rdunkelb
Thu, 02/15/2024 - 18:46
Edited Text
- Aid The Mighty Seventh !.!-

Senior Takes Honor
In Festival Audition
At Philadelphia

Althea Parsell , a member of the
college community, won the third
weekly radio audition of the "Voice
of Tomorrow" competition .
Miss Parsell, soprano who sang
with two other contestants Sunday
May 6, in the contest presented over
radio station KYW, will compete May
27 in a final audition with four other
weekly contest winners.
Miss Parsell hag been studying mit
sic for fou/ years and hopes to continue her, musical education after
graduation .

Shirley Wolfe and
Mr. Rygiel Take Over
Editing of Obiter

Assembly to Feature Annual
Spring Concert by Chorus

Women 's Choral Group of Sixty Voices Under Direction
The latest bit of information concerning the appearance of the Obiter
Of Miss Harriet Moore Will Sing on May 23
is that it will be available the week
previous to graduation.
Wednesday morning, May 23, the
The delay in publication was due Aviation Lab. School
Women's Chorus will present its anto a slight misunderstanding which
nual spring concert as the assembly
has been cleared up. Progress is be- To Open Again J une 4 feature. TBie vocalists have been
ing made now that Mr. Rygiel and
working hard for several months preFormer Instructors of
Miss Shirley Wolfe have taken over.
paring for this occasion and a fine
Members of th e student body who
Military Personnel Will
group of selections have been learnwish to place an order for the yeared.
Teach Civilian Students
book may still do so by contacting
The program Jo be presented is:
any of these people: Bernice Gabuzda, The second annual aviation labora- "Holy Lord God"
Noble Cain
Flora Guarna, Marian Chubb, Evelyn tory school opened to high school boys "Lift Thine Eyes"
Mendelssohn
Whitman, and Wanda Kehler.
Women's Chorus
and girls above the age of fourteen,
Firestone
high school teachers and college stu- "In My Garden "
Peggy Beach
dents interested in aviation or teachState Senate Fixes
Catherine Coakley, Accompanist
ing aeronautical subjects will be held
New Teacher Salaries
at the Bloomsburg State Teachers "The Two Clocks" .... James Rogers
Evelyn Doney, Martha Stitzel;
The Nittany Lions of Penn State A compromise fixing increased College this summer. Three courses
of
four
weeks
duration
each
will
be
Barbara
Greenly, Jean Richard
teacher
salaries
and
State
school
subscored six runs ,in the second inning
Dawn Raup, accompanist
on three hits, four bases on balls, an sidies at $29,000,000 for the next two offered beginning June 4, July 2 and
"Ye Banks and Braes O' Bonnie
error and a balk and that . meant the years was written into the Hare-Lee- August 1 respectively.
Doon"
James Miller
by
Sollenberger
bill
the
Senate
ReThe
aviation
course
consists
of
ball game as the Bloomsburg State
Teachers College Huskies were best- publican maj ority. The vote was 30- ten hours of dual flight with experi- Bridal Chorus from "Lohengrin"
¦.. Wagner
enced instructors and seventy-two
19.
ed, 12 to 2.
Senate and House Education Com- hours of ground school work including Barcarolle from "Tales of Hoffman"
Strong started for the locals but
Offenbach
was unsteady and gave way in the mittee members worked out the com- civil air regulations, meteorology, naWomen's Chorus
second to Wanich . The Scott hurler promise which they said had Gover- vigation and general service of airfailed to get out any of the five nor Martin 's approval . The move craft . The equipment and facilities "Without a Song" .. Vincent Youman
Althea Parsell
men he faced and Zagoudis, a Brook- quelled differences among Senate used in the aviation laboratory school
lyn , N. Y., boy then came in to hurl Republicans over committee changes is the same which was used in the Howard Fenstemaker, accompanist
slicing the increase to $24,000,000 training of over a thousand military First Movement , "Moonlight Sonata"
well the balance of the afternoon .
Beethoven
Zagoudis was in control from then above budget recommendations of pilots at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College . College instructors who
Catherine Coakley
on except in the sixth when Tepsic $103,000,000 for the biennium .
homered with two pals on base. Hop- Senate approval is assured as soon trained the military personnel are Three Little Maids from School from
now available for use in the civilian
"The Mikado"
Sullivan
kins, Lion short stop, had 11 assists as the revamped bill is printed.
Anne Williams, Dorothy Kocher
while "Cork" Terhune handed 11 Pau l L. Wagner of the Senate Edu- aviation laboratory school.
Athamantia Comuntzis, Dawn
The course, which was so successchances at third base for the Huskies , cation Committee estimated 50,000 of
,
s
61
000
t
e
ac
hers
Raup, accompanist
the
Commonwealth'
ful
last
summer, attracted students
without a miseue.
"I
Would
That My Love"
will
get
pay
boosts
under
the
comfrom
nine
Eastern
States
and
aroused
Bloomsburg S.T.C.
promise legislation for which support such interest that it was the subj ect
Mendelssohn
ab r It o a o of teacher representatives was claim"Country Gardens "
English
of
a
feature
article
in
the
New
York
Stoltz, If
3 0 0 0 0 1
Folk Song arr. by Treharne
ed . Changes made over previous re- Herald Tribune and "Aviation" magaBianco, If
1 0 0 0 0 0
zine.
Women's Chorus
4 0 0 6 5 0 visions by the committee:
Terhune, 3b
1. Minimum teacher - pupil unit on Detailed information concerning the
Harriet
M, Moore, Director
Klinefelter , lb . . . . 4 1 1 9 1 0
which
State
subsidies
are
based
reMartha
Hathaway,
accompanist
course may be obtained by writing to
Pratico, 2b
3 0 1 1 2 0
duced from 25 to 22 for high schools, John C, Koch, Director of Aviation The Women's Chorus has at the
4 0 0 0 0 0
Davis, cf
present time a membership of 60
4 0 0 1 0 0 elementary schools remaining at 30. at the college.
Mariaschin, ss
2.
Minimum
subsidy
per
teaching
girls.
4 1 1 1 0 1
Masterson, rf
proviso
that
no
unit
retained
with
a
4 0 2 6 1 0
Bottigor, c
B » Club Has Annual
0 0 0 0 2 0 district get less than at present.
Strong, p
"Newspapers in the
on mandated
The
new
lino
up
.0 0 0 0 0 0
Wanich , p
Making
Zagoudis, p
. . 3 0 0 0 4 0 teacher salaries: district - elementary Eaglesmere Trip
Totals
34 2 .5 24 15 2 First class
teachers to start at 51,400 with 13 The annual B-Club trip to Eagles- The main feature of the recent BusPenn State '
increments of $100 Instead of 10 at mere, the main event on the girls iness Ed . Club meeting was an inab r h o a o $120; ju nior high , $1,800 minimum athletic program this month , was teresting and enlightening discussion
of newspaper work presented by JacDeLoronzo, 2b . . . . 3 3 2 5 0 2 with 10 increments of $120 as before; made May 12 and 13.
Stetler, If
3 2 2 0 0 0 senior high, $2,000 minimum and eight The girls loft Bloomsburg, Satur- queline Shaffer, co-editor of the Maday at 12:30 and returned Sunday roon and Gold,
Hopkins, ss . . . . . . . 5 2 2 2 1 1 increments of $175 as before,
She told of the various phases of
Tepaic, 3b . . . . . . . . 5 2 3 0 3 1 Second class districts-elementary, evening.
newspaper
make-up and explained
Leith, lb . . . . . . . . . 4 0 1 15 0 0 $1,400 minimum with nine increments
Although the lake was too rough
.. ; 2 0 0 0 0 0 of $100 instead of eight; high school , for boating and the weather too cold types of headlines, planning the
Smith , cf
Pips. rf .- .
1 2 0 1 0 0 $1,600 with nine increments of $100 for swimming, everyone enjoyed the length of articles , and the newspaper
Herb, o
3 1 ,0 4 0 0 instead of eight.
BIG softball game Saturday, and the dummy.
Hill , p
3 0 0 0 2 0 Third and fourth class districts-ele- hikes around the Laurel path , and Mtss Shaffer showed mats used to
Totals
29 12 10 17 16 4 mentary and high school, $1,400 mini- the Labyrinth Sunday, to say nothing produce cartoons and illustrations and
Bloomsburg ... i... 000 100 010— 2 mum with seven Increments of $100 of the FLUID DRIVE to and irom challc trays and tools used to make
Penn State
161 003 lOx—12 instead of six.
the destination.
(Continued on page 2)

Huskies Miseue
At Penn State

——¦¦

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jfflarooit anb #olb

PnbBshed at the Btoocnoburg State Teachers College

[LIFE WITH UNCLE
*¦-

\^U.vr

Plssocided Cblle6tate Press

ijfiBS jh

Editors
Athamantia Comuntzis, J acqueline Shalier
Editorial Board
lean Richard.
Sports feditor
John Zagoudis
Service Editor
Phyllis Schrader
Exchange Editor
Mary Schroeder
Business Manager
Helen M. Wright
Circulation Manager
Eileen Falvey
Reporters — Rosanna Broadt , Jean Dickinson, Barbara Greenly, John Hmelnicky,
%
Baron Pittinger, Marjorie Downing and Marjorie Stover.
Typists
Betty Fisher, Anna Pappas, Harriet Rhodes
Faculty Advisors
Miss Pearl Mason, Mr. Samuel L. Wilson

For the Nation Today!
For YOU Tomorrow !!

Buy Bigger EXTRA War Bonds
In "The Mighty Seventh"
±

Five Years Transition,
What of the Future?
by Harvey A. Andruss
An idea of the balance between
the Teacher Education development
and the War Programs can best be
depicted by placing them in parallel
columns, shown as follows :
PROGRAMS OF STUDY
Teacher Education Developments
Educational Clinic with Health ,
Psychological and Speech divisions
approved by the State Council of
Education .
Field of Speech Correction as a part
of the curriculum for the education
of teachers of Mentally Retarded
Children .
Field of Aeronautics as a part of
the curriculum for the education of
Secondary Teachers.
Field of Spanish as an elective for
Business Education students and later
as an elective field f or Secondary
Students.
Experimental Laboratory School in
Aviation , Summ er of 1944.
War Progress
Aviation Programs — over 1,000
persons given fligh t instruction.
Civil Pilot Training for 100 college
students.
High School, Teachers of Aeronaut i cs 100.
Naval Flight Instructors 250.
Army and Navy Aviation Cadet
Program 550.
Science Hall facilities provided for
2000 enrollecs in Engineering, Science
and Management War Training courses.
Bloomsburg Hospital School of
Nursing received Science instruction
for 35 students,
Navy V-12 Unit (Officer Candidates ) 500 Trainees .

Newspapers in the Making

( Continued from page 1)
original drawings from which mats
can be made. The members of the
club examined various copies of school
'
papers.

r

There are three important and
highly personal reasons why you will
want to buy bigger EXTRA War
Bonds during "The Mighty Seventh."
Each of them can be given in a single
word :
1. War
2. Inflation
3. Yourself
Re-arrange these reasons in any sequence you wish . It doesn't matter.
Your purchase of War Bonds for any
one of them simultaneously includes
the other two.
Buy because you know that the cost
of completing the j ob in Europe will
be tremendous, and because you realize that the fabulous distances in the
Pacific must be spanned by dollars
as well as by men, ships , pla n es, and
guns , and your purchase also helps
to jkccp prices down and rewards you
with the world's safest investment.
Buy because your personal post-war
plan calls for money that you can acquire only by saving, and your dollars
automatically help to wage the war ,
to allay the backwash of war, and to
defea t inflation.
No matter how you look at it , in
sho r t , your investments in "The
Mighty Seventh" help to safeguard
your own and your country's future.
So buy the bonds of "The Mighty
Seventh" and hang on to the bonds
you buy. Only by doing this can your
investment be profitable and patriotic .
Only by doing this can "The Mighty Seventh" hold its beachhead for
the nation today and for you tomorrow.

by "Phyzz" Schroder

Lt. H. E. Miller, U.S.M.C.R.
"Taxi" writes, "As you have probably heard and surmised, I am on
Okinawa. In fact I've been here'since
the beginning! This place is somewhat like Pennsylvania—rolling, hilly
country and a cool climate. It rains a
little bit more than it does in Pennsylv ania , but it is a pretty good substitution—the best I've seen so far!
The inhabitan ts of this island are a
mixture of Chinese, Japanese, and I
believe Korean . They are small of
stature—about five feet tall, but appear to be quite muscular . At least
they carry loads which make the
loads carried by Marines silly! The
women deftly balance h uge loads on
their heads—and their balance is perfect."
Conrad SUaeiTcr E.M. S/g
"We stopped off in Pearl Harbor,
T.H. and had a few liberties, etc., but
the best part of our stay there was
the sigh t-seeing trip around the island
of Oahu, sponsored by the Navy. The
sights and points of interest were
grand . I'm sure it would put a big
den t in a fellow's finances to take
that same trip in peace time. Also
we are allowed to say we crossed the
180 th meridian and are now one day
ahead of you folks back there . We
were taken into the "Sacred Order of
the Golden Dragon" and have written
proof of the same. As to my whereabouts now — well it's a military
secret for a lot of reasons. One consolation , it's a lot cooler where we
are now and its sure a relief to get
some cool breezes. It rains frequently and that helps matters. We have
been sleeping under a blanket every
night for the past week.

The Navy has officially declared it
to be summer—come snow, sleet, or
hail—i t's still summer because the
Navy has broken out in whites.
The firs t morning I saw them I
thought the Milkman's Union was
having a convention on our campus.
I heard one say he felt like he was
employed by the street cleaning department.
Mr . Englehart's crow are rushing
around with mop and pail cleaning
frantically, They mutter "We must
preserve the PURITY of the Navy" to
the tuno "WE'RE IN THE ARMY
NOW."

Dillon 's Flowers
Phone — 127!

PENNEY'S

T^^^W^BS^^BSSSSUBSS ^

15th A.A.F. in Italy — 1st Lt . Dru e
W. Folk, 204 E. 14th Street, Berwick,
Pa . squadron navigator in the 451st
Bombardment Group has recently
flown his 25th combat mission . The
announcement was made by Col. Leroy L. Stefonwicz, Wildrose, N . Dak.,
the Group Commander.
Since arriving overseas last September Folk has charted courses
against installations throughout six
European countries. He wears the
Air Medal with two bronze clusters
"for meritorious achievement—while
participating in sustained operational
activity against the enemy."
A graduate of B.S.T.C. Lt . Folk
was commissioned at Ellington Field,
Texas in May, 1944.
With a Twelfth A.A.F. B-25 Mitchell Bomb Group in the Mediterranean
Theater — Sgt . John Hubiak of Forest Ci t y, Penna.r recently arrived in
the Mediterranean "theater and has
been assigned as an engineer gunner
in a 12 Air Force B-25 Mitchell bomb
group.
The Forest City gunner is taking
his place in a Mitchell uni t now engaged in aiding the American Fif th
and British Eighth Armies batter the
last Nazi strongholds in Northern
Italy. This bomb group has a two
year combat history of close support
operations for three maj or Allied
armies in the Mediterranean theater.
T/5 George E. Home
Has arrived safely in Germany according to the word recently received
by his wife. He received his basic
training at Camp Haan , California in
an anti-aircraft division . In May 1944,
he was transferred to the infantry
and took additional training at Camp
Carson, Colorado and Fort Meade,
Maryland.

It's Summer!!! - - So Help Me!!

WHERE
COLUMBIA COUNTY
SHOPS and
SAVES

I. L. DILLON

¦

Bloomsburg, Pa
¦»

There will be a rush for Don Juan
lipstick in the stores down town—It's
the only safe kind unless you want to
spend your odd moments bending over
a washtub errailicating those cupidbow design s from Navy Whites.
The canteen is going to do its part
and stock Clorox and Fels Naptha.
White birch should sell well now—
doesn't spot as much !
Girls, drag out your last year's
cottons. Wo can't let the Navy show
us up, If half of B.S.T.C, is going to
catch pneumonia, we might as well
make it an epidemic .
What hnpponed to the rugged little
crew who still are wearing their
itchies ? Someone should dunk them
in some white wash or else take them
aside and toll thorn what store Is
selling Whites.
The Instructors of Navy men have
boon told to dust the class-room seats
ju st before class. After nil they have
to earn their money some way 1 !
Thus the now Navy motto — KEEP
IT CLEAN ! ! !
BUY EXTRA BONDS