Snyder, Mrs. Earle V. Charles, Mrs.
Sara W. Edwards
1931 Mi’s. Robert L. Stover, Mrs.
Robert M. Shoemaker
1932 Dr. Chester C. Hess, C. L.
Hunsicker, Almeda L. Derby, Mrs.
Harold A. Millington, Mrs. Alma E.
Todd
1933
Mary
A. Stahl, Mabel Belles,
Mrs. Edwin Krum, Mrs. Howard A.
Linse
1934 Mrs. Wm. McDermatt, Mrs.
1937—
Joseph Conner, Mrs. George Plowright
1935 Walter G. Hiney, Clarence S.
-
Slater
1936
Mrs. N. W. Moreth, Sr.
Mary E. Palsgrove, Sara M.
Berger, Mary Reisler, Mrs.Helen S.
Moore
Mrs. Dorothy Kreinheder, Dr.
1938
Cleo M.
Hummel
Dr. Alex J. McKechnie
Mrs. Glenn A. Hyssong, Mrs.
Margaret E. McCern, William W.
1939
1940
Wertz
1941 Mrs. Frank M. Taylor, Leo J.
Lehman, John E. Lavelle, Mrs. Ken-
neth A. Baylor
1942 Mrs. Harey G. Maty as, Edward D. Solach, Mrs. John W. ThomMr. and Mrs. Edward B. Can
as,1947—
-
,
Mrs. William B. Fritz
1949—
1943 Mrs. Harold Trexler, Frank
M. Taylor, Dr. John M. Apple, Loren
L. Collens, Mrs. Clyde C. Deets, Mrs.
Henry C. Van Blohn
1944 Joyce E. Hay, Carmel A. Sinanni, Mrs. John J. Gallagher
1946 Stephen M. Hatz
J. Richard Zerby, Mis. Harry
John W. Thomas
1952— Mrs. Edward A. McElivee.
John
H. Reichard, Francis J. Radice,
1954—
Richard E. Grimes
J. Dill, Jr.,
1950 Thomas J. McAndrew, Mrs.
Berdine L. Rittenhouse, Mrs. Muriel
M. Himmelberger, Edward J. KolodHenry F. Pacholic, Paul P. Plevyak, Henry C. Talarsky
1951 Mrs. Donald
W. Donnelly.
Mike Masanovich, Charles F. Lewis,
Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Harold F. Emmitt
Calvin W. Kanyuck
gie,
Mrs. R. B. Hallingsworth, Dr.
Jerome S. Kopec,
Michael
Mrs. Laurence Auerweich,
R. Crisce
1955
Mrs. Relda M. Scott, Mrs.
Ernest P. Rebuch, Lt. Cdr. Philip W.
Gergln USN, Mrs. William C. Harrell, June E. Lukac
1956 Mrs. Leonard Flecknoe, Robert J. Huntz, Robert E. Dalton, Mrs.
Ronald R. Krick, Mrs. J. D. Coughlin,
Curtis R. English
1957 Mrs. Margaret D. Folliner,
Donna R. Wilcox, Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Maurer, William C. Harrell.
Mrs. William C. Follmer, Mrs. Hugo
Mori
1958 Theodore F. Reznick, Mrs.
William F. Swisher, George E. Renn.
J. Alfred Chiscon,
—
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Mrs. Conrad J. Tuza
1959— William F. Swisher. Mrs. Robert E. Hicks, Mrs. Margaret Price
1990 Victor A. Miller
—
19G1— Frank W. Deaner. Mrs. Paul
E. Bickelman, Mrs. J. W. Lorah, Ray
L. George, Mrs. Beatrice M Roberts
1962 John C. Spangler, Richard E.
Wendel, Mrs. Lane L. Kemler, Thomas1963—
J. McHugh, Mrs. Anthony Cicero
Gary R. Kahler, Daniel Kwasnoski.
Mrs. John W. H. Ribble
Mrs. Leon Applegate, Mrs.
Karl
Najaka, James S. Case, Mrs.
1964—
Eugene Criswell, Mrs. John E. Willard
Herbert A Leeper, Fredrick T. Min-
OVER
4,500
ON
cludes ten valedictorians and six salutatorians.
BSC ROLLS
A
total of 3,953
undergraduate stud-
completed registration for the
1970-71 year at Bloomsburg State College, according to Robert Bunge, registrar.
In addition, 393 graduate students
which
are enrolled at the college,
gives a grand total of 4,346 undergrad-
amination results. These results were
reviewed and six hours of credit were
awarded and 15 hours were exempted.
The mean grade point average for
uate and graduate students. This is
the largest enrollment of the college.
Approximately 175 part time undergraduate and graduate students that
have been registering by mail raised
majority of transfer students was from
two year community colleges.
ents
the grand total of fulltime and part-
time
undergraduate
and
graduate
nich
students over the 4,500 mark.
Mrs. Vincent J. Seraflno, Diane A. Bensinger, Karl Najaka. Stanley E. Rummel, Ann M. Hocker. John
W. H. Ribble. Harold C. Andrews,
Mrs. John K. Frank. George J. Froe-
undergraduate students,
1.990 are men and 1,963 are women
Approximately 1.983 men and women
will be housed in campus residence
halls and will be served their meals
through the facilities of the Scranton
lich
1965 Mrs. Donald R. Fisher. Jr..
Robert W. Hertzig, William J. Reilly,
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Bittenbender, Mrs.
Donna Gulluni, Mrs. Jack Madeoy.
Charles H. Wilson
1966 Mrs. David L. Welsh. Mrs.
Philip A. Smith. Barbara A. Urbas,
1967—
Mrs. Robert J. Donahue, John J. Zarski, Mrs. Kenneth G. Bartoo, Mrs.
Sharon K. Herr, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth G. Cromwell, Jr., Mr. and Mrs.
Richard
1968— H. Fulmer. Mrs. Allyn E. Hostetter, Frederick J. Klock, Donna F.
Miller. Mrs. Lola M. Hunsinger
Thomas S. Fowels. Kay E.
Schmidt, Gerald E. Depo. Kenneth L.
Adams, Mrs. Cheryl A. Bold, George
H. Cook. Allen W. Handwerk, Judith
A. Heffelfinger
L.
Robert T. Moran, Jr., Mrs. L.
Dona M. Houck. Barbara
Conti.
Politis,
Henry Bernatonis. Elizabeth A.
Pinter. Mrs. Josephine Plonski, Claude
M. Cocodrilli, Carole A. Marone, John
Trathen. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce H.
Williams, George R. Colestock, David
W. Gerhard, Gale M. Kovalich, Mrs.
Araulia E. Schlegel, Mrs. Wilson A.
J.
James
Poechman. Mrs.
Linda R. Beyer, Mrs. Nicholas Kazemka. Joseph T. Austin, Jr., Diane M.
Shaffer,
L.
Boone, Joyce E. Brobst, Mrs. Sharon
L. Griggs. John R. Moyer, John J. Ondish
1969 Mrs. Francis A. Demnicki.
Robert T. Repko. Donna L. Reed, Connie M. Fike. Mrs. Mark B. Pierce
Linda E. Wimmer, Gerald F. Sheperis
Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Clayton, Ernest P. Rebuch, Thomas F. Castrilli.
Barbara M. Klepac, Linda D. Tonkin.
Mrs. James L. Poechman, Robert J.
Brochi, Bart Giacometti, Beverly Ann
Jones, Mrs. Larry S. Smith. Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Kowalski, Kathy J. McGuire, James E. Riefenstahl
1970 Nancy M. Grifasi, Helen V.
Olanovich, Horace D. Bennett III,
Janet M. Nossal, Robert K. Ace. Mrs.
Deanna M. Banonis, Jon L. Black, David C. Sarge, George Beecham. Loretta M. Kukol. J. Garth Edwards, Susan
J. Bower, Barbara L. Lawser
DECEMBER,
1970
A total of eleven students submitted
College Entrance Board Advanced Ex-
Of the
3.953
Commons.
A total of 282 faculty and administrative personnel will be on duty during the semester.
Bloomsburg State College admitted
new students for the 1970-71 colyear.
Forty-six and one tenth
per cent of these new students were
men and 53.9 per cent were women.
The new students were broken down
into the following categories:
freshmen totaled 1,069 with 465 being male
and 604 female; transfer students totaled 215 with 121 males and 94 female;
returning students (those who had
been enrolled prior to the preceding
semester) totaled 40. broken down into 27 males and 13 females; one male
and six females were not classified.
This class of new students was selected from 4,524 applicants.
Of all
the freshmen candidates, 8.2 per cent
were offered admission with 58.9 per
cent of that number being enrolled.
In the transfer group, 47.9 per cent of
the applicants were accepted and of
this group 61.6 per cent registered .Admission was offered to 73 8 per cent
of those who applied
as
returning
students;
forty-three
per
cent
1.331
lege
of this
group completed registration.
The geographical aspect
of the new'
cent re-
students reveals that 90 per
side in counties located in
Pennsylvania. Counties with
representation are Luzerne,
Eastern
the most
11.3
per
Northumberland, 9.8 per cent:
Columbia, 8.5 per cent; Montgomery.
cent;
8.0
per cent;
Lackawanna,
Schuykill, 6.9 per cent;
per cent and Bucks
per cent. A total of 48 counties of
Pennsylvania are represented and
eight per cent of the new freshmen
are out-of-state students. The majority of new freshmen. 86.2 per cent attended public secondary schools.
Forty-five per cent of the freshmen
ranked in the first fifth of their respective high school graduating class.
33 per cent in the second fifth 20 per
cent in the third fifth, and 2 per cent
in the fourth fifth. These figures are
commensurate with last year’s rank
6.5
4.9
distributions.
The class
of
1974
in-
the transfer
men was
women was
2.72.
transfer
all
2.55 and for the
total mean for
The
students was 2.63.
The
NEW FRESIiMEN
arrived at
begin the
Over 1,000 freshmen
Bloomsburg State College
to
1970-71 college year.
An informal reception was held in
Scranton Commons lobby giving new
students and their parents the opporwith administrators,
tunity
to talk
members, and student
faculty
A
ers.
buffet dinner
lead-
followed
in
Scranton Commons, and later that
evening a freshman class meeting
was held, climaxed by a band dance
in the Student Union Building.
for freshmen took
Centennial Gymnasium, at
which time the students were issued
The registration
place
in
dinks,
dars.
name
signs, pilots,
and calen-
Prior to a picnic held on the
soccer field adjacent to the Gym, fun
and games were held on the same
location. A band dance in the Gym-
nasium Parking
lot
terminated
the
day’s activities.
upperclassmen were registfreshman class meeting and
group meetings were held throughout
the day. Students also had the opportunity to meet with faculty members
who direct varsity sports, men’s intramurals, women’s intramurals and
While
ering, a
extramurals, choral groups, theatre,
and forensics.
For the first time, orientation sessions were held for new' students during the summer. By conducting several orientation sessions in this manner, students and their parents were
given more time and attention, which
w’as not possible when all new students previously arrived on campus
the week before registration in Sept-
ember.
The National Secretaries Association
has approved Bloomsburg State College as a center for the annual examination for Certified Professional Secretary (CPS) to be given in May, 197i.
according to Dr. Emory w. Rarig.
Director of the Division of Business
Education. Prior to the addition of
BSC, the only other centers in the
state were located in Philadelphia
and Pittsburgh.
Willard A. Christian. Associate Professor of Business Education at BSC,
has been named testing administrator
for the examination.
ADVANCED DEGREES
—C.
Gene Baker, 2207 McCormPlacentic, Calif.. 93670. M. A.,
University of the South, Sewanee,
1962
ack
St..
Tennessee.
Page
five
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR
H. F. Fenstemaker T2
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Grace Foote Conner,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
PRESIDENT
Terms
Howard
F. Fenstemaker T2
242 Central Road
’48
Dr.
John Thomas ’47
68 Fourth Street
Hamburg, Pennsylvania 19526
Elizabeth H. Hubler
’43
205
140
Clayton H. Hinkel
’29
Gordon, Pennsylvania 17936
TREASURER
Lancaster, Pennsylvania 17603
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Terms expire 1973
Dr. Frank J. Furgele ’52
Colonial Farm Box 88
R. D. 1, Glen Mills, Pa. 19342
James H. Deily, Jr. ’41
37 N. Bausman Drive
Earl A. Gehrig ’37
110 Robin Lane, Sherwood Village
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Dr. Alexander J. McKechnie, Jr.
19
Camp
expires 1973
Volume LXXI. Number
1903
Class Representative: II. Walter
Riland, 11 Warwick Avenue, Scarsdale N. Y. 10583
1905
Representative:
Class
Hemingway
Mrs.
Vera
503 Market
Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Ilousenick,
Barton, 353 College
Pa. 17815
Hill,
Edwin
M.
Bloomsburg,
1908
Dr. Jay Harold Grimes retired from
active practice of medicine in 1951 and
moved from Martinsville, Indiana to
Bellleair Estates Clearwater, Fla..
33516.
Spends
joying
Page
his
life.
six
time playing golf and enHe and his wife are act-
3.
N. 24th
Hill,
’39
St.
Pa. 17011
December. 1970
ive in the first Methodist Church United of Clearwater and many civic organizations.
daughter at 564 Ryder’s Lane, East
Brunswick, N. J. 08816. Mr. Naugle,
one of the organizers of the Greater
He spent 38 years in the general
practice of medicine with the last six
years in heart speciality, before retire-
New York Branch
1909
Diehl, 627
17821
of the Alumni Association, recently underwent surgery.
1912
Class
ment.
Class
1907
Representative:
Class
’40
224 Leonard Street
McKnight Street
643
State College, Pa. 16801
Term expires 1973
Term
Kimber C. Kuster T3
West Eleventh Street
Dr. William L. Bitner III ’56
33 Lincoln Ave.,
Glens Falls, N. Y. 12801
SECRETARY
M. Wagner
Wiltshire Road
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
1972
Col. El wood
’34
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie ’35
509 East Front Street
Berwick, Pennsylvania 18603
Pennsylvania 17846
Term Expires
expire 1972
West Street
102
Plant Avenue
Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087
VICE PRESIDENT
Millville,
Terms
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
’36
11
expires 1973
Millard Ludwig
R. D. 1
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
expire 1971
Mrs. Verna Jones
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Term
—
’34
Representative:
Bloom
Fred
W.
Street, Danville, Pa.
1910
Robert C.
Class Representative:
Metz, 23 Manhattan Street, Ashley,
Pa. 18706
1911
Class Representative: Mrs. Pearle
Fitch Diehl, 627 Bloom Street, Dan-
Pa. 17821
Alfred K. Naugh
is
living with his
Howard
F.
Road,
1913
Class Representative: Dr. Kimber
Kuster, 140 West 11th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1914
Representative: J. Howard
Deily. 518 West Third Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1915
Class Representative: John
man,
ville,
Representative:
Central
Fenstemaker,
242
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
368 East
burg, Pa. 17815
Main
Street,
II.
Shu-
Blooms-
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Reed,
1916
1922
Class Representative: Mrs. Itussell
Burrus (Emma Harrison) R. D. 2,
Orangeville. Pa. 17859
Class
Representative:
Edna
S.
Harter, R. D. 1, Nescopeck, Pa. 18623
Mahoning
Cromis,
Representative:
Mrs. Ray125
Forrest
Road,
Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa.
Class
1917
L.
Allen
Manor, R. D. 1,
Representative:
Class
1923
mond Kasbner,
:
baster.
Portraits
Three Dimensions by
Mrs. Ancker will be Mason, bronze:
Dr. W. Ross Morris, bronze loaned by
Dr. Monis, president of the Medical
in
Doctors’ Hospital, Washington.
C.;Danilo and Curance, bronze:
Zelda, fibreglass: Kathy, terra cotta;
Robert, bronze loaned by Mrs. Robert
Hutton. Drawings in penline and watercolor will also be in the display.
Mrs. Ancker graduated from Bloomsburg Normal School and Columbia
University. She studied art at Philadelphia
Museum School; Parsons
School of Design, New York; University of New Mexico and Cincinnati Art
Staff,
Class lteresentative:
Edward F.
Schuyler, 236 West Ridge Avenue,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1925
Michael P.
Walakonis, Box 222, Ringtown, Pa.
Class Representative:
17967
1926
Class
Representative:
Bloss, P. O.
Pa. 17815
Box
505,
Marvin M.
Bloomsburg,
Class Representative: .Mrs. Ralph
G. Davenport (Verna Medley),
16
Ransom Street, Plymouth, Pa. 18651
ren.
1929
Mrs. (Elsie
Nelson Stauffer, 88 John St.,
Kingston, Pa. 18704. (Arline Frantz)
Mrs. James
Wertman, 20 Parish
Street, Dallas, Pa.
18612
Walter Siesko, Apt. T3, 7858 Americana Circle, Glen Burnie, Md. 21061,
has retired after serving as Head of
Employment, Naval Ship Research
and Development Laboratory, Annapolis, Maryland.
Class Representatives:
Lebo)
—
1930
Class
Representatives:
and Margaret Swartz
1920
Luther W.
Street, Millville, Pa. 17846
Old
Leroy W.
Berwick Road.
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1921
Mrs. Harry
Cole. 100 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg,
Class
Representative:
Pa. 17815
DECEMBER,
Jer-
Class Representative: Paul G. Martin,
710
East Main Street,
Blooms-
burg, Pa. 17815
1939
Class
Representative:
Willard A.
Christian, Jr., 803 Logue Street, Williamsport, Pa. 17701
1940
Class Representative:
Clayton H.
Hinkle, 224 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1941
Representative:
art Edwards, R. D. 4,
Pa. 17815
Class
Dr.
C.
Stu-
Bloomsburg,
1942
Class Representative: Mrs.
Ralph
H. Zimmerman
Nell),
165
(Jean
Kready Avenue,
Millersville,
Pa.
17551
1943
Representative:
Mrs. Raymond A. Algatt (Betty Katerman),
253 Iron
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Street,
Class
17815
1944
Class Representative: Mrs. (Poletime Comuntzis) Carl Demetripopoulos. Friar and Robin Lanes, Sherwood
Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1945
Mary Lou
Representative:
Class
John, 257 W. 11th St., Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
1932
1946
Paul Reichart, president of Columbia Accident and Health Insurance
Company and Columbia Life Insurance Company, Bloomsburg, was one
of twenty of the nation’s leading insurance executives selected to attend
Insurance
the
Sixth
International
Seminar at the Imperial Hotel, Tokyo,
Japan, on July 26-30.
Anastasia
Representative:
Pappas (Mrs. John Trowbridge), 102
W. Mahoning Street, Danville, Pa.
Charles
17821.
Co-chairman: Mrs.
W. Creasy (Jacqueline Shaffer), R.
D. 1, Catawissa, Pa. 17820
1933
Representative:
Miss Lois
Third Street,
Lawson,
East
644
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1947
Harry G.
Representative:
Class
John, Jr., 425 Iron Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1934
Esther
Representative:
Evans McFadden (Mrs. Joseph), 154
East Fifth Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
1949
Representative: Richard E.
Grimes, 1723 Fulton St., Harrisburg,
Pa. 17102
Class
Class
1950
Class Representative: Willis Swales.
9
Raven Road, Montvale, N.
Edward
17815
1935
Class
1970
New
17815
1931
Representative:
3117
Ho-Ho-Kus,
Representatives: Mr. and
Mrs. Earl A. Gehrig, 110 Robin Lane,
Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa.
Bitler, 117 State
Class
Representative:
James B.
Davis, 333 East Marble Street, Mechanicsburg, Pa. 17055
Class
Creasy,
Road,
1938
Rosalie Boyer (Mrs. Earl J. Smiley), 519 Stanbridge St., Norristown,
Pa. 19401. Mrs. Smiley is teaching in
the Norristown Schools.
She has
three children and three grandchild-
She has attained renown in the field
of sculpture and in that art form was
a student of the late Oronzio Maldarel-
1919
Linden
sey 07423. Co-Chairman: Ruth Wagner (Mrs. Lawrence Le Grande) 126
Oak Street, Hazleton, Pa. 18201 and
Mary Jane Fink (Mrs. Frederick McCutcheon)
Maple Avenue, Conyngham, Pa. 18219
Florence Piathowski Timmes lives
at 10 Lochinvar Drive, St. Catherines, Ontario, Canada.
1928
Academy.
Class Representative:
Miss Cath
erine A. Reimard. 335 Jefferson St..
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
;
1936
1937
Anna S. Gossler, 226 North 9th St.,
Sunbury, Pa., 17801, has retired from
the Shikellamy Schools after thirtythree years of teaching.
Helen E. Snyder, 1059 Market St.,
teaching
Sunbury, Pa., 17801,
is
grade two at the Maclay School in
Sunbury.
li.New York; Ferenc Varga, Detroit:
Antonucci Volti, Paris, and Allesandro
Monteleone, Rome.
She has had a
number of exhibitions in New York.
Paris and Rome.
Mrs. Ancker taught art in Cooper
Union. New York; Pratt
Institute.
Brooklyn; University of Alabama and
University of Cincinnati.
Clarence S. Slater, 5100 Atlantic
Avenue, Ventnar City, N. J. 08406,
reports that he has successfully completed open heart surgery.
Class
1927
D.
Blooms-
Kathryn
Representatives:
Vanauker (Mrs. Nicholas Mereth) 34
1924
1918
East 4th Street,
Class
17815
Milton. Pa. 17815
Clair
Representative:
J.
Class
Patterson, 315 West Street. Bloomsburg. Pa. 17815
Ruth Hutton Ancker. Washington.
D. C.. who is a native of Bloomsburg.
is one of three native Pennsylvania
artists, whose works will be featured
in the Pine Arts Galleries of the William Penn Memorial Museum, Harrisburg.
Sculpture by Mrs. Ancker on display will be Compassion, bronze: The
Three Graces. By The Sea. Ondine St
Andrew. Sun Worshipper and Brotherhood, all in terra cotta: The Family,
bronze loaned by Louis Reid. Department of the Interior. Washington, D.
Dancer in Leotard, terra cotta:
C.
St. Francis in bronze and two bas relief in bronze of St. Francis’ Funeral
Procession and St. Francis Giving His
Cloak to the Poor Man: Dancer at
Rest and Running Dancer, bronze:
Fallen Angel, carved coral rock:
Enigma, and The Tranquil One. carved limestone: Hark. Hark the Lark,
wood and metal; Night Flight, ala-
151
burg, Pa. 17815
Representative:
William
I.
J.
Kalodgee
is
J. 07645
Treasurer of
Educators Processing Service, located at 99 West Greenwood Avenue,
Page seven
Lansdowne, Pa.
Paul
Towson, Md.
19050
Road,
501 Holden
21204, is President-elect
Plevyak,
of the National Business Education
In 1968 he was PresiAssociation.
dent of the Eastern Business Association.
After military service in Korea and
Japan he
completed
Master’s
a
Degree at Bucknell University in 1956.
A doctorate in administration and curriculum development was earned at
Wayne State University in 1967. New-
bury
tendent
Michigan, a suburban
1951
Francis B.
Class Representative:
Galinski, 90 Tower Hill Road, Doylestown, Pa. 18901
Harold F. Emmitt, 141 Forest Hill
been
Road, Leola, Pa. 17540, has
teaching chemistry at the Conestoga
Valley High, Lancaster, Pa., for the
past fifteen years. He has been selected as one of the outstanding high
school chemistry teachers in Eastern
Pensylvania by the Chemistry Industry Council of Eastern Pennsylvania.
Elizabeth Johnson, Winnipeg, Canada, daughter of the late Rev. and
Mrs. E. W. Johnson, was married to
Dr. Emory Webster Rarig, Bloomsiburg, in a candlelight ceremony on
July 3 in Harrow United Church of
The bride and
Winnipeg, Canada.
groom are both graduates of TeachUniversity.
Columbia
ers College,
The bride formerly taught at Rutgers
University and most recently in the
School of Nursing at Queens UniverDr. Rarig
sity, Kingston, Ontario.
is director of the Business Division
at Bloomsburg State College.
He began teachand has served as
Director
and
Curriculum
Science
Director before being appointed Assistant Superintendent. Dr. Newbury
has served on the Board of Directors
of
the Michigan State Curriculum
Development Association and was
president of the largest county curriculum leadership group in Michigan.
1954
Class Representative: William
J.
Jacobs, Tremont Annex Apartments,
2 West Main Street, Lansdale, Pa.
19446
Dr.
Michael R. Crisci, former assistant
principal of Somerville High School,
is
principal
ville.
Teams.”
The book
entitled
“Teacher Nego-
Guide
for
Bargaining
is considered unique in
educational circles since it is one of
the first to attempt to connect the
growing practice of teacher bargaining with research on effective learning of students.
It is published by
•the Parker Division of Prentice-Hall
Publishers and is aimed at the national market of public and college
educators, as well as school board
members, who are concerned with
teacher negotiations.
Newbury has previously published
articles on such topics as the history
of iron mining at Danville, Pa., federal aid to education, science education, dropout prevention,
and vocational education.
Dr. Newbury attended elementary
school in Sunbury, graduated from
Watsontown High School in 1949 and
graduated with various honors from
Bloomsburg State College in
1953.
Page eight
of
the
new Somerville
J. Crisci
Somerville in 1958 as a teacher in the high school business education department.
He was named asto
sistant
principal in 1967, and two
left the school system to
principal of South Hunterdon
years later
become
High
Regional
School
in
Lambert-
tenure in Somerville,
Crisci was best known as coach of
top-flight varsity swimming teams.
He organized Somerville High’s first
team for competition in 1962, and went
on to develop teams which won 51
consecutive meets. In 1962 he received a master’s degree in secondary
administration from Rutgers University.
Crisci and his wife Marilyn
nave three children. They live at 380
Catherine Street, Somerville.
his
Campus violence, elective office,
the prosecution of a campus revolutionary, and citations of merit from
the Calif. State Senate of the
Pa.
House
of Representatives have worked their way into the fabric of Kenneth D. Wagner’s life.
A Selinsgrove native who graduated
from Bloomsburg State Teachers College, married Inez Spaid, a Bloomsburg girl, and moved in 1955, to Whittier California, Wagner now teaches
biology in a Los Angeles school.
Cited by the Calif. Jr. Chamber of
Commerce in 1962 as one of the five
outstanding men in California for his
outstanding work with biology students
at Manual Arts High School, Los An-
geles, his
scientific
several
the
Calif.
State
Senate
and Pa. House of Representatives
passed resolutions citing him for his
work as a scientist and educator.
1955
Class
inger,
18618
Representative: Arnold GarR. D. 1, Harveys Lake, Fa.
1956
Class Representative: Ur. William
Bittner III, 33 Lincoln Avenue, Glens
Falls, N. Y. 12801
1957
Ciass Representative: William J.
Pohutski, 554 Oakridge Drive, North
Plainfield, N. J. 07606
Jean Stavisky Mori lives at 1541
Wyoming Avenue, Scranton, Pa. She
has two chilldren. Her husband, Hugo
Mori, M. D., is a urologist.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Stanton are
living at 525 Halting Circle, Warminster, Pa. 18974. They have twin daughters. Mr. Stanton is Elementary Principal in the Lower Moreland School
District, Huntingdon Valley, Pa. Mrs.
Stanton, a graduate of Marywood College, taught home economics at the
William Tennant High School,
War-
minster.
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Follmer
(Margaret Ann Duck) live at 1518
Chalk Avenue, Whitpain Manor Development, Norristown, Pa. 19403. Mrs.
Follmer has taught in the Neshaminy
School District and in Blue Bell, Pa.
She is serving as a substitute in the
Wissachiason School District. Her husband is Manager of the Automotive
Electronics Research Laboratory of
the Philco-Ford Corporation. Mr. and
Mrs. Follmer have two daughters.
1958
During
Class Representative: John S. Scrimgeour, 411 East 3rd Street, Bloomsburg. Pa. 17815
Dr. David N. Newbury has recently
co-authored a book which relates
teacher contract negotiations to effective learning for school children.
is
Government Best
May 5, 1970. The
award was made “on the basis of
student body elections and in recognition of outstanding work being done
in the classroom.”
His address is
400 N. River Rd., Apt. 1109, West
Lafayette, Ind. 47906
gina.
A
Alfred Chiscon was presented
J.
the Purdue Student
Instructor Award on
came
1953
of
30,000 residents.
ing there in 1956
Class Representative:
Francis B.
Galinski, 90 Tower Hill Road, Doylestown, Pa.
18901
Calvin W. Kanyack is teaching Physics and Chemistry at the Lake Lehman High School. He has a Master’s
degree from the University of Vir-
tiations:
community
High School, Somerville, N.
1952
The book
currently Assistant Superinof Schools in Hazel Park,
is
studies.
Also, both
community
service,
and
his
work, Wagner has received
grants to pursue biological
Class
Representative:
Raymond
Hargreaves, 37 Dell Road, Stanhope.
N. J. 07874
Gary Rupert has accepted the head
basketball post at Johns Hopkins University for the 1970-71 season.
A 1958 graduate of Bloomsburg High
School, Gary had been an assistant for
three years to head coach Herb Magee
of the Philadelphia Textile cage team.
At BSC he participated four years
on both the cage and diamond squads
and took to the gridiron his junior and
senior years.
With the Huskies football team, he
was ninth in the nation in punting and
received invitations to attend camps of
the Cleveland Browns of the NFL and
several Canadian clubs. He decided
to pass on the latter because he wanted to coach basketball.
In basketball he was an All-NALA
and All-Penna.,
Conference
State
guard on the ’63 team coached by
Bill Foster, the current head coach at
Rutgers.
Coach Rupert taught in the Colonial
School District in Plymouth Meeting
for the past seven years and from
1964-67 he scouted and recruited for
the Textile Rams. As frosh coach he
earned a healthy 36-11 record.
In addition to his cage duties, Gary
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
handle the backfield on the Jay’s
team. His assignment will be
strictly coaching on a iull-time basis.
He received his Master’s Degree in
Education from Temple U. this past
June.
will
grid
be upon us soon (May,
predate hearing from
ideas
Also,
class
ings”
1972) --I’d
ap
people with
or suggestions for the reunion.
I’d appreciate hearing from the
members concerning their “dothe last eight years.
1959
Class Representative: William F.
Swisher, Box 245, Cincinnatus, N. Y.,
13041)
1960
Class Representative: James
J.
Peek, 100 Hull Road, Madison, Conn.
06443
1961
Class Representative: Edwin C.
Kuser, It. D. 1, Box 145-C, Bechtelsville, Pa. 19505
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Shutovich
(Barbara Schaefer) live at 28 Hilltop Drive, Morris ville, Pa. 19067
Ronald W. Thomas,
the
Dean
of
Men
33, will become
at Indiana Univer-
of Pennsylvania, September 1.
Since 1966 in his most recent position Thomas served as Assistant Dean
of Students and Housing Director at
Susquehanna University in Selinsgrove. In that post his assignments included responsibility for all residence
and off campus housing, discipline and
a student counselor program. In addition he worked as advisor to the Student Handbook at Susquehanna.
Prior to his employment at the Selinsgrove institution he taught English at Edinboro State College for one
year and for four years at Harbor
Creek High School in Erie.
At all three locations Thomas also
held duties in coaching.
In 1963 he completed work on his
Master’s Degree in Education at Edinboro State College; since that time
he has earned additional credits in
guidance and college administration at
Bucknell University.
sity
IUP’s new Dean of Men is married
and the father of four children.
1962
Class.
Representative:..
Richard
Lloyd. 6 Farragut Dr., Piscataway,
N. J. 18854
Thomas F. Foley has been elected
President of the Canandaigua Jaycees
for 1970-71.
Tom has been active in
the Jaycees for three years and has
been Director and Treasurer in the
last two years. He is a 1962 Graduate
Business Education from Bloomsburg State College. He is now employed as a representative and Acin
counting Specialist with the Gregg
Division/McGraw Hill Book Company
of New York City.
Tom resides with
his wife and four children in Canan-
—
daigua,
New
York.
Connie Allegrucci, now Mrs. Richard
Louis Dunn III, is living in California
1533 Espinosa Circle, Palos Verdes
Estates, California 90274. Connie and
Lou have a son, Richard IV. Also,
living in California is Kay Ann Karmilowicz, now Mrs. Lloyd Gordon. Kay
lives in San Francisco.
know
come
as a shock to
some, but our tenth year reunion will
I
it
will
DECEMBER,
1970
Whatever happened to Jerry Wright.
Krash, Kathy Buggy, Ed Cocco
Kathy Sinkler, etc.!
Bill
C. Spangler, Lt. USN, 210 72nd
Virginia Beach, Va. 23451, is
Naval Science Instructor at the First
Colonial High School, Virginia Beach,
John
St.,
Va.
1963
Class Representative:
Pat Biehl
(Mrs. Ronald Cranford) R. D. 1, 71
Hawthorne Ave., Boyertown, Pa. 19512
Joseph V. Oravitz has been named
director of personnel and research
services in the Pennsylvania School
Boards Association. He was formerly
administrative assistant to the superintendent of
the
Hanover Public
Schools.
.
Benjamin M.
pointed
Baum
has been ap-
Principal of the Oxford
Area Elementary School, Oxford Area
School District, Oxford, Pennsylvania.
Baum began his teaching career in
Newark. Delaware, as a 6th grade
teacher.
In 1967 he was appointed
as an elementary counselor in the
Cecil County Public Schools. In June,
as
1970 Mr.
Baum was awarded
MasElemen-
his
Education Degree in
tary Guidance from the University of
ter’s of
Delaware
He and
Baum,
his
wife,
Sandra Treuhaft
reside at 48 Stanford
Robscott
Drive,
Manor, Newark, Delaware
19711 with their daughter Jennifer.
1964
Class
Shuba.
Ernest It.
Gaston Avenue, Raritan, N.
Representative:
1
J. 00869
1965
Class Representative: Carl P. Sheran, 59 Vreeland Ave., Bloomingdale,
N. J. 07403
William J. Reilly, 1408 North 2nd
St., Harrisburg, is employed as coordinator for the Distributive Education
program in Harrisburg.
Harry
Ravert, 626 Erford Road,
Pa. 17011, is employed as
an accountant with the U. S. Army,
and is working at the Indiantown Gap
Military Installation.
Camp
Hill.
Edward K. McCormick has joined
the staff of Susquehanna University
as dean of men and director of financial aids.
In the latter capacity, he
will supervise the distribution of scholarships, grants-in-aid, and other forms
of financial assistance for students.
McCormick, who holds two master’s
degrees from the University of Pittsburgh, comes to Susquehanna from
Lycoming College.
He was at Lycoming for three years, serving as as-
named Appalachian Program
coordinator for the Economic Development
Council of Northeastern Pennsylvania.
Mrs. McDonald
is
a
member
of
Am-
erican Society of Planning Officials,
Health and Hospital Planning Council
Northeastern Pennsylvania Study
Committee, Pennsylvania State Education Association and Bradford-Sullivan Chapter of Crippled Children’s
of
Society.
Charles Wilson, 116 Oak St., Forty
Fort, Pa. 18704, is teaching Business
Law and coaching in the basketball
and track programs in the Wyoming
Valley West School District, Kingston,
Pa. In 1969 he received the Master’s
degree in Business Education from the
University of Scranton.
1966
Class Representative: Anthony J.
Cerza, 608 Corlie Ave., Wallenhurst,
N. J. 07711
Mr. and Mrs. K. Gary Bartov, 2121
Billington Rd. E. Aurora, N. Y. 14052.
announce the birth of a son, Nicholas
Jon. on July 11. 1970 in Buffalo, N. Y.
Mrs. Bartov is the former Nancy M.
Jones.
Donna L. Miller, 618 Catawissa Avenue, Sunbury, is a member of the faculty of the Middleburg Elementary
She recently received her
School.
Master’s degree at BSC.
1967
Class
Representative:
It.
Thomas
Lemon, Warwick Apt. 3-D, 802 Old
English St., Bel Air, Md. 21014
The board of Education of Kent
County (Maryland) recently announced the appointment of Alex J. Dubil
to the position Assistant Principal
at
Chestertown Middle School.
Mr. Dubil graduated from Berwick
Sr. High School in 1963.
He received
his B.S. degree from Bloomsburg State
College and a M.Ed. degree in Secondary School Administration from the
University of Delaware.
He had been teaching in Delaware
for the past four years.
1968
Class Representative: Thomas W.
Free, R. D. 1, Box 34. Kintnerville,
Pa. 18930
Bruce H. and Brenda Nafzinger Williams are living at 12 Villa St., Mansfield. Mass. 02048.
Bruce is a graduate student at the School of Theology,
Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts. He is also an ordained Methodist
minister, and at present has charge of
two churches in the Mansfield (Mass.)
area. Mrs. Williams is doing graduate work at Boston University; her
major field is Mathematics Education.
She is employed by Milton Public
Schools, Milton, Mass., as a math
teacher in one of the city’s junior
high schools.
1969
then as assist-
Class
Representative:
Frank J.
Mastroianni.
1018
Cooper
Street
Scranton, Pa. 18508
Teresa B. McDonald, who resides at
Ganoga Lake, near Benton, has been
Pa., hs been appointed an assistant
professor in the Department of Executive Secretarial Science at State
sistant
dean
of
men and
ant dean of students.
Chester
J.
Buglia
of
Miners ville.
Page nine
University of New York Agricultural
and Technical College at Alfred, N.Y.
Mr. Buglia, who taught in the business education department at Easton,
Pa., Area High School from 1966 until
this past June, will begin his duties
at the two-year college in September,
according to Dr. David H. Huntington,
president. He will teach shorthand and
typewriting
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Kowalski
S.
(Sarah E. Biddle), R. D. 1, TurbotPa. are both teaching in the Milton School District, Milton, Pa.
ville,
1970
Class
Dalfovo,
Mary Ann Cecile Kotchic and Thomas R. Bender, Jr. The bride is a stewardess on Delta Air Lines. The bridegroom is serving in the Armed Forces
in Georgia, where the couple resides.
WEDDINGS
1960
Linda Anne Bartlow and David G.
Hutchinson. Address: 2124 Lombard
Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 19146
1963
Sandra Fleming, Catawissa, and
The
Mifllintown.
Robert Shearer,
bride has been a teacher at the Cata\vissa Elementary School, and the
bridegroom is a sergeant in the U. S.
Susan Fritz and Donald J. Clayton
Both are teaching in Port Jervis, N.
Y. Their address is 214 Broad Street,
Milford, Pa. 18337
Air Force.
Rosalie P. Giovannini and Douglas
E. Schroeder. Address: 76 Italy St.,
Mocanaqua, Pa. 18655
John W.
Dean Street, Beaver
Representative:
61
Meadows, Pa.
Patricia A. Shepardson, Little Falls,
N.Y. and John Dowett, Berwick. Mr.
18216
Vincent J. Shiban, 1805 Ridgeview
Drive, Coates ville, Pa., has been commissioned a second lieutenant in the
U. S. Air Force.
David C. Large, 1539 Centre St., Ashland, Pa. 17921, has enlisted in the
Air Force.
Miss Joanne Cashman, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Neil Cashman, 232 West
6th Street,
Berwick, began duties
as a member of the
in
faculty
the
Shikellamy
(Sunbury
area)
School District, being assigned to Junior High, in Special Education.
She is a 1970 graduate of Bloomsburg State College and did her student
teaching at Lower Merion and Central
Dauphin.
Dowett is teaching in the school system of Stratford and West Canada
Valley, N. Y.
1965
Shirley Marie Pooley, Bloomsburg,
and John C. Lutz, Orangeville, Pa.
The bride is employed in the IBM department of Milco Industries, Inc.
Nancy E. Voelker, Waterford, Conn.,
and Glenn R. Rupert, Niantic, Conn.
Mr. Rupert is teaching in the Waterford High School, and Mrs. Rupert is
a teacher in the Old Lyme High
School.
Amanda
DR. NOSSEN SPEAKER
Jane Weaver, Orangeand John L. MacDonald, Jr.,
Bloomsburg. Mrs. MacDonald is teaching in the Central Area School District
Columbia County. Mr. MacDonald is
employed by the Volpex Corporation,
AT REGIONAL MEETING
Rochester, N. Y.
Aproximately forty
of
area on Setember
19, 1970.
The meet-
ing was held at Harford Junior College and lasted from 10:30 A. M. until
1:30 P. M., after which a luncheon
was served for those attending. Mr.
and Mrs. Richard V. Miller, both BSC
alumni and members of the faculty at
Harford served as hosts for the meeting.
the College Community
the meetmg and spoke
to the alumni about current trends
and changes at BSC were Dr. Robert
Nosen, President; Mr. Elton Hunsinger, Associate Vice President for Student Affairs; Dr. Bruce Adams, Geography Department; Mi James Creasy, Director of Summer Programs and
Mr.
and,
Education;
Continuing
James H. Neiswender, Assistant Director of Development.
Dr. Nossen discussed the new administrative changes at the college as
well as the many new programs which
have been added recently. He explained the purposes of the Bloomsburg Foundation and how it will contribute to the overall academic community. The President also invited
and encouraged each Alumnus to become involved in the College Commun-
Members of
who attended
-
.
ity.
The Bel Air meeting was the first of
approximately seventy-five regional
meetings being organized by the College to keep the Alumni informed and
up-to-date in college affairs.
Page ten
ville,
1966
our Alumni
residing in the Greater Baltimore Area attended the first meeting for that
Carolyn A. Danneker and Larry S.
Smith. Their address is 241-D Woodhill Drive, Glen Burnie, Md. 21061
Carol M. Whitmoyer, Millville, and
James Rutkowski,
Selinsgrove. Mrs.
Rutkowski is a head nurse at Geisinger Medical Center.
Mr. Rutkowski
Peggy Hamor and Frank Straub.
The bride is a graduate of the Geisinger Medical Center School of Nursing.
Mr. Straub is an earth and
space science teacher for Perkiomen
Valley School District, Schwenks ville.
Address: Apt. 35-C, 1151 Stergiere
Courts, Stergiere St., Norristown.
Harriet A.
Poeckmann
Hummel
’69
and James
Address: Apt. 2, 413
Matlach Avenue, Lewisburg, Pa. 17837
’68.
B. Wayne Laubach, Horsham, Pa.,
and Bonnie Jean Simpson, Bloomsburg. Mrs. Laubach is teaching in the
Abington School District, and Mr. Laubach is a teacher in the Hatboro-Horsham School District. Address: 107
Briarwood Drive, Horsham, Pa. 19044.
Gloria Jean Matylewicz, Millville,
and Gary J. Woolcock, Orangeville.
Mr. Woolcock is a teacher in the Lower Moreland School District.
New York. Mr. Teter is an
engineering graduate. Mrs. Teter recently received the Certificate of Clinical Competence in Speech Pathology
Terri Miriello and Albert C. Rogers.
is an elementary school teacher at North Penn School District,
Lansdale. The bridegroom is teaching senior math and public speaking
at North Penn School District, Lansdale. He is also organist at the Oak
Restaurant in Hatfield. The couple
resides in Hatfield, Pa.
from the American Speech and Hearing Association. Mr. and Mrs. Teter
are living at 156 Graystone Lane, Ro-
Carmen
is
teaching in Selinsgrove.
1967
Mary
Gifford and Jack Teter, Jr.,
Ithaca,
chester,
New
York.
Roberta Jean Pentz, Montgomery,
and Leonard J. Specht, East Orange,
N. J. The bride is a teacher-coordinator at Rahway, N. J., High School.
Mr. Specht is a student at Rutgers
University. He has served four years
in the Air
Force.
1969
Virginia Foster Boyd, Conklin, N.
Y. and Barry Whitenight, Orange-
Mrs. Whitenight
is
a teacher
in
Susquehanna Valley School System. Address: Riviera Ridge Apartments, Vestal, N. Y. 13850.
the
Patricia Ann Branch,
Michael R. DiPippa.
Eighth
St.,
Rose Marie Varsics, Danville, and
E. Roma, Shamokin.
Mrs.
Roma
is
teaching in Danville.
Bonnie Kay Zeek, Langhorne, and
Gerald F. Kearney. The bride is a teacher
Township School
Her husband is a teacher in
the same school district and also
sports writer for Bucks County Courier Times of Bristol.
Address: The
in
the Bristol
District.
Dorelyn Terrance Apartments, Lang-
1968
Greienaway,, San Dtiego,
Calif., and James R. Davis, San DiThe bride is a teacher in San
ego.
Address: 4515
Diego City Schools.
35th Street, Apt. 5, San Diego, Calif.
Cecelia
ville.
The bride
Pen Argl, and
Berwick, Pa.
Address
118
horne, Pa.
1970
Deborah Ann Brandt, Mifflinville,
and Donald Ray Deitterick, Berwick.
Mr. Deitterick is a teller in the Berwick Bank. Their address: 1308 Market Street, Berwick.
Kathleen
R.
Burger,
and
William Singer,
Mrs. Singer is teaching
Bloomsburg,
Bloomsburg
in East Gran-
by, Connecticut.
Sandra Kay Doebler, Berwick, and
Clayton L. Newcomer, Montours ville.
Both are teaching.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Carol Gerencher and William H.
Grow, Jr. Mrs. Grow is teaching in
Bethlehem. Their address: 2050 Westgate Drive. Apt. P-8, Bethlehem. Pa.
18018.
Esther A. Mason, Freeland, and
John D. Driesbach, Bloomsburg. Both
are teaching at the Bloomsburg Elementary School.
Dorothy Merz and Dale A. Clark.
Both bride and groom teach in Bel
Air,
Md.
Virginia Ann Miller, and Ted Carl
Hess, both of Berwick. Mr. Hess is a
teacher in the Whitehall-Coplay School
District. Their address is 208 N. Nelson St., Allentown, Pa. 18103
Irene C. Newhart and Carl M. BerThe couple resides in Lutherville.
Md., where both are teachers in the
Baltimore County School District.
lin.
Cinde Lee Rogers. Williamsport, and
Alfred E. Hippenstiel, Orangeville.
The bride is a teacher at the Migrant
Day Care Center. Address: Bloomsburg R. D. 1.
Kay Anne Smeal, Bloomsburg, and
Donald K. Klinefelter, ’69. Nescopeck.
Mr. Klinefelter is employed by Nelson’s Express Co., Millersburg. Mrs.
is teaching in Millersburg.
Address: R. D. 1, Halifax, Pa.
Klinefelter
Splain and Robert H. Daily.
in paraMr. Daily is pursuing an
pathology at Boston College.
Sally
MA
Jo Ann Irene Verdekal. Catawissa.
and Robert J. Zorambo, Ranshaw.
The bride, majoring in elemnetavy
education at BSC. is completing her
senior year at Kutztown State College. The bridegroom is a teacher of
mathematics at Perkasie. Address:
Allentown.
205 North Ninth Street.
Pa.
STATE BOARD
OF DIRECTORS
Dr. Robert J. Nossen, president of
BSC, was present when Governor
Raymond P. Shafer at Harrisburg
signed into law a bill creating a statewide board of directors of the State
Colleges and the Indiana University.
He received a pen used in the signing.
Dr. Nossen said that the measure
“ is excellent and necessai'y ”
ar.d
“ overdue ”. He believes it will provide meaningful relationships within
the group and be a center for direction of these institutions.
The boards of trustees of each of
the individual institutions will continue to operate as in the past although
their duties will be somewhat curtailThe state board
ed in some areas.
will provide coordination and general
guidelines.
be fifteen members of
the state board and there will be three
names submitted for consideration
for each position.
The State Secretary of Education will serve as an ex-
There
will
DECEMBER,
1970
member and chairman,
and
employ an
with students and attending various
classes on Tuesday, February 16.
executive secretary and staff.
The local educator said that this is
a somewhat modified form of the setup in New York state and is in the
line with organization of state colleges
followed in many states.
Dr. Nossen said he is grateful that
the local board
is
to be continued,
Another special program follows almost immediately when the Erich
Hawkins dance company begins a
three day artist in residence series
officio
the board has the right to
adding that the BSC board “has been
a real source of strength to this institution.”
Unless a member of the local board
should be named to the state board
it is expected to remain as presently
constituted.
OFFER 43 COURSES
FOR GRADUATES
A total of forty-three graduate courses are being offered during the first
semester of the present college year
at Bloomsburg State College, according to Dr. Charles Carlson, Director
of Graduate
Studies.
This is the
largest number of graduate courses
offered during the regular semester
of the college year.
The forty-three courses are being
offered by 15 different educational departments. There are two courses in
biology, two in business
education,
one in economics eight in education,
two in English, three in foreign languages. one in geography, seven in
two
political science, two
in psychology, one in sociology, one in
speech, two in special education, four
history,
in
communication disorders,
in
five
in
teaching of the mentally retarded.
At the present time there are 21 full
time graduate students and 341 part
time graduate students enrolled at
BSC, both of which are an all-time
high. This increase in enrollment is
largely due to more students being
interested in graduate work and the
addition of new degree programs on
the graduate level. It is anticipated
that this increased enrollment will
continue as
a result of the newly
created graduate programs.
The
SIX
EVENTS
1970-71 Artists
and Lecture Ser-
at Bloomsburg State college will
offer six major events during the season. A “Rock” Musical adapted very
ies
from Shakespeare’s
comedy
“Twelfth Night”, and called “Your
Own Thing”, was presented on Monday, October 26.
A real novelty will be a closed circuit television satire, “Groove Tube”,
which will play two days. Tuesday
and Wednesday, February 2 and 3.
This video taped show satirizes the
television industry and programs, and
is constantly updated.
freely
On Monday, February
will play a program
Bacon
Haas Auditorium.
made up
man
The symphony is
from the East-
of students
School of Music.
At least two more events, one of
which will feature a leading lecturer,
announced during the fall
will be
semester.
Attention is called to the cooperating
musical program of the Bloomsburg
Civic Music which so far has signed a
musical revue program. “Set to Music.” featuring a troupe in highlights
of the musical stage. In the Spring
the Association had signed the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra. The
Community Government Association
helps to subsidize this program and
tickets are available to students and
faculty.
Two more major musical
events will be announced in October,
events will be announced in October.
Varied musical programs are offered by college Concert Choir. Concert
Band. Harmonettes, Studio Band. Madrigal Singers, and Men’s Glee Club.
All in all. a varied artists and lecture program covering musical comedy, symphony, soloists, events of public interest, and an innovation closed
circuit touring television, makes up
the new season at Bloomsburg State
College
UDALL ADDRESSES
CONFERENCE
ARTISTS COURSE
OFFERS
with visits to classes, demonstrations
master dance classes with a
final event a full evening’s dance program. Hawkins is tentatively schedFebruary 17, 18, and 19th.
uled for
This program is under the sponsorship
of the National Foundation of the Arts
and the Pennsylvania Council for the
Arts. A final date will be set early in
the first semester.
The performance on March 7, on a
Sunday afternoon of the Eastman Philharmonia. a symphony orchestra, will
realize a dream of the Committee to
present a full symphonic concert in
lecture,
15,
Former Secretary of the Interior
Stewart Udall was the speaker at the
general session of the fourth Annual
Conference for Teachers held at BSC
on Saturday. October 24. He issued a
call for a new set of values to overlay
the old set regarding the earth’s environment. thinking of it in its totalityin relation to all of
man’s
activities.
Udall is now visiting professor of environmental humanism at Yale University and head of Overview Group,
an agency interested solely in environmental problems.
Julian
of lute
and
guitar music ranging from 16th cent-
ury music to modern folk and flamenco. Baco will stay on campus for two
days conducting informal sessions
ALUMNI DAY
SATURDAY, APRIL
24, 1971
Page eleven
FACULTY MEMBERS
ARE PROMOTED
Biological Sciences; Dr. Percival R.
Roberts, III, Art; and Dr. Alfred E.
Tonolo, Foreign Languages.
Eight assistant professors advanced
to associate professors. They include:
Richard Anderson, History; James C.
Creasy, Administration; Russel E.
Houk, Health and Physical Education;
Mrs. Mary Lou John, Foreign Languages; Eli W. McLaughlin, Health and
Physical Education; Louis V. Mingrone, Biological Sciences; Miss Gwendolyn Reams, Library; and Mrs. Margaret Webber, Communication Disorders.
The remaining seven faculty members who were advanced to assistant
professor are: Thomas L. Ohl, MathAaron Polonsky, Library;
ematics;
Carrol J. Redfern, Mental Retardation
Richard M. Smith, Communication
Disorders; Mary A. Tolan, Student
Personnel; Stephen C. Wallace, music;
and Miss Janice M. Youse, Speech.
AWARDED DEGREES
Shippensburg State College
Linda Jane Lurowist ’66, R. D. 5,
Bloomsburg, Pa. M. Ed. in Elementary Education.
Linda K. Maul ’65, 2814 North Front
Street, Harrisburg, Pa. 17110. M. Ed.
in Elementary Education.
Lawrence F. Potter, ’67, Fallston,
Md. M. Ed. in Business Education.
Apple
Claire Ann Zutlas
Drive, Mechanicsburg, Pa. 17055.
1118
M.
Elementary Education,
Mary Alice Woodruff ’66, Harrisburg, Pa. M. Ed. in Elementary EdEd.
in
Bucknell University
John R. Gotaskie ’66 M. S.
Karl K. Sheaf fer ’66 M. S.
Robert R. Erdman ’64 M. A
Ace
T.
'67,
Shippensburg
in Counseling.
BSC
Ray E. Gross, Bloomsburg. M. Ed.
(Guidance and Counseling)
Lehigh University
Mrs. Bonnie P. Voiles ’64, 419 Pen
Argyl, Pen Argyl, Pa. 18027 M. Ed.
Major in Elementary Education
Jerry E. Trear ’61, Nazareth, Pa.
Major in Education
State University of New York,
College at Cortland
John M. Coulter ’66, 94 Park Watson
Master of SciSt., Ccrtland, N. Y.
ence
1,
Troy,
lives
at
San Fran-
7,
BSC will sponsor a Culture Trip to
Europe. The trip will last 29 days,
from May 30 to June 28, 1971. The
trip will include a round trip flight
from New York to Amsterdam, bus to
Cologne, Geneva, Innsbruck, Venice,
Florence, Naples, Pompeii, Rome,
Pisa Nice, Monaco, Paris, and return
to Amsterdam.
Cost will be $699.00
or $709.00, the latter price for those
receiving three
credits
academic
from BSC.
For information, contact Dr. Alfred E. Tonalo, Department of Foreign Languages, BSC.
EDUCATION CONFERENCE
More than
700 teachers, administra-
and students took part in the 24th
annual Conference for Teachers and
Administrators held Saturday, October
tors
24.
The topics discussed were business,
elementary, secondary, and human
resources and services.
The sessions were held in the Bakeless Center for the Humanities
CLASS NEWS
1910
lives
Fortman Sobolesky
E.,
Seattle,
lives
at
Washington,
Cecelia M. Gross (Mrs. Philip A.
Smith) lives at R. D. 3, Box 311. Geneva, N. Y. 14456.
Trudy Snyder (Mrs. Richard L.
Foster) lives at 919 Log College Drive,
Warminister, Pa. 18974.
1967
Geraldine L. Lang (Mrs. Robert F.
White) lives at 803 Manor Drive.
Stroudsburg, Pa. 18360.
Mr. and Mrs. D. James Clinger
(Susan Dianne Marguardt) are living
at 615 Broadway, Milton, Pa. 17847.
Mr. Clinger, a graduate of Hillsdale
College, Michigan is affiliated with
the Clinger Lumber Co. Mrs. Clinger,
a teacher in the Milton Area school, is
doing graduate work at Syracuse University.
Mr. and Mrs. R. Thomas Lemon are
living at 802 Old English Court, Warwick Apt. 3-D, Bel Air, Maryland,
21014.
Corey F. and Marilyn Sheerer Per’65, are residing at 2323 3rd Avenue, Altoona, Pa. 16602. Corey is a
District Executive for the Boy Scouts
ot America.
Marilyn received her
master’s degree in Student Personnel
Administration at Syracuse University in 1967.
She is doing substitute
teaching in the Altoona School System
and caring for Brian Wallace Perrin,
one year old.
rin
Carol Kozemku Welgosh lives at
105 Darling Street. Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
18702.
1970
Robert T. Marshall, 83 Slocum St.,
Forty Fort, Pa. 18704, has enlisted in
the U. S. Coast Guard,
Anwyl (Mrs. Harold E. Davis
at 405A Parkway Plaza Apts.,
May
1966
Jane
7211 9th N.
98155.
will
at
Sandy Hook, N.
and
is
stationed
J.
From Nov-
1971, her
address is 208 Jamaica Way, Punta
Gorda, Florida.
1,
1970,
to
15,
1926
Helen Kehler Gradwell is living at
Locustdale, Pa. 17945. She retired in
1967 after teaching 41 years.
ALUMNI DAY
1943
James
Broad
Rutkowski,
212%
North
Pa. 17870,
is teaching at the Selinsgrove Area
Junior-Senior High School.
He was
recently married to Miss Carol Whitmoyer, who is a head nurse at the
Geisinger Medical Center, Danville,
Pa.
Street, Selinsgrove,
Rev. Carl
Union College
Apt.
Merle Tomaryn Madeoy, 4706 Naples
Avenue, Belts ville, Md. 20705, is teach-
S.
State College, Pa. 16801.
Towson State College
Page twelve
M.
sponsor a trip to Puerto
Rico from June 13 through June 19,
1971. The cost will be $275 per person,
double occupancy, European plan,
with $65 single supplement. For brochure and more information, write
to Mr. James H. Neiswender, Asst.
Director of Development, Bloomsburg
State College, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
Please include your name, class, address, zip code, and telephone number.
ember
Paul James Zaleskie, R. D.
’68
St.,
cisco, Calif. 94133.
1965
ANNUAL BSC-ALUMNI
FACULTY VACATION
Lila
tion.
Faust
350 Franciscus
ing first grade.
Vicki Faye Culton ’68, Williamstown. M. Ed. in Elementary Educa-
Enrico A. Serine
1962
Kutztown State College
Judith A. Heffelfinger ’67 M, Ed.
ucation.
M. Ed.
Teachers
of Science for
Kay Karmilowicz Gordon
Promotions in rank for 18 members
of the Bloomsburg State College Faculty have been approved by the Board
of Trustees. The promotions became
effective in September, 1970, for the
1970-71 academic year, accoding to Dr.
Robert J. Nossen, president.
Three associate professors were advanced to full professor status and inDr. Julius R. Kroschewsky,
clude:
’69,
Master
Pa.,
S.
Berninger
at the Sanford
Del. 19707.
School,
SATURDAY, APRIL
24, 1971
Chaplain
Hockessin,
is
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
PROPOSED CHANGE
ALUMNI DUES
At the meeting of the Board of Directors on Alumni Day, it was voted to
annual dues from $2.00 to $5.00, subject to approval by the General
Association on Alumni Day, 1971.
raise the
This has been made necessary because the money set aside as dues has
been insufficient to pay the costs of printing the Quarterly and mailing it to
all of the 11,000 graduates of whom we have the correct addresses.
These
expenses also include the salary of an office secretary, postage for other mailings,
telephone and dues to the Pennsylvania Association of Teachers College Alumni.
For many years the College has paid the bill for the Alumni Luncheon.
\Ve have been informed that tlie College will no longer be able to do so. At
rhe Director’s meeting held Saturday, October 17, it was decided
that
the
Alumni Association will pay the bill. All those who present membership cards
will be admitted free to the luncheon.
We
invite
comments from the Alumni, expressing approval
or disapproval
of this policy.
The Blo.omsburg Foundation is in the early stages of organization. This
involves an appeal for funds from the Alumni.
It is obvious that two appeals
Only one appeal is practicable, either the
cannot be made concurrently.
Foundation or the Association, through the Loyalty Fund, must be the collecting
agency. It has been agreed that, for the time being, the Association will be the
collecting agency, and that the requests for contributions to the Loyalty Fund
will continue.
We
invite
vour comments.
President,
Alumni Association
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE
BLOOMSBURG, PA. 17815
Non-Profit
U. S.
Org.
POSTAGE
PAID
Address Correction Requested
1.6c
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Permit No. 10
Loyalty Fund Fourth Year
OCTOBER
Amt.
Class
32
8.00
10.00
100.00
38.00
30.00
22.00
3.00
83.25
37.00
67.00
31.00
202.00
195.00
14
14
16
218.00
132.00
145.00
2
29
15.00
199.50
62.50
144.00
119.00
159.00
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
1948
1949
No.
2
Class
1892
1896
1898
1901
1902
1903
1904
1905
1908
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1923
1,
1
1
4
2
3
1
9
4
13
5
10
13
17
12
22
24
12
268.00
94.50
82.00
142.00
11
20
1969 to
OCTOBER
No.
21
34
15
12
20
21
50
12
18
11
10
16
4
8
11
3
13
13
19
16
9
4
6
8
9
18
1,
1970
Amt.
Class
131.00
231.00
104.00
109.00
135.00
118.00
615.75
89.00
180.00
65.00
112.00
91.00
25.00
125.00
70.00
25.00
65.50
116.00
173.00
212.50
104.00
27.00
53.00
77.00
125.91
147.00
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1986
1987
1968
1969
1970
No.
21
15
8
8
5
11
15
18
17
12
22
11
22
29
22
44
44
50
56
65
17
(“Includes check nresented on Alumni Dav)
Others
5
TO RE DETACHED, FILLED OUT, AND RETURNED
Signature
Name
while
in
college
Address
(street)
Zip Code
(town)
If
above address
is
new check here
Q
Amount
Year of graduation
Mail checks to Alumni Office, Box 31, B.S.C.
To
insure tax deductions,
B.
S.
C.
Amt.
192.00
170.00
50.00
87.00
49.00
98.00
75.00
360.00
124.00
57.00
145.00
69.00
185.00
240.00
139.51
262.00
218.00
258.51
429.50
340.00
695.00°
make checks payable
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
to
1114.00
HOARD OF TRUSTEES, BLOON1SBURG STATE COLLEGE
Guy Bangs. Standing:
Gerald Strauss, Faculty representative, BSC; Howard Fernsler, Gerald A. Beierschmitt, Frank Croop, Howard Fenstemaker. Alumni Representative, BSC: Edgar Fenstemacher.
Seated: Judge George W. Heffner, William Booth. William B. Lank. Dr. Robert J. Nossen, E.
THE PRESIDENT’S PAGE
James Neiswender
I am sure that most of you already know that Mr.
assumed responsibilities, on a part-time basis, during this past summer associated with alumni activities. He has continued to be active in the general area
of college-alumni relations.
what
To accomplish
happening
his first objective, that of advising
he has been organizing regional
meetings in approximately 60 geographic areas throughout Pennsylvania and
He and I, and, frequently other persons from the college
adjoining states.
community, have enjoyed the opportunity to meet with interested graduates.
The response to these meetings thus far has been most gratifying, and were
looking forward to those gatherings which have been scheduled during the
coming months. The role of the alumni in the college community is a vital one,
and at each of our meetings, graduates have expressed interest in participating
actively towards the welfare of the college.
Jim is now working on programs
designed to provide interested alumni opportunity to aid in college development. Do not hesitate to write directly to him if you have ideas or wish to
organize or participate in a regional gathering.
the alumni on
is
at the college,
This summer we plan to initiate an Alumni-Faculty Vacation. The itinerary includes San Juan, Puerto Rico, where those participating will be spending
six nights and seven days at the fabulous El San Juan Hotel.
The flight is
scheduled to depart from the Philadelphia Airport on June 13th, returning to
Philadelphia on June 19th, at a cost of $275.00 per person. Please, again, direct
your inquiries to Mr. James Neiswender, who will be most pleased to forward
brochure or other information.
ii
In keeping with the reorganization started last year, the college has now
its fourth Vice-President, Dr. Don B. Springman, who will be primarih
concerned with administrative services.
Dr. Springman is an
experienced
administrator, coming to us from Cleveland State University, where he held the
position Dean for Special Programs.
His appointment will provide one more
means to assure the smooth and efficient operation of the total college program.
added
We
cannot, unfortunately, yet make specific plans for enrollment for the
1971-72 academic year because of budget uncertainties. Demand for inclusion
in our entering class, however, continues very strong, and in fact, is running
well ahead of last year. The college hopes to be able to increase its enrollment
of community college transfers.
When the fiscal matters are settled, hopefully
in the near future, the college will again be able to make specific plans to assure
full utilization of its available facilities.
These facilities, by the way, continue
to improve; work is progressing very rapidly on the Field House located on the
new campus site; excavation has been completed and mechanicals are being
installed for the Administration Building; and the new multi-level Parking Lot
at the comer of East 2nd and Penn has been progressing, despite the extreme
cold weather during the latter part of January and early February.
As we continue to meet with regional groups,
opportunity to see and speak with each of you.
I
certainly
Robert Nossen
President
hope
to
have an
members
192 Are Graduated
One hundred seventy undergraduand twenty-two graduate students
received degrees at the mid- January
ate
commencement
exercises
held
at
Bloomsburg State College Tuesday.
January 19, at 2:30 p.m. in Haas Auditorium.
The commencement address delivered by Dr. Edson Drake. Dean of
School of Arts and Sciences, was en
titled. “The Idea of a College.”
The senior class was presented by
Dr. John A. Hoch. Vice President and
Dean of the Faculties and the graduate candidates were presented by Dr.
Charles Carlson, Dean, School of
Graduate Studies, and Director of Research Activities. All degrees were
conferred by Dr. Robert J. Nossen
President of BSC. and awarded bv
William A. Lank. President Board of
Trustees.
The following seniors were graduated with academic honors. (Scholastic
average of 3.75 to 4.00).
Mrs. Elaine Balkiewicz. Shenandoah, B.S. degree in elementary educaah. B.S. degree in elementary education: Penny Faux, R.D. 3. Bloomscation; Deborah Fenstermacher. Milton. B.S. degree in elementary education: Mrs. June Hoover, R.D. 1.
Shickshinny. B. S. degree in elementary education: Mrs. Sally Manbeck
Kint. R.D. 2, MifTlintown. B. S. degree
Mrs. Dorothy
in special education:
Messner. Hershey, B.S. degree in
secondary education:
and Deborah
Rhodes. R.D. 2. Shamokin. B.S. degree
in secondary education: Mrs. Cynthia
Basta, Allentown. B.S. degree in ele-
mentary education.
Magna Cum Laude (3.60-3.74). Carl
Magee. 1418 Carlyn St.. Philadelphia.
B
S. degree in secondary education:
and Mrs. Norma Reed, R.D. 5. Danville. B.S. degree in elementary edu-
cation.
Cum Laude (3.50-3.59). Zane Dennis
R.D. 1. Shickshinny. B.S. degree in secondary education: Beverly Donchez,
1608 Spring St., Bethlehem, B.S. degree in business education: Norman
Foster. 575 Broad St.. Nescopeck. B.S.
degree in secondary education: Wil-
liam Hyde, Jr.. R.D. 3. Bloomsburg.
B.S. degree in secondary education,
Mrs. Marion Marks. 509 E. 3rd St..
Nescopeck, B.S. degree in elementary
education: Mrs. Martha Seymour. 220
E. 13th St., Bloomsburg, B.S. degree
in secondary education: Mrs. Nancy
Sherlock Husted. R.D. 1, Port Royal,
B.S. degre in elementary education:
and Keith Wagner, R. D. 1, Herndon.
B.S. degree in elementary education:
Of the 170 undergraduate students,
22 are graduating in business education, 69 in elementary education, 43 in
secondary education, 11 in special education, and 25 in arts and sciences.
The 22 graduate students will all receive the Master of Education degree.
MARCH,
1971
Dr. Edson J. Drake, Dean of the
School of Arts and Sciences, delivered the address at the commencement
His address was entitled
exercises.
“The Idea of a College.”
Dr. Drake joined the BSC faculty
in June, 1964 as Associate Professor
In August, 1969 he was
of History.
named Director of the Division of
Arts and Sciences, replacing Dr. Alden Buker who resigned from the faculty to accept a similar position at
Pittsthe Robert Morris College in
burgh. Under the new organizational
structure, which became effective on
September 1, 1970, Dr. Drake was
named to his present position.
A native of Philadelphia, New
York, he earned his Bachelor of Arts
degree at the University of Notre
Dame and both his Master of Arts
and Doctor of Philosophy degrees
from Georgetown University.
Prior to coming to Bloomsburg, he
had been associated with school sys-
Wheaton, Maryland and Belleserved as an
tems
in
ville,
New York and had
Assistant
Professor
of
Air
Science
and tactics at the College of St. Thomas, St. Paul. Minnesota.
From 1942 to 1953, he was a United
States Air Force officer and a psychological Warfare officer.
The Commencement address delivered by Dr. Drake follows:
"A college is government under
law, not of men. If the latter were
true, we would have either despotism
or anarchy, each of which is equally
abhorent and ultimately
self-destructive.
College law may be couched in such euphemistic
terms as
statements of policy or
suggested
guidelines, but the essential purpose
and characteristics of law remain,
which, by dictionary definition, is a
rule of conduct, recognized by custom or decreed by formal enactment,
which is considered by an authoritatively constituted group as binding
upon its members. It is conceived in,
and dedicated to, the welfare of the
community: or as JereBentham would have stated it, it
entire college
my
is
designed
to
provide the
greatest
.
Utopian society
democracy
must be a parin
which
all its
which a group
of
ual.
man is not
man himeach man
“This fourfold nature of
in perfect balance; nor is
self perfect.
Furthermore,
unique unto himself, or
idea
“Instead, a college
in
disciplined solely by their
intellects, divided their labors, under
common
just government, for the
good. The fallacy in such a conclusion would be that a college is a community for men, who, by their very
nature, are physical, emotional, and
spiritual beings, as well as intellect-
sential role in the existence of a college.
ticipatory
equit-
scholars,
is
Dual Concept
an
guaranteed
ure of a college.
“Lastly, I would emphasize the idea
of a college as a community of men.
Until now one might have been tempted to conclude that a college is an
good for the greatest number.
“Although college is a government
under law, it by its very nature cannot be a pure democracy since students outnumber the faculty and administration, 15 to 1, and thus colege
would become a government of, by,
and for the students
with hopefully
the rights of the faculty and administration guaranteed.
But to accept
this concept of a college as a pure
democracy would be to deny that faculty and administration have any es-
—
are
able voice. In this idea of a college
as a government under law and functioning as a participatory democracy,
we have a viable institution that defines the rights and responsibilities
of its members and provides the mechanisms for peaceful and orderly
change as change is desired or needed.
"When one thus considers the dual
concept of a college as a community
of scholars and a government under
law, it becomes manifest that violence and revolution, and even campus unrest, are antithetical to it.
Cries of ‘pigs on campus’ and taunts
of ‘Fascist’ or ‘Communist’ are not
rational and hence, not scholarly; the
bombing of campus buildings and the
barricading of classrooms are neither
rational nor legal. Less dramatically
the professor who refused to carry out
student
his assigned duties and the
who aids or abets him are likewise
acting neither rationally or legally.
“A college is also a functional society composed of students, faculty,
and administration; each with a function to perform for the common good
Reduced to the most elemenof all.
tary terms, the primary function of
the student is to learn; the faculty,
to teach; and the administration, to
manage or supervise. These three
functional groups are thus interdependent and, like the leaves of a shamrock, component parts of the whole.
To conceive of a college as an arena
in which students are pitted against
faculty and both are locked in mortal
combat, with the administration, is
to deny any understanding of the nat-
Thomas Browne
so
Sir
as
aptly expressed
is the common
phenonomen, ‘It
wonder of all men, how among
this
so
many
millions of faces there should
be none alike.’ And so it is with the
opinions which men hold, or, as Montaigne phrased it, ‘There never was
in the world two opinions alike, no
more than two hairs or two grains,
the most universal quality is diversity.’
“This quality of diversity thus be-
comes the fourth dimension
of
a college.
This
in the
diversity
must be recognized, must be welcomed, and must be utilized to its fullest
extent to better attain the truth which
is our common objective.”
Page one
BLOOMSBURG FOUNDATION
ORGANIZATION
Members of the Bloomsburg Foundation, Inc. of Bloomsburg State ColDr.
lege held their first meeting.
Robert J. Nossen, President of the
Foundation, discussed the purposes of
the Foundation as well as
its
goals and
operating procedures.
According to the by laws, the membership of the Corporation shall consist of those individuals who occupy
the following positions: President of
the College, Dr. Robert J. Nossen; Associate Vice President for Student Affairs, Elton Hunsinger; Business Manager of the College, Paul G. Martin;
two members of the Board of Trustees, William A. Lank and William E.
Booth; two faculty members selected
by the faculty, Dr. Bruce E. Adams
and and Dr. Frank Radice; the President of the Senior Class, William
Cluley; the President of the Junior
Class, Alexander Horvath; the President of the Sophomore Class, Michael
Soptroth;
a representative of the
Freshman Class, George W. Meschter; two Alumni representatives selected by the Alumni Association, Earl
A. Gehrig and Millard Ludwig; the
Vice President and Dean of the Faculties, Dr. John A. Hoch; and Associate Vice President for Development
and External Affairs, Boyd F. Buck-
ingham.
Following the meeting of the Corporation, the board of directors convened
for the election of officers and its first
business meeting. Membership of the
Board of Directors consists of the folPresident of Bloomsburg
lowing:
State College, Dr. Robert J. Nossen;
two representatives of the College
Board of Trustees, William A. Lank
and William E. Booth; a faculty representative, Dr. Frank Radice; a representative of the Alumni Association, Earl Gehrig; the Business Manager of the College, Paul G. Martin;
the Associate Vice President for Student Affairs, Elton Hunsinger.
The following officers of the Board
of Directors were elected: Dr. Robert
Nossen, president; William E.
J.
Booth, vice president; Earl A. Gehrig,
secretary; John Trathen, treasurer;
James Neiswender was appointed as
executive director of the Foundation
and Marilyn Muelhof w as appointed
r
recording secretary.
The Foundation has been designed
various functions for which either state funds
should not or cannot be used, the
to assist the college in
Foundation
will
signifiicantly
the college in carrying out
cation mission.
assist
its full
edu-
TIFFANY PANEL GIFT TO
GOLLEGE
A handsome
panel of Tiffany Glass,
a gift of the Bakeless Family, has
been recently installed in the lower
foyer of the Bakeless Center for the
Humanities.
A specially designed
mounting constructed by Charles Ty-
Page two
son provides fluorescent illumination
of the glass.
The stained glass represents a fitting adornment since
Professor O. H. Bakeless in 1920 sol-
is
from students, faculty,
and other donors to purchase the Tiffany stained glass windows, formerly
installed in Waller and Noetling Halls,
and removed and replaced in the An-
officers, the Faculty and the Student
Body of Bloomsburg State College.
Through the attainment of this prim-
icited $25,000
druss Library in 1966.
Louis Comfort Tiffany (1848-1933)
was a major innovator in stained
glass design, and according to Dr.
Percival R. Roberts III, Chairman of
the Art Department at Bloomsburg
State College, began his career as a
painter, the training of which permitted him to think and design in terms
of plastic forms, color and texture.
Tiffany experimented widely with various effects. His own romantic originality combined with his almost sensuous regard for the preciousness of
medium,
glass and its decoration,
contribute to the remarkable efthe incifectiveness of his work
glass
dental effects and cased
techniques for which he is famous.
The splendidi specimen given to
the college exhibits all these fine qualities, the multi-hued layers of stained
glass, the three dimensional effect of
depth, the ripple glass and streaked
color create an almost mystical or,
by today’s optical standards, psychedelic effect. Dr. Roberts, who teaches
American Art History, finds Tiffany
convenient to lecture on, since stylistically and historically he represents
somewhat of a bridge between the
high Victorian tastes of his day and
the
more avant-garde tendencies
found in the emerging organic forms
oi the Art Nouveau with perhaps some
traces of inspiration from the Orient.
Dr. Roberts finds the subtle hues,
achieved by the use of copper to produce a soft luster, and the gentle
forms a pleasure to study. The overall quality he says is “not assertative,
it doesn’t dazzle but rather moves the
viewer with its diffused iridescence.”
The total mocd projected is one of
quietude without glaring, completely
in harmony with nature and the contemplative spirit one would expect in
a Humanities’ Hall.
his
all
—
—
to facilitate the development and
of viable relationships,
“among the Board of Trustees, the
maintenance
President,
the
administrative
other
ary purpose it is intended that the administrative officers of the college and
the board of trustees may receive a
steady flow of information concerning campus opinions, that policy decisions by the board of trustees, the
President and other administrative
officials may be quickly and clearly
presented to all segments of the college population, and that each segment through its elected representative may influence changes in policy
or the formulation of new policy.”
Work on the constitution for the
Senate began a few years ago by the
Committee on Professional Affairs.
Dr. Robert Warren chaired a subcommittee of faculty, students, and
administrators which prepared the
Senate
constitution.
was approved
in
The document
year by
and the board of
May
the faculty, students,
trustees.
of this
APPLICATIONS DISTRIBUTED
The Office of Admissions at Blooms
burg State College has distributed over
5,000 applications for the Spring Sem5,000 applications for the Spring and
Fall semester 1971. It is anticipated
before the 1971 enrollment quotas are
reached, 12,000 applications will be
Of
sent to prospective candidates.
the total estimated 12,000 applications
distributed,
expects
to
the Office of Admissions
receive in excess of 5,000
completed applications.
Admission to Bloomsburg State College is determined by the applicant's
academic and personal qualifications.
Decisions are reached without regard
to race, color, creed, or national origin.
Applicants must be graduates of or
accredited
secondary
seniors
in
schools or must have secondary school
equivalency as determined by the
Credentials Evaluation Division of the
Pennsylvania Department of Education.
COLLEGE SENATE
The College Senate recently estabBloomsburg State College is
a formal step by which faculty and
lished at
students
ment
participate
in
the
develop-
of college policies.
Serving as president is George A.
Turner, assistant professor of history
vice president, Dr. Robert Rosholt.
chairman, Political Science Department; and secretary Mary Tolan, assistant dean of Students.
There are
seventy-four members of the Senate
consisting of sixty faculty, twelve
students, with President Nossen and
Vice President Hoch at ex-officio
members.
Acceptance is determined by the OfAdmissions upon evaluation of
secondary school preparation, achievement, rank in class, standardized
testing, personal characteristics, and
fice of
Previously, faculty and
student involvement in contributing to
college governance existed in a committee structure.
The primary purpose of the Senate
institutional capacity.
Those candidates whose credentials
present the best likelihood for experiencing success in an academic college
program are offered admission.
Application materials and instructions for submitting the application
may be secured by writing the Director of Admissions.
ALUMNI DAY
SATURDAY. APRIL
24, 1971
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
iHmurtam
Jlti
1926—Loretta Maher
1912—
Re1924 Clara Krzyzanski, Mrs.
hon
Helen S. Walp
1900—Julia Kirk, Shenandoah, Pa.
1970 Andrew J. Schucker, M. Ed.
1911—Mrs. Harriet Armstrong (Mrs.
—
—
A. C. Garberson), Harrisburg, Pa.
1911 Rosalie
Donahoe, Scranton,
—
Pa.
1906— Mrs. Blanche Pealer Troxell,
Narberth, Pa.
1913 Edith Keeler (Mrs. Clarence
Died
Tallman), Vienna, Virginia.
December
—
9,
1970.
1904 Margaret A. Burns, Harrisburg. Pa. Died November 22, 1970.
1916— Iram R. Schlauch.
1926 Ruth Carver (Mrs.
Maxwell)
—
,1926— Irene
Coval
Charles
Guffrovitch (Mrs. John
)
1929
— Frederick
—
Henry B. Aikman ’01
Henry B. Aikman, Bloomsburg R. D.
5,
died
Saturday,
United Methodist Church. Berwick,
and he taught Sunday School for many
years. He was a member of the Columbia County Federation of Bible
Classes. He was a 50 - year member
of Caldwell Consistory; former member of Berwick Rotary
November
14,
in
Berwick National Bank, and entered
into farming for the balance of his
life.
Dr. Charles L. Mowrer, Hagerstown, Maryland.
Florence Priest (Mrs. M. W.
Cook) Cortez, Pa. died in Hialeah,
Florida, April 20, 1970.
1908
Margaret A. Burns ’04
Miss Margaret A. Burns, formerly
of 3216 N. Fourth St., Harrisburg,
Pa., died Sunday. November 22.
She was a teacher in the Harrisburg
area for more than 45 years.
She
was a life member of Our Lady of the
Blessed Sacrement Catholic Church.
Helen Moyer Hemingway ’07
Mrs. Helen Moyer Hemingway, of
24? W. Third Street, Bloomsburg, died
ac the
Bloomsburg Hospital.
Mrs. Hemingway was a member of
the First Presbyterian Church, and
the Woman’s Circle of the Church, the
“S” Club and the Bloomsburg Hospital
Auxiliary.
Maurice E. Houck ’10
M. E. Houck, Berwick, died
Lera Farley Yard ’12
Lera M. Farley (Mrs. Milton G.
Yard). 743 Hepburn Street. Milton, Pa.
died October
cal
1.
Community
EvangeliHospital. Lewisburg.
1970. at the
Pa.
Mary
Mary
F. Conlan ’13
F. Conlan. Pittston, Pa., died
August at her home. Miss Conlan
was one of three sisters who were
graduated in the class of 1913. The
other two sisters were Anna Conlan
and Helen Conlan (Sister Marie Bernard of the Sisters of Charity). Graduating in the class of 1914 were Alberta Conlan and Francis Conlan,
now practicing medicine in the Pittston Area. Requiem High Mass was
celebrated for Miss Conlan in the
Church of St. John the Evangelist in
Pittston by her nephew. Rev. Dr. Allan F. Conlan of Mansfield, Pa.
in
Elsie
Myers Boughner
MARCH,
1971
’49
Monday. November
30,
in that city.
was born in
in
the
General Hospital
Mrs. Boughner
Slocum
Township. August 9. 1893. For many
years she was a teacher in Grant
Street School, retiring 12 years ago.
She was a member of St. Stephen’s
Episcopal Church and taught Sunday
School 50 years.
teacher
of
1970.
in
11.
years ago.
Mr. Speicher was a member of Immaculate Conception BVM Church.
He was a fourth degree member of
He held
the Knights of Columbus.
membership in Berwick Rotary Club
Berwick Elks. Berwick Moose and
Berwick Golf Club.
Mr. Speicher was a veteran of World
War
II.
Paul F. George ’61
Paul F. George, a graduate assistant in the History Department, died
Monday. December 14.
He graduated from Hazleton High
School in 1953. then spent two years
at
Penn
He
State.
graduated
from
Bloomsburg
State College in 1961, and taught
school from 1961 to 1964 in Bayville,
that city, died
the Williamsport
Miss Hill was an ardent worker for
her church and for the various educational and social clubs with which she
was affiliated. She was a member of
1964 to 1970, he first spent four
the Navy, then three years
years
in
in the
Army.
his army career, he had two
tours of duty in South Vietnam.
He was a captain in the U.S. Army
Medical Corps.
During the post session of this year
he became a graduate assistant at
During
the- college.
John
Cara G. Hill ’16
Cara Gertrude Hill, Williamsport, a
March
J.
From
Mrs. William Boughner. of 462 North
Pennsylvania Avenue. Wilkes-Barre
died
Leo
N. J.
’13
the national, state, and local retired
teachers’ associations, and was instrumental in reorganizing the latter.
Surviving is a sister. Miss Eloise Hill,
with whom she lived.
Michigan in 1913, and received
a master’s degree from Penn State in
1929.
He began teaching in Berwick
Speicher
Mr. Speicher was born in Nanticoke
and was a graduate of Kingston High
School. He received his Master’s Degree from Rutgers University and had
taught in Drake Business College, at
Perth
Amboy. Pleasantville High
School in New Jersey. He had served
as an Internal Revenue Agent for nine
years and became controller of the
Berwfck Fabricating. Company 10
survives.
sity of
J.
burg Hospital.
She was a guest at the Boone Nursing Home for seven weeks prior to her
admission to the hospital, and had
been in ill health for several months.
She was a member of the Lightstreet United Methodist Church.
Hospital. Since her retirement in 1956,
the Univer-
He received his masters degree
from Columbia University in 1936. At
one time he taught at Hunter College,
New York City. He retired two years
ago after serving as curator of Laguna
Beach Art Museum. He was a veteran of World War II and Korean War
attaining the rank of commander in
the U.S. Navy.
Leo
wick Hospital Sunday, December 16.
He was born in Nescopeck Township. Luzerne County. May 22, 1886.
He was married to the former Margaret Meixell, June 17, 1914, and she
He was graduated from
Street,
Speicher, controller of Berwick Fabricating Co., died Saturday,
December 12 in the Berwick Hospital.
retired
at Ber-
fifty-nine, 570 Cal-
Laguna Beach, Calif.,
died Thursdey, November 12 in Laguna Beach Nursing Home.
liope
Helen Shue
Berwick Hospital.
Mr. Aikman was born in Centre
1909—
Township
and spent his entire life
there. He taught for a time, for a period of eight years was employed at the
Rostand. D. Kelly ’35
Rostand D. Kelly,
(Mrs. Helen M. Ferguson) ’ll
Mrs. Helen M. Ferguson, Lightsteet
died Sunday November 15. in Blooms-
R. Harrison.
1902— Lourissa V. Leighow,
St. Pettersburg, Fla.
1965 Ronald J. Turri, Freeland, Pa.
„
High School in 1913, instructing biology. In 1916 he was made high school
principal and in 1920 he was made
superintendent cf Berwick schools,
where he served for more than 20
years.
He was a member of the First
—
Fisher Injuries in an auto
caused the death Sunday,
November 15. of John J. Fisher, Sr.,
J.
accident
eighty-two. 417
Ir.d.,
former
Gra-Roy Drive, Goshen
member
at the Murphy
Warsaw, Ind.
ulty,
of the
BSC
fac-
Medical Center,
He was
injured Saturday when his
went through a stoplight near
Warsaw and was struck by a truck,
it was reported.
The deceased was on
his way to a psychologists’ meeting
car
at Indianapolis.
Fisher was born in Johnson County.
Iowa, on Oct. 4, 1888. He was married
Page three
1923 to
in
Elma Warye who
died in
1964.
He
from the psychology deBloomsburg State Teachers College in 1950 and later served
retired
partment at
as school psychologist at Harrisburg.
also had been serving in that capacity in Goshen, Ind., where he went
to reside in Noivember, 1963.
He
Verna Keller Beyer ’09
Verna Keller (Mrs. Frank Beyer)
died November 23, 1970 in the Sunbury
Community Hospital. She was a former member of the Mausdale Reformed
Church.
Helen Shew Ferguson ’ll
Helen Shew (Mrs. James Ferguson),
Lightstreet, Pa., died November 15,
the Bloomsburg Hospital,
1970 in
where she had been a patient for one
She was a member of the
day.
Lightstreet Methodist Church.
Catherine Kerl Rebernik ’58
Mrs. Catherine Kerl Rebernik, Phyllis Court, Pequannock, New Jersey,
native of Simpson. Pennsylvania, died
December 12, 1969 at home after a
brief illness.
Mrs. Rebernik was employed in the
Fairlawn, N. J. School District as a
Preteacher for retarded children.
viously, she taught in the Maine-Endwell School District.
A graduate of
Fell High School, she was graduated
at Bloomsburg State Teachers College and received a master’s degree
at Marywood College, Scranton, Pa.,
majoring in special education, and later matriculated in that field at Columbia University.
^Ihanh
1909—
l.jau
Loyalty Fund Contributions to December 31, 1970, not reported previously:
Ex-faculty
—Mrs.
1901
1907
1908
— Margaret
J.
E. Waldron
E. Ratacki
Edwin M. Barton
Martha V. Jones
Walter C. Welliver
Maurice E. Houck, Mrs. Clareva N. Fisher, Robert C. Metz, Mrs.
Harold E. Davis, Mrs. Lee A. Perry
1911 Edward
Robinson, Mrs.
J.
1910
David
J.
Crew
Elison,
Ruth
Walter
Monahan, C. B. F. Brill
1913 Catherene Malloy
1916 Mrs. Kenneth Hoyt, Sr., Mrs.
Jennie R. Morris, Rachel C. Cappello,
Mrs. Lela D. Hemingway, Mrs. Emma
H. Burrus, Mrs. Elmer E. Fairchild
1917 Nan R. Jenkins, Edwin S. Hel-
Mrs.
1912
ler
—
1918 Mrs. Margaret Brown Wilson,
Mrs. Jay Lee Funk, Mrs. A. J. King
1919 Mrs. Esther R. Schaffer, Mrs.
Charles V. Miller
—
Page four
1920 Mrs. Ruth T. Deitrick
1921 Mrs. Lillian N. Yerkes, Mrs.
A. C. Sutcliffe, Mrs. Otto M. Girton
1922 Mrs. J. Russell Reed, Evadna
M. Ruggles, William T. Payne
1923 Mrs. Viola H. Dando, Mrs.
1924— E. Snyder, Mrs. Margaret B
Charles
Parke,
1925—Grace H. Brandon
Clara D. Abbet, Mrs. V. E.
Whitlock
Dr. James H. Sterner
1927 George A. Mathews, Mrs. Kenneth Cooper, Bertine Prosser
1928 Mrs. Sterling Strausser, Mrs
Miltona Klinetob, Mrs. Jeanette H.
Buckingham. Mrs. Mary Ruddy, Mrs.
Mary P. Dole, Margaret L. Lewis,
Mrs. Mabel Linskill, Mrs. F. P. Prettyleaf
1929 Mrs.
1933—
Charles D. Blair, Margaret D. Kleback, Mrs. E rl F.trman.
1934—
Mrs.
Paul H. Bittner
1931 Mrs. Esther Y. Castor
1932 Dr. Henry J. Warman
Mrs. Paul J. Turek. Raymond
1937— Walter M. Kitzberger
Stryjak,
Mrs. Ivan L. Smith, Mrs.
1938—
Morris A. Greene
1935 Clarence S. Slater, Gerald C.
Harter, Stanley P. Heimbach
1936 Mrs. Verna Jones
Mary Reisler, Mrs. Helen S.
Moore
Mrs. Clyde Dickey, Mrs. Joseph R. Gillen, John F. Hendler
1939 Mrs. Tirzak Pesto, Mrs. Jennis
—
T.
Odgen
1940 William W. Wertz, Mrs. Stephen R. Illeck, Mrs. Joseph A. Withey,
Mrs. Jean S. White, Clayton H. Hinkel
1941 John E. Lavelle, Mrs. Kenneth
A. Baylor, Mr. and Mrs. C. Grant
Brittingham, Thurwald Gommer, Sr.
1942 H. Burnis Fellman, Mr. and
Mrs. William E. Smith, Mrs. Bernice
E. Bandida. Mrs. H. Dorothy Paltrock. John W. Betz
1949—
1943 Mrs. H. Burris Fellman, Mrs.
Julius
1950—F. Adamic, Mrs. M. E. Smoczynski
1944 Mrs. John H. Gallagher, Mrs.
Jean A. Moyer
1945 Mrs. Ralph J. Balliet
1946 Mrs. William J. Davis
1954—
1947 Mrs. Joseph R. Kula
1948 Henry E. Crawford, James G.
Tierney, Sr.
1956—
William R. Miller, Ralph W.
'
Baird
Max
Mrs. Arlene P. Walters, Dr.
Cooley, Joseph J. Grande,
G.
Wayne Van
Stetten
Charles L. Edwards, George
N. Roessner, Mrs. Robert F. Fritz
1953 Dr. David N. Newbury
Jerome S. Kopec, Mrs. Lawrence Auerweck, Michael R. Crisci.
Mrs. Myrna E. Wagner
1955 Mrs. Paul Dunkelberger
R. Glen Fenstermacher, David
M. Cole. Mary R. Moser
1957 William E. Dupkaneck, Mrs.
David M. Cole, Donna R. Wilcox,
1951
Thomas
J.
Reimensnyder,
Joseph
Wascavage
1958
tine J.
Otto H. Donar,
1960 Mrs. Robert E. Bucher, Paul
T. Paliscak, James H. Williams
1961 Joyce L. Dascola, David J.
1962— Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. EdLoughlin.
wards
John T. Kovich
1963 John J. Boback, Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne A. Hock, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
O. Rhoads, Raymond N. Miller, William H. Garson. Jr.
1964 Mrs. Robert L. Bull, John R.
Schneider,
Edward
A. Wallesh, George
Weigand. Mrs. Dale E.
Mrs. Walter C. Beamer
A.
Erway,
1965 Frank C.
Dowman, Joseph
Schein, Mrs. Rita Seybert, Milton J.
Van Winkle, John N. Ritter, James F.
Eisenhardt, Jr., Mrs. David Hixon,
Glenn R. Morrison, Mrs. Emily A.
Bell, Diane H. Sheridan.
1966 Kathryn L.
Sharrow, Mrs.
Dowman, Mrs. Richard L.
James J. Rutkowski, Ray H.
Fox, William M. Reiter, Mrs. Dennis
Zimmerman, Mrs. Robert L. Schuld,
Frank
C.
Foster.
Mrs. Robert Barchik
Frank
Chellino.Jr., Mrs.
Robert F. Kline,
Charles E. Wagner, Michael V. Mellinger, Phillip D. Landers, Mrs. Marilyn Y. Houck, John R. Price, Harry
J. Balliet, Stephen L. Empet
1968 Mrs. Carol A. Sutzko, Mrs.
Paul H. Umlauf, Mrs. Dawn S. Moffett, Mrs. Michael V. Mellinger, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard L. Hartman, Mrs.
Carol L. Mace, James H. Neiswender,
Diane W. Dawson, Lawrence F. Foran, Mrs. Stephen L. Empet
1969 Thelma Connistra, Francis R.
Demnicki, Marsha Henderson, Robert
Muscosky, James M. Riggs, Mr. and
Mrs. Reinhold A. Schulz, Dolores A.
1967
Mary G.
Slavik,
J.
Teter,
Nancy
Strauss,
Canda
L. Sch-
wenke, James L. Carter, Mrs. Robert
J. Bednar, Robert S, Van Horn, Mrs.
Phillip D. Landers, Victor E. Keeler,
III, Mrs. Richard E. Osberg, Mrs.
Larry E. Drumm, Van G. Booth, Kenneth C. Stanton
1970 Robert T. Marshall, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry M. Maurer, Mrs. Charles
H. Nielsen, Jr., Mrs. James L. Carter,
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene E. Coiffi HI,
James M. Waragaris, Mr. James
Snyder II, Mrs. Craig F. Sleep, Richard L. Bingaman
AMENDMENT TO
CONSTITUTION
An amendment
the
the
to the Constitution of
Alumni Association, approved by
Board of Directors, will be voted
on at the next general meeting of the
Association on Alumni Day, Saturday
April 24, 1971. This amendment would
install a member of the graduating
class as an ex-officio member of the
Board of Directors, to serve for one
year.
COLLEGE CALENDAR
— April 24, 1971
— May 29. 1971
Pre-Session — June 7 to June 25
Main Session — June 28 to August 6
Alumni Day
Clarence W. Swade, ConstanSpentzas, Kenneth J. Oswald,
George T. Herman
1959
yack, Paul H. Spahr
Mary E. Lab-
Commencement
Post Session
-
August
8 to
August
27
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR
F.
II.
Fenstemaker
’12
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
’34
Grace Foote Conner,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS — ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Terms
242 Central
Road
Bloomsburg. Pennsylvania 17815
Term
expires
Millard Ludwig
R. D. 1
’48
Pennsylvania 17846
Term Expires
1972
SECRETARY
West Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania
Dr.
Dr. William L. Bitner III ’56
33 Lincoln Ave.,
Glens Falls. N. Y. 12801
John Thomas ’47
68 Fourth Street
Hamburg, Pennsylvania 19526
Park and Oak
Hubler
Sts.,
140
Clayton H. Hinkel
’31
Terms expire 1973
Dr. Frank J. Furgele ’52
Colonial Farm Box 88
R. D. 1, Glen Mills, Pa. 19342
James H. Deily. Jr. ’41
37 N. Bausman Drive
expires 1973
Lancaster, Pennsylvania 17603
Dr. Alexander J. McKechnie, Jr.
19 N. 24th St.
Camp
expires 1973
Volume LXXII, Number
1903
Representative:
11
Walter
Warwick Avenue, Scars-
dale, N. Y. 10583
1905
Representative: Mrs. Vera
Hemingway Housenick, 503 Market
Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1906
Dr. Carroll D. Champlin, 627 West
Fairmount Avenue, State College,
Pa., 16801, concludes his 1970 holiday
letter by saying. "God save the world
and help us to observe more widely,
study more assiduously, think more
rationally, arrive at more justifiable
conclusions and treat each other more
sincerely.”
MARCH,
1971
1,
1909
Class
Representative:
Bloom
Pa. 17011
18702
Class Representative:
Edwin M.
Barton, 353 College Hill, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
Diehl, 627
17821
Hill,
’39
March, 1971
1907
H.
’40
Leonard Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
224
Apt. 2
Gordon, Pennsylvania. 17936
TREASURER
Class
Riland,
17815
Kimber C. Kuster T3
West Eleventh Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Earl A. Gehrig ’37
110 Robin Lane. Sherwood Village
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Term
’34
102
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie ’35
509 East Front Street
Berwick, Pennsylvania 18603
Elizabeth H.
Col. Elv.ood M. Wagner ’43
643 Wiltshire Road
State College, Pa. 16801
Term
expire 1972
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
197.'!
VICE PRESIDENT
Millville.
Terms
expire 1971
Mrs. Verna Jones ’36
111 Plant Avenue
Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087
Fred
W.
Street, Danville, Pa.
1910
Class Representative:
Robert C.
Metz, 23 Manhattan Street, Ashly,
Pa. 18706
1911
Class Representative: Mrs. Pearle
Fitch Diehl, 627 Bloom Street, Danville, Pa. 17821
Mina McFee (Mrs. John Fisher) is
a guest at the Carey Nursing Home,
366 Carey Avenue, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
1912
Class
Representative:
Howard
Fenstemaker,. 242. Central.
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
F.
Road,
1913
Class Representative: Dr. Kimber
Kuster, 140 West 11th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Judge Bernard J. Kelley, member of
BSC Board of Trustees, has
changed his address to 1004 One East
Penn Square, Philadelphia, Pa. 19107.
Mr. Kelley is a Judge in the Court of
the
Common
Pleas
in Philadelphia.
1914
Representative: J. Howard
Deily, 518 West Third Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
Page
five
1915
Class Representative: John H. Shu-
man,
368 East
Main
Street,
Blooms-
burg, Pa. 17815
1916
Class Representative: Mrs. Russell
(Emma Harrison) R. D. 2,
Orangeville, Pa. 17859
Harrison (Mrs. Russell Burrus), R. D. 2, Orangeville, Pa., has for
the past twenty years been associated
with the Zaner—Bloser Publishing
Company, who publish all kinds of
materials for the instruction of handwriting at the elementary level. At
present she is completing, as co-author, a series of books for the teaching
of handwriting to children in Special
Education classes. Dr. Emily Reuwsaat. of the BSC faculry, has been
assisting in an advisory capacity.
Burrus
Emma
1917
Representative:.
Class.
Allen.
Cromis, Mahoning, Manor, R. D.
Milton, Pa.
L.
1,
1918
Clair
Representative.
J..
Class.
Patterson, 315 West Street, Bloomsburg. Pa. 17815
Jay Lee Funk and Miriam Welliver
Funk are now living at 806% S. Richardson Avenue, Roswell. New Mexico
88201.
Class Representative: Miss Catherine A. Reimard, 335 Jefferson St.,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1919
Dreibelbis.
F. Ralph
1919, and his
fifth
wife Ruth are spending their
winter in Tucson, Arizona.
1920
.Old. Berwick
Pa. 17815
1921
.3117
Bloomsburg,
Class
Leroy W.
Road,
Representative:
Class
Creasy,
Representative:
Cole, 100
Pa. 17815
Wilbur
Leonard
S.
old Drive,
21157
Street,
Foresman
Mrs. Harry
Bloomsburg,
lives at 2 Arn-
Westminister,
Maryland
1922
Class. Representative:. Edna. S.
Harter, R. D. 1, Nescopeck, Pa. 18623
1923
Representative: Mrs. Raymond Kashner, 125 Forrest Road,
Sherwood Village. Bloomsburg, Pa.
Class
17815
A
distinguished educator who was
born in Mauch Chunk recently observed her 50th year of teaching and was
the guest of honor at a party attended
by 25 friends and associates.
Dr.
Margaret Bittner Parks, a graduate
of the 1919 class of Mauch Chunk High
School, was the guest of Mrs. Dorothy
Fasanelle, Phillipsport, N. Y., who
entertained, Oct. 3 at her home in the
Catskill Mountains.
Dr. Parke is a graduate of Pennsylvania State University Teacher’s College and Columbia University, where
she received her doctor’s degree. In
addition, she was the recipient of an
honorary degree from Staley College.
Dr. Parke has taught at all levels
of the school system - elementary,
secondary and college.
Page
six
Margaret Parke started teaching in
a rural school in Rockport, Pa.; immediately after graduating from high
school taught grades 3 and 4 in Packerton, grades 7 and 8 in Doylestown.
She went to New York State in 1928 to
attend Columbia University to major
in guidance, taught in the Washington
Junior High School in Mt. vernon,
from which she moved to the East
where she
Chester High School,
pioneered for eight years in developing guidance and research
systems
for a small school system.
She later moved to New York City.
In the research bureaus of the New
York
City Public School system, she
conducted numerous reasearch projects, developed tests and wrote bul-
letins for teachers, chiefly in the field
of language arts.
In 1951 Dr. Parke went to Brooklyn
College where she chaired a commitand supervisors of student teachers in elementary education.
Later she developed graduate programs for teachers of reading and the
language arts and became advisor of
these programs, a post which she now
holds
Dr. Parke’s record is found in Who’s
tee of teachers
Who
of
American Women, Leaders
in
Education, International Biography,
and other compilations of note. She
was admitted to the honorary societies
of Pi Lambda Theta and Kappa Delta
Pi and received a Fulbright Grant in
1960 to lecture in Australia, the Philip-
pines and Taiwan.
Her books
for parents and young
published by Grosset and
Dunlap, have been widely circulated
in the United States and in some other
English speaking
countries.
They
include Young Reader’s Picture Dictionary in five different editions. My
children,
Book to Read. My Second Book
Read, You Can Teach Your Child
to Read. Practice Workbooks in Writing. I, II, in.
Getting to Know Aus-
First
to
was written for older children.
Dr. Parke is active in world, nation-
address
is
P. O.
Box
20168, Astrodome
Texas 77025
Station, Houston,
1926
Representative:
Class
Bloss, P.
Pa. 17815
O.
Box
505,
Marvin
M.
Bloomsburg,
Collins (Mrs. Henry S.
living at 39 Verbena
Avenue, N. Merrick, L. I., N. Y. 11566.
Ruth
E.
Fairchild)
is
Second Grade TeachShaverton Elementary
Shaverton, Pa. retired from
teaching as of June, 1970 after 41
years of service.
She is residing in Riverside, CalifBertha
er
at
School,
Sutliff,
the
ornia, at the following address:
4440
Street 92501.
1927
Bertine Prosser, 900 Main Street,
has retired
Peckville,
Pa.,
18452,
after forty-three years of teaching.
Lemon
Forty-two years were in the Blakely
District and one year
in the Valley View School District
Borough School
consolidation).
(a
Cooper
Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth
(Thelma Prosser) have moved from
Boonton, New Jersey and now reside
at 321 Gravity Street, Peckville, Pa.
18452
Class Representative: Mrs. Ralph
G. Davenport (Verna Medley), 16
Ransom Street, Plymouth, Pa. 18651
1928
Mabel Albertson
Linskill, 21 Butler
Street, Forty Fort, Pa. 18704, has retired from teaching in the public
school system of Freeport, Long
Island, N. Y.
1829
Class Representatives: Mrs. (Elsie
Lebo) Nelson Stauffer, 88 John St.,
Kingston, Pa. 18704. (Arline Frantz)
Mrs. James Wertman. 20 Parish
Street, Dallas, Pa. 18612
1930
Class
Luther W.
Representatives:
and Margaret Swartz
Bitler, 117 State
Street, Millville, Pa. 17846
tralia
state
and
She
participated in the UK Reading Conference in England in 1969 ond chaired
a secton of the World Reading Conference in Australia in 1970.
al,
city organizations.
The educator
currently on the executive board of the Woman’s Press
Club of New York City and the New
York State organization of College
English educators.
She is a vice
president of the New York Society for
is
the Experimental Study of Education
and has been elected to serve on the
Elementary Committee on the National Council of Teachers of English.
Dr. Parke resides at 1655 Flatbush
Ave.. A-1810, Brooklyn, N. Y.
1924
Class Representative: Edward F.
Schuyler, 236 West Ridge Avenue,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1925
Class Representative: Michael P.
Walakonis,
Box
222,
Ringtown,
Pa.
17967
Dr.
Harold H. Hidlay, Assistant Superintendent of the
Columbia County
Schools,, recently received the Honorary Keystone Farmer Degree.
1931
Class Representative:
Davis, 333 East Marble
anicsburg. Pa. 17055
James
Str<|t,
B.
Mech-
1933
Representative: Miss Lois
Lawson, .644 .East Third .Street.
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1934
.Esther
Representative:.
Evans McFadden (Mrs. Joseph), 154
East Fifth Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
Class.
17815
Joseph J. Gribbin. Bethlehem, Pa.,
has been appointed field representative to eleven northwestern counties
for the Pennsylvania Division of the
American Cancer
A
Soiciety.
veteran of the
U
S.
Army, Gribbin
has been active in youth work with
the YMCA and the Bethlehem Boys
Club.
James H. Sterner
Associate
Dean of the School of Public Health
at Houston, University of Texas. His
1935
is
Class
Reed,
Representative:.
151
East
William
I.
4th Street, Blooms-
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
mond
burg, Pa. 17815
1936
Kathryn Vanauker (Mrs. Nicholas
Moreth) 34 Linden Road. Ho-Ho-Kus,
New Jersey 07423, Co-Chairman; Ruth
Wagner (Mrs. Lawrence LeGrande)
18201
123 Oak Street, Hazleton, Pa.
and Mary Jane Fink (Mrs. Frederick
M. Cutcheon) Maple Avenue, Conynghani. Pa. 18219
1937
and
Mr.
Class Representatives;
Mrs. Earl A. Gehrig. 110 Robin Lane,
Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa.
17815
Randall
F.
Clemens,
Senior
Pro-
Specialist. Division of Compensatory Education. U.S. Office of Education was one of the speakers at the
gram
Twenty-Fourth Annual Conference for
Teachers and Administrators held on
the BSC Campus on Saturday, October
24, 1970.
Mr. Clemens has been engaged
program review and development
in
in
the field of compensatory education
since 1965 when Title I was enacted
by Congress. He has been specializing in programs for the education of
migratory children of migratory agricultural workers.
A native of Berwick, he also holds a
Master of Arts degree from New
York University, and has taken graduate work at the University of PennHe is a former classroom
sylvania.
teacher and high school principal in
Pennsylvania School Systems. Clemens served with the U.S. Navy from
1942-1945.
Mr. Clemen’s wife is the former
Janice Nicholls, of the class of 1936.
1938
Class Representative: Paul G. Mar710 East
burg, Pa.
tin,
Main
Street,
Blooms-
1939
Willard A.
Christian, Jr., 803 Logue Street, Williamsport, Pa. 17701
Prof. Alfred P. Koch, Pine Top
Class
Representative:
Trail, Bethlehem. Pa. 18017, professor
of accounting at Lehigh University,
has been appionted to serve on the
Committee on Taxation of the Pennsylvania Institute of Certified Public
Accountants (PICPA).
A native of Shenandoah. Pa., Prof.
Koch received the M. S. degree at
Busknell University and joined the
Lehigh faculty in 1946. He became a
CPA in Pennsylvania in 1952.
A contributing author to the “Accounting Teachers Guide” published
by Southwestern Publishing Co.
1940
Class Representative: Clayton H.
Hinkle, 224 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1941
Representative: Dr. C. Stuart Edwards, R. D. 4, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
Class
1942
Class Representative: Mrs. Ralph
H.
Zimmerman (Jean Noll) 165
17551
1943
Class
MARCH,
Representative:
1971
Mrs.
Ray-
A.
253 Iron
17815
Algatt
Katerman),
Bloomsburg, Pa.
(Betty
Street,
1944
Class Representative: Mrs. (Poletime Comuntzis) Carl Demetripopoulos. Friar and Robin Lanes, Sherwood
Village, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1945
Mary Lou
Class Representative:
John, 257 W. 11th St., Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
1946
Anastasia Pappas (Mrs. John Trowbridge), lOp
Danville, Pa.
W.
Mahoning
Street,
Co-chairman:
Mrs. Charles W. Creasy (Jacqueline
Pa.
Shaffer), R. D. 1,
Catawissa,
17821.
17820.
Representative:
Robert
L.
Bunge, 12 West Park Street, Carroll
Park, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
The Board of Education of the City
School District of Binghamton. New
York, announces the appointment of
Gerald J. Demaree as Assistant Superintendent of Schools for Business
and Non-Instructional personnel.
Mr. Demaree had been associated
with
the
Binghamton
1952
Francis B.
Galinski, 90 Tower Hill Road, Do.vlestown. Pa. 18901
U. S. Air Force Major Clarence W.
Troutman, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. C.
Rhodes of R. D. 2, Sunbury. Pa., has
been decorated with the Distinguished
Flying Cross (DFC) and the Bronze
Star Medal for action in Southeast
Asia.
Major Troutman’s DFC was for exClass
Representative:
traordinary achievement as an RF-4C
tactical reconnaissance airenemy
Despite
navigator.
craft
Phantom
fire, he completed two special
missions to obtain information of vital
ground
1947
Class
1951
Class Representative: Dr. Russell
C. Davis, Jr., Thunder Hill, Grahamsville, N. Y. 12740
District
since
serving as a business education
teacher and coach, director of finance,
business administrator, and in his
present capacity. The Assistant Superintendent was awarded a Masters
degree from New York University in
1951.
He has also taken additional
graduate courses at Cornell, Syracuse,
and Ithaca College.
1947.
1948
Harry G.
Representative:
Class
John. Jr., 425 Iron Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Ralph E. and Nancy Evancho Seltzer, live at 2604 Helen Street, Allentown, Pa.
1949
Representative: Richard E.
Grimes, 1723 Fulton St., Harrisburg,
Pa. 17102
Class
1950
Class Representative: Willis Swales,
Raven Road, Montvale, N. J. 07645
Mrs. Francis Cerchiaro Abitanta.
1046 Cross Avenue, Elizabeth, New
Jersey, is Principal of an elementary
school in that c ity.
Mrs. Abitanta
has a Master of Education degree.
She has two children.
9
Mrs. Audrey Terrel Adliss, Forest
Clifton
Forge, Virginia, is
head of the Mathematics Department
in the Clifton Forge High School. She
has two children.
Hills,
Mrs. Nancy Anthony Thomash, 577
Park Ridge Drive, Wayne P. O., Pa.
is Speech Therapist in the Cheltenham
Township School District.
Mrs. Janice Jones Kulp, Teaching
Supervisor at the Mary Richenbach
Research-Learning Center, Kutztown
State College, is the author of an article, “Third graders build Kidsville,”
which appeared in a recent issue of
the “Instructor” magazine.
importance
to allied forces.
The major received the Bronze Star
Medal for meritorious service (Turing
military operations against Viet Cong
forces. He was cited for his performance as a requirements reconnais
cance officer at Seventh Air Force
headquarters, Tan Son Nhut AB,
Vietnam.
Major Troutman was honored at
Tactical Air Command. Bergstrom
AFB. Austin, Tex., where he now
serves.
Commissioned in 1953 through the
aviation cadet program, he served
during the Korean War and holds the
aeronautical rating of master navigator.
1953
Class Representative: John S. Scrimgeour, 411 East 3rd Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Dr. David N. Newbury, 4852 Iowa
Drive, Warren. Michigan 48092, has
recently co-authored a book which relates teacher contract negotiations to
effective learning for school children.
The book is entitled, “Teacher Negotiations:
A Guide for Bargaining
Teams.” The guide was written in
collaboration with Dr. William C. Miller, who, like Newbury, is a Detriot
area school administrator.
The book is considered unique in
educational circles since it is one of
the first to attempt to connect the
growing practice of teacher bargaining with research on effective learning
of students.
It is published by the
Parker Division of Prentice-Hall Publishers and is aimed at the national
market of public and college educators, as well as school board members, who are concerned with teacher
negotiations.
Newbury has previously published
articles on such topics as the history
of iron mining at Danville, Penna.,
federal aid to education, science ed-
ucation, dropout prevention, and vocational education.
After military service in Korea and
Japan he completed a Master’s Degree at Bucknell University in 1956.
doctorate in administration and
curriculum development was earned
at Wayne State University in 1967.
Newbury is currently Assistant Sup-
A
Page seven
erintendent of Schools in Hazel Park,
Michigan, a suburban community of
He began teaching
30,000 residents.
there in 1956 and has served as Science Director and Curriculum Director before being appointed Assistant
Dr. Newbury has
Superintendent.
served on the Board of Directors of
the Michigan State Curriculum Development Association and was president
of the largest county curriculum leadership group in Michigan.
1954
Class Representative: William J.
Jacobs, Tremont Annex Apartments,
2 West Main Street, Lansdale, Pa.
19446
Myra
Wagner
Albertson
606 Hobart Terrace,
California 95051
1955
is
living at
Santa
Clara,
officiated.
A
of Bloomsburg State
and the Wesley Theological
Seminary of Washington, D. C., he
received the degree of Master of Sacred Theology in Ecclesiastical History
from the General Theological Semin-
graduate
College
ary of the Episcopal Church, New
York, in May of 1970. He was ordained to the Diacconate by Bishop
Stevenson on June 28, 1970, in St.
Luke’s Church, Mechanicsburg.
Thomas
Class Representative: Arnold GarR. D. 1, Harveys Lake, Pa.
inger,
18618
er at the
School in
team leader-teachPerry Browne Elementary
Davis, a
Norwich,
New
York,
and
Mary Whitmore, an insurance
1956
Representative: Dr. William
33 Lincoln Avenue, Glens
Falls, N. Y. 12801
Class
Bittner
Curate at Christ Episcopal Church
Reading, was elevated to the Sacred
Order of Priests on January 17, in
the Cathedral Church of St. Stephen.
Harrisburg.
The Right Reverend
Dean Theodore Stevenson, Bishop of
the Episcopal Diocese of Harrisburg,
III,
administrator at the Norwich Pharmaceutical Company, were married last
summer. Their address is Box 64,
Tanner Hill Road, R. D. 1, Norwich,
New
1957
Class Representative: William J.
Pohutski, 554 Oakridge Drive, North
Plainfield, N. J. 07606
1958
Class
Representative:
Raymond
Hargreaves, 37 Dell Road, Stanhope,
N. J. 07874
York, 13815
lives at R. D. 1, Box
Oxford, Penna., 19363. Lanny is
a teacher in the middle school in Oxford and completed a 22-day tour of
Lanus Miller
74,
Western Europe
last
summer.
Teresa Julio Kohut lives at 15 Brown
Lane, R. D. 2, Appalachin, New York,
Alexander R. Stepanski, Bear Path
Road, Munnsville, New York, has accepted an assistantship at Syracuse
13732.
University to study for his PhD. in
1959
mathematics.
Class Representative: William F.
Swisher, Box 245, Cincinnatus, N. Y.,
13040
1960
Representative!:
Glass
James J.
Peck, 100 Hull Road, Madison, Conn.
06443
George M.
Emmaus,
Avenue,
Apilla, 6 Alvin
Pa.,
a
is
member
Emmaus
of
the
High School. He
married and has one daughter.
staff of
is
1961
Class Representative: Edwin C.
Kuser, R. D. 1, Box 145-C, Bechtelsville, Pa. 19505
1962
Class Representative: Richard Lloyd
6 Farragut Drive, Piscataway, N. J.
18854
John W. H. Ribble and Salley Layton Ribble are living at 36
Oak Lane.
Royersford, Pa.
1963
Class Representative:
Pat Biebl
(Mrs. Ronald Cranford) R. D. 1, 77
Hawthorne, Ave., Boyertown, Pa.
19512
An item appeared
in the December
Quarterly, stating that
Mr. Rupert had been appointed head
basketball coach at Johns Hopkins
University.
The item erroneously
listed Mr. Rupert as a member of the
class of 1958. Mr. Rupert and his wife
issue of the
(Nancy McFerran
sons live at 717
and their two
Hallen Road, Balti’63)
more, Maryland 21212.
The Rev. Robert Howard
Page eight
Pursel,
Gary Rupert has begun
his
new
job as head baskebatl! coach at Johns
Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland. He will also assist in their football program. He and his wife Nancy
(McFerran ’63) and their two sons
live at 717 Ho lien Road, Baltimore,
Maryland
21212.
Robert Painter lives at 509 Center
Street, Milton, Penna., 17847, with his
wife Bonnie (Fisher ’63) and their
two daughters, Lynn and Kathleen.
in the middle school in
Bob teaches
Milton.
is
The address of Capt. John J. Owens
Co B 2-12 Cav 1st Air Cavalry Div-
ision,
APO
Nancy Pickering (Mrs. John K.
Frank) reports her address as Box
92- A,
R. D.
Ernest R.
Shuba, 1 Gaston Avenue, Raritan, N.
N. 08869
The address of James F. Gallagher
is Box 203, Cloverdale, N. Y. 12820.
Representative:
1,
Moscow, Pa. 18444
George and Kay Shaffer Weigand,
2625 Skylark Drive, York, Pa., are
the parents of a daughter, born July
28,
1970.
George
is
Dean’s Repre-
sentative to the College of Education
at the York Campus of the Pennsylvania State University.
1965
Class Representative: Carl P. Sheran, 59 Vreeland Ave., Bloomingdale,
N. J. 07403
1965
W. Greenly, Newtown has been
accepted in an advanced program' of
study at the University of New MexL.
Albuquerque, which leads to a
Master’s degree in architecture. He
graduated from Bloomsburg State
College in 1965 and did further study
ico,
Lawrence University, Temple
University, Holy Cross College and
Rider College. He taught physics and
at St.
photography for five years at Pennsbury High School, Fairless Hills,
where he recently resigned.
Thomas E. and Barbara Boland
Miller are living at 236 St. David Ct..
Cockeysville, Md. 21030.
They have
two children. Mr. Miller is the Specialist in Business and Office Occupations for the State of Maryland.
Barru Brittingham (Mrs. Louis J.
White) lives at 411 New York Ave.,
Ogdensburg, N. Y. 13669.
Emily Herman Bell is living at R.
2, Ganague, Ontario, Canada.
D.
1966
Class Representative: Anthony J.
Cerza, 608 Corlies Ave., Wallenhurst,
N. J. 07711
Ruth Rimsha (Mrs. Robert L. Schuld)
lives at 1284 Ellisworth Drive,
Whitehall, Pa. 18052.
Manlynne Kolnik (Mrs. David L.
Welsh) is living at 1023 Lacouer,
Missouri 63122.
1964
Class
S.F. 96490.
1967
Class
Representative:
Lemon, Warwick
R.
Thomas
Apt., 3-D, 802
English St., Bel Air, Md. 21014
Old
Richard and Cheryl Crewdson Bald,
R. D. 1 Center Valley, Pa., 18034, announce the birth of a daughter, June
Arthur C. Pursel, elementary teachCamp Hill School District,
will open a private nursery school and
day care center on the West Shore
under the name “Arthur Pursel’s
West Shore Children’s Center.”
It will be located in New Cumberland and will provide organized educational experience for three and four-
21.1970.
year-old children in addition to competent developmental child care.
The founder and director has been
involved with child development for
over ten years and feels there is a
need for day care and nursery school
programs for pre-school children.
sity.
er in the
Dr. E. C. Keller, Jr., Chairman of
the Biology Department at West Virginai University, has selected William
Frederic Skinner as a graduate research assistant on a $68,650 research
grant awarded by the Office of Water
Resources to West Virginia Univer-
Skinner is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
E. B. Skinner. Bloomsburg.
After
completing two years active duty in
the U.S. Coast Guard, he entered graduate school at West Virginia University in January of this year.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Mr. and Mrs. R. Thomas Lemo.i
have moved to 802 Old English Court
Md.
Apt. 3-D, Bel Air.
21014.
Ernest A. Cole has moved
to 1106 E.
5th St., Berwick, Pa. 18603
Mrs.
(Hileman)
Virginia
Ryan
is
Rear Elm St.. Huntington
Va. 25703 where she is working in the
Office of Career Planning and Placement at Marshall University where
her husband is a student.
living at 620
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bentley are
living at 1124*4 South Allen St., State
College, Pa. 16801. Mrs. Bentley is the
Emmajane
Pellen and is
Bellefonte High School
former
teaching at
while her husband
is working on his
Ph.D. in Finance at State and she is
working on her M.Ed in Business Ed-
U.S.
Training School (OTS) at Lackland
AFB, Texas.
Lieutenant Hitz is being assigned to
Mather AFB. Calif., for navigator
low Grove, Pa.
training.
Airman Terry L. Lutz,, Bloomsburg,
Pa., has completed basic training at
Lackland AFB, Texas. He has been
to Sheppard AFB, Texas, for
training as a medical service special-
assigned
ist.
Robert J. Stahl, whose address is
W. Union Blvd., Bethlehem, Pa.
18018. has been enrolled in the class
of ’73 at Westminister TheologicalSeminary, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia,
28
Pa. 19118.
ucation.
1968
Class Representative: Thomas W.
Free. R. D. 1. Box 34, Kintnerville.
Pa. 18930
Carol Kopp Sutzko lives at 125 S.
Mill Stret, St. Clair, Pa. 17970
Sally S. Splain (Mrs. Robert H.
Daley is living at 1546 Commonwealth
Avenue. Boston, Mass. 02100.
Cinde Rogers Hippensteel is living
at R. D. 1, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
)
Nancy Stewart Magrone
is
400 No. Dupont Highway,
Apts., Dover, Del. 19901.
Sharon Griggs Hogett
Daniel R. DiFeo. Jr., 1805 Brazos
Street. Apt. 35, Austin Texas 78701, is
enrolled in the Botany Department of
the Graduate School at the University
of Texas.
Carlton
Terrace,
lives at
2019
Williamsport,
Pa.
17701
1969
Representative:
Frank J.
Masteroianne,
1018
Cooper Street,
Scranton, Pa. 18508
Francis J. Handy (Mrs. John D.
Wright) lives at Apartment 107, 210
Lake Hallingsworth Drive, Lakeland.
Class
Beverly Forry Bode reports her
address as P. O. Box 151, Middle
River, Minn. 56737.
.
.
WEDDINGS
.
/".
.
Florida, 33803.
1944—1942
Anne
’44
L. Shortess
and H. Ray-
Victor E. Keeler III, 106 N. Howard
Avenue, Gettysburg, Pa. 17325, is a
Social Studies teacher and StudioVisual Director for the Fairfield Area
School District. He is married and
Mrs. Chandler has been emCity.
ployed by the Henry Dreyfuss Asso-
has one son.
Organization Resources Counselors.
Address: 927 Madison Avenue, New
Marsha Carpenter (Mrs. Charles
J.
Vogt) lives at 863 Carlivynne Manor,
Carlisle. Pa. 17013.
Charlene
Graci
Goldthevarte
re-
ports her address as Box 700. Lot 54,
Rte. 2. Fountain Blue Mobile Home
Park, Pensacola. Fla. 32506
Francis J, Handy (Mrs. John D.
Wright) lives at Apt. 1607. 210 Lake
Hallingsworth Drive, Lakeland, Fla.
mond Chandler
ciation.
York
’42.
Mr. Chandler
61
Dean
John
W.
Street,
Beaver
Meadows, Pa. 18216
Airman David C. Large, Achland,
Pa., has
completed basic training at
Lackland Air Force Base, Texas. He
has been assigned to Lowry Air Force
Base,
Colorado,
for
armament systems
address
Pa.
is
training
field.
His
in
the
home
1539 Center Street, Ashland
employed by
1957
Jean Starisky and Hugo More, 1541
Wyoming Avenue, Scranton, Pa. 18509.
Suzanne Miller and Dennis ZimmerDowman, ’65, 1503- A Rollin Glen
Drive, Boothwyn, Pa. 19061
Barbara L. Robinson and Frank C.
Dowman. 1503- A Rolling Glen Drive.
Boothwyn, Pa. 19061.
1960
Gertrude
1970
Representative:
is
New York
City.
33803.
Class
Dalfovo,
both of
Snyder
Foster, Address 919
Warminster, Pa.
and Richard L.
Log College Drive
18974.
1967
Carla Mattucci and Anthony Scala,
both of Berwick. Anthony is a teacher
at the West Hazleton High School.
1968
Virginia Ann Brown and John R.
Hatton.
Address: 3217-A Wakefield
Road, Harrisburg, Pa. 17709.
Donna Jean F. Pucino, Catawissa
Gary L.
MARCH,
Hitz, 60 Sylvania
1971
Road, Her-
R. D.
1,
na
is
a teacher of kindergarten for the
Upper Moreland School
and Capt. William K. Gifford,
District, Wil-
Bonnie Wallos and Jan Keller.
The
bride is a mathematics teacher in
Central Bucks School District, Tamanend Junior High School, Warrington.
Address: 433 Summit Ave., Horsham.
Karen
J.
Zehner, Bloomsburg, and
R. Bradford Adams, Rochester, N.Y.
The bride is doing graduate work at
Bucgnell University and the University of Rochester.
At present she is
teaching mathematics at Spencerpm't
Senior High School. Spencerport, N.Y.
1967
Joan Hand and William Dupkanick.
1968—69
Karla Klinoff, Nanticoke, Pa., and
Charles H. Bowman. Williamport, Pa
Address: 2508 Benvenue Avenue, Berkley. Calif. 94700.
Sharon McQuillen and Anthony M.
Vinciguerra. The bridegroom
ing in the U. S. Navy.
is
serv-
1969
living at
Lake Club
James W. Warth
lives at Apt. A-7.
King of Prussia, Pa. 19406. His wife
is the former Nancy D. Shaffer, of
the class of 1970.
Army, Morgantown, W. Va. Don-
shey, Pa. 17033, has been commissioned a second lieutenant in the U.S. Air
Force upon graduation from Officer
Jocelyn Entrot and Charles Celli.
The couple resides in Newtown
Square. Both are employed as chem
ists at Wylth Laboratories. Inc., Paoli.
Kathleen Jarrard and Richard E.
Osberg. Apt. 21. 4 Silver Drive. Nashua,
New Hampshire
03060.
Harry A. Snyder and Margo Fetterolf.
Address: 6 Academy Apts., Marvin St., Deposit, N. Y. 13754.
Bonnie L. Yorks, Berwick, and Peter
R. Gatski, Bloomsburg. The bride is
an elementary teacher in Norristown.
Her husband, is a mental health worker at Norristown State Hospital.
1970
Bonnie J. Beaver and James E.
Rufenstahl ’69. Address: 206-C Perkiomen Place Apts., Pennsbury, Pa.
18073.
Donna Calvello and Glenn A. Ahlum.
Address: 1510 Oriole Drive, Cornwells
Heights, Pa. 19020.
Mary E. Leiby, Bloomsburg, and
Bernard V. Curran. Shenandoah. Mrs.
Curran is a social worker for the
New
Jersey Division of Public WelMr. Curran is a teacher in the
Pennsbury School District, Fiarless
Hills, Pa.
fare.
Sharon L. Pinkerton and Larry M.
Maurer. Address: 14 Rector Street,
“C” Lancashire Apts., Wilmington,
Del. 19810.
Barbara
and Charles H.
Address is Benton AFS,
Poireca
Nielsen, Jr.
Box
369, R.
D.
2,
Benton, Pa. 17814
Rebecca Brown.
Northumberland
and Gary R.
Steiner,
Nescopeck.
Mrs. Steiner is a teacher in the Shikellamy School District. Mr. Steiner,
who served
four years in the U. S.
Navy, is a machinist.
Bargara Louise Scaran, R. D. 4,
Danville, Pa., and Thompson P. Ging-
Page nine
her,
His estate was valued
about $25 million. The costs and
taxes totaled almost $20 million, thus
leaving his family with only 20 per
cent of his estate.
Many of you have Catherine Marshall’s book “TO LIVE AGAIN” in
which she says, “Peter, to the surprise
without a will.
Bloomsburg.
The bride graduated from the Gelsinger Medical Center School of Nursing in 1969 and is currently employed
as a staff nurse at the Center. The
groom is employed by the F and T Insurance Company. The couple reside
at 224 W. Fourth St., Bloomsburg, Pa.
at
of all
17815.
left
Ellen G. Shoemaker and Craig F.
Address: A-6 Meadowbrook
Sleep.
Apts., Gilbert ville, Pa. 19525.
James P. Snyder
Address: 526 Turner Street, Apt.
Mrs. Snyder is
403, Allentown, Pa.
teaching at Pieruff High School in
Allentown.
Judith E. Urso and
n.
Horace D. Bennett 3rd and Marilyn
Barr.
I.
The groom
is employed by the Heart
Association as a field representative.
The couple will reside in Pittsburgh.
HOUK HONORED
Russell Houk, Athletic Director and
Wrestling Coach at Bloomsburg State
College for the past fourteen years, received international recognition when
he was elected by the United States
Olympic Wrestling Committee to serve
as manager of the freestyle wrestling
team for the 1972 Olympics to be held
no
who had known him well, had
will. If only he had known how
much
it left to be taken care of.”
Only th ough a valid will are you
enabled u:
1. Decide who is to receive your
property and how
2. Choose the organization or person
you wish to supervise the settlement
of your estate
3. Lessen the amount of Federal estate tax your estate will have to pay
4. Name the person you wish to
serve as guardian of your minor
children
5.
Make
specific provisions for the
Foundation
Bloomsburg
or
other
charitable organizations
Even those who have wills sometimes do not spend enough thought
and time in planning for something
which is so important. For example,
Benjamin Franklin, the wise leader of
early America, left an endowment to
the city of Philadelphia, which now
amounts to over $1 million. But Ben
stipulated in his will that the
money
in
Munich, Germany.
As a manager, Houk will serve as
administrator for the team, arranging
would be used to buy watering troughs
for horses. Of the adults in the United
States today who have wills, eight
including travel,
prepamtiic'ns
meals, lodging, and clothing. He is
responsible for communications between teams and issues protests of
out of ten provide for outright distribution of their estates; for example,
leaving everything to spouse who in
turn leaves all assets to children. This,
of course, is the most costly way of
leaving assets to loved ones.
So you see wills and estate planning
are important to Bloomsburg State
College because by education we help
others and by bequests others help
Bloomsburg State College.
all
matches,
necessary.
In his thirteen previous years at the
helm
of
if
BSC, Houk has amassed an
enviable record of 131 wins, 26 losses,
and 3 ties. He has won three National
NAIA team
Pennsylvania
Championships, and one
titles,
five
Conference
Wilkes Open Tournament
was named NAIA Coach
He
Title.
of the Year
in 1960-61, 1962-63, 1964-65.
WHY A WILL?
Many alumni have asked why
Bloomsburg State College is interested
in informing them about wills and
estate planning. There are two simple answers to that question.
First, Bloomsburg State College is
an educational institution, and our
primary purpose is to educate. The
Bloomsburg State College experience
has already provided our alumnae
with their basic education, and we
are concerned with their continuing
education in matters which relate to
their personal well-being and that of
their loved ones.
A recent survey in the United States
came up with some interesting facts
about estate planning:
1.
Seven out of every adults die
intestate (without a valid will)
2. Less than 50 per cent of those
with estates of $60,000 or
a
will.
I read
recently about a prominent
in New York who died
businessman
Page ten
more have
Remember--your will is probably
most important, single document
you will ever be called upon to sign.
Be sure it is prepared the right way,
the
the best way, the only
attorney
way-by your
Have you made your will?
Did you remember Bloomsburg
idence Hall.
For nearly two decades, the Husky
Lounge in Waller Hall had served as
the center of student activities. However, as the student enrollment grew
steadily during the past decade, it became apparent that a completely new
designed
structure
and specially
would be needed to accommodate a
college enrollment of 5.600 - 6,000.
When plans were designed for a new
student center, the old Husky Lounge
occupied part of the site which will be
needed for construction. The student
union board immediately sought temporary headquarters to program student activities, and the former College
Commons, built in 1956, became available when Scranton Commons was
completed
Asst. Director of
Development
Social events, such as movies, are
the featured activities held
weekly in the temporary union. The
Union is open daily from 7:00 a.m. until midnight and until 1:00 a.m. each
Friday and Saturday.
ADVANCED DEGREES
Lehigh University
John T. Kovich ’62, Master of Education, Major in Counseling.
Charles J. Greco ’68, Master of Education, Major in Educational Administration
.
Patricia A. Stickler
An improved
facility for student actthis summer in the
of
John R. Hinkle ’66, Master of Arts,
Major in Education.
Edward R. MacKay ’69, Master of
Arts. Major in Education.
John H. Rittenmeyer ’53, Master of
Arts, Major in Education.
Allen
Montclair State College
H. Kessler ’57, Master
of
Arts.
University of Delaware
Susan Ruth Krier
’65.
Master
of
Science.
Benjamin M.
Baum
’63
Master
of
Education.
Robert A. Koppenhaver
ucation
ivities
Master
ucation.
formation
IMPROVED FACILITY
’67,
Education, Major in Elementary Ed-
of Education.
necessary.
The form-
among
ried name.
In order to be properly identified
for credit on our records, full inis
1970.
Jack Mulka.
We
request that all correspondence
with the College or the Alumni Office include the year of graduation.
Married women are requested to
include both maiden name and mar-
March,
The temporary student union is
divided into four areas: the snack bar,
a multi-purpose area, a billard area
with five tables, and a combination
television, reading, and game lounge.
Also included are an information center, offices for the student union board
and the Director of Student Activities,
State College?
James H. Neiswender
in
er Commons provides approximately
twice the area which was available
in the Husky Lounge.
Joseph P. Lavelli
’66.
’63.
Master
Master of Ed-
.
Shippensburg State College
Reker LeRoy Richards. ’57, Camp
Hill, M. S. Major in Communication.
was opened
former College Commons. This temporary student union building will serve
the college community until a new
student center is completed in the area
between Waller Hall and Montour Res-
Rider College
Elaine Kennedy (Mrs. W. C.
er)
26
boro,
Beam-
Kings Court. Mill Run, HatPa.. M. A. in Guidance and
Counseling.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
GRADUATE PROGRAM
The Master of Education degree
at Bloomsburg State College is now
Bioareas
Business Education, CommuniPhycation Disorders, Chemistry,
Elementary
sics, Physical Science,
Education, English, Foreign Language (French, Spanish), History, Read-
offered in the following
:
logy,
ing,
cal
Social Studies (History, PolitiSpecial
Geography),
Science.
Education with emphasis on Mental
Retardation, and Speech (Theatre or
Public Address.)
During the fall of 1968 the first
Master of Arts degree program ofCollege
fered by Bloomsburg State
was instituted in the field of history.
Other departments such as English,
econopsychology, geography and
mics, will follow suit and are in various stages in preparing similar proposals.
cf biology will be
the first to offer a Master of Science
The department
Their proposal is on the
verge of completion and should be
acted upon during this academic year.
Other science departments are expected to follow with similar programs.
degree.
Bloomsburg State
In future years,
Master of
anticipates
a
College
Science degree in geology.
The department of psychology is
in the process of preparing a proposprepare
ed curriculum designed to
A future proschool psychologists.
gram designed to prepare guidance
counselors is also anticipated.
Graduate programs are being esretablished as rapidly as staff,
sources, and facilities will permit,
according to Dr. Charles
Carlson,
Dean
cf Graduate
Studies.
The
over-ail growth of the college encour-
ages additional degree programs on
the graduate level.
INCREASE IN TUITION
The Board
of Trustes of
Bloomsburg
State College, in its regular monthly
meeting held recently, approved an
increase in the basic fee paid by students from the present $350 to $450, an
increase of $100 per year; subsequently this fee increase has been approved
by Satte Secretary of Education. Increase is in keeping with action previously taken by a majority of the
Boards of Trustees of the thirteen
State Colleges and Indiana University of Pennsylvania, and is essential
in assuring the funds necessary to
balance the operating budget of the
College for the 1969-1970 fiscal year.
The $100 fee increase for the 19691970 college year wall be paid by the
students of Bloomsburg State Collgeg
in the Basic Fee payment for the Sec-
ond Semester, which began January
1970.
Out-of-state students, currently paying $25 per credit hour, will
be charged $30 per credit hour; graduate students will have an increase
from $20 to $25 per credit hour, and
undergraduate fees for part-time students will be increased from the present $15 to $18 per credit hour. Sub26,
MARCH,
1971
sequent semesters, however, will be
charged at the $50 per semester increase rate.
At its meeting on October 24, 1969,
the Board of Trustees had delayed
action on the passage of a fee increase, pending further study. During
the intervening weeks, a thorough investigation for the rationale of a fee
increase was made, exploring various
possibilities for avoiding it. On November 10, 1969, Board President William A. Lank and President Robert J.
Nossen met with College Council
members to review with them the current financial status of the College,
pointing out that the passage of the fee
increase at Bloomsburg was essential
to the current and future operation of
the College.
A report from the College Business
Manager showed that, withont the
increase in fees, the College would be
unable to meet its
ities for 1969-1970.
out that
fiscal
responsibil-
The report pointed
even though every step had
been taken to curtail expenses to provide reserve funds for necessary items
of instruction and operation, a sufficient amount did not exist to cover minimal operation for the balance of the
academic year without the above-mentioned fee increase.
It is pertinent to note that, cutbacks
notwithstanding, support of higher education within the Commonwealth has
risen over the past years more than
450%, and the budget figure for the
current year will well exceed six hundred million dollars. With the fee in-,
crease, the student share of operating
costs at Bloomsburg,
exclusive of
capital construction, will approximate
a
more than 25%.
Part of this
also covered by State Scholarships and other financial aids.
Following the November 21, 1969
meeting, Mr. Lank stated, “The
Board of Trustes of Bloomsburg State
College regrets the necessity for such
action, but it nevertheless, bears the
responsibility to the College in providing a sound fiscal operation.”
A recent survey made by the Office
of Institutional Research of the Association of State Universities and
Land Grant Colleges disclosed that
tuition charges at the nation’s major
public colleges and universities rose
this year at a record rate of 16.5%. It
pointed out that tuition and fees at 113
institutions belonging to the National
Association of State Universities and
Land Grant Colleges registered the
16.5% hike and 261 institutions affiliated with the American Association
of State Colleges and Universities
showed a 14% rise in these charges.
Of the total oi 405 institutions and
components of systems of institutions
reporting to the two national associations in this year’s survey, all but 52
reported raising at least one charge in
the last twelve months.
little
amount
is
ALUMNI DAY
SATURDAY, APRIL
24, 1971
ADDRESSES WANTED
— Mrs. Donna M. Schuster
Florence Sugarman Stetler
—Benjamin B. Baer
Mrs. Brenda de Estrada Berg
— James H. Mlserian
1969
1922
1916
1961
1966
1966
1966
1966
—Dennis E. Rosini
—Kay Diamond
Karen Zeiss (Mrs. Ted Hes-
backer, Jr.)
—Ann M. Vitale (Mrs. Daniel
1933 —Dr. Walter Jarecki
1925 Mrs. Ruth Stevens Wilson
1969 — John M. Ritter
1969 —Barbara E. Schall
1963
Harner
1926 Helen
Walburn)
1962
Pursel
Patricia
L.
(Mrs.
Whittaker
Robert
(Mrs.
Bobby
1963—D. Knight)
1923 Carol Hattenstein
(Mrs. Albert James)
1927 Hannah Barry
1953 Robert J, Dowd
Wayne T. Maressey
1963 Bruce D. Reffeor
1964 Donna Brown
(Mrs. David
1970—
A. Davis)
1965 David A. Davis
1969 Kathleen Hanzlik Finkbeiner
—
—
1968— Carol
J. Erb
Donna Kennedy
1969
(Mrs.
John
Carney)
Betty
J.
Edward
1967
1961—
1969—
1967
Weiss
T.
— Emmajane
Andrews
Pellen
(Mrs.
Frank Bentley)
—Vincent H. Doyle
— Dennis E. Rosini
1959
1965
1969— Geraldine Byrnes
1969 Kathy Jarrarl (Mrs. Richard
Osberg)
Mrs. Edith Whitesell Yoke
Robert F. Deitrlck
1962 Dorothk Dildine (Mrs. William
—
Landis)
—
1963 Sylvia M. Mattis
1965 Dennis E. Rosini
1970 P. Peter Henzlick
1965 James A. Slymansky
i960 Adabelle Shellenberger
—
—
—
THIRTEENTH YEAR
FOR ARA
ARA
School and College Services
is
13th year of dining service to
the students, faculty
and
college
community at Bloomsburg State College.
After serving in the old College
Commons for 12 years,
moved
into the new Scranton Commons in
March of 1970. At the present time
approximately 4.750 meals are served to college students each day. In
addition to this,
provides dining service for many special events
throughout the year some of which
include up to 1 000 persons. Special
dinners are also provided for the
students throughout the college year
in
its
ARA
ARA
for such events as Circus Night, St.
Louis Night, Dixie Land Night, Italian
Night, Western Barbecue Night, plus
coffee breaks during exam periods.
The School and College Service Division currently provides dining services for over 300 schools throughout
the United States.
Page eleven
NEW ADDRESSES
—Beulah Beltz Hewett, R.
Box 36, Catawissa, Pa. 17820
1959 — Barbara Yeager Jones, R.
1940
2,
2,
Box
148,
and Reformed Church,
Matthew Lutheran Church.
Evangelical
seriously
D.
St.
are welcome to apply.
D.
GERMAN
Catawissa, Pa. 17820
CHAPLAIN APPOINTED
Protestant
called by selven Ideal
churches and the Central Pennsylvania Synod of the Lutheran Church in
America to be the first protestant
chaplain of the Bloomsburg State College.
The local churches who have worked
over the past two years in bringing
First Presbyterthis to fruition are:
Paul’s Episcopal
ian Church,
St.
Church, First Baptist Church, Wesley
United Methodist Church, Good Shepherd United Methodist Church, Trinity
join
the truly
excellent
to
in
language
So are adults
the
widen their cultural and
human
IN AUSTRIA
Teachers of German, graduate and
undergraduate students are invited
to
The Rev. Jay Rochelle has been
who wish
interested
German
language program at Graz,
Austria which operates with Dr. Hans
K. Gunther of the BSC faculty as its
Resident Director.
The beginning,
intermediate and advanced courses,
together with co-curricular activities, provide total and intensive exposure to undiluted German in the
native environment of the
second
largest city in Austria in the picturTransfer credits
esque Steiermark.
are granted by BSC to those who pass
the examinations and earn a certificate or diploma. High school seniors
horizons by learning another
language or improving their competence. The seven-week program costs
$690. For full details, booklet and application forms, contact Dr. Hans K.
Gunther, Box
165,
BSC.
Alumni are urged to inform the
Alumni Office when they change
address.
Mail that is returned costs ten cents per piece.
The last bill for returns was $50,
their
which means that 500 pieces
mail were
returned.
This
money going
down
of
is
drain.
Please help us to save money, so
that it can be
used for more
the
worthy purposes.
ALUMNI DAY
Saturday, April 24, 1971
Page twelve
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
ALUMNI DAY
SATURDAY, APRIL
The Alumni Day Week-end
will
be
complete program of
activities:
We
hope
with
filled
not have complete information at this time.
that
24, 1971
activities, of
which we do
The Alumni Letter will give the
many Alumni will take advantage
of them.
Alumni graduating before 1921 are invited
to
be the guest
of the
Alumni
dinner honoring the class of 1921, the fifty-year class. Those
It is very imporbringing guests are requested to pay for the guest’s dinner
Association at the
tant that
should
even one attending the 50-vear dinner and the Alumni Luncheon
reservations by April 15, in order that necessary arrangements may
make
be made.
In previous years, the presentation of an
the bearer to the
of
budget
Alumni Luncheon.
limitations, the College is
Alumni dues card has admitted
The College has paid
unable
to
pay the
the
bill
bill.
Because
this year.
This
be asked to pay for their luncheon. We are hoping that
a different arrangement may be made next year. This may be possible, if the
Association votes to raise the dues to five dollars.
We have noted that at
practically all the Colleges of which we have information, the Alumni pay
for the Alumni Luncheon.
year
all
Alumni
will
There have been many changes on the Campus.
see what has been o
going
O on.
We
hope that you
will
come back and
We
shall
be expecting you on Alumni Day!
President,
Alumni Association
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE
BLOOMSBURG, PA. 17815
Non-Profit
U. S.
Org.
POSTAGE
PAID
Address Correction Requested
1.6c
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Permit No. 10
Loyalty Fund Fifth Year
OCTOBER
Year
Amt.
No.
Ex. faculty
1901
1
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1923
1924
1925
1927
1
1
1
1
5
2
3
1
6
2
3
2
1
2
3
3
2
1
3
100.00
10.00
2.00
10.00
10.00
37.00
28.00
11.00
50.00
15.00
30.00
40.00
13.00
1.00
9.00
25.00
17.00
15.00
10.00
13.00
1,
1970, to
Year
1928
1929
No.
7
5
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
1948
1949
JANUARY
Amt.
1
73.00
225.00
10.00
50.00
18.00
2.50
20.00
50.00
35.00
12.00
25.00
25.00
50.00
20.00
15.00
1
1.00
1
5.00
5.00
15.00
30.00
1
1
3
1
2
1
3
2
3
1
6
3
1
2
2
6,
1971
Year
1950
No.
5
3
1951
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1988
1969
1970
1
1
1
3
1
4
4
3
4
1
7
6
10
9
10
11
19
12
TO BE DETACHED, FILLED OUT, AND RETURNED
Signature
Name
while in college
Address
(street)
Zip Code
(town)
if
t
above address
is
new, check here
Q
Amount
ear of graduation
Mail checks to Alumni Office, Box 31, B.S.C.
To
insure tax deductions,
B. S. C.
make checks payable
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
to
Amt.
22.00
20.00
25.00
5.00
5.00
20.00
30.00
40.00
18.00
19.00
22.00
3.00
39.00
42.00
39.00
89.00
51.00
44.00
134.00
47.00
nKF
*v
DISTINGUISHED SERVICE
AWARD
—
Miss
Julia
Gregg Brill and her brother. Col. Clinton B. F. Brill,
were recipients of the Distinguished Service Award given
by the Bloomsburg State College Alumni Association
and presented at the annual luncheon by Dr. Kimber
Kuster (right).
THE PRESIDENT’S PAGE
academic year, and once again we can
academic and administrative issues
No one at the college enjoys having
that, critical or not, seemed so at the time.
Yet in a world dominated
internal matters made the subject of public media.
by the rapidity of communication, such is virtually inevitable.
In spite of difficulties in some areas, we have had a good year. The Senate
for the first time convened and brought together faculty, students, and admin
istrators to share a role in the governing process^. Initially, it reviewed the
myriad details and concerns that make up an academic community; it recommended policies from “moonlighting' to plagiarism; it established standing committees to assure orderly procedures for future operation.
Just this month we received notice of approval for our program leading to
the M.S. in Biology.
We have continued to review our curricular patterns,
broaden general education requirements, and consider each of our course offerings.
We shall continue for some time with this phase of our operation, establishing objectives, working to improve classroom teaching, keeping offering.;
current and meaningful, and carefully selecting those areas through which we
might fulfill our responsibilities. We initiated, too, a program of Continuing
Education, and though modest at present, it should become of increasing concern
through the years ahead.
Perhaps the best way to assess the end of an academic year is to ask our-
Once again we reach
the
end
of the
with some degree of calm review a
series of
number of questions. The following are some that many of us throughout the profession are struggling with.
How can we make intelligible to young people today the unbelievable anti
What methods can yet be
still rapidly increasing sum of human knowledge?
devised for organizing, storing, and transmitting human knowledge? When a
scientist, of the stature of Costeau estimates that our oceans face possible extinction with fifty years, and with them, the ability of man to survive, what steps
cowards correction of the causes must we take, and what part must the colleges
and universities play in determining and executing those steps? These and
other questions in all probability lead to the basic question: What kind of education do we need for the balance of the seventies and on into the eighties, and
how do we achieve it?
Partial answers are already apparent.
will utilize more and more work
and study sequences, with less emphasis upon continuity of the program in highwill rely upon short term and evening courses, grant credit
er education.
for apprenticeship programs, use TV and other media.
will also be concerned with “second career preparation as vocations will continue to change, new
ones appear and old ones disappear. As for our survival, other segments of our
society working together will be able to meet the challenge.
And while we are concerned for survival, let us not forget that we must
retain our concern for values.
We must understand the continuity of life, and
therefore our touch wdth the past; we must remember history as group memory,
and philosophy as the art and science of reflection and of probing into the unknown.
must continue our studies of the works of man, and our concern
for man as man; we must not lose sight of the role of imagination so that, as
Sir Philip Sidney wrote, we can explore not only what has been, what is, and
what will be, but also what might have been, what should be, and what could be.
Certainly I want to offer my thanks to Mr. Howard Fenstemaker for his
many years of fine service to the Association and most particularly to the
Quarterly.
I
owe many thanks, too, to numerous oJ»ers who are working to
make this college a more effective institution, more capable of fulfilling its educational objectives, and more definite in what those objectives are and should beselves a
We
We
We
We
ROBERT NOSSEN
President
DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AWARDS
TWO BSC ALUMNI
GIVEN
A brother and sister received the
Distinguished Service Awards oi the
Bloomsburg State College's Alumni
Association at the association’s annual
meeting at the college on Saturady.
The recipients, the son and daughter
a former member oi the faculty,
were honored during the association's
business meeting in Scranton Com-
oi
mons
in the afternoon.
Col. Clinton B. F
Brill, class of 1912, nationally prominent architect and engineer, and his
sister. Miss Julia Gregg Brill, class oi
Honored were
ementa of English
prolessor
composition, Pennsylvania State Uni191U,
versity.
Prof. William Brill,
the department oi hiscivics at Bloomsburg State
Then father,
became head of
tory and
Normal School
in 1911,
and served
the capacity until within a
death on June
8,
week
in
of his
1925.
The presentations of their awards
was the climax of the Saturday afternoon association gathering.
All officers of the association were
Howard F.
re-elected as follows:
Fenstemaker, Bioomsburg, president;
Millard Ludwig, Millville, vice president; Col. Elwood Wagner, State Coland Earl Gehrig.
lege, secretary;
Bioomsburg, treasurer. The reorganization followed at a directors meeting,
a sequel to the association gathering.
Mr. Fenstemaker extended greetings and the invocation was offered
by Fred W. Diehl, Danville.
William H. Cluley, president of the
1971 graduating class, presented a
check to the alumni association and a*,
the same time issued a challenge to
the older alumni to “’try to understand” the involvement of students today and their concern ’’not only on the
campus but in the community.”
He cited student work in the fields of
pollution, special education, and efforts to "get down in the classroom”
and “help with the problem.”
Cluley advised, “Don’t accept any
person not willing to sit down and talk
over the confrontation of the prob-
lem.”
The Class of 1971’s check was for
more than required for association membership. This fact and the
$800,
fact that the class has also made a
contribution to the Bloomsburg Hospital was lauded by Dr. Robert J.
Nossen, president of the college, during his remarks later. He cited the
contributions as an indication of the
class’s civic-mindedness.
Dr. Kimber Kuster, chairman of the
association’s DSA committee, replied
briefly to Cluley, observing that his
generation was of the“same clay” as
others and that there was really not
much difference in the two age groups.
Dr. Kuster pointed out there had al-
ways been some problem
JUNE,
1971
of
commun-
oline
quartermaster and engineer sup-
He
plies.
During the height of his career, Colonel Brill held licenses in eight states
as a registered professional engineer,
was licensed to practice architecture
in five states, and held both architect’s and engineer’s licenses in New
New
Yerk,
technical
She continued her education
earn a Bachelor of Arts degree in
classical languages in 1921 from The
Pennsylvania State University, and
a Master of Arts degree in Euglish
School.
to
moral and ethical values. He said
the college “would not be a part of the
.”
’rushing away’ from those values.
just for the sake of “rushing.”
The college wrill not oppose change
.
will
the
seek it, he said, but it would
with the development of
man
a dignified being in
scheme
—
of things.”
Dr. Kuster presented the two recipients for the DSA’s and each spoke of
the other’s accomplishments.
Colonel Brill, a well know’n authority on turnpikes, thru- ways, highways,
bridges, and urban materials serves
as a consultant for state, national,
organizations
professional
and
He attended
throughout the world.
the Bloomsburg State Normal School,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
and Trinity College; at the latter he
holds a Bachelor of Science degree.
A member
of
numerous engineering
firms, he has long been engaged in the
practice of archotecture and engineering. In 1971, he assumed the presiden-
cy of Brill Engineering Corporation of
New York City. The previous year he
was chairman of the New York State
Thruway Authority and directed a
variety of engineering projects, particularly express highways in conjunction with the New Jersey, Ohio, Indi-
ana, and Massachusetts Turnpikes;
The Garden State, Sunshine State, and
Taconic Parkways; and the New York
State Thru way.
In past associations with other consultants as well as his own, Colonel
Brill has participated in such well
known projeats as Miami (Fla.)
- South Expressway, Columbus
Ohio) Outerbelt, remodeling of New
York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art,
original runway and terminal design
for New York International Airport,
and construction of all permaneni
buildings for the New York World’s
Fair in 1939.
As a Public Works
Administration Engineer from 1934 to
1936, he worked on New York’s Triborough Bridge and Lincoln Tunnel.
With the U.S. Army Engineers in
the European Theatre in World War
II, Colonel Brill was in charge of all
general construction, including depots
for ammunition and explosives, gas-
North
i
and professional organiza-
tions related to his profession.
Miss Julia Gregg Brill attended Sunbury High School prior to her enrollment at Bloomsburg State Normal
“Relevancy” today.
Dr. Nossen said
considered the “greatest
relevancy to be in the integrity of the
learning process” and that included
Jersey and Massachusetts.
affiliated with numerous
He has been
the college
continue
“man as
strips,
evacuation,
surgical
front-line
stations.
ication between the young and the old.
In his remarks. Dr. Nossen made
special mention of the approaching
retirement of Dean of Women Ella
Mae Jackson, and the retirement of
Howard Fenstemaker as editor of the
Alumni Quarterly after forty-five
years as its editor.
He told the former students of some
of the activities on the campus and
noted that great stress was placed on
and
also supervised building of
forward landing
and
hospitals,
and American Liteerature from the
same
institution in 1927.
Before her appointment to the faculty of the University in 1924, she
taught in the public schools of Luzerne
County, at Town Hill and Huntington
Mills. She later taught at Bloomsburg
High School.
As a result
of serving on the faculty at Penn State for thirty years, retiring in 1954, and her continued interest in that institution, she was named
Penn State
of theYear in 1958.
During those 30 years, she was
friend and counselor to hundreds of
Woman
students, serving as vocational counselor of women students in the College
of the Liberal Arts, and assisting
many undergraduates in extra-curricular activities.
She also was adviser to and continues as an active
alumna of her sorority. Alpha Chi
Omega. Her interest is Phi Kappa
Phi, scholastic honor society,
has
been constant.
When
ciaion
was
the Penn State Alumni Assowas reorganized \n 1930, she
named
to
its
first
executive
She served for 20 years on
the Board, then retired briefly, and
again served on the Board. She has
been vice president of the Association and president of the Penn State
Alumnae Club of Centre County and
has served as a member of the Board
of Directors of the Penn State Founboard.
dation.
At the general session, the report
Boyd H. Buckingham, of the nominating committee,
was accepted,
electing to the board of
directors:
Miss Elizabeth Hubler, class of ’31;
Mrs. Jean Foster, class of ’66; Frank
Galinski, class of ’52; Charlotte McKenchnie, class of ’35 and Mrs. Verna
of
Jones, class of
’36.
ALUMNI DAY
Many “Old Grads” of Bloomsburg
came back as Alumni
State College
Weekend
activities
got
underway
Friday, April 23. at the “Friendly
College on the Hill.”
The Alumni Association played hosi
Friday evening to the Class of 1921,
Page one
the Fiftieth Reunion Class.
In addition, the classes of 1906, 1911,
and 1916 were guests of the association
at a dinner in Scranton Commons, on
Friday evening.
Special class dinners and activities
were held Saturday evening by the
classes of ’36, ’41, ’56, ’61 and’66.
On Saturday morning at nine, an informal session for alumni and faculty
was held in the Waller Hall Lounge
and lobby.
From ten-thirty till noon, members
of the faculty discussed “Fiscal Prob-
lems
Our Commonwealth’’
of
in
a
panel presentation.
At twelve-thirty, luncheon for all
alumni was held in the Commons,
followed by the annual business meetHighlight of the session was the
presentation of two distinguished service awards.
Open house in all residence halls followed from three to five. Social hours
and special dinners, scheduled by the
classes in reunion, began at five.
At nine Saturday night, the Presidents Ball held in two dancing areas in
the Commons. “The Train” furnished
“music” for students and recent grads
in the Blue Room, while a slower
tempo was provided for faculty and
alumni in the Gold Room.
ing.
Mrs. Harry Cole, Bloomsburg, was
chairman of the honored 50-year class
Mrs. Fred W. Diehl, Danville, chairman of the class of 1911, and Mrs.
Russell Burrus, Orangeville R. D. 2,
chairman
of the class of 1911.
Class of
Special events included:
1941, Dr. C. Stuart Edwards, Bloomsburg, R. 4, chairman, diner at Hotel
Magee. Class of 1961, get-together and
dinner at Briar Heights. Class of 1966,
get-together, dinner and dance at
Holiday Inn, Danville.
AWARDS DAY
Dr. Milton M. Klein, Professor of
History, University of Tennessee, delivered the keynote address at the
Annual Awards Day Convocation at
Bloomsburg State College held Sunday, April 25, in Haas Center for the
Arts.
The noted scholar, humanist, administrator, and outstanding class-
room teacher spoke on “A Plea
for
Welcoming remarks
honored
and August graduto the
1971 January, May
ates and their parents
were given by John
S.
and friends
Mulka, Direct-
or of Student Activities.
thirty-two
recipients of
Who’s
Who
in American Colleges and Universities certificates and the twenty-one
recipients of Service
Keys were
ac-
knowledged by Elton Hunsinger, Associate Vice President for Student Affairs.
Lifetime Athletic Passes were presented by Russell Houk, Director of
Fifteen special scholarAthletics.
ships were awarded to underclassmen
by Robert Duncan, Director of FinanForty-six students were recial Aid.
cognized for their academic achievements by Dr. John A. Hoch, vice
Page two
former
member
of
the
Board
of
Trustees and Dean Jackson, Dean of
Women, who
retired at the end of the
current college year. Dr. Robert J.
Nossen, President, delivered the congratulatory remarks, and following
Dr. Klein’s address, Kappa Kappa
Psi fraternity gave a musical presentService Keys are given for “outstanding service to 10 per cent or
less of the senior class who accumulate a minimum of 20 points for participation in various activities during
their four years of college.” This is
the highest award given by the college
community.
Those receiving
this award were:
Beverly Boston, Warminister; Beverly
Conchez, Bethlehem; Penny Faux,
Bloomsburg; Donna Harper, Troy;
Gayle Thorpe, Scranton; James Berkheiser, Berwick; William Cluley, Upper Darby; Anita DeLance, Shenandoah; Susan Dieffenderfer, Nisbet;
Thomas Funk, Bloomsburg; Mlike
Hock, Bdoomsburg; Bob Medford,
F'eacoqk,
Anne
Northumberland;
Drexel Hill; Michael Pillagalli, West
Chester; Patricia Quinn, Millersville
Amy Raber, Elysburg; James Reese,
Frackville; Doris Remsen, Roselle,
New Jersey; Joe Roinick, Hazleton:
Susan VanRiper, Scotch Plains. New
Jersey; Samuel Zachary, Shavertown.
Lifetime Athletic Passes are given
to senior athletes who have participated in varsity sports for four years.
Those to receive these passes were:
Arnold
E.
ing and mailing the Alumni Quarterly.
The publication and mailing costs will
be paid by The Bloomsburg Foundation.
3. The College, Alumni Associationand the Foundation will continue to
work together on programs of mutual
concern Homecoming, Alumni Day.
i
Special Events).
4. The Alumni Association should
continue those programs which they
have performed in the past.
5.
ation.
Thompson,
Washington,
New
Jersey; Mark Angelo Sacco,
West Hazleton; Joseph Accardi, Bristol; Lee Barthold, Bethlehem; Joseph
Bottligilieri, Easton; Richard Brand,
Pennsburg; James Cavallero, Metuchen, New Jersey; John Davis, NazarWilliam
Firestine,
Athens;
eth;
Thomas Fleeger, Turbotville; Richard
Geise,
Danville;
Charles
Hess,
Bloomsburg; Hugh Jones, Nazareth;
David Kelter, Swarthmore; Michael
Kolojejchick, Swoyei'sville; John Masters, Phoenix ville
Dennis Mummey,
Weston; William Nagly, Dimellen.
New Jersey; Paul Pelletier, Menlo
;
New
Park,
Talent.”
The
President and Dean of the Faculties.
William A. Lank, President, Board
of Trustes, presented certificates of
appreciation to Howard S. Fernsler,
Jersey;
James
Platukis.
West Hazleton; John Reeve, Philadel-
The appointment
of
Mr. James
H. Neiswender as Executive Director
This
Alumni Association.
of the
would result in the Alumni Associasomeone on campus
tion’s having
daily who would be able to greet visiting graduates and answer any questions they might have about the Colimportant
vitally
It
is
lege.
that the Association have an office
which is open and accessible on a fulltime basis.
EXTEND GREETINGS
The following was received from
Mr. James B. Watts, Director
of Lib-
rary Services at BSC:
The Alumni Association
Bloomsburg State College
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Dear friends,
The staff of Andruss Library joins
me in extending greetings and best
wishes to the Alumni.
Students and faculty alike are deeply grateful for the abundant support
of help the Library receives from the
generosity
Alumni, through
whose
many phases of library services have
and
enriched,
broadened,
been
Among these have
strengthened.
been in recent years such outstanding gifts as:
A handsome Recordak
Microfilm
presented by the Class of
1917 in honor of the Golden Anniversary of their graduation. Mr. Allen
L. Cromis was in charge of arrangements.
Ten tape-players and 50 Cassette
Associathe
tapes, provided from
Library
Fund
tion’s Fenstemaker
The Cassette
(total cost $796.75).
format is a recent innovation in recording technology, one that is incredi-
Reader,
bly
compact and
self-contained.
The
50 tapes cover a wide range of topin
ics that should be a great help
The Bloomsburg
tation of funds for both organizations.
will
Foundation
through
alive”
“bringing history
sound. Plans are in progress for the
eventually
scores,
acquisition of
hundreds, of Cassette tapes devoted to
music.
An extremely important survey entitled “Three Centuries of Drama”
has been acquired on microfilm (5,the
451 units in 26 boxes) through
Class of 1961’s gift of $1,200.00 for
The
microforms for the Library.
scope of the material ranges from
1515 to 1800 A.D. for English drama
and from 1714 to 1830 A.D. for Amer-
guarantee the annual operating budget
ican drama.
phia; Steve Ryznar, Pottstown.
PROPOSAL ADOPTED BY
ALUMNI BOARD
PROPOSAL ADOPTED BY
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION BOARD OF
DIRECTORS
On SATURDAY, APRIL
24,
1971
The Bloomsburg Foundation will
assume the responsibility of solici1.
Alumni Association.
The Office of Development and
of the
2.
External Relations of the College will
assume the
responsibility of publish-
From time to time, gifts are received from individual Alumni. One of
the largest in recent years was the
Miss
late
personal library of the
TIIE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Mary
Jones
Elliott
(Class
of
1927),
memory
by her sisters Miss Martha Y. Jones (Class of
1922), Miss Margaret J. Jones (Class
of 1924) and Mrs. Dorothy K. (Jones'
given in loving
Chase (Class of 1931). The sisters
parents were John T. and Mary Elliott (Taylor) Jones, both alumni of
The 265-volume gift, chiefly
BSC.
professional works in Education, will
the
tangible evidence of
meaningful continuity of the educa-
as
serve
from one generation
tional process
the
to
next.
Again,
we
Director of Library Services
1900—
hi Mrmnrtmn
Home.
Hayman,
Lutheran
Phila., Pa.
Louise Buck Lewis,
Hawley,
Pa.
1902—Jennie E. Williams (Mrs. Wil1908—
Cook), Mechanicsburg. Pa.
liam
1904— Mrs. Margaret Brogan. Shenandoah, Pa.
1906 Lillie Hartman (Mrs. T. J. Irish), Camden. N. J.
1907 Lillian Wendt (Mrs. George H.
Webber), Milledgeville, Georgia
Alberta Handley (Mrs. John
McGowen), Pittsford. N. Y.
1908— Joanna Beddall Watkins, Ventura, Calif.
1917 Elva
cott,
Brobst
Ramage,
Pres-
Grace Mae Henwood. MethoHome, Tunkhannock, Pa.
—
1921 Mrs. Elizabeth Fetherolf
Fister, Ringtown, Pa.
1926 Loretta Maher, Plymouth, Pa.
1926— Florence E. Ness, Peckville,
—
Pa.
—
1926 Olive Henrietta Watts, Millersburg, Pa.
1946 James E. Foley, Willoughby,
—
Ohio
— Robert
E. Hale
Gannon, Pittston, Pa.
1916 Margaret E. Rutherford (Mrs.
Herbert Dygert), Medina, N. Y.
1926—Sister M. Wm. Carroll
1953
1901
Lizzie
—
— Mae Hilda Feissner
1926—Anna E. Lenahan
1900— Edna Boutz Hassler,
1926
Allen-
town, Pa.
Olive
Beeman
Mrs. Olive E. Beeman, eighty-one,
South Hadley, Mass., widow of Charles
R Beeman, died Friday, Fedruary 19.
at
Holyoke Hospital.
Born
in Hindsale, HI., she was a
graduate of the University of Chicago
and teacher in Chicago schools for
many years. She was later a member
of the faculty of Blomsburg State College. In 1961 she went to Mount Holyoke where she was an assistant in the
zoology department. She also assisted
in the college library.
JUNE,
1971
with
community
was
and
affairs.
Anna Susan Magill ’07
Mrs. Anna Susan Magill, Blomsburg
R.D. 3 (Rock Glen) died Saturday,
March 27, in the Davis Nursing Home,
Mountain Top. after an extended illEducated in the Black Creek township schools and the Bloomsburg Normal School, she taught in the Gowan,
Weston, Sugarloaf, Sybertsville and
Rock Glen schools. She substituted up
until a few years ago in the Rock
Glen school.
Mrs. Magill was instrumental in the
establishment of the Black Creek
township PTA and served as its first
president. She was also instrumental
in the establishment of the PTA Council of the Greater Hazelton Area serving also as its president.
A lifetime member of the Black
Creek United Methodist church, sho
served as a Sunday school teacher for
over
fifty
years.
E. Louise Jolly ’07
Louise Jolly, Paradise, California, died August 9, 1970. Miss Jolly
retired from teaching in 1952. After
graduation from the Blommsburg
State Normal School, she went to
New Jersey to become a first grade
E.
teacher.
She went
to
California
and taught in Alomda until her
retirement. She received her Bachelor’s .and Master’s degrees from the
University of California at Berkley. In
1936 she was the honored guest of the
Japanese government, one
of
fifteen
U.S. teachers selected to visit Japan,
Korea, and Manchuria. She served as
President of the California Retired
Teachers Association from 1961 to
Anna Louise Slocum Williams
’08
Anna Louise
(Slocum) Williams, 82. of 1024 South Main Street,
Taylor, died Sunday, January 17, in
the Gilbert Nursing Home, Gilbert.
She was a member of the Stewart
Memorial Methodist Church, Old
Forge, and of the Women’s Society of
Christian Service, of that church and
of the
He was a graduate of
University.
The Alumni
Office received a copy of resolutions
adopted by the faculty of Seton Hall
College, in which they paid tribute to
his forty-six years of service as a
member of the faculty.
ember,
Notre
1970.
Dame
Florence
Miss Florence
S.
S.
Houck
’13
Houck, Numidia,
died in the Char-Mund Nursing Home
Saturday, January 30.
Born in Roaringcreek township, she
was a member of the United Church
of Christ, Mill Grove.
She taught in Roaringcreek township high school in 1914, and then
taught in South Forks until retiring in
1961.
Anna N. Yost ’16
Mrs. Anna N. Yost, seventy-five, of
Forks. Orangeville R.D. 2, died Tuesday, January 19.
She was a member of the Zion United Church of Christ, Forks, and the
Women’s Guild of the church. She had
served as church secretary for more
than thirty-three years and as pianist
for thirty years.
She was a member of the ladies
auxiliary of the Fort Ricketts Post 817
VFW, Benton, and of the 56th Pioneer
Veterans of World War I. She was
active in Democratic politics and had
served as a committee woman in Fishingcreek Township for thirty years,
and had also served on the Columbia
County Democratic Executive Committee.
Cora G. Hill ’16
Miss Cora Gertrude Hill. Williamsport, Pa., died March 11, 1970.
Miss
Hill taught until her retirement in
1956. She w as a member of CovenantCentral Presbyterian Church in Williamsport and a member of the national, state, and local teacher’s associr
ations.
Phoebe Pennington Appleman,
1962.
Mrs.
College, Greensburg, Pa., died in Nov-
in
1919
Arizona
1918
dist
affection by all his patients. He
closely affiliated with his church
ness.
are beholden.
Very sincerely yours,
James B. Watts
1890— Eleanor
Dr. Charles L. Maurer ’05
Dr. Charles L. Maurer, Hagerstown,
Maryland, died October 7, 1970. He
had practiced medicine in Hagerstown
for fifty years, and was held in deep
Lackawanna
Historical Society.
Ralph I. Wertman, Sr. ’10
Ralph I. Wertman Sr., of Quakake,
died on Tuesday, January 26, in the
Hazelton State General Hospital.
He taught school for some time in
Rush Township and furthered his education at Pennsylvania State College
where he earned a degree in Agriculture. He was self employed as a
farmer, and was a member of Ascension Lutheran Church, Quakake.
Daniel Joseph Carr ’ll
Daniel Joseph Carr, Chairman of the
Department of Chemistry at Seton Hall
’16
school teacher, died Saturday, Februburg, Orangeville R.D. 1, a retired
school teacher, died Saturday, February 20, at the Hampel Nursing Home
Nescopeck. She had been a guest at
the nursing home the past three and a
half months.
She taught in the Fishingcreek
township
schools
for
twenty-four
years, and then in the Huntington
Mills elementary school from 1941 to
1961. She was principal at the time of
her retirement.
Anna Isaacs Gay
’17
Mrs. Anna Isaacs Gay, a resident of
Albuquerque. N.M., 40 years, died
February 4 in Presbyterian Hospital.
Mrs. Gay was born in Forty Fort.
She was a graduate of the University
of New Mexico and taught school in
Albuquerque 32 years until her retirement. She was a member of the Forst
United Methodist Church.
J.
J. Claire Patterson ’18
Claire Patterson, seventy-three.
Page three
315
West
Street,
Bloomsburg, retired
superintendent of Bloomsburg Area
School District, died at Bloomsburg
Hospital Sunday, March 28, shortly
after being admitted as a patient.
He was a lifelong resident of Columbia County and one of the area’s best
known educators. He retired as superintendent of the Bloomsburg Area
School District in 1962 after forty
years of service to education.
During his long career he had been
on the faculty of the Bloomsburg system for 28 years, twenty as principal
Bloomsburg Junior-Senior High
of
School and six as superintendent. Following his retirement, he was parttime instructor at Bloomsburg State
College and an advisor to Bloomsburg
Area School District for a number of
years.
A native of Orangeville, he was a
graduate of the schools there, the
Bloomsburg State College,
in 1918,
and
Bucknell University in 1934 where he
received his Bachelor’s Degree. He
received his Master’s Degree from the
latter institution a short time later.
He began his teaching career in Canby High School, in Mount Pleasant
Township, in 1918, shortly after his
discharge from military service during
World War I.
For a time he was in the State Department of Agriculture, Harrisburg,
and then resumed teaching with the
position
supervising
principal in
Salem Township. From there he went
to Mifflin Township where he was a
member of the faculty and coach of
all sports during a seven-year tenure
of
A member
of
Bloomsburg Kiwanis
was a past secretary, past
and past exalted ruler of
Berwick Lodge of Elks.
For a substantial time, he was a
Club, he
president
member
of the
board of directors
of
Bloomsburg Hospital, being president
board for several years.
of the First Prsebyterian
Church, he served three terms as
elder and as clerk of sessions.
For
years he was active in Masonry and a
member of Oriental Lodge, 460, Orangeville; the
Scottish
and York
Rite Bodies and Oriental Conclave,
Red Cross of Constantine, Bloomsburg,
and Irem Temple, Shrine,
of the
A member
Wilkes-Barre.
He was
also a member of Pennsylvania State Education and National
Education Associations; Susquehanna
Valley Superintendent’s Association
Retired Teachers Association, and
other groups.
Cloe r a VV. Frit*
’20
Mrs. Cleora W. Peggy Fritz, seventhree, Benton R.D. 2, died at the Geisinger Medical Center Tuesday, February 23.
She was born in Sugarloaf township.
She taught school in Beaver township school and also at the Fritz Hill
school, Sugarloaf township.
She was a member of the Brandon
United Methodist Church and the
WSCS of the church. She was a member of the Grassmere Garden Club.
Page four
Geraldine Garrison Petyjohn ’28
Roy (Geraldine) Petyjohn died
Saturday, March 6, at Milford, Delaware, Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Pettyjohn was recognized as
an outstanding teacher in the Milford
schools where she had taught for the
past 41 years. She had spent her entire teaching career in those schools
having left Berwick in 1929 to take a
She was a
teaching position there.
graduate of Berwick High School.
Mi's. Pettyjohn was a member of
numerous educational organizations
Mi’s.
including the Delaware State Educa-
She was also
an active member of the Milford Calvary United Methodist Church.
tional Association.
Miriam R. Lawson
’29
Miss Miriam R. Lawson, Bloomsburg, died Sunday, April 3, at the
Bloomsburg Hospital. She had been
in ill health for the past three months
and hospitalized for the past 12 weeks.
She received her Masters degree at
Columbia University. She was a school
teacher for forty-four and one half
years and taught in the Bloomsburg
school system since 1922.
She was a member of St. Matthew
Lutheran Church, Bloomsburg, the
church council, a Sunday School teacher for 45 years, Lutheran church
women, American Association of University Women, and numerous education organizations.
She was also a
member
of the retired teachers association. She was a board member and
in
charge of memberships of the
Bloomsburg Civic Music Association.
Clifford A. Nelson ’34
Clifford A. Nelson, coordinator of
religious affairs at Penn State since
1963,
died
unexpectedly
Thursday,
March 18, at his office at the Helen
Eaken Eisenhower Chapel. He served
also as associate professor of accounting at the university, joining the faculty in 1945 and in 1961 he became
assistant coordinator of religious af-
He had served in 1959-60 as
interim director of the B’nai B’rith
fairs.
Hillel Foundation and also had been
active at the university at that time as
chairman of the Committee on Inter-
religious affairs. He received his master of science degree from Bucknell
University. Prior to joining the Penn
State faculty, he had been head of the
business department of Mt. Carmel
high school.
Beulah Fairchild
Mann
’36
Mrs. Beulah Fairchild Mann, 62,
former teacher in the Nescopeck
schools and resident of Montgomery
Street, Nescopeck, for many years,
died Thursday, March 25, in
North
Brunswick, N.J. Death followed an
extended illness.
Mrs. Mann, who had also resided in
Wanamie earlier in her life, was a
member of North Brunswick, U.M.
Church.
Russell E. Hcnne ’70
Russell E. Henne, who was born in
Reading, died in March
Lynwood,
Hospital,
in St. Francis
Calif.
He was a
teacher in the Stanford Avenue Elementary School, South Gate, Calif.,
since last September.
He was active as a member of
Bloomsburg Players, the Maroon and
Gold Marching Band, the glee club,
the Maroon and Gold Concert Band,
and the Huskie Club during his student
days.
Ray D. Leidich
’16
Ray D.
Leidich, Tremont, died Saturday, April 17, following a heart attack. After his graduation from the
Bloomsburg State Normal School, he
was a teacher in the Tremont Elementary Schools for one year, and was
basketball coach at Tremont High
School from 1944 to 1946.
A
in
veteran of World War I, he served
France with the Ambulance Corps,
Company
111,
28th
Division,
U.
S.
Army. He was a Post Commander, a
member and a life member of
Brennan Keip Post No. 384, Tremont
American Legion, and a member of
World War Veterans Barracks, Pine
charter
—
Grove.
A fifty-year Mason, he was a member of Swatara Lodge, F. & A. M. Tremont, and a member of Tremont Fire
Company No. 1.
For many years, he was actively engaged in Republican politics of Schuylkill County, was a member of the
Pennsylvania House of Representatives for two terms, was Schuylkill
County Controller from 1932 to 1936,
and then held the office of Chief Clerk
in the County Registration Bureau.
He was one of the outstanding athletes at Bloomsburg during the years
when he was a student.
Dorothy Lynch Litwhiler
Mrs. Daniel Litwhiler, East Lansing.
Mich., former BSC student and wife of
the former major league baseball
player, passed away Saturday, March
in Jackson Memorial Hospital,
27,
Miami, Fla.
Mrs. Litwhiler was in Florida with
her husband, now head baseball coach
at Michigan State University, on a
spring training trip. She and her husband, were natives of Ringtown,
Litwhiler, whose
county.
pro baseball career included playing
with the Philadelphia Phillies, Boston
Braves and Cincinnati Reds, later
basecoached Florida high school
ball teams that won national recognition before moving on to Michigan
State. He was an outstanding athlete
Schuylkill
in his undergraduate days at Bloomsburg State College.
Margaret Byerly Morrison ’12
well-known and prominent citizen
B.
T.
of Danville, Mrs. Margaret
Morrison, 79, of 214 Walnut Street,
Danville, died suddenly at the Mansion
A
Convalescent Home, Sunbury.
She was a graduate of Danville High
School and Bloomsburg State Teachers College.
She also did graduate
work
at
Susquehanna University.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR
F.
II.
’12
Fenstemaker
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
’34
Grace Foote Conner,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Terms
242 Central
Terms Expire
’34
1974
Mrs. Verna Jones ’36
111 Plant Avenue
Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087
102 West Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Bloomsburg. Pennsylvania 17815
Term
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
expire 1972
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
Road
—
expires 1972
Dr. Kimber C. Kuster T3
VICE PRESIDENT
Millard Ludwig
Main
625 East
140 West Eleventh Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
’48
Street
John Thomas ’47
68 Fourth Street
Pennsylvania 17846
Term Expires 1972
Millville,
Hamburg, Pennsylvania
SECRETARY
Elwood M. Wagner
Col.
Clayton H. Hinkel
’43
Terms
expires 1973
Colonial
Earl A. Gehrig ’37
110 Robin Lane, Sherwood Village
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
expires 1973
R. D.
1,
Farm Box
Glen
Mills,
1903
dale,
H.
Walter
Ave.,
Soars-
Representative:
11
Warwick
N. Y. 10583
Class
Representative:
Vera
Market
Mrs.
503
Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1906
Laura Aurand (Mrs. Martin W. Witmer) 178 Main Street, Trappe, Collegeville, Pa. 19426, has been spending
some time with her daughter, a member of the faculty of Central Connecticut State College,
son-in-law
is
Community
Class
JUNE,
New
Britain.
Her
President of Mattabuck
College,
1907
Waterbury.
Representative:
1971
Barton, 353 College
Pa. 17815
Hill,
Edwin
M.
Diehl, 627
17821
Bloom
’29
Apt. 2
Pennsylvania. 17936
Gordon,
Sts.,
Mrs. Jean Zenke Foster
’66
W. Grove St.,
Clarks Summit, Pa. 18411
914
88
Pa. 19342
2,
Francis Galinski
’39
90
Tower
’52
Hill Rd.,
Doylestown, Pa. 18901
June, 1971
Bloomsburg,
Fred
W.
Street, Danville, Pa.
He has served on
skill.
for
1909
Class Representative:
1905
Hemingway Housenick,
Park and Oak
’52
Dr. Alexander J. McKechnie, Jr.
19 N. 24th St.
Camp Hill. Pa. 17011
Volume LXXII, Number
Class
Riland.
Miss Elizabeth H. Hubler
expire 1973
Dr. Frank J. Furgele
TREASURER
Term
19526
’40
224 Leonard Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
643 Wiltshire Road
State College, Pa. 16801
Term
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie ’35
509 East Front Street
Berwick, Pennsylvania 18603
•
thirty
years.
this
Mr. Ikeler
board
is
the
former General Manager of the PeekHe sold his
skill Evening Star.
interest in the paper several years
ago.
1910
Class Representative:
Robert C.
Metz, 23 Manhattan Street, Ashly,
Pa. 18706
1912
Representative:
Howard F.
Fenstemaker, 242 Central
Road,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1911
1913
Class Representative: Mrs. Pearle
Fitch Diehl, 627 Bloom Street, Danville, Pa. 17821
Donald F. Ikeler, 201 Buttonwood
Class Representative: Dr. Kimber
Kuster, 140 West 11th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Avenue, Peekskill, N. Y: 10566, has
been elected Chairman of the Board of
Directors of the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Peek-
Representative:
J. Howard
Deily, 518 West Third Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1914
Class
Page
five
1915
John H. Shuman, 268 East Main Street, BloomsClass Representaive:
bury, Pa. 17815
1916
Class Representative: Mrs. Russell
Burrus (Emma Harrison) R. D. 2,
Orangeville, Pa. 17859
1917
Representative!:
Class
Mahoning
Cromis,
Allen L.
Manor, R. D. 1,
Milton, Pa.
1918
Mrs. J. R.
Class Representative:
Ohl (Edna Davenport), 25 E. 11th St.,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1919
Miss CathClass Representative:
erine A. Reimard, 335 Jefferson St.,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1920
Leroy W.
Old Berwick Road,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Representative:
Class
Creasy,
3117
1921
found their homes in Wyoming Valley.
I have lived a long time and have observed people and I tried to depict the
characters as I found people in this
region,” Mrs. Wilkie explained.
The title “The Three Virgins” is deceptive because the book is not a 1970
sex story, but rather a “journey
through life with a thoroughly Christ-
us that she will have a four-month
furlough in the States, from December 15, 1971 to April 15, 1972. During
that time her address will be 47 Claremont Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10027.
ian attitude.”
Clarence S. Slater, 5100 Atlantic
Avenue, Ventnor City, N.J. 18406,
underwent open heart surgery in
December. He returned to work on
1935
Reed,
1922
Edna S.
Representative:
Class
Harter, R. D. 1, Nescopeck, Pa. 18623
March
1923
Mrs. RayRepresentative:
mond Kashner, 125 Forrest Road,
Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa.
Class
17815
1924
pendent
:
When one reaches
10 years,
three score and
generally assumed that
1925
it is
relaxing, enjoying the little things of
life
that the so-called “productive
years” prevent one from doing.
Known facetiously as the Twilight
Years, the 70’s are associated with
sagacity, experience and indifference.
Such is not the case for Mrs. Kathryn Gronka Wilkie of 2122 East Main
Street, Glen Lyon.
At the age of 70, she has become an
authoress of a 550-page first novel,
“The Three Virgins,” which was released for publication Jan. 15, 1971, by
the Vantage Press Inc., New York
City.
“Besides, I have my 50th reunion
from the Teachers College of Bloomsbury this Spring and I thought it would
be nice to show my classmates that
I had accomplished something during
my life.” Rearing her family and
teaching thousands in the Newport
Schools have been accepted by Mrs.
Wilkie as part of life rather than ac-
complishments.
The novel, parts of which are based
upon historical fact, was written in
long hand at Mrs. Wilkie’s kitchen
table.
It
is
set
in
the
1880’s
when
thousands of European emigrants, of
all nationalities and religions, poured
into this land.
“The characters are a composite of
I have known all of my life,
who came from abroad and
people
people
Page
six
1.
Ernest E. Line’s address is 5250-A
Seattle, Washington
Michael P.
Representative:
Walakonis, Box 222, Ringtown, Pa.
Broadway, APO,
Class
98737
1926
Jean Smith (Mrs. Robert Pritchard)
Parkway, Wor-
Representatives: Marvin M.
Bloss, P. O. Box 505, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815 and Mrs. Allen Earnhart,
307 Berwick St., White Haven, Pa.
lives at 26 North
cester, Mass. 01601
18661
Florida 33134
Class
Francis E. Conner (Mrs. William
Mensinger) lives at 327 East 10th
Street, Berwick, Pa. 18603.
Grace D. Robbins (Mrs. Richard F.
Hunt) lives on 17th Avenue, Wareham,
Mass. 02571
1927
he or she has earned the privilege of
Mrs. Ralph
Medley), 16
Street, Plymouth, Pa. 18651
Class Representative:
G. Davenport (Verna
Ransom
1929
Mrs. (Elsie
Nelson Stauffer, 88 John St
Kingston, Pa. 18704.. (Arline Frantz)
Mrs. James Weriman, 2(0 Parish
Street, Dallas, Pa. 18612
Class Representatives:
Lebo)
,
1930
Class
Representatives: Luther
and Margaret Swartz
W.
Bitler, 117 State
Street, Millville, Pa. 17846
1931
Frank J.
Representative:
Class
Golder, 1113 Market Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1932
Class Representative: Miss Wilhelmina Cerine, 2716 31st Street S.E.,
Washington, D.C. 20020
1933
Representative:
Miss Lois
Street,
Third
Lawson,
644 East
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Class
1934
Class
Representative:
Esther
Evans McFadden (Mrs. Joseph),
East Filth Street,
Bloomsburg,
Street,
at
Evelyn Robbins Sparrow is living at
275 Engle St., Tudor Hall, Apt. S-l,
Englewood, N. J. 07631
part of an article
appearing in the Wilkes-Barre Inde-
4tli
Madeline D. Feorini Merva lives
Place,
Wittingham
West
106
Orange, N. J. 07052
Edward F.
Class Representative:
Schuyler, 236 West Ridge Avneue,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
year.
Fisher, a member of the local service club, retired last year from the
school superintendency and is serving
the system in an advisory capacity.
is
East
Genevieve R. Bowman (Mrs. Vincent McKelvey) 6601 Braxburn Drive,
Bethesda, Maryland 20034
17967
The following
151
burg, Pa. 17815
Mrs. Harry
Cole, 100 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815
Warren L. Fisher, former Bloomsburg superintendent of schools, will be
Lieutenant Governor of the nine-club,
Kiwanis Division 14 in the 1971-72
Class Representative:
William I.
Blooms-
Representative:
Class
151
Pa.
17815
Dorothy L. Schmidt has changed
her address to 7-14 Deneuchofu 3Chome, Ota Ku, Tokyo 145, Japan.
Miss Schmidt has been teaching for
many years in Japan. She informs
Gerald J. Wolfson lives at 3691
North Prospect Drive, Coral Gables,
1936
Kathryn
Representatives:
Vanauker (Mrs. Nicholas Moreth) 34
Linden Road, Ho-Ho-Kus, N.J. 07423,
Co-Chairmen:
Ruth Wagner (Mrs.
Class
Lawrence LeGrande)
123
Oak
Street,
Hazleton, Pa. 18201 and Mary Jane
Fink (Mrs. Frederick M. Cutcheon)
Maple Avenue, Conyngham, Pa. 18213
Helen (Latorre) Tinelli lives and
works in Rochester, N. Y. She received her Masters degree in library
science in 1961 and is now busy setting up an elementary school library
while working for Doctorate.
Her
son and daughter both teach in Rochester, and even though she is a
grandmother, Helen is planning her
third trip
abroad
this
summer.
Jean (Phillips) Plowright, 103-C
Georgetown Dr., Casselberry, Fla.
32707, still lives in Florida surviving
the ever changing scene of teaching
but she is looking forward to retirement. Her summer tour this year is
being planned for visits to the South
Pacific Islands,
Australia.
New
Zealand
and
David Mayer, 12 Morningside Dr.,
Lansdale, Pa. 19446, is an Associate
Professor at the Montgomery County
Community
College,
Conshohocken.
Pa..
Morgan, Bldg.
24, Ste. 203, 6930
Dr., Cleveland, Ohio
44141, is retired and is now working
for himself as a construction consultant. Jan, his wife, teaches fourth
Bill
Carriage
Hill
grade
in Ohio.
His daughter, Molly,
getting her Ph. D. in French from
Tulane, while his son, Mike, is a 1st
Lt. in Vietnam, and they will soon be
is
grandparents.
Ruth (Wagner) LeGrande
is
a read-
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
ing supervisor in four schools in the
Hazleton School District. She is active in the St. Joseph Hospital Auxiliary. also has spent several of her
summers getting a change of scene by
She is also a
traveling to Europe.
grandmother.
proud
Kathryn (Vannauker) Moreth. 34
Linden Rd., Ho-Ho-Kus, N. J. 07423,
has been active in the Garden State
Chapter WAC Veterans Association
serving as its secretary for two years
and treasurer for this past year. She
has also been a Red Cross volunteer in
Service
the
Military
to
Families
Red Cross
for the last
four years. She and her husband of
twenty-five years are hoping to leave
May 3 for London and Paris, motor-
branch
ing
of the
south
to
Marseille (
met while both were
in
where they
the service,
then on to Menton, Pisa, and Rome.
After seeing the places she taught her
students about in Latin classes, she
and her husband will go to Venice.
Florence, Parma. Verona and Milan
getting home May 31 in time to pick
up their son who will be finishing his
Dr. Kenneth L. Cook. Ed.M. and Ed.
17820
Robert L.
Class Representative:
Bunge, 12 West Park Street, Carroll
Park, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Theodore Jurasik has been elected
a vice president of Ketchum, MacLeod & Grove.
Mr. Jurasik. who joined KM&G in
1967, is manager of the agency’s Director Advertising Department. Prior
to joining the agency he had been with
the Reuben H. Donnelly Corporation
and Cross & Blackwell Company.
Mr. Jurasik is married to the former
17815
Escoffier.
1937
Class
1938
Paul G. MarStreet, Blooms-
Class Representative:
tin,
710
East Main
burg, Pa. 17815
Anna B. Rech (Mrs. E. J. Medyckii
lives at 143 Di Marco Drive. Philadelphia, Pa. 19154
Representative:
Representative:
Richard E.
Grimes. 1723 Fulton Street, Harrisburg. Pa. 17102
Class
Kready
Avenue,
Millersville,
Pa.
1943
Representative:
Mrs. Raymond A. Algatt (Betty Katerman)
253 Iron Street, Bloomsburg,
Pa.
17815
1944
Class Representative:
Mrs. (Poletime Communtzis) Carl Demetripopoulos, Frair and Robin Lanes. Sherwood
Village. Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1945
Class Representative:
Mary Lou
John. 257 West 11th Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1946
Anastasia Pappas (Mrs. John Trowbridge) 102 W’est Mahoning Street,
Co-chairman:
Danville, Pa. 17821.
Mrs. Charles W. Creasy (Jacqueline
Shaffer), R. D. 1, Catawissa, Pa.
JUNE,
1971
Connelly,
6206
In wood Street, Cheverly, Maryland
teaching at the Prince
is
20785,
George Community College.
1952
Francis B.
Galinski, 90 Tower Hill Road, Doylestown, Pa. 18901
David L. Heckman, Bloomsburg,
was awarded the Doctor of Education
degree at Temple University, Philadelphia. His field is education adminRepresentative:
Class
istration
.
He serves
_
as assistant to the superintendent of the Haverford Township
School District, Havertown, and is in
charge of pupil personnel services and
data processing.
After serving in the U.S. Army
Signal Agency where he was assigned
to the White House, Dr. Heckman
began his teaching career in Clifton
Heights High School and the following
year moved ta the senior high wrhere
he taught chemistry and physics.
Before being appointed to his present position in 1967, he was assistant
principal in the senior high school
and assistant to the business manager
of the school district.
He is a member of Phi Delta Kappa,
national educational honorary society
and lives with his wife, Mary and two
children,
David and Lynda,
in
Drexel
Hill.
1950
1953
Class Representative: Willis Swales,
9 Raven Road. Montvale, N. J. 07645
Robert Balent. M. A., 24 Honeysuckle Lane, Levittown, Pa., is a
teacher in the Woodrow Wilson High
School.
Class Representative: John S. Scrimgeour, 411 East 3rd Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Kenneth E. Borst, B.S., M.S., 5
Maplewood Orchard Drive, Greenville,
Rhode Island, is Associate Professor
of Chemistry at Rhode Island College.
17551
Class
N.Y. 12740
Mary Ann Alarcon
1948
Harry G.
Class Representative:
John. Jr., 425 Iron Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1940
Class Representative:
Clayton II.
Hinkle, 224 Leonard Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1941
Class Representative: Dr. C. Stuart
Edwards, R. D. 4, Bloomsburg, Pa.
17815
1942
Class Representative:
Mrs. Ralph
H. Zimmerman (Jean Nool), 165
ville,
11581.
1949
Willard
Christian, Jr., 803 Logue Street, Williamsport. Pa. 17701
1951
Dr. Russell
Class Representative:
C. Davis, Jr., Thunder Hill, Grahams-
Mr. and Mrs. Jurasik reside in 86
Jackson Rd.. Valley Stream. L.I., N.Y
1939
Class
State College.
Sidari ’43 of Hazleton. Pa., who
is currently Commercial Department
Head at Valley Stream Memorial
Junior High School.
Mr. Jurasik is a recognized authority in his field and has been retained
as a consultant by such diverse groups
as BOAC and the Mexican Govern-
Mr. and
Representatives:
Mrs. Earl A. Gehrig, 110 Robin Lane,
Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg, Pa.
year of college.
Max G. Cooley, 404 Sunset Lane
Shippensburg, Pa., is Director of
Business Education at Shippensburg
Dr.
Nan
ment. Mr. and Mrs. Jurasik were
formally welcomed recently in Mexico
City by personal representatives of
President Gustav Ordaz.
Mr. Jurasik is a member of the following organizations: Directory Committee; American Association of Advertising Agencies. Sales Executives
Club, Society of Independent Slovaks
in the U.S.. Village Interest Party, W.
C. Fields Lompoc Boosters, Anis De
first
D., R. D. 1, Mohnton, Pa. is Associate
Professor at Kutztown State College.
1947
James and Susan
Dreibelbis Boyle
live at 38 Ski Hill Drive,
Bedminster,
N.J. James is Vice-President and Director of Marketing and Sales at Ortho
Diagnostics.
Mr. and Mrs.
Boyle
have two children.
Dorothy Snyder
Madingley Road.
Linthicum Heights, Md. Dorothy is
a substitute teacher in the Andover
High School, and William is Physics
Instructor at Southern High School.
J.
and
live at 508
William
Brennan
John E. Buynak, 9805 Pitt P.I.N.E.
Albuequerque, New Mexico is a Lieutenant Colonel
Marine Corps.
ine
ROTC
School.
children.
He
at
is
in the U.S.
is teacher of Mar-
(Retired)
He
Rio Grande High
married and has six
the
1954
William J.
Class Representative:
Jacobs, Tremont Annex Apartments,
2 West Main Street, Lansdale, Pa.
19446
Gerald Houseknecht is pastor of St.
Paul Lutheran Church, Newport, Pa.
17074. His wife (Vera Rowlyk) and 2
sons, Gerald Jr. and Mark, also reside
Pastor
at 24 N. 4th St., Newport.
Houseknecht was named to the 2nd
Annual Edition of Community Leaders
1969
and is active in
of America
Cub Scouting and the International
Platform Association.
(
)
1955
Arnold GarClass Representative:
inger, R. D. 1, Harveys Lake, Pa.
18618
1956
Dr. William
Class Representative:
Bittner III, 33 Lincoln Avenue, Glens
Falls, N.Y. 12801
1957
William J.
Class Representative:
Pohutski, 554 Oakridge Drive, North
Plianfield, N.J. 07606
Richard J. Kratzer, R. D. 2, Box 409,
Page seven
Sunbury,
Pa.
was
17801
named Postmaster
in
recently
Sunbury.
1958
Raymond
Class Representative:
Hargreaves, 37 Dell Road, Stanhope,
N.J. 078784
Green Uniteaching in the
Glen Ridge School District, N.J. Mrs.
1967
National Bank of New Jersey. Their
address is Apt. 3-A, 25 Manor Drive,
Newark, N.J. 08628.
Class Representative:
1959
William F
Class Representative:
Swisher, Box 245, Cincinnatus, N.Y
13040
1960
James J.
Class Representative:
Peck, 100 Hull Road, Madison, Conn.
06443
1961
Edwin C.
Class Representative:
Kuser, R. D. 1, Box 145-C, Bechtelsville,
ate of Bucknell University. A former
engineer, he is now in his third year
at the University of Pittsburgh School
of Dentistry.
Pa. 19505
R.
Thomas
Lemon, Warwick
Old
Apt., 3-D, 802
English Street, Bel Air, Md. 21014
1968
Class Representative:
Thomas W.
Free, R. D. 1, Box 34, Kintnerville,
Pa. 18930
Dawn S. Schulten (Mrs. Thomas L.
Moffet) lives at 7425 Mountain Avenue,
Melrose
Park,
teaching
first
Elementary
Pa.,
19126.
She
is
grade
at Blair Mill
School in the Hatboro-Hor-
sham
1962
Class Representative: Richard Lloyd
6 Farragut Drive, Piscataway, N.J.
School District, Montgomery
County, Pa. Her husband is a student
University Dental
at the Temple
School.
18854
William
Dildine
(Mrs.
Dorothy
Landis) lives at 6807 Fairfax Road,
Apt. 130, Bethesda, Md. 20014
Mrs. Viriginia A. Kline lives at 562
Avenue, Palmerton, Pa
Kathy Giger, 818 Fishburn Rd., Hershey, Pa. 17033, is a research assistant and a graduate student at the
Milton S. Hershey Medical Center of
the Pennsylvania State University.
Lafayette
18071
1963
Class Representative:
Pat Biehl
(Mrs. Ronald Cranford) R. D. 1, 77
Hawthorne Ave., Boyertown, Pa. 19512
Ronald E. Hosier, 1151-B Forest
Edge, West Aaron Drive, State College, Pa., has received the degree of
Master of Science in Computer Science at the Pennsylvania State Uni1964
Shuba,
Boards Speak for Math.” Mr .Fennell, a former teacher and principal
in the Williamsport school, is a doctoral candidate in elementary education at Pennsylvania State University.
versity.
Class
Francis M. Fennell, 550 Grandview
Place, South Williamsport, Pa., is the
author of an article appearing in the
April issue of the Instructor Magazine.
The article is entitled “Bulletin
Ernest R.
Avenue, Raritan,
Representative:
1
Gaston
N.J. 08869
Janice M. Clemens (Mrs. John De
Finnis), is living at 815 East Front
Street, Berwick, Pa.
Her husband,
who served with the U.S. Army Dental
Corps, has opened a private dental
practice in Berwick.
1965
Class Representative: Carl P. Sher59 Vreeland Ave., Bloomingdale,
N.J. 07403
1966
Class Representative:
Anthoy J.
Cerza, 608 Corlies Ave., Wallenhurst,
N.J. 07711
Drue P. and Nancy Kneer Michael
report their address as Box 10, R.D. 4,
Reading, Pa. Mr. Michael is claims
adjuster for the Pennsylvania Manufacturing Association Insurance Co.
sons.
Mr. and Mrs. D. Theodore Apperman (Sally Regan) are living at 7231
Whipple Street, Swissvale, Pa. 15218.
Mrs. Apperman taught in the Harrisburg School District and has worked
for the Pa. Dept, of Welfare and Dept,
of Education as a Personnel Analyst.
In May, 1970 she received her Master’s Degree from the School Psychology Dept, at Temple University, Philadelphia.
At present, she is doing
post graduate work at Duquesne University and is employed by the Pittsburgh Board of Education as a Schol
Psychologist.
Her husband, Tedd,
Page eight
After graduation, Mrs. Parker taught English
for two years in the Interboro School
System of Glen Alden. Mr. and Mrs.
Parker have one daughter.
Glenalden,
Pa.
19036.
Richard Benyo, 207 Center Street,
Jim Thrope, Pa.
18229,
was awarded
place in the 1971 Keystone Press
Awards Contest for local columns.
Benyo is employed as Associate Editor of the Times-News & Record, Ediitor of News ’N Views, and Program
Director for PTVC TV in Lehighton,
Pa. He accepted the award at the
annual conference of the Pennsylvania
Newspaper Publishers’ Association on
May 15 in Harrisburg. The award was
presented for his weekly column,
“Tripping It.”
Benyo has also recently been assigned as a special correspondent for
Stock Car Racing Magazine; his initial
contribution, a history and prospectus
of
Pocono International Raceway,
appeared in the July issue of that
first
an,
They have two
Robert and Elaine Barlow Parker
at 19 West Knowles Avenue,
live
is
a 1965 gradu-
—
magazine.
Economics
versity, Ohio.
McNertney
is
at Bowling
He
is
employed by the First
Ronald L. Buffington is serving as
a First Lieutenant in the Marine Corps
His address is 1st
in South Vietnam.
Lt. Ronald Buffington, 0110534 USMC
H & HS
18 Security Officer, Vietnam, APO San Francisco, Calif. 96602.
Friends and classmates are urged to
write to him.
—
1970
John W.
Class Representative:
Dalfovo, 61 Dean Street, Beaver Meadows, Pa. 18216
Private Daryl L. Stull, R.D. 2, Fairfax Farms, York, Pa., was honored recently as the Outstanding Trainee of
the Cycle during Basic Training graduation exercises at Fort Jackson,
South Carolina. He was selected for
the honor in recognition of his leadership, military bearing and training
proficiency.
Airman Clayton
L.
Newcomer, Mon-
toursville, Pa., has completed basic
training at Lackland AFB, Texas. He
has been assigned to Sheppard AFB,
Texas, for training in the communi-
cations field.
Airman Terry L. Lutz, Bloomsburg,
Pa., has graduated at Sheppard AFB,
Texas, from the technical training
course for U.S. Air Force radiology
specialists.
Airman Lutz
USAF
is
Hospital
(Branch
of
being assigned to the
at
Andrews
AFB,
Wash., D.C.), Md. 20331.
Linda Aim Lyle (Mrs. Timothy
Roach) is living at 82 Kikapai Street,
Apt. 302, Kailua, Oahu, Hawaii. Her
husband is serving in the U.S. Marine
Corps.
1971
Class
Cluley,
Representative:
115
Terrace
William H.
Avenue, Upper
Darby, Pa. 19082
1907—
Loyalty Fund contributions to April
not previously reported:
Dr. Harvey A. Andruss
1892— Mrs. E. E. McKelvey
1901—N. Elwell Funk
1903 Howard K. Houtz
1911—
15,
1971,
—
1969
Class
Representative:
Frank J.
Masteroianne, 1018 Cooper Street,
Scranton, Pa. 18508
Theresa Eyerman Castro is living at
16700
Sunnyside
Street,
Oakland,
California 94603
Jean A. Moulder, Chester, Pa., and
Edward McNertney,
in
Hazleton,
Pa.,
were married in September, 1969. Mr.
McNertney completed his M.A. degree
Rowland F. Hemingway
Dr. Carroll D. Champlin
Mrs. W. H. Hile, Mrs. Robert
B. Fleischer
1908 Saida L. Hartman
1909 Mrs. W. Milton Brown
1910 Sara F. Lewis, Mrs. Jared D.
Montanye, Julia Gregg Brill, Mrs. Lee
A. Perry
Mrs. Edward H. Beavers, Mrs.
P. II Monaghan, A. K. Naugle
1905
1906
.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
1969—
1912—
Mrs. Charles A. Nicely, Col.
B. F. Brill, Mrs. B. J. Swartwood
C. 1913—
Mary D. Comerford, Mrs. Eugene F. Sarber, Nellie M. Denison,
Kenneth Mausteller, Judge BerMrs.
1914—
nard J. Kelley, Mrs. W. L. Snyder
1915—Dr. Jacob H. Vastine II, Mrs.
J. A. Gosaman, Glennis H. Rickert
Mrs. William R. McCready.
Mrs. George H. Moore, Mrs. Glennis
id Rickert
1916 Mrs. H. R. Robinson. Cora G.
Hill
(in
memory
of Eloise C. Hill.)
James O'Donnell, Mis
1919—Mrs.
John W. O'Toole, Mrs. Harry W. Miller, Mrs. Alice T. Gardner
1918 Mrs. Robert D. Beminger
Patterson, Mis.
1920— Hurley O.
Victor G. Long, Mis. Priscilla A. McDonald,
1921— Mrs. Norman A. Fox, Sr.,
Mrs. Thomas Mainivaring, Mrs. William D. Powell
Bennett, Margaret
1922— Marie H.
1917
V.
Hower
Mis. Kathryn Wilkie, Anna L.
Swanberry, Mrs. Allen L. Beaver, Sr.
1923—
Edith B. Hoffman, Wilbur S.
Mis.
Foresman, Alice M. McDonnell
Emmanuel, Mrs.
1924—Mrs. Mary S.
Stephen Bellas, Mrs. Oren L. Harris,
Mis. Antoinette C. Mason, Mary C.
Getty
Mrs. Beatrice
Mrs.
Mis. Helen
Jopling,
Robert MacNaught, Sr.,
R. Padgett
Mrs. Clare L. Reger, Alma
1927— Mrs. Guy F. Roliand, Mrs.
Thomas,
Leroy Bughbee, Mrs. Harbert C. PearMrs. Margaret Brumbach
son,
1928—
Wayne Turner, Mirs.
1925 Mrs.
James S. Jordan, Alice E. Stead
1926 Mi-s. Edmund Jenkins, Mrs.
Neal W. Warmley, Mrs. Robert M.
Dwyer, Christine B. Roeder
1930—Naomi K. Bender, Mrs. Esther
W. Copp, Mis. Harvey Dickstein, Rosina Ellery, Mi's. Earl J. McCloughan
Mrs. M. S. Martin, Lehman J.
Snyder, Mrs. Charles D. Blair, Mary
K. Huntzelman, Alice L. Evans, Mrs.
Howard K. Scott, Mrs. Thomas Han1932—
lon, Margaret L. Lewis
1929 El wood Avery, Mrs. J.L. Cohen, Mrs. Esther W. Burnat
Mrs. Anna S. Gossler, Mrs.
Myrtle R. Ker, Margaretta M. Bone,
James B. Davis, In memorw of
Armond G. Keller, Helen E. Snyder
Mi's.
1931 Mi's. Catherine S. Acker, Catherine R. Ingram, Emily A. Park, Mrs.
S. L. Ritchie, James J. Wilkes, Mrs.
Sheldon A. MacDougall
Mrs. Mildred Hinebaugh
1933 Mrs. R. Kenneth Maiers, Mrs.
Benedict A. Stein, Mrs. Samuel Shirk,
Mi's. Stanley C. Strausser
1934
Mrs. Robert A. Elder,
Mrs.
Mercedes McDermott
1935
Mi's. S.
Mi's.
W.
Vincent
E.
McKelvey,
Stanulonis
Mr. and Mrs. Earl A. Gehrig,
Mary A. Palsgrove
1938 Mrs. Robert V. O’Connell
1939 Dr. Alex J. McKechnie, Sara
E. Tubbs.
1941 Mrs. Edwin H. Andrews, Marqueen V. White, Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Tomlinson, William G. Kerchusky
1942 Mi's. Mildred R. Levitt, How1937
JUNE,
1971
ard R. Brockyus, Jack L. Mertz,
William P. Wanick, Dr. Lawrence B.
1943—Mrs. Eleanor M. Zale
Myers,
Dr. John M. Apple, Loren L.
Collins, D. Mae Graw, Virginia M.
Shambach, Col. and Mrs. El wood M.
Wagner, Hugh S. Niles, Philip R.
Yeany
1944 Mrs. C. P. McLaughlin, Mrs.
Frederick J. Edwards, Mrs. Philip R.
Yeany, Mrs. Leslie B. Gare
1945 Mrs. Carrie J. Balliet, Mrs.
Shirley Nicholas
1946
1949— James E. Foley (In Memoriami, Mrs. Dora B. Silk
1947 Vincent F. Washville
1950—Mrs. Vincent F. Washville
1948
Carl H. Robbins, Richard E.
Grimes, John H. Reichard, Frank J
Radice,
1952— John M. Purcell
Mrs. Robert A. McMillan,
Paul D. Slusser, Richard E. Jarman
1951 Mrs. Eugene R. Miller, Ralph
Wayne
ger
1971 Janet M. Brew, Walter A.
Karmosky, Mrs. James W. Fox, Mary
Ann Schwartz
LOYALTY FUND
ADDITIONAL CONTRIBUTIONS
1897— Mrs. F. E. Van Wie
1906 Mabel R. Farley
1907 Mrs. Wilfred Seeming
1909 Harold L. Moyer
1910 Mrs. Morris S. Evans
C.
Wagner
1958—
1955 Mrs. Caroline Y. Karas, Jay
Stanley Worth, Mrs. Joseph P. Feifer
Milton H. Croop
1957 Mrs.
WUll&am C. Follmer,
Thomas
J.
Reimensnyder, Evelyn M.
Strine,
Mrs.
C.
Kilpatrick,
Dick
Moritz L. Schultz
Mrs. Joseph N. Corrio, C.
J.
Spentzas, Mrs. Willis Wayman, Beth.
Evans, William C. Sheridan
1959 Craig R. Yeanish, Otto H.
Donar, Robert W, Harris, Mrs. Rose
Ann Radzinski, Moritz L. Schultz,
Kenneth A. Swatt
1960 Mi's. Sue B. Lindner, Mrs.
1964— A. McFall.
Barbara
1961 Donald L. Smith, Mrs. Richard W. Thomas, Thomas V. Grace,
Mrs. Robert S. Dayton, Mrs. Beatrice
1918—Dr. Kimber C. Kuster, Mrs.
Mabel Luccareni, Elizabeth Sturges
1915 Mrs. Elmer A. Harrington
1920— Ruth A. Dreibelbis, Dorothy
1916
M.1921—
Fritz, Mrs. Lila D. Hemingway.
William A. Thomas
1917 Mrs. Alice F. Gardner
Clyde A. Miller, Mrs. Theo1922—
dore
B. Wallin
1919 Mrs. Claire T. Parker
Mrs. Roy O. Fry
Mrs. Margaret B. Fetch, Mrs.
Frank Honstrater, Mrs. Hester Aten,
Mrs. Otto M. Girton, Mrs. Bertha B.
Zong, Mrs. Ralph Moser, Alice M.
McDonnell
1928—
William T. Payne, George B.
Jr., Mary C. Getty
1923 Mrs. Edith H. Dawson, Mrs.
Hershel S. Libby
1924 Mrs. Alfred L. Wendel, Mrs.
Rhawn,
Margaret Brumbach
Thomas
J.
McHugh
Ronald H. Beury, Robert C.
Houck, James K. Sample, Mrs. Beatrice B. Robinson, Mrs. Richard C
Scorese
Kenneth R. Miller, Dr. EdP. Azary, Mrs. D. Dale Kleppinger, Anne M. Hocker, Richard C.
Scorese. Mrs. John De Finnis, E. Ed-
ward
ward
Eill, Mi's.
Joseph R. Kuzmick
Mrs. H. L. Campbell, Jr.
Mrs. Cyril J. Sweeney, Harold
1926
1927
M. Roberts
1962
1963
Donation
Mrs. E. B. Landis
Class
1911
1912
1913
Blue,
Myra
Koch. Mrs. John D.
Jane M. Rompala, Richard L. Benjamin. Mrs. John C. Gottschling, Connie D. Roth, Helen D. McAndrews,
Robert P. Sheptack, Stephen M. Klin-
W. Wire
Mrs. H. M. Snyder, Viola M.
Andre M. Vanyo, Russell C.
Brachman, Mrs. Paul Cerula
1956—
1953 Keith S. Bearde
1954 Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. An
drews, Louise M. Schullery, Mrs.
J.
Wright, Chester A. Buglia, Bonnie K.
Rinehimer, Robert A. Muscosky, Lee
Berry, Connie L. Jarrard, Thomas
J. 1970—
F. Castrilli, Cheryl L. Dyer
Dennis D. Bohr, Evelyn Kovalchik, Mrs. Robert D. Gauss, Jr.,
Judith M. Rohland, Stewart O. Strohle,
J.
Baum
Mrs. Foster
Furman
1929 Mrs. Emil Lang
1930 Mr. and Mrs. Jasper M. Fritz
1931 Elizabeth H. Hubler
1932 James J. Johns
1933 Mrs. Max D. Frye
1934
1949—Gladys Mae Wenner
1935 Charlotte H. McKechnie
1936 Mrs. Mae H. Deitrick, Mrs
Neil A. Mercando, Robert A.
Green, James L. Apriani, Mrs. Thomas L. Snyder, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
D. Zavgaglia, Edawrd Beck, Robert
Griesing, Robert E. Barfield III, William C. Ross, Jr.
1966 Mary Alice Woodroff, Rose M.
Nicholas W. Moreth, Sr.
1937 Ray G. Schrape
1938 Elizabeth J. Gilligan
1939 Isaiah D. Bomboy
1942 Mrs. John W. Thomas, Dominic R. Pino
1944— Mrs. James S. Powell
Chiki, Darryl W. Lanning, James M.
Ayers, Barbara A. Urbas, Mr. and
Mrs. Henry L. Spering
1967 Mr. and Mrs. Regis C. Sterling. Glen H. Book, Mrs. Joyce A. Mordan, Mrs. Nickola J. Oram, Robert O.
Samsel, David J. Hollingshead
1968 Nancy
L.
Luzi,
Joyce E.
Brobst. Richard O. Wilhour, Charles
J. Greco, Jr., Mrs. Thomas E. Karam,
Mrs. Diane Kazemka, Mrs. Francis
R. Dick, Richard J. Yost
1947 John W. Thomas
1948 Henry E. Crawford,
Magill, Jr.
1965
—
John F.
William R. Dubel, Mrs. Julia
P. Sterling
1950 Warren
Thomas
ski
1951
1952
L.
M. Sterling, Mrs.
Gunn, Frank T. Lupashin-
Mrs. Donald W. Donnelly
Mrs. Nancy Lychos, Francis
J. Stanitsky
1954 Mi's.
—
Rachel W. Dailey, Shel-
Page nine
1970—
Sandra Sample, Mr. and Mrs.
Michael L. Schreckengost
1966 Robert J. Biscombe, Rosemary Fogarty
1967 Mrs. Lavere McClure, Thomas
S. Fowles, Ronald R. Jackson, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert F. White
1968 Frederick T. Bausch, Douglas
C. Hippenstiel, Kathryn E. Giger, Mrs.
R. B. Adams, Mrs. Ruth A. Smith,
Mrs. Robert A. Bachman, Myra J.
Schlesinger, Mrs. Betsy L. Schneider,
Raymond B. Walverton
1969 Mrs. T. L. Guy, Mr. and Mrs.
Marie Hutz, George A. Ziolkowski
1965
Joseph W. Kinder, John C.
1955—
1957—
Panichello
1958—
William J. Pohutsky
1959— Mrs. William J. Pohutsky,
Mrs. Helen Kerstetter
1961—Mrs. Gerald H. Major
1960 Allen M. Rathbone
Ray
Kathleen
Yergey
ton N. Erwine, William J. Jacobs
L. George, Mrs. Robert
Dayton
David W. Barbour, Mrs. Nancy E. Evans, Gerald J. Wright
1963 John M. Di Liberto, Thomas
W. Nawrocki, Mrs. Joann H. Zogby
1964 Mrs. Richard C. Bartz, Robert
A. Mayefskie, Mr. and Mrs. David A.
S.
1962
Cahill,
Robert
Shelly, Leslie A. Rohrbach
1971 Kay F. Leonard, Class
tion ($800.00)
S.
Dona-
SCHOLARSHIPS
In the future, all direct contributions to the Alumni Association will
be credited to the various scholarship funds, which are listed elsewhere in this issue, in the report of
the treasurer. You may, if you wish
specify the fund to which you wish
It is desirable that
contribute.
these funds be built up; scholarships
are granted only from their income.
to
Alumni Association
BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania
Report of the Treasurer
STATEMENT OF CONDITION
March
31,
1971
ASSETS
Cash, Checking Account, 1st National Bank
Cash, Savings Account, 1st National Bank
.
.
.
7,420.05
1,368.60
Assets
Total
8,788.65
EQUITIES
General Loan Fund and Misc. Payables
Long Term Dues Reserves
Plus
Interest
1970-71
Credit,
Long Term Dues Reserve, March 31,
Loyalty Fund Balance, April 1, 1970
Net Addition,
Net Balance
214.82
1,308.71
59.89
1971
1,368.60
6,957.69
247.54
1970-71
® March
Total Equities
31, 1971
March
31,
7,205.23
1971
8,788.65
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
April
Income
Dues and Loyalty
1,
1970 to
March
Collections
Expenditures
Quarterly Printing
Postage and Office Supplies
Clerical Assistance
Editor’s and Business Manager’s Fees
Advertising and Publicity
Alumni Day Dinner and Expense
Flowers
Misc. Expenses
Travel and Meals, Directors’ Meetings
Dues, State Associations
Telephone Expense
Insurance and Wage Taxes
Alumni Field Meetings Grant
Contribution to Inaugural Activities
Total
Expenditures
Net Increase
in
31, 1971
Equity
11,530.00
4,935.00
1,229.30
1,849.50
400.00
919.50
232.75
75.00
14.12
53.00
600.00
107.29
66.91
500.00
300.00
11,282.46
247.54
General Information
Dues
Collection (no Loyalty Fund), year ended March 31, 1966 3,842.01
8,405.23
Fund and Dues Collection, year ended March 31, 1967
Fund and Dues Collection, year ended March 31, 1968 8,346.92
13,016.42
Fund and Dues Collection, year ended March 31, 1969
8,699.53
Fund and Dues Collection, year ended March 1, 1970
11,530.00
Fund and Dues Collection, year ended March 31, 1971
Loyalty
Loyalty
Loyalty
Loyalty
Loyalty
Page ten
THE ALIJMNI QUARTERLY
Alumni Association
BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania
BSC General Alumni Funds
STATEMENT OF CONDITION
March
31, 1971
ASSETS
Cash, Checking Account, 1st National Bank
1st National Bank, Savings Account
1st National Bank, Certificate of Deposit
General Trust Fund, BBSTC
Accomodation
U. S. Govt. Securities
—G
4,943.37
3,794.07
5,000.00
17,079.67
35.00
11,801.56
960.00
and Treasury
Accrued Interest Income
Total Assets
43,613.67
AND EQUITIES
LIABILITIES
Liabilities
Scholarships
Equities:
and Grants Payable
Centennial Loan Fund
O.H. and S.H. Bakeless Memorial
E. H. Nelson Memorial Fund
Operations Reserve Fund
William D. Watkins Fund
Earl N. Rhodes Fund
1,900.00
19,249.49
Fund
......
10,001.49
1,160.24
74.10
1,460.00
250.00
590.20
100.00
1,994.28
3,794.07
660.00
2,334.70
Lucy McCammon Fund
Henry J. Warman Fund
Wm. B. Sutliff Fund
Paul Thomas Endowment Fund
Anna Lowrie Welles Fund
Fenstemaker Fund
Total Equities
41,713.67
Total Liabilities and Equities
43,613.67
RECONCILIATION OF TOTAL EQUITIES
Total Equities, March 31, 1970
Less: Contribution from Fenstemaker
Andruss Library
Net Decrease per Schedule on Page
Total Equities,
March
42,770.37
Fund
796.75
259.97
41,713.67
1971
31,
1,056.72
3
Alumni Association
BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania
BSC General Alumni Funds
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
April
1,
1970 to
March
31,
Income:*
Income from Trust Fund. BBSCT
Interest on Government Obligations
Interest on Savings Account, 1st National Bank
Interest on Certificate of Deposit, 1st Natl. Bk.
1971
749.28
320.00
166.03
254.72
Total Earned Income
1,490.03
Other Receipts:*
Contribution
B
Club
Lucy
to
McCammon Fund
150.00
Total Other Receipts
150.00
Total Receipts
1,640.03
Less Grants Awarded:
Rhodes Scholarship
Alumni Assn. Scholarship
Lucy McCammon Scholarship
E. H. Nelson Memorial Scholarship
Anna Lowrie Welles Scholarship
Total Grants
Net Decrease
JUNE,
1971
in
200.00
900.00
200.00
300.00
300.00
Awarded
1,900.00
Fund
(259.97)
Equities
Page eleven
^Income and other Receipts was allocated as follows:
Operations and Alumni Scholarships
E. H. Nelson Memorial Fund
Watkins Fund
Rhodes Fund
879.00
70.00
70.00
30.00
180.00
5.00
90.00
166.03
50.00
100.00
McCammon Fund
Warman Fund
Fund
Sutliff
Paul Thomas Fund
Anna Lowrie Welles Fund
Fenstemaker Library Fund
Total
1,640.03
BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania
BSC McNinch Alumni Loan Fund
STATEMENT OF CONDITION
March 31, 1971
ASSETS
Checking Account, BSSTC (less $25
Cash,
held as accommodation)
Cash, Certificates of Deposit, BBSTC
Cash, Certificate of Deposit, 1st Natl.
United Student Aid Fund Deposit
Student Loans Receivable
Permanent Trust Fund, BBSTC
Office
11,830.52
15,000.00
10,000.00
6,000.00
34,296.46
78,696.79
416.45
Bank
Equipment
Total Assets
156,240.22
EQUITIES
Original Bequest McNinch Estate
Additions to March 31, 1970
Additions to March 31, 1970
Net 1970-71 Addition
128,758.70
8,424.55
17,323.74
1,732.23
27,481.52
Total Equities
156,240.22
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
April
1,
1970 to
March
31,
1971
Income:
Income from BBSTC, Trustee
Inerest Income, Certificate of Deposit
1,854.01
1,261.72
Total Income
3,115.23
Expenditures
Clerical Assistance
Postage and Supplies
Treasurer’s Fees
Dues, State Association
Auditing Service
424.00
18.00
300.00
600.00
40.00
Total Expenditures
Net Addition
to
1,382.00
Equity
1,733.23
GENERAL INFORMATION:
Student loans, totaling $34,296.46 were outstanding at March 31, 1971. During the year April 1, 1970 to March 31,
1971 a total of $10,175. was loaned to 27 students.
.
.
WEDDINGS
.
1966
Donald H. Bowman’ 66 and Nancy J.
Moyer ’67. Address: Old Orchard
Lane, Mifflinburg, Pa. 17844.
Lois Silkroski and Lawrence Skoger-
Address:
158 Grand
Englewood, N. J. 07631.
son.
Avenue,
1968
Donna Rae Dunn and William Kerstetter, Jr. The bride attended MansPage twelve
and has been employed at Keck’s Drapery. Mr. Kerstetter is studying for his Master’s
Degree at BSC. He teaches reading
and English in the seventh and eighth
grades of Southern Area School Distrist.
Address: 366
Street.
Center
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
field State College,
.
1969
Marcella Lynn Hall and David G.
Moharter. The bride teaches German
at Berwick High School. Her husband
is a senior at BSC.
Address: Glenn
and Washington Avenue, Bloomsburg,
Pa. 17815.
1970
Dolores A. Bowen and Robert D.
Gauss, Jr., 803 West Lockhart St.,
Sayre, Pa. 18840.
Susan Jane Bower and Richard J
Varner.
Mrs. Varner has been a
graduate assistant in the Department
of Special Education at BSC; in September she will begin teaching special
education in the Southern Columbia
Area School District. Her husband
is on office employee at Joseph A.
Rado. mechanical contractors.
Address: Berwick, R.D. 1, Pa.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
With
this issue of
The
Editor.
first
The
issue of
Quarterly, the undersigned
The Quarterly was published
ties,
and publication was continued
time
The Quarterly was
Publication
staff.
about 1921.
was then discontinued
ing the magazine.
Under
and the
appeared
issue
until
out as
in the eigh-
Up
that
to
edited and published by the Normal School
Alumni Association decided
first
bows
until
1926,
assume the responsibility
to
arrangement,
this
December,
in
I
when
of publish-
was appointed
1926.
I
the
Editor,
have performed
the editorial duties since that time.
At the meeting
24,
it
was decided
of
to
your Board of Directors on Alumni Day, April
hand over the
responsibility of publishing
and
mailing the Quarterly to the Office of Development and External
Relations.
The
publication and mailing costs will be paid by the
Bloomsburg Foundation.
the September issue.
This
new
policy will go into effect with
At that time, the
new
editorial staff will
be
announced.
We hope
that you, the Alumni, will continue to supply the Editor
with news, as you have done
in the past.
President,
Alumni Association
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE
BLOOMSBURG, PA. 17815
Non-Profit
U. S.
Org.
POSTAGE
PAID
Address Correction Requested
1.6c
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Permit No. 10
Loyalty Fund Fifth Year
OCTOBER
Amt.
Yeai
No.
Ex-faculty 2
1892
1896
1901
1903
1905
1906
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1923
150.00
10.00
10.00
40.00
10.00
5.00
22.00
22.00
20.00
215.00
92.00
309.00
98.00
152.00
25.00
25.00
52.00
60.00
73.00
56.00
50.00
258.00
65.00
62.00
1
1
2
1
1
2
4
2
4
10
24
7
10
4
3
13
6
5
9
4
14
10
9
i
I
1
1
1
!
.
1,
1970 to
Year
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
No.
9
5
5
10
17
9
7
8
3
8
4
5
3
4
5
5
3
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
6
14
10
6
4
3
3
APRIL
30, 1971
Amt.
Year
1948
1949
1950
58.00
30.00
57.00
63.00
148.00
247.00
74.00
110.00
65.00
58.00
24.50
72.00
70.00
25.00
50.00
36.00
25.00
80.00
140.00
75.00
65.00
45.00
20.00
20.00
9
11
6
7
2
8
6
4
10
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1981
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
10
11
7
10
5
15
18
23
18
22
28
34
27
TO BE DETACHED, FILLED OUT, AND RETURNED
Signature
Name
while in college
Address
(street)
Zip Code
(town)
If
above address
is
new, check here
Amount
Year of graduation
Mail checks
To
to
Alumni
insure tax deductions,
B. S. C.
Office,
Box
31, B.S.C.
make checks payable
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Amt.
No.
5
to
.
36.00
78.00
72.00
75.00
43.00
35.00
53.00
35.00
25.00
65.00
81.00
47.00
44.00
58.61
33.00
76.00
127.00
125.00
76.00
162.00
180.00
214.00
138.00
817.00
The
iliiiniii
The upper and lower Campuses
Volume LXXII
of
Quarterly
Bloomsburg State College are outlined
Number
3
in this
airview
SEPTEMBER
made
in July 1971
1971
THE PRESIDENT'S PAGE
In 1966, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
brought out its first comprehensive Master Plan
for Higher Education, and at that time called
for a review and a revision within four years.
During these past two years Task Forces and
other groups worked towards the development of
that Plan, and a short time ago, the 1971 version
appeared. Some of the more significant parts
are the following.
The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, like all
states,
serious
faces
Education
ing ever
is
difficulties.
an expensive process and
more
stitutions is
fiscal
so.
The
is
Highe
•
becom
plight of the private in-
such that their very survival depends
upon some kind of public support.
private education has
Certainly,
made
a significant contribution, and its loss would be serious for everyFinancial problems, however, also extend
one.
must be
to the public sector, and a system
found
that
will
assure
that
public
institutions
character. The Masincreases.
gradual tuition
retain their unique public
ter
Plan
proposes
Some increases are inevitable, and the individual
It
to make a greater contribution towards its cost.
education will have
be hoped, however, that loan
who have
provisions and scholarship provisions will be such that those students
sought, through public institutions, both social and vocational mobility, will not be
hampered. The Master Plan ultimately should come forth with a meaningful philosophy of public higher education, in addition to its concern for independent institutions.
The Plan calls for greater emphasis on Continuing Education. During the past
year, this College appointed a Director of Summer Sessions and Continuing Education,
and tried to take its part in this vital area of educational concern. In a world in
which occupations are changing rapidly and radically, the major hope for man:
individuals is flexibility achieved through a continuing process of learning.
The Master Plan is cognizant of the need for further educational opportunities for
the disadvantaged. Bloomsburg has assumed responsibility for trying to provide such
educational opportunities but the process is costly, and financial support has not
been forthcoming. Nevertheless, this College will continue to do what it can to provide
meaningful opportunities.
There has been emphasis upon the need for cooperative endeavors regionally
with public and private working together. This past year has seen meaningful cooperation among all segments of higher education, a degree cf corporation w’hich, heretoMore, of course, is needed, but the coming era will
fore, had not effectively existed.
receiving an
is to
see the emergence of regional consortia.
Finally, the Master Plan calls for a Board from the various segments of higher
education to advise the Council on Higher Education. I have, I am pleased to say,
been asked to serve in this capacity. This is a meaningful step towards better communication among all segments of higher education, and among the institutions, the
and the legislature.
The Master Plan indicates the need for private support of public education. As I
am sure all of you recall. The Bloomsburg Foundation was established during the
past academic year in an attempt to gain private funds for those things that the State
public,
either cannot or should not undertake.
In keeping with the efforts of the Foundation,
Alumni Association has turned over to the College all fund-raising activities. You
will be hearing more about this; the need is great to provide many of the educational
the
services for which only private monies can be used.
CAMPUS BUILDING
PROGRAM CONTINUES
by Boyd F. Buckingham
Alumni returning to campus for Homecoming Day
Activities on October 9 will notice several changes in
both the Upper and Lower Campus areas.
Six new projects are curently under construction at an
estimated cost of $7,200,000, and several others are in
either the planning or design stage.
The new Gymnasium on the Upper Campus is expected
to be completed before the end of this year at a cost of
$2,435,000. The gym will provide areas for varsity basketball, wrestling, and swimming as well as health and
physical education classes and intramural activities.
Nearly $200,000 worth of movable equipment must be installed before the gym will be completely ready for use.
More than
Husky Lounge, formerly
make way
for the
the gymnasium, comes down
new Student Center building.
to
$1,000,000 is being spent to install utilities,
roads, and parking areas on the Upper Campus. Although
this project will not be completed before July, 1972, it is
expected that a 350,000 gallon reservoir and utilities in
some areas will be finished earlier to accomodate the
the new gym next spring. The utilities will be installed in
sites, wiiere new' classroom buildings, residence halls, a
dining room, and other projects are to be constructed in
the future.
A
parking area adjacent to Elwell Residence
more than 200 cars when it is
completed in December at a ccst of $467,000. Adjoining
streets will be widened and new' srdewalks constructed.
Most of the steel w'ork and the concrete block and brick
facing of the new' air conditioned Administration BuildThis
ing will be completed by Homecoming Day.
structure, located on the site previously occupied by
Dillon House, will provide central offices for a number of
administrative and office personnel now located in different buildings. One wing of the building will house offices,
loading docks, and storage areas for the receiving and
disbursing of college suplies. The target date for completion is April, 1972; estimated cost of construction is
triple-level
Hall will provide spaces for
Work
is
Dillon
House
underway on
site.
new'
President’s
Administration Building
home
is in
on
the background.
$1,350,000.
Old Husky Lounge has been demolished to prepare the
Student Center. When completed in Decemnew center wall house the College Store, a
formal lounge, a snack bar and dining area, multi-purpose
rooms, an area for four bowling alleys, a game room, a
television lounge, a listening room for hi-fi and stereo
record playing, offices and workrooms for student publications, a first aid center, and offices for student organizations.
Completely air-conditioned, the center wall cost
$1,250,000 plus the cost of movable equipment.
New' recreation areas are being constructed to meet one
of the most critical needs on campus. By June. 1972 there
should be 18 all-weather tennis courts mine will be lighted
for night-time use), a football soccer field, a softball
diamond, and a new' road connecting Chestnut Street with
Light Street Road. The playing fields are to be used only
for health and physical education classes and intramural
site for a new
ber, 1972, the
athletic activities.
mate $550,000..
The cost
New
field
house on the upper campus takes form.
of the project will approxi-
Several problems continue to block approval of plans
for newr athletic fields for varsity football, baseball, and
track. It is hoped these problems can be resolved in the
near future so that all varsity athletic contests can be
played on campus.
The Capital Budget has allocated funds
to 1. install one
converted boilers in the Heating Plant to make
gas and oil the primary sources of energy for heat and
hot water; 2. design and construct a residence hall on the
site of Waller Hall; 3. design and construct a classroom
building east of Andruss Library
4. provide installation
new and
2
;
of air-conditioning in Sutliff Hall.
New lawm areas, trees, shrubbery,
and flowers are being
planted near recently completed buildings as funds permit
SEPTEMBER,
1971
Construction area of multi-level parking garage at Second
and Penn
streets.
Page one
This
is
Bloomsburg State College
Someone once asked Ernest Hemingway, “What is the best early trainHemingway reing for a writer?”
“An unhappy
childhood.”
childhoods are unremarkably uniform these days, teachers of composition face a tough challenge. It isn’t like the good old days
when Lafayette College threw out
Stephen Crane and Lehigh University bounced Richard Harding Davis.
Bloomsburg State College this year
launched a new idea in teaching composition that may not produce Stephen
Cranes or Hemingways, but it won’t
discourage them, either, and it will
save the patience of everyone.
What Bloomsburg found in its freshmen is puzzling, yet true. Because of
higher admissions standards and better high schools in Pennsylvania, the
quality of writing composition by the
average freshman is up. Certainly
there are fewer F-rated writers getting into college. However, the reading background of freshmen has not
improved that much, if at all. The
paradox is that so many college freshmen are half-decent writers but indifferent readers.
The Bloomsburg English Department of 25 professors decided to junk
the worn-out system of inflicting a dull
English Composition course on everyone. Now tests are given, and at least
half the incoming class goes right into
an “English Laboratory” program.
plied,
Since so
Page two
many
New
in 1939. the
Centennial year.
"English Lad"
Program Replaces
Tiresome Lecture
B. BEERS
Associate Editor
Harrisburg Patriot-News
By PAUL
Students who are slow on grammar,
punctuation and the rest endure a
straight composition course for a semester and then head for the lab work
The lab has audio-visual methods
of teaching the fundamentals of writing. Ten professors are tutorial assistants to the lab. The staff has devised
10 slide shows on composition, plus 6
These presentations
tape cassettes.
are better than a lecture, because
pictures of writing
a professor’s voice
gives explanations over the earphones.
I sat through one slide presentation
on “The Whole Theme,” where the
elements of unity in a composition
were discussed and shown. It took
one essay of a cashier describing
Christmas shoppers. Her point was
that she was interested in the shop-
(they
offer visual
examples while
pers’ attitudes toward spending money. A poor theme was shown that had
make that point in the third
sentence. A good essay - or a proper
rewrite, editing job -- then revised
the cashier’s story and put her thematic point in the first sentence.
The 20-minute slide presentation
also has examples on content, style,
tone, methods of organization and
diction. A student quickly learns some
basics of good writing and editing
when he sees “nice” person scratched
out for “cheerful” person or “chaste"
as a
synonym for
not permitted
“pure” when used as an adjective
before “water.”
The tape I heard was of a Bloomsburg professor correcting a student’s
her essay
paper on why he liked growing up in
Newark, N.J. With the original comp
duplicated, the student can
fellow the professor’s telling how the
orition
Newark youngster
failed to develop
ideas, didn’t produce enough evidence
persuasion in the mind of
the reader and was too general and
unspecific to achieve any focus on his
to sustain
subject matter.
The slide and tape were a first-rate
job of teaching.
A college-qualified
youngster couldn’t fail to learn something after a few hours in the lab.
The lab course is set up so a student
studies on his own time and then
takes three, 1' a -hour each theme-examinations. He selects his topic from
a group offered and writes away.
(Continued on Page
3)
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
College Begins
Many
For
Every summer
B. S.
In
for the last eleven
a small number of students
have begun their college experience
at
Bloomsburg State in late June.
In the summer freshman program
at
BSC a student begins college dursummer main session, taking a
math and an English composition
course. He also takes a course of his
choice during post session, which begins in August, then returns to school
on a regular basis in January if he
meets the requirements of the sum-
mer program.
the program was aimed
giving students with a scholastic
weakness, who would not otherwise
be admitted to college, a chance at
higher education.
Initially,
at
‘Probies’ No Longer
Over the years, however, the
pro-
gram has changed.
Current Director
of Admissions, T. L. Cooper, presently
in charge of the program, stated “as
the program has grown, the quality
of the incoming summer freshmen
has improved.”
Cooper
noted,
the
summer freshmen were referred to
as “trial freshmen” or as “probationary freshmen,” which as things
go on campuses, led to somewhat
derogatory nicknames like “proby.”
Previously,
Now, although
the program
the central concept
still to admit a
group of students in the summer who
of
is
normally
cannot be accommodated
semester, the program is
no longer referred to as a “trial” or
probation
program
“This year there were 4,251 applications for 1,000 spaces for freshmen
in the
fall
‘
’
’
‘
Also, the summer frosh express
pleasure at the reception they received from upperclassmen, especially
C. Freshmen
Bloomsburg.
to
No Cars
years
ing
ing.
Summer
in September,” Cooper said, explaining, “the 279
freshmen admitted this year were unsuccessful
summer
Several facets of the summer program differ from the regular semesSummer freshmen cannot have
ter.
automobiles on campus, they mus:
reside on campus, and they must
achieve a 2.0 oi “C” average to return in January.
These factors. Cooper said, aid the
student in doing as well as he can.
Residing on campus, for instance,
provides easy access to the library,
the help of other students, and morning classes.
Prohibiting autos can
aid in keeping the student’s mind on
studying.
Requiring a “C” average
keeps the student from starting off on
the wrong foot, builds his confidence,
and helps him when he enters the
stronger, regular semester competiJanuary.
Researching ‘Success’
John L. Walker.former director of
admissions and current dean of students, said his personal observation
indicates the program has been successful.
Walker noted that a study
of the program is underway through
the college research center which
tion in
will reveal in detail just
how
success-
it has been.
Although figures are not yet available on the number of students who
enter college through the
summer
program and complete a foui’-year
program. Walker said he believes
frem his own observation that about
the same percentage
of
students
entering in the summer graduate as
ful
who
Head of
the
change
in
those
to
enter in the Fall.
program when it began
the
1965, Walker said
ment, recommendations, and personal
college
deemphasized
admitting
students with a weakness through the
program because it became a “matter
of fairness.”
Matter of ‘Fairness’
“Since five years ago,” Walker said
“the applications for freshmen spaces
at BSC have tripled. We were faced
with a large group of applicants with
good qualifications but not quite good
interview.
enough
in competing for those 1,000 spaces,
but most had the necesary qualifica-
tions for admission.”
Applications, Cooper said are evaulated by five criteria:
class
rank,
standardized test results (such as
college boards), high school achieve-
The most highly
qualified students
in all areas are accepted for the fall
semester.
Others are offered
the
summer program, and
if
they
are
are admitted in January
withdrawals, graduations
and
to
make
it
in
September, and
yet not poor enough to be admitted
ir.
the summer program. They were
the next in line and we asked ourselves, how fair are we
being
to
for
them?”
As an example of the general success of the program Walker quoted
Many of the students admitted to
the summer program at BSC
this
the following figures:
in 1968, 129
students were admitted in the summer
and 117 qualified for January admis-
year, Cooper said, had been accepted for the fall semester and regular
admission at other schools, but they
sion; in 1969, 136
qualified: in 1970,
and 154 qualified.
wanted
Summer freshmen, although many
complain about Commons food, having
to stay on campus, and lacking automobiles, agree that summer sessions
allow a more relaxed pace for study-
successful,
when
academic
failures
make
room
them.
to
come
to
Bloomsburg.
Others, he said, because of financial
or other reasons, would not go to
college at all if it were not for the
summer program which admits them
SEPTEMBER,
1971
were admitted. 119
181 were admitted
the members of the orientation committee, which guides rather than hazes
incoming students.
“Hazing is a thing of the past, we
just don’t do it anymore,” said one of
three co-chairmen of the orientation
committee.
It seems to have worked well for
the frosh. “I like the upperclassmen
a lot,” one lad said, looking at pretty,
shapely Mary Wachter, a committee
chairman with the freshest freshman
gleam his eyes could muster.
(ENGLISH LAB,
Continued)
When he passes
three exams he’s completed the course. Many students do
this early in the semester, completing their English comp course in a
hurry and devoting the rest of the
term to their other college studies.
The Bloomsburg experiment was set
up by Dr. Louis F. Thompson, head of
the English Department. He was as
tired of the old lecture hall composition courses as the past 10 generations
oi college
students.
Mrs. Virginia Duck was one of his
faculty members who applied imagination in making the tapes and slide
presentations.
Another on the staff
is Richard Savage who was a professional
writer for the Saturday
Evening Post. Savage now concentrates on poetry.
Bloomsburg’s new president, Dr.
Robert
J.
Nossen
is
humanities mind-
ed and welcomed the experimental lab
project. Not only is it more efficient
but it is a desirable method of handling large numbers of students. Bloomsburg isn’t a little school anymore.
With 3.800 students, it is now twice as
big as it was in 1960.
NEW FACULTY FOR
1971-72
Dr. Walter A. Simon, Director of
Education Opportunity Program and
Piofessor of Art.
William G. Williams, Professor of
Business and Coordinator of Legal
Affairs
Frederick
J.
Carberry, Temporary
Assistant Professor of Sociology
Dr. Stephen D. Beck, Professor and
Chairman. Dept, of Mathematics
Dr. Robert R. MacMurray, Professoi
of
Economics
Thomas W. Wheeler,
Instructor of
Speech with responsibilities as Technical Director of Theatre.
Dr. Gerald W. Powers, Professor of
Communication Disorders and Director of Deaf Education
Miss Karen S. Tesreau, Temporary
Assistant Professor of Physical Education
Dr. Chang Shub Roh,
Sociology
Professor of
Page three
—
DEGREES AWARDED
514
AT JUNE COMMENCEMENT
“We
live in an age of mediocrity
widespread mediocrity in key
places in business or education and
even in the armed forces, can be deadening, even destructive, to any country,” Dr. John A. Hoch told the grad-
and
uating seniors of Bloomsburg State
College at the May 30 commencement
exercises held at the Bloomsburg Fairgrounds.
Dr. Hoch, Vice President and Dean
of the Faculties, said a few of the
causes of mediocrity in many instances are the result of labor union regu-
by seniority of
unqualified politicians and non-interested voters, broad results of taxation
policies and the adjustment of school
curriculum to the ability of the average or below-average pupils.
“We have moved almost unconsciously toward achieving the greatest
good for the greatest number,” he
said, “but we have neglected that
small group of potential readers
through whom human happiness has
in the past been attainable and attained. For Americans it is at the moment vital to provide a cultural climate
lations,
$2.7
promotions
in which exceptionally high intelligence is detected and subsidized ac-
cordingly.
“Somehow
our
national leadership
in religion, in education
craft should rise to the
and
in state-
occasion and
counteract the blight which mediocrity has been casting over our boasted
culture.”
Following the awarding of degrees,
which included 23 Master of Education
degrees and 491 bachelor degrees,
William A. Oluley, President of the
Class of 1971, delivered the response.
He pointed out that as a result of the
physical growth his class has seen it
is no longer correct to refer to B.S.C.
as “the friendly college on the hill”
because it will soon occupy not one.
but two hills.
He also cited the growth of the college in terms of enrollment and in the
development of the fraternity and
sorority system, but said it is not
on these that B.S.C. should place its
greatest emphasis.
“In the final analysis” he declared
“any college must stake its reputation
on
its
fulfillment of its
primary
BILLION RECEIVED IN
FINANCIAL AID AT BSC
Financial Aid Statistics for fiscal
year 1970-71 indicate Blomsburg State
College students have received $2.7
million toward educational expenses.
The aid was distributed among
2,783
students according to need. Included
in the trial figure is $1,200.00 in Guar-
anteed Loans provided by local banks.
Nationally, these loans total $1.5 billion and are the main source of funds
for higher education.
PHEAA
Scholarship accounting
the
for $846 000 in direct aid to BSC students. This fund is contingent upon action by the state Legislature each year.
iation.
to
Once accepted as a student, the key
most assistance is the Parent’s
Confidential Statement filed through
the College Scholarship Service. Notable exceptions are the State Scholarship and Guaranteed Loans which
have separate applications to PHEAA.
Full details are available in the office
the Director of Financial Aid,
of
Bloosmburg State College.
Page four
my
my
dynamic existence.”
Welcoming remarks by Dr. Robert
as a
Nossen, president of the college, followed the invocation by Rev. Jay
Rochelle, Protestant Campus Minister.
Candidates for the bachelor degrees
presented by Dr. Hoch, and
those for master degrees were presented by Charles H. Carlson. Dean of the
School of Graduate Studies. President
Nossen and William E. Booth, vice
were
president of the Board of Trustees,
conferred the degrees.
FORMER ATTORNEY GEN.
IS NAMED TO FACULTY
William G. Williams, Former Attorney General, General Counsel to the
Department of Education and the
Civil Service Commission for the Commonwealth of Pensylvania. began his
new duties as Professor of Business
and Coordinator of Legal Affairs at
BSC on June 7, 1971.
A native of Williamstown, Pennsylvania, Williams received his early
education in the schools of Harrisburg
and Williamstown. He was awarded
his Bachelor of Arts degree from
Gettysburg College in 1942 and received his Doctor of Jurisprudence
from Dickinson School of Law in 1946
In addition to the position he held
with the Commonwealth of Pensylvania, Williams has been in general law
practice in Harrisburg for the past
eighteen years. He has also served as
Assistant Attorney General on th"
Board of Review for the Unemployment Compensation Bureau from 1963
to 1970.
From December. 1953 to 1957
he was associated with the Bureau of
Social Security for Public Employees
The second largest source remains
Other sources include part-time employment during the school year
which provides $317,000 to 800 undergraduates, National Defense Loans.
Educational Opportunity Grants, and
loans provided by the Alumni Assoc-
that of providing an intelfunction
lectual community in which students
and faculty can creatively learn to
grow together, to advance the ideas
of education and individual growth.
fellow gradcharge to
“It is
uating seniors that in the future we
make an effort to bridge some of the
gaps which exist in our world today
and continue to search within ourselves for the means to continue to
grow educationally and creatively as
individuals who must deal with life
of the
Commonwealth
Department
of
of
Pennsylvania
Labor and Industry
in
the capacities of counsel for a year
and a half, acting director for a year,
and special advisor to the Bureau for
a year.
Dr. John A. Hoch, Vice President
and Dean of the Faculties at Bloomsburg State College, has asked that he
be relieved of his administrative responsibilities and that he be given a
classroom teaching assignment. Dr.
Hoch indicated that he was acting on
the advice of his physician.
Dr. Robert Nossen, President of BSC
said he would hold Dr. Hoch’s request in abeyance pending action by
the Board of Trustes.
Upon his graduation from Dickinson School of Law in 1946, Professor
Williams taught for seven years a!
that institution. He has written several articles which have appeared
the Dickinson Law Review.
in
HOMECOMING DAY
SATURDAY, OCT.
9,
1971
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
New head
football coach. Bill Sprou-
have to find some key replacements on both the offensive and defensive units for players lost through
will
graduation.
Wingback Bob Warner,
vania
back
tack.
found
Paul
All PennsylConference Selection, will be
to lead the Husky ground atReplacements will have to be
for his running mates, fullback
Skrimcovsky, and tailback Bill
Firestine.
IS
NAMED
HEAD FOOTBALL COACH
Husky Football Squad
1971
le,
BILL SPROULE
On
Key Positions Open
On
will
NAIA Honorable Mention
tackle Bill
Nagy, and defensive ends Ted Schmittel and Mark Sacco, along with Hugh
Jones and John Davis, key defenders
in the backfield.
Mike Devereux may
more duty at quarterback, although he could be shifted to a running position with sophmore Bob
Two key
Better calling the signals.
returnees are punter Dan Stellfox, who
averaged 40.6 yards per boot, and
place kicker Neil Oberholtzer, who.
in addition to kicking the extra points,
booted six field goals, two over 40
yards.
If the returning veterans, along with
incoming sophomores, can fill the
vacancies of those mentioned above,
the Huskies should be in for another
winning season. Last year's record
see
was 5-3.
In addition to the regular Pennsylvania State College opponents, the
University of Scranton returns to the
FORMER BSC BASKETBALL
COACH GETS UTAH POST
Bill Foster, BSC coach from 1960-63.
was named head basketball coach at
the University of Utah in early spring.
Foster served as head coach at Rut-
gers University for eight years after
leaving BSC. His 1966-67 team finished
third in the National
Invitational
Tournament
New
York. The enviable record
was accomplished by Foster during his three years
in
of 45-13
BSC.
Dick Lloyd, Foster’s star eager at
BSC and freshman coach at Rutgers,
was named to the head mentor position at Rutgers when Foster accepted
the Utah appointment.
Lloyd. Class
at
of 1962, set numerous BSC records during his undergraduate years, many of
which still stand. He w as named to the
Conference All-Star team in 1960 and
1962.
His younger brother Bob was
selected as Rutgers’ first All-American
r
in 1967.
SEPTEMBER,
College at Homecoming on October 9,
a team they haven’t played since 1957.
Blcomsburg has yet to defeat the University of Scranton, having been defeated four times, while the Huskies
have the edge in the series with California 5-3-2.
CROSS COUNTRY
the offensive line, re-
be neded for split end
Mike Kclojejchick. center Steve Harmanos. and guard Joe Bottiglieri.
Defense may present the biggest
problem to Sproule with the loss of
placements
schedule after an absence of 17 years.
The Huskies entertain California State
1971
Following two very successful seasons 11-1 and 10-1) under the direction of Dr. Clyde Ncble. the 1971 edition of the Husky thinclads appears to
<
have a bright future.
Only one runner. Dave Kelter, has
been lost through graduation. Leading the returning veterans are tw o
junior outstanding runners. Tim Waer
chter and Terry Lee. who alternated in
the one and two finishing positions
Strong
for the Huskies last year.
support is expected to come again
from seniors Paul Pelletier and Larry
Strchl, last year’s captain, along with
sophomore Larry Horwitz. Another
sophomore. Mike Hippie is also being
counted on strongly and two fresh-
men, Don Nauss and Bob Faux may
well work their way into top spots.
Coach Noble indicates it wall be extremely difficult to improve on the
records of the past two years. The
is expected to
Millersville, the only team
to defeat BSC last year. Lock Haven
S. C., Bucknell U., and Susquehanna
U. are also expected to field strong
toughest
competition
come from
aggregations.
Chuck Daly is another former BSC
eager who has “arrived” in the
coaching profession. Daly, Class of
1952, who played his BSC basketball
under Harold Shelley in the 1950’s,
was named this spring to succed Dick
Harter as head basketball coach at the
University of Pennsylvania. He previously served as freshman coach at
Duke University for two years, then
replaced Bob Cousey as head coach
at Boston College before being named
to the Penn position. Daly played his
high school basketball at Kane High
School in western Pennsylvania under
Dr. Stuart Edwards, current Dean of
the School of Professional Studies at
BSC.
William J. Sproule, Assistant Professor of Health and Physical Education, was appointed Acting Head
Football Coach for the 1971-72 academic year during the latter part of June.
Sproule, a native of Lansford, Pennsylvania, has been a member of the
faculty since August, 1969, and has
served since that time as Assistant
Football Coach and Assistant Wrestling Coach.
A
graduate of Syracuse Univerw here he received a Bachelor of
Arts degree in Physical Education,
Sproule played football under Coach
of the Year Floyd “Ben” Schwartzwalder. He was a member of Schsity,
r
wartzwalder’s 1959 National Championship Football Team which played
in the Cotton Bowl.
While at Syracuse, Sproule was named “Outstanding Senior” in the Department of
Athletics
and Physical Education,
Teacher Training Division, and achieved academic recognition for six
semesters on the Dean’s List.
Sproule received his Master of Scidegree in Physical Education
ence
from
then
Brooklyn College, and since
has
completed postgraduate
work at New York University and the
State University College at Cortland.
New York. His previous coaching experiences include positions as Head
Football, Track and Baseball Coach
at Waterville Central High School in
New York, and as Assistant Football Coach at Smithtown High School.
Dr. Charles H. Carlson, Dean, School
Graduate Studies and Director of
Research Activities, has been elected
to a second term as president of the
Pennsylvania State College and University Graduate Deans Asociation.
of
New
A veteran
Army as a
2nd Lieutenant, Sproule was a member of the U.S. Army Football Team
at Fort Dix, New Jersey, and served
Smithtown,
GETS SECOND TERM
York.
of service with the U.S.
as Director of the Post Football Clinic.
He is married to the former Joanne
Pavlick of Coaldale, pensylvania, and
is the father of three children.
Page
five
AGENDA FOR HOMECOMING WEEKEND
Friday, October
8:30 P.M.
—
8,
1971
Name
Entertainment Committee will present the “New York Rock Ensemble” in concert
All seats reserved— $2.00 per person.
Tickets may be secured in advance by writing to John Trathen, Comptroller, Community Activities, Box 37, Bloomsburg
State College, Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815. The Homecoming Queen will be crowned at
Big
in
Haas Auditorium.
the intermission of the concert.
Saturday, October
9,
1971
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
service.
P.M. — Football — Millersville State College — Town Athletic Park, 7th and Iron Streets.
Admission — Adults $1.50; Students — $1.00.
P.M. — 5:30 P.M. — Residence Halls will be open to visitors.
P.M. —Dinner for Alumni and visitors — cafeteria service — Scranton Commons — $1.25 per person.
P.M. —Semi-formal Dance — Two locations:
West Dining Hall (Blue Room) — Scranton Commons — “URSA MAJOR” — suggested for students and recent graduates.
East Dining Hall (Gold Room) — Scranton Commons — “THE STAGGS” — suggested for
faculty and less recent graduates. Admission — $1.50 per person; Current Alumni Membership
A.M. 5:30 P.M.
Registration and Refreshments
Student Union Building.
A.M. 12:00 Noon
All College Buildings except Residence Halls will be open for inspection by Alumni
and Visitors.
*10:15 A.M.
Homecoming Parade begins at Parking Area, Centennial Gym.
12:00 Noon
Luncheon begins for Alumni and visitors Scranton Commons
cafeteria
$1.25 per person
8:30
8:30
2:00
4:30
5:30
8:30
Card or Faculty Activities Card will admit member and guest free
and Alumni are welcome to attend the dance of their choice.
of charge.
Students, faculty,
"The parade will form at Centennial Gym, proceed down Second and Main Streets to Market, south on Market to the Bloomsburg Town Park. The theme for Homecoming Activities will be “It Was a Very Good
Year.” All Alumni and friends are urged to come to Bloomsburg early to see this gala procession.
DEGREE APPROVAL
BSC has been
DR.
notified
by the De-
STATE ADVISORY GROUP
CommonEducation,
of
wealt of Pennsylvania, that the approval to offer the Bachelor of Science
degree in public nursing in the
School of Professional Studies has
been renewed. Although the program
for the degree in public school nursing
has been offered at BSC for nearly 20
years, the program has been revised
to conform to present standards re-
partment
commended by
the State
Board
of
Dr. Robert J. Nossen, President of
Bloomsburg State College, has been
appointed a
Danville.
Page
six
Holiday
of the Advisory
to the State
Education for the
Council of Higher
academic year, according to
an announcement by Dr. W. Deming
Lewis, Chairman of the State Board
of Education of the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania.
The appointment is
pursuant to the 1971 Master Plan for
Higher Education and in accordance
1971-72
Ed-
OVERNIGHT ACCOMODATIONS
Bloomsburg Highway;
member
Committee on Planning
ucation.
Reservations for overnight accomodations for Homecoming Weekend
should be made directly with the MaHummel’s
gee Hotel, Bloomsburg.;
Motel, Route 11, Bloomsburg; Riverview Motel, R. D. 1, Berwick; Stone
Castle Motel and Restaurant, R. D. 2,
Bloomsburg; Keller’s Motel, R. D. 4,
Danville; Pine Barn Inn & Motel, Danville; Reichard’s Motel, R. D. 4, Danville; Red Maple Motel, R. D. 2, Berwick; Hotel Berwick, Berwick; Tennytown Motel, Berwick Highway, Bloomsburg; Brair Heights Lodge, Berwick-
NOSSEN APPOINTED TO
with agreement of the State Board of
Education and the Council of Higher
Education. As a member of the Advisory Committee, Dr. Nossen represents the Board of State College Presidents.
of
William H. Rea. Chairman, Council
Higher Education, has indicated
that the major responsibilities of the
Advisory Committee
Ellamae Jackson, who
Dean
of
Women
with students at
retired
as
summer chats
a Summer Session
this
Inn,
picnic.
will
be to meet
periodically with the Council of Higher
Education, work to improve communication with all segments of Higher
Education in Pennsylvania, and make
more effective and productive the
planning function of the Council.
TIIE
ALUMNI QUARTERLY
A portrait of Dr. Francis B. Haas, former BSC President. was presented to the college recently by Mr. and
At left are Mrs.
Mj-s. William A. Lank, shown at right.
Mary Haas Gailey and Francis B. Haas, Jr., daughter and
son of Dr. Haas. Presentation was made on occasion of
official naming of the auditorium as the Francis B. Haas
Center for the Arts.
B. S.
9 18
U. of Scranton
H
Lock Haven
A
A
H
H
A
H
A
Mansfield
California
West Chester
Millersville
Cheyney
Kutztown
East Stroudsburg
Play off East
—
H
SWIMMING
11
15
Temple
H
Wilkes
A
A
A
H
H
A
A
Kings
Millersville
8
Kutztown
29
E. Stroudsburg
Indiana
2
5
9
12
16
23
25
CROSS COUNTRY
BASKETBALL
9 25
1
Andruss, President Emeritus.
C. Fall and Winter Sports Schedules
VARSITY FOOTBALL
10 2
10 9
10 16
10 23
10 30
11 6
11 13
11 20
Miss Ethel Wilson, of the Business Office staff holds
certificate of service presented her at a luncheon in July
recognizing her 40 years of employment of BSC. With her,
from left are: C. M. Housknecht, former Business Manager: Paul C. Martin, Business Manager; Dr. Harvey A.
Lock Haven
S. Rock and California
West Chester
H
H
Trenton
A
H
12 2
12 4
12 8
12 11
12 14
12 16
12 18
12 29
1
8
1
25
29
2
5
9
12
16
19
22
24
26
29
Baptist Bible
H
9
Cheyney
A
Shippensburg
West Chester
H
A
A
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
11
11
Cheyney
Millersville
H
& 19 S. Hampton (Tournament)
& 30 Berwick (Tournament)
E. Stroudsburg
Baptist Bible
H
Mansfield
A
A
A
Cheyney
H
Shippensburg
West Chester
A
Kutztown
A
Kutztown
Lock Haven
H
A
A
H
A
ALUMNI CHAIRS
Note: Schedules for all Fall and Winter sports, except Football, are ten-
Alumni Chairs are now available at
the College Store.
We have a Captain’s Chair with Cherry Arms for
$40.95 plus tax and shipping, and a
Boston Rocker for $31.95 plus tax and
shipping. The chairs are black with
a gold BSC Seal. Please write the
College Store at Bloomsburg State
College and we will be glad to send
you more information, or stop in to
see the chairs on Homecoming Day,
tative.
Saturday, October 9th.
10
Clairon
&
11
Penna. Conference
Meet—
Clarion
3 23,
24
&
25
NAIA Championship
Meet
SEPTEMBER,
1971
Lock Haven
E. Stroudsburg
& Kings
>>a>a>w>>
Kutztown
Susquehanna
E
.
Stroudsburg
Millersville
NAIA Millersville
—
Mansfield
Bucknell
Penna. Conference
W. Chester
>x
Meet
H
Millersville
E. Stroudsburg
Mansfield
Kings
Shippensburg
Mansfield
Cheyney & Wilkes
WRESTLING
12 11
12117
11 8
1115
1 19
Quadrangular
Quadranguler
Oregon State
Oswego
Clarion
State
122
Shippensburg
28
1 29
2 3
2 5
California
1
2110
2 19
Waynesburg
Millersburg
Kutztown
Lock Haven
E. Stroudsburg
2|25
&
26
3
&
4
3
1
3|
9,
College
West Chester
10
Penna. Conf. Meet
NCAA
&
11
Championship Meet
NAIA Championship
Meet
Page seven
NEWS ABOUT YOUR CLASSMATES
Your classmates and friends are inwhere you are and
what’s happening to you. So, if you
change your adress, start a new job,
get married, or welcome an addition
to the family, send the news to the
Alumni Office, Bloomsburg State
College, Bloomsburg, Pa., 17815 and
Square, London. S
terested in knowing
we’ll publish it in the next issue of
the Quarterly. The news should reach
the Alumni Office by any of the fol-
lowing dates:
1,
May
1,
November
or August
1,
February
1915
August
(Mrs.
Michelini), 113 Orono St., Clifton,
New Jersey, is the mother of Dr.
Francis Michelini, who became President of Wilkes College on July 1.
1970.
1923
The Rural Group
the Class of
1923 enjoyed a very pleasant day at
Ralph
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Beagle, R. D. 5. Danville. Pa, on
June
A
5,
of
1971.
delicious
I,
England.
Kenneth E. Wire, 4104 Walnut St..
Harrisburg, Pa., 17109, w'as recently
reappointed as Controller for the Harrisburg Steel Co., a Division of the
Harsco Corporation.
covered
dinner
dish
was served to
D.l.
Seely,
R.
Annie Bronson
Drums; Sarah Levan Leighow, R. D.
3, Catawissa, Pa.; Ruth Geary BeaR. D. 5, Danville, Pa.; Dr. Elma
Major, R. D. 2, Dallas, Pa.; Emily
E. Craig, R. D. 3, Catawissa, Pa.
Leona Williams Moore, Simsburg,
Conn., a member of the group, extended greetings by telephone.
John Rowlands is married
former Alma Corman, ’27.
address is 505 Park Ave.,
port. Pa. 16915
Marjorie
Smith
address of
(Mrs. Roderick Reber) is 215 Surrey
Road, Chalfont, Pa. 18914
The
Clarence Meiss, ’50 and Elizabeth
at
Walters Meiss, ’51, are living
Catonsville, Maryland, with son John,
age 13. Clarence is head of the Guidance Department at Catonsville Senior H. S.
1954
Betty Hoover (Mrs. Stephen Wolfe
earned a law degree from the University of California at Davis this
spring and accepted a position as
law clerk in the U. S. District Court
Her husband earned
in Sacramento.
his Ph.D. in Biology at Johns Hopkins University in 1962 and is associate
professor of biology at the University
of California at Davis. They and their
children, Andr a and Eric, reside at
1133 Dartmouth Place, Davis, California 95616.
1955
Shirley Redline
Thomas
(Mrs. C.
Fenstermacher) was awarded
the
Master of Education degree by Western Maryland College in June. Her
address is 983 York Street. Hanover.
Pa.
17331
to
1957
the
Their
Couders-
William J. Pohutsky and wife (Mary
Grace, ’58) now live at 222 West End
Avenue, North Plainfield. New Jer-
1929
Dorothy Schmidt wall be at 7-14
Denenchofu 3-Chome, Ota Ku, Tokyo
December
15,
1971.
From
then until April 15, 1972, her
address will be 47 Claremont Ave..
N. Y.. N. Y. 10027
1939
Alfred P.
members
Koch
of
one of seventeen
Lehigh University
honored in May for
is
the
faculty and staff,
25 years of service to the University.
A certified public accountant, he is a
professor of accounting at Lehigh.
1940
Mrs. Eleanor Sabota (Eleanor Beckis now living at 303 East Ann
St., Valdosta, Georgia. 31601
ley)
The address of Mr. and Mrs. CharNew Delhi.
les R. Bakey, Jr., is
Department of State. Washington. D.
C. 20521. Mrs. Bakey is the former
Charlotte Gearhart,
’41.
1941
Irene
Konrad)
Diehl
is
Page eight
now
Klusman earned
(Mrs.
William
living at 13
A.
Codogan
is
ville,
Pa.,
degree
from
Rutgers
1963
in Business Administration
nell University in May.
Pekala
J.
at R.
D.
1,
(Mrs.
Plaza) is
Park.
Woodlawn
Hazleton, Pa. 18201
Joseph
W. Johnston, 60 Sylan
Drive, York, Pa., 17402, received the
Master of Education degree
from
Shippensburg State College in May.
Charles F. Dye, R. D.
17315,
will
join
the
5,
by Buck-
1964
Robert R. Erdman received
the
Master of Science degree in August
at Bucknell University.
Reginald
J.
Arnold
7205 Parkview
Virginia. 22042.
Howard
Rising Sun
J.
to
Ave.,
now
is
Falls
living at
Church
Frear has moved from
R. D.
2.
Box
302. Street.
Maryland, 21154
Roy A.
Peffer, 701
Green Acre
Mechanicsburg. was awarded the Master of Education degree in
Elementary Education at Shippensburg State College in May.
Street,
1965
Dr. George T. Barthalmus. assistant professor of zoology at North Carolina State University, is
one of thirty
members chosen by
their
and recent alumni as Outstanding Teachers for 1970-1071.
Carol S. Hoover (Mrs. Ronald R.
Yoder) has changed her address to R.
D. 1. Huntingdon. Pa. 16652.
Donna Eckhart (Mrs. Lester Mease
now living at R. D. 1. New Holland.
Pa. 17557
18049
Nancy
Dan-
his
Gordon Vanderslice Thomas was
awarded the Master of Science degree
is
Robert A. Bottorf picks up his mail
at 673 North Street, Emmaus. Pa.
living
5,
Master’s
University in
received
June.
located at
60048
Illinois.
at
1962
1959
Joseph R. Yocum. IH,
Liberty ville,
the Master
Science degree in Education
Bucknell University in May.
of
faculty
students
sey. 07063
until
J.
Kerry E. Reidinger, R. D.
1926
Japan
1961
John
1950
gle,
145,
College in September. His address is
R. D. 1. Washington Boro, Pa. 17582
1.
Marchetti
Angeline
W
1949
Dover, Pa.
faculty
of
York
College (Penna.) in September as assistant professor in business education.
1960
Dr. William J. Yurkiewicz. a proffessor at Millers ville State College,
will assume additional duties as adjunct associate professor of biology,
a parttime position at Elizabethtown
1966
A
son was born to Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Mandak (Gertrude Hoffer) on
March
1.
The Mandaks and
their
three sons live at 577 North Locust
St., Hazleton, Pa. 18201
Karl K. Sheaffer was awarded the
Master of Education degree and John
R. Gotaskie the Master of Science
degree in Education at Bucknell University during
cises in May.
commencement
exer-
James A. Edwards, Penndel, Pa.,
and Wayne Marek. Levittown. Pa.,
received the Master
Education
of
degree from Rutgers University in
June.
1967
Second Lieutenant Eugene P. Miller was awarded his silver wings at
Vance AFB, Oklahoma, following
graduation from U. S. Air Force pilot
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
He earned
training.
the
Master
of
Science degree at Bucknell in 1969.
Drew
West
B. Poslock
4th Street. N.
is
Y„
.
WEDDINGS
.
.
.
1938
Florence Snook
March
was
married
in
to
4930
1958
Michael J. Marcinko, Fern Glen,
Michael
and Adalgisa P. Vagnoni.
teaches in the Hazleton Area School
District at the Rock Glen Jr. H. S.
Address: 239 Main St., Fern Glen. Pa.
University in
May. Classmate Ace T. Faust was
also in the same line of graduates to
receive the Master of Science degree
in Education.
Bucknell
Genevieve
Recia
resides at 17
Y. 12550
Roe
(Mrs.
St.,
Schmitz)
Newburgh. N.
Nester
Education
of
Master
the
in Reading at Shippensburg
State College in
May.
Susan C. Strine (Mrs. DoletskK is
Heather Road. Huntingdon Valley, Pa. 19006
living at 1578
1969
Thomas M. Eastep was awarded the
Miami
Master of Arts degree by
University (Oxford. Ohio)
His residence is Star Rt.
ensburg. Pa. 17257
Airman
Class Lee
First
in
2,
J.
June.
Shipp-
Berry
named Outstanding Airman
unit at Albrook AFB. Panama
has been
in his
1964
Marie Smolen (Mrs. Solensky).
Address: 1053 Alter St., Hazleton, Pa.
Janet Bohstedt (Mrs. Greenleaf).
Road.
Address:
2318
Catasauqua
Bethlehem, Pa. 18018
Canal Zone. A computer operator.
Berry was cited for his outstanding
performance of duty and exemplary
conduct.
Elaine F.
Zalonis
earned
tne
Master of Science degree at Bucknell University in May.
1970
Joyce Ann Brobst is a candidate for
a Master's degree in Biology at Illinois State University.
Holder of a
two-year Fellowship, she expects to
complete the degree requirements by
June, 1972.
Thomas C. Bedisky has been commissioned a second lieutenant in th°
U. S. Air Force.
He has been assigned to Mather AFB. California.
95655 for navigator training.
1966
Mary
Alice Woodruff and Kenneth
Dumbauld.
Address:
1902 Bellevue
Road, Harrisburg. Pa. 17104
1967
Carl G.
Hack and Susan Ann
Jas-
Both are teachers at Twin
Valley High School.
Susan graduated from Elizabeth College. Address:
Templin Road, Glenmoore. 19343
insky.
Karen Shivelhood. Williamsport ’70
and Larry Swisher, Fairless
Hills.
Both are employed by Union County
Schools in the area of special education. Address: 20 South 18th St., Lew-
1970
Pa.
Priscilla Zimmerman (Mrs. Kayes)
Address: Apt. 5, 1205 Phaestos Drive,
Whitehall, Pa. 18052
Sandra K. Sanford, '69, and .Joseph
Gribbon, ’70. Joe works for the
American Cancer Society. Address:
J.
P. O.
Box
1072. Oil City,
Pa. 16301
Barbara A. Dagle (Mrs. Beaver'.
Three well known theater, film, and
personalities appeared on the BSC
TV
summer
sessions.
Lillian Gish, one of the first stars of
motion pictures in the silent era.
spoke in conjunction with film clips of
some of her early movies. In the sum-
mer
theater productions. Robert Alda
appeared in the “Impossible Years”
and Lee Kurty appeared in “St. Joan.”
1971
Sheryll Ebeler and Wayne D. FredAddress: Apt. 3-D, 60 Vanderbeck St.. Hackensack, N.J. 07601
rick.
Harry K. Berkheiser,
Address:
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Bloss,
’71.
New
Jersey.
Mary
will
begin
her fourth year of teaching second
grade in Franklin Township, N. J. Her
husband is a cost control analyst
for Mobil Chemicals in Edison.
He
will attend Rutgers University this
fall.
Address: 70 JFK Blvd.. Apt.
26 K. Somerset. New Jersey. 08873
1969
Lynn Hall,
Marcella
Montoursville
and David G.
Moharter, Berwick.
Address:
Glenn
and
Washington
Avenues. Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Suzanne E. Dillman and Warren J.
Peel.
Address: Fairground
Street.
Lavelle. Pa.
Linda
and Juno
Fair
St..
’70, and Beverly
Address: R. D. 3.
John B. Parker,
Ann Boston,
’71.
Susquehanna, Pa. 18847
Andrysick and Fred KresAddress: R. D. 1, Orangeville.
Shirley
sley.
Pa. 17859
1971
Mary Lee
Williamsport,
and Edward G. Conway, North Plainfield.
’70
341
17943
Cressman.
Sandra Jefferson, Spring City and
Robert W. Rupp. Bloomsburg. Both
are 1971 BSC graduates. Address: 1016
Chestnut Street, Apt 3. Lebanon, Pa.
17042
Bloomsburg and
Address: 172 Bissets Lane. Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
Jane O.
James H.
Rupert,
Fisher.
Cynthia Sharretts, Bloomsburg and
John W. Sibole. John will begin his
senior year at Lehigh University this
fall.
Address: Will be living in Bethlehem, Pa.
E. Johnson. Berwick, and
Lyons, Berwick. Address:
c/o Airman 1/c Wm. J. Lyons, 195-424447. 5921 Security Group, Box 1423.
APO San Francisco, Calif.. 96210
Paula
William
J.
Quakertown and
Barbara Hershey, (Mrs. Myer). Address: 1211
Pa. 17603
Wabank Road.
Lancaster.
Robert Hauck. ’69. and Gloria Altemose, ’70.
Address: 617 North 7th
St., Allentown, Pa. 18102
GUEST STARS
the
bury, Pa. 17801
Ruth Ann Babb and Clark W. Hack.
1968
Steffen,
268 South Street, Carlisle. Pa. 17013
SEPTEMBER,
Street,
Cathy Ann Getty, Berwick and RobAdert D. McQuown, Shickshinny.
dress 15 North Main St., Shickshinny,
isburg, Pa.
James G. Fargu.s, Williamsport, both
members of the class cf 1969. Address:
campus during
Radcliffe
Address: 432 North Ninth Street, Sun-
Nan Carolyn Good
Mrs.
earned
degree
C-10, 1032
Bristol. Pa. 19007
Raymond
H. Barrett. AdLocust Lane, Colonial
Park Gardens, Harrisburg, Pa. 17109
dress:
1968
at
Pa. 17543
St., Lititz,
dress:
Donald R. Schnaars and Glenn E.
Halterman were awarded the Master
of Science degree in Business Administration
Broad
324 N.
.
Joanne Maletsky (Mrs. Owens) Ad-
residing at 235
N. Y. 10014
Correct address for Sue A. Chambers (Mrs. Griffiths) is 529 Chestnut
17844
St., Mifflinburg. Pa.
Donna Carson (Mrs. Olah) Address’
.
Nancy E. Geiger and Richard C.
Smith. Address: Apt. 13, 1340 Green
Valley Drive. Pittsburgh. Pa. 15220
Sharon Enslin and Gordon C. DodAddress: 75 East
First
St.,
Bloomsburg. Pa. 17815
son,
Salley Dever (Mrs. Sypek.)
Address: 17 Chestnut St., Tresckow, Pa.
18254
NEW GRADUATE PROGRAM
for a new graduate
in biology, leading to the
Approval
gram
ter of
pro-
MasScience degree at Bloomsburg
was received in early
Department of Education at Harrisburg. The program,
which is the first leading to the Master of Science degree at BSC, is being
State College,
summer from
the
offered during the 1971-72 college year.
Page nine
HUmnrtam
Jtt
ANNOUNCE NEW POLICY
FOR ISSUING TRANSCRIPTS
Robert Bunge, Registrar, has announced the following concerning re-
1892— Mrs. Eva McKevy, Montoursville,
Pa.
G.
1898 Laura Snyder (Mrs. U.
Mor grain) Lewisburg, Pa.
One of Dan1899 Rush Shaffer.
ville’s oldest citizens and one of the
oldest graduates of BSC. At the time
of his death, he was 95 years old.
1900 Phoebe Wightman (Mrs. A. F.
John) Mt. Carmel, Pa.
1901 Lela M. Shultz
(Mrs. Infred
T. Madsen)
1909 Emeline Schooley ( Mrs Ralph
L. Hazletine)
1909 Mary
Hughes (Mrs. H. N.
—
.
Lake) Carbondale, Pa.
1910 Margaret Jones, Dalton, Pa.
1916 Margaret E. Rutherford (Mrs.
Herbert Dygert)
1916 Ana Line (Mrs. Bowersox)
1916 Ruth Clark (Mrs. John Gum-
—
—
—
mer
1916 Roy D. Leidick, Tremont
1917
1919—Agnes Treon (Mrs. Willard J.
Davis) Danville, N. J.
1917 Mrs. Hester Saltzer
Fagan.
Mays Landing, N.
J.
Ruth Pope, Nanticoke, Pa.
1918
1918
quests for transcripts:
“Effective September 1, 1971, the
Office of the Registrar at Bloomsburg
State College will not release a transcript of any student or former student, without the live signature of the
student, authorizing the release of this
information. Verbal requests, including school districts, must have the
student’s authorization as well.
“This change in policy is necessitated to maintain the confidentiality
of student records.”
*
74anh.
you
Contributions to the Loyalty Fund to
July
1, 1971, not previously reported.
1909—
1901
1911— Mrs. Mary C. Ratajski
1903 Howard K. Houtz
1906 W. Raymond Girton
1907 Mrs. Sadie R. MacCulloch
—
—
Mary Southwood, Mrs. Adka
1908
Florence Altmiller (Mrs. Conrad Walters) Catonsville, Maryland
Mildred E. Stover, Scranton.
Pa.
1926 Evelyn Bomboy 'Mrs. Cour-
M. Westfield
Fred W. Diehl
Mrs. Fred W. Diehl, Mrs. Edward J. Robinson. Mrs. John S. Helt,
Mrs. Pauline S. Harper, Ruth Harris.
sen)
Ciass Gift
1912 P. Clive Potts, Floyd Tubbs
1913 Mrs. John B. Bradford, Homer
W. Fetterolf
1915 Mrs. D. J. Spiegel, Mrs. Invin
R. Weaver
1916 Mrs.
Margaret H. Porter,
Rachel C. Cappelle
1917 Allen L. Cromes, Mrs. Ruth
Freas Downing
Mildred A. Dietrick
Laura E. Mann
Kathryn Munroe 'Mrs.
Paul
Diehl
Ellen M. Whitehouse
1927 Martha Tasker (Mrs. Theron
Cook) Allentown, Pa.
1928— Mrs. Beulah Fairchild Mann.
North Brunswick, N.
—
1953 Edward
ington, Pa.
J.
J.
Campbell,
Ed had been head
football
Downcoach
since 1966
at
Downingtown High
School, after serving as
assistant
coach for 13 years. He suffered a
heart attack while coaching on Sep-
tember 19, 1970. He is survived by
his wife, a daughter, Sally, and a
son, Edward, Jr.
1970 Karen E. Campbell, Wyalusing, Pa.
Karen died of injuries sus-
—
tained in an automobile accident.
1923—
Smith
1919 Rhoda L. Crouse, Mrs. Eva
F. Ellis
1920 Mrs. Foster L. Pannebaker.
Mrs. William R. Turner. Mrs. BenjaJ. Eshleman. Mi's. Ruth E. Deit-
min
rick
1921
Mrs. Harry W. Scott, Mrs.
Earl D. Utt. Grace Griffiths, Class
Gift
Emily E. Craig. Mrs. W. Paul
Blancher
1924 Mr. and Mrs. Carl D. Blose
1926 Mrs.
Allen Earnhart, Mrs.
Ruth
Miller, Leora V. Souder,
Mrs.
1932—
Marion
1933— Eschenlauer
1927 Doris
G.
Palsgrove,
Mrs.
Alma Rowlands
EVENING ADULT CLASSES
Bloomsburg
College began
Continuing Education
Classes in September for high school
graduates who wish to broaden their
cifering
State
adult
interests, add to their knowledge of
specific subjects, or review certain
skills.
Persons enrolled in this program are not matriculated for a degree, but credits earned through Continuing Education may be accepted
at some later date for persons approved for admissions as regular students
by the Admissions Office.
Page
ten
1928
1929
Mrs. Martha D. Watkins
Mrs. H. C. Brockman, Mrs.
Raymond Goodwin
Mrs. Dorothy Foote Pihlblad.
Thursabert Schuyler Mrs. C. J. Coleman. Mrs. William J. Jones
1931 James B. Davis, Mrs. Naomi
Eble, Kenneth E. Hawk. Thomas J.
Henry, Mrs. Esther Y. Castor, Class
1930
Gift in
Memory
of Dr. Edward DeVoe
Dr. Henry J. Warman
Raymond Stryjak
Mrs. Joseph P. Davis
Sara M. Berger, Mrs. Ruth
1936
1937
Radcliffe
Dickerman
1938
1939
Mrs. R. H. Barrett
Robert P. Hopkins.
Pearl
Pcust
1940 Charles R. Bakey, Jr.
1941 Howard T. Williams, S. Frederick Wonnan, Mrs. Charles R. Bakey.
Jr.
1949
1953— Kenneth E. Wire
1950 Mrs. Dale H. Reichart,
Mrs.
Richard A. Ammerman
John T. Bogdan
1954 Mrs.
Patricia B. Hollings1957—
worth
1955 Jacob E. Slembarski
1956 Mrs. Carmel Casper
1960— Mrs. W. W. Hinkle
1958 James F. Snyder
1959 Robert
Murray,
W.
Mrs.
James M. Gustave
Mrs. Robert W. Murray
1961 James H. Kitchen, Mrs. Jane
Wilkouss. Mrs. Barbara M. Gasser
1962 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Enney
1963 Margaret Ann Hosey, Lynn E.
Shoop
1964 Dorthy P. Eisenhart
1965 Frank C. Doroman. Mrs Alan
S. Hoffman. Mrs. James H. Kitchen
1966 Mrs. Frank C. Doroman, Drew
.
B
Poslock. Mi's. Connie, L. Donahue
Lorraine M. Savidge, Stephen
1967
G. Korcl
1968 David V. Gerhard. Mr. and
Mrs. Dennis W. Byrne, David C. Gerhard
1969 Mark J. Ferraro, Mrs. Gary
F. Pender. Paul W. Canouse, Jr.
1970 Elizabeth A. Jones, Mary M.
Ratchko, Ellen R. Arnioine. Mrs. Karen R. Swasher
FORMER BLOOMSBURG STARS
NOW IN PRO GRID RANKS
One
out of
come
Bob Tucker, Class of
of the greatest athletes to
BSC
is
who had a great year as a rookie
with the New' York Giants of the NFL
Tucker set several natlast year.
ional NAIA college records as a tight
end for the Huskies in 1967. He continued his record breaking performances in leading the Atlantic Coast Foot1968,
League in 1968 and 1969 in pass
receptions.
He was signed by the
Giants after serving on the taxi squad
of the Philadelphia Eagles.
Two BSC teammates of Tucker’s,
quarterback Rich Lichtel and split
ball
end Stan Kucharski, have been members of the Atlantic Coast Football
League, and expect to be playing for
the Schuylkill Coalcrackers this season.
Lichtel w'as a college division
passing leader in 1967 and Kucharski
was a leader in pass receptions and
scoring until he w as injured in the
third game against Susquehanna University and was lost for the season.
Another gridder. Bill Nagy, 6’3” 250
lb. defensive lineman on the 1970 BSC
team, is expected to see considerable
action with the Norfolk (Va.) Neptunes of the Atlantic Coast Football
League this season. Nagy, who was
named best defensive player by his
BSC team members, received honorable mention on the 1970 NAIA AllStar American football selection.
r
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
ANNOUNCE RETIREMENT
OF 2 FACULTY MEMBERS
Two BSC faculty members, Miss
Ellamae Jackson. Dean of Students,
and Herbert H Reichard. Associate
Professor of Physics, recently retired.
NEW HEAD OF EDUCATIONAL
ADDRESSES UNKNOWN
OPPORTUNITY PROGRAM
you know' the address of any of
the following alumni, please send it
If
the Alumni Office, Bloomsburg
State College, Bloomsburg. Pa. 17815.
Gallagher (Mrs.
1895 Genevieve
to
—
Miss Jackson came to BSC in 1961
Dean of Women and was elected
to one of the Dean of Students positions created in 1970 when Elton Hun-
Mundy)
Wm.
1905—
singer became Associate Vice-President for Student Affairs. She was previously at Mansfield State College for
eleven years and had also been Assistant Dean of Women at Penn State.
She was also a member of the faculties of high schools in East Greenville.
Pennsylvania and Harrisburg. In 1944
Miss Jackson joined the American
Red Cross as Club Director in the
Her
China, Burma. India Theatre.
retirement was effective as of August
— Cecilia McMenamin (Mrs. Arthur Gilmore)
1926 — Fae Womelsdorf (Mrs. Tubickt
as
28.
Professor Reichard retired June 1
after 40 years of teaching service in
colleges and secondary schools in
1904
Mae
Wolfe (Mrs.
sion on
Klegmam
1910
Shovlin (Mrs. John Carr).
Pow'ei’l
Isaac, Gertrude
(Mrs. Norris Miller), James W. Jones,
Florence
Margaret
Helen Goulden
<
Mrs
Sachs
.
)
Mary
,
(Mrs. McEthenny), Eleanor
Roderick, Hazel Smith (Mrs. Stookey).
1959—Davis (Mrs. Durna)
Emily
1928 Mrs. Teloiv Wetzel
1960—
1933 Walter Jarecki
1950 Deryl J. Samois
1961—
Maher
—
—
—
1957— Robert DeWolfe
1964—Mrs. Bernadine McCoy, Ralph
F. Wetzel
Pennsylvania and Maryland.
Prior to
joining the BSC faculty in 1961. he was
a member of the faculty of William
Allen High School, Allentown, for a
period of 20 years.
He previously
served as Chairman, Department of
Mathematics,
Beall
High
School.
Frostburg. Maryland, as an Instructor
in Physics at Muhlenberg College, as
an Assistant Instructor at Penn State,
and as a Physics and Mathematics
Instructor at the Hazleton Undergraduate Center of Penn State.
In adition to his many years as an
outstanding classroom teacher, Reichard served as a Research Engineer
with the Fuller Company, as a Research Assistant in Electrical Engineering at Harvard University, as a
Graduate Assistant at Lehigh University and the University of Michigan, and as a Student Engineer of the
RCA Victor Company at Camden. N.J.
Bessie Goodale (Mrs. Charles
Thielman)
Tlhomas
E.
Stover,
CBivia
Greenway (Mrs. Henry Orband)
Judith Bole
(Mrs. Klaus Lu-
eth)
Mary
L.
Miskevich,
Wm.
Dr. Walter A. Simon, former assistant to the President, California Institute of the Arts at Los Angeles,
began his new appointment as Director of the Education Opportunity Program and Professor of the Arts at BSC
at the start of the main summer ses-
O.
Kraftchak
1965 Lynald E. Silsbee, Thomas J.
Miller, David R. Eyster, Kevin R.
Weaver. Alex M. Kozlowski
1967 William F. Skinner.
Janice
Galea, Carolyn E. Bennett, Lynn R.
Brownlee, Sara R. Hoffecker
1968 Marian R. Harris (Mrs. David
1970—
Eisenhower),
Ruth A. McGinley,
1969 Dale
A.
Clark.
Elizabeth
Gladkow'ski, Leona A. Parsons, David
L. Boster, John W. Mallin, HI. Mrs.
John W. Mallin, HI (Linda Watts),
George A. Ziolkow'ski. Jean G. Long.
Mi's. John M. Hutchings
(Patricia
Buiocchi), John M. Hutchings. Gerald
F. Sheperis
Mrs. Jane L. Corbin (Reed).
Mrs. Dale A. Clark (Dorothy Merz).
Charles J. Macunas. Thomas S. Troup
June
28.
Dr. Simon w as associated with the
California Institute of the Arts for a
period of two and one-half years. For
the previous eight years he served
with the United States Information
Agency of the Foreign Service in
Cairo, United Arab Republic; Kabul.
Afghanistan; and in Colombo. Ceylon.
He previously taught art in Georgia
State College in Savannah and Virginia State College at Petersburg and
New Jersey State College in Paterson.
His paintings have been exhibited
in the Wittenborn Gallery in New
York City, the Brooklyn Museum,
and at other exhibitions throughout
eastern United States and the countries in which he served with the U.S.
Foreign Service.
The Educational Opportunity Program was initiated on the campus of
r
BSC
in
August 1968 and
for
two years
was under the direction of Dr. Lee Aumiller, who at that time was Director
of Field Experiences and was later
named Chairman, Department of Secondary Education.
college year, the
by
Tom
During the 1970-71
program was headed
Cooper, Director of Admis-
sions.
REAPPOINTED
Dr. Percival Roberts. IH, Chairman,
of Art, has been reappointed Eastern Representative for
the Higher Education Section of the
National Art Education Association
by William Bealmer, President of
Department
NAEA
FACULTY SABBATICALS
Eleven faculty members will be on
sabbatical leave either part, or all, of
the 1971-72 college year.
Those who
will be on leave for the full academic
year are: Dr. Lee Aumiller, Chair-
man, Secondary Education:
Robert
L. Bunge. Registrar: Dr. William L
Jones. Director, Division of Human
Resources and Services;
Gerald H.
Strauss, Dept, of English.
Those who
will
be on leave during
the first semester only will be:
Dr
Margaret Leffevre, Communication
Disorders:
Theodore M. Shanoski.
Dept, of History; Miss Eleanor Wray.
Dept, of Physical Education.
The four members who will be on
leave during the second semester will
be:
Dr. Bruce E. Adams. Dept, of
Geography; Thomas R. Manley. Dept,
of Biological Sciences:
George G.
Stradtman. Dept, of Mathematics; Dr.
Louis F. Thompson. Chairman, Dept,
of English.
Eight faculty members will be re-
SEPTEMBER,
1971
FRESHMAN ORIENTATION
RECEIVES GRANT
Four three day orientation sessions
were scheduled this summer at BSC
for over 1.000 freshman who will be
matriculating
at
the
College
this
September. The first group of approximately 250 freshman arrived on Campus on July 11. Three other sesions
began on July 18. July 25, and August
The Department
of
Communication
Disorders received a grant of $10,120
from the Pennsylvania Department of
Public Welfare in support of the special training program and guest lecture
series held during the 1971 summer
sesion.
1.
turning to their duties following a sabbatical leave for either all or part of
the 1970-71 college year.
They are:
William K. Decker, Dept. i>f Music;
Craig L. Himes, Biological Sciences;
Clayton H. Hinkel, Dept, of Business
Education; Dr. Lee C. Hopple, Dept,
Geography; Mrs. Margaret J.
Hykes, Dept, of Business Education;
Miss Alva W. Rice, Dept, of English;
John F. Schrimgeour, Dept, of Mathematics; Dr. William B. Sterling, Dept,
of Geography.
of
VISITORS
FROM FRANCE
Eight French college students began a summer visit in the United
States by spending two weeks at
Bloomsburg State College in July.
The students came to B.S.C. under
the auspices of the Experiment in
International Living and in conjunction with the International Education
Club of Bloomsburg State College.
Page eleven
B. S. C.
ANNUAL GIVING CAMPAIGN
Traditionally, colleges each year seek and gratefully receive gifts from
alumni, parents, businesses and friends who have an interest in the well-being
of the institution. The Bloomsburg Foundation, which serves Bloomsburg State
College and the BSC Alumni Association, has assumed the responsibility of
soliciting gifts
from private sources.
This year Bloomsburg State College will conduct an Annual Giving CamThe Campaign began September 1, and hopefully will conclude Nov-
paign.
ember
Four areas
20, 1971.
of institutional
need
will
be the focus
of this year's
campaign.
ALUMNI DEVELOPMENT.
1.
to
as
Contributions in this area will be used
promote communication between the college and the Alumni, as well
maintaining the office of the Alumni Association.
ALUMNI SCHOLARSHIPS.
2.
increase the existing
Contributions in this area will be used
Alumni Association scholarship program.
ATHLETIC GRANTS.
3.
promote intercollegiate
to
Contributions in this area will be used to
at BSC thru grants
individual
to
athletics
athletes.
UNRESTRICTED. Gifts in this area piovide funding for a variety of
programs, seminars, institutes, research, etc.
Requests for funds are
received by the Bloomsburg Foundation from students, faculty, depart-
4.
ments and administrators.
A
contribution of $5 or
Alumni Association.
more
will
renew your annual membership
card will be forwarded.
in
the
A renewed membership
The Bloomsburg Foundation
is
also prepared to receive gifts of corporate
and bonds, and personal property. Interested individuals are urged
contact the Executive Director for more information.
stocks
to
(detach here)
Please
make checks payable
to:
Address:
THE BLOOMSBURG FOUNDATION
Bloomsburg State College, Box 292
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Please use
my
gift for
17815
the following purpose:
ALUMNI DEVELOPMENT
ALUMNI SCHOLARSHIPS
ATHLETIC GRANTS
UNRESTRICTED
Name
Class
(Middle or Maiden)
(First)
(Last)
Address
Zip
(_J
Page twelve
Please check
if
adove address
is
new.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR — Boyd F. Buckingham
ASSISTANT EDITOR — Kenneth Hoffman
BOARD OF DIRECTORS OFFICERS
—
PRESIDENT
Howard
Eerm Expires 1973
VICE PRESIDENT —
Term Expires 1972
F.
Fenstemaker T2.
Millard Ludwig
— Col. Elwocd M. Wagner
— Term Expires 1973
SECRETARY
Pa. 16801
TREASURER
—
—
Pa. 17815
Earl A. Gehrig
Term Expires
’37,
110
Terms
102
Terms expire
expire 1972
’34
—
R.
D
1.
John Thomas ’47
68 Fourth Street
Hamburg. Pennsylvania
Clayton H. Hinkel
643 Wiltshire
Read, State College,
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie ’35
509 East Front Street
Berwick. Pennsylvania 18603
1973
Glen Mills. Pa. 19342
Miss Elizabeth H. Hubler
Dr. Kirnber C. Kuster T3
140 West Eleventh Street
Bloomsburg. Pennsylvania 17815
'43,
Pa.
Millville,
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Dr. Frank J. Furgele
Colonial Farm Box 88
West Street
East Main Sldeet,
Robin Lane Sherwood Village, Bloomsburg,
’52
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
625
1973
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
'48
Bloomsburg, Pa.
242 Central Read,
Dr. Alexander J. McKechnie. Jr. ’39
19 N. 24th St
Camp Hill. Pa. 17011
Park and Oak
Sts.,
’29
Apt. 2
Gordon, Pennsylvania. 17936
Mrs. Jean Zenke Foster
’66
W. Grove St.,
Clarks Summit, Pa. 18411
914
Terms Expire
19526
1974
Francis Galinski
Mrs. Verna Jones ’36
111 Plant Avenue
Wayne. Pennsylvania 19087
’40
224 Leonard Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Volume LXXII, Number
3,
90
Tower
’52
Hill Rd.,
Doylestown. Pa. 18901
1971
As announced in the June issue of the Alumni Quarterly, the pubyour Alumni magazine has been taken over by the Office of
Development and External Relations. Some changes are being made in
this issue, and others will be made from time to time.
I am confident
that you will enjoy reading the Quarterly, and hope that it will deepen
your loyalty to your Alma Mater.
lication of
In the future,
all solicitations
for contributions to the Loyalty
Fund
be made through the Bloomsburg Foundation. During the past five
years, you, the Alumni, have contributed in the neighborhood of $50,000
This has been used to cover the expenses of maintaining
to the fund.
the Alumni Office, and in addition has made possible a great number of
projects approved by your Board of Directors.
The new arrangement
should make possible financial support more in keeping with what is
being done in other colleges and universities.
I
hope that you will continue to support your College and your
Alumni Association.
will
President,
Alumni Association
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE
BLOOMSBURG, PA. 17815
Non-Profit Org.
U. S.
POSTAGE
PAID
Address Correction Requested
1.7c
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Permit No. 10
LOYALTY FUND FOURTH YEAR
October
Class
No.
Ex-faculty 2
1892
1896
1901
1903
1904
1905
1903
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1923
1
1
3
3
1
2
3
5
4
5
10
12
9
12
4
5
15
8
5
11
8
5
10
11
1,
1970 to July
Amt.
Class
No.
150.00
10.00
10.00
50.00
22.00
2.00
7.00
27.00
24.00
45.00
220.00
92.00
324.00*
105.00
156.00
25.00
35.00
72.00
75.00
73.00
68.00
72.00
328.00 *
65.00
82.00
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1933
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
1948
10
5
9
12
18
11
11
15
4
9
4
5
4
6
6
6
4
9
14
11
6
4
3
3
6
Includes class gifts presented on Alumni
1,
1971
Amt.
Class
No.
Amt.
78.00
40.00
68.00
95.00
149.00
274.00
86.00
186.00°
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1931
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
11
13
6
7
3
9
128.00
82.00
75.00
43.00
60.00
58.00
40.00
30.00
75.00
91.00
57.00
49.00
73.61
35.00
91.00
137.00
136.00
91.00
177.00
195.00
239.00
138.00
817.00
115.00
63.00
24.50
72.00
170.00
70.00
60.00
48.00
50.00
134.00
140.00
80.00
65.00
45.00
20.00
20.00
51.00
Day
7
6
11
11
13
7
12
5
17
19
26
20
25
38
38
6
5
The Alumni Quarterly
Governor Shapp
Visits
Campus
Semester Plan
May Be
Revised
Changes
Top
In
Administrative Posts
Senator Church
Will
Be Speaker
New
2
Coaches For
Winter Sports
Volume LXXII
Number
3
DECEMBER,
•
e
1971
7
.
,
THE PRESIDENT’S PAGE
The “Year for Assessment and Planning^
moving forward according to schedule. A
Steering Committee has been established
which includes the following: Mayor Martin
is
Lutz of Bloomsburg; Dr. John Magill, Superintendent of Bloomsburg public schools, representing the Alumni; Dr. William Carlough,
President of the College Senate; Mr. Michael
Siptroth, President of the Community Government Association; Dr. Don B. Springman,
Vice-President for Administrative Services;
Dr. Hobart Heller, Acting Vice-President for
Academic Affairs; Dr. Jerrold Griffis, VicePresident for Student Life; Mr. Jack Naus,
Secretary of the Bloomsburg Chamber of
Commerce; Mrs. George Thompson, President of the Bloomsburg Chamber of Commerce; Mr. William E. Booth, Chairman
of the Board of Trustees; and myself. The
major thrust will be through existing Senate
committees, augmented hy administration,
the community and the alumni.
Every
policy, every procedure, every phase of
our operation will be open to question and evaluation; planning, specifically,
will be directed towards the years 1975, 1980, and 2000. Hopefully, accumulated
information can be interpreted and assembled during the coming summer, and
by the end of 1972 be available for general distribution.
On November
3, Dr. Frederic K. Miller, Commissioner for Higher Educarelinquished his office to assume duties as Chairman of the Commission
on Independent Colleges and Universities. For four and one half years, Dr.
Miller provided leadership for all of Higher Education in Pennsylvania, and
most particularly played a key role in the development of the State Colleges
shall, of course, miss him, but we look forward
and Indiana University.
to working with him through public and private cooperative efforts within the
Higher Education community. As of this writing, his successor has not been
tion,
We
hamed.
The Bloomsburg Foundation was established a year ago in order to pro
At
vide those funds which cannot or should not be expected from the State.
the time that the Foundation was initiated, virtually no guidelines, and less
guidance, were available; consequently, the Foundation had to develop its
own policies and procedures, and to refine these in the course of operation.
The Foundation exists solely for the development and improvement of the
College community. It is the only source for unrestricted funds, and it does
allow the College to engage in activities which would otherwise not be possible.
A full report of the Foundation will be forthcoming in a later issue of the
QUARTERLY. In the meantime, your support of the Alumni Association is in
fact a support of the Foundation.
I
can think of few ways in which you can
more actively assist ongoing activities of this College not covered by the regular
operating budget.
Tio-c^t ~n
President,
Bloomsburg State College
Gov. Shapp Urges
Voters to Take Part
4216
Young
B.S.C.'s
A total of 4216 full time undergraduate students completed registration for the 1971-72 college year at
Bloomsburg State College, according
to Robert Bunge, Registrar.
Three hundred eighty five full time
and part time graduate students are
enrolled with 38 of this number being
Another 231 part
full time studens.
time undergraduate students, Continuing Education students and Public
School Nurses raises the total enrollment for the college to over 4800
which is the largest enrollment in the
in Politics
Milton J. Shapp’s first
a State College campus, and
address to students following
lowering of the voting age to 18, was
at Bloomsburg State College September 30.
The governor, in his address, stressed the young voters’ ability to change
the shape of state and national politics
He told of
through participation.
changes in the Democratic State Committee’s procedures in the selection of
delegates to the Democratic National
Convention which will help redress
imbalance of young people, member's
of minority groups or other segments
of our society.
He told also of his appointment of
Governor
visit to
his first
history of BSC.
Of the 4216 full time undergraduate
students, 1934 are men and 2282 are
women. The 385 graduate students
break down into 165 men and 220 wo-
men.
Approximately
2,282 men and woare being housed in campus
Over 2,400 students
residence halls.
are served their meals through the
facilities of the Scranton Commons.
A total of 286 faculty and administrative personnel are on duty during
the semester.
men
young men to positions of responsibility. citing particularly his appointment of 31-year-old Bob Ford as
State Director of Selective Service.
He spoke also of his philosophy on
education which would “prefer people
and “education to
buildings’’
to
schooling.”
During his address Shapp presented
C.G.A. President Mike Siptroth with
a letter concerning his intention to
appoint a student to the Board of
Trustees of each of the State Colleges
and inviting Bloomsburg students to
nominate five candidates for the position. He declared that the student appointees would serve not merely to
represent students, but to act as trustees in the fullest sense of the word.
The nominations of four Bloomsburg students have since been forwarded to the Governor. The candidates are: Douglas McClintock,
a
junior from Doylestown, president of
the junior class and a member of the
steering committe for the Simulated
Democratic Convention to be held
next April; Robert Parry, a senior
from Dallas, a member of Circle K
and Sigma Pi fraternity who has participated for three years on the BSC
varsity football and basketball teams;
Joseph L. Romano, a sophomore from
Norristown, a member of Pi Kappa
Delta (speech fraternity), member of
the Visitation committee, treasurer
sophomore class, member of
the debate team and vice president
of the Forensic Society; and Michael
J. Torbert. Allentown, a member of
the Judo club and the Veterans Assothe
of
ciation.
Appointment
full
will
be
made
for
a
six-year term.
JOHN HOGH HONORED AT
TESTIMONIAL DINNER
owned and
state-related colleges
and
universities.
Under the
bill
Trustees would
a State
Board
become
a
of
central
state-owned and stateAny requests for
new degree programs or a change in
status, such as a change from a Colcome
lege to a University, would
board
under review of the state
which would act as final authority.
All operating budgets wr ould also be
subject to approval by the state board.
Shapp is supporting a study of a
proposal for a single admission sys-
agency for
all
related institutions.
r
tem
for the 13 state colleges
and
diana University. He believes neighboring colleges must avoid competi-
programs and that instead of
duplicating faculty and facilities he
suggests an exchange of students
tive
and
faculty.
He
said the higher education comin Pennsylvania will get along
better with his administration
munity
much
abandons what he
calls “educaimperialism.”
He describes
this as the “tendency of every branch
campus of every community college to become a four-year institution,
of every four-year institution to add
masters programs and then Ph.D.’s,
and of every university to become a
if
it
tional
multiversity.”
Shapp answered questions from
audience concerning changes in
PHEAA Scholarship program, effect of the state income tax on college
students, the freeze on state jobs and
patronage problems.
When he entered the auditorium
Shapp accepted a petition bearing
2000 signatures requesting an investigation of the problems confronting
BSC.
More recently, in addressing the
Pennsylvania Association of Colleges
and Universities Shapp discussed Senate Bill 30 which wall have broad implications
for
DECEMBER,
Pennsylvania’s
1971
state-
ATTENDS MEETING
Dr. Robert
J.
Approximately 250 members of the
Bloomsburg State College community
attended a testimonial dinner October
28 honoring Dr. John A. Hoch, former
Vice resident for Academic Affairs
and Dean of the Faculties.
During the summer Dr. Hoch asked
reassignment to classroom teach-
for
ing duties. He is now a member of
the history department staff.
Howr ard Fenstemacker, president of
the Alumni Board, was master of
ceremonies, and speakers included Dr.
Harvey A. Andruss, president emeritus, and BSC President Robert J.
Nossen Dr Andruss told about hiring
John in 1946 as an assistant football
.
In-
Following his address to the students
the
the
UNDERGRADUATES ARE
REGISTERED AT RSC
Nossen, President of
Bloomsburg State College, attended
the annual meeting of the Pennsylvania Association of Colleges
and
Universities on the campus of The
Pennsylvania State University, Unibeginversity Park, Pennsylvania
ning Sunday, October 17 and extending through Tuesday, October 19. The
PACU is an organization of all the accredited colleges and universities in
the Commonwealth which are essentially represented by their chief administrative officers.
.
coach.
Dr. Hoch was presented with a travel certificate and a set of luggage in
aggregation for his many years as a
college administrator.
VISIT BSC SUITE
IN ATLANTIC CITY
Bloomsburg State College is planning to have a hospitality suite at the
Dennis Hotel in Atlantic City February 12, 13 and 14 during the annual
convention of the American Association of School Administrators.
BSC alumni and friends are cordially invited to visit the BSC headquarters.
College officials will be
there afternoon and evenings of the
three days to discuss admissions,
housing, placement and other questions pertaining to the college.
Plans for the hospitility suite are
necessarily subject to final official
state approval.
ON THE COVER
Miss Lori Johnson,
’71,
BSC Home-
coming Queen; Bloomsburg High
School band passes Carver Hall during
Homecoming parade; and Husky running back Bob Warner is the man in
the middle of a pileup during
coming game with California
Huskies won,
HomeState.
35-26.
Page one
Proposals for Dropping Semester
Calendar Plan Are Being Studied
Editor’s note:
Dr. Hobart Hel-
became Acting Vice President for Academic Affairs and
Dean of the Faculties in Septemler
ber succeeding Dr. John A. Hoch.
The College Senate currently has
under consideration four proposacademic calendar changes
als for
aJt
BSC.
By Dr. Hobart Heller
Bloomsburg is making a study of
academic calendar with a view
possible improvement.
its
to
It is almost trite to say that a calendar should be a framework within
which faculty and students can best
work together to the end that effective
Some of the
learning is promoted.
qualities that a calendar should enstudents should
courage are these:
be as free as possible from periods
cf undue pressure, students and fac
ulty should find it natural for efforts
to flow evenly through the days and
weeks of the terms and should have
maximum opportunity for efficient
use of classrooms and laboratories;
encourage studenMaculty
communication.
The B.S.C. Senate is considering the
it
should
of an unconventional calendar, one which sacrifices the strict
symmetry of semesters, quarters, or
trimesters in favor of improved teachpossibility
By tradition, an
ing and learning.
academic year comprises nine months
from Labor Day to Memorial Day.
Christmas vacation must come at
about the two-fifth’s
iod;
therefore the
mark
in this perremainder of the
weeks fellow New Year’s. It would
be advantageous to close a term
shortly before Christmas, and open a
new term after New Year’s. Obviously, one cannot have two equal terms
within nine months if this line of demarcation is observed. The most efuse of the period after New
Year’s challenges one who would plan
a calendar.
The semester plan makes it necessary to interrupt the first semester
Stuto provide a Christmas recess.
dents on the semester plan must be
fective
thinking of their semester examinations during the Christmas vacation;
this is not conductive to sound learning experience.
College students and faculty need a
break between New Year’s and June.
It would be advantageous to have this
break come between two terms rather
than within a term. Furthermore, as
a college grows, more time is needed
between terms for the processing of
grades; as a result, this requires a
recess between terms. It is economical to have such administrative vacations coincide with natural vacation
periods.
Under the semester plan which
Bloomsburg has followed, the student
carries five, six or even seven courses
at one time. Since most courses meet
three hours a week there is a tendency
to concentrate classes on
Monday,
Wednesday and Friday. As a result,
the Bloomsburg calendar discourages
an even flow
Page two
of faculty
and student
energies through the week, and it requires that both faculty and students
handle more courses at one time than
can be dealt with efficiently.
These and other considerations
might make it desirable to have a
calendar which divides
the
nine
months into three terms, with a vacation at the end of each of the terms. In
such a calendar a student and a faculty member would be responsible for
fewer courses in any term.
The
quarter system can achieve this, but
it requires
a late fall start, and a
spring term which closes well into
June, if a term is to close at Christ-
mas.
A
modification of the quarter sys-
tem
is under discussion, one which
might provide a solution; but it is at
the sacrifice of symmetry.
The final examination periods under
such a plan would be shorter in duration, yet provide more time for serious preparation. Because of the reduced number of classes carried by a
faculty member, there would be more
efficient opportunity for utilization of
faculty energies in examinations.
The semester hour is a common
measure of courses; the semester hour
traditionally represents a class exercise of one hour per week for a semester.
Traditionally, a semester represents half of a nine-month academic year.
After deducting holidays,
vacations, registration periods, examination pericds and other necessary
activities, a nine-month period nets
thirty and thirty one weeks
between
for actual class meetings, plus the
final examinations: this is equivalent
to fifteen weekly class meetings plus a
final examination for each semester
hour credit. A calendar which uses
the semester hour as the unit of measure should provide fifteen class
meetings of fifty minutes each plus a
final examination for each semester
hour credit.
class can be taught in
a shorter period of time than a semester by increasing the number of hours
A
per week proportionately. Accrediting
agencies commonly favor a standard
which provides that a student may
earn credit at the rate of one semester
hour per week. In planning shorter
periods than a semester, therefore,
there are two quantitative tests:
there must be fifteen class meetings
plus a final examination for each semester hour cf credit; student loads
must permit earning credit at the
ra e of one semester hour per week.
|f
Hobart Heller
Dr.
the viewpoint regarding a semester
hour of credit may be that it meet the
two quantitative tests.
Other principles to be observed in
constructing a calendar are these:
the total elapsed time for a course
should be such that there is optimum
opportunity for the integration of the
when a term
learning experience
is too short the course is compressed
so that it becomes little more than a
cram session
if the term
is too
long, as is the case when a fall semester is divided by a two or three
week Christmas vacation, the learning experience is spread so that integration of learning is difficult.
A student should not have too many
courses at one time.
Students at
Bloomsburg have had five, six or even
seven courses; three or four courses
at one time provide a better learning
experience, and faculty members who
teach three courses at once have a
better opportunity to prepare, to plan
—
—
sound examinations and to read the
papers than faculty members with
more
courses.
colleges have found advantages in having two or three so-called
“dead days” between the close of
classes for a term and the opening of
the final examination period. Where
this has been experienced, there is
often a significant reduction in the
amount of cheating.
These then, are principles for calendar construction. Whether Blooms-
Many
burg
will
adopt a new calendar has
it is being
The whole procedure of measuring
progress toward a degree by semester
hours and courses passed is occasion-
not yet been decided, but
studied
ally
find
ARTICLE PUBLISHED
criticized,
but
it
is
difficult
to
a substitute for this kind of measurement in a mass education system.
Consequently, in calendar proposals
currently under consideration,
the
standards described above will be ob-
served
A
.
class meeting is no more than,
and no less than, an opportunity for
learning. There can be no guarantee
that learning will take place, for
learning depends upon the teaching,
the students and the conditions; but
An article entitled
of Interaction Who’s
—
"The Dynamics
Got the Closed
Mind?” written by Professor Hbward K. Macauley and Richard
O.
Wolfe of Bloomsburg St^te College
was published in the April, 1971 issue of Phi Delta Kappa and now
appears
a book of readings entitSibboleths,” which
was published by Simon and Shuster
in August, 1971.
led.
in
“Shamans and
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
ENVIRONMENT EDUCATION
CONFERENCE IS HELD
A state wide conference on environmental education was held on the BSC
campus November 19, 1971. The conference was sponsored by the BSC
Biology Department in cooperation
with the Pennsylvania Biologists AssAdditional financial support
was received from the BSC Community Government Association, Pennsylvania Power and Light Company, and
ociation.
Roaring Creek Water Company
Shamokin, Pa.
the
of
attendance
In
at
the
conference
were elementary, secondary, and
Dr.
Dr. Griffis
Dr. Bresett
Mayer
Administrative Changes
Administrative changes at BSC for
the
the 1971-72 college year include
appointment of Dr. Jerold Griffis as
Vice President for Student Life; Dr.
Hobart Heller as Acting Vice President for Academic Affairs and Dean
A.
of the Faculties; and Dr. Evelyn
Mayer as Associate Dean for Student
Life.
Another appointment made at the
beginning of the College year was
that of Dr. Stephen M. Bresett. Associate Professor of Health and Physical
Education, as Acting Chairman of the
Department of Health. Physical Elucation and Athletics.
Dr. Griffis, a native of Susquehanna
Pa., served previously at Ohio University as Dean of Resident Life. He
received his bachelor’s degree from
West Chester State College, his mas-
degree from Ohio University and
and Psychology, from the Pennsylvania State
ter’s
his doctorate, in Counseling
University
As Vice President for Student Life.
Dr. Griffis wdll coordinate the areas
of Student Life formerly handled by
Associate Vice President Elton Hunsinger and Miss Ellamae Jackson.
Mr. Hunsinger assumed duties at Associate Vice President for Campus Services and will coordinate all health
services, security and conferences on
campus.
Miss
Jackson
retired
in
August.
Dr. Heller,
curricula;
Education at Lock Haven
State College, her master’s degree in
Guidance and Counseling at ShippensHealth
Education degree in Counselor Education
at the University of Virginia where
S. C..
and her Doctor
served
last
ity.
Dr. Bresett. who came to Bloomsburg in 1969. received his bachelor’s
degree and doctorate from Springfield College in Massachusetts and his
master’s degree from Rutgers UniHis teaching and coaching
versity.
include positions in the
Ridgewood Public Schools in New
Jersey, Springfield College and South
Brunswick High School, Monmouth,
N.J.
As acting department chairman he
is responsibile for the total Physical
Education and Athletic program at
BSC. His appointment followed the
resignation of Dr. Clarence A. Moore
as Chairman of Health and Phvsical
Education, and the request of Russell
Houk to be relieved of duties as Director of Athletics.
experience
DRAMA CLASS PLANS
who served last year as
professor-at-large, was named Acting
Vice President after Dr. John A. Hoch
NEW YORK CITY TRIP
asked to be relieved of the duties of
that office and be returned to class-
sburg State College
room teaching. He will serve until
a permanent replacement for Dr.
Hoch is selected. A native of Berwick, Pa., he earned his bachelor’s degree at Gettysburg College and his
master’s and doctor’s degree at Columbia University. He began his tea-
ching career at Berwick High School
and then went to Eastern Illinois
University where he served as Academic Vice President. Upon retirement he returned to Pennsylvania and
served in the Department of Education’s Bureau of State Colleges and
Universities at Harrisburg before com-
of
year as Assistant
Dean of Students. She is a native of
Mifflin, Pa., the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Mayer of that communshe
The Modern Drama class at Bloomatre trip to
13
and
14.
planning a theCity on March
The students will be seeing
is
New Yory
OLD TIMES by
the following plays:
Harold Pinter; SLEUTH by Anthony
Shaffer;
STUART by Schiller
MARY
and adapted by Stephen Spender;
NO
SOMEBODY by
THE EFFECT OF
GAMMA RAYS ON MAN IN THE
MOON MARIGOLDS by Paul Zindel;
SOLITAIRE DOUBLE SOLITAIRE by
Ribert Anderson THE BASIC TRAINING OF PAVLO HUMMEL by David
PLACE
education programs
teaching materials; aids;
environmental
She
ministrative structure at BSC.
received her bachelor’s degree in
burg
col-
lege teachers, representatives of state
and federal education and environmental agencies, and representatives
of companies exhibiting materials relevant to environmental education.
Major objectives of the conference
were to provide the two hundred participants with a current assessment of
TO
BE
Charles Gordone;
;
Rabe; HAIR, JESUS CHRIST SUP-
sources of financial aid; and future
expectations in environmental education pertinent to schools at the elementary, secondary, and college levels.
The conference opened with a key“ECOLOGY AND SURVIVAL. A LIFE SUPPORT SYSTEMS
note address
APPROACH”, delivered by Dr. William A. Nearing, Connecticut College.
New London, Connecticut. The participants then went into special sessions.
Chairing the session on Elementary Environmental Education
was Dr. James E. Coles, Professor of
Biology, BSC.
Resource specialists
participating W'ere Mrs. Eleanor Bennett, Penna. State Department of Education, Harrisburg; Dr. John Horst,
State College; and Dr.
John W. Hug, Bear Run Nature Reserve, Millrun Pa.
The session on
Secondary Environmental Education
was chaired by Dr. J. R. Krosehewsky. Professor of Biology, BSC. Resource specialists participating were
Dr. Irwin T. Edgar, Penna. State Department of Education, Harrisburg;
Millers ville
Dr. Peter Gail, Stoney-Brooks Millstone Watershed Association. Pennington, N.J.; and Mr. Jack Hershey and
Mr. Alan Sexton, Project CARE, Blue
Bell, Pa.
Dr. Louis V. Mingrone
chaired the session on College En-
vironmental
Education.
Resource
specialists taking part were Dr. John
McLain, Clarion State College; Dr.
John Moss, Franklin and Marshall
College,
Lancaster, Pa.; and Dr.
Charles L. Remington, Yale Univers-
New Haven, Connecticut.
At the luncheon meeting, the Honorable Franklin L. Kury of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
spoke on “EDUCATION AND THE
ity,
FUTURE OF THE ENVIRONMENT”.
The afternoon program consisted of
an address given by Mr. George E.
Low e of the U.S. Office of Education,
Washington, D.C. explaining “IMPLIr
CATIONS OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION ACT OF 1970”. The
conference heard summary reports
of the special
elementary, secondary,
and college sesions.
In
the
evening,
the
participants
ERSTAR.
heard Dr. Charles
ing to/BSC.
Former drama students who are
interested in making the trip are invit-
Professor of Biology, Yale University,
speak on “LAND USE SOLUTIONS
Dr. Mayer’s position is a new one,
created under the reorganizational ad-
ed to contact Dr.
lish Department,
DECEMBER,
1971
Susan Rusinko, EngBSC.
L.
Remmington,
FOR A FRAGILE ISLAND WILDERNESS”.
Page three
SCHOOL ADMINISTRATORS
ATTEND SYMPOSIUM
Casey Agrees Meeting Needed
To Set Foundation
Put more emphasis upon cooperperformance obsupervision and
Guidelines
atively developed
Combine
jectives.
Avoid, as
assessment.
Robert B. Casey, state auditor general, has agreed to a suggestion by
Dr. Robert J. Nossen, BSC president,
that “it would be helpful to hold an
early meeting of representatives of
the several state college foundations,
and other appropriate state officers
to review the functions of the foundaestablishing
tions with an aim of
proper guidelines for their operation.’’
Dr. Nossen’s suggestion followed an
exchange of letters concerning recommendations made by the auditor
general’s office in a report of an audit of the Bloomsburg Foundation in
first state
September.
It was the
audit
a state college foundation,
of
and the report stressed the legal
questions concerning interpertation of
the law as it applies to foundations.
It also recommended action to prevent the possible co-mingling of College and Commonwealth funds.
The auditor general stated that “the
Foundation, as a separate and distinct
legal entity, is entitled to receive
gifts, grants and other moneys it applies for, solicits, or receives in its
own name.” He contended, however,
that “any gifts or grants received by
the College in its own right should remain within the control of the college.”
Under
mended
he recomapproximately $45,000
this interpretation
that
from the Endowed Lecture Fund,
est-
ablished in 1958, should be returned to
the control of the College.
These
funds had been transferred to the
Foundation, with the Board of Trustes authorizing the Foundation to administer the funds as specified by the
grantors.
The audit report also recommended
that
balances
remaining
grams involving use
of
from
pro-
state-owned
should be forwarded to the
instead of being placed in the Foundation account. To prevent the possible co-mingling of College and Commonwealth funds, the
report recommended that a distinct
rental charge for use of Commonwealth property be established.
The auditor general suggested also
that a legal ruling be obtained on
whether Federal grants could be placed in the Foundation account or whether all such grants should be transferred to the Commonwealth.
Casey said Dr. Nossen had confirmed to him that until such time as we
(Bloomsburg State College) can get
further clarification or appropriate
facilities
Commonwealth
we shall conform to your
recommendations
the College has
and will continue to operate within the
framework of law and Commonwealth
time, to get satisfactory answers to a
number of questions.”
Dr. Nossen said the Foundation was
conceived as a way of holding several college accounts and to simplify
the bookkeeping procedures, that the
Board of Trustees is represented on
the Foundation board, that all moneys
are always restricted to the intention
of the grantor, and that all funds are
He pointed
properly accounted for.
out that the Foundation’s by-laws call
not only for a private audit, but also
for an audit by the state auditor general’s
office.
The audit report
also raised the
question of interlocking directorships
and recommended that they be discontinued to eliminate any actual or potential conflict of interest.
The
inter-
locking directorships referred to concerned William Lank, member of the
Board of Trustees, and President Nossen, an officer and director respectively of the United Penn Bank, one of
the depositories for College funds.
Dr. Nossen informed Casey that
prior to his accepting a position on
the advisory board of the United
Penn Bank, he had consulted the office of the state Attorney General. He
said the then Deputy Attorney General William G. Williams had advised
him informally that he “saw no legal
difficulties.” Dr. Nossen also pointed
out that the United Penn
Bank is
only one of several depositories for
college funds, the major depository
is and has been the Bloomsburg BankColumbia Trust Co.
Dr. Nossen, in his letter to Casey,
stated that “we have believed, and
continue to believe, that the Foundaprovides the most efficient
tion
method for handing a series of heretofore scattered College accounts.
Casey’s press seretary stated that
the audit of the Blomsburg Foundation just happened to be the first one
made and that all State College Foundations will be audited.
Dr. Nossen stressed the need for
private funds to enable the college to
Alumfulfill several of its objectives.
ni gifts now are deposited directly
with the Foundation which, in turn,
guarantees operating capital for the
Alumni Association. Hopefully, alumni will respond to the basic need of
the college for unrestricted gifts, in
accord with the current fund drive.
All
alumni should have received
mailings on this subject.
.
.
.
guidelines,
.
.
.
policy.”
Dr. Nossen stated that the Founda"was deliberately established to
serve the needs of the college in ways
that could not otherwise be accomodated;
at the time of the establishment of the Foundation we sought
guidelines, but were unable to get
appropriate assistance ... in fact,
we have been unable, even at this
tion
.
Page
.
four
ing.
presentation of Dr. George B.
Redfern, Associate Secretary. American Association of School Administrators, speaking to school administrators
and supervisors meeting in a symposium on instructional accountability
meeting at BSC October 28 - 29.
Dr. Redfern, in promoting the concept of evaluation by objectives or
job targets, stressed the need to clearly understand duties and responsibilities. An analysis of the expectancies
of the position will reveal needs, areas that should be improved. This will
lead to the formation of specific per-
formance objectives.
Planned action
achieve the goals makes it necessary to tie supervision and assessment closer together. Goal assessment requires bi-lateral action by the
teacher and his evaluator, i.e. selfassessment and estimates of accomplishment by his evaluator. The entire
process culminates in an evaluation
conference by the two parties.
“Performance objectives evaluation.” said Dr. Redfern, “will necessarily change the roles of supervisors
to
and principals.” Uni-lateral onerway
assessments will be de-emphasized.
The evaluator will become less of an
“instructional umpire” and more of a
“diagnostician, coach, facilitator, exand helper.”
Some of the outcomes of evaluation
by objectives, concluded Dr. Redfern,
will be clearer understanding of Job
expectancies, more emphasis upon
professional growth and development,
better communication, higher motivation, and a closer coordination of objectives of the school system and the
personal and professional goals of the
pediter,
individual.
LISTENING LABORATORY
FOR STUDENTS, FACULTY
Dr. Margaret Sponseller, coordinator of the Reading Clinics at Bloomsburg State College, has announced the
opening of the new “Listening Laboratory” which is located in the Benjamin
Franklin building. The new “Listening Laboratory” may be used by all
faculty and students.
The facility has been made possible
through the cooperation of Dr. John
A. Hoch, former Vice- President for
Academic Affairs and Dean of the
Faculties; Dr. C. Stuart Edwards,
Dean, School of Professional Studies;
Dr. Charles Carlson, Dean, School of
Graduate Studies, and Director of
Activities;
and
Thaddeus
Piotrowski, Director of the Learning
Resources Center, Andruss Library;
60.
professor of business education and
office practice at Ball State University, died in early November, 1971 at
Fort Wayne, Indiana following an
illness of several months.
Prior to coming to Ball State, she
had taught at Elmira College, 1961-62;
West Virginia University, 1957-61;
and Bloomsburg State College, 194754.
as pos-
note
Research
FORMER PROFESSOR DIES
Dr. Honor a MacAuthur Noyes,
much
post-performance ratThis was the essence of the key-
sible, unilateral
the
Reading
staff
and graduate
stud-
The installation and
ent assistants.
operational capability of the laboratory was perfomed by Harold Spotts.
College electronics technician.
The laboratory operates for the
small group listfollowing purposes
ening assignments; individualized instructional listening assignments; genassignlistening
instructional
eral
ments; and personal listening.
:
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
Sen. Church
For
Is
Gymnasium
at
Bloomsburg
State
College on Saturday, April 22, 1972.
keynote
Senator Church was the
speaker at the 1960 Democratic NatAngeles
Los
ional Convention in
which nominated John F. Kennedy
as the Democratic presidential canElected to the U. S. Senate
didate.
at the age of 32 in 1956, he was one
of the youngest men ever to win a
Senate seat.
The mock convention will be the
second to be held on the BSC Campus by the college’s political science
department. The first was held in
1968 and was attended by over 1,300
students from BSC. twelve other colleges and Central
Columbia High
School. The keynote speaker for that
event was
Representative
Gerald
Ford of Michigan, the minority leader of the U. S. House of Representatives.
addition to Senator
Church’s
address, the 1972 program
will include two evenings of films
featuring Spencer Tracy
in
"The
In
keynote
Last Hurrah”, and Henry Fonda in
“Advise and Consent”; a guest speaker who will appear under the auspices of the Artists and Lecture Series;
meeting of the Platform Committee
to draft resolutions
tion; an exhibit of
convencampaign items
the
for
from past Presidential elections; a
seminar on
Pennsylvania
politics
conducted by the members of the
State Legislature; and the convention
itself.
The 1968 convention simulated the
Republican National Convention, and
the 1972 events are planned to simulate the Democratic Convention. Its
purpose will be to determine the
students’ choices for President and
Vice President on the Democratic
ticket.
“The College
is
not interested in ad-
vancing the cause of any party or candidate,” Prof. James W. Percy of the
science department stated,
“nor is the College interested in the
participants’ personal political affiliation. The intention is to give young
people some exposure to political participation in as realistic a manner as
possible.”
political
Area high schools and
all
colleges in
Pennsylvania are being contacted to
send delegations to the convention.
The delegate
fee of $1.50 will include:
admission to events, membership in a
State delegation, and lunch on the day
of the convention. The pulbic is invited to observe all proceedings at no
charge for admission.
Additional
information regarding the convention
can be obtained by writing to James
Percy, Department of Political Sci-
Bloomsburg
DECEMBER,
1971
State
College,
Bloomsburg, Penna.
A political and legislative pacesetter, Senator Church draws on 15
years of experience
in the
Senate.
He
Chairman of the Senate Special
Committee on Aging and, in addition,
is
holds senior positions on the Senate
Interior Committee and on the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee.
In the Senate, Church found a major
calling in safeguarding the nation’s
environment against the ravages of
mismanagement and waste. He authored the bill which, in 1968, created
the National Wild and Scenic Rivers
System. He was Senate floor leader
of the bill which established the National Wilderness System and of the
legislation which set up the Land and
Water Conservation Fund to stimulate
expansion of outdoor recreation facil-
by state and local governments.
Among the many awards he has received is the coveted designation
“outstanding conservation legislator”
by the National Wildlife Federation.
As a member of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, he became one
of the earliest opponents of American
involvement in Vietnam. He is especially well known as the co-author
with Republican Senator John Sherities
—
man Cooper of Kentucky
Cooper-Church amendment
By
—
of
of
the
1970.
prohibiting the use of U.S. ground
in Cambodia, Laos, or
combat troops
Thailand, without consent of Congress,
the
amendment became an
the
first
statutory
Northumberland, Snyder and Union
Counties. As of July 1, 1971. Pennsylvania abolished the Office of County
Superintendent of Schools, and created
These
Intermediate Units instead.
Intermediate
Units
are
the
bridge
between the local school districts and
the Department of Education in Harrisburg. There are 29 Units throughout the state of Pennsylvania.
Dr. Toole discussed the services of
these new units, the purposes of their
creation, and the benefits which the
local school districts will derive from
He
the organization of these units.
also emphasized innovative programs
within the local schools and services
to the local school districts.
BLACK STUDENTS TAKE
PART IN CONFERENCE
President Robert Nossen of Bloomsburg State College, along with nine
members of the Department of English and 20 black students attended
the 15th annual conference of Pennsylvania Council of Teachers of English at The Pennsylvania State University, October 15 and 16.
Dr. Nossen. Dr. Louis Thompson,
department chairman, and Dr. Cecil
Seronsy participated as speakers at
the two-day conference
Dr. Thompson is serving as Vice
President for colleges.
historic
milestone in U.S. Constitutional history,
Patrick Toole, Executive Dirthe Central Susquehanna
of
Intermediate Unit (Unit 16) was the
guest speaker at the October 19
Bloomsburg Chapter AAUW meeting.
Unit 16 includes Columbia, Montour,
Dr.
ector
Campus Mock Convention
of
U. S. Senator Frank Church
Idaho will be the keynote speaker at
National
the Simulated Democratic
Convention to be held in Centennial
ence,
INTERMEDIATE UNIT
SERVICES DISCUSSED
Keynoter
limitation
ever imposed on an American theater
of war.
HIGH SCHOOLS SEND
EDITORS TO CONFERENCE
25
The second annual Journalism Inwas held at BSC October 21-23.
stitute
BSC PLANS SEMINAR
FOR SCHOOL DIRECTORS
Twenty-five high schools attended the
A seminar for the public school directors will be offered as part of the
non-credit Continuning Education offering at BSC, beginning February 1,
1972.
The ten sessions will be held
each Tuesday evening from 7:00 to
9:00 p.m. and will conclude April 18.
The seminar will deal with the following areas: the duties and responsibilities of school directors, the rights
of teachers, and the rights of the
“youth culture” with reference to their
impact and possible future applications; a description and analysis of a
nationwide trend toward open space
schools; Pennsylvania’s professional
certification regulations, including the
various instructional certificates
specialist certificate, emergency, interim, and permanent.
Finally, the
dynamics of interpersonal relationships will be dealt with through the
use of case studies, simulations, roleplaying, and critical incidents.
The seminar will meet in the faculty
lounge of the Bakeless Center for the
Humanities. Seminar size will be limited to insure personal attention and
to allow sufficient time for discussion
A fee of $25 will be required.
—
Institute sponsored by the Department
of English and Alpha Phi Gamma,
honorary journalism fraternity.
Featured speakers at this year’s institute were Robert Fawcett, editor,
“Bloomsburg Morning Press,” and Edward Schuyler, Jr., an Associated
Press sports writer in New York City
for
more
than
six years.
Philip
of The Pennsyl-
Thomas, president
vania Scholastic
also participated.
Press
Association,
AWARDS SCHOLARSHIP
The Campbell Soup Company reawarded the college $250 a
year for “The Campbell Soup Company Unrestricted Scholarship” to
cently
begin with the 71-72 college year.
will be permitted to set up its
criteria
for the
scholarship.
In
BSC
own
ad-
William Himmelright, West
Chester, Penna., who will enter BSC
as a freshman this September, received a scholarship of $750 each semester
for a total of $6,000 during his four
years in college. Himelright is one
of twelve students who received the
scholarships given by the Campbell
Soup Company to children of its emdition,
ployees.
Page
five
New
Coaches Named For Wrestling, Basketball
Charles Chronister, former assistant basketball coach at Gettysburg
College, launches his career as a college head basketball coach, taking
over the reins at BSC from Earl Voss,
who has joined the Physical Education
Department at West Chester State
College as assistant basketball coach.
A native of East Berlin, Pennsylvania,
Chronister attended Bermudian
Springs High School where he was a
standout athlete. He matriculated at
East Stroudsburg State College, and
played varsity basketball and baseball for the Warriors. He earned both
his Bachelor of Science and Master
of Science dergees in Health and
Physical Education at ESSC.
Dring the 1962-63 season at East
Stroudsburg, he served as freshman
basketball coach and guided the team
to a 17-2 record. He went to Gettysburg after three successful years at
Hanover (Pa.) High School. At Hanover, his jayvee and varsity teams
were 59-9 while winning county championships and participating in the
PIAA District in Class A playoffs.
In addition to coaching the freshm'an
team at Gettysburg, one of his chief
responsibilities was recruiting talent
for head coach Bob Hulton. This aspect of his coaching career should enable him to oversee and participate in
the obtaining of future talent for BSC.
Chronister is married to the former
Carol L. Strausbaugh of Hanover, Pa.
They have two daughters, Lee Ann
age 4 and Garyn Lynn age
2.
The
Chronisters reside at 1248 Old Berwick
Road, Bloomsburg, Penna.
HUSKY CAGERS TO HAVE
NEW LOOK’ THIS YEAR
New head
coach Charles Chronister
Burt Reese and
“Doc” Herbert are introducing a new
spstem for the Huskies. The new mentor points out that although BSC has
been very successful using a zqne defense, he favors a man-to-man style
of defense.
In addition, he is employing an offense, which will be “a
new look” for Bloomsburg.
Chronister feels he has ideal co-capbains in two senior returning starters
from last year’s squad, 6’5” Howard
Johnson, New Castle. Delaware, and
6’3” Paul Kuhn, Lebanon.
Johnson
averaged 15.9 points in 20 games and
last year was the team’s leading rebounder with an average of 13.8 rebounds yer contest. Kuhn was the
team’s third leading scorer, averaging 14.4 points per game and also was
extremely proficient in guarding and
playmaking.
Another regular performer from last year is junior Art
Luptowski, Ridley Park, who again
will perform his ball handling magic
as the team’s No. 1 playmaker. Two
other members from last year’s squad
who saw action as reserves and who
and
his
assistants
should see considerable action this
year, are 6’5” junior Dennis Mealy,
Levittown, and 6’3” senior Bob Consort!, Chester The big plus this year
will be the tallest player that Bloomsburg has had in recent years, 6’8”
sophomore John
Page
six
Willis,
formerly of
Carl Hinkle, Assistant Professor of
Health, Physical Education and Ath-
and freshman football coach at
Bloomsburg State College, has been
appointed Interim Coach of wrestling
letics,
1971-72 season.
Hinkle, who joined the BSC faculty
at the start of the present college
year,
wrestled
High
at Berwick
School and was a member of the varsity team at Montana State University, competing in the 166 lb. class.
Prior to coming to Bloomsburg, he
was an assistant in wrestling at the
State University of New York, College
at Cortland, and previously held posiions in the health, physical education,
and coaching assignments at the Amsterdam and Fulton City school dist-
for the
Coach Hinkle
Coach Chronister
Manville,
N.J.
and
now
living
in
Willis did not particiOarbondale.
pate on last year’s freshman squad
well
perfomed
already
has
but
enough to have the inside track as
the starting center.
Supporting Lupowsky in his playmaking role will be Tony DaRae, a
5’10” sophomore from Allentown. The
balance of the squad is made up of
three other sophomores, 6’3” Gary
Petcavage; 6’4” Dave Jones, Shavertown; and 6’0” Gary Choyka, Clarks
Summit, plus 6’1” George Hamilton, a
junior from Philadelphia who is a
transfer student from Temple University.
In analyzing the team’s prospects
at this early stage. Coach Chronister
feels that the Huskies will be right in
there fighting for the top spot in the
tough Pennsylvania Conference. “We
have the talent to do the job, providing we can put it all together,” he
stated. His main concern in the early
practice sessions
is for
the players to
adapt to his style of play, and learning the different strengths and attri-
ricts
in
New
York.
Assisting Hinkle will be James McCue, a veteran wrestler during the
past four years at Bloomsburg. As a
sophomore, he was Pennsylvania State
College champion, and last year he
won the Wilkes tournament for his
weight division.
In mid-season, he
injured his shoulder and was unable
to continue in competition.
He remains at the college, however, completing degree requirements. Training
for the wrestling season is now under
way and involves approximately thirty
candidates.
A graduate of Montana State University where he received a Bachelor
of Science degree in physical education, Hinkle also hold's the Masters
degree in physical education from
Ithaca College, Ithaca, N.Y.
He is married to the former Patricia Meyers, of Berwick.
The Hinkles reside at 245 West Eleventh Street
in
Bloomsburg.
butes of his players.
NEW COURSE OFFERED
YOUNG BUT OPTIMISTIC
course
WRESTLERS THIS YEAR
titled “Individualized Instructive Activities in the Elementary School” is
A
In his initial year as head wresting coach, Carl Hinkle has a young but
optimistic squad.
The Huskies suffered the loss of
eight starters from last season’s team
through graduation and will rely
heavily on the six returning lettermen
Showing the way for the rest of the
squad will be the two junior co-captains, Floyd Hitchcock and Ron Sheehan. Hitchcock, a native of Stevensvllle, Pa., placed first in the Pennsylvania Conference and second in NAIA
competitions last season, wrestling in
the 190 lb. division in the PC and the
177 lb. class in the NAIA.
Shean,
from Drexel Hill, Pa., placed first
in the PC last season, wrestling in the
177 lb. class.
Another
BSC
standout, James Mcco-captain of the Husky
in 1968, will serve as assistant
coach.
“The threesome should provide the experience and maturity to
lead the rest of the squad in continu-
Cue,
who was
squad
ing its winning ways,” observed Coach
Hinkle.
The main loss through graduation is
Wayne Smythe, who placed first in
the NAIA last season at 142, Mike
Shull, who finished third in the NAIA
at 118, and Jim McCue, who compiled
new
in
undergraduate
elective
Elementary Education en-
currently being offered at BSC. The
idea for this offering originated in
1968 when research for a course of a
workshop nature was first undertaken by Dr. Donald A. Vannan, Professor of Education, and the instructor
for the course.
Very few colleges
offer such a program in this country.
a first-place finish in the PC and
fourth in the NAIA in 1968-69 before
being injured.
Other returning lettermen for the Husky squad include
Bob Dibble, a sophomore from New
Albany, Pa., who competes in the 165
lb. class; Randy Watts, a sophomore
from Turbotville, Pa., who weighs
158
Dan Burkholder,
a 170 lb. sophomore from Denver, Pa.; Douglas
Grady, a 182 lb. senior from Hatboro,
Pa.
Bloomsburg ranked second in the
NAIA and fifth in the PC last year
with a record of 12 wins and 8 losses.
As in the past years, the Huskies face
a schedule which includes some of
the strongest schools in the East. In
addition to the regular strong competitors of the PC, will be Miami of Ohio.
Eastern Michigan University, Appalachian State University, Oswego, and
lbs.;
Waynesburg.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
SWIMMING COMPETITION
IS GETTING TOUGHER
“There’s no question about
it,
comp-
opponents, becomes stronger each
year”, BSC coach Eli McL»aughlin
“More
stress in
swimming
is
being applied at both the high school
level, which is resulting in
better competition everywhere.”
Bloomsburg State embarks on another ambitious schedule of nine Pennsylvania Conference opponents plus
Mcfive non-conference contests.
and college
Laughlin and his Huskies will be hard
pressed to improve on last year’s 10-5
Bloomsburg
shooting for its
seventh straight winning season. “We
were particularly proud of our third
place finish in the PC meet last year.
We were fortunate in edging out East,
Stroudsburg, a team that defeated us
McLaughlin
competition,”
in dual
stated. In addition to ESSC, four other
teams that defeated Bloomsburg in
Temple, Mondual competition
mouth, West Chester, and Clarion
Bloomsburg’s
greatest
comprise
challenges this year.
record.
is
—
—
Leading the group of returnees, is
BSC’s first All American swimmer,
freestyler Dave Gibas, a junior from
West Mifflin. Pa., where he also
earned high school All American honGibas,
ors.
who was named NAIA
50
yd. freestyler champion, will continue
to perform in the 50 and 100 yd. events
and anchor either the 400 yd. medley
or freestyle relay teams.
In addition, Jack Feyer, Bob Herb.
Jones, Ken Narsewicz, Jon Ston-
Bob
and Doug Yocom
will be counted
spread their talent over several
events and carry the bulk of the load.
There are four sophomores and five
er,
on
to
freshman also battling
to
make
the
squad.
McLaughlin is blessed with the best
diving prospects he has had in a number of years. Steve Coleman and Bob
Myers are back along with newcomers
Eric Cureton, Dan Legosky, and Jim
Smith.
Although the Huskies will be spotting in
some
events, overall
team
bal-
ance should provide keen competition.
Everyone has shown an early desire
and
enthusiasm
and
McLaughlin
points out with that type of attitude.
Bloomsburg should have another successful season.
SOPHOMORES TEAM WITH
WARNER ON GRIDIRON
In his initial year as head football
coach of Bloomsburg State College,
Bill Sproule directed
the
Huskies,
comprised chiefly of sophomores and
juniors, to a season’s record of 4-5.
In concluding the season, the Huskies lost to a powerful East Stroudsburg team, 26-7. Victories were recorded over the University of Scranton, Mansfield, California, and Cheyney while the other four losses were to
Lock Haven, West Chester, Millers-
and Kutztown.
Despite a losing season, there were
some bright spots for the Huskies,
ville,
Bob Warner,
showed why he
prospect.
The
6’2”
230
lb.
tailback,
considered a pro
Stroudsburg senior
led the squad in rushing
with 635
DECEMBER,
is
1971
in 180
of 3.5
etion in the Pennsylvania Conference,
along with that of our non-conference
states.
attempts for an average
yards per carry. Warner also
finished second in the receiving department, garnering 10 passes for 124
peards and ranked behind quarterback
Joe Geiger, in total points scored with
6 TD’s to his credit.
Joe Courter, a sophomore wide deceiver from Willow Grove, Pa., was
the favorite target of Geiger, catching
21 passes for 241 yards to lead the
team in receptions. Geiger, a sophomore from Lancaster, Pa., connected
for 630 yards in the air and collected
291 yards on the ground. He ran for
7 touchdowns and 1 two-point conver-
yards
sion, tallying a total of 44 points. Fullback John James, Bristol, was the second rusher with a total of 364 yards
and a 3.8 per carry average.
The Huskies were also strong in the
kicking department with place kicker
Neil Obersholtzer and punters Dan
Stellfox and Warner.
Oberholtzer, a
junior from Columbia, Pa., who recorded a number of field goals as a
freshman and sophomore, kicked 14
extra points this season while senior
Gleno'lden,
averaged 40.1
yards in 45 kicks. Warner, who punted 17 times when Stellfox was injured,
averaged 40.6 yards per boot.
Stellfox,
Linebacker Ken Klock, Trevorton
the team in tackles followel by
middle guard John Cox. a junior from
Levitt own.
Rich Walton, a junior
from Berwick at right tackle, was considered the top linesman on offense.
The loss of only six seniors through
led
graduation, points to a
enced Husky squad
in
more
experi-
1972.
BOR TUCKER ONE OF
NFL’s TOP RECEIVERS
By Tom Huntington
Sports Edi'or. Berwick Enterprise
Guess who is one of the tri-leaders
in pass receiving in the National Conference of the NFL?
It’s not Gene Washington of the San
Francisco 49ers nor Bob Hayes of the
Dallas Cowboys. It’s Bob Tucker of
Bloomsburg State College, Pbttstown
Firebirds and Hazleton vintage.
Tucker, the New York Giants’ tight
end, has 34 catches for 373 yards. Of
course. Ted Kwalick, 49ers, and Dick
Gordon, Chicago, have more yardage,
465 and 469 respectively, but they too
have 34 receptions which leaves the
three in a flatfooted tie.
However, of the three, Tucker came
into the NFL the less heralded.
Bloomsburg State isn’t the most famous name in college footballand Tucker stuggled for three years in the minor leagues, being rejected twice by the
Philadelphia Eagles, before the Giants recognized that here was an end
with potential.
One of the big knocks that the Eagles had against Tucker was that he
couldn’t run and he couldn’t block.
There was no question about his ability to snatch a football out of mid-air.
His acrobatic catches while at BSC
have yet to be duplicated.
Now, after four years of hard work
to improve himself, no one is saying
Tucker can’t block or run with the
football.
In fact, he’s being boomed
for All-Pro!
In an article which appeared in the
New York Daily News, written by
Larry Fox, Fran Tarkenton was quoted as saving:
“Without question, Bob’s the best
tight end in football,” Tarkenton said.
“There’s not one who can block with
him especially with the way he handles those big defensive ends like Eller
and Humphreys: he never drops the
football, and he can run with it once
he catches it.
“There he is, up there among the
leading receivers even though he’s
missed two games and even though
our opponents know I’m going to be
throwing to him. If he doesn’t make
all-pro there’s something wrong”.
Tarkenton is not an altogether disinterested observer.
Tucker is not
only his teammate and favorite target (twice as many catches as any
ether Giant), but also his roomie on
the road where they while away the
hours playing either a juvenile game
called Battleship, or chess. Tucker is
the chess master known for his nonstop series with on Johnson and he’s
initiating Tarkenton into the game.
Alex Webster seconds Tarkenton’s
of Tucker, pointing out that
“he can catch the football and also do
what a tight end has to do
block;
you get very few who can do both.”
praise
—
CROSS COUNTRY^TEAM
HAS A 6-4 RECORD
The Bloomsburg State College cross
country team ended its dual meet
competition for the season with a 6-4
record
The Maroon and Gold thjnclads
posted their 3rd straight winning season.
The 1969 and the 1970 records,
11-1 and 10-1 respectively, were the
best ever posted in the history of the
The charges of Coach Clyde
Ncbel got off to a slow start back
early October due to a series of
illnesses and were defeated in their
first two meets by Mansfield
and
Lock Haven.
The only other loss
was to the strong Millers ville team.
Three seniors were in their last
year of competition for the CC team.
They are: Larry Strohl, Hazleton:
Rod Dewing, Warren Center;
and
Paul Pelletier, Woodbridge, N. J.
Juniors Tim Waechter, Camphill, and
Terry Lee. Malvern, are again expected to lead the Huskies in the competion next season.
college.
in
SPEECH DISABILITY
TEACHING AID PROJECT
A two year project of training and
special teaching to help children with
language disabilities was formally
launched with an orientation conference held at Bloomsburg State College
September
17.
The project, to be directed by the
Department staff on behalf of Intermediate School Units 16, 18 and 29,
has been funded by a
first
year
grant of $135,000 from E.S.E.A. Title
m, Federal funds administered by
the Pennsylvania State Department of
Education. The Central Susquehanna
Intermediate Unit is receiving the
special funds for participating school
areas.
The purpose
of
the
project
is
to
from the schools
to administer newly available
programs to aid children with language
and speech problems.
train professionals
Page seven
NEWS ABOUT YOUR CLASSMATES
Your classmates and friends are inwhere you are and
missioned in 1952 through
Officer
Candidate School, and earned his Master of Science degree in 1960 at the
University of Maryland.
terested in knowing
what’s happening to you. So, if you
change your adress, start a new job,
get married, or welcome an addition
to the family, send the news to the
Alumni
Bloomsburg
Office,
1953
Dr. Jack Rittenmeyer is principal
of
Conestoga Senior High School,
State
College, Bloomsburg, Pa., 17815 and
we’ll publish it in the next issue of
the Quarterly. The news should reach
the Alumni Office by any of the following dates: November 1, February
1, May 1, or Augtist 'l.
Conestoga and Irish Roads, Berwyn,
Pa.
S. Scrimgeour, Jr. was awarded the Master of Education degree in
Counselor Education on Sept. 16 at
Penn State. John and his wife Jean,
’54 live at 441 East Third St., Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815. He is a member of
1905
Mae Wolfe
(Mrs. Klegman) is living
at 2250 South Beverly Drive, Los AngCalifornia
eles,
the
elopment division
Edward
joined
Evelyn is still living at 332
Maple Ave., Morgantown, West VirOur
ginia
26505, and we’re glad!
edition.”
apologies for a grievous error!
1910
Robert C. Metz has moved to 443
North Gates Ave., Kingston, Pa. 18704.
Bob serves as his class representative
for the Alumni Association.
The address
is 7
Reynolds
1912
Bina W. Johnson is residing
Mariyln Apt., 400 North Gates
Kingston, Pa. 18704.
at
St.,
1913
Cassell (Mrs. Irvin
living at R.D. 2, Hum-
is
melstown, Pa. 17036.
1926
The
adress of Fae Womelsdorf
(Mrs. Tubick) is 50 Samboume St.,
Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 18702
(Mrs. Raymond
a new home in
Sunken Heights, Bloomsburg, Pa.
17815.
Betty is class representative.
Katerman
moved
to
1949
Clifford J.
this
Kendall was graduated
summer
from
Management Program
the Advanced
of the Harvard
University Graduate School of Business Administration. The class was
composed of 154 senior executives,
including high-ranking businessmen,
military officers,
and government
officials.
home
Clifford’s
is
at
47
Washington St., Sherbom, Mass. 91770
he is Vice President of the National
Shawmut Bank
of Boston.
1951
John A. Klotsko has resecond award of the U.S.
Air Force Commendation Medal at
Sheppard Air Force Base, Texas,
where he serves as chief of training
Lt.
Col.
ceived his
operations
division
ait
Health Care Sciences.
Hazle Smith Stookey resides at
Dalrymple, Dover, N. J. 07801.
Smith
Kingston, Pa. 18704.
Algatt) has
Anna Elizabeth
F. Keller)
St.,
1943
Betty
1911
Dr. Harry A. Smith, 259a South
Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, has been
chosen Penna. Physician of the Year
by the Governor’s Committee on Employment of the Handicapped.
Dr.
Smith was chosen over a number of
physicians because of his outstanding
record as an orthopedic surgeon over
a period of 45 years in the Wyoming
Valley Area. He will also be nominated to compete for national awards.
1932
of Catherine A.
of
Bethlehem
Steel
Corporation industrial relations department, effective October 1, 1971. He
J. Connolly, ’55
1909
17086.
faculty.
Edward J. Connolley was appointed
director —management development in
the personnel and management dev-
Ida Flgley (Mrs. John Lyons) has
been a guest in the Gold Star Nursing
Home, R.D. 4, Danville, Pa. for the
She celebrated her
past two years.
83rd birthday on April 20, 1971.
Pa.
BSC
1955
90034.
1906
Sue Toole Bassler is a guest in
Mengel’s Nursing Home, Richfield,
19312.
John
the School
of
He was com-
15
Bethlehem
Commander
Reserve
Steel
in
1967.
A
the United States Nav-
In
—Air
Intelligence, he is
officer of
Operational Control Group W-l, at
the Naval Air Station, Willow Grove,
The Connolleys reside at 996
pa.
al
also currently
Hexer
commanding
Ave., Allentown, Pa. 18103.
Miss Pearl S. Borchers has changed
her address to 509 Norway St., Berlin.
New Hampshire 03570 c/o Donald
Borchers
Thomas J. Welliver has been apointed a counselor in the Division of
Counseling at the Penn State UniverHe expects to receive his docsity.
tor’s degree in counseling and guidance from the State University of N.
Y. at Albany in June, 1972. Tom has
adminbeen dean of student affairs
istration at Post Junior College, Waterbury Conn.; has served two years
in the U.S. Army, and has been a teacher and wrestling coach at Lewisburg High School.
1956
Dr. Larry Fiber, associate professor of business at Shippensburg State
College has been appointed acting director of business education while Dr.
Max Cooley is on leave from Sept. 9th
—
January
Dr. Cooley is
Dr. and Mrs.
Phber and son, Larry, live at R.D. 3,
Shippensburg, Pa. 17257.
to
also a
15,
1972.
BSC alumnus.
1957
Charlotte K. Deebel (Mrs. Rissier)
Mrs. Mary Maher McBlhenny gets
a vote of thanks for sending her current address: 459 New Market Road.
Piscataway, New Jersey 08854.
Price was awarded the
Doctor of Education degree in Aug..
1971 by the Dept, of Special Education of the University of Arizona at
Tucson. He is now a member of the
faculty of San Fernando State College
as assistant professor of special education. Dr. and Mrs. Price live at 1776
Mary Marg. Henmigan (Mrs. Gallagher) makes her home at 784 Clinton
and Alisen,
is
living
at
Century
Edge, Apt. 21B,
Florida.
33401
Village,
West Palm Beach,
Ave., Newark, N. J.
eight
D.
Lydia
Circle, Simi, California 93065
with their daughters Laura Anne, 9
7.
1958
07108.
Evelyn Bomboy (Mrs. Rolland Corson) has written to help us correct an
error in the September Quarterly, in
which she was reported “deceased”.
She writes “All is forgiven but please
print correction in your forthcoming
Page
James
Soft’s
Col. Klotsko, ’51, right, receives
U.S.A.F. Commendation medal from
Col. Jerrold Wheaton.
Lt.
William A. Welliver was recently
elected Superintendent of Springford
Area School District, Royersford, Pa.,
and is also working on his doctor’s
degree at Temple University. Bill’s
address is R.D. 2, Mennonite Road.
Oollegeville, Pa.
19426.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
USAF.
1959
C.
Thomas Fensttermacher was
a/-
John R. Hatton was awarded the
Master of Education degree in Elementary Education at Penn State
warded the Doctor of Education degree in Elementary Education at Penn
Tom’s address
State in Sept.. 1971.
is 513 Baer Ave.. Hanover, Pa. 17331.
17109.
Kenneth H. Parker has accepted a
position as UniServ Director for the
St. Louis Suburban Teachers Association. He taught for ten years in the
schools of Riverside and Orange Counties prior to serving for one year as
President of the Placentia Teachers
Association and Salary and Negotiations consultant for the California
Southern SecTeachers Association
tion. He and his wife. Jane, and sons
have
Keith 4. Scott. 4 and Jeff, 1,
moved to 7306 Princeton, University
City Missouri 63130.
—
1961
Joe McGroorty is serving as an
Education Specialist with the Federal
Government. He is currently residing
at 1310 Grovania Ave., Abington, Pa.
19001.
Jane Reinaker (Mrs. Russell Wilwas awarded the Doctor of
hour)
Philosophy in June. 1971. The title
of her thesis was “Behavioral Object-
Reading in the PriJane, and her husband lives at 209 Cole Blvd., Charles.
Missouri 63301
ives for Teaching
mary Grades”.
1962
Ann Brown, Class of 1968) became
parents of a baby girl, Jennifer Rae,
John is now enrolled in a
in April.
doctoral program in educational administration at Penn State. He te'aches 6th grade in the West Shore School
Shiban,
’67
Miller,
’70
August, 1971.
His address at that
time was 610 South Locust St.. Oxford.
Ohio. His address in the Alumni Office at BSC is 356 S. Poplar St.. Hazleton. Pa.
18201.
Walter H. Veranda is presently employed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Pood and Nutrition Service.
He was promoted recently to
the position of senior budget analyst
in the Budget and Planning Division.
Walter and his wife, Joy, and their
daughters Lois and Lisa are living at
9461 Catfeet Court, Columbia, Maryland 21043.
Robert J. Strunk has been named a
UniServ staff representative by the
Penna. State Education Association,
and will serve a cluster of associations
in western Delaware County.
Since
1964, he has been a teacher in the
Rose Tree Media School District. Bob
and his wife, the former Betsy Whitenigh* live with their family at 17 War
Trophy Lane, Media. Pa” 19603.
Mechanicsburg
District in
1968
Mr. and Mrs. George Chellew (she
Virginia C. Heasel. 400 Riverside
Drive, Apt. 3A, New York City, received her Master of Arts degree at
Teachers College, Columbia UniverMiss Heasel
sity in August, 1970.
teaches African Studies at the New
Lincoln School.
was Patricia Swartz, Class
are living at Continental
B-6, New Castle, Delaware
George received the Master of
Education degree in July, 1971 from
the University of Delaware.
Richard
(Mrs. George Zach-
Steible
managing
1971.
tor or
1,
Donna Maria Barbara (Mrs. Mcis residing at 5817 Morrowfield
Ave., Pittsburkh, Pa. 15217.
her some news.
Marie
NOW!
Mayer (Mrs. Donlou) was
previously
listed
incorrectly
in
the
Alumni Office files as Ann Marie
Moyer. The Editor of the Quarterly
and the Alumni Office staff are grateful to Marie for setting the record
straight and for sending her address:
1003 F Charles View Way, Baltimore,
Maryland
21204.
1967
of Captain
Fowles. 199-36-1951, is
The address
Thomas
S.
HQ USARV DCS
OPS
I&S,
APO
San Francisco,
96375.
edi-
Views, a weekly
Louella Davis, R.D. 1, RichPa. 17086, received the Master
of Education degree in Elementary
Education at Penn State in Sept., 1971.
Flo
field,
on Aug.
1966
Benyo has also served as
TV News N
18229.
ar-
Jean Zehnke (Mrs. John T. Foster)
has moved to 626 Sunset St., Clarks
Summit. Pa. 18411. Jean is representative for the Class of 1966 and is
a member of the Board of Directors
of the BSC Alumni Association. Send
the
entertainment supplement and is editor of a new local weekend magazine,
Saturday. He won the 1971 Keystone
Press Award of the Penna. Newspaper Publishers’ Association in the
His address
local column category.
Center St., Jim Thorpe, Pa.
is 207
Rae)
rivel of their daughter. Dawn Marie,
21, 1971. Both Joe and Karen,
who reside at 25 Tudor Ave., Pine
Beach New Jersey 08741. are 1965
grads of BSC.
was appointed
Times-News
Benyo
S.
editor of
& Record, Lehighton, Pa. on October
arda) has moved to 34 Oak St.,
Wilkes-Barre. Pa. 18702. George has
assumed duties as coordinator of the
Metropolitan Lutheran Council and is
pastor of St. Paul’s Lutheran Church.
They are the parents of Andrew, 4.
and Rebecca. 1% years of age.
was Karen Baumer) greeted the
Apartr
19720.
1965
Nancy
1969)
of
Arms
ments
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Zavaglia (she
John Pesda was awarded the Doctor of Philosophy degree with a major
in history by Kent State University in
His address is 3217 A
Pa.
Harrisburg,
Road,
The Hattons (she was Viringia
1971.
in Sept.,
Wakefield
1960
*
A son was born to Itfr. and Mrs.
David Knouse (she was Donna Fenstermacher, Class of 1968) on July 5,
The Knouses have a new ad1971.
R.D. 1, Northumberland, Fa
dress:
17857.
1969
Nancy James (Mrs. Brubaker)
living at
Route
3,
Towanda, Pa.
is
18848.
Gregory A. Kanaskie, 1243 Pulaski
Ave., Shamokin, Pa. 17872 was awarded the Master of Education degree in
Earth Sciences at Penn State in
1971.
Sept.
E. Hall, 2019 Roosevelt
Williamsport, Pa. 17701, was
awarded the Master of Education degree in Elementary Education at
Penn State in Sept., 1971.
Cherie
Ave.,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Drumm
(she Was Linda Unger) have moved
to 420 East Sixth St., Laurel, Dela-
.
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent P. Raupers
was Virginia Nark) are living at
18 Tedd Lane, Old Tappen, New Jersey 07675. Both are 1962 grads.
(she
1963
The address of Theresa
(Mrs. Ray W. Lewis) is Box
Bloomfield,
Pa.
Biagiotti
256,
New
17068.
1964
George A. Weigand. who has been
serving as dean’s representative of
the College of Education on the York
Campus of the Penn State University,
of
has been appointed coordinator
Student teaching at the University.
His address is 489 Park Lane State
College, Pa. 16801.
,
DECEMBER,
1971
Mr. and Mrs. James McKinley (she
was
Salley Hoffecker)
are living at
Kings wood
Apartments, 502 Steven
Drive. Apt. B, King of Prussia, Pa.
19406. Jim was graduated from BSC in
1964, and has started his eighth year
as a teacher at Upper Merion High
School; he also coaches basketball.
Sally is busy caring for their baby
boy and teaching swimming at the
high school as part of the Comunity
Aquatics Program
ware
19956.
The
address of SP/5 George A.
Ziolkowski 165-40-7494 is ‘A’ Battery,
Artillery,
APO, New York
George returned to the USA
from Vietnam in March, 1971 and left
2175th
09165.
Germany in April, 1971. Mail will
reach him at his mother’s home: 137
Honey Pot St., Nanicoke, Pa. 18634.
for
The Reverend and Mrs. Ralph Edward Cope (she was Sherryl Shaffer,
Class of 1966)
Second
Lieut.
Eugene
P.
Miller,
U.S. Air Force, has arrived for duty
at Clark Air Base, the Philippine Islands. A pilot, Lt. Miller is assigned
to a unit of the Air Force Communications and air traffic control for the
baby
girl,
are the parents of a
Ann Marie, born August
3,
The couple has one other child,
Paul Edward, age 2. The family re-
1971.
sides at R.D.
1,
Windsor, Pa. 17266.
1970
Hilda K.
Yocum
(Mr's.
Morgan)
is
Page nine
residing at 330
Mahoning
St.,
Milton,
Pa. 17847.
.
.
WEDDINGS
Lincoln Ave.,
.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry K. Berkheiser,
Jr. (she Was June E. Bloss, Class of
1971) are making their home at 22
Camelot Road, Parsippany, New Jersey 07054. Both are teaching in the
New
Bloomfield,
Box
Education degree at
his
BSC
Master
of
in 1971.
Dorothy Pichel is now Mrs. DoroAddress: Route
1,
thy Schneider.
Hellertown, Pa.
1957
Anna Romanczyek is now Mrs.
Anna Woodward. Address: 814 Delaware
Vera E. Kovalich, 41 Spring St.,
Glen Lyon, Pa. 18617, was awarded
in
the Master of Science degree
speech pathology and audiology at
Penn State in Sept., 1971.
Monique H. Cavalliero,
307 11th St.,
Honesdale,
Pa. 18431 received the
Master of Arts degree in French at
Penn State
in Sept., 1971.
Second Lieutenant Vincent J. Shiban has been awarded his silver wings
following graduation from U.S. Air
Force pilot training. After specialized training, Lt. Shiban will be assigned to MacDill AFB, Oklahoma,
Where he will fly the F-4E Phantom
bomber With a unit of the
Tactical Air Comm'and. His wife is
the former Theresa DeRenzis.
fighter
1971
Angeline T. Carrato (Mrs. Babatis living at 27 South Ferguson St.,
Shenandoah, Pa. 17976.
sky)
The address of Cynthia Sharretts
John W. S'ibole) is Second
Floor, 616 West Union Blvd., Beth(Mrs.
lehem, Pa. 18018.
Joan M. Gabuzda (Mrs. Reese) is
living at Nittany Garden Apts., Apt.
F-10, 445 Waupelani Drive, State College, Pa. 16801.
$4,500 OIL
IS GIVEN
PAINTING
Bloomsburg State College received
an oil painting by the noted Japanese
artist Tetsuro Sawada in October. The
gift was made possible through the
generous efforts of Miss Toshiko Takaezu, well known American Craftsman. and Mrs. Kathyrn Trubeck, of
the Hunderdon Art Center in Clinton,
New
Jersey.
Selection of the painting
was made by Dr. Percival R. Roberts,
in, chairman of the department of
art at BSC.
Dr. Roberts described the gift as a
“stunning example of structured color
field abstraction, one that will greatly
enhance our college’s permanent art
collection.”
The Hunderdon Art Center featured
an exhibition of his work in March of
1971 and it was from this collection
that the BSC painting, valued at
$4,500, Was selected.
CHAIRS AVAILABLE
at
Alumni Chairs are now available
the College Store.
We have a
Captain’s
Chair
Cherry Arms
and shipping, and
with
for $40.95 plus tax
a Boston Rocker for $31.95 plus tax
and shipping. The chairs are black
with a gold BSC seal. Please write
the College Store
Bloomsburg
at
State College and we will be glad to
send you more information.
Page ten
Forest City, Pa. 18421
St.,
1958
Eloise Kaminski is now Mi’s. Eloise
Canfield. Address: R. D. 1, Box 202,
Vestal, New York. 13850
1959
Joan Dalton is now Mrs. Joan
Riverside
Decker.
(Address:
2555
Drive, Duboistown, Pa. 17701
Lorraine J. Taylor is now Mrs. Lor-
Thomo. Address: R. D. 1, Box
Dushore, Pa. 18614
Ruth A. Moser is now Mrs. Ruth
Seksinsky.
Address: R. D. 2, Watsontown, Pa. 1777
Mary Tier is now Mrs. Mary Kelley.
Address: 2326 Prospect Ave., Croydon, Pa. 19020
raine
5,
1962
Nancy
is now Mrs. Nancy
Address:
5579
Highland
Avenue, Millport, N. Y. 14864
Joyce Redcliff is now Mrs. Joyce
Michael.
Address: 321 Harry Ave.,
Robesonia, Pa. 19551
Kathryn Kerlish is now Mrs. Kathryn Ellis. Address:
10746
Linden
Ave., Seattle, Washington. 98133
Joni Ann Petrie is now Mrs. Joni
Frie.
Address:
5303
Ravens worth
Road, Springfield, Va. 22151
"ersia Anita Berardi is now Mrs
Robert A.
Penna.
Address:
415
Foulke Lane, Rolling Green Estates,
Springfield, Pa. 19064
J.
Case
Dr. Larry R. Eckroat, ’64 is married
to Cozella E. Harvey.
Address: 1584
West 42nd St., Erie, Pa. 16509.
1965
Carole J. Snook is now Mrs. Carole
Sadowski. Address: R.D. 2, Selinsgrove, Pa.
17870
Alberta R. Pealer is now Mrs. Alberta Makary.
Address:
1743 W.
Union Blvd., Bethlehem, Pa. 18018.
Baymbam
now Mrs. Mar6,
Dan-
Jane L. Kaszowicz is now Mrs. Jane
Trochimowicz.
Address:
110 King
William St., Newark, Delaware 18711.
Carol Ripa is now Mrs. Carol R.
Oliver. Address: 75 Huntsville Road.
Dallas, Pa.
18612.
1967
Carla Overhiser is now Mrs. Carla
Auten. Address. 403 South Main St..
Muncy Pa. 17756.
Margaret Chrismer is now Mrs.
Stewart Hopkins. Address: R.D. 1,
Dcylestown, Pa. 18901.
Angelica Sacco is now Mrs. Angelica
Mahoney. Address: 322 Beverly Court,
Sp ringside Manor, Shillington, Pa.
19607.
’67
1968.
Dave teaches
82520.
Darlene H. Bastress is now Mrs. DarAddress: 610 North Fifth
17801.
St., Sungury, Pa.
Jo Ann Eister is now Mrs. JO Ann
Fry. Address: 107 West Sunset Ave.,
Ephrata, Pa. 17522.
Loretta Waskevich is now Mrs. Loretta Shimko. Address: 124 East Avon
Road, Parkside, Pa. 19015.
Timothy J. Hoffman, ’68 was married to Mary Sue A. Petrole on September, 4, 1971. Address: 389 First St.,
Warminister, Pa. 18974.
SaJllie L. Swoyer is now Mrs. Sallie
Feussner
Susanne Saurman, ’68 is married to
Barry Sutter, a senior at BSC. Address:
33 East Third St., Blomsburg.
Pa. 17815.
Dale Lamar Kreischer, '68 was married to Linda Jane Patterson on June
Address: 523 Railroad St.,
26, 1971.
Danville, Pa. 17821.
Elaine Barlow, ’68 is now Mrs. Bert
Address:
19 West
R. Parker, HI.
Knowles Ave., Glenolden, Pa. 19036.
1969
Laura Reynolds is now Mrs. Laura
Address:
Lake Winola
Warnken.
Road, Facto ryv file, Pa.
18419.
Brenda Bowman is now Mrs. Brenda Stutzman.
Address:
704 East
Main St., Hegens, Pa. 17938.
Linda Biduck is now Mrs. Linda
Address:
Roscoe.
6038
Carpenter
East Petersburg, Pa. 17520.
Paul G. Clothier, ’69 is married
St.,
to
Carol A. Sladin, (Wilkes College, ’69).
Both are teaching in the schools of
Anne Arundel County, Maryland. Address: 7873 American Circle, Apt. 101.
Glen Burnie, Maryland 21061.
Catherine Bryan is now Mrs. Catherine Roscoe. Address: 254 Ft. Fairview St., Bethlehem, Pa. 18018.
Virginia Davenport, ’69 is now Mrs.
Donald F. Yoder. Address: R.D. 2,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
Oheri Ziegler, ’69 is married to
Adam J. Skelding, ’71. Address: Apt.
M-l, Mayflower Apts., 290 River Road
Piscataway, New Jersey 08854.
Karen
was married
’67
on October
for the
to
19,
Perkiomen
Valley School District and Eileen
teaches at Lansdale Cathodic High
School; she received her Master of
Education degree at Temple University in August, 1971.
Address:
218
J. Kroll,
’70
was married
to
Horwath
on August 14,
1971.
Address: 5544 North Morgan
Street, Apt. 301, Alexandria, Va. 22312
Ann E. Dalto, ’70 and William R.
Heckman,
Jr
Address:
Guam,
Jeffrey
L.
Pacific Islands. 96910
M. Obzut,
Bernice
’70
and Mich-
ael Roy Linn, ’71.
Address: 184%
Schuylkill
Avenue,
Shenandoah
Heights, Pa. 17976
Maria Pellegrino, '70 and Joseph
Vezendy, Jr., ’70. Address: 237 West
Front Street, Berwick, Pa. 18603
Sylvia Silvetti, ’70 was married to
Havlish, Jr., on September 4, 1971.
Sylvia is teaching at
Emmaus High School. Husband will
Norman
graduate
.
from
Business
Allentown
January, 1972. Address:
Sussex #10
2444 Mountain Lane,
Allentown, Pa. 18103
Elizabeth Ann Hodek, ’70 and Jack
W. Sharbaugh, ’70.
Susan Force. ’70 and David Schneider.
Address: Hatfield Village.
El-9, Hatfield, Pa.
19440
Arlene Kipp, ’70 is now Mis. Arlene
College
Eileent Fertig,
Wyoming
1970
is
liyn Steinhart. Address: R.D.
vllie, Pa.
17821.
David Hildenbrand,
18964.
lene Winn.
1966
Marilyn
Pa.
1968
Robbins.
1964
TO COLLEGE
Lander,
764,
1951
Jersey School Dis-
Harry earned
trict.
Souderton,
Margaret M. Laudig, ’67 is married
to Robert S. Vaughn. Address: P.O.
.
in
,
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
1924—
teaching in the QuakAddress: Box 52,
ertown Schools.
Pleasant Valley. Pa. 18948
Kathleen Martin is now Mrs. Kath-6
53
leen Weaver. Address: Apt. C
Sweinhart Road, Boyertown, Pa. 19512
Barbara Skocik is now Mrs. BarAddress: 1801 Center
Nestor.
Shubert.
She
bara
17921
Pa.
Street, Ashland.
now Mrs. Betty unAddress: Rear 3 East 11th
Betty Weiss
is
derwood.
Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
17815
1971
Susan I. Beyer, ’71 and Thomas C.
NorParr. Address: 259 Third Street,
thumberland, Pa. 17851
is
Karen E. Dow.
Karen Gallaway. Address:
’71
now
11
Mrs.
Honey-
Lane. Chester, N. J. 07934
Jacqueline Ann Lewis, ’71 to Richteachard J. Camuso, ’70. Richard is
Noring at Rittenhouse Jr. High in
ristown. Pa. and Jacquie is doing subView
stitute teaching. Address: High
Gardens. Apt. B-305. Spring City. Pa.
hill
19475
’71 and Kathy Lutz
1971
were married September 4.
Craig returned to Ft. Benning, Ga
where he was attending Officers
R3710
Address:
Candidate School.
Old Berwick Road, Bloomsburg, Pa
Craig Searfoss,
17815
Carol
Rainick,
3u UJrmnrmm
is
Sturgin,
’71.
’71
„
and Joseph S
Address: Laporte, Pa.
18626
Shirley J. Geisler,
’71
Emil
and
151
Address:
Moskovich, Jr., ’70.
West Eighth Street. Bloomsburg, Pa.
17815
Sharon Hayman, ’71 is now Mrs.
Larry E. Yost. Address: R. D. 1,
Stillwater, Pa.
17878
Esther Jane Bassett, ’71 and Kenneth E. Herman, ’71. Address: 332
SelinsSouth High Street, Apt. 6
grove. Pa. 17870
Penny K. Faux, ’71 and Randall N.
Fetterman. Address: Oatawissa, Pa.
1900 Lydia Zehner (Mrs.
1901—
Shuman), Bloomsburg. Pa.
Sara
Brenda L. Stoneback is now' Mrs.
303
Address:
Brenda Shoemaker.
Main Street, Emmaus, Pa. 18049
1971
Shirley A. Beaver, ’71 is
Shirley A. Troy.
Address:
Box
513,
Ringtown, Pa.
now Mrs
R.D.
1,
17967.
Shirley J. Geisler, ’71 is married to
Emil Moskovich. Jr. Address: 151
West Eighth St., Rloomsbrugurg, Pa.
17815.
Diane Pupkiewicz
is
now Mrs. Diane
Cuirle.
Address: c/o Keta Business
College, Box 65, Keta, Volta Region,
Ghana, Africa.
Nancy S. Sherlock is now Mrs.
Nancy Husted. Address:
R.D. 1,
Port Royal, Pa.
17082.
Dorothy Voy stock is now Mrs. Doro40 South
Rurnbel.
Address:
Penn St., York, Pa. 17404.
Gayle Thrope, ’71 is married to
119
Address:
Robert Phillips, Jr.
Oak St., Scranton, Pa. 18508.
thy
Parents attended the opening
game of the season with
ball
foot-
BSC
entertaining the University of ScranFollowing the game a picnic
ton.
was held at Town Park.
DECEMBER,
1971
Catawissa,
Hamlin,
(July, 1971)
1902 Bess Long.
15, 1971)
Bloomsburg (Nov.
Mrs. Blanche A. Gibbons. Wilkes1905—Pa.
Barre,
1903
Howard
Houtz,
Sioux
City,
Iowa
Alice L. Small Danville. Pa.
(Nov. 11. 1971) Miss Smull served as
a teacher in the Danville schools for
She had
46 years, retiring in 1951.
.
the BSC Alumni
Association for 37 years, held numeroffices in the Trinity Methodist
ous
1906—
Church, and taught in every depart1908—
of the Sunday school, and was
ment
active in many community projects
in Danville.
Lillie Miller (Mrs. Otto Parr),
been an officer
in
Nescopeck Pa. (July, 197P
Martha Herring (Mrs.
Elliot
Tomlinson). Harrisbm-g, Pa.
Mabel Clark (Mrs. Orrie Pollock).
Wilkes-Barre. Pa. (April 30, 1970'
1909 Julia Simpler (Mrs. E. P.
Aurand'. Fullerton, Pa. (Aug. 11,
J.
1971)
Walter
1911—
Bloomsburg
Welliver.
C.
(Nov. 1971)
1912—Enola Snyder (Mrs. Morris S.
1910
Evans). Long Island. N.Y.
Ira
Burton Shuman, Honesdale.
(May 31. 1971). Ira taught school for
a number of years, then operated a
farm until he retired in 1947.
L. May Steiner (Mrs. George
E. Gamble. Jr.
(Aug., 1971)
1916—Mary M. Watts
Laura HouhtOn (Mrs. Peacock) East
Stroudsburg. Pa. (Sept.
Wakeman
Lucille
7.
1971)
(Mrs.
Rair)
(Sept., 1970)
1913 Messina Patterson (Mrs. Fay
Daley)
Dr. Kimber C. Kuster, Bloomsburg,
Pa.
(Aug. 1971)
Kathryn Reed (Mrs. Ray C.
Kase), Georgetown, S. Carolina (Oct.
1970)
1917 Veda Kester (Mrs. Irvin L.
Miller), Alexandria, Virginia (Aug.
30. 1971)
John L. Richardson, Jr., San Gabriel, California (May 13, 1971
7,
Stuart Button, Johnson City, New
York (Aug. 9, 1971) Mr. Burton retired in 1961 after teaching 47 years.
Dr. J. Loomis Christian, Paxtang,
Pa. (Sept., 1971) Dr. Christian practiced general medicine for 41 years
and participated extensively in civic,
professional,
religious,
and fraternal
Clarence
(Sept.
18,
the U.S.
an
T.
1970)
Hodgson, York, Pa.
Clarence served in
Army from
elementary
P9
Is-
—
Bloomsburg
1928 Teloiv Wagner (Mrs. Teloiv
Wetzel), Bloomsburg (Aug. 1970) Mrs.
Wetzel had taught second grade for
many years in the Conynham School
of the Hazleton Area School District.
1931—
George Evancho
1929 Myron D.
(Sept. 1971)
Helen L.
Moss, Shickshinny,
Pa.
Maynard (Mrs. Lot
Lake)
Mrs. Sarah Hartt, Bloomsburg
Mrs. Hartt is survived
by a daughter, Mrs. Edward Kitchen,
Bloomsburg, Pa.; a son, Robert Hartt,
Harrisonburg, Virginia; four grandand seven gre(at grandchlildiiien
1932
1971)
(Oct.,
children
.
Samuel Sacus, Ranshaw, Pa.
1933
1934
Frederick T. Jaffin, Ambler,
Pa. (Dec. 24, 1970) Fred participated
varsity football, basketball, and
track while at BSC from 1930-1934;
he was captain of the football squad
during his senior year.
He Was a
member of College Council, Phi Sigma
Pi fraternity, the Maroon & Gold
staff and served as assistant dean of
men in Old North Hall during 1933-34.
Temple University awarded him the
in
Master
of
Education degree
in
guid-
ance.
His teaching career included appointments to the faculties of Augusta
Township, Canton, and Youngs ville
High Schools. During World War H,
he was a supervisor at National
Forge and Ordinance (Warren, Pa.)
and taught mathematics courses for
Penn State. For a quarter century he
was well-known for his coaching and
teaching in the Wissahickon School
District, and officiated in both football and basketball games in Montgomery County and adjacent counties.
Fred is survived by his wife, Elfrieda, who attended BSC and is a teacher in the Wissahcikon District a
son, Lt. Frederick T. Jaffin, Jr., U.S.
Navy; a daughter, Barbara, and several brothers, two of whom are also
BSC alumni.
;
—John
1938
New
J.
Maczuga,
Franklin,
Jersey (Dec. 3, 1970)
1940—William Wertz, St. Charles,
Mo. (Sept., 1971) William was a longtime resident of Berwick, Pa. and was
transferred to St. Charles when the
ACF
He
closed its Berwick plant.
active in church affairs and in
He
civic and fraternal oranizations
was
.
survived by his wife, Kathryn; two
daughters, Salley and Janet; a son,
William, Jr.; a brother; and a grandis
activities.
York
The first annual Parent’s Weekend
was held at Bloomsburg State College Saturday and Sunday, September 18 and 19. John Mulka, Director
of Student Activities was in charge.
A.
Pa.
,
17820
R.
F.
Mar jory McHenry, Long
New' York (Sept., 1971)
Josephine Maurer (Mrs. Francis
Laut)
1925 Beatrice Geisinger (Mrs .Johnson), Millerburg, Pa.
1926 Olive Henrietta Watts, Millersburg, Pa.
Geraldine Aul (Mrs. Carl M. Davis)
land,
1917-1919
school
and was
principal
in
,
Hugh E. Bolye (March
23, 1971)
Carlton C. Sherman, Hanover-Green, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. (July
1971)
Carlton taught nearly four
decades in Hanover Township; he is
a
survived by his wife, Louise;
daughter, Marion Price; a son, Fred;
six grandchildren.
1923 Helen
(Mrs. Reher)
Kline
1922
(July, 1970)
son.
1949
(July,
1950
Harold E. Dodson, Orangeville
1971)
Clarence
Meiss,
Catons ville,
Clarence was chair(Oct., 1971)
of the guidance department at
Catons ville Sr. H. S. He earned his
M.S. degree at the University of
Delaware in 1962, and was a doctorcandidate at the University of
al
Maryland at the time of his death. He
was an active member of professional,
civic, and fraternal groups, and was
Md.
man
Page eleven
HERRE WILL RETIRE,
ON FACULTY SINCE 1947
serving as Treasurer of the Metropolitan Baltimore Association for childHe
ren with Learning Disabilities.
is survived by his wife, Elizabeth; a
son, John; his parents; a brother; and
a sister.
DR.
Dr. Ralph S. Herre, a member of
the faculty at Bloomsburg State College since 1947, has announced Ms retirement effective at the end of the
1971-72 college year.
Dr. Herre joined the faculty as a
Professor of History and has also
served as an Assistant Dean of Men
During his 25 years at
since 1948.
—
Elizabeth A. Kroupa (Mrs. W.
Gunn) (Aug. 20, 1971) Elizabeth
was fatally injured in an automobile
1965
J.
accident, along with Trista, her 7
old daughter in Port Hood, Texas. She is survived by her son, Brett,
month
age
and her husband, Captain W.
J. Gunn.
Beth’s mother wrote recently “Her years at Bloomsburg
were happy ones and a pleasant mem-
BSC he has served
2,
ory for the family”.
Thomas
1967
(Nov.,
B. Stitely, Milton, Pa.
1970)
Peace Corps
INSTITUTE
Tom Gorrey
in
—
Ecuador.
SOCIAL STUDIES
Dr. Herre
TOM GORREY TO LEAVE
SUPERINTENDENT’S POST
Thomas
1968 Richard D. Leahy, Canton,
Pa. (Aug., 1971)
We received word
recently that Richard lost his life in
an accident while serving with the
on numerous facincluding
being
chairman of Homecoming and Freshman Parent’s Day. He served as advisor to the commuting men on campus for over 20 years and participated
for many years in high school Career
and College Day, visiting as many as
35 schools in a year.
For the past
year he has served as curator of the
committees,
ulty
A. Gorrey, superintendent
and grounds at Bloomsburg State College since 1959, has
announced his retirement effective
January 28, 1972.
of buildings
reporting
resignation, Dr.
Robert J. Nossen, president, lauded
Gorrey highly and the board went on
record to Commend him for Ms ser-
In
the
Columbia County Historical Museum
in Bakeless Center
Humanities on campus.
located
for
the
Following his retirement, Dr. Herre
be the curator of the
Columbia County Historical Museum.
The Herres plan to do some traveling
in this country and abroad.
will continue to
The Bloomsburg State College Infor Social Studies Teachers
held a conference on “Afro-Americans
in American Life” on Friday, November 19. The Institute is a cooperative
education program between
Bloomsburg State College and thirtyfour public school districts which involves around eight hundred elementary and secondary social studies tea-
School in 1921.
was associated With his father, the
late John J. Gorrey, in the general
contracting business until his father’s
death in 1947. He continued in that
business until he was named to the
cher's
college post.
O’Neill (Mrs. Redington).
1928 Lois M. Odell (Mrs. Wallace
His twelve-year tenure corresponded with the period of greatest physical
growth in the history of the college. In
addition to being responsible for maintenance of all buildings, both old and
new, he actively participated in the
design and construction of numerous
buildings and other campus facilities.
Robert
Lacoe); Ruth Avery (Mrs.
Kellerman; Bernard Gallagher.
1957—
1929 Anna Rose Farrell
stitute
The
.
George A.
Associate Professor of History, said the conference was concerned with various approaches and methods which would enable teachers to
recognize and include Afro-Americans
in the social studies curriculum.
The keynote address, “Introducing
Afro-American Studies Into the Curriculum for Teachers,” given by William Green, curriculum specialist in
African and Afro-American Studies
in the Philadelphia School District.
Green, in his talk, pointed out that
the history of Africans and Afro-Americans has been omitted, distorted
and presented in such a biased manner that myths and stereotypes have
become the central core of a racist
ideology which has denied a sense
of humanity to the person of African
ancestry.
Institute’s Director,
Turner,
Others participating were Dr. waiter A. Simon, Professor of Art at BSC;
James Pescy, Associate Professor of
Political Science at BSC; Mrs. Helene
C. Broome, Associate Director of Instruction
ir|
tfle
Hiaifriisiburg
City
vice.
A
native of Bloomsburg, Gorrey
graduated
from
was
Bloomsburg
High
Prom that time he
The addition
of new buildings has
a significant increase in
of employes in the build-
resulted in
the number
ings and grounds department.
The
staff includes custodians, tradesmen,
and other buildings and grounds personnel.
One
college
noted Gorrey
and his staff have earned the praise
official
of visitors for the
appearance of the
in which the
campus and the manner
facilities have been maintained.
Werkheiser, are parents of a daughter., Mrs. Thomas Madden, town, and
they have two grandchildren and one
great grandchild.
25th
ANNAUL CONFERENCE
and Steven S. McLaine, a
teacher at Trenton Central High
School.
The Bloomsburg State College Black Student Society presented
views and reactions to history and its
“Student Perspective of Black Studies,” discussing views and reactions
to history and its presentation.
Jay
Rochelle, Bloomsburg State College
Chaplain, gave a program “Simulation Games in a Classroom Situation.”
Approximately
50
departmental
programs under the School of Business and School of Professional Studies were available to participants
at the 25th Annual
Conference for
Teachers and Administrators held at
Bloomsburg State College Saturday,
October 30, according to Dr. C. Stuart Edwards, Dean, School of Professional Studies and conference dir-
This was the first of three conferences on the topic of “Minorities in
American Life,” sponsored by the
Bloomsburg State College Institute
for Social Studies Teachers.
In addition to the divisional programs and the general session, there
were specially-schoduled group breakfasts, exhibits and refreshments, and
Schools;
Page twelve
ector.
ADDRESSES UNKNOWN
If you know the address of any of
the following alumni, please send it
Bloomsburg
Office,
to the Alumni
State College, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
1898— Blanche C. Dawson
1923 Joy E. Sheats
1924 Michael P. JanMcelli;
1951—
1938
—Stasia
Anna
Zola
1940— William H. Miller
1963—
1950
Edward
1954
Michael Hemlock
Mrs. Kenneth Gunton
—
J.
Mitros
Den-
mon
Doris Krzywlcki (Mrs. Philip
1956
Glenna Gebbhard
Smith);
William D. Kautz
1961— Alfred Ford; Mary Downey
1967—
Mrs. O’Donnell)
Charles J. Gelso; Rosemary
M. Timory
1964 Jo Ann Hoffman (Mrs. Gary
Sprout); Joseph B. Mockaitis; Mar1969—
tha E. Timlin
1965 Elizabeth Yokl;
Hayden C.
Jones
Judy Gross (Mrs. Robert FarA. Fogarty; Karen
M. Eckert; Robert T. Ballentine
William J. Shope;
John C.
Carr; Robert D. Harvey
1968 Larry R.
Phillips;
Bonnie
Wallos (Mrs. Jan D. Keller); Charles
E. Rhoades, Jr.; Mrs. Lisbeth Deal
1966
ina);
Rosemary
Cepes; Judith A. Bower
Thomas R. Bennuhoff; Barbara A. Ruffing; Richard L. Bailey
1971 Cynthia A. Basta;
Barbara
—
and George Duchemin
ALUMNI DAY
SATURDAY, APRIL
29,
1972
an informal luncheon.
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
THE ALUMNI QUARTERLY
EDITOR — Boyd F. Buckingham
ASSISTANT EDITOR - Kenneth Hoffman
BOARD OF DIRECTORS OFFICERS
— Howard F. Fenstemaker ,12. 242 Central Road, Bloomsburg, Pa.
Term Expires 1973
17815
VICE PRESIDENT — Millard Ludwig, ’48, 625 East Main Street, Millville, Pa. 17846
Term Expires 1972
PRESIDENT
— Col. Elwood M. Wagner
643 Wiltshire Road, State
— Term Expires 1973
TREASURER — Earl A. Gehrig,
110 Robin Lane, Sherwocd Village,
burg, Pa. 17815 — Term Expires 1973
SECRETARY
College,
’43,
Pa. 16801
Blooms-
’37,
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Terms
Terms
expire 1972
Mrs. Joseph C. Conner
’34
102 West Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Vacancy
to be filled
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Mrs. Charlotte H. McKechnie ’35
509 East Front Street
Berwick, Pennsylvania 18603
expire 1973
Dr. Frank J. Furgele ’52
Colonial Farm Box 88
R. D. 1. Glen Mills, Pa. 19342
Miss- Elizabeth H. Hubler ’29
Park and Oak
Dr. Alexander J. McKechnie, Jr. ’39
19 N. 24th St.
Camp Hill, Pa. 17011
John Thomas ’47
68 Fourth Street
Hamburg, Pennsylvania 19526
Terms Expire
111 Plant
’40
Francis B. Galinski,
’36
Avenue
Volume LXXII, Number
I
wish
to
4,
express
Apt. 2
Mrs. Jean Zenke Foster ’66
626 Sunset St.
Clarks Summit, Pa. 18411
90
Wayne, Pennsylvania 19087
224 Leonard Street
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 17815
Sts.,
Gordon, Pennsylvania. 17936
1974
Mrs. Verna Jones
Clayton H. Hinkel
—
Tower
’52
Hill Rd.,
Doylestown, Pa. 18901
December, 1971
my
personal sorrow for the recent loss of Dr. Kimfoer
C. Kuster.
I first
came
to
know Dr. Kuster
as a fellow student in the
fall
of 1910.
We
were both day students, and our headquarters were the “Check Room,”
a dingy area in the basement of Noetling Hall. I spent a week-end at his
home, and he, in turn, spent a week-ent at my home.
After graduation, our paths separated for several years, until he returned
Bloomsburg as a member of the faculty, following the retirement of
Professor Hartline.
We worked together as colleagues on the faculty, as members of the
same church, and a member of the Board of Directors of the Alumni Assn.
Dr. Kuster did a wonderful piece of work as Chairman of the Awards
Committee. He handled all of the countless details involved in selecting the
recipients of the Distinguished Service Award.
Dr. Kuster was also very active in community affairs. He served for
several years as Chairman of the Bloomsburg Chapter of the Red Cross. He
also was active in many other organizations in Bloomsburg.
We are happy that his name will be perpetuated in the Kuster Auditorium of the Hartline Center, thus joining the names of two persons who have
loomed large in the history of the Bloomsburg State College.
This is my personal tribute to a man whom I shall always remember as
a beloved friend.
to
President,
Alumni Association
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE
BLOOMSBURG,
Non-Profit Org.
POSTAGE
U. S.
PA. 17815
PAID
Address Correction Requested
1.7c
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Permit No. 10
6.S.C.
Once
ANNUAL GIVING CAMPAIGN
was a
there
turtle.
He was
handsome, inventive,
brilliant, aggressive,
accomplished, inquisitive, amorous, composed, and loyal to his Alma Mater.
He was rarely given to turtlenapping, woolgathering, daydreaming, revelry,
absentmindedness, or procrastination. He was the epitomy of turtle purposefulness.
of
a
One day the turtle received a short note from Mr. Aesop who was Director
Alumni Affairs of the turtle’s college “Old Mill Pond.” Mr. Aesop asked for
contribution to the Annual Giving Campaign and also the turtle’s biography.
He
suggested that the
The
fellow.
turtle
turtle’s
was
classmates might be interested in such an unusual
He took pen in hand to comply with Mr.
delighted.
Aesop’s request.
At that precise moment a neighborly hare hounded him to have a race.
Reckless in his zeal to answer the challenge, the turtle neglected Mr. Aesop’s
appeal.
When he won the race against overwhelming odds, the Director of
Alumni Affairs had no biography for his 16-page, quarterly edition of the
Alumni Quarterly, and although the race became famous, the turtle did not.
Please don’t be a turtle unless
Send a contribution
will
make
to the
name
sure your
is
it
is
a thaumaturgical turtle.
BSC ANNUAL GIVING CAMPAIGN and we
Summer edition of 1971 CONTRIBUTORS.
in the
QUARTERLY
We’ll even include some “news” in one of our
you send
may not make you famous, but we hope
you have helped Bloomsburg State College.
This
that
mailings
if
to us.
it
it
make you
will
feel
good
(detach here)
Make check payable
THE BLOOMSBURG FOUNDATION
to:
Address:
BSC, Box 292
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Please use
my
gift for the
following purpose:
— ALUMNI DEVELOPMENT
— ATHLETIC GRANTS
17815
— ALUMNI SCHOLARSHIPS
— UNRESTRICTED
Name
Class
(first)
(middle or maiden)
(last)
Address
Zip
please check
is
Please enclose some news on a separate sheet.
new.
if
address
Media of