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STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania

Hb^

THIS

IS B.S.T.C.

m; ;mii

-

A

pictorial tour of the campus
using as the theme a few of
their interthe buildings
.

some

iors,

.

.

of the activities

and events peculiar to them
the memories they stir
.

.

up

.

.

.

.

.

Here

is

name

in

a dedicated building
to the

man who

.

built

.

it

dedicated

.

.

.

.

dedi-

cated in purpose to the perpetuation of learning and free thinking

.

.

dedicated in spirit

.

an honored group of men who died
tle so that its purpose might live.
to

in bat-

Here beats the heart of B.S.T.C, for here
administration coordinates the various
phases of college life into a smooth running
educational machine.

the

Here

too, are

memories

Ref ae
.

.

>/J:

*-4

v

-7

jina llY

«° r ked-

1

Dy"

ami' e
1

ho^^;.
rottB

^ir>-

^

MRS.

ANNA

M.

KNIGHT—Secretary

u;hef
oiii
:

bus'"'

Ne* 1

DR.

HARVEY

A.

ANDRUSS,

President.

th*
'

ce

e

'

cr
jVla"flS


MISS LAURA JANE UNGER

.

.

.

the

Dean

of Instruction's office,

where we meet

.

.

.

-

AtRs


^4ft 5

**G c Ea

n

MR. JOHN
Dean

A.

HOCH

oi Instruction

Our

last visit

will take us to

.

.

and

the

man

responsible for

placement of graduates

.

.

.

DR.

tlftSS

ERNEST

H.

ENGLEHARDT

up the old familiar back
to

.

.

.

stairs

THE AUDITORIUM.

The wealth

of

memories here could

volumes; we can only pick a jew.

Remember

.

.

.

fill

<""* a we//

WW

speee h,
"'' " erv"

kaom

9U12 s/low.

To

the Seniors of the Class of 1955:

Yours

is

institute

became

a heritage of history.

was held
normal school.

for teachers
the first

One hundred years ago
in an academy which,

the first
in

turn,

greatest task of a democracy is the education of its youth.
success of schools cannot be attributed to buildings, grounds,
or equipment but is measured by the influence of teachers who
lead students to learn to think and to live rightly.

The
The

May

your opportunity for service bring you gratifying rewards

is

the parting hope of

HARVEY

A.

ANDRUSS,

President

DR.

HARVEY

A. ANDRUSS
President

MR. JOHN
Dean

A.

HOCH

of Instruction

from Dean of Men to Dean of Instruction is an honored and responone indeed, but no person was more deserving or better qualified
for such an honor than John A. Hoch.

The

rise

sible

Native of Milton
nell University

1946

.

.

.

.

Dean

graduate of Pennsylvania State College and Buckhigh school instructor
B.S.T.C. faculty member
.

.

.

Men

1947

.

.

pioneer founder and secretarytreasurer of the Pennsylvania State Teachers College Athletic Conference
assistant football coach
director of public relations
chairman
since

.

.

.

.

.

of

.

of Athletic

since

.

Committee

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

Dean Hoch's

list

.

.

of accomplishments

is

long

and varied.
is a word seldom used
and justifiably so, for few
deserve such a title. But to Dean Hoch, the student body gives the
distinction of being as indispensable as one person can be.

Indispensable

.

.

.

men

Each one of us has come

into contact with you in some phase of college
classroom ... on the athletic field
over the public relations
desk ... in the Dean's office
and each one of us will carry some fond
memory of you
an-encouraging smile when college looked the darkest
helpful and never-failing advice when most needed
intuitive understanding of all our problems. For this, we thank you, Dean John Hoch
life ... in the

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

"the spirit that

is

Bloomsburg."

.

.

THE ASSISTANT DEANS

MARY

E.

MacDONALD

M.A.
Guidance Services
A.B..

B

~~
.

i

Social

"WC ARETE WAtn
Afat hen,a„'

Studies
- l

,',
(

THE DEANS

ELIZABETH
Dean

of

B. MILLER
Women

The

De*tt

college deans

.

.

.

vital factors in the lives of all

dormitory students

ever
coordinating links between the students and administration
for all this
present sources of patience, understanding, advice, and help
the student body expresses its sincere appreciation and gratitude to Mrs.
.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

two people who will long remain in the memory of
Miller and Mr. Yohe
every Bloomsburg student as instrumental in making B.S.T.C. "the friendly
.

college" that

it is.

.

.

DR.

THOMAS

P.

The

NORTH

1954 brought

closing of the year

of dedicated service to the College of

Thomas

P. North.

With

the termination of twenty-five years
its

beloved Dean of Instruction, Dr.
is Blooms-

his retirement, a little of the "spirit that

to follow him. His sympathetic guidance and infinite understanding linger at the heart of the campus, as do remembrances of his untir-

burg" seemed

ing efforts for a "better" Bloomsburg.

Dr. North has been called "the father of the professional standards movement in Pennsylvania," and in keeping with this title he inaugurated an
improved system of selection of candidates for admission to college and to
the teaching profession. He established a plan for the inspection and improvement of all instructional facilities. In addition, Dr. North was largely
responsible for the

institution

orientation classes for

new

of the

students,

college

and for the

calendar,

for professional

class dues

program.

His contributions have not been confined to the Bloomsburg campus alone,
for Dr. North has devoted much energy to furthering high standards throughout the profession. Although he has relinquished his position at B.S.T.C,
Dr. North will continue his ambition to strengthen the ideals of a great
profession.

We

sincerely hope that his

many remaining

happiness and with fond memories of the college

God Speed,

Dr. North.

years will be filled with
which he gave so much.

to

HA R\E^
,

v

-

LtSS
nHN £.B.^

An outstanding Alumnus of the Bloomsburg State Normal
Pennsylvania
School. Dr. John E. Bakeless was selected as a
for 1954. These people once lived in PennsylAmbassador

vania, and have gone to greater heights while

now

residents of

other states.

M.A.;
Doctor Bakeless: Williams College. B.A.: Harvard.
educator, and the son of
is an author, soldier, and

Ph.D.:

Oscar Hugh Bakeless,

for

main years

the Director of the

Model

School.

Presentation of the Pennsylvania Ambassador
made by President Harvey A. Andruss.

being

Award

is

here

TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF SERVICE

PRESIDENT

AND

MRS. HARVEY A. ANDRUSS

(1930-1955)

" 'TIS

BUT TO NOTE THE PASSING TIME"

Doctor Andruss came

Commerce,

of

years as

Dean

to

of which he

Bloomsburg

in

1930

to organize the

Department

was Director for seven years. After serving two

of Instruction, he

became President

1939.

in

In addition to substantial contributions to both the

Husky and Alumni

Loan Funds, he has made available the rovalty of one of his books, BUSI-

NESS

LAW CASES AND TESTS
New York

Inc.,

City),

for

(originally published

student aid

in

by Prentice-Hall,

form of the President's

the

Scholarship.

Mrs. Andruss came from a Teachers College family, since her parents
are both graduates of Indiana State Teachers College, of which her father

was
of

a

member

Men and

College. She
the

of the Board of Trustees, and her brother-in-law

later
is

Dean

of Instruction of the Shippensburg State Teachers

also an organizing

American Association

as a

member

of University

of the

Women,

life of

Bloomsburg.

Bloomsburg Branch of

and, in addition to acting

charming hostess for many college occasions,

community

was Dean

is

active in the club

and

Leaving Carver Hall, ive glance to the left, decide
on that route, and continue our tour with a brief
visit to

.

.

.

i

.

When we

.

.

SCIENCE HALL
we naturally think

think of Science Hall

of scientific study. However, not only

is this building dedicated to the study of science, hut to all
the fields of secondary education as well.

These

— much

is

much

to

remember about Science Hall

by a camera. We
can only photograph concrete things; we cannot
capture memories on film.

What

that cannot be captured

are some of the

more

cerning Science Hall? Are they

vivid

memories conthe breaks between classes

.

.

.

.

.

.?

the

pendulum

.

.

.

d a chance for
old friends to
get together.

THE FACULTY
in

Secondary Education

DR.

ERNEST

H.

ENCELHARDT

Director of Secondary Education

OLIVE PAYNE BEEMAN
Ed.B.. Ph.B.
Art. Science

Social

Studies

BOYD ,
BL-CK1.NGH.A.M
B? Ed- M.S.Ed.
Speech

EDWARD
B.S..

T.

DEVOE

M.Ed.

English

CLALDE L BORDVER
A.B.. M.A.
Mathematics

VAN>
DOROTHY T £
B.S

Music

DONALD

W.HERBEKHOLZ
B.A..

M.A.

RALPH
B.S.,

S.

HERRE

M.A., Ed.D.

Social Studies

Art

tf^

*>

6
n Va*

^ot e\&

MARY

E.

MacDONALD

NELL MAL1PIN

A.B.. A.M.
Guidance Services

B.A., M.A., Ph.D.

NELSON

E.

PAUL WAGNER

B -S.,

M.S., Ed.D.
Psychology

A.

MILLER

M.Ed.
Music

B.S.,

Social Studies

MARGARET

E.

WALDRON

B.A.. M.A.
Mathematics

KIMBER

KUSTER

C.

Ph.D.

B.S., M.S.,

Biological Science

«>y«cal Science

<\^'°"
»cay

J.

ALMUS RUSSELL
A.B., A.M., Ph.D.

London University

Certificate

CECIL

C.

HAROLD

SERONSY

B.A., M.A., Ph.D.

A.B.,

S.

SHELLY

M.A.

Physical Education

English

English

&
>*».

CLARA

B.O.E.,
Clinical

WEIR

B.

M.A.
Speech

STEPHEN

R.

HOPKINS

B.M. of Music

Private School of Music

Gtaa«

aVe

»

/

t:
**p?

1

i
77ie college

greenhouse

L*

EDWARD SHARRETTS
Superintendent of
Buildings and Grounds

NAVY HALL
Originally constructed to house the V-12

Naval Training program during World

War
home

II,

Navy Hall now

serves as the

of Business Education.

However, we find other

activities car-

among which was
Remember
?

ried on here as well,

our very

first.

.

.

.

finally, the

"ID." picture

9K

^^

j5

THE FACULTY
in

Busin ess Education

DR.

THOMAS

B.

MARTIN

Director of Business Education

FORNEY

,„.« c
WLU
BS.M.A.

CUY

m.

hinkel

bT
B
-S; M.Ed.

EARL

GEHRIG

A.

B.S.,

MARGARET
B.S.,

M.B.A.

E.

McCERN

M.Ed.

CHARL
B Bs

f»HEmiE
M.Ed.

WALTER S.RJOIEL
B.S.,

M.Ed.

BENJAMIN FRANKLIN
in its purpose, Benjamin Franklin
Laboratory School not only affords a superior
education to pupils in the elementary grades,
many of our Elementary student
it offers
teachers the opportunity to practice under the

Unique

careful supervision of trained specialists.

in

"Ben Franklin" is always a buzz
some form or other. Here we find

of activity
.

.

.

scenes of

i^^

ft

WARREN
B.S.,

I.

JOHNSON

M.Ed.

Training Teacher

Grade VI

RUSSELL

F.

B.S..

SCHLEICHER
M.A.

Training Teacher

Grade

V

ANNA GARRISON SCOTT
B.S.,

M.A.

Training Teacher
Grade IV

THE FACULTY
in

Elementary Education

EDNA

B.

HAZEN

Director of Elementary Education

EDNA

L13COX3.BAKEB

J.

B.S..

M.A.

Elementary- Education

Ttaimns

i

Grade

e
1

LLA MARIE STICKLER

*i

BARNES
T

Bs-

^"^

-M.Ed.

Teacher

CENTENNIAL GYMNASIUM

Etched sharn and clear against the
Pennsylvania sky stands Centennia

Gymnasium,

B.S.T.C.'s

From

newest

her vantage point
atop college hill, Centennial experiences the college life both around
building.

and within her walls.

.

.

.

HAROLD SHELLY
Head Coach

y

^
t

HARRISON MORSON

bF

r

gy tV M?

FRED BETZ,

Captain

Maiiag e

p avl

JV

NDE» s0N

BASKETBALL
As Coach Harold

1955

Husky hardwood crew for the season's
Fred Betz was the only senior who had survived the

Shelly prepared his '54-55

curtain-raiser, he found that

four-year grind, and was the only veteran of the championship 52-53 team that had
much varsity experience. The remainder of the squad would then be of juniors,
who were frosh stars in the championship days, one sophomore, and untried fresh-

man

talent.

At the outset there were many juniors who had been members of that undefeated
freshman squad of two years ago. but only Keith Weiser. Bob Evans. Mo Morson.
and Elmer Robinson were in uniform when the season's final records were written.
Len Kozick proved to be the only sophomore surviving the many perils that confront a college athlete. So this left Coach Shelly with the problem of filling out the
bench strength from the freshman talent show. This show proved to be a success
as Jim Gustave. Bob Boyle. John Shaffer, and Jim Snyder all lent a hand in the
varsity replacement department.

As usual, the Shellymen gave a good account of themselves, and were in the
running for the league title when they ran into their arch court rival, the Maurauders
of Millersville. In both contests the Lads from the Hill held the lead at the half but
weren't strong enough at the finish, dropping two close decisions to the Lancaster
County Tutors.
Fred Betz. team captain, played outstanding ball for the Hilltop courtmen. and
the same time paced the Husky scoring department. Bob Evans, in his first
season as a starter, proved his worth to Coach Shelly and his mates. Keith Weiser
provided an unusual scoring punch from the back court in his initial season as a
first team starter. Big Mo Morson asserted his value to the Shellymen with his
rebounding efforts and plavmaking ability. Len Kozick. who rounded out the first
team, had been second in scoring during his freshman year and followed suit in
his sophomore campaign.
at

VARSITY CLUB

.

.

.

.

.

.

giving unity to that group of

whose strength and
of the college

.

.

.

fulfilling

a

social

usefulness with the Varsity Dance

OFFICERS
President

.

.

ROBERT CUMMENS

THOMAS

ROBERT GROOVER

Treasurer

T. Higgins, R. Groover

.

.

Secretary

Advisor

e~

.

.

Vice President

PERSIN'G

THOMAS HIGGINS

Assistant Secretary

T. Persing

men

are the pride

skill

JOHN PANICHELLO
HAROLD SHELLY

MR.

The pool has seen many splash

parties

but to

Gym

played host to two assembly programs during the course of
Centennial
the year.

Remember when

a

couple showed us their

talented y o u n g
skill

.

.

.

mc

More important, we discovered

that a

new

TOM WELLIVER

KEN LYNN

WRESTLING

1955

A new

winter sport was introduced into the athletic
itinerary in 1955. The popularity of the inter-collegiate mat sport had been spreading to eastern campuses,
and it was only a matter of course that Bloomsburg

should adopt the idea.

Wrestling was well received by the Husky fans,
although not too much was known of the grapplers
until Coach Jack Yohe held a wrestling clinic at Centennial Gym during an assembly period. Here. Coach
Yohe explained the fundamentals necessan for understanding and scoring a meet.

Hoch, in one of his last
planned a card that employed
seven regular dual meets, and an entry in the Teachers College State meet. A new mat, uniforms, and
equipment were purchased, and the Husky was ready
for its first crack at inter-collegiate wrestling.
Athletic

efforts

in

Director, John

this

post,

DON WISE
Of

the eight weight divisions recognized in college

to use at least five freshmen
assignments, in order to build a strong
foundation for the future. He employed only one
Tom "Red" Welliver. A State Champion from
senior
his Shamokin High School days, Red was elected to
captain the first Husky wrestling team. Other standouts were Harry Hughes, a sophomore from Williamsport in the unlimited weight class, and Don Wise,

wrestling,
in

Yohe managed

starting



former Forty Fort grappler now
wrestling in the 177 pound class.

in

his junior

year,

SCORES
22

Millersville

West Chester

... .

E. Stroudsburg

Wilkes

Lock Haven
Indiana
Lincoln

._

26
16
19

27
16
00
Stale

Welliver

Wise

BSTC
BSTC
BSTC
BSTC
BSTC
BSTC
BSTC

...

10
00
11

...

13
00
15

40

Meet
3rd place— 147
3rd place— 177

lb.

lb.

H*/tH)

HuGtlj7-s

Can anyone think
recalling

of Centennial without

many wonderful

the

the

beautifully

And

with each

dances,
decorated gymnasium?

new dance

.

.

.

1

«Jh
:,v*\

i

A

i

*

';.'.

choose

almost



Gym
...

In addition to all this, Centennial
fered one more outstanding event

of-

an

event that was destined to be the Highlight
of 1955. It all came about when the Social

Recreation heard of a certain jazz band that
was "knocking them cold" on college cam-

puses

lovely

new queen

like

a
.

all

over the country.

And so they
man named
.

invited this
.

.

band

.

.

.

led by

e

All*"1 '

1

it

t° r

ali

Here

°\

we must

leave

there are other visits to
is

limited

And

so,

.

.

.

on

to

.

.

.

Centennial,

for

make and time

Leaving Centennial Gymnasium behind, we
begin to realize how much more could be
included in our tour.

We might visit the dormitories

of

.

.

.

of the process

seeing once again the rooms with their

"double deckers" and crowded closets,
much used telephone booths, or the
smokers ... or we could pause in the
lounge

the

.

.

.

u a< ch

MRS. HELEN M.

LORMAN

i^C is

lodern new social room

little

.

.

,

or a glimpse of the dining room might show
us the bustle of activity in the kitchen
.

.

.

MISS

MARY FONTANA
Dietitian

we can see all this and more
but these
more than the cost of printing them.

Yes, with the aid of the camera
are only pictures



.

.

.

actually worth no

Their real value lies in the meaning they hold and in the memories they
up within each one of you
For there will be memories memories
that will live forever in your minds ... in your very beings.
stir

.

Whatever the future holds

.



.

you, whatever you choose to do,
go with you. They will be what this
college has made of you, but more important, they will lie what you have

wherever you choose

made

of yourself.

result of all that

in store for

to go, they will

They

will represent



in

you



the total effect, the net

went into the making of your college career.

is far too intimate, far too intangible for the poor powers of
camera to capture. The camera can do much, but there is much it cannot
do. The camera is purely a graphic instrument. It can photograph two

All this

the

cannot depict their experiences or their deep feeling
can picture a group or an organization, but the purpose, the cooperation, the spirit, are lost on paper. The camera can capture
the beauty of a college campus; it cannot show what that campus has
meant to you. The camera can look silently about, capturing the magnitude
and beauty, but it cannot speak out and say, "This has been my home."
friends together, but

it

toward one another.

It

As our tour

ends,

we

turn to

.

.

.

THE
ORGANIZATIONS

K
OFFICERS
Present
Ikv /Vwirfenf

.

r „ as „ rer

.

ALICE FISHER

-

Secretary

.

o

JOANNE HESTER
MARION DURICKO
TINA VALENTE

...

MRS. ELIZABETH MILLER
MISS MARY MacDONALD

Advisors

GOVERNING

J.

Hester. T. Valent.

M. Duricko

Miss MacDonald, A. Fisher. Mr*. Miller

WALLER HALL
ASSOCIATION
...

all

dormitory

women who make

living together a pleasant, cheerful,

50ARD

and

while earning
out social, educational, and governing

cooperative experience,

programs

.

.

.

OFFICERS
Vice President _
Secretary

Treasurer
Advisor

.

.

.

PATRICIA

President

...

......

....

MISS

HARTMAN

CAROL NEARING
JUNE REESE
NANCY EBERSOLE

MARGARET WALDRON

DAY WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION
promoting and protecting the interests
non-dormitory women students, working
together in social, welfare, and student gov.

.

.

of

ernment affairs

.

.

.

-"•IT

MEN'S DORMITORY ASSOCIATION
...

male students working

all resident

together for the regulation of dormitory
providing social proconditions
.

.

.

grams for the benefit of
and the college
.

.

OFFICERS
President

Secretary

Treasurer

Advisors

.

.

.

JOSEPH KINDER
WILLIAM MIELKE
MICHAEL BERNOT

President
Vice

the association

.

_

PHILIP GERGEN
MR. JOHN HOCH
MR. JACK YOHE

... a representative governing body composed of students and faculty working together in the

interests

of

and the community

students,

the

the

formulating
college policies, creating student committees,
college,

and regulating student

.

.

activities

.

.

.

.

EDWARD CONNOLLEY

CARL MEYER

MURIEL NEILSON

COMMUNITY GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION
College Council

OFFICERS
___.

President
Vice President

Secretary

_

Treasurer
Assistant Treasurer

.

.

.

EDWARD CONNOLLEY
CARL MEYER
MURIEL NEILSON
HARRISON MORSON
KENNETH WEIR

FACULTY -MEMBERS
Dr. Englehardt

Miss Hazen
Dr. Herre

Mr. Hoch
Dr. Martin
Miss MacDonald
Mrs. Miller

Dr. North

Miss Waldron
Mr. Yohe

STUDENT REPRESENTATIVES

Robert Asby

Alice Fisher

Edwin Chase

Arnold Garinger
Robert Groover

Joan Christie
Robert Cummens
Robert Evans

Patricia

Mary

Hartman

Heatley
Joanne Hester

Grace Histed
Joseph Kinder
Carl Shively

Edward Shustack
Sally Stallone

.

r

,

c (* n *

OFFICERS
President

Hce

President

Secretary

Treasurer
State Secretary

Program Chairman
Advisors

.

.

ALLAN WALBURN
THOMAS SANDERS
CORA GILL
SHERRILL HILLER
JOAN DIORIO

EVELYN WEAVER
NANCY SUE WILLIAMS
DR. ERNEST ENGLEHARDT
DR. THOMAS MARTIN
MISS EDNA HAZEN

<

FUTURE TEACHERS
OF
AMERICA

acquainting upperclassmen with teaching
problems while advancing the interests of
education to prospective students and those
already enrolled at Bloomsburg
.

.

.

.

.

.

Left to right: T. Sanders, E. Weaver,

N. Williams. C. Gill.

J.

DiOrio. S. Hitler,

THE LIBRARY

.

.

.

providing interested students
with a source of the various types
.

.

.

of literature necessary for complete

and thorough study

.

.

.

GAMMA THETA UPSILON
.

.

.

a Professional

Geography Fraternity seeking

bonds of fellowship, professional promise
and study, and high character and ideals
close

.

Albert Belinsky. William Ellinger. Lewi* Mervine

.

.

.

ATHENAEUM CLUB

OFFICERS
President
Vice President

.

.

JOHN SANDLER
JOAN DIORIO

-

Secretary

ELIZABETH ADAMS

Treasurer

JEANNE CROCKER
ROBERT EBNER

Program Chairman

.

.

.

advancing the understand-

ing and enjoyment of music,

both classical and popular, by
utilization of both club and
outside talent

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

POETRY CLUB

OFFICERS

.

.

LYNDA BOGART

President

IRENE ZEILINSK1

Vice President

PEGGY BARTGES
C. SERONSY

Secretary-Treasurer

Advisor

.

.

.

DR. CECIL

_

__..

delving critically and aninto the realms of

alytically

poetry

.

members

.

encouraging

.

to create, read,

discuss poetry for their

enjoyment

.

.

.

its

and

own

KAPPA DELTA

Dr.

Maupin, O. Baker

PI

s

A. Schmidt. N. Williams
L. LaSorsa. R. Paul. S.

Morgan

a National Honor Society in Education,
encouraging high intellectual and personal
.

.

.

standards, and fostering professional fellowship and growth

.

.

.

.

PHI SIGMA PI

.

.

.
.

.

.

for

a National Professional Fraternity

men based on

twenty-five years of

fellowship, scholarship and professional

OFFICERS
President
Vice

President

Secretary

Treasurer

Advisor

.

.

THOMAS HIGGINS
JOHN NALCOVICH
RONALD KRAFJACK
HARVEY BOUGHNER
MR. R. F. SCHLEICHER

skill

.

.

.

SCIENCE CLUB
enlarging scientific knowledge and
experience in both the biological and
physical fields through use of lectures,
.

.

.

demonstrations,
field trips

.

.

m

o

t

i

o n pictures and

.

Dr. Kuster
Dr. Lanterman, J.

Shemanski

P.

Hartman, B. Adams, A. Swortwood

M. Homick

OFFICERS

.

.

.

Vice President

JOSEPH SHEMANSKI
MICHAEL HOMICK

Secretary

PATRICIA

President

Treasurer
Advisors

....

DR.

HARTMAN

BARBARA ADAMS
DR. K. C. KUSTER
H. H. LANTERMAN

BUSINESS EDUCATION CLUB
... a large and active organization using
extracurricular activities to enlarge the

business

members

education
.

.

experience

of

its

.

OFFICERS
President
Vice President
Secretary

Treasurer
Historian

Advisor

Mr. Rygiel, C. English

.

.

.

CURT ENGLISH
DONALD CAREY
JOYCE KLINE
JOAN CHRISTIE
MARION DURICKO
MR. WALTER S. RYGIEL

OMEGA

PI

.

.

.

promoting, extending, and creating

and

interest
.

.

.

PI

scholarship

members having

commerce

in

a high professional

promise and superior scholastic ratings,
high ethical standards plus
equaling worthy enterprise

.

OFFICERS
President

Vice President
Secretary

__

Treasurer

.

.

.

.

MARY HOFFECKER
_ JOANNE McCORMICK
SALLY MORGAN
ROBERT CAREY
PATRICIA O'BRIEN

Historian

Advisors

_

service
.

,

DR.

THOMAS MARTIN

MR. EARL GEHRIG

DAY MEN'S ASSOCIATION

.

.

.

all

.

.

.

non-dormitory male students

taking a unified active part in the social

and student governmental functions of
college life

.

.

.

OFFICERS

_

President
Vice President

Secretary

Treasurer

Advisor

__

.

.

.

EDWIN CHASE
OREN BAKER
ROBERT LYON
RONALD GIRTON
DR. R. S. HERRE

.

.

SIGMA ALPHA ETA

.

.

.

OFFICERS
Secretary

.

-m.

.

CHARLOTTE RUMMAGE
AVERY WILLIAMS

President
,

.

ALVIN DAVIS
B. WEIR

Treasurer

MISS CLARA

Advisor

Miss Weir, C.

I'M

t

\ — _-> ^\
r


I

f

\

... creating and stimulating

L

«

^.,;

speech and hearing

.

'-

_

* ^

*2

/^*>***

'

MJ

ir&

A. Davis, A. Williams

.

.

.

interest in

supplementing

coand clinical experience
ordinating interests and efforts toward

class

a

common goal

.

..

.

.

.

Rummage

'B"

CLUB

using a point rating based
on sports participation to further the ideals of sportsmanship, cooperation and athletic
.

.

.

fitness

.

.

.

OFFICERS
President

.

.

.

BETTY HOFFMAN
RUTH PAUL
GLORIA HARRIS
ANNA DREESE
MISS LUCY McCAMMON

Vice President
Secretary

Treasurer
Advisor

_

A. Dreese, R. Paul, G. Harris

Miss

McCammon,

B.

Hoffman

\S

&y

BLOOMSBURG PLAYERS

.

n

... a workshop in educational dramatics
by the creation of student staged productions for the benefit of the club, the
college, and the public
.

.

.

Mr. Buckingham
A. Davis, A. Aiello

Se

cTe

V

T^

„r
sot

.

ALPHA

PSI

OMEGA
.

.

.

providing encouragement and

rec-

ognition for students interested in dra-

and the college theater, being
comprised of outstanding members of
matics
the

,

(

Bloomsburg Players

OFFICERS

.

Treasurer

Advisor _

.

.

SHERRILL HILLER

Secretary

Mr. Buckingham

.

^
President

S. Hiller,

.

_

WYLLA MAE BOWMAN
DOYLE LYNN
MR. BOYD BUCKINGHAM

W. Bowman,

D.

Lynn

MAROON AND GOLD BAND

ft

President
Vice President

Secretary
Librarians

Advisor

Jl

J

GERGEN
JOHN LEHET

PHILIP

JEAN NAUGHTON

MARY LONTZ
ELEANOR NICHOLS
MR. NELSON A. MILLER

J.
J.

Lehet,

M. Lontz

Naughton,

E. Nichols

P. Gergen, Mr. Miller

Id!

^

BOB CUMENS

TOM PERSING
Co-Copfaini

JIM

HARVEY BOUGHNER

GARY YOHE

BROWNING

Football season 1954 found Coach Jack

Yohe

starting his third year in the

head Husky. Five veterans of the once-proud championship '51 team
were available for call, and, as usual, a host of new faces waited to replace
many of the greats who had departed from the land of the Husky.
role of

Leading the parade of veterans who had performed for Bob Redman and
John Hoch on the team that had gone undefeated and taken the first crown
ever offered by the newly formed Teachers College Conference, were Alex
Boychuck, a returning G.I. who had played in the defensive backfield of the
two-platoon era; Eddie Connolley, the Danville Ironman, who was ready
for his fourth season at center: John Panichello, the Glenside Giant, formerly
a defensive tackle who was now set to work both ways; Big Don Thomas, an
exceptionally speedy tackle seasoned with varsity experience; and finally,
Charlie Pope, who had played for the past three years as an end.

The other two seniors who were ready to write their final grid chapters
were the co-captains. Bob Cumens and Tom Persing. Cumens, originally a
blocking back, had switched to end in order to strengthen the Yohemen.
Persing was well entrenched in his berth as a varsity guard. An all-league
selection for 1954, he

HARRY HUGHES

was a good bet

to repeat in '55.

The Huskies were off and running in the '54 season which many experts
predicted to be another championship year. They took Mansfield to task 28-0
did take its toll,
The
without exerting any
of p'o w e r.
however, as Eddie Connolley suffered a broken ankle during the first half

show

and was

game

lost for the season.

The week

of practice that followed further put a

mark on

the chances

I


MIKE

*

LASHENDOCK

CHARLES SKIPTUNAS

DON THOMAS

ALEX BOYCHUCK

JOHN PANICHELLO

Jose- PH

^

CZYK

new popular phrase on campus, "We're going all the way."
Panichello and Pope were injured, causing Yohe to employ more inexperof realizing the

ienced hands.

Courtland Teachers,

making

their

first

appearance

on

a

Bloomsburg
The

schedule, were victims of the win-hungry Huskies, by a 26-13 count.

Homecoming and undefeated Wilkes fell prey to a
great Bloomsburg team by a 44-0 surprise. The purge continued the following week when Bloomsburg traveled to Wilkes-Barre to knock undefeated
following week was

Kings aside 49-0.

in a

demonstration of near perfect football.

With a record of four wins and no losses, the Huskies were riding the
and as the saying goes, they were riding for a fall. New
Haven provided the necessary effort to push the Husky from the nation's
undefeated ranks, and the final score read New Haven 26, Bloomsburg 14.
The Lads from College Hill then took a trip across the state to play a strong
California team, and brought the bacon home wrapped in a 20-13 package.
crest of the wave,

Again the stage was set. The biggest one of them all, the one we needed,
brought more support from the student body than all the rest put together.
West Chester! Win this one and there will be "no school Monday." But,
it turned out to be the blackest
Friday that a Bloomsburg team has had
to face in post-war football. As classes went on as scheduled Monday morning it was still hard to believe that this team could have been beaten 41-0.

The Yohemen bounced back
a 40-13 score. This

in the finale

EDWARD CONNOLLEY

by taking Lock Haven over by

win enabled the Huskies to salvage a three-way
West Chester and East Stroudsburg.

tie

for

the conference along with

ROBERT

DIPIPI

CHARLES POPE

ROBERT STROUP

T*

*

Hiu'feies

Get Share Of State Croivn With 40 To 13 Victory At Lock Haven

ST***^

END— Mike Panich
END— John Marefka
TACKLE John Covne
TACKLE— Phi] Marella
guard Tcm Perslng
GUAP.D— Gene

CENTER— Joe
BACK
HACK

Alplanal
Persipo-i

Spence Keyey/
Jim Browni-/

Haven Dumps Huskies From Undefeated Ranks WJ$k
END— Lesli
TACKLE- /ii,
t

GUAR!

Yds. gained inter.

and Abrai>
Eternal
to present

I'mlii

ts

t

completely

i

MXy

New Haven Owl

Todd

Bloomsburg

Husky

throttled

attack

line

:he
until

Fumbles

Own

fumbles

Penalties

r

%/%a> $
ft

%

.

Pigskin

/>£*&. %'f

&>£r


#"

-''•

'hVA** 'A>AN/

j

THOMAS

PERSING, JAMES

BROWNING

7954 All-State First Team

SEASON SCORES
Record

2
6

Mansfield

Lock Haven
Kutztown

DR.

E.

— 5 Wins, 5 Losses
3

Millersville

3

Mansfield
Wilkes
West Chester
Rider
Scranton
Wilkes

8

PAUL WAGNER.

9
3

12
1

Coach

BSTC
BSTC
BSTC
BSTC
BSTC
BSTC
BSTC
BSTC
BSTC
BSTC

15
2
15

4
5
5
1

3
6
in

.._

.

J**

-

~r

*£^
BASEBALL
,-«,••'

l-J^*

1955

of Dr. E.

Bloomsburg Baseball Huskies came under the leadership
Paul Wagner, who at one time had been coach at Donora High School

during

reign over schoolboy sports.

The 1955
its

edition of the

The diamond hopefuls were

a

dowery which consisted,

at the outset, of a veteran-

studded infield, a host of catchers, and a badly depleted pitching and outfield

staff.

experienced infield, first base was well-manned by former monogram
winners Bob Stroup and George Derk. At second, senior Johnny Halcovitch. the
team's leading hitter in 1954. was well entrenched. Rifle-armed Bob Cumens was at
third base in this fourth vear as a varsitv competitor. But "Doc" had some tough
decisions to make at the short stop position: Terry Zachowski had been the regular
in '54, but Chuck Casper also had a keen eye on the coveted infield spot. The final
decision rested on the ability of each to field his position with the flawless effort
In

the

required of a

\^

agner-coached player.

The catching department had
as a hold-over

a wealth of untried material, and only Joe Keefer

from the '54 team.

Among

the untested backstops were Treverton's

Harv Boughner. Bobby Boyle, former Scranton

player, and

Frank

Fisk.

one-time

Danville Ironman.

Eddie Shustack. a 1954 letter winner in center field, and Chuck Casper, a shifted
were the onlv outfielders inherited from the previous season, and the

shortstop,

search started for patrollers of the outer pastures.

The pitching department was

also sparse in starters and light in collegiate experLeading the parade of veteran chuckers was Bobby Dipipi. former Old Forge
hurler and successful B.S.T.C. pitcher of '54. Charles Kwiatkoski. another baseball
veteran at Bloomsburg. had also done considerable pitching in the Navy.

ience.

The

personnel had to be drawn from the pool of green freshuntried upperclassmen. \^ ith this in mind, the Huskies settled down under
the eye of Doc Wagner and set about their task with an air of self-assurance.
rest of the baseball

men and

TRACK

CHEERLEADERS
... six sweet gals loaded with ^ im.
Vigor, and Vitality leading the student
body

in the old

Bloomsburg

spirit

.

.

.

=y\^$«SSSi

.

C0LLEG1
mellow
and tenor, and rich bass voices for

the blending of sweet soprano,
alto

the

common

college,

pleasure of the group, the

and the community

a^^HHM

.

.

.

HOIR
OFFICERS
President
Vice President
Secretary

Treasurer
Pianist

Advisor

.

_

.

.

CHARLES POPE
SAMUEL HALL
JOYCE LUNDY
BARBARA LENTZ
MARY JANE MILLER
MR. NELSON MILLER

WOMEN'S CHORUS

.

.

.

OFFICERS

__

Treasurer _

Advisor

.

.

._

Vice President
Secretary

.

JOYCE BUCK
TINA VALENTE
BERNADINE BUTZ
JACQUELINE ALBERT

_

President

_

_

MRS.

B. Butz. T. Valent, J. Alberts

.

.

.

music enthusiasts singing

to-

gether for the enjoyment of the college and

community

.

.

.

L

D. T.

EVANS

.

AVIATION CLUB

.

.

.

}MiU
OFFICERS
President
Vice President
Secretary

Treasurer
Advisor

.

GORDON STAMETS
_
FRANK ANDREWS
MARY LOU THORNTON
ARTHUR LESHER
W.

B.

STERLING

M. Thornton, A. Lesher

C

St3m

'

N
-

.

.

^ S,„U

na

looking into the

.

future

and

keeping abreast of the present by
promoting all aspects of aeronautics

.

.

.

.

STUDENT CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION

Mr. Hinkle
Enola Van Auken, Willard Snyder

OFFICERS
President
Vice President

Secretary

Treasurer

Advisor

_

.

.

WILLARD SNYDER

NANCY HOMSCHER
ENOLA VAN AUKEN
MARILYN RITTER
MR. CLAYTON HINKLE

RELIGION IN LIFE
On Tuesday morning. November

WEEK

1954 during the assembly period, Victor
Michael. Chairman of Religion in Life Week Committee, made the announcement,
"This is Religion in Life Week." Through the tireless effort of a committee composed
of all religious faiths and denominations, the first Religion in Life Week was underway here on our campus.
16.

the student response was viewed with little optimism, but after the attenshown during the address given by the Reverend Raymond Shaheen, the
speaker for the Protestant faith, there was no doubt that religion was something

At

first,

tiveness

about which college students were

vitally

concerned.

Further evidence of the fine student
attended the informal discussion group
auditorium for the Wednesday Vesper
spoke on behalf of his faith, displayed

more

response was shown by the number who
meetings. The well-populated Carver Hall
service,

when Rabbi

Vander Walde
body to become

Isaac

the desire of the student

tolerant of the other person's religion.

On Thursday. November

18, 1954, the Right Reverend Monsignor George D.
Mulchay. represented the Catholic faith by presenting to an attentive audience his
address during assembly. In the afternoon the best-attended discussion group meeting
of the series dealt with the subject of Mixed Marriages, concluding three days of
religious awakening.

The outstanding achievement of the entire program was not attained during the
it was the continued
interest in religion, as evidenced by increased
attendance in Bloomsburg churches and the increased number of students who now
week: rather,

attend the Student Christian Association meetings. These were the signs that "Religion
in Life
it

Week"

possible.

far surpassed the expectations of the committee

who helped

to

make

ltVh

JOANNE HESTER,

Editor-in-Chief

... a student publication presenting current
news and opinion to the college community
through the cooperative efforts of journalistically

minded students

.

.

.

BOM®
EDYIO*!^

\\at* a
S^coe.

Joan

O—

EA^

«

\

heads

D^

~ xh
.

J

Joyce

V,ne

**

Butl-

a

Busing

%
EdwaTd^-

Ed^ ria

5

.....

'

iC oe.

---^ ve.>anc

loan CVvn

t

&

>

Martbabtan

-""

Feature
-'-"......„-Sports ...
"
----...
Circula"
Typi n S
.

GEORGE

DE*K- B

..
....

Berna^ 6

_

J°>

ce

PILOT
... the student handbook acting as a printed
guide to a more thorough understanding of
college activity and policy

.

.

.

Bottom row:
M. STARVATOW
M. DURICKO

STAFF
*«'Editor
Usine

f 7r~——.

Ps.

td'lor*

Ss

ary atow

S
n ° Krz}Wicki

yei 'son

r

nal Car
a re.v
'on Ull
D..
.
rickr
'

e rer,t
e

C-4fl

fy
__

^

OLYMPIAN
the annual student literary publication
providing an opportunity for those endowed
.

.

.

with creative talents
prose, and

humor

.

.

in

the fields of poetry,

.

gvanS)

Sue

e
A Stri»

Jane
TAat>'

BttSin

Read** -rj

BeW u
Typ

ist

PublH">
Circ"

lotion

As the years following your graduation increase in number,
many of the memories and recollections of your four years
here at B.S.T.C. will become more vivid and meaningful.
more recent events in your lives
push many of those fond recollections back into
the hidden depths of your memories.
However,

in later years, the

will tend to

Our purpose in bringing you the 1955 OBITER is actually
an attempt an attempt to provide, through the medium of
photographv. some of the Bloomsburg you knew as a student.



We

hope that in the years to come you will turn occasionally
your yearbook and refresh some of those memories which
time might have tended to fade a bit. If you do this, our purpose will have been accomplished.

to

YOUR EDITOR

KEITH McKAY
EditoT-in-Chiei

JOHN

WILLIAM BlTfB
Sports Editor

S-VSDLE*

THE OBITER

'55

NANCY SUE WILLIAMS
Associate Editor

CAROL

ELY, JAN

«RENCE

BARBARA

Editor-in-Chief

...

Associate Editor
Editorial Board ..

Editorial Staff

Business Manager

Co-Advertising Managers
Director Senior Pictures
Art Editor
Sports Editor

Copyreaders

TL-CXWOOD

_

Keith

McKay

Nancy Sue Williams

HOLLEY

Charlotte Rummage
Holley Smith

George Derk
Curt English
Jan Ference
John Sandler
Bill Bitner

Suzanne Osborn

Mary Jane Trefsger
Coed-of-the-Y ear Contest

Coordinator
Faculty Advisor

Tom
E. T.

R.

SMITH

Business Manager

Corinne Pentecost
Barbara Tuckwood
Marie Will
Carol Ely
Joanne Hester

Higgins

DeVoe


OBITER COED
CONTEST

1955

.

EMAGENE PARK

.

.

MISS BOBBI BOADSIDE
Coed

of the

Year

THE CLASS OF
.

.

.

1958

the rigors of customs

.

exploring of Bloomsburg

show

ditional talent
habits, routines
in

Central

Dance

.

.

P

a

.

.

r

.

.

k"

Vice President

the trafriends,

the

at

"Up

Freshman

_.

.

.

.

ROBERT ASBY
ROBERT BOYLE
NANCY SUWALSKI
RICHARD CONNOLLEY
MARY HEATLEY
CARL SHIVELY
....

....

Woman Rep
Man Rep.

the initial


.

.

President

Treasurer

.

.

.

new

.

Gerry Kehler

.

OFFICERS

Secretary

.

.

CLASS OF

1957

.

.

.

the transition stage between under
Sophomore week
and upperclassmen
"Candyland" at the annual Cotillion
.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

taking a definite place in the pattern

of Bloomsburg

.

.

.

R. Beimensderfer, E. Shustak, K. Weir. A. Kleinschrodt
S. Stallone,

Mr. Miller. B. Lentz.

c£^

of**
jM*

ulf n>

^55? 5>
tt-

S eC
l r

!ute T

RcV-

K. Weir. Mr. Miller.

CLASS OF

1956

.

.

assuming and

.

and
.

.

a

.

responsibilities

of

procuring school rings
event with
.

.

.

.

.

the

creating

Junior

.

OFFICERS
President
Vice President

Secretary

Treasurer

Man Rep
Woman Rep. __.
Advisor

role

upperclassmen

memorable

Prom

the

fulfilling

.

.

.

ROBERT EVANS

RAYMOND EDWARDS
JOYCE KLINE
PASQUALE GIANGIULIO
ROBERT GROOVER
JOAN CHRISTIE
DR. C. C. SERONSY

Dr. Seronsy. R. Evans

THE SENIORS

XASS OF

1955

,

jap.-;-l!f]

WHO'S

WHO
in

American Colleges

JEAN GRIFFITHS

an<

Universities

.

.

.

LUKAC

Hope
XOJtflf,

JEANETTA MINCER

WHO'S

WHO

(Continued)

MICHEL

MOKA*

RELD*

SALLY

ROHRB ACH

MORGAN
NA

»"^*m Mls

ARNOLD GARINGER
President. Class of "55

MY FELLOW GRADUATES
your college careers at Bloomsburg. You can be
made by you and your families in order
accomplished goal. I should like to be one of the first to offer my

In a short time
j

you

will close

ustK proud because of the

to reach this

many

sacrifices

sincere congratulations.

As we go out into the world, each in his own way. let us never forget the happy
memories of these ivied walls. Each of you will leave your mark at Bloomsburg
Bloomsburg too. will leave a
some large, some small, but nevertheless a mark
mark on you that will never be erased.
.

.

.

.

.

.

As you leave, do not go with the thought in mind that vou have finished. Believe
me. vou are onlv beginning. Do not stop until vou reach the top. Bloomsburg has
given vou a good start. Always remember as you take your place in the teaching
profession that the most important part of one's life is not in doing something for
himself, but in doing something for others.

Besides ourselves and
recognition

our parents, there are

— our President, our Faculty, the Board

many

other

factors

of Trustees, the

that

deserve

model community

which we have been a part for four years, and finallv. the great state of Pennsylwhose help many of us would not have been able to make this step
upward.
of

vania, without

I

want

to

president.

It

thank you for the honor and privilege it has been to serve as your class
is my heartfelt wish that life may be filled with great happiness for you

and yours.
Sincerely,

ARNOLD GARINGER

BUSINESS

f
B ERDY

MlCHALENE BELOCK

Robert Walter Carey

Scranton

Forest City

General Business

General Business

Waller Hall Association
Business Ed. Club 1, 2.
Co-ordinator

1,

3.

2,

3,

4;

FTA

4;

Newman Club
3,

4;

1,

2;

Fashion Show

1.

Carolyn Berdy

1;

3, 4;

2,

Business Ed. Club

4;

3,

Newman Club

FTA

Pi

1;

Omega

Pi

2,

3;

3,

4;

4.

Berwick

Secretarial

Secretarial

Waller Hall Association 1, 2, 3, 4; "B" Club 4; Business
Ed. Club 1, 2; Mixed Chorus 3; FTA 3, 4; Drum
Majorette 2, 3, 4; Social Recreation Committee 2, 3.

Taylor

1,

2,

Athenaeum Club
1, 2;
Maroon and Gold 1, 2; FTA

Day Women's Association
SCA 1; Women's
3, 4;
1,

4;

4.

2;

Alpha Psi Omega

William Creasy

Mifflinville

Waller Hall Association
4;

4;

1,

Bloomsburg Players

3;

Chorus

G.

Secretarial

3,

Waller Hall Association
2,

3,

Olive Hunter Buynak

SCA

3;

1,

2,

3,

4; Business Ed. Club 1;

Women's Chorus

1.

Accounting

Day Men's Association
2, 3;

0.

Association

Aviation Club

Joan M. Chapin

Dallas

FTA

Dorm Men's
Phi Sigma Pi

BUYNAK

Baseball 3;

FTA

1.

2,

3,

4:

Bus

Ed.

Club

1.

4.

G.

CREASY

-,**<£

~N

R.

CUMENS

Robert

G.

DERK

E.

Cumens

E.

Marlene

Accounting

GOBSTER

Gobster

Secretarial

Dorm Men's
Treasurer

Association

1,

2.

3,

4;

Varsity

Club

1,

2,

Waller Hall Association 1,
Business Ed. Club 1, 2, 3;
Fashion Show Coordinator 1,

President 4: Class Vice President 3; College

3,

Council 4;

Football

1,

2,

3,

Baseball

4;

1.

2.

3,

4.

George W. Derk

Newman Club

1;

Women's Chorus

1;

4;

3,

4;

2, 3.

Bloomsburg
General Business

Dorm Men's Association 1, 2. 3, 4; Varsity Club 4;
Wesley Fellowship 1, 2, 3, 4; Mixed Chorus 1. 4; FTA
3, 4; Business Ed. Club 1. 2, 3; CGA Vice President 3;
Baseball 3, 4; Maroon and Gold, Business Manager 4;
Advertising Manager

3,

Day Women's Association

1.

2,

3,

i, 2, 3, 4. Secretary 2;
FTA 4;
Secretary 3; Maroon and Gold

4; Bloomsburg Players
Alpha Psi Omega 3, 4,
3;

1.

2,

4;

LSA

OBITER

3.

Mary Ellen Henning

4.

Stroudsburg

Eileen Helen Gerosky

General Business

Pittston

Waller Hall Association

General Business

Waller Hall Association 1,
FTA 3, 4; Women's Chorus

Omega

2,

FTA

Mollie H. Harter

Montandon
General Business

Pi

P.

M.

Shenandoah

Coatesville

OBITER

GEROSKY

3,

P*i

Co-ordinator

3,

4;

M.

2,
1,

3,

2:

4;

ness Ed. Club

Newman Club

1,

Business Ed. Club

2;
cil

1,

3;

Kappa Delta Pi 3, 4; Fashion Show
Maroon and Gold 1, 2, 3.

3,

4;

HARTER

M.

E.

HENNING

2;
4;

CGA
Kappa

1,

2,

3;

1,

2,

3,

Women's Chorus

1,

1;

Secretary 3; Pep Committee 1;
Delta Pi 3, 4; Majorette 2, 3.

2,

3,

4;

Busi-

College CounPi

Omega

Pi

5

SHERRILL V. HlLLER
Jersey Shore

Joseph Edward Kinder

Secretarial ; English

4;

LSA

1.

Committee

OBITER

Freshman Class Advisor 3; Hospitality
Alpha Psi Omega 3, 4, President 4;

2, 3;

2;

FTA

Richard

3.

4:

4;

4,

2;

Customs Committee

Treasurer 3;

Athen-

Bloomsburg Players
3;

OBITER

2, 3,

Co-Advertising Manager

3,

4.

General

Waller Hall Association 1.
Business Ed. Club 1. 2:

3,

4;
4;

Newman Club
Cheerleader

1,

1.

2;

2,

3.

Accounting

Day Men's
4;

2,

FTA

D. Lev an

Catawissa

Accounting
1,

Treasurer

3.

Hurtt

Day Men's Association

4,

Varsity

1:

OBITER

Donald
G.

Forty Fort

3,

Club 3, 4;
Men's Chorus 1; Class Vice President 2;
College Council 4; Hospitality Committee 3; Customs
Committee 3; Football 1; Baseball 1, 2; Phi Sigma Pi

Newman Club

Mountaintop

General

Day Women'; Association 1. 2. 3,
aeum Club 1; Business Ed. Club
4:

2,

1;

Mary Lou Kubic

Nancy Bangs Holtzman

3.

Dormitory Association 1,
President 4; Business Ed. Club

Men's

3.

1.

Bloomsburg

Accounting

St. Clair

Waller Hall Association 1, 2. 3, 4; Bloomsburg Players
Business Ed. Club
1, 2. 3. 4. Treasurer 2. Secretary 3;
1. 2. 3. 4, Secretary 3; FTA 3, 4, Treasurer 4; "B" Club
3,

* HoltzMan

BlliE*
.

Business Ed. Club

1. 2,

1. 2. 3,

4;

Association

FTA

1.

2,

3,

4;

Business

Ed.

Club

4; Aviation Club.

Chorus 1; Class Treasurer 3; Furniture Committee Co-Chairman 2; Hospitality Committee Co-Chairman

3:

3;

R.

.Men's

FTA

4.

HURTT

J.

KINDER

M.

L.

D.

KUBIC

\

LEVAN

Mi

m

^

«ft

/*»



**-


J.

McCORMICK

J.

J

• •

MINCER

Secretarial ; English

Waller Hall Association 1, 2, 3, 4; Committee Chairman 3;
Governing Board 2, 4; Newman Club 1, 2, 3, Secretary 2;
1, 2; FTA 3, 4; Women's Chorus 1,

Business Ed. Club
2;

Pi

Hospitality Committee 2;
3, 4,

Vice President

Fashion Show

Omega

Pi

1;

Waller Hall Association
Ed. Club 1, 2. 3: FTA

Chairman

3;
3.

4,

Pi

Omega

General

John C.
Glenside

4,

3,

Pi

Secretary 3;

Women's Chorus

4;

Dining

Secretary

4,

3,

3;

Corresponding Secretary 4;

American Colleges and

Waller Hall Association 1, 2, 3, 4; "B" Club 1, 2. 3, 4,
President 4; Bloomsburg Players 1, 2; Business Ed. Club
Women's Chorus 1. 2; FTA 3, 4; Calendar
1. 2. 3. 4;
Committee 1; Customs Committee 3; Social Recreation
Committee 3; Freshman Counselor 2; Pi Omega Pi 3, 4,
Treasurer 3; Kappa Delta Pi 3, 4; Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities.

2.

1,

3,

Committee Co-Chairman

Hospitality

Delta Pi

4.

Jeannetta A. Mincer
Jersey Shore

MORGAN

Sally F. Morgan
Edwardsville
Accounting; Mathematics

Joanne M. McCormick
Sunbury

MORAN

N.

S.

3,

Business

1.

2.

3,

Room

4;

Co-

Kappa

4;

Who

Who's

in

Universities.

Panichello
Accounting

Dorm Men's Association 1, 2. 3. 4; Newman Club 2, 3, 4,
Vice President 4; Varsity Club 1. 2, 3. 4, Treasurer 4;
FTA 4; Business Ed. Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Class Treasurer 4;
Basketball Tournament Committee

man

2,

3,

4;

Football

1,

2,

2.

4.

3,

3.

4,

Program Chair-

Basketball

1.

2.

3.

4.

James K. Roberts,

Nancy
Scranton

A.

Moran

Mifflinville

Secretarial ; English

Waller Hall Association

1,

2,

3,

4;

Business

Ed.

FTA

Mixed Chorus 3;
1. 3; Athenaeum Club 1;
Customs Committee 2; Dining Room Committee

PANICHELLO

Club
3,

4;

3.

J

-

ROBERTS

Jr.
Accounting

Day Men's Association 1, 2,
Maroon and Gold Circulation

3,

4;

Staff

Business
4;

FTA

Ed.
4.

Club:

A SN y
D£R
-

John

B.

Grace D. Vanderslice

Sibly

Bloomsburg

Day Men's Association
2,

4;

Berwick

General
2,

1,

Men's Glee Club

1;

3,

Business Ed. Club

4;

FTA

4;

1,

Assembly Commit-

tee 1, 2.

3,

Robert

F.

Sunbury

FTA

R.

1,

1,

2, 3;
2,

3,

Day Women's Association
4; FTA 3, 4; Women's

1,

Omega

4; Pi

Pi

Day Women's Associa-

Business

2;
3,

4;

Club

Ed.

Kappa Delta Pi

1,

2.

3, 4.

General

4;

Day Men's Association 3,
1, 2;
Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Business Ed. Club 1, 2;
Club 1, 2; Customs Committee 2; Football 1, 2.
Association

Aviation

George Viti
Shickshinny

Accounting
1,

2,

3,

4;

Aviation Club

1.

3, 4.

SNYDER

3,

Dorm Men's

Newman

Snyder

Day Men's Association

FTA

Shamokin

General

Waller Hall Association
4; Business Ed. Club
Chorus 1, 2, 3. 4.

4;

3;

2,

1,

Ralph Charles Verano

Ann Elizabeth Snyder
Elysburg

General

Waller Hall Association
tion 4; Women's Chorus

G.

VANDERSLICE

2;

Accounting

Day Men's Association

2.

Class Vice President

Band

R.

VERANO

1;

4;

Business
1,

2;

Club

Ed.

Orchestra

1.

1.

G. VITI

2;

)

E.

WEAVER

T.

WELL1VER

G.

WIIK

Evelyn Mae Weaver
Muncy
General Business

Waller Hall Association
1,

3;

"B" Club

Secretary 4;
3;
3;

1,

2,

3,

4;

Business

Mixed Chorus 4;
Fashion Show Coordinator
4;

FTA
1,

2,

3.
3,

Ed.

Club

4,

State

Chairman

Waller Hall Governing Board Treasurer 3; Band

Maroon and Gold

Thomas

J.

1,

2,

1.

Welliver

Shamokin
Accounting

Day Men's Association 1, 2, 3, 4; Aviation Club
Business Ed. Club 2, 4; Bloomsburg Players 1, 2;
Wrestling 4.

2,

3;

FTA

4;

1,

Glenn Leon Wiik
Allentown

Accounting

Day Men's Association

FTA

4;

LSA

Committee

3;

1, 2, 3, 4; Business Ed. Club 1, 2;
Customs Committee 2; Hospitality
Basketball Tournament Committee 1. 2. 3,

1,

2;

Student Co-ordinator

3.

> r*K? *

WW
SHE
Si™
:

-

Jfc^.'^iilk

a?
-

IT

ELEMENTARY

B °U/jvc

Ethel Mae Brace

Dorothy Ann Barnes

Hunlock Creek

Starrucca

Waller Hall Association
Aviation Club 1, 2, 3;

1,

2,

FTA

4;

3,

3,

4;

Women's Chorus
Pep Committee 4.

1;

Waller Hall Association 1, 2, 3, 4; Women's Chorus 1, 2;
Wesley Fellowship 1, 2, 3, 4; FTA 3, 4; House Committee Chairman

2.

Judith M. Bolling

Allene Burlingame

Scranton

Waller Hall Association
Players

1,

2,

3,

4;

3,

Janice

Bower

B.

2,

3,

4;

SCA
1;

1,

2;

FTA

Counselor 2; Alpha Psi

Fellowship

4;

1,

Athenaeum Club

Bloomsburg
3,

Omega

4;
2,

Knox
3,

4.

Berwick

Day Women's Association 1, 2, 3, 4; FTA 4; Athenaeum
2, Secretary 3; Mixed Chorus 3; Aviation Club 1.

Club

Marcy Cedor

Clarks Green

Berwick

Waller Hall Association 1, 2, 3, 4; "B" Club 4; Athenaeum
Club 1; Women's Chorus 1, 2; FTA 3, 4; Wesley Fellowship 1, 2, 3, 4; Governing Board 1, 2, 3, 4; Kappa Delta
Pi 3, 4; Who's Who in American Colleges and Univer-

Day Women's Association 1, 2, 3,
Athenaeum Club 1; Aviation Club

4;

4;

Science

FTA

3,

Club 2;
4.

sities 4.

A.

BURLINGAME

M.

CEDOR

H.

CLARK

Hope

A.

A.

DREESE

R.

J.

FERENCE

Ianet Ruth Ference

Clark

Pittsburgh

Dornsife

Waller Hall Association
Poetry Club 3; FTA 3;

2,

1,

4;

3,

Women's Chorus

Bloomsburg Players

1.

2,

2;

3.

Anna Louise Dreese
Beavertown
Waller

ELLIS

Hall

Association

Women's Chorus

1,

2;

2,

1,

Band

Waller Hall Governing Board

3,

1;

4;

"B" Club

3,

4;

FTA

3,

4;

SCA

2;

Hall Association 2, 3, 4; Women's Chorus 2;
Bloomsburg Players 2. 3. 4; FTA 4; Publicity Committee
Co-Chairman 4; Art Committee Co-Chairman 4; Kids'
Christmas Co-Chairman 2; Fashion Show 2, 3, 4; Waller
Hall Handbook 3; Olympian Editorial Board 3; OBITER
2, Editorial Board 3, Senior Pictures 4.

Waller

Alice

3.

.

I.

Fisher

Sunbury

Rebecca Ann Ellis
Milton

Waller Hall

Waller Hall Association 1, 2, 3, 4; FTA 3, 4; "B" Club
4; Athenaeum Club 1: Waller Hall Governing Board
President 3, President 4; College Council 4;
2, Vice
Hospitality Committee 1; Kappa Delta Pi 3, 4; Maroon
and Gold 3, 4.
3,

Association

Athenaeum Club

1;

LSA

3,

2,
2.

4;
3;

SCA
Kappa

2;

FTA

Delta

Pi

4;

3,

3,

4.

Loretta N. Fry
Muncy
Waller Hall Association 1, 2, 3, 4; Women's Chorus
4; Mixed Chorus 2, 3. 4; FTA 2, 3, 4; SCA 2, 3,

3,

A FISHER
.

L-

FRY

2,

4.

R C/U.\M.v
-

Cora

R. Gill
Wilkes-Barre

GlLMORE

Waller Hall Association
3.

Secretary

4.

Secretary

Board

4:

2.

2,

1,

Science

4;

3,

Women's Chorus

3;

Canterbury

Club

1,

2,

3,

1,

4;

1,

2,
3,

4:

Jean

E.
Scranton

Waller Hall Association
Mixed Chorus 3; FTA

1,

3.

2, 3,

4;

4;

Women's Chorus

Class Secretary 1;

Committee 2; Wesley Fellowship

1, 2, 3,

R.

Vice
2, 3.

Aviation Club 3;

FTA

1.

Griffiths
1,

2,

3,

4;
2,

Customs

Homecoming Day Committee

2,

4; Cheerleader

1.

Who

in

4, Social Chairman 2, 3;
Athenaeum Club 2, Vice
4; Women's Chorus 2, 3;

3,

President 2; Class Secretary

Girdalskas

American Colleges and

LSA

3;

1,

2, 3, 4;

Who's

Universities.

Rita Gydosh
Duryea

Waller Hall Association
4,

4;

3,

Soccer

2;

1.

Forest City

3.

2,

1,

1;

Waller Hall Association
SCA 1; "B" Club 2,

Meuntaintop

Chorus

Photography Club

Governing

1.

B.

GRAYBILL

FTA

Club
3:

Ruth Gillman

Rae

G.

Richfield

Day Men's Association

President
4:

3:

1,

Athenaeum Club 1. 2,
Women's Chorus 1, 2; Mixed
2,

Newman Club

GIRDAUSKAS

3,

4;

1, 2.

Waller Hall Association

Athenaeum Club

1,

2;

1,

2,

3,

4;

Newman Club 1, 2;
FTA 3, 4: Band

Science Club 3;

1, 2.

G.

GRAYBILL

J.

GRIFFITHS

R.

GYDOSH

G.

HARRIS

HIPPENSTEEL

M.

G.

Gloria M. Harris

Betty

Hickory Corners

Annville

Waller Hall Association 1,
4; Women's Chorus 1, 2;

2, 3, 4;

LSA

2,

"B" Club
3,

4;

Kappa Delta

2; Hospitality Committee 2;

3,

FTA
Pi

Secretary

3,

4;

SCA

J.

Waller

HISTED

Hoffman

Hall

President 4;

Association

Committee

2,

1,

Women's Chorus

Vice President 3;

3, 4.

HOFFMAN

B.

LSA

1,

2,

4;

3,
1,

3,

"B"

FTA

2;

Club
4;

3,

Secretary 4;

2,

3,

SCA

2,

Hospitality

2.

Mollie Jane Hippensteel

Hope

Espy

Day Women's Association 1. 2, 3, 4; "B" Club 2,
Athenaeum Club 1; Women's Chorus 2, 3; LSA 1, 2,
Majorette

3,

4;

3,

4;

"B" Club 2, 3, 4;
1, 2, 3, 4;
Women's Chorus 1, 2, 3; Mixed

Waller Hall Association

Athenaeum Club

2;

FTA

SCA

Canterbury Club,
1, 2;
Fashion Show 1, 2, 3, 4;
House Committee 2; College Council 4; Kappa Delta Pi
3, 4; Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities.
1,

2;

1,

Day Women's Association
2,

1,

2,

3,

Board

Official

4,

President 3; Science Club

1,

2;

1,

4,

Women's

Chorus 3; Mixed Chorus 3; FTA 4; College Council 3;
CGA Evaluation Committee 2; Kappa Delta Pi 3, 4;
Who's Who in American Colleges
1;

Honesdale

Secretary

Horne

Vice President

3, 4.

Grace Histed

Chorus

H.

Catawissa

3,

President

4;

2,

3;

B

-

HOUGH

Maroon and Gold
and Universities.

Beverly Hough
Berwick

Day Women's Association 1, 2, 3,
Athenaeum Club

Aviation Club 4;

4;
1;

Science

FTA

4.

Club 2;

Nanette Hoy

J.

Snydertown

Hollidaysburg

Waller

Hall

Mixed Chorus 1, 2;
1,
2, 3;
FTA 4; Pep Committee 2; Dining
Maroon and Gold 1.

Association

Women's Chorus

Room Committee

1;
1;

Joan Kanyok

Falls

Waller Hall Association 1, 2, 3, 4; Newman Club
Poetry Club 1, 2, 3, Secretary 3; Women's Chorus
3,

Waller Hall Association 1, 2, 3, 4; FTA 3, 4; SCA 2,
3;
Wesley Fellowship 1, 2, 3, 4; Athenaeum Club 3; Women's
Chorus 1, 2; Kappa Delta Pi 3, 4.

Louise M. LaSorsa

Moosic

FTA

Sylvia Krapf

4;

OBITER

1,

2;

Day Women's Association

1,

2;

3,

4;

Newman Club

Mixed Chorus

3.

Women

Florence Alice Keiper

2,

1,

3,

4,

1,

2,

2;
3,

4,

Waller Hall Association
Secretary 3; FTA 4
Band 1, 2, 3, 4

Secretary 3;

Representative 3; Assembly Committee
Board Committee 3; Kappa Delta Pi 3,

Bulletin

Noxen

1,

3

2,
4,

His-

torian 4.

Waller Hall Association 1, 2, 3, 4; Athenaeum Club 2;
Women's Chorus 1, 2; Mixed Chorus 3, 4; SCA 1, 2, 3;
Wesley Fellowship 1, 2, 3; FTA 4.

Mary Lingousky
Sheppton
Waller

Hall

Association

1,

2,

3,

4;

Poetry

Club

2;

Women's Chorus 2; Athenaeum Club 3; FTA 3; Chairman of Waller Hall Art Committee 3; OBITER Advertising Staff 3.

F.

KEIPER

J.

KRAPF

M.

LASORSA

M.

LINGOUSKY

J.

LIPKO

G.

LONG

LUNDY

Bloomsburg

Forest City

Waller Hall Association

2,

1,

FTA

4;

Athenaeum Club
Band 2.

Guy

A.

Long

1.

J.

Joyce M. Lundy

Johanna Lipko

Club

LUKAC

J.

2;

2;

Newman

Counselor 4;

4;

Women's Chorus

1,

2;

Athenaeum Club

1;

?

Danville

Day Men's Association
Aviation Club 3;

Day Women's Association 1, 2. 3, 4; Women's Chorus
1, 2; Mixed Chorus 3, 4, Secretary 4; Bloomsburg Players
1, 2, 3, 4, Secretary 4; Customs Committee 2; Hospitality
Committee 3; Library Committee 4: Alpha Psi Omega
Kappa Delta Pi 3 4; Who's Who in American
3, 4;
Universities and Col leges.

FTA

2,

1,

3,

4;

4.

Jacqueline McCauley
Shenandoah

June Elizabeth Lukac

Waller Hall Association 1. 2, 3, 4;
Club 1, 2, 3; Athenaeum Club 1, 2,

Freeland

Waller Hall Association

Athenaeum Club

1,

2,

1,

3,

President 3;

4,

Program Chairman

FTA

3,

4;

LSA

1,

2,

Kappa

Universities

Delta Pi

and Colleges

3,

4;

Who's

Who

in

3,

American

Dolores

3,

4:

Newman

4.

MJLEWSKI

E.

Milewski

Mt. Carmel

Day Women's Association

FTA

Vice President 3;

Club 3;

4.

D-

3,

2;

4; SCA 1, 2, President 3; Women's Chorus 1, 2; Waller
Hall Governing Board 4; Chairman Kid's Christmas Com-

mittee 3;

FTA

OBITER

3.

3,

1,

2,

4;

3. 4;

Poetry Club

"B" Club

2,

3.

4;

1,

2,

3,

Science

V

mviCK

Michael Moran

Edward

Hazleton

Fern Glen

P.

Day Men's Association

Dorm Men's

4;

FTA

1; Dorm Men's Association 2, 3,
Men's Glee Club 1, 2; Mixed Chorus 1, 2; FTA 4;
Newman Club 1, 2; Class Vice President 1; Social
Recreation Committee, Co-Chairman 3; Assembly Committee 2; Who's Who in American Colleges and Univer-

Palushock
Association

2,

1,

4;

3,

Aviation Club

1,

2;

3, 4.

Ruth Eleanor Paul
Plymouth
Waller Hall Association 1, 2, 3, 4; "B" Club 1. 2, 3, 4;
Poetry Club 1, 2; Mixed Chorus 2, 3, 4, Vice President
2, Treasurer 3; Social Recreation Committee, Co-Chairman

sities 4.

Eleanor Novick
Wilkes-Barre

3;

Waller Hall Association 1, 2, 3, 4; FTA 3, 4; Women's
Chorus 2, 3; Newman Club 1, 2, 3; SCA 1; Counselor
2, 3; Proctor 2, 3; Maroon and Gold 2.

Class

Secretary

Secretary 4;

FTA

3;

4;

Kappa Delta Pi
Women's Chorus 2,

3,
3,

4,

Recording

4.

Patricia Irene Phillips
Williamsport

Mary

O'Braitis

Waller Hall Association

Edwardsville

3,

4;

FTA

3,

4;

SCA

1,

1,

Counselor 3; "B" Club
Committee Chairman 2.

2, 3, 4,

2,

3,

1, 2, 3, 4; Women's Chorus 1, 2;
Newman Club 1, 2, 3; Athenaeum Club
Committee 3; Hospitality Committee 2.

Waller Hall Association

Mixed Chorus
3;

FTA

4;

M. O'BRAITIS

>

IB

2;

Fire

E.

PALUSHOCK

R.

PAUL

P.

PHILLIPS

to

I
S.

REDLINE

REITMEYER

B.

ROHRBACH

R.

Shirley Beatrice Redline

Thomas

Bloomsburg

Shamokin

Day Women's Association 1, 2,
Mixed Chorus 3, 4; "B" Club
Delta Pi

Official

4,

3,

2,

3,

4;

FTA

Board
4;

4;

Kappa

3, 4.

E.

T.

Sanders

Day Men's Association

4;

Dorm Men's

Science

Club

FTA

Vice President 4;

3,

1;

Aviation

Club

George Alfred Schell

Oneida

Bloomsburg

Waller Hall Association 1. 2, 4; Women's Chorus 1, 2;
Athenaeum Club 2; Poetry Club 1, 2; Newman Club 1,

3, 4,

FTA

4;

OBITER

2.

Waller Hall Association 1, 2, 3, 4; "B" Club 3, 4;
3, 4; SCA 1, 3; Furniture Committee 2, 3; Band
Fashion Show 1, 2, 3, 4; Wesley Fellowship 1, 2,

OBITER

1;

Who's

Who

in

FTA
1,

3,

2;
4,

American Colleges

Universities.

G SCHE^
.

1,

2,

3,

FTA

4;

1,

1,

2,

4;

3,

4.

Band

1,

2,

3;
2;

2.

3.

Duryea

Sunbury

President 3;

President

Association

Athenaeum Club

Alberta Jean Semanski

Relda May Rohrbach

and

Day Men's Association

3;

Newman Club

Barbara Mary Reitmeyer

2;

SANDERS

A SEMANSKI
-

Waller Hall Association 1, 2, 3, 4; SCA 1; FTA 3, 4;
Canterbury Club 2, 3; Women's Chorus 1; Mixed Chorus
2;

Olympian

3;

Maroon and Gold

2,

3,

4;

OBITER

4.

AT.SK/

Carol Louise Shupp

Theodore Craig Thomas

Plymouth

Nanticoke

Waller Hall Association 1,
Women's Chorus 2; FTA
Pi

2,
3.

3,

4;

Poetry

4;

SCA

1;

Club

Kappa

1,

2;

Delta

Dorm Men's
tion

4;

1,

Association

Men's Chorus

1,

2,

2,

3;

4; Day Men's AssociaPhi Sigma Pi 3, 4.

3,

3, 4.

Mary Jane Trefsger
Hubert

L.
Mt. Carmel

Smoczynski

Day Men's Association
Aviation Club

2. 3,

4;

1,

Watsontown
2,

3,

Athenaeum Club

4;

Newman Club

1,

2. 3, 4,

1;

Treasurer

Committee 3; Religion in Life Week
Committee 4; Basketball Tournament Committee 3; Pilot
4; Social Recreation

3,

Associate Editor

Day Women's Association 1, 2, 3; Waller Hall AssociaPoetry Club 1; Mixed Chorus 4; FTA 4; Wesley
Fellowship 1, 2, 3, 4, Vice President 4; Kappa Delta Pi
tion 4;

Maroon and Gold
Sigma Alpha Eta 4.
4;

1,

2, 3, 4;

OBITER

3,

4;

SCA

1,

4;

3.

Janet Wagner

LURA SZERAFINSKI

Kingston

Dalton

Waller Hall Association 1, 2,
4, Treasurer 3; SCA 1, 2,
FTA 3, 4; Wesley Fellowship

3,

L.

SZERAFINSKI

Waller Hall Association
3,

4;

3,

4;

1,

2,

Athenaeum Club
Women's Chorus
3,

T.

2,

2;

tion

SCA

2;

Chorus

1,

1;

FTA

2; Aviation

1,

3,

Club

2,

4;

3,

4;

LSA

Day Women's Associa1, 2, 3, 4;
Women's

3.

4.

THOMAS

M.

TREFSGER

J.

WAGNER

C.

WALLACE

N.

WILLIAMS

S.

Waller Hall Association 1,
Club 1; Social Recreation
2. 3;

2.

3.

4;

FTA

Committee 2;
Maroon and Gold 1.

Newman
Dining Room

3,

4;

Women's Chorus 1,
Awards Committee
2, 3; FTA 3, Program Chairman 4;
Chairman 2, 3; Kappa Delta Pi 3, Treasurer 4; Maroon
and Gold

1,

Editor 4;

Who's

2,

Editorial

Who

in

1,

2,

3,

4;

Board 3, 4; OBITER Associate
American Colleges and Univer-

sities.

2,

3,

4;

Aviation Club

1,

2,

3;

Day Women's Association 1, 2, 3, 4; Athenaeum Club 1,
2, 3; FTA 4; Day Women's Social Chairman 3; Athenaeum Club Program Chairman 4.

Janice

Yozvuk

Wilkes-Barre

"B" Club 2, 3, 4;
1, 2, 3, 4;
3: FTA 3. 4: Science Club 1, 2; Waller
Governing Board 4; CGA Fire Drill Committee
Chairman 3; Dining Room Committee 3.
Waller Hall Association

Athenaeum Club

Shirley Search Williams

Hall

Shickshinny

Day Women's Association 2; Bloomsburg Players
Women's Chorus 2; Aviation Club 2; Sigma Alpha Eta
Maroon and Gold 2.

\OST

1,

3, 4.

Orangeville

Clarks Summit

Waller Hall Association

Day Men's Association

FTA

Carolyn Ann Yost

Nancy Sue Williams

I

WIRTH

Northumberland

Wilkes-Barre

(Mrs.

J.

Jay Stanley Wirth

Connie Ann Wallace

Committee

WILLIAMS

J-

2;
2;

YOZV7AK

# VJ

I

I

I

SECONDARY

UflAJVD

D. Angus
Bloomsburg

Albert

Social Studies, Geography

Berwick

John

Dorm Men's

Association

Club

Aviation

4;

Gamma

Theta Upsilon

Robert

2,

1,

3;

Football

3;

1,

Day Men's Association
2,

3;

Baseball

1,

2;

3, 4.

Social Studies, Geography

Day Men's Association
ball

Aurand

L.

Belinsky

T.

1,

Gamma

2;

1,

2,

Mt. Carmel

Mathematics, Geography

Social Studies, Mathematics

Day Men's Association

1,

2,

3,

4;

Aviation Club

1,

2,

3;

Baseball 1,2,3,4.

Dorm Men's
Club

1.

2,

Association

President 3;

A. Baker
Bloomsburg

Fredric

Science, Mathematics

Social Studies, Geography

2,

3;

2,

3,

4;

0.

1, 2, 3, 4,

BAKER

3,

Vice President 3; Science

College Council

Awards Committee

Kappa Delta Pi

Secretary

3,

Varsity

4;

Kappa Delta

Pi

3,

4.

Varsity Club

1,

2,

3.

Betz

Lemoyne

Day Men's Association
1,

J.

2,

1,

Football 1;

Oren

Club

2,

Michael Richard Bernot

Danville

FTA4;

Aviation Club 4; Base3, Vice President 4.

4;

3,

Theta Upsilon

1,

President

2,

3,

Customs Committee
4; Phi Sigma Pi 3, 4;
1;

4.

Dorm Men's

Association

FTA

Customs

4;

Chairman; Basketball
3,

A.

BELINSKY

4;

President

M.

1,

2,

3,

4;

Committee
1.

2,

3,

4;

2;

Committee
Theta Upsilon

Senior

Gamma

4.

BERNOT

F.

BETZ

J

I
B.

<

\

V

R.

BISHOP

Byron

P.

BLYLER

BOGART

L.

BUCKWASH

V.

Vincent Buckwash

Bishop

Keiser

Honesdale

Science. Mathematics

Science, Social Studies

Day Men's Association

1, 2,

3,

4; Science Club

1,

2, 3,

4;

Day Men's Association
Science Club

FTA4.

Pi

Robert Paul Blyler

3.

4;

2,

1,

3,

Club

Aviation

4;

Phi Sigma Pi

3,

4;

President

3;

2.

1,

Kappa

2;

Delta

3, 4.

Edwin H. Chase

Bloomsburg

Scranton
Science, Social Studies

Day Men's Association 1. 2, 3; Science Club
Program Chairman 2; Awards Committee 1, 2.

English, Social Studies
1,

2,

3,

Day Men's
3;

Lynda M. Bogart

Council

Berwick

Club
3,

4;

Who

1;

2,

President

in

1,

3,

Women's Chorus

SCAT; LSA

1, 2, 3,

2,

4;
1,

4;

American Colleges and

E.

L.

Football

1,

FTA
1;

2,

3;

Phi

Poetry

Class Treasurer 2;

Sigma

Pi

2,

Club

College

3.

Cole

Berwick

Waller Hall Association
President

3;

Ronald

French, Spanish, English

Association

Aviation Club 1;

CHASE

3,

"B

4;

Poetry Club

Club

3,

4;

1,

Vice

Athenaeum

Mixed Chorus 3; FT A
Kappa Delta Pi 3, 4; Who's
2;

Social Studies, Geography

Day Men's Association
Upsilon

Universities.

R COLE
-

1,

2,

3,

4;

Science Club 2; Bloomsburg Players
3, 4.

Aviation
1.

2;

Club

Gamma

3,

4;

Theta

CONNOR

Edward

R. Dietz
Bloomsburg

Danville

Science, Speech

Science, Mathematics

Day Men's Association

Dorm Men's

3;

2,

1,

Association

Vice President 2, President 3; Newman Club 3, 4; FTA 4; Class Treasurer 2; Class President
3; College Council 3; CGA President 4; Furnitare Committee 2; Basketball Tournament Committee 2; Phi Sigma
Science Club

4;

Pi

2, 3, 4,

COUCH

George

Connolley

J.

«•

1,

Who

Who's

Historian 3;

and Universities; Varsity Football

American Colleges

in

2,

1,

3,

Day Men's Association 1, 2, 3,
1, 2; Football Manager 2.

Science

Club

3,

4;

William Belven Ellinger
Bloomsburg
Social Studies, Geography

Dorm Men's Association
Aviation Club 1, 2;
Theta Upsilon 2, 3, 4.

4.

4;

Ronald James Couch

4;

Football

1,

2,

FTA

3;

Day Men's Association

3;

Football

1,

2;

Gamma

Tamaqua

Elinor Evans

English, Social Studies

Dorm Men's

Association

Varsity Club

Basketball
mittee

1;

1,

2,

3,

Track

FTA

4;
1,

2;

Day Men's Association

3;

1, 2,

3,

4;

Football

Basketball

1,

2,

3,

4;
4;

Tournament Com-

1, 2, 3, 4.

Thomas Samuel Davis

Laceyville

English, Social Studies

Waller Hall Association 1, 2, 3; Poetry Club 3; Athenaeum Club 1; Mixed Chorus 1; FTA 3; Kappa Delta
Pi 2, 3; Maroon and Gold 1, 3; Olympian 3.

Harveys Lake
Science, Social Studies

Day Men's Association

1,

2,

Poetry Club 2; Science Club

T.

DAVIS

1,

3,

Aviation

4;

2, 3, 4;

G.

FTA

Club

1;

4.

DIETZ

W. ELLINGER

E.

EVANS

R.

GARINGER

P.

GERGEN

G.

Mocanaqua
Science, Mathematics

Science, Social Studies

Dorm Men's

Association

Club

Wesley

Fellowship

President
3,

2,

1,

Editor 3;

1,

2,

Columnist

OBITER Show

1;

2;

Day Men's

4;

Science Club 3;

Council

4;

Class

2; Assembly Committee
Manager 1, 2, 3, 4; Maroon
4; Olympian 3, 4, Humor

1,

4; College Crier 3; Football

and Gold

1,

FTA

Science Club

4;

College

4;

3,

2,

Pep Committee

4;

3,

Bloomsburg Players

4;

3,

2,

GURZYNSKI

A.

Archie Gurzynski

R. Arnold Garinger
Harveys Lake

Varsity

GERMANA

3,

Director

4.

Philip Gergen

Association

FTA

4;

2,

1,

3,

Club 1;
Phi Sigma Pi 4.

Aviation

4;

Newman Club

1;

John Martin Halcovich
Shamokin
Science, Mathematics

Dorm Men's

Association

Varsity Club

2,

3,

Vice President

3,

4;

1,

2,

Baseball

3,
1,

4;
2,

Science Club
3,

4;

1,

2;

Phi Sigma Pi

4.

Mt. Carmel

Harry

Social Studies, Geography

Dorm Men's
man Club 2.
Band

2,

Upsilon

Association
3,

Vice

2,

Treasurer 4;

3,

FTA

4;

4: Basketball

Tournament Committee

President

President

3,

4;

Gamma

New3,

Day Men's Association
Phi Sigma Pi 4.

Jr.

Bloomsburg
Biological Science, Geography

Day Men's Association
Science Club

Gamma

1,

2,

1,

2.

3,

4;

Aviation Club

4; Varsity Club 2;

Theta Upsilon

FTA

4;

1,

2,

3;

Track

1,

2;

2, 3. 4.

»•

Heiser

Social Studies, English

4;

Theta

2, 3, 4.

Guy Thomas Germana.

J.

Nescopeck

HEISER

3,

4;

Science

Club 4;

FTA

4;

HOR NE
Rudolph Victor Holtzman

Eugene

Bloomsburg

Mocanaqua

French, Spanish, English

Dorm Men's

Association

Mixed Chorus
ball

1,

President

1

;

Science
1, 2,

3;

Day Men's Association

Class Historian

Library Committee 3;

2;

1

;

Basketball

1

Phi Sigma Pi

;

2,

4;

Base3,

2,

3,

4; Science Club

2,

3,

3,

4;

Science Club

2,

Avia-

4.

E. KOSOLOSKI. Jr.
Mt. Carmel

Bloomsburg

Science, Social Studies

Day Men's

Day Women's Association 1, 2, 3, 4; "B" Club
Athenaeum Club 1; FTA 4; Bloomsburg Players

2,

3,

4;

3, 4.

4;

FTA

1,

4;

Sigma Pi

4; Phi

2,

3,

3,

4;

4.

Thompson
Social Studies, Geography

Dorm Men's

Science, Mathematics

Day Men's Association 1, 2, 3. 4; Science Club
FTA 4; Phi Sigma Pi 3, 4; Kappa Delta Pi

KANASKIE

Association

Newman Club

Joseph Jerome Matikiewicz

Kanaskie

Shamokin

R.

FTA

Club 2:

JOHN

Horne

English, Social Studies

B.

Day Men's Association
tion

4,

3.

Virginia Grace

Ronald

Klimovich

J.

E.

1, 2, 3,
3,

4;

4.

KLIMOVICH

i:»A^

Kappa Delta
and Gold

J.

Association
Pi

4;

1,

Gamma

2,

3,

Theta

4;

Aviation Club 2;
Upsilon 4; Maroon

3. 4.

KOSOLOSKI

J.

MATIKIEWICZ

j.

McCarthy

McKAY

K.

L.

MERVINE

M.

Mark Gray Morris

John McCarthy
Bloomsburg

Bloomsburg

Social Studies, Geography

Social Studies, Geography

Dorm Men's
Varsity Club

Association 2;
4;

3,

FTA

4;

Day Men's Association
Football

2,

3;

4;

3,

Baseball

4.

3,

Day Men's Association
4;

Gamma

1,

Theta Upsilon

Harri§burg

Shamokin

Biology, Social Studies

Social Studies, Geography

Day Men's Association

1;

Dorm Men's

Association

4

2, 3,

Men's Glee Club 1; LSA 1, 2
FTA 4; Hospitality Committee 2; CGA Fire Committee 2
Senior Committee; Class President 1; College Council 1,
2; Phi Sigma Pi 2, 3, 4; Kappa Delta Pi 3, 4; Olympian
Editor-in-Chief 3; Maroon and Gold Photography Head
3,

4;

1,

4;

OBITER

rector 2,

Coed-of-the-Year Director 2, Publicity DiEditorial Board 3, Editor-in-Chief 4.

Association

Gamma

2,

3,

4;

Theta Upsilon

LSA
3,

3,

4;

FTA

Secretary 4;

4;

Phi

4.

j

4;

3,

Aviation Club 2;

FTA

nemetz

1,

Newman Club

1,

Sigma Alpha Eta

Thomas

E.

3;

2,

1,

1, 2,

2;

3;

Day Men's Association 4

Varsity Club

Football

2;

1,

2,

1,

3,

2,

4;

Maroon and Gold

3,

4;

Track

FTA

4

2,

3

1,

1.

Persing

Shamokin
Science
1, 2; Dorm Men's Association 3, 4
Vice President 4; Aviation Club 3
Science Club 4; FTA 4; Football 1, 2, 3, Co-Captain 4
Wrestling 4.

Social Studies, Geography

Dorm Men's

Association

Aviation Club

Varsity Club

Gordon

Wrestling 4;

Dorm Men's

Day Men's Association

Lewis Reilly Mervine

Sigma Pi

2,

2, 3, 4.

John W. Nemetz

Keith D. McKay

Bloomsburg Players

MORRIS

T PERSING
-

1,

2,

3,

Charles Greer Pope

Joseph

Conyngham

Glen Lyon

Association

Men's Glee Club

1;

1,

2,

Varsity

4;

3,

Mixed Chorus

Club

3,

Vice President

2,

President 4; FTA 4; Wesley Fellowship 1, 2, 3,
Vice President 4; Basketball Tournament Committee

4;
3,

4; Class

Football

Shemanski

Science, Mathematics

Social Studies, English

Dorm Men's

J.

3,

4;

1, 2, 3, 4.

Day Men's Association

Jacob

3; Football

1,

E.

Catawissa

Day Men's Association

Science, Mathematics

Association
1, 2, 3,

2;

Track

2;

4;

Science Club

FTA

1,

2,

3,

4; Basketball Tour-

2.

Mocanaqua
Science

Aviation Club

1,

3,

1,

Slembarski

Paul Harold Rhodes

Day Men's

2,

1,

Newman Club

President 4;

nament

1,

2,

Treasurer 2;

3,

Science

4;

FTA

Club

4;

4.

Newman Club
1, 2.

Donald

E.

1;

Smith

Alton William Schmidt

Dallas

Lavelle

Biology, Geography

Science, Mathematics

4; Aviation Club 3; Science
Phi Sigma Pi 3, 4; Maroon

1, 2, 3,

Club 4;

and Gold

Science

Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Treasurer 2; FTA 4; Varsity
Club 1, 2; Kappa Delta Pi 3, 4, Vice President 4; Phi
Sigma Pi 2, 3, 4; Maroon and Cold 2, 3, 4, News Man-

Day Men's Association 1, 2, 3, 4; Aviation Club 3; Science
Association 4; Athenaeum Club 1; Mixed Chorus
1, 2,
Treasurer 2; Aviation Club 1, 2; FTA 4; College Council'
3;

ager

Maroon and Gold

Dorm Men's

A.

Association

1, 2,

3;

Day Men's Association

3.

SCHMIDT

J.

SHEMANSKI

4;

Customs Committee

Gamma

J.

Theta

3;

Upsilon

Track
3,

4;

1,

2; Phi

Kappa

Sigma Pi

Delta

Pi

3,

4;

3,' 4;

1.

SLEMBARSKI

D.

SMITH

I*!**}
->•» &*- i

M

H.

M.

SMITH

Holley

R.

W. STANEK

SMITH

Walter Stanek

Smith

LaAnna

Hazleton

Science, Social Studies

Science, Social Studies

Dorm Men's

Day Men's Association

FTA

Baseball

Gold

Association 1, 2, 3, 4; Men's Glee Club 1, 2;
Olympian Advertising Manager 3; Maroon and

4;
3;

OBITER

Malcolm

2, 3,

Business Manager

FTA

2, 3, 4;

4; Basketball

2, 3,

4;

1, 2, 3,

4;

4.

4.

James

P.

Steiner

Bloomsburg

H. Smith

Physical Science, Geography

Hazleton
English, Social Studies

Day Men's Association

Day Men's Association 1, 4; Dorm Men's Association 2, 3;
Aviation Club 2; Athenaeum Club 1; FTA 4; Men's Glee
Club 1, 2; Mixed Chorus 3; CGA Furniture Committee 2;
Kappa Delta Pi 3, 4; Olympian 3, Business Manager.

FTA

Upsilon

1, 2, 3,

Club

Varsity

4;

4; Science Club

Football

1;

1;

Gamma

Theta

4.

Donald W. Thomas
Shamokin

Nancy Snyder

Social Studies, Geography

Hazleton

Day Men's Association

Science, Mathematics

Waller Hall Association

FTA

3;

SCA

1;

Club
1,

Kappa Delta

4;

2,

3,

Pi

3, 4.

Science Club

2,

3;

2,

1,

Upsilon

4.

Allen

B.

4;

3,

1, 2, 3,

Football

4; Aviation
1,

2,

1, 2, 3,

4;

4;

3,

Club 4; Varsity
Gamma Theta

Walburn

Shamokin
Science, Mathematics

Dorm Men's

Association

4; Science Club

1,

Convention Delegate

Kappa

J.

STEINER

D.

THOMAS

Delta Pi

A.

2,
3,

3, 4.

WALBURN

3,

4;

4;

Day Men's Association

FTA

3,

Track

1;

President 4, State
Phi Sigma Pi 3, 4;

4,

SENIOR DIRECTORY

1955

BUSINESS
1315 Bryn Mawr, Scranton,
R. D. No. 1, Dallas,
_ 419 S. Main, Taylor,
415 Hudson, Forest City,
229 E. Fifth, Berwick,

Belock, Michalene
Berdy, Carolyn
Buynak, Olive (Hunter)
Carey, Robert

Chapin, Joan
William
Cumens, Robert
Derk, George .....
Gerosky, Eileen
Creasy, G.

Mifflinville,

45 Kirby,

Box

Hiller,

Sherrill

_

Panichello, John
Roberts, James

John

Sibly,

_

Snyder, Ann
Snyder, Robert
Vanderslice, Grace
Verano, Ralph

_

George
Weaver, Evelyn
Viti,

Welliver,

Thomas

Coatsville,

Montandon, Pa.

9 Union, Pittston,
333 W. Coal, Shenandoah,
_ 446 E. Fourth, Bloomsburg,
19 N. Tenth, Stroudsburg,
339 Oak, Jersey Shore,
405 Iron, Bloomsburg,

Gobster, Marlene
Harter, Mollie
Henning, Mary Ellen

Holtzman, Nancy
Hurtt. Richard
Kinder, Joseph
Kubic, Mary Lou
Levan, Donald
McCormick, Joanne
Mincer, Jeannetta
Moran, Nancy
Morgan, Sally

154,

Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.

__

Wiik, Glenn

Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
_
141 Butler, Forty Fort, Pa.
123 Broad, St. Clair, Pa.
Mountain Top, Pa.
R. D. No. 1, Catawissa, Pa.
310 S. Fourth, Sunbury, Pa.
528 S. Broad, Jersey Shore, Pa.
712 Clay, Scranton, Pa.
178 Summitt, Edwardsville, Pa.
101 Lismore, Glenside, Pa.
235 Main, Mifflinville, Pa.
R. D. No. 2, Benton, Pa.
Elysburg, Pa.
_
117 N. Eighth, Sunbury, Pa.
1919 W. Front, Berwick, Pa.
316 S. Shamokin, Shamokin, Pa.
38 S. Main, Shickshinny, Pa.
415 S. Market, Muncy, Pa.
Box 225, R. D. No. 1, Shamokin, Pa.
3136 Oxford Circle, Allentown, Pa.

Dorothy
Boiling, Judith
Bower, Janice

Starrucca,
_ 940 N. Webster, Scranton,
__ 210 Hall, Clarks Green,
R. D. No. 2, Hunlock Creek,

Brace, Ethel

Burlingame, Allene
Cedor, Marcy
Clark, Hope
Dreese, Anna
Ellis,

_

Rebecca __

Ference, Janet
Fisher, Alice
Fry, Loretta
Gill,

.

Cora

Gillman, Ruth
Girdauskas, Rae
Graybill, Gilmore
Griffiths.

333 Martzville, Berwick,
330 E. Second, Berwick,
R.D. No. 1, Dornsife,
Beavertown,
....
R. D. No. 1, Milton,
4872 Elmwood, Pittsburgh 27,
R. D. No. 2, Sunbury,
R. D. No. 4, E. Water, Muncy,
3 Rutter, Buttonwood,
Mountaintop,
142 Dundaff, Forest City,
.

.

Richfield,

_..

Jean

1024 Alder, Scranton,
302 Cherry, Duryea,
Box 104, Hickory Corners,
Main, Espy,
1517 West, Honesdale,
_

_

Gydosh, Rita
Harris, Gloria

Hippensteel, Mollie
Histed, Grace
Hoffman, Betty

Box

.

Home, Hope
Hough, Beverly

Keiper, Florence
Krapf, Sylvia
LaSorsa, Marie L.

.

Lingousky, Mary
Lipko, Johanna
__
Long, Guy
Lukac, June
Lundy, Joyce
McCauley, Jacqueline
Milewski, Dolores

362, Annville,

Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.

Route No. 3, Catawissa,
R. D. No. 1, Berwick,
Snydertown,
727 Main, Moosic,
Box 137, Noxen, Pa
316 Wayne, Hollidaysburg, Pa.
R. No. 1, Falls, Pa.

...

Hoy, Nanette
Kanyok, Joan

Sheppton,
309 Delaware, Forest City,
237 Mill, Danville,
603 Vine, Fretland,
422 E. Fourth, Bloomsburg,
1248 W. Coal, Shenandoah,
_ 135 Vine, Mt. Carmel,
.

_

1014 W. Fifteenth, Hazleton,
105 Prospect, Wilkes-Barre,
106 Church, Edwardsville,
154 Main, Fern Glen,
Paul, Ruth
....
34 Turner, Plymouth,
Phillips, Patricia
406 Brandon, Williamsport,
Redline, Shirley
._. R. D. No. 5, Bloomsburg,
Reitmeyer, Barbara
120 Second, Oneida,
Rohrbach, Relda
245 Ridge, Sunbury,
Sanders, Thomas
1412 State. Shamokin,
Schell, George
_ 361 Fair, Bloomsburg,
Semanski, Alberta
243 Main, Duryea,
Shupp, Carol
227 Cameron, Plymouth,
Smoczynski, Hubert
351 S. Oak, Mt. Carmel,
Szerafinski, Lura
R. D. No. 2, Dalton,
Thomas, Theodore
20 W. Spring, Nanticoke,
Tresfger, Mary Jane
_
R. D. No. 1, Watsontown,
Wagner, Janet
393 Northampton, Kingston,
Wallace, Connie
188 Division, Wilkes-Barre,
Williams, Nancy Sue
302 Main, Clarks Summit,
Wirth, Jay
Fourteenth and Queen, Northumberland,
Yost, Carolyn _
Mill, Orangeville,
Yozviak, Janice
31 Luzerne, Wilkes-Barre,
Novick, Eleanor

Mary
Palushock, Edward

O'Braitis,

_

.

_

Angus, John
Aurand, Robert
Baker, Oren

R. D. No.

1, Mt. Pleasant,
618 Bloom, Danville,
335 West, Bloomsburg,
1161 First, Berwick,
130 W. Second, Mt. Carmel,
514 S. Third, Lemoyne,
310 Tracy, Honesdale,
R. D. No. 2, Bloomsburg,
803 E. Fourth, Berwick,

Belinsky. Albert
Bernot, Michael

Fredric
Bishop, Byron
Betz,

Blyler, Robert
Lynda
Buckwash, Vincent
Chase, Edwin
Cole, Ronald

Connolley,
Davis,

442 Warsaw, Keiser,
208 W. First, Bloomsburg,
223 E. Front, Berwick,
__ 301 W. Mahoning, Danville,
_ 322 Rolling Mill, Tamaqua,
R. D. No. 1, Harveys Lake,
152 E. Third, Bloomsburg,
_
33 N. Main, Shickshinny,
_ 23 Second, Laceyville,
Harveys Lake,
142 N. Oak, Mt. Carmel,
202 W. First, Bloomsburg.

..._

Edward

Couch, Ronald

Thomas

_.
.

George
Ellinger, William
Dietz,

_

Evans, Elinor
Garinger, Raymond
Gergen, Philip

Germana, Guy

.


_

Gurzynski, Archie
Halcovich, John
_

Holtzman, Rudolph

Home,

Virginia

Kanaskie, Ronald
Klimovich, Eugene
Kosoloski, John

McKay, Keith
Mervine, Lewis
Morris,

Mark

Nemetz, John
Persing,

Thomas

Pa.
Pa.

Pa.
Pa.
Pa.

Steiner, James
Thomas, Donald
Walburn, Allen

_

Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.

57 Italy, Mocanaqua,
1015 Webster, Shamokin,
R. D. No. 1, Nescopeck,
405 Iron, Bloomsburg,
R. D. No. 3, Bloomsburg,
R. D. No. 1, Box 53, Shamokin,
140 River, Mocanaqua,
26 S. Locust, Mt. Carmel,
541-A Maclay, Harrisburg,
Box 143, Gordon,
646 W. Main, Bloomsburg,
1712 Tioga, Shamokin,
127 S. Rock, Shamokin.
._
Main, Conyngham,
R. F. D. No. 2, Catawissa, Pa.
_

Heiser, Harry

Pope, Charles
Rhodes, Paul
Schmidt, Alton
Shrmanski, Joseph
Slembarski, Jacob
Smith, Donald
Smith, Holley
Smith, Malcolm
Snyder. Nancy
Stanek, Walter

Pa.
Pa.

Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.

SECONDARY

Bogart,

ELEMENTARY
Barnes,

Moran, Michael

Lavelle,

Pa.

34 Coal, Glen Lyon, Pa.

Pond

Hill,

Mocanaqua, Pa.

Hillcrest,

Dallas,

710 Grant, Hazleton,

Pa.
Fourth, Hazleton, Pa.
R. D., Hazleton, Pa.
Preston Place, Girardville, Pa.
410 E. Church, Shamokin, Pa.
1252 W. Pine, Shamokin. Pa.

981

W.

_ Box

37,

249

Pa.

LaAnna, Pa.

_

.

SENIORS

.

.

.

Join your ALUMNI ASSOCIATION, and keep your membership active
through the years. Annual dues of $2.00 will include a year's subscription
to the ALUMNI QUARTERLY. This magazine, which appears four times
a year, will keep you informed of the activities of your classmates, and the
events happening on the campus. A three year membership ($5.00) will
bring you also the 72 page booklet "Bloomsburg Through the Years."

Our Object
"To Keep the Door of Opportunity
Open for Worthy American Youth."
.

Our Slogan

.

.

.

.

.

"Every Graduate of Bloomsburg an Active

Member

of the

ALUMNI ASSOCIATION."

All Dues Should

DR.

E. H.

Be

sent to

.

.

NELSON

President,

Alumni Association

State Teachers College

Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania

CAIN'S

PHARMACY
Danville,

Pa.

W
Mil *i

IfTWI
IJ

ENr

* Restauraistt

mill ii ii
8 i^iiii
ii
HI

I.UWlLI,

IMNK

iiLiiiiiiiii

SHOP
AL-S MEN'S

THE

WAFFLE
GRILL

Compliments of

NEW CAR AND TRUCK
DEALERS ASSOCIATION

Compliments of

.

.

.

BLOOMSBURG BANK
COLUMBIA TRUST CO.

FEST'S

RESTAURANT
Main and Leonard Streets

GIRTON'S STUDIO

s

N

Compliments of

THE

ECONOMY

.

.

.

STORES

WIEDENMAN AND COMPANY,
102

West Main

INC.

Phone 700

St.

ROCK'S RESTAURANT

FRIGID AIRE

SALES

Home

AND

of Fine Food

SERVICE

Class Rings, Club

Pins,

Diplomas, Medals, Trophies

and Announcements

L

G.

BALFOUR COMPANY

Amby

Nolan, Miner's Bank Bldg.

WILKES-BARRE, PA.

THE TEMPLE OF MUSIC
with an interest
.
School and Community
.

.

FIRST

in
.

.

.

NATIONAL BANK OF MILLVILLE

.

.

.

Your

Jeweler

Away
From

Home.

LOGAN'S

Compliments of

.

JIMI-JAC'S Coffee Shop

.

.

SNYDER'S DAIRY

THE
Compliments of

DIXIE

SHOP

VAUGHN'S BAKERY
26

E.

Main

Bloomsburg

TV MB

s
s*
Best

IMU
u.

Wish es

1J

From

-

CON FAIR'S
BEVERAGE COMPANY
£

L»-

w:

VINCENT'S
Berwick, Pa.

HABERDASHERY
Berwick, Pa.

Compliments of

.

.

.

HESS' BAR

SNEIDMAN'S
JEWELRY STORE
130

E.

Main

Phone 1724

EPPLEYS

DRUG
STORE

AND

GRILL

WISE

POTATO CHIPS

RITTER'S

STATIONERY

That Extra Fine Quality
Bloomsburg, Pa.

Main Street

THE PINE BARN INN
Finest in

Compliments of

.

.

.

Food and Lodgings

DANVILLE, PA.
Phone 1102

DOBYN'S
STUDIOS
Bloomsburg, Pa.

Compliments

of

THE
MAGEE CARPET COMPANY
BLOOMSBURG,

MANUFACTURERS

.

.

PA.

.

Velvet Axminster Wilton Cotton

Carpets and Rugs

RACUSIN'S

CLO

Compliments of

Compliments of

.

.

.

THE ZEPHYR DINER

GEISTWITE
STUDIOS
DEISROTH'S
Bloomsburg's
Friendly Place to

Main Street
Bloomsburg

BART PURSEL
Clothing
for

Men

Shop

.

f

Compliments of

.

BART PURSEL

—-—

CI
«n SHIP
11UID
FLAG

.

I
NESPOLI JEWELERS
Berwick, Pa.

Compliments of

.

.

.

MILLER OFFICE SUPPLY

LETTERMAN'S BAKERY

AND
EQUIPMENT COMPANY

Bloomsburg, Pa.

7 East Main Street

Bloomsburg

Best Wishes from

RACUSIN'S



R



,

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