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STUDENT
HANDBOOK
of
State Teachers College
.
Edinboro, Pa.
.1950-51':!~.
~
~
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'-
Property of
.I....,',.
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.
-FOREWORD
..111___'
dent
at. is
Edinboro
to toserve
a
Thisenrolled
handbook
distributed
eachasstureliable source o( information about the
rules and regulations of the College. We
sincerely hope that it may continue to serve
as a guide to the freshmen and as a convenience to the (acuIty and upperclassmen.
PRESIDENT'S
.
:
Acknowledgment is made to Dr. Van.
Houten, our President, and to Miss Ruth
Morton, our Dean of Women, who have
helped guide us in the. preparation of the .
material
for
,'"
this Dooklet~
The beginning of another college year is
(or a!l of us, students and faculty alike, the
...occasIon
of new opportunities and fresh outlooks. For most freshmen this September 11
means a break in the pattern of living which
is .probably the most momentous change they
will encounter.
For upper cJ.assmen, it is
the return to familiar scenes, but with new
hopes
May
academic
this
be
a
year
achievement
F
or
t
of
pleasant
and
.
for you.
h
e
S d
tu
ent
C
ouncl
.
1
GREETING
and
resolves.
This
handbook
is
assembly of most useful information.
its
happy
use
contribute
to
a
meaningful
Co
.
1
unCI
Olli
L..
cers:
Frank Pinto, President
Dorothy Tucker, Secretary
2
3
H.
Van
May
and
year.
Wm. R. Leech
.
one
~eans of assistance in adjustment.
It is not
Intended as a book of rules, but as a brief
Houten
,.
".,
HISTORY
--tio~
school, power plant, and spacious audi-
,
Eighty-seven
years
have
tonum. For these and the ol,cter buildings,
gone
by
.the
since
campus
Edinboro was first chartereq as a State Nor'
mal Schooleighty,seven years of growth
and service to the Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania, The beginnings
of the college w~re .
.
chartered
by
the
State
as ~ennsylvama
acres makes
an ap'
named in honor of one of the early donors
of the school. Academy Hall, known recently
as Music Hall, is the oldest building on the
campus, having been, built about 1857. Nor'
laid in 18~7 when a band of Scotch'Ins~
farmers grouped together and founded a pnvate academy at Edinboro b,y popular su~'
scriptiqn, but it W;iS not until 1861: tha~ ~t.
was
of thirty-eight
propriate setting.
Haven Hall, the women's
dormitory,
was built during the administration of -John F. Bigler,
Reeder Hall, the
men's dormitory,
was built in 1907 and
mal
was
s
Hall
was
cons~d~rablr
built
in
enlarged.
1875
and
Todaro'it
in
1891.
contains
second Normal School.
A gte'at forward stride was taken in 19~4,
the administration offices, the ll/brary, several. cl~ssrooms,'a~d the ,old j~u~itorium.
when the Commonwealth
purchased
Edln'
boro Normal School and made it the prop' .
erty of the State. Twelve years later, rea1i~ing the:neec! of t~e schqols of P~Qnsylvama
for better'educated
teachers, the Commonwealth 'made Edinboro
a Te~chers COII~ge .
Recitation Hall, built early
the school, provides class
Ne~ ,Gymnasi~m, with its
f~cllltles, .no~ overshadows
Slum, which IS outmoded.
named for the, lat~ Mr. FraQk Loveland Qf
Corry, who for many years w~s a trustee of
the College; this building was ,b,uilt in 1930
and houses the Art and Science departments. A temporary science building was
erected by the Federal Works A&ency In
1947...
We are rIghtly proud of our campus because of its attractiveness" its accommoda'
ti?ns and. its traditions. We hope t~is pride
will continue to be shared by all Incoming
students.
by organizing a four-year currIculum, leadl~g
,to' the degre~ of B~chelor of Science In
Education.
Although designed primarily to serve t~e
counties of Erie, Crawford, Mercer, Venango, and Warren, ~dinboro receiv.esand we~'
comes students from every section of this
state and from other states.
As a result of the building program concluded in 1940 there are four new build,
ings, -gymnasium,
training and demonstra'
4
.
IIi the history of
room space. The
excellent athletic
,the old gymna',
Loveland Hall IS
:
I
5
r
.L.a
CONTROL
OF THE
COLLEGE
-lege
..
The
~ontrol
of
the
College
.
IS
vested,
will
the Board of Trustees, composed of. rune
members' with John K. E,arp, as, PresIdent,
and Will P. Rose as VIce-PresIdent. The
?tate Superi~tendent ~f Public Instruction
IS an ex-officIo member.
."
h
t
h
I
e.
fi
n
fI
h
rmary
f
w
'
h
I' S
located
on
For
H
II
Dr
Ha
asked
to
respect
the
following
office
ILLNESS
The. illness
of
unc
student
7,00
."
,
"
DINING
.
'
hours.
necessary.
A.M.
11 '
5' 30 P,.M
AM
...
ROOM
the
College
Hall.
d,in,ing
The
room
dining
loca~ed
room,
in
whIch
Haven
seats
400
p~ople, accommodates all ,the boardi~g students because the self-servIce method IS used
in serving meals. Meal hours are:
b
2174
Breakfast
L
Weekdays
,." ",... 7:00 to 7:30
h
unc
11
in his
"'
"'..".,
' 30
.0
t12
'
5:30 to 6:15
.
15
Sunday
room
must be reported immediately to the Col6
,
30
eon
IN ROOM
any
student
if
Meals are served to boqrding students.-in
dd
e~ts
IN CASE OF EMhE~GENChY' Cthl ~ .stuE
may call Doctor Gering at t e lruc,
Inboro 2181 or at hIs ome,
In oro
.Dinner
Ed'
I
or
7:45 A.M. to 9:00 A,M.
11:00 A.M. to 12:00 Noon
4:00 P,M.. to 5:00 P.M.
'h
The
Infirmary
,
h
d'
or Inner
rold
While the Nurse can be found at the Infirmary at practically any ti~e, students ar~
the
breakfast
F
F
IC
H
treatment,
to
.Requests
for trays for' student~ ill in their
rooms must be made to the nurse before
the following hours:
,
.
d
prescribe
moved
REQUESTS FOR TRAYS
t e t Ir
oor 0
aven a.
.
Ghering, the College Physician, is at the
infirmary between 11:00 A. M. and 12:00
Noon.
h
and
be
Off-Campus and day students also have
the services of the physician and nurse.
INFIRMARY
The College Nurse lives in a room adJolrung
Nurse.' She or the physician will visit
him
In
Breakfast ,
Dinner ,
7:45 to 8:15
,..".."..,... 12: 30 to 1 :00
Supper .~.,::"
,
7
5:30 to 6:00
r-
Admittance to. .the' dining room is by
meal ticket only. 'These tickets are issued to
all boarding students and are non-transfer,
a e.
vised and consequently certain rules must
be qbserved.
! All b k
h.
bl
,."
A limited' nuillbet of guests may bt ac'
commodated in the diniI!g room, providing
individual- meal tickets are purchased in ad,
vanc~ in the office of the Director of Food
Service.
.:
..,
Transien~ meal r~tes are:
.'
"
!}reakfast
$ .45
.I;.1:II]ch ,
,
.55
Dinner
75
,THE LIBRARY
. b oro State
. ~tud ent at EdIn
The entering
Teachers COllege soon. discovers the educa'
tional and recreational. facilities available in
our College.Library. Approximately twenty'
six thousand volumes offer a wide range for
refer~nce and study. A generous fiction sec"
tion and 193 magazines and periodicals give
the studen~, an opportunity to ,fill l.~isure
hours with enjoyable reading.
Our library has the distinction of being
one of the few in the state which employs
open 'shelves for all books, thus allowing all
students easy aC:cessto the volumes. Of
course, this system must be carefu~y super'
8
.
h
.00
s
W
IC
h
b
ave
d
een
fi
e
.
nlte
I
y
~s~lgned to cIa~ses are p I aced on shelves
directly behind the desk and. are knoWrl as
the Reserve Books. Such books may be
withdrawn at 5:00 P.M., and returned at
.7:00
P.M., or taken at 8:~O P.M. and
returned before 9:00 A.M. the following
mornin.g. Failur~ to observe these rules will
result In a fine ,of ten cents per hour.
2. Books not on reserve but in demand
are te~med "overnight books" and may leave
t~e Library at any time of the day or over'
night and .must be returned before 9:00
A.M. the following day. Penalty for late
return is' ten. cents a day."
3. .All books except those on reserve m~y
b,e withdrawn for two weeks; a fine of two
cents. a day will be ~1:Iargedfor books kept
ov.ertlme. Encylopaedla volumes and diction'
anes may not be withdrawn.
.
4. Magazines may be withdrawn from the
~ibrary subject to the same rules as Reserve
Books.
,
5.. No st.udent' will be issued grades or
.credits until 3:11 library obligation~ have
been se.ttled.
,
: 6, No books may."be removed froni the
Library except by proper .charging at the
.,"9;
~,
desk by the Librarian in charge. Anyone
taking
books
not
properly
charged
from
Library will be subject to a fine of $5;00 for
each
book
and
suspension
fr?m,
all
~
The
,
LIbrary
.
~oll~ge
.d located on the secoh
IS
f1oor
t e year.
ACADEMIC
-Noon
-4:00
been
fail~r~;
whIch
Any
an
earned
F
must
grade:
be
re'
peated.
X
,
In
-not,
a grade, but a mark indi'
catlng that the student, for
been
some able
justifiable
to complete
cause, has
the not
re'
quired
limit.
work
within
the
time
The Dean's List
.
T";lce .a ,rear ~here is published, "The
Dean s LIst, ,~!~st of stud~nts who have
make a g~ade B or ~etter In every course,
taken during the prevIous semester.
P.M.
Oasses
The following number of credits are ne£'
STANDARDS
Grading System
. the quaI Ity
.f 0
Standards indicating
i~dica~ng
has
""
Monday through Friday
8:00 A.M. -5:30
P.M.
7:00 P.M. -9:00
P.M.
Saturday
8:00 A.M.
1:00 P.M.
-grade
course
activities until such fines are paId.. <:;hpplng
and marking \.fooks is always prohIbIted.
of Normal
Hall and ~hroughout
will observe the following
hours:
"F"
the
work
are:
essary to become a member of each class:
Sophomore
Junior
-64 -32
Senior -96
..A"
-grade
given to students whose
work is clearly of an excep'
tional nature.
:
"B" -grade
given to s.tudents who do
distinctly superl~r work.
"0" -"'- grade representing work of
good quality.
"D~" ~ grade indicating unsatisfactory
.work..
10
Graduate -128
or degree
REGISTRATION
Students are reminded to register and pay
fees on the assigned dates. All fees must be
paid in advance. Permission must be ob,
tained from the. President of the College in ,
advance to avoId penalty for ..late payment.
1'1
~
Dates of registration and payment
may be found in the Calendar.
A BSENCE
AND
of fees
quested by the faculty sponsor and
approved by the Dean of Instruction.
TARDINESS
2.
Students, should
be familiar
with
the
method
of secu(ing
excuses for absences
from class, The burden of responsibility
for
absence
h ' d ' and
' tardiness rests at all times upon
Women and present it to the instructor
within seven days after the absence, the
absence shall be considered unexcused.
,
Ed b
S
.
d I '
I
' g formakl ' ng U p work
' ".
.
initiative In p anrnn
after an absence. Please note that no un'
excused absence is without penalty. ,
The following regulations governing ex'
cused and un~xcused absences for a)1 stu'
dents have been approved by the faculty.
I
t
e
In
IVI
ua
InVO
d
ve.
H
ust
e
take
th
e
3.
m
omen
f or
one
0 f the
following
reasons:
,
6.
a. Personal illness or emergency medical
or dental appointments.
(1) A written statement from the
colle:ge nurse, the college phy'
sician, or the family doctor or
dentist.
b .~nous
S.
"11
I ,ness
or d ea th
in
the
tlclpatlon
In
other
college
athl,et.1~
activities)
12
contests
when,
(or
re'
There.
IS
no
cut
system
at
In
oro
tat~
equal to one unexcused absence.
h
d '
.b.
It IS his
t, e Instructors
~tu ents
tact
~SpOnsl
~oq'
to makeI li ty up~o work
missed because Qf an excuseq absence. If
he 'does not make up this work;' he will
be penali~ed in his grade.
7., The student may not make up' work
because of an unexcused absence. He
inlme'
dlate family.,
c. Marriage in the immediate family.
d. ~~sence fr?m the ~ampus for par'
T each ers C 0II ege.
4. Unexcused absences are regarded as
prima facie evidence of neglect and indifference on the part of the student and
are so considered in assigning grades.
5. Three tardinesses shall be considered as
1. Excused absence forms may be secured
from the Dean of Men or the Dean of.
.W
If the the
student
not secure
excuse
from
Dean does
of Men
or the hisDean
of
will be penali~edin
excused
absentes.
I
-.one
!'
R
'
.'1'3
his grade
for
For:
example,
allin un-a
three'credit courS'e three unexcused ab,
sences will result in .lowering' the grade
lett~r; four u?excused abs~nces ~ill
~~sult
, failure:
In
expulsion
from
""
class
with
r-1
ASSEMBLY
,
Each Wednesday Il:lorning the entire student
body
meets
in
the
auditorium
for
,CQuncil
qePt
body
.
semesters.
a
be
period of worship and entertainment. The
programs are varied and consist of lectures
by prominent thinkers, musical recitals, plays,
skits, movies, and important announcements.
A committee of students meets with the
faculty sponsors to plan the programs.
."
Every
student
at
Edln~oTo!S
.The
r~qulred
members
are
and faculty
Membership
considered
a
elected
by
and serve
in
very
high
this
name
Student-Faculty
of
group
stutwo
should
honor.
CONSTITUllON
.Revised
1948
ARTICLE I
N
ante
to
the
for
'
this
organi~atiQn
shall
Co-operative
Government
be
the
of
attepd. ~n assembly s,eatlng list will be prepared wIth seats assIgned and attendance
will be checked. The list of absentees will
be fil,ed in th~ office of the Dean of Instructlon. Each unexcused absence automat-
the Edinboro State Teachers College.
ically lowers by one point the total 'accumulation of quality points which the student
has tamed toward graduation.
While
,appreciating
deeply the provinc,e
and.fun~tlons
of the Trustees, College Presl'
dept, Dean oj ..Instruction,
the Dean of
STUDENT
ARTICLE II
Pu
se
rpo
Women; Bursa:r and other officials and facuclycommiltees
a~d me~bers, organi~ed
chiefly for administering the business and instruction of the college, We, the students,
the faculty, and the President ~f; the C~l,
lege, feel that there still remains unoccupied
a large promising field for co-operative ser:vice, Accordingly, we do hereby declare that
the purpose of the Co-operative Government
is to take over increasingly the responsibility
for organi~ing and directing purely student
affairs" t,O co:operate with the proper: college
authoritIes In matters of student welfare,
GOVERNMENT
Student Council
The Student-Faculty Council considers and
enacts much legislation in connection with
campus problems. Probably its most important fuction is the budgeting of the Student-Activity Fund, The Council meets regularly and is always ready to listen to and
,discuss any new proposal for college progress. Council meetings are open to al1Y of
the student body who wish to attend.
14
.15
~
and to seek constantly to make the college
a better agency for developing effective citi~ens and teachers.
AR TICLE V
Membership, Election, Officers
of the Council
Section 1. The Student Faculty -Council
shall be composed of seventeen members,
eight of whom -four
men and four women
-shall
be students elected by the severa.!
classes, a repre~entative from the Reeder
Hall Council, a representative: from the
Haven Hall CAJuncil,a rep~esentative of off-
ARTICLE !II
Membership
The membership of this Co-operative Government shall consist of all students, all
faculty members, and the President of the
Coll~ge.
ARTICLE IV
..campus
men, a representative
General Orgamzatlon
Section 1. The functions of this Co-operative Government shall be distributed as follows:""
(a) legis)ative functions in relation to all
student and student-faculty agencies now existing and to be organi~ed are vested ina
Council, and (b) executive functions, including the veto of any measure passed by
the Council, are ve~ted in the Preeide1)t 0.£
the Colleg~.
..ginning
Section 2. 'the existing stud~~t .-faculty
agencies and studept organi2;ations with faculty sponsors ~re to continue in thei. present f!:lr~ andt~ func~ion as at p.esen.t.u~til
such time as they may. be m~dified either
by vote of the Go~l\cil and approved by the
College Pre~ident or by direction of the
College Presldept.
16
of off-campus
women, a chairman, elected by popular vot~,
a faculty member elected by the faculty, a
faculty member appointed by the President,
the Dean of Men and the Dean of Women.
Section 2. Methods of election:'
To be eligible for election to the Council
students should be outstanding in character
and ability and have a college r~cord of better than a "C" average.
Each class shall elect annually, a~ the beof the first semester, a woman, and,
at the beginning of the second seltlester, a
man, the men and women each to serve for
two semesters...During the first quarter of
the first semester the freshmen class shall
also elect annually a man to represent it for
one semester.
The following method shall be. used to
elect class representatives:
.17
The president of. each class shall appoint
a nominating committee of three which shall
submit at a Ineeting of the class at least two
nominations for each membership oil the
Council. These names shall be posted on the
o/licial bunetin board of the college for one
wt:ek prior to the election. which must be
completed, for the first semester election. b}'
October 1 for the upper three classes and
by the end of the first quarter for freshmen,
and for the second ~emester election, ,by .February 15. From thiS group of nominations.
with or without additional nominations that
may be made f,rom the floor, the. class shall
elect ~y ballot Its two representatives on the
Council,
Other groups shall elect their representatives by popular vote prior to October 1.
The chairman shall be elected in the following manner: As soon as possible after
the opening of the second semester. the
president of the junior class shall appoint
a nominating committee of three, who shall
nominate at least two persons from the
junior class as candidates for the o/lice of
Chairman of the Council. In addition, any
junior may be eligible for this o/lice if a
petition signed by twenty-five students, requesting that his name be placed on the
ballot. be presented to the secretary of the
Council at least fo~ty-eight hours bef.ore the
election, ~ames of all candidates shall be
posted on the o/licial bulletin board at least
twenty-four hours before the election. The
election shall take place at an assembly not
later than February 1S. at which time each"
candidate will speak about his aims or plans
regarding the Studt:nt-Faculty Co-operative
Government. Following the speeches. the
students shall elect the Chairman of the
Council by ballot.
Section 3. Any student vacancy on the
Council shall be filled for the balance of his
term at a special election conducted in the
same manner as herein prescribed for the
regular election or appointment. Nothing' in
this Constitution shall prevent the election
of .any student doing stude,nt teaching in
Ene" or s~all prevent any student from succeedlng himself or herself.
.~ecti?n 4. The ot~er o/li~ers of the Couw
cil. w\1lch shall be vlce-chal~man and a secr~tary. sha~ be chosen annually br the ~ouw
cll from Its stude~t members Immediately
after the new president has taken o/lice.
ARTICLE VI
..
Duties of the Council
Section 1. To initiate. organi~e. and direct.
in co-operation with the faculty. a social program for the entire student body.
Section 2. To integrate, improve. and su-
18
19
r
pervise the organization and activi.tles of all
students and studenwaculty agencies.
Section 3. To act upon submitted reque5-ts
for the organization of any new student or
studenwaculty agency.
Section 4. To provide, as needed, cooperative standing committees such as the
following: House Committee, Publicity Committee, Athletic Committee, etc. These committees may co-operate with purely faculty
committees for the same- purpos~. Thtse
standing committees should have at least five
members (student and faculty) and should be
app.ointed by the Chairman of the Council
from the student and faculty bodies with the
approval of the Council.
Section S. To co-operate with the College
President, the Trustees, or some properly
delegated a\lthority in the assessment, collection, and control of any Student Activity
Fee or othel; fees, or dues that the students,
upon the recommendation of the Council,
may agree by majority vote to assessor pay
to provide for activities, agencies and wel-.
fare .not' adequately ~\lpported by the State;
provided that the said fees or dues are approved by the President of the College ~nd
Board of Trustees, or other controlling
agency.
Section 6. To hold regular meetings once
each month, in addition to special meeting5
20
as. ~~eded when constructIve suggestions or
Criticisms from students of faculty members
shall be investigated and acted upon.
Section 7. To recommend to the faculty
or the President of the College penalties
for specific disciplinary cases which are not
sufficiently serious to warrant possible expulsion or other severe punishment.
Section 8. To provide for at least one
general study assembly each semester for
the purpose of interpreting the work of the
Council and for transacting any business of
general interest to the Student Body brought
b~fore it by the Council, the College President, or a representative of the students or
the facQlty. At such assembly meetings the
Chairman, or, in his absence,the vice-chairman, of the Counci~ shall preside; the s~cretary of the Council shall record the mlnutes.
ARTICLE VII
Powers of the President of the College
Be~ause of the n3Jtureof the office of the
Pre-'ident of the College and his responsibilities to the Board of Trustees the State
Super\ntendent of Public Instr~ctiQn, the
Statt Council of Education.. and the Governor, the President is an ex-officio member
of all co~mittees and to him is reserved the
duty and right of final approval of all acts,
.21
I
,...
I
rules and regulations that may be devised.
or offered.
ARTICLE VIII
Finances
Section: 1. In order to <;o-ordinate and
control the funds of the several studenwaculty activities and organizations either now
existing or that may be created, all funds
belonging to or collected by the several organizatjons, shall, when requested by the
Council, be deposited in and disbursed
through a General Control Fund of which
the President of the College and the Bursar
or other faculty member or members may
be custodians.
S~ction 2. The Bursar or any delegated
shall be published or posted at the beginning
of each college year.
Section 4. To prepare and submit to the
Faculty, the President, and any other interested persons by May 1, a tentative budget
for the succeeding school year of the disbursement of Student Activity Funds; and
to prepare and subm~t to students, faculty,
the President, and other interested persons
by October 1, a final budget for the disbursement of Student Activity Funds. This
duty is to be performed by a committee,
known as the Budget Committee, to consist
of at least three students and two faculty
members appointed by the Chairman of the
Student. Council.
member of the faculty of t~e Co!lege, may,
upon request of the Council subject to the
approval of the President of the College,
keep individual and separate accounts of the
several funds and credits of each organization included within the General Control
Fund as provided for in Article VIII, Section 1. DiSbursements shall be made upon
duly authorized requisitions of each organization.
Section 3. There shall be an annual audit
of the General Control Fund made by an
auditing committee of three, one representing the student body, one the faculty, and
one the President of the College. This audit
ARTICLE IX
..
Ratification and Amendments
Section 1. This Constitution shall go into
effect as. soon, as ratified by the approval of
the President of the College and by a twothirds vote of the fac~lty and student body
present when such vote is taken.
Section 2. This Constitution may b e
amended or revised by a majority vote of
the entire student body and the faculty, provided that said amendment or revision first
be subm!tted in writing to the Council and
the President of the College, approved by
them, and then posted for two weeks.
22
.23
I
,..
REGULATIONS
FOR WOMEN
Section One -Women's
Hours
..B.
1. Regular PermISSIons:
portionately with the hours of wotk
reported as unsa,usfactory.
The
DeanofofallWomen:s
Office
a record
permissions
for keeps
each
A. Regular hours shall be observed by
women students according to the fol.
lowing schedule. Not only must women
students b~ in the dormitory or ot~~~
~tudent r~sldence after these h.ours,
In the pnvate part ~f the resldenc~.
Monday
through
Freshmen
Sophomores
.Juniors
,-"c :
person. Women will be notified individ.
ually when their permissions have all
been taken.
C. Permissions for absences from resi.
dences are granted as follows:
During the day:
Fnday -,
,
.-'
c
1
8:00
8.30
P.M.
P.M.
9:00 P.M.
Ed' b
s:~d~~~~
'.d
may
visit
approved
db'
wlomen s dresl encesd anh
~~~~~d:Y.="Aii..;~~.~:;;...~t;d:~~~ 1~.:~O
o'clock.
Sunday -All
women students 10:00
o'clock.
Regulations concerning special late
permission will be given students
by the Dean of Women.
..short
II. General ProVISIOns:
huslness
fc:;e:ndnsho~s :~ethe l~c~lCthe:~:~:
2. For the night.
A student is required to secure the
written permission of her parents
and of the Dean of Women.
3. Out of town.
Before leaving, except in case of
hikes,of aher
student
permission
parentsmust
and secure
of the
A. Whenever a woman student's name
appears o~ the Dean of Instruction '5
list of students doing unsatisfactory
w~rk, i. e., work below standard, her
perJ!1i-ssfons are to be curtailed
withdrawn
by the Dean of Women
I
.All
Dean of Women; except when go.
ing to her home over the week.
end when a general permission is
granted.
or
in
4. On the campus, bu~ from one's own
room.
an amount at least to correspond pro;
A
24
student
may spend
25
.
Saturday
f'
Cnights
own,
in
a
providing
r~ntlon,
In
'
room
she
other
registers
wrItIng
' ,
Wit' h
t
than
her
her
in-
h e D ean
Violations
It '
0f
SU
.
Women.
Section
I
M
S
.en
A.
tu
d
1m not
me
'
esl
'd
ences:
,
who
m~y
nine
nine
day,
Wednesday,
ment,s
tertaln
ments
the
Thursday
on
returning
from
social
out-of-toV:Jn
escorts
In
their
returning
may
Fri-
Saturday;
only
of
Tuesand
Sunday,
with,
theIr
parlor
Monday,
on
parlor
students
women
and
women
enga.ge-
escorts
enthe
musIC~ay room
residence.
from
entertain
Women
social
such
.
.
there
.
until
M
C
,
D.
their
permission
'
en
are
not
permltte
Haven
Hall
between
an d t h e 1unc h h our.
Men
conduct
"'
accepted
and
women
themselves
ends.
d
guests
in
must
accordance
26,
standards
of
good
always
I
taste.
,
up
for
Officers
-:-
Secretary
S?clal
I~g
late
h
wore-
White
Ha:;elwood
-Emilie
Atwater
Carol
Sundean
-Nancy
-.
Four
are
Shay
Locking
locked
of
at
ten
Women
perm.issions
will
whIch
their
Doors
o'clock
Five
Stud
~
..'
be
admitted
admission
(3)
I
P arents
,.
en.."
h
oin
'
P
an
weekends
27
d b oatlng'
havat
has
..
ermlSSlons
permIssIons
,ome
mmg
ca noemg'
by
students
,
(1
as
of
also
Markham
Shirley
watchman.
Section
Women
IS
P ro
students
bl ems.
those
Evelyn
Captain
n
d
f or
It.,
are:
Chairman-
doors
night
acts
execution
ofstuden
woment
A(ln
~
Tre~urer
~he
the
by
Vice-President'=:'-
Sectio
Council
Council
.
for
semester
Cou,ncil
All,
re-
Hall.
PresIdent
FIre
House
d escn b e d ;
IS
'Council
made
one
'
will
standards
House
body
(2 » S
gw ' mg
with
,
Hall
h ereln '
aven
' The
grante
In
hour
for
H
In
time
.'
to
remain
breakfast
the
.
'I
h
PrIvIleges.
Hall
ons
AdvIsory
C ouncl
e
f su~
-avenH
Haven
g ulati
'
re
d
Sl
0
OSS 0
ree
administrative
elected
'
engage-
guests
e
an
'""
,'eh
late
lOIter
1yo- fl In
with
in
on
o'clock
o'clock
students
are
stay
o'clock
eleven
ten
the
.
d
0 clock.
After
day;
t
'
.
students
resi~en~s
or
R
s
meals.
until
--B.
h The
'
omen
ences
must
d
Men
.,
-Guests
w
In
students
, S resl '
lowing
1,
Two
'
ents
Men
wo~en
Th
S e ct Ion
f
1
In
for' .
the
been
P
( 4) skating
.I~IIIII
~
Section Six
(S) riding in automobiles
(6) visiting away from home or college
depend upon the action of the Dean of
Women as determined by individual requests
from parents. Forms will be sent to parents
for recording their requests.
D
't
M .
ormlory
alntenance Problems
1. Rooms
Assignment to rooms is made by the Dean
of Women or her agent. Keys are procured
from the Office of the Bursar. Rooms must
be kept clean ~nd ready for inspection at
all times. Tacks, scotch tape or nails in
~lIs are not permitted. The electric wiring
18not the type for heating appliances; therefore, electric irons and hot plates are not
permitted.
Damage to furnishings or walls will result
in a fine being charged against the offender.
The minimum charge will be one dollar to
be paid to the College Bursar.
'
Because of the dacnger of accidents, permissions of parents must be granted before
students may ride in automobiles. During
the day all students may ride within the
borough limits if their parents' permission
is in the Dean's office, but after 6:00 P.M.
students must have the additio~al perm~ss~on
of the Dean of Women. SpecIal permIssIon
from the Dean of Women must be obtained
for all trips outside the borough of Edinboro.
.
Women students are not permitted to
leave for home after an evening college function of any kind, except by special written
permission from her parents, which must
be in the Dean of Women's office two days
before the event.
2 S k
.mo
Ing
Fire regulations and the protection of life
and property require that 9tudents do not
smoke in their rooms or elsewhere in the
c<:>l!egebuildings except where special proVISIons are made by the College. .
3. Telephone
Permissions to m~intain automobiles in
Edinboro must be filed on blanks provided
for that purpose by t\le Dean of Women.
No women un~er twenty-one years of age
w:1I be permitted to maintain automobiles in
Edinboro.
~l~ resi~ents of Haven Hall must become
familIar wIth th.e. campus telephone system
andvbe ready, willing and able to. answer the
Ha en Hall desk phone at all tImes.
4. Absence from campus
Before leaving the campus fo
28
.29
.,
,.
.of more than one hour,
and after
a student
is required
to register
destin~tion,
the
and
notebook
desk,
expected
provided
and
upon
time
at
5:30 P.M.,.
her name,
of
the
returning,
return
in
Haven
the
It
T
.
time
of
10:30
Saturday,
urday;
midnight
Pianos
must
hours.
except
vided
heard
may
the
.they
outside
from
P.M.
not
Radios
during
that
are
11:00
are
the
8:00
to
to
9:00
be
played
7:00
A.M.
be played
night
quiet
tuned
P.M.
Callers
and
at
the
at any
hours,
so they
be
11 :00
of the
Guests
of
30
Women's
Office.
.
.
hall
and
.(d)
tlons,
the
as
On
such
other
must
hostess.
register
in
a
not
the
overnight
masculine.
gues.ts
be enterta~ned
In
unless
does
college
(c) The
P.M.
daily
by
special
woman
apply
per-
student
to
the
first
year.
is closed to guests at
11:00 P.M.
Saturday.
evenings
lectures,
of
all
games,
college
movies,
10:00
funcetc.,
which
last beyond
the hours
listed
in A,
all students
must
report
in not later
than
one hour after the close of the function.
7.
A
.
This
,the
the
Charge
for
per person.
ac~ompany
room.
of
guests
with
must
lobby,
they
her
day
time
pro-
cannot
.dormltory
mission
to
room.
Dean
th.e
.
guests
Gue8t
Book.
is fifty
cents
~ill
follow
hostess,
and
acquainting
rests
(b) Fathers
and
wome~
students
of
these
(a) {juests
for overnight
or for the dining
room
should
be introduced
upon
arrival
to
the
I?ean
of W ~men.
Stude?ts
may
have
o,:,ernlght
guests In the dormltor~
Saturday
nIghts
only.
Arrangements
for .lInen
must
be made
before
the
guest arnves.
Every
guest must be registered
with
the Dean
of
Women.
Registration
forms
are to be obtained
.
Sunday.
during
Typewriters
may not be used after
P.M.
excepting
by special permission
Dormitory
Council.
6.
Sat-
official
lodging
guests
their
for
regulations
Overnight
to
A.M.
responsib!lity
these
her
quiet hours
are desirable
and arHouse
action.
Night
quiet hours,
P.M.;
the
with
;
Evening
ranged
by
is understood
that
regulations
governing
th.at
Hall
return.
5. Quiet
except
the
Sewing
sewing
Room
room
is located
on
second
/loor
in
Haven
Hall.
Permission
to
use
this
room
will be granted,
upon
request,
by the
Haven
Hall
House
Council.
Each student
is
responsible
for leaving
the room
and equipment in good condition.
.
~. The
Recreation
Room
This
room,
located
in
31
the
basement
of
.
",
Haven Hall, is ; project of the College Stu-
B. Fire Drill Procedure:
I
dent Council.
..hen
9. OtI.Camp~ .Regulations
..1.
All students living outsIde the dormlt.ones
must have
the 'approval
of the
PresIdent
unless
such students
are living
in their
own
homes..
.'
The
. ences
Housing
the
resl
w ICh CommIttee
h ave b eenhas
0fIia
cla.y.
. list
11 of
d eslg..
d
h.
~ated. as Approved H?uses. Permlssl°!1 to
live
rn
granted,
these
homes
however:
As
IS
in
not
the
.plication blanks are received, approved, and
filed by the Housing Committee.
Women students living in Edinboro in
homes other than their own are expected to
follow, in general, the rules applying to
residents
ordinarily
d bon hcampus. Permission
' d
'
.1
grante
y t e women s ormltory councl s
may be granted by the house mother.
~.
.drIlls
10.
~Ire~egulatlons
A: FIre. SIgnals:
II.
mu5t be. tak.e~ t~ see that. eve~yone fOllOWS
o~ders Imphc~tly. The obJect IS to g.et .all
gIrls .out ~f the. hall safely. Speed IS 1mp.eratlve-.cSuence IS necessary.
32
Wh
serve
.
.
.
held at least
a month.
All FIre
girlsdrIlls
mustareparticipate,
andonce
greatest
care
fire alarm rings:
Close the windows.
2. Turn on the li hts
3. Put on ash~~s~
1
gh'eavy coat.
4.
5. Have a towel in one hand.
6. tlStand
outside
closed
doorto ofstart.
1 captain
gives
signal
room un-
automatIcally
case: of any
other off-campus arrangement, indivi4ual
arrangements are only temporary until the ap-
W
I
I
-33
...
eili crptaln.
gIves sIgnal
e ollowlng
rules:
1. Walk down
the nearest
to
start,
ob-
corridor
on own side to
fire escape or exit (as
ord~red by fire captain).
2. Re~ldents of each floor will wait until
Thl.dents of floor aboye have vacated.
IS prevents congestion on the stair-
way.
.
III .neous.
Miscella
1 .
.FI~e escap.esare to be used only for fire
or In case of actual fire.
2. No
clothing
must b~ put
other
than
on or taken
3. If
leaving
night
notify
the for
floorthecaptain.'
that
from
specified
room.
students m us't
4. The fire chief or Dean of Women will
sound the alarm for fire drills. In case
of real fire, the person nearest the alarm
box should give the signal.
r"'
REGULA nONS ,FOR THE USE OF THE
WOMEN'S DAY STUDENTS' ROOMS
All women who are not living in the
dormitory may study or relax in the Day
Student Rooms, loca~ed in the basement
at the end of Normal Hall, whenever tne.y
do not have a cla.ssduring the day. This
room is open dally from 7:30 A.M. to
6:00 P.M. and Saturdays from 7:30 A.M.
to 12:00 noon.
The parlors of Haven Hall. are open to
all wome~ students: Also available for use
is the SocIal Room In the basement of Haven
Hall, which
dormitory
hours.
is open during the regular
REGULAnONS
FOR
MEN
STUDENTS
.
.
..
I
I
I
dormitories after 7:00 P.M., except when
the.y are escorting women to the campus
resIdences.
.No
Intoxlcat~ng drinks may be brought
Into the dormItory. No men students are
permitted
anywhere,
the use. of
at any tIme,
alc~holic
beverages,
while
they are mat-
controlled by the Reeder Hall House Coun'
cil and the Dean df Men. The House Couw
cil is elected by the men students and cow
riculated at Edinboro State Teachers College.
Any ~isconduct
resu!ting f~om the use of
alcohQlI.c be,,:erages I~ .E~lnboro
.or elsewhere IS subject to dIscIplinary actIon.
sists of one representative of each class.
The main insistence is that behavior be .
in accordance with the accepted standards
of good taste. All men are expected to co-
All men who smoke will use metal ash
trays. For safety reasons, .use of any elec'
trical appliances is not permitted in the dormitory or rooming houses.
Men's regulations for Reeder Hall
operate
wo~en's
be In
in the
are .
the company Qf a woman student. All men
are expected to enter and leave Haven Hall
by the north entrance at mealtimes. Men
must appear in jacket sweaters, sports jackets,
Qr suit coats, all with collared shirts at' each
evening meal Monday through Friday. At
the Saturday evening meal and Sunday noon
~eal shirts wi~h ties must be worn with sport
Jackets or SUIt coats.
Men students are asked to use the Meadville Street walk when returning to the
in resI:'ect to the ~tter.
of all
regulations. No man Is.permltted.to
Haven
evening,
All
.
Hall
L.obb>: until
~fter
6.~0
at whIch
time he IS to be In
34
men maintaining
in ,any subject
~ill
theIr rooms
studYing
through
Friday.
.3S
!
a grade less than "C"
be
by
expected
to be in
9:00 P.M.,
Monday
)
~
I
REGULATIONS
FOR OFF.CAMPUS
MEN
.have
.d
Men living off-campus a.r~. not segregate
in any way from those .IIVI~g on camsus.
They. have a representa.tlve Id the I Stu ebt
Council who helps advise an
sett e pro -uled
one central
office
events can be scheduled.
duty has been delegated
of Student Personnel. No
which women are involved
until all the necessary
lems pertai~ing to the. ~ff-c~mPhs gllup.
Rules applYing to men IIvlng'dn the do ege
dormitory apply to those qutSI e t e orm!'
tory.
REGULATIONS
CONCERNING
S
CARS ON CAMPU
chaperones, hours, etc. have been met and
the approval of the Dean of Women has
been given. Before advertising. any evening
activity, it is necessary to have the activity
recorded on t~e Social Calendar in the
office of the Director of Student Personnel.
.
Students
retaining
cars in
Edinboro
are
in
required to register the cars with the Dean
of Men and to obtain a campus license
sticker. Car permission may be removed at
any time for reckless driving on campus.
RECREATION
f
t
e
asemen
center operates in
Normal
Hall
on
weekda
o~ercrowded,.
y
high
0
evemngs rom:
o.
..
evenings when a major social function or
athletic event is scheduled. Ping-pong, dancing, and cards are featured. This is a p~oject of the Student-Faculty Cooperative
Council.
.
f
6
30
t
8
.
00
P
M
exce
p
t
SCHEDULING SOCIAL ACTIVITIES
To avoid conflict it has been necessary to
36
The Director of Student Personnel, acting
this scheduling
capacity, represents the
College Social Committee and, under its
instruction, seeks to maintain a well-balanced
and satisfactory social program. Permission
for scheduling an event may be denied when
the general Social Calendar or the Calendar for a particular organi~ation seems
ROOM
A tem ora
recreation
h b
p try
where all social
This scheduling
to the Dira~tor
social event in
may be schedrequirements for
seem
'
.
.37
t
academic
0
d.
Iscourage
or when
~he maintainence
standards
In
th
e
ac
the
t
IVlty
college
of
would
In
question.
A form, Student Social Function and
Trips, is to be obtained at either the office
of the Director of Student Personnel or
the office of the Dean of Women, by any
organi~ation planning a major social event.
Th~ form is to be completed and approyed
by the c:>rgani~ationadvisor and returned
to the DIrector of Student Personnel Office
~
at least one ~eek before the date of the.
activity. Failure to comply with this regulation may result in cancellatio? of t~e date;
Assignment
of
rooms
for
meeting
of the College.
..niques
In ~Itlng
the DIrector
or approva
0
e
of Student Personnel;
and the Dean of Men or the Dean of Women at least one week before the initiation
begins.
The initiation program shall include no
activiti~s.?n campus ~uring <;lass~ours and
no activities at any time which disturb the
public in general.
in..The
suchinitiation
a manner
that classroom
may
program
shall be work
conducted
pr~ceed as :usual. Any mode of dress. or any
actlon.s
which
attract
undue
and
of
.
.
.
.
FRATERNITY AND CLUB
INITIATIONS
No physical punishment shall be admiw
istered at any time.
hUb
b
An! dPu~llC 1~1~latlof program Is ta th e
su mltte
sponsor,
.
ana
activity purposes is administered through
the Dean of Ihstruction's Office. Evening
use of any room must be approved by the
President
boro and becomes a teacher will be expect.
ed' to assume leadership in community life
attention
are
undesirable.
I
:
.
.
38
.39
I
activities.
the
In.a
teacher
large
will
be
percentage
expected
to
sponsor clubs and other student groups.
Therefore, it is very important that every
student in college becomes accustomed to
certain
activities and familiar with
of discussion, parliamentary
the tech.
law, rec,
ord keeping, and the general promotion of
student activities. Even if a teacher never
become~:a cl~b s!:,onsor,the ~d:u~ati?nalvalue
~f participation In these activities In college
1S perhaps as great as that of some course
of study. Therefore, it seems advisable that
each
student
becomes
a member
of
some'
club or other activity aside from athletics.
In the College year of 1950-51, the follow~ng plan of extra-curricular activities Will
be In effect:
1. At the beginning of the semester each
student will be given the opportunity to
choose any club or activity in which he is
interested.
2. A club or activity may be set up on
petition of not fewer than fifteen studentS
with
.Student
EXTRA-CURRICULAR
PROGRAM
Every person who graduates from Ediw
school
cases
the
approval
of
the
Committee
on
Activities.
3. All organizations will proVide for regular meetings.
:
i
,...
4. No meeting shall be held without at
least one faculty advisor present.
5. Each club or activity is to choose its
own Faculty Advisor subject to the consent
of the faculty member concerned~nd the apptoval of the Committee on Student Activities. The Faculty Advisor is not to be responsible for planning the program of the
Published hi-weekly by an excellent staff
of students, the Spectator covers all phases
of college life. Cost o~ publication is covere.d. by the studen~ a~tlv~ty fund, and advertlsmg: the paper .Jsdlstrlbuted wIthout extra
charge to all students. ,The Spectator offers
an, excelle.nt °I;'portunlty for students to
' gain experIence In newspaper work.
activity since his relationship i'Sonly advisory.
6. Each activity is to have a Secretary,
whose duty it shall be to record and report
its membership and program as follows:
(a) A membership report to be turned
over to the Chairman of the Committee on
Student A~ti:viti~s early eacb semes~er..,
(b) PartIcIpatIon report of each Indlvld.
ual member,
of the
attendance
d office' b holders.
'
h
at
an
contrI
utlon
to
t
e
prog meetings,
Th '
t .
t
t
th
D
f I
ram.
IS repor
IS
0 go
0
e
ean
0
n.;
st ruc..,on
at th e end 0f th e semester.
( c) A monthly report of the activities
of the club to be given the Chairman of the
Committee on Student Activities.
Blanks for all these reports may be secured from the office of the Dean of Instruction,
The Conneautteean
The Conneauteean, the college yearbook.
published by the Junior class, is an enterprise in which the whole college takes an
active part.
The name "Conneauteean" is derived
from the original name of Edinboro Lake
-Lake Conneauttee,
The b00 k w hIC. h .IS d e fi nI .t e I y a s t u d en t
...
b y a sta ff 0 f stu d ents
enterprIse,
IS
put
out
d
and faculty a vIsors.
Dramatic Club
All students interested in participation in
dramatic activities on campus are eligible
for membership, Those who earn a total of
fifty points in acting and back-stage wOI:k
and who meet certain character and scholastic requirements are eligible for consideration for membership in Alpha Psi Omeg~.
National Honorary Dramatic Fraternity.
The club will produce two. publi~ dr:amatic
programs each year and will assist In the
ACTIVITIES
The Spectator
.~he Spectator's reputat.i«?nfor goo~ journahsm has been a tradItIon at Edlnboro.
40
.
..
r
-~
~--
41
presentation of dramatic presentations of .1
other clubs when requested.
.
Alpha Delta Sorority
The
Iota
The
Sorority
is
ScaRAB
/
The ScaRAB CI~b': is an organization
open to all art students. The program for
this year includes speeches, demonstrations,
films,
several
drawing
social
and
events
painting
Mi.
a Meet ngs a.re usually
onday night.
The College Ensemble
The
College
sessions,
at
.
the
ChrIstmas
Concert,
SprIng
St~dents
d
A
bl
M
~nterest~~
In.
camera
work
I
Special
help
is
given
to
begin-
evening
.
S
Delta
in
the
of women
ba~ed
on
being
ad,
the sorority
is to foster
the
of
all
these
traits
toward
de'
the
in
.
the
P
sorority
.
F
rooms
of
Music
Hall..
.
,
,Upsilon
Chapter of PhI SIgma PI, natIonal
I
professiona! educational f~ate~nity, is a mem'
I
I
~gma
I
ratemlty
ber of a nine-state
organl~atlon
that empha'
si~es the professional
development
of teach,
ers and promotes the spirit of scholarship,
brotherhood, and loyalty to the college. New
I
tIes provIded by the college. In. the baseme~t
of Normal Hall. MembershIp
In the club IS
participate.
Alpha
chapters
achievement of a socially integrated personality. The sorority meets every Monc!ay
Ph
will
limited to tWelve by selecting those who
attend m~etings regularly. Darkroom space
and privileges are extended to students who
the
seven
of the tot~l
enrollment
Th.e
req.ulrements
are
rating
wIth no member
purpose
of
velopment
!
b
find interesting actIvIty In the Photography:
Club. This group meets once each week
a.1\dmak~s use of excellent ?arkroom facili'
of
the
mitted with a "D"..o~
an "F" in. any s~b'
)ect. Character, abilItIes, and socIal attain'
ments are also taken into consideration. The
Mu'
sIca e, an
ssem y programs.
em ers are,
selected from the College Choir.
Th
Ph
e
oto~aphy CI~b
.
1
one'thlrd
students:
scholastIc
group
of men and women singers who perfoI'ln in'
formally for club meetings, social functions,
churches, etc. T~ey also present spec!al num'
bers
I
and
I
is a selected
of
State Teachers Colleges 0.£~en~syl,:,a~ia and
New,,! ork. Its membershIp IS limIted to
every two weeks on
Ensemble
Chapter
one
members are chosen' by the current member'
ship on the b-asis of scholastic standing, so'
cial aptitude, and ability to lead.
..
Kappa Delta Phi Fraternity
I
Kappa
leading
Delta
professional
Phi,
one
and
of
soc~al
the
nation's
frate~nities,
ners as well as to those more advanced.
was formed when the Beta XI Fraternity re'
42
43
r"
ceived a national charter. The members of
this. group are selected by the careful discretlon ~nd t~ought of current members in
conformIty wIth college rules for rushing.
The Kappa J?elta Phi Fraternity was honored by having Mr. Doucette, a member
of the faculty,. elected as National President
of the Fratermty for 1949.
.prerequisite
Delta PhI Delta
Membership in Delta Phi Delta, national
professional and honorary art fraternity, is
limited to those Junior and Senior art students who have maintained an average of
"superior" in art subjects and "good" in
academic work.' The purpose of the fraternity is to further a genuine interest in art,
to recogni:;e scholarship, a~d to promote
professional fellowship. Pledges are chosen
by members with the approval of the art
faculty sponsors.
Mu Kappa Gamma
Mu .Kappa Ga.mma,. the honorar,y music
fraternIty, takes fit? Its .membershIp th?se
students who contrIbute In an outstanding
way to the musical life of the college. Scho- .
larship,
leadership,
musical
ability,
coopera-
Alpha Psi Omega
A chapter of the largest national honorary
dramatic fraternity is maintained at Ediw
boro under the title of the The Gamma
Kappa Cast. Because the requirements for
initiation are very high, an average of only
five students are accepted each year. Member&hip in the Edinboro Players is the first
for consideration for the honor.
Each neophyte in the organi:;ation has excelled in at least one p~ase ?f Dramatic Art
or .has e~rne? fifty pOints In. the fields of
acting, dIrecting and backstaglng work.
Forum Cub
The activities of this organi:;ation include
intercollegia'te debating; panel discussions
given in the college assembly, before community groups, over television station
WICU in Erie, and in club meetings; and
visits with a faculty member to nearby high
schools to speak about college life. The
panel discussions are devoted to current
local, national, and !nterna~ional p':obleis
and range from. su~h toplcsr,as "Shoul~
students marry while In c.ollege. to. Shou
the l!;S.
land?
share her atomIc secrets wIth
.
Eng-
tion, length of service, and participation in
one or m?re musical or~an!:;ations are points
The club meets two evem~gs a month,
usually for an h.our each meeting. Programs
upon
for
whIch
membershIp
44
IS based.
these
meetings
are
45
arranged
so that
~
preparation by the students who ¥e pre'
senting the program will not be t~o time
consuming.
~
Membership in the club is open ~ the
entire student body, and any students who
may be interested are cordially invited to
join.
Beta Beta Beta
Beta Beta Beta the National Biological
Honor Fraternity, 'was installed on our cam'
pus by the national officers February 11,
1950. The purpose of the fraternIty is three'
fold: stimulation of sound scholarship; dis'
semination of scientific knowledge; and pro'
motion of biological research.
Only those colleges and universities that
have high rating are eligible to have chap'
ters. The Biology faculty must be excep'
tionally strong, and the courses and equip'
m,ent must. be adequate to provide a full
.~Iology major..
.To
qualify for membership in this fra'
ternity a student must have an average of
"B'~ or better in all of his biology courses,
and rate above an average grade in all
courses taken in college.
.<?ur
chapter has been designated Alpha
Chi. Twenty students and three Biology
faculty members composed the charter mem'
46
.
bership. M?nthly meet~ngs.are hel~ to dis'
cuss some Important bIologIcal tOpIC.
The College Choir
The College Choir is a choral group
whose repertoire includes sacred and secular
numbers. It presents annually a Christmas
Vesper Service and a Spring Musicale and,
in addition, sponsors each year the appear'
ance of some fine choral groups. Members
are selected by tryouts ear.ly in ea~h sem'
ester. All students wh? like to sing are
urged to tryout for thIs group.
Small Instrumental Ensembles
Small instrumental ensembles will be
formed into trios, quartets, two'piano teams
and other units if students who have talent
will. report ~o M~s.. .Campbell and indicate
an Interest In activIties.
The College Band
All students who are interested in instru'
mental music are urged to join this organi'
~ation. The band's activities during the
paSt schpol year included the .furnishing of
music for athletic contests, both at home
and away, for various assembly programs,
and for the Alumni Homecoming Day
Parade. The college owns many instruments
which are. available for student use.. The
band practIces every Monday from 6.30 to
9:00 P.M.
47
~
,
.J.
The Pershing Rifles
A National Honorary Military Fraternity
was
Lieutenant)
foundedJohn
in J.1894
Pershing
by General
at the Unlv~r(~hen
sity of Nebraska for the purpose of attal~ing
greater
proficiency
In close order
at
Edinboro
State
Teachers
College.
12, the Biology Laboratory, Loveland Hall.
The Canterbury Qub
Cant~rbury Club is an organization
of Episcopalian ~tud.ents, although members
of ot.her denominations are also welcomed
to Join.
Every fourth meeting is a soci~l meeting,
but the rest 0.£ the meetings are giveq
.
fargely
IS
a part of the Compa~y B,S of the Pershing
Rifles at Pennsylvania State College, and
members pledged here auto~atically become
members of the Pennsylvania State Chapter
f .
h
upon trans errIng t ere.
The Al ha Phi Omega Club
p
"
The Alpha Phi Omega IS a national service fraternity, composed of college and Un!'
versity men who are or have been pre'
viously affiliated with the, Boy Scouts.
each candidate for membership .must have:
(1) previous trainil}g in Scouting; (2) a
desire to render s~rvice t? others; (3) a
satisfactory scholastic standing.
48
and former Scouts of all ranks
are eligible for membership.
third
.Meetings
Thu.rsdays
are scheduled
of every for
month
the illfirstRoom
and
drIll
and to cultivate high morale among the
cadets.
..The,
Membership in the Pershing Rifles IS !1mited to those members of the R. O. T. C.
Cadet Corps who have shown a ~igh d.e~ree
of proficiency and interest In Military
Science.
The platoon organization of the Pershin~
Rifles
-Scouts
fiems.
to
~he
rst an
the
dl.scussion
,meetIngs
of.
are
important
scheduled
prob,
for
the
third Wednesdays of every month.
ATHLETICS
i
Men's Athletics
.
...
.The m~n s Interc?lIeglate athletic program
Includes Intercollegiate compe.titio~ in foot,
ball, .basketball, soccer, swimming, golf,
wrestling, track, and tennis.
Intramural Sports
The college has expanded the intramural
programs so that every student will have the
opportunity of participating in his favorite
sport. Besi~es th~ above'mentioned sports,
the college IS equipped for badminton, ping'
i
i
!"
'
'-
49
I
r
'
,
.
t " ""
II '
varsl y. E.In
I~terco eglate competition, is
to maintain a hIgh standard of athletics at
Edinhor.oo It' functions chiefly, therefore, in
connectIon with athletic events.
.Other important events of the year for
thIs club ate the "E" Club dance the annual intramural basketball games; This club
presents. sweaters to, all men earning varsity
lette~s, Jackets to three-year lettermen, and
specIal awards to outstanding athletes.
pong, volleyball, softball, and many others.
W.A.A.
The Wolnen's Athletic Association is a
mem.ber of the Athleti~ Federation of College Women. It also IS a member of the
United States Fi.eld ~aCkey Association. The
type of recreatIon IS carefully chosen for
the complete deyelQpment of each student.
Evet:y woman student, upon entering college, is elected to membership in either the
Phis or the ,Deltas, who make up the national health recreational sorority Phi Delta
Lambda. Throughout the year there is regular intramural competition between the two
groups.
Fall sports, outdoors, consist of field
hockey, tennis -and hiking; winter sports:
skating basketball swimming life saving
badmi~ton, and 'b~w.ling; spri~g. sports, out:
doors: arGhery, tennIS, golf, hiking, ~oftball,
and horseback riding.
.the
The W.A.A. IS governed by a student
council which meets every week to plan and
guide all activities. The Association is based
on a point system. .Awards are p~esented at
the enn of fall, Winter, and sprIng sports.
The "E" Club
The aim and purpose of the "E~' Club,
made up of the athletes who have won a,
50
YOUR CHURCH
h S .
urc
ervlces
The Edinboro Churches offer students a
yriety of religi,ous and social activities. The
.oung. Peoples groups hold weekly meetIngs, dlsc,:,sslo~ groups, suppers,. etc. Many
students S1ngIn the church choIrs 0, serve
~~ u:she:s .thr.oug~out the school year. A
rdlal ~nvltatlon. IS ex:t~nded to .all students
to continue theIr religIous affiliations with
churches here in town.
Ch
i
!
Advent Christian Church
10:00 A.M. Sunday School
11:00 A.M. Mor~ing Worship
~
8:00
P.M.
Everun~
8:00
P.M.
Wednesday,
Service
Pra
yer Service
Baptist Church .
10:00 A.M. BIble School
51
I
!
~
11:00 A.M. Morning Worship.
7:00 P.M. Young People's
8:0~ P.M..
Wednesday, Mid-week..Boarding
Service
Cathohc
ServiCes
10:00 A.M.
Mass-College
Auditorium
Episcopal Church
9:15 A.M. Holy Communion (S~cond
Sunday of the Month)
..the
Worship services once a month In a private home.
.
Meth.odlst
,
.Hall,
.
Presbyterian Church
10:00 A.M.
Church School
11:00 A.M. Morning Worship
7:00 P.M. Young People's Westminster
Fellowship
8:00 P.M. Wednesday, Mid-week Service
GENERAL
INFORMATION
Rooms For Men
Men students will be housed in Reeder
Hall or in any private home that has been
approv~d by the Housing Committee.
Rooms For Women
Women students will be housed in Haven
52
h~s been approved by the Housing
mlttee.
Facilities
Com-
All stud tnts WI
.11b e expected to eat In
.
the College Dining Room. However, other
arrangtments may be made if approved by
College President.
Bus Service
I
Edinboto
is situated
on the
between
Pittsb?rgh
and Erie.
Church.
9.45 A.M. Sund~y School.
11 :00 A.M. Mormng Wo(shlp
White ~all, or any private home that
main bus line
During
the
day and evemng the busses run approXlmately every two hours. Because of the fact
that the schedules are constantly changing,
we shall not attempt to print them. The
,schedule
may be obtained by calling 2481.
I
I
I
I
i
i
I
,.
Book Store
Book~ ~nd ot.her supplies are obtainable
a't Cooper s Stationery Store. It is advisable
to order your books as soon as possible
:after they have been designa,ted by your
Instructors. Each student is expected to own
the text books required in his classes.
..
Mad. Service
The College receIves two mail deliv~ries
e~ch day. Dormitory mail will be delivered
dIrectly to the students' mail boxes there.
53
'-
i
:.-
~
The College offers no service for the pQrchasing of stamp~; ~u~h matters should be
handled by the Individual students ~t the
local post office. Lock boxes at the Edmboro
post office may be secured at the rate of
$'"60 a quarter ...limited
Fire
General
Fire
are
required
drills
Regulations
by
t~e
persons
The
to particIpate.
following
drill
observed:
1. When
windows to
1. Empty
3. Order:
by faculty.
4:
Kee.p
to
procedure
of
the
should
be
..all
the alarm IS given, close
prevent draft,
first floors and basements first.
students to leave first, followed
,.
the
right.
Avoid
..
.
.
la,!,s,
Commonwealth. Signal for drills will not be
a.nnounced and will be given always ~y some
pa.rticular person designated for th~s duty.
The first fire ~a:m is always a. call to the
runnIng
and
rushing.
Responsibility for the ob~ervance of fire
drills and oHler fire regulations falls to all
persons --stQdents, faculty, and employees.
L1ustodians of the various buildings will see
h .
t'
'~n to meet the par'
t at mstruc Ions are gl-y~
'I
d.
tlcu ar nee s me. ach building
i
i
.
.
LaWldry
ironing boards and electric irons in the base'
ment of Haven Hall. The laundry is re'
served for the use of men on Fridays.
..
..As 3; part o.f ~ormltory ser,vlce students
llvmg m..laundry
dormitories
are
permitted
toto have
privileges.
Articles
be
washed
in
a
must
laundry
be
bag
Women's
foot
of the
Students are permitted the use of tubs,
for
securely
steam
i
Monday
I
m?re
mornIng.
than
Thl~
twe~ve
servI~e
pIeces,
mc~udes
IncludIng
no
two
shirts. Laundry IS to be called for Friday.
Laundry ba.gs may be purchased at a.ny
of several stores in Edinboro.
All
dl
.'
,stu
ents Ivlng on the campus are en'
titled
to
seventy,live
of la.undry
bd
. I. cents worth
"
ase on price 1st. For add Itlona
I I aund ry
of
~harge
be
ma.de
55
.
tied
on Wednesday mornings. These are to be
called for on Wednesday after lunch,
Men's laundr~ ba.gsare to ~e in ,the back
entrance to R~eder H~1l by ?me.o clock on
is completed.
54
and
e~pecially
la.undry
ba.gs a.re to be at the
ba.sement
stairs by nine o'clock
the
schedule
Paym~nt
will
Service
color-fast
made
laundry. All bags and articles to be washed
should be cclearly marked with the name of
the owner, Students are advised not to send
fine pieces to the college laundry.
should
when
be consulted.
laundry
work
f
---,
L
~
,
,
\
/JI
r
~
Telephone
Service
i
Telephones on a private College branch
(Edinboro
3301)
are
located
in
5. At the end of th;freshman
~
every
various
~?
semester'
"all-college
thereafter
average
year and
have
not
earned
less
than
places on the campus. Outside calls in Edinbord may only be made by students through
station "78", and ther~ it will be necessary
.to listeddialin "0",
before dialing the number
the directory.
C.
.
CommIttee On Student Employment
H. W. Earlley, Chairman
Lo ans
Long distance calls may only be made
over the pay telephones found in each
dormitory.
~ small loan fund administered by the
Edlnbo.ro Cha.pt~r of the Edinboro College
A~umnl AssoCIatIon is available. Consult the
1?lrector of Student Personnel for informatlon about a loan.
Student Self-Help
-There are a limited number of part-time
pos!t~ons available at the. college, and i~ is
antl.clpate~ that there wpl be a few Jobs
available m the community.
To be eligible for employment a student
must:
1. Be matriculated .as a student either in
a four-year Edmboro course or the
Commercial Art Curriculum,
2. Be boarding at the College Dining
Room.
3. Be rooming on the campus unless
existing facilities do not permit.
4. If a freshman, have scored not below
the 25th percentile on the American
Council On Education Psychology Examination which is administered to all
Edinboro Freshmen,
5:6
.
.
-
57
r
,
SONGS AND
I
CHEERS
Dear Home of College D~ys
Alma Mater
(Old
(Aloha)
Hail to thee, our Alma Mater glorious,
Fresh wreaths we bring to bind thy brow;
Trails past thou has withstood victorious
Never fairer, never statelier than now.
Dear home of college days so great and free,
Thy sons and daughters will be true to thee.
Thy love we'll cherish and thy fame declare,
Loyal to thee, and to thy name so fair.
0 Edinboro, Edinboro,
...
We revere thee, love thee, serve thee ever.
That
Sweep the Campus
Winds that sweep the campus,
Winds that stir the ~ree,
Sweep around her towers
Standing calm and still
Through the Winter's darkness,
Through the summer shine,
Bear her our blessings
Through glad good will.
58
Chorus
So raIse your voIces all, and honor gIve,
Her fame and glory may they ever live.
Through joy and sorrow as the years go by,
And with a constancy that cannot die.
While class speeds class
As swift years pass,
To thee our hearts are true.
Winds
Refrain)
.
.
Pep Song
Edinboro College, we will sing to you
We'll defend your standards
In whate'er we do.
"Hail, hail, the gang's all here,"
Round thy colors bright
.We'll
stick together for the
Crimson and White.
~i
c
t
c,
.59
I
;
.J
r
.
..
.
.
Hand Me Down my Bonnet
Hand me down my bonnet,
Han d me d own my sh aw,I
Hand ~e down my c:alico dress,
I'm
going
to
the
Cahco
First she gave me honey,
Then she gave me cake,
And then she gave me gingerbread
For kissing her at the ga,te.
.
0
as we go marching,
And the band begins to play
You can hear the people shouting
"Edinboro College wins today."
Victory Song
Id R d R .d
On you 0
e
al ers
Beat those darned invaders
And march on to Victory.
Down the floor we'll thunder;
We'll put then asunder
And
match
on to Victory.
Dribble,
dribble,?~ibble
.
down
the
Onward, onward piling up the score.
Sun will shine tomorrow;
For we've won E. S. T. -C.
floor.
,
Dick RockwEll 43
Jack Alton '44
60
Hello
.Two
Ball.
.
~
.61
11
Hello Cheer
(opponent), Edinboro says
" H eIIo. " ,
bits, four bits,. six bits, a dollar;
Everyone
and
from
holler!
Edlnboro,
15 Rahs
Rah, rah, rah-rah-rah!
Rah, rah, rah-rah-rah!
.Rah, rah, rah-rah-rah!
Ye~h, Team!
Yea Team
Y ea team, sock It., to em.
Yea team, sock it to 'em.
Yea team, sock it to 'em.
Team, sock it to 'em.
Dynamo
,
Dynam?, let ~ go,
DynamIte, let s fi~ht,
Dy~amo,
Let
s
go,
Dynamite,
let
s fight!
Rah Team
Rah team, fight, fight!
Rah team, fight, fight!
Rah team, fight, fight!
Fight! Team! Fight!
stand
up
C
c
~
~
locomotive,
Skin 'em alive.
Edinboro Special
Fight, fight, fight, fight
E-S-T-C
Fight, fight, fight, fight
E (clap three times) fight
(clap three times) fight
(clap three
three times) fight
fight
(clap
fight
fight
fight
fight
E-S-T-C
Fight, fight, fight!
Give It To 'Em
.
I
I
,I
,
Give
'em
Sock it to 'em
M
'
d
ow em own,
Come on, Edinboro, .(pause)
Let's go to town.
62
l
,
,
get
h
steam.
h
G
I
e JIve.
,
steam
Team, team, team.
Smear 'em
Beat (opponent)
..
DiVIded Team
TE -AM
TE AM
TE -AM
Team, team, team;
Let's Go Raiders
Let 's go raiders,
Let's
L
' go raiders
.d '
et s go ral ers,
Beat 'em.
63
er
'
Steam
toget
11
e team
a s on,
rea Edinboro,
y ep to
Come
S
T
C
E
S
T
C
Locomotive,
..et
t
I
B-E-A-M
th
eve_got
h
h
the
'
on
t
Th
That's
W
'
to
We've got the T-E-A-M
Locomotive Steam
get
I
er,
Jive Cheer
C ALE
ND A R
September. 1950
1950 -1951
/./
~
11. Mon.
Registration of freshman students
Freshman Mixer Party College Gymnasium -8:00
P.M.
12 Tues. '
..Regist rat.Ion 0f upper-c I assmen
Freshman Assembly -22.
College f.1;Iditor~um-9:00
A.M.
Freshman OrIentatIon -7:30
College Auditorium'~
1:30 P.M.
All College Dance College Gymnasium --8:30 P.M.
13. W e.d
14.
15.
Thurs.
Fri.
16. Sat.
.l~
Faculty-Student Re~eptlon and Dance -+
College Gymnasium -8:30
P.M.
17. Sun.
Affilia~ion of students with churches of
Edmboro
18. Mon.
64
.
.
.
..
.
.,
.September,
19$0
19. Tues.
W.A.A. Tea -4:00
20.
P.~.
Wed.
Assembly -Michael
M. Dorizas, lecture
21. Thurs.
Secondary School Curriculum Revision
Committee for Northwestern District
Fri.
All College Sing at Edinboro Lake P.M.
23. Sat.
Foot~all -California
2.00 P.M.
24.
at Edinboro -
Sun.
25.Alpha
Mou.Delta Picnic
26. Tues.
27. Wed.
A ssembly
28. Thurs.
.
Mus'c Club Picnic at Green POInt 7:30 P.M.
65
i
I
,..-
~
September, 1950
29.
Fri.
:-~~
..
.
.
.October,
1~50
7.
Y.W.C.A. Big and Little Sister Tea -Freshman
Haven Hall -2:30-4:30
P.M.
30. Sat.
Football -Edinboro
at Clarion
October, 1950
1.
Sun.
2.on.M
3. Tues.
Soccer -Edinboro
at Westminster
College
W.A.A. .color rush parade and
Phl'Delta game
Wed.
4.
Assembly
Thurs:
6
F.
5.
I
Ii
.fl.
Freshman Tests
Soccer -Grove
at Edinqoro
I
I
City Coll~ge
66
,
Sat.
':,:.,;;;':"i:'c
c.
Tests
Football -Edinboro
at Slippery Rock
Amateur Night -College
Auditorium 8:00 P.M.
8.
Sun.
9.
Mon.
10. Tues.
Soccer -Edinboro
11. Wed.
Assembly -All
12. Thurs.
13. Fri.
Soccer -Thiel
14. Sat.
at Allegheny College
American Male Chorus
at Edinboro
Football --Edinboro
at Indiana
Card Party at Haven Hall -7:30
15. Sun.
16. Mon.
W.A.A. Fall Meeting -4:00
17. Tues.
Soccer -Slippery
18. Wed.
P.M.
"
P.M.
Rock at Edinboro
6'7
f
:
..
October, 1950
I
.
I
19.
Thurs,
F ..Football
20.
rl.
,
Soccer -Edinboro
~
at Indiana
21. Sat.
Homecoming Day
Alum~ae -Varsity
Hockey game -::,"
10.45 A.M.
Football ~ Thiel at Edinboro
E-Club Ball -College
Gymnasium ~
.22.
111
October, 195(} ,
'
"
,
28.
Sat.
-Brockport
M~squerade
Party
at Edinboro
Gymnasium -8:00
29. Sun,
30. Mon.
Soccer -Wheaton
31.
,
--College
P.M.
at Edinboro
Tues.
"~""";
8:30 P.M.
Sun.
November, 1950
Haven Hall Open House
23. Mon.
Alpha Delta Founder's Day
1, Wed.
Assembly
2. Thurs.
24. Tues.
25. Wed.
Soccer -Kent
State at Edinboro
(Pending)
Charles Laughton -College
3, Fri.
4, Sat.
Football -Edinboro
at Mansfield,
Square Dance 7C College ~ymnaslum 8:00 P.M:
Auditorium
26.
-8:15
P.M.
Thurs.
5, Sun.
6.
27. Fri.
Haven Hall Tea -2:30
66
-4:30
Mon.
7, Tues.
Soccer ~ Edinboro at GoroveCity Collegc
69
..
.
r
November, 1950
,
8.
21.
Assembly
9. T~urs.
:.
23.
I
Thurs.
National
SectIonal
12.
13.
Field Hockey -Great
Tournament
Lakes
24.
Thurs.
Fri.
18.
Sat.
Hockey
"
"
Tournament
'
FIeld
Hockey
Tournament
25. Sat.
National Field Hockey Tournament
14. Tues.
15. Wed.
Assembly -Dramatic
16.
Field
Fri.
..
NatIonal
Sun.
Mon.
17.
~
22. Wed.
S
.at.
.26.
~
Club Program
.
.
.
.
Harvest Ball -College
8:30 P.M.
19 Sun
Gymnasium -
..
20
Tues.
Thanksgiving Recess Begins at the
Close of Classes
10. Fn.
W.A.A:
'
-~
Wed.
11
II
November, 1950
M
.on."
One Act Play .To~rnament in
College Audltonum
70
Sun.
27. Mon.
Thanksgiving RecessEnds at 8:00 A.M.
28.
29.
'
Tues.
Wed.
Assembly
30. Thurs.
,,!', ",0,',:,
D
ecem
b
er,
1. Fri.
'2.
1950
"
",.'1"
...'-
Sat.
I
71!
i
!
.J
-December, 1950
".
3.
Sun.
4.
Mon.
5.
Tues.
'-Dec:ember,'1950
,
16. Sat.
"Mistletoe Hop" -College
,
8:30 P.M.
17.Christmas
Sun.
Vespers by College Choir -
6. Wed.
Art Exhibit
Basketball -Allegheny
7.
Thur~.
8.
FrI..W.A.A,
Gymnasium
at Edinboro
4:00 P.M.
18. Mon.
.Alpha
Delta C~ristmas Party
'
.19.
9. Sat.
Card Party at Haven Hall ~
7:30 P.M.
10: Sun.
11 .
.on.M
Tues.
presentation
of guest
awardsspeaker,
-4:00 and
P.M.
meeting,
Women's Dormitory Christmas Parties
20. Wed.
Assembly -Llord's
12.ues.
T
Basketball -Fredonia
13. Wed.
Assembly --College
'
at Edinboro
Choir
72
Christmas Recess begins at Noon
22.
23.
Fri.
Sat.
24.
Sun.
25.on.M
26. Tues.
14. Thurs.
15. Fri.
.27.
The hanging of the green In Haven Hall
Puppets
21.
Wed..
,
73
,
,..December, 1950
.January,
1951
.28.
Thurs.
10. Wed.
29. Fri.
30. Sat.
31.
Assembly
11. Thurs.
S"
un.
..
January, 1951
1.
Mon.
2.
Tues.
3.
Wed..
Christmas Recessends at 8:00 A.M.
No Assembly
4. Thurs.
5. Fri.
6.
Sat.
Swimming Meet -Westminster
.
.
12. Fri.
13.
Sat..
14.
Sun
15. Mon.
16. Tues.
17. Wed.
~o Assemb!y
Fmal Exammations
18. Thurs.
First Semester Ends at Close of Classes
19. Fri.
20. Sat.
Basketball -Edlnboro
at
Edinboro
21.
Sun.
22.
Mon.
8.
Mon.
23.
Tues.
Tues.
Basketball--Slippery
74
at Alliance
Sun.
7.
9.
i
."
I-
Registraiton of Freshmen for
Second .Semester
Rock at Edinboro
.75
.)
I
January, 1951 .-February,
~
24. Wed.
Registration of Upper Classmen for
Second Semester
25.
Thurs.
Swimming
Meet
--Edinboro
1951
Swimming
Meet
at Edinboro
4,
Sun.
26. Fri.
27. .Sat.
Basketball -Edinboro
5.
6.
7.
Mon.
Tues.
Wed.
.Baldwin
--,-.;'::,;:;:'
Feb ruary, 1951"
1.
Thurs.
F
-
-
at Slippery Rock
"
Assembly
-Buffalo
at Edinboro
8.urs.
Th
9. FrI,
Wrestlit;lg Match--Edinboro
Bowling Green
10. Sat.
Swimming Meet -Edinboro
Wallace
Wrestling: Match --Edinboro
Baldwm Dan~e
Wallace
Freshman
-College
8:30 P.M.
76
'
at Indiana
-Brockport
Basketball -Edinboro
P.M,
28 Sun
..Basketball
29. Mon.
30. Tueg'...
Basketball -Clarion
at Edinboro
31. Wed.
Assembly -pr.
Ar~ur M. ~:arding,
"Glimpses of Other Worlds.
Swimming Meet -Buffalo
at Edmboro
11
.
Fri.
Basketball -Edinboro
3. Sat.
at
at Indiana
';;,;;,
2.
W.A,A.
Grove Winter
City College
,Sports Party -,
7:30,10:00
,
---:,!:;;
77
at
~t
at
,
GymnasIUm
"
'-
~
February, 1951
,
February, 1951
--II,
Sun,
M
I honD
o 1
R h P
,A
p a eta us
arty
13, Tues.
14. Wed.
22, Thurs,
23, Fri,
Basketball --Alliance
at Edinboro
24, Sat,
Swimming Meet ~ Youngstown
at Edinboro
Swimming Meet -Allegheny
at Edinboro
15. Thurs.
.26.
Basketball -Edinboro
at California
16. Fri.
Basketball -Edinboro
at Clarion
25.
12
17. Sat.
Swlmmm.g
..
M eet
.
S1
-.Ippery
Sun.
Mon.
27. Tues.
Basketball -Edinboro
28. Wed.
As~emb~y
SwImmIng
Meet -Grove
at Edinboro
Rock
at Edmboro
W.A.A. Intercollegiate Swimming Meet
18. Sun.
19. Mon.
20. Tues.
21. Wed.
Assembly
Swimming Meet -Edinboro
at Thiel
.Wrestling
Match -Waynesburg
at Edinboro
78
at Thiel
:,;;'f':i;';,':;:
City Coliege
March, 1951
1.
2.
Thurs.
Fri.
Basketball -California
3.
Sat.
Penn. Ohio Swimming -away
Card Party and Dance College Gymnasium -8:00
.:'
i
at Edinboro
'
P.M.
79
)
~
Marcil;
1.951
4.
5.
Sun.
Mon.
Mu Kappa Gamma Initiation7.;30 P.M.
6. Tues.
Basketball ~,Edinboro
at Grove City
7. Wed.
Assembly
8.
9.
-~';;~e¥j
16.
Fri.
Easter Recess Begins at the
Close of Classes
17. Sat.
18. Sun.
19. Mon.
T hurs.
20.ues.
.T
Fri.
21.
S
10.
March, 1951
22.
Wed.
Th
urs.
,.
at.
W.A.A. Intercollegiate Sports Day -23.
2:00 -5:30 P.M.
c
Music 'Club "Dance -College
Gymnasium -8:30
P.M.
11. Sun.
12.on.M
Alp'ha Delta Pledge Service
13. Tues.
14. Wed.
Assembly ~ Dramatic Club Play
15. Thu~.
Three-Act Play iriCollege Audit:Jri~-8;15 P..M.
80
24.
')5
~.
Fri.
Sat.
S
un.
26. Mon.
27. Tues.
28E
.Wed R
aster ecessE nd s at 8:00 A..M
Assembly , William Hacker, Pianist
29. Thurs.
30. Fri..
Assembly -Bert
Harwell,
American Audobon Society
31. Sat.
.
81
~
r
I
April, 1951
-":'
1.
2.
April 1951
'c""c"':
~Sun~
Mon.
14. Sat.
Talent Show -College
8:00 P.M.
15. Sun.
3.
Tues.
4.
Wed.
16. Mon.
Assembly
17. Tues.
5.
6.
Thurs.
Fri.
Art Conference
7. Sat.
Art Conference
Scarab Club Dance -College
Gymnasium -8:30
P.M.
8.
Sun.
9. Mon.
10. Tues.
11. Wed.
Assembly -Forum
Club Program
12. Thurs.
Northwestern Pennsylvania Council for
Social Studies Artnual Conference
13. Fri.
Haven Hall Tea -2:30'
4:30
"'82
18. Wed.
Assembly -Edinboro
19. Thurs.
20. Fri.
21. Sat.
Bowery Brawl-
Auditorium -
Choir
College Gymnasium-
8:00 P.M.
22.
Sun.
23.
Mon.
24.
Tues.
25. Wed.
Track Meet -Edinboro
Grove City College
26. Thurs.
Track Meet -Edinboro
Grove City College
83
at
at
April, 19S1
May, ~9S1
-
27.n. F .9.
28.
Wed.
Assembly
Track Meet -Allegheny
Sat.
29. Sun.
30 .on.
M
Golf -Allegheny
-
W.A.A.
4:00
at Edinboro
1
.
T ds.
Wue
2.
e.
and
Presentation
of
Fri.
Tennis -Edinboro
19S1
at f.,lIegheny
12.Junior'
Sat. Senior Prom -8:30
13.
P.M.
Assembly -Virginia
Davis,
Portraits in Song
Track Meet -Edinboro
at Slippery Rock
3. Thurs.
Spring Concert -College
Auditorium -Tennis
8:00 P.M.
4. Fri.
W.A.A. Dance -College
Gymnasium 8:30,11:30
S. Sat.
Archery Meet -1:30
P.M.
16. Wed.
Assembly ::.- Recognition Day'
6. Sun.
7. Mon.
17.
T hurs.
18.
Fri.
8.
.
.
Tues.
,
84
Awards
P.M.
10. Thurs.
.'11.
.May,
Tea
Triangular Meet
.
Sun.
14. Mon.
IS. Tues.
Match -Grove
City College
at Edinboro
W.A.A. Intercollegiate Telegraphic
8S
-./
r--
May, 1951
MEMORANDA
I'
1~~
Haven Hall Tea for Senior Women 2:30' 4:30 P.M.
20. Sun.
21. Mon.
22. Tues.
23. Wed.
24. Thurs.
25. Fri.
26. Sat.
Alumni Day
Dinner -College Dining Room 12:30 P.M.
President's Alumni' Senior Reception 3:30 P.M.
27. Sun.
BaccalaureateServices-College
Auditorium -3:30 P.M.
28. Mon.
Commencement
-College
10:00 A.M.
86
Auditorium 87
-
.1950 * CALENDAR'
* 1951
~
~o~~%«c
Z lz l"'la l~ l
.
-I-
I/I~I->I-II.U)
SEP 3 ;
;
6 ;
~:
MAR ~
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17181920212223
24252627282930
5
6 ;
8
9 10
1112 13 14 15 16 17
18192021222324
25262728293031
OCT
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
891011121314
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22232425262728
NOV 293031
---1
2 3 4
APR
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
891011121314
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22232425262728
MAY 2930
.-1
2 3 4 5
567891011
6789101112
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
19202122232425
20212223242526
2627282930
-.2728293031
-OEC
1 2
3456789
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25262728
29 30
.IAN 31
-1
2 3 4 5 6
JUN.
JUl
78910111213
14 15 16 17 18 1920
21222324252627
28293031.
--293031
FE8
3
13
20
27
4
14
21
28
5
15
22
29
6
16
23
30
7
891011121314
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22232425262728
,
I
--1
2 3 4
45678910
567891011
1112 13 14 15 16 17
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
1819202122
23 24
19202122
23 24 25
25262728.
--262728293031
--
-~
1 2
1 2
3456789
10 11 12
17 18 19
24 25 26
1 2 3
AUG.
1
0
.otJ
~
STUDENT
HANDBOOK
of
State Teachers College
.
Edinboro, Pa.
.1950-51':!~.
~
~
~
;,'
'-
Property of
.I....,',.
'. )..
)
;:-;
.
-FOREWORD
..111___'
dent
at. is
Edinboro
to toserve
a
Thisenrolled
handbook
distributed
eachasstureliable source o( information about the
rules and regulations of the College. We
sincerely hope that it may continue to serve
as a guide to the freshmen and as a convenience to the (acuIty and upperclassmen.
PRESIDENT'S
.
:
Acknowledgment is made to Dr. Van.
Houten, our President, and to Miss Ruth
Morton, our Dean of Women, who have
helped guide us in the. preparation of the .
material
for
,'"
this Dooklet~
The beginning of another college year is
(or a!l of us, students and faculty alike, the
...occasIon
of new opportunities and fresh outlooks. For most freshmen this September 11
means a break in the pattern of living which
is .probably the most momentous change they
will encounter.
For upper cJ.assmen, it is
the return to familiar scenes, but with new
hopes
May
academic
this
be
a
year
achievement
F
or
t
of
pleasant
and
.
for you.
h
e
S d
tu
ent
C
ouncl
.
1
GREETING
and
resolves.
This
handbook
is
assembly of most useful information.
its
happy
use
contribute
to
a
meaningful
Co
.
1
unCI
Olli
L..
cers:
Frank Pinto, President
Dorothy Tucker, Secretary
2
3
H.
Van
May
and
year.
Wm. R. Leech
.
one
~eans of assistance in adjustment.
It is not
Intended as a book of rules, but as a brief
Houten
,.
".,
HISTORY
--tio~
school, power plant, and spacious audi-
,
Eighty-seven
years
have
tonum. For these and the ol,cter buildings,
gone
by
.the
since
campus
Edinboro was first chartereq as a State Nor'
mal Schooleighty,seven years of growth
and service to the Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania, The beginnings
of the college w~re .
.
chartered
by
the
State
as ~ennsylvama
acres makes
an ap'
named in honor of one of the early donors
of the school. Academy Hall, known recently
as Music Hall, is the oldest building on the
campus, having been, built about 1857. Nor'
laid in 18~7 when a band of Scotch'Ins~
farmers grouped together and founded a pnvate academy at Edinboro b,y popular su~'
scriptiqn, but it W;iS not until 1861: tha~ ~t.
was
of thirty-eight
propriate setting.
Haven Hall, the women's
dormitory,
was built during the administration of -John F. Bigler,
Reeder Hall, the
men's dormitory,
was built in 1907 and
mal
was
s
Hall
was
cons~d~rablr
built
in
enlarged.
1875
and
Todaro'it
in
1891.
contains
second Normal School.
A gte'at forward stride was taken in 19~4,
the administration offices, the ll/brary, several. cl~ssrooms,'a~d the ,old j~u~itorium.
when the Commonwealth
purchased
Edln'
boro Normal School and made it the prop' .
erty of the State. Twelve years later, rea1i~ing the:neec! of t~e schqols of P~Qnsylvama
for better'educated
teachers, the Commonwealth 'made Edinboro
a Te~chers COII~ge .
Recitation Hall, built early
the school, provides class
Ne~ ,Gymnasi~m, with its
f~cllltles, .no~ overshadows
Slum, which IS outmoded.
named for the, lat~ Mr. FraQk Loveland Qf
Corry, who for many years w~s a trustee of
the College; this building was ,b,uilt in 1930
and houses the Art and Science departments. A temporary science building was
erected by the Federal Works A&ency In
1947...
We are rIghtly proud of our campus because of its attractiveness" its accommoda'
ti?ns and. its traditions. We hope t~is pride
will continue to be shared by all Incoming
students.
by organizing a four-year currIculum, leadl~g
,to' the degre~ of B~chelor of Science In
Education.
Although designed primarily to serve t~e
counties of Erie, Crawford, Mercer, Venango, and Warren, ~dinboro receiv.esand we~'
comes students from every section of this
state and from other states.
As a result of the building program concluded in 1940 there are four new build,
ings, -gymnasium,
training and demonstra'
4
.
IIi the history of
room space. The
excellent athletic
,the old gymna',
Loveland Hall IS
:
I
5
r
.L.a
CONTROL
OF THE
COLLEGE
-lege
..
The
~ontrol
of
the
College
.
IS
vested,
will
the Board of Trustees, composed of. rune
members' with John K. E,arp, as, PresIdent,
and Will P. Rose as VIce-PresIdent. The
?tate Superi~tendent ~f Public Instruction
IS an ex-officIo member.
."
h
t
h
I
e.
fi
n
fI
h
rmary
f
w
'
h
I' S
located
on
For
H
II
Dr
Ha
asked
to
respect
the
following
office
ILLNESS
The. illness
of
unc
student
7,00
."
,
"
DINING
.
'
hours.
necessary.
A.M.
11 '
5' 30 P,.M
AM
...
ROOM
the
College
Hall.
d,in,ing
The
room
dining
loca~ed
room,
in
whIch
Haven
seats
400
p~ople, accommodates all ,the boardi~g students because the self-servIce method IS used
in serving meals. Meal hours are:
b
2174
Breakfast
L
Weekdays
,." ",... 7:00 to 7:30
h
unc
11
in his
"'
"'..".,
' 30
.0
t12
'
5:30 to 6:15
.
15
Sunday
room
must be reported immediately to the Col6
,
30
eon
IN ROOM
any
student
if
Meals are served to boqrding students.-in
dd
e~ts
IN CASE OF EMhE~GENChY' Cthl ~ .stuE
may call Doctor Gering at t e lruc,
Inboro 2181 or at hIs ome,
In oro
.Dinner
Ed'
I
or
7:45 A.M. to 9:00 A,M.
11:00 A.M. to 12:00 Noon
4:00 P,M.. to 5:00 P.M.
'h
The
Infirmary
,
h
d'
or Inner
rold
While the Nurse can be found at the Infirmary at practically any ti~e, students ar~
the
breakfast
F
F
IC
H
treatment,
to
.Requests
for trays for' student~ ill in their
rooms must be made to the nurse before
the following hours:
,
.
d
prescribe
moved
REQUESTS FOR TRAYS
t e t Ir
oor 0
aven a.
.
Ghering, the College Physician, is at the
infirmary between 11:00 A. M. and 12:00
Noon.
h
and
be
Off-Campus and day students also have
the services of the physician and nurse.
INFIRMARY
The College Nurse lives in a room adJolrung
Nurse.' She or the physician will visit
him
In
Breakfast ,
Dinner ,
7:45 to 8:15
,..".."..,... 12: 30 to 1 :00
Supper .~.,::"
,
7
5:30 to 6:00
r-
Admittance to. .the' dining room is by
meal ticket only. 'These tickets are issued to
all boarding students and are non-transfer,
a e.
vised and consequently certain rules must
be qbserved.
! All b k
h.
bl
,."
A limited' nuillbet of guests may bt ac'
commodated in the diniI!g room, providing
individual- meal tickets are purchased in ad,
vanc~ in the office of the Director of Food
Service.
.:
..,
Transien~ meal r~tes are:
.'
"
!}reakfast
$ .45
.I;.1:II]ch ,
,
.55
Dinner
75
,THE LIBRARY
. b oro State
. ~tud ent at EdIn
The entering
Teachers COllege soon. discovers the educa'
tional and recreational. facilities available in
our College.Library. Approximately twenty'
six thousand volumes offer a wide range for
refer~nce and study. A generous fiction sec"
tion and 193 magazines and periodicals give
the studen~, an opportunity to ,fill l.~isure
hours with enjoyable reading.
Our library has the distinction of being
one of the few in the state which employs
open 'shelves for all books, thus allowing all
students easy aC:cessto the volumes. Of
course, this system must be carefu~y super'
8
.
h
.00
s
W
IC
h
b
ave
d
een
fi
e
.
nlte
I
y
~s~lgned to cIa~ses are p I aced on shelves
directly behind the desk and. are knoWrl as
the Reserve Books. Such books may be
withdrawn at 5:00 P.M., and returned at
.7:00
P.M., or taken at 8:~O P.M. and
returned before 9:00 A.M. the following
mornin.g. Failur~ to observe these rules will
result In a fine ,of ten cents per hour.
2. Books not on reserve but in demand
are te~med "overnight books" and may leave
t~e Library at any time of the day or over'
night and .must be returned before 9:00
A.M. the following day. Penalty for late
return is' ten. cents a day."
3. .All books except those on reserve m~y
b,e withdrawn for two weeks; a fine of two
cents. a day will be ~1:Iargedfor books kept
ov.ertlme. Encylopaedla volumes and diction'
anes may not be withdrawn.
.
4. Magazines may be withdrawn from the
~ibrary subject to the same rules as Reserve
Books.
,
5.. No st.udent' will be issued grades or
.credits until 3:11 library obligation~ have
been se.ttled.
,
: 6, No books may."be removed froni the
Library except by proper .charging at the
.,"9;
~,
desk by the Librarian in charge. Anyone
taking
books
not
properly
charged
from
Library will be subject to a fine of $5;00 for
each
book
and
suspension
fr?m,
all
~
The
,
LIbrary
.
~oll~ge
.d located on the secoh
IS
f1oor
t e year.
ACADEMIC
-Noon
-4:00
been
fail~r~;
whIch
Any
an
earned
F
must
grade:
be
re'
peated.
X
,
In
-not,
a grade, but a mark indi'
catlng that the student, for
been
some able
justifiable
to complete
cause, has
the not
re'
quired
limit.
work
within
the
time
The Dean's List
.
T";lce .a ,rear ~here is published, "The
Dean s LIst, ,~!~st of stud~nts who have
make a g~ade B or ~etter In every course,
taken during the prevIous semester.
P.M.
Oasses
The following number of credits are ne£'
STANDARDS
Grading System
. the quaI Ity
.f 0
Standards indicating
i~dica~ng
has
""
Monday through Friday
8:00 A.M. -5:30
P.M.
7:00 P.M. -9:00
P.M.
Saturday
8:00 A.M.
1:00 P.M.
-grade
course
activities until such fines are paId.. <:;hpplng
and marking \.fooks is always prohIbIted.
of Normal
Hall and ~hroughout
will observe the following
hours:
"F"
the
work
are:
essary to become a member of each class:
Sophomore
Junior
-64 -32
Senior -96
..A"
-grade
given to students whose
work is clearly of an excep'
tional nature.
:
"B" -grade
given to s.tudents who do
distinctly superl~r work.
"0" -"'- grade representing work of
good quality.
"D~" ~ grade indicating unsatisfactory
.work..
10
Graduate -128
or degree
REGISTRATION
Students are reminded to register and pay
fees on the assigned dates. All fees must be
paid in advance. Permission must be ob,
tained from the. President of the College in ,
advance to avoId penalty for ..late payment.
1'1
~
Dates of registration and payment
may be found in the Calendar.
A BSENCE
AND
of fees
quested by the faculty sponsor and
approved by the Dean of Instruction.
TARDINESS
2.
Students, should
be familiar
with
the
method
of secu(ing
excuses for absences
from class, The burden of responsibility
for
absence
h ' d ' and
' tardiness rests at all times upon
Women and present it to the instructor
within seven days after the absence, the
absence shall be considered unexcused.
,
Ed b
S
.
d I '
I
' g formakl ' ng U p work
' ".
.
initiative In p anrnn
after an absence. Please note that no un'
excused absence is without penalty. ,
The following regulations governing ex'
cused and un~xcused absences for a)1 stu'
dents have been approved by the faculty.
I
t
e
In
IVI
ua
InVO
d
ve.
H
ust
e
take
th
e
3.
m
omen
f or
one
0 f the
following
reasons:
,
6.
a. Personal illness or emergency medical
or dental appointments.
(1) A written statement from the
colle:ge nurse, the college phy'
sician, or the family doctor or
dentist.
b .~nous
S.
"11
I ,ness
or d ea th
in
the
tlclpatlon
In
other
college
athl,et.1~
activities)
12
contests
when,
(or
re'
There.
IS
no
cut
system
at
In
oro
tat~
equal to one unexcused absence.
h
d '
.b.
It IS his
t, e Instructors
~tu ents
tact
~SpOnsl
~oq'
to makeI li ty up~o work
missed because Qf an excuseq absence. If
he 'does not make up this work;' he will
be penali~ed in his grade.
7., The student may not make up' work
because of an unexcused absence. He
inlme'
dlate family.,
c. Marriage in the immediate family.
d. ~~sence fr?m the ~ampus for par'
T each ers C 0II ege.
4. Unexcused absences are regarded as
prima facie evidence of neglect and indifference on the part of the student and
are so considered in assigning grades.
5. Three tardinesses shall be considered as
1. Excused absence forms may be secured
from the Dean of Men or the Dean of.
.W
If the the
student
not secure
excuse
from
Dean does
of Men
or the hisDean
of
will be penali~edin
excused
absentes.
I
-.one
!'
R
'
.'1'3
his grade
for
For:
example,
allin un-a
three'credit courS'e three unexcused ab,
sences will result in .lowering' the grade
lett~r; four u?excused abs~nces ~ill
~~sult
, failure:
In
expulsion
from
""
class
with
r-1
ASSEMBLY
,
Each Wednesday Il:lorning the entire student
body
meets
in
the
auditorium
for
,CQuncil
qePt
body
.
semesters.
a
be
period of worship and entertainment. The
programs are varied and consist of lectures
by prominent thinkers, musical recitals, plays,
skits, movies, and important announcements.
A committee of students meets with the
faculty sponsors to plan the programs.
."
Every
student
at
Edln~oTo!S
.The
r~qulred
members
are
and faculty
Membership
considered
a
elected
by
and serve
in
very
high
this
name
Student-Faculty
of
group
stutwo
should
honor.
CONSTITUllON
.Revised
1948
ARTICLE I
N
ante
to
the
for
'
this
organi~atiQn
shall
Co-operative
Government
be
the
of
attepd. ~n assembly s,eatlng list will be prepared wIth seats assIgned and attendance
will be checked. The list of absentees will
be fil,ed in th~ office of the Dean of Instructlon. Each unexcused absence automat-
the Edinboro State Teachers College.
ically lowers by one point the total 'accumulation of quality points which the student
has tamed toward graduation.
While
,appreciating
deeply the provinc,e
and.fun~tlons
of the Trustees, College Presl'
dept, Dean oj ..Instruction,
the Dean of
STUDENT
ARTICLE II
Pu
se
rpo
Women; Bursa:r and other officials and facuclycommiltees
a~d me~bers, organi~ed
chiefly for administering the business and instruction of the college, We, the students,
the faculty, and the President ~f; the C~l,
lege, feel that there still remains unoccupied
a large promising field for co-operative ser:vice, Accordingly, we do hereby declare that
the purpose of the Co-operative Government
is to take over increasingly the responsibility
for organi~ing and directing purely student
affairs" t,O co:operate with the proper: college
authoritIes In matters of student welfare,
GOVERNMENT
Student Council
The Student-Faculty Council considers and
enacts much legislation in connection with
campus problems. Probably its most important fuction is the budgeting of the Student-Activity Fund, The Council meets regularly and is always ready to listen to and
,discuss any new proposal for college progress. Council meetings are open to al1Y of
the student body who wish to attend.
14
.15
~
and to seek constantly to make the college
a better agency for developing effective citi~ens and teachers.
AR TICLE V
Membership, Election, Officers
of the Council
Section 1. The Student Faculty -Council
shall be composed of seventeen members,
eight of whom -four
men and four women
-shall
be students elected by the severa.!
classes, a repre~entative from the Reeder
Hall Council, a representative: from the
Haven Hall CAJuncil,a rep~esentative of off-
ARTICLE !II
Membership
The membership of this Co-operative Government shall consist of all students, all
faculty members, and the President of the
Coll~ge.
ARTICLE IV
..campus
men, a representative
General Orgamzatlon
Section 1. The functions of this Co-operative Government shall be distributed as follows:""
(a) legis)ative functions in relation to all
student and student-faculty agencies now existing and to be organi~ed are vested ina
Council, and (b) executive functions, including the veto of any measure passed by
the Council, are ve~ted in the Preeide1)t 0.£
the Colleg~.
..ginning
Section 2. 'the existing stud~~t .-faculty
agencies and studept organi2;ations with faculty sponsors ~re to continue in thei. present f!:lr~ andt~ func~ion as at p.esen.t.u~til
such time as they may. be m~dified either
by vote of the Go~l\cil and approved by the
College Pre~ident or by direction of the
College Presldept.
16
of off-campus
women, a chairman, elected by popular vot~,
a faculty member elected by the faculty, a
faculty member appointed by the President,
the Dean of Men and the Dean of Women.
Section 2. Methods of election:'
To be eligible for election to the Council
students should be outstanding in character
and ability and have a college r~cord of better than a "C" average.
Each class shall elect annually, a~ the beof the first semester, a woman, and,
at the beginning of the second seltlester, a
man, the men and women each to serve for
two semesters...During the first quarter of
the first semester the freshmen class shall
also elect annually a man to represent it for
one semester.
The following method shall be. used to
elect class representatives:
.17
The president of. each class shall appoint
a nominating committee of three which shall
submit at a Ineeting of the class at least two
nominations for each membership oil the
Council. These names shall be posted on the
o/licial bunetin board of the college for one
wt:ek prior to the election. which must be
completed, for the first semester election. b}'
October 1 for the upper three classes and
by the end of the first quarter for freshmen,
and for the second ~emester election, ,by .February 15. From thiS group of nominations.
with or without additional nominations that
may be made f,rom the floor, the. class shall
elect ~y ballot Its two representatives on the
Council,
Other groups shall elect their representatives by popular vote prior to October 1.
The chairman shall be elected in the following manner: As soon as possible after
the opening of the second semester. the
president of the junior class shall appoint
a nominating committee of three, who shall
nominate at least two persons from the
junior class as candidates for the o/lice of
Chairman of the Council. In addition, any
junior may be eligible for this o/lice if a
petition signed by twenty-five students, requesting that his name be placed on the
ballot. be presented to the secretary of the
Council at least fo~ty-eight hours bef.ore the
election, ~ames of all candidates shall be
posted on the o/licial bulletin board at least
twenty-four hours before the election. The
election shall take place at an assembly not
later than February 1S. at which time each"
candidate will speak about his aims or plans
regarding the Studt:nt-Faculty Co-operative
Government. Following the speeches. the
students shall elect the Chairman of the
Council by ballot.
Section 3. Any student vacancy on the
Council shall be filled for the balance of his
term at a special election conducted in the
same manner as herein prescribed for the
regular election or appointment. Nothing' in
this Constitution shall prevent the election
of .any student doing stude,nt teaching in
Ene" or s~all prevent any student from succeedlng himself or herself.
.~ecti?n 4. The ot~er o/li~ers of the Couw
cil. w\1lch shall be vlce-chal~man and a secr~tary. sha~ be chosen annually br the ~ouw
cll from Its stude~t members Immediately
after the new president has taken o/lice.
ARTICLE VI
..
Duties of the Council
Section 1. To initiate. organi~e. and direct.
in co-operation with the faculty. a social program for the entire student body.
Section 2. To integrate, improve. and su-
18
19
r
pervise the organization and activi.tles of all
students and studenwaculty agencies.
Section 3. To act upon submitted reque5-ts
for the organization of any new student or
studenwaculty agency.
Section 4. To provide, as needed, cooperative standing committees such as the
following: House Committee, Publicity Committee, Athletic Committee, etc. These committees may co-operate with purely faculty
committees for the same- purpos~. Thtse
standing committees should have at least five
members (student and faculty) and should be
app.ointed by the Chairman of the Council
from the student and faculty bodies with the
approval of the Council.
Section S. To co-operate with the College
President, the Trustees, or some properly
delegated a\lthority in the assessment, collection, and control of any Student Activity
Fee or othel; fees, or dues that the students,
upon the recommendation of the Council,
may agree by majority vote to assessor pay
to provide for activities, agencies and wel-.
fare .not' adequately ~\lpported by the State;
provided that the said fees or dues are approved by the President of the College ~nd
Board of Trustees, or other controlling
agency.
Section 6. To hold regular meetings once
each month, in addition to special meeting5
20
as. ~~eded when constructIve suggestions or
Criticisms from students of faculty members
shall be investigated and acted upon.
Section 7. To recommend to the faculty
or the President of the College penalties
for specific disciplinary cases which are not
sufficiently serious to warrant possible expulsion or other severe punishment.
Section 8. To provide for at least one
general study assembly each semester for
the purpose of interpreting the work of the
Council and for transacting any business of
general interest to the Student Body brought
b~fore it by the Council, the College President, or a representative of the students or
the facQlty. At such assembly meetings the
Chairman, or, in his absence,the vice-chairman, of the Counci~ shall preside; the s~cretary of the Council shall record the mlnutes.
ARTICLE VII
Powers of the President of the College
Be~ause of the n3Jtureof the office of the
Pre-'ident of the College and his responsibilities to the Board of Trustees the State
Super\ntendent of Public Instr~ctiQn, the
Statt Council of Education.. and the Governor, the President is an ex-officio member
of all co~mittees and to him is reserved the
duty and right of final approval of all acts,
.21
I
,...
I
rules and regulations that may be devised.
or offered.
ARTICLE VIII
Finances
Section: 1. In order to <;o-ordinate and
control the funds of the several studenwaculty activities and organizations either now
existing or that may be created, all funds
belonging to or collected by the several organizatjons, shall, when requested by the
Council, be deposited in and disbursed
through a General Control Fund of which
the President of the College and the Bursar
or other faculty member or members may
be custodians.
S~ction 2. The Bursar or any delegated
shall be published or posted at the beginning
of each college year.
Section 4. To prepare and submit to the
Faculty, the President, and any other interested persons by May 1, a tentative budget
for the succeeding school year of the disbursement of Student Activity Funds; and
to prepare and subm~t to students, faculty,
the President, and other interested persons
by October 1, a final budget for the disbursement of Student Activity Funds. This
duty is to be performed by a committee,
known as the Budget Committee, to consist
of at least three students and two faculty
members appointed by the Chairman of the
Student. Council.
member of the faculty of t~e Co!lege, may,
upon request of the Council subject to the
approval of the President of the College,
keep individual and separate accounts of the
several funds and credits of each organization included within the General Control
Fund as provided for in Article VIII, Section 1. DiSbursements shall be made upon
duly authorized requisitions of each organization.
Section 3. There shall be an annual audit
of the General Control Fund made by an
auditing committee of three, one representing the student body, one the faculty, and
one the President of the College. This audit
ARTICLE IX
..
Ratification and Amendments
Section 1. This Constitution shall go into
effect as. soon, as ratified by the approval of
the President of the College and by a twothirds vote of the fac~lty and student body
present when such vote is taken.
Section 2. This Constitution may b e
amended or revised by a majority vote of
the entire student body and the faculty, provided that said amendment or revision first
be subm!tted in writing to the Council and
the President of the College, approved by
them, and then posted for two weeks.
22
.23
I
,..
REGULATIONS
FOR WOMEN
Section One -Women's
Hours
..B.
1. Regular PermISSIons:
portionately with the hours of wotk
reported as unsa,usfactory.
The
DeanofofallWomen:s
Office
a record
permissions
for keeps
each
A. Regular hours shall be observed by
women students according to the fol.
lowing schedule. Not only must women
students b~ in the dormitory or ot~~~
~tudent r~sldence after these h.ours,
In the pnvate part ~f the resldenc~.
Monday
through
Freshmen
Sophomores
.Juniors
,-"c :
person. Women will be notified individ.
ually when their permissions have all
been taken.
C. Permissions for absences from resi.
dences are granted as follows:
During the day:
Fnday -,
,
.-'
c
1
8:00
8.30
P.M.
P.M.
9:00 P.M.
Ed' b
s:~d~~~~
'.d
may
visit
approved
db'
wlomen s dresl encesd anh
~~~~~d:Y.="Aii..;~~.~:;;...~t;d:~~~ 1~.:~O
o'clock.
Sunday -All
women students 10:00
o'clock.
Regulations concerning special late
permission will be given students
by the Dean of Women.
..short
II. General ProVISIOns:
huslness
fc:;e:ndnsho~s :~ethe l~c~lCthe:~:~:
2. For the night.
A student is required to secure the
written permission of her parents
and of the Dean of Women.
3. Out of town.
Before leaving, except in case of
hikes,of aher
student
permission
parentsmust
and secure
of the
A. Whenever a woman student's name
appears o~ the Dean of Instruction '5
list of students doing unsatisfactory
w~rk, i. e., work below standard, her
perJ!1i-ssfons are to be curtailed
withdrawn
by the Dean of Women
I
.All
Dean of Women; except when go.
ing to her home over the week.
end when a general permission is
granted.
or
in
4. On the campus, bu~ from one's own
room.
an amount at least to correspond pro;
A
24
student
may spend
25
.
Saturday
f'
Cnights
own,
in
a
providing
r~ntlon,
In
'
room
she
other
registers
wrItIng
' ,
Wit' h
t
than
her
her
in-
h e D ean
Violations
It '
0f
SU
.
Women.
Section
I
M
S
.en
A.
tu
d
1m not
me
'
esl
'd
ences:
,
who
m~y
nine
nine
day,
Wednesday,
ment,s
tertaln
ments
the
Thursday
on
returning
from
social
out-of-toV:Jn
escorts
In
their
returning
may
Fri-
Saturday;
only
of
Tuesand
Sunday,
with,
theIr
parlor
Monday,
on
parlor
students
women
and
women
enga.ge-
escorts
enthe
musIC~ay room
residence.
from
entertain
Women
social
such
.
.
there
.
until
M
C
,
D.
their
permission
'
en
are
not
permltte
Haven
Hall
between
an d t h e 1unc h h our.
Men
conduct
"'
accepted
and
women
themselves
ends.
d
guests
in
must
accordance
26,
standards
of
good
always
I
taste.
,
up
for
Officers
-:-
Secretary
S?clal
I~g
late
h
wore-
White
Ha:;elwood
-Emilie
Atwater
Carol
Sundean
-Nancy
-.
Four
are
Shay
Locking
locked
of
at
ten
Women
perm.issions
will
whIch
their
Doors
o'clock
Five
Stud
~
..'
be
admitted
admission
(3)
I
P arents
,.
en.."
h
oin
'
P
an
weekends
27
d b oatlng'
havat
has
..
ermlSSlons
permIssIons
,ome
mmg
ca noemg'
by
students
,
(1
as
of
also
Markham
Shirley
watchman.
Section
Women
IS
P ro
students
bl ems.
those
Evelyn
Captain
n
d
f or
It.,
are:
Chairman-
doors
night
acts
execution
ofstuden
woment
A(ln
~
Tre~urer
~he
the
by
Vice-President'=:'-
Sectio
Council
Council
.
for
semester
Cou,ncil
All,
re-
Hall.
PresIdent
FIre
House
d escn b e d ;
IS
'Council
made
one
'
will
standards
House
body
(2 » S
gw ' mg
with
,
Hall
h ereln '
aven
' The
grante
In
hour
for
H
In
time
.'
to
remain
breakfast
the
.
'I
h
PrIvIleges.
Hall
ons
AdvIsory
C ouncl
e
f su~
-avenH
Haven
g ulati
'
re
d
Sl
0
OSS 0
ree
administrative
elected
'
engage-
guests
e
an
'""
,'eh
late
lOIter
1yo- fl In
with
in
on
o'clock
o'clock
students
are
stay
o'clock
eleven
ten
the
.
d
0 clock.
After
day;
t
'
.
students
resi~en~s
or
R
s
meals.
until
--B.
h The
'
omen
ences
must
d
Men
.,
-Guests
w
In
students
, S resl '
lowing
1,
Two
'
ents
Men
wo~en
Th
S e ct Ion
f
1
In
for' .
the
been
P
( 4) skating
.I~IIIII
~
Section Six
(S) riding in automobiles
(6) visiting away from home or college
depend upon the action of the Dean of
Women as determined by individual requests
from parents. Forms will be sent to parents
for recording their requests.
D
't
M .
ormlory
alntenance Problems
1. Rooms
Assignment to rooms is made by the Dean
of Women or her agent. Keys are procured
from the Office of the Bursar. Rooms must
be kept clean ~nd ready for inspection at
all times. Tacks, scotch tape or nails in
~lIs are not permitted. The electric wiring
18not the type for heating appliances; therefore, electric irons and hot plates are not
permitted.
Damage to furnishings or walls will result
in a fine being charged against the offender.
The minimum charge will be one dollar to
be paid to the College Bursar.
'
Because of the dacnger of accidents, permissions of parents must be granted before
students may ride in automobiles. During
the day all students may ride within the
borough limits if their parents' permission
is in the Dean's office, but after 6:00 P.M.
students must have the additio~al perm~ss~on
of the Dean of Women. SpecIal permIssIon
from the Dean of Women must be obtained
for all trips outside the borough of Edinboro.
.
Women students are not permitted to
leave for home after an evening college function of any kind, except by special written
permission from her parents, which must
be in the Dean of Women's office two days
before the event.
2 S k
.mo
Ing
Fire regulations and the protection of life
and property require that 9tudents do not
smoke in their rooms or elsewhere in the
c<:>l!egebuildings except where special proVISIons are made by the College. .
3. Telephone
Permissions to m~intain automobiles in
Edinboro must be filed on blanks provided
for that purpose by t\le Dean of Women.
No women un~er twenty-one years of age
w:1I be permitted to maintain automobiles in
Edinboro.
~l~ resi~ents of Haven Hall must become
familIar wIth th.e. campus telephone system
andvbe ready, willing and able to. answer the
Ha en Hall desk phone at all tImes.
4. Absence from campus
Before leaving the campus fo
28
.29
.,
,.
.of more than one hour,
and after
a student
is required
to register
destin~tion,
the
and
notebook
desk,
expected
provided
and
upon
time
at
5:30 P.M.,.
her name,
of
the
returning,
return
in
Haven
the
It
T
.
time
of
10:30
Saturday,
urday;
midnight
Pianos
must
hours.
except
vided
heard
may
the
.they
outside
from
P.M.
not
Radios
during
that
are
11:00
are
the
8:00
to
to
9:00
be
played
7:00
A.M.
be played
night
quiet
tuned
P.M.
Callers
and
at
the
at any
hours,
so they
be
11 :00
of the
Guests
of
30
Women's
Office.
.
.
hall
and
.(d)
tlons,
the
as
On
such
other
must
hostess.
register
in
a
not
the
overnight
masculine.
gues.ts
be enterta~ned
In
unless
does
college
(c) The
P.M.
daily
by
special
woman
apply
per-
student
to
the
first
year.
is closed to guests at
11:00 P.M.
Saturday.
evenings
lectures,
of
all
games,
college
movies,
10:00
funcetc.,
which
last beyond
the hours
listed
in A,
all students
must
report
in not later
than
one hour after the close of the function.
7.
A
.
This
,the
the
Charge
for
per person.
ac~ompany
room.
of
guests
with
must
lobby,
they
her
day
time
pro-
cannot
.dormltory
mission
to
room.
Dean
th.e
.
guests
Gue8t
Book.
is fifty
cents
~ill
follow
hostess,
and
acquainting
rests
(b) Fathers
and
wome~
students
of
these
(a) {juests
for overnight
or for the dining
room
should
be introduced
upon
arrival
to
the
I?ean
of W ~men.
Stude?ts
may
have
o,:,ernlght
guests In the dormltor~
Saturday
nIghts
only.
Arrangements
for .lInen
must
be made
before
the
guest arnves.
Every
guest must be registered
with
the Dean
of
Women.
Registration
forms
are to be obtained
.
Sunday.
during
Typewriters
may not be used after
P.M.
excepting
by special permission
Dormitory
Council.
6.
Sat-
official
lodging
guests
their
for
regulations
Overnight
to
A.M.
responsib!lity
these
her
quiet hours
are desirable
and arHouse
action.
Night
quiet hours,
P.M.;
the
with
;
Evening
ranged
by
is understood
that
regulations
governing
th.at
Hall
return.
5. Quiet
except
the
Sewing
sewing
Room
room
is located
on
second
/loor
in
Haven
Hall.
Permission
to
use
this
room
will be granted,
upon
request,
by the
Haven
Hall
House
Council.
Each student
is
responsible
for leaving
the room
and equipment in good condition.
.
~. The
Recreation
Room
This
room,
located
in
31
the
basement
of
.
",
Haven Hall, is ; project of the College Stu-
B. Fire Drill Procedure:
I
dent Council.
..hen
9. OtI.Camp~ .Regulations
..1.
All students living outsIde the dormlt.ones
must have
the 'approval
of the
PresIdent
unless
such students
are living
in their
own
homes..
.'
The
. ences
Housing
the
resl
w ICh CommIttee
h ave b eenhas
0fIia
cla.y.
. list
11 of
d eslg..
d
h.
~ated. as Approved H?uses. Permlssl°!1 to
live
rn
granted,
these
homes
however:
As
IS
in
not
the
.plication blanks are received, approved, and
filed by the Housing Committee.
Women students living in Edinboro in
homes other than their own are expected to
follow, in general, the rules applying to
residents
ordinarily
d bon hcampus. Permission
' d
'
.1
grante
y t e women s ormltory councl s
may be granted by the house mother.
~.
.drIlls
10.
~Ire~egulatlons
A: FIre. SIgnals:
II.
mu5t be. tak.e~ t~ see that. eve~yone fOllOWS
o~ders Imphc~tly. The obJect IS to g.et .all
gIrls .out ~f the. hall safely. Speed IS 1mp.eratlve-.cSuence IS necessary.
32
Wh
serve
.
.
.
held at least
a month.
All FIre
girlsdrIlls
mustareparticipate,
andonce
greatest
care
fire alarm rings:
Close the windows.
2. Turn on the li hts
3. Put on ash~~s~
1
gh'eavy coat.
4.
5. Have a towel in one hand.
6. tlStand
outside
closed
doorto ofstart.
1 captain
gives
signal
room un-
automatIcally
case: of any
other off-campus arrangement, indivi4ual
arrangements are only temporary until the ap-
W
I
I
-33
...
eili crptaln.
gIves sIgnal
e ollowlng
rules:
1. Walk down
the nearest
to
start,
ob-
corridor
on own side to
fire escape or exit (as
ord~red by fire captain).
2. Re~ldents of each floor will wait until
Thl.dents of floor aboye have vacated.
IS prevents congestion on the stair-
way.
.
III .neous.
Miscella
1 .
.FI~e escap.esare to be used only for fire
or In case of actual fire.
2. No
clothing
must b~ put
other
than
on or taken
3. If
leaving
night
notify
the for
floorthecaptain.'
that
from
specified
room.
students m us't
4. The fire chief or Dean of Women will
sound the alarm for fire drills. In case
of real fire, the person nearest the alarm
box should give the signal.
r"'
REGULA nONS ,FOR THE USE OF THE
WOMEN'S DAY STUDENTS' ROOMS
All women who are not living in the
dormitory may study or relax in the Day
Student Rooms, loca~ed in the basement
at the end of Normal Hall, whenever tne.y
do not have a cla.ssduring the day. This
room is open dally from 7:30 A.M. to
6:00 P.M. and Saturdays from 7:30 A.M.
to 12:00 noon.
The parlors of Haven Hall. are open to
all wome~ students: Also available for use
is the SocIal Room In the basement of Haven
Hall, which
dormitory
hours.
is open during the regular
REGULAnONS
FOR
MEN
STUDENTS
.
.
..
I
I
I
dormitories after 7:00 P.M., except when
the.y are escorting women to the campus
resIdences.
.No
Intoxlcat~ng drinks may be brought
Into the dormItory. No men students are
permitted
anywhere,
the use. of
at any tIme,
alc~holic
beverages,
while
they are mat-
controlled by the Reeder Hall House Coun'
cil and the Dean df Men. The House Couw
cil is elected by the men students and cow
riculated at Edinboro State Teachers College.
Any ~isconduct
resu!ting f~om the use of
alcohQlI.c be,,:erages I~ .E~lnboro
.or elsewhere IS subject to dIscIplinary actIon.
sists of one representative of each class.
The main insistence is that behavior be .
in accordance with the accepted standards
of good taste. All men are expected to co-
All men who smoke will use metal ash
trays. For safety reasons, .use of any elec'
trical appliances is not permitted in the dormitory or rooming houses.
Men's regulations for Reeder Hall
operate
wo~en's
be In
in the
are .
the company Qf a woman student. All men
are expected to enter and leave Haven Hall
by the north entrance at mealtimes. Men
must appear in jacket sweaters, sports jackets,
Qr suit coats, all with collared shirts at' each
evening meal Monday through Friday. At
the Saturday evening meal and Sunday noon
~eal shirts wi~h ties must be worn with sport
Jackets or SUIt coats.
Men students are asked to use the Meadville Street walk when returning to the
in resI:'ect to the ~tter.
of all
regulations. No man Is.permltted.to
Haven
evening,
All
.
Hall
L.obb>: until
~fter
6.~0
at whIch
time he IS to be In
34
men maintaining
in ,any subject
~ill
theIr rooms
studYing
through
Friday.
.3S
!
a grade less than "C"
be
by
expected
to be in
9:00 P.M.,
Monday
)
~
I
REGULATIONS
FOR OFF.CAMPUS
MEN
.have
.d
Men living off-campus a.r~. not segregate
in any way from those .IIVI~g on camsus.
They. have a representa.tlve Id the I Stu ebt
Council who helps advise an
sett e pro -uled
one central
office
events can be scheduled.
duty has been delegated
of Student Personnel. No
which women are involved
until all the necessary
lems pertai~ing to the. ~ff-c~mPhs gllup.
Rules applYing to men IIvlng'dn the do ege
dormitory apply to those qutSI e t e orm!'
tory.
REGULATIONS
CONCERNING
S
CARS ON CAMPU
chaperones, hours, etc. have been met and
the approval of the Dean of Women has
been given. Before advertising. any evening
activity, it is necessary to have the activity
recorded on t~e Social Calendar in the
office of the Director of Student Personnel.
.
Students
retaining
cars in
Edinboro
are
in
required to register the cars with the Dean
of Men and to obtain a campus license
sticker. Car permission may be removed at
any time for reckless driving on campus.
RECREATION
f
t
e
asemen
center operates in
Normal
Hall
on
weekda
o~ercrowded,.
y
high
0
evemngs rom:
o.
..
evenings when a major social function or
athletic event is scheduled. Ping-pong, dancing, and cards are featured. This is a p~oject of the Student-Faculty Cooperative
Council.
.
f
6
30
t
8
.
00
P
M
exce
p
t
SCHEDULING SOCIAL ACTIVITIES
To avoid conflict it has been necessary to
36
The Director of Student Personnel, acting
this scheduling
capacity, represents the
College Social Committee and, under its
instruction, seeks to maintain a well-balanced
and satisfactory social program. Permission
for scheduling an event may be denied when
the general Social Calendar or the Calendar for a particular organi~ation seems
ROOM
A tem ora
recreation
h b
p try
where all social
This scheduling
to the Dira~tor
social event in
may be schedrequirements for
seem
'
.
.37
t
academic
0
d.
Iscourage
or when
~he maintainence
standards
In
th
e
ac
the
t
IVlty
college
of
would
In
question.
A form, Student Social Function and
Trips, is to be obtained at either the office
of the Director of Student Personnel or
the office of the Dean of Women, by any
organi~ation planning a major social event.
Th~ form is to be completed and approyed
by the c:>rgani~ationadvisor and returned
to the DIrector of Student Personnel Office
~
at least one ~eek before the date of the.
activity. Failure to comply with this regulation may result in cancellatio? of t~e date;
Assignment
of
rooms
for
meeting
of the College.
..niques
In ~Itlng
the DIrector
or approva
0
e
of Student Personnel;
and the Dean of Men or the Dean of Women at least one week before the initiation
begins.
The initiation program shall include no
activiti~s.?n campus ~uring <;lass~ours and
no activities at any time which disturb the
public in general.
in..The
suchinitiation
a manner
that classroom
may
program
shall be work
conducted
pr~ceed as :usual. Any mode of dress. or any
actlon.s
which
attract
undue
and
of
.
.
.
.
FRATERNITY AND CLUB
INITIATIONS
No physical punishment shall be admiw
istered at any time.
hUb
b
An! dPu~llC 1~1~latlof program Is ta th e
su mltte
sponsor,
.
ana
activity purposes is administered through
the Dean of Ihstruction's Office. Evening
use of any room must be approved by the
President
boro and becomes a teacher will be expect.
ed' to assume leadership in community life
attention
are
undesirable.
I
:
.
.
38
.39
I
activities.
the
In.a
teacher
large
will
be
percentage
expected
to
sponsor clubs and other student groups.
Therefore, it is very important that every
student in college becomes accustomed to
certain
activities and familiar with
of discussion, parliamentary
the tech.
law, rec,
ord keeping, and the general promotion of
student activities. Even if a teacher never
become~:a cl~b s!:,onsor,the ~d:u~ati?nalvalue
~f participation In these activities In college
1S perhaps as great as that of some course
of study. Therefore, it seems advisable that
each
student
becomes
a member
of
some'
club or other activity aside from athletics.
In the College year of 1950-51, the follow~ng plan of extra-curricular activities Will
be In effect:
1. At the beginning of the semester each
student will be given the opportunity to
choose any club or activity in which he is
interested.
2. A club or activity may be set up on
petition of not fewer than fifteen studentS
with
.Student
EXTRA-CURRICULAR
PROGRAM
Every person who graduates from Ediw
school
cases
the
approval
of
the
Committee
on
Activities.
3. All organizations will proVide for regular meetings.
:
i
,...
4. No meeting shall be held without at
least one faculty advisor present.
5. Each club or activity is to choose its
own Faculty Advisor subject to the consent
of the faculty member concerned~nd the apptoval of the Committee on Student Activities. The Faculty Advisor is not to be responsible for planning the program of the
Published hi-weekly by an excellent staff
of students, the Spectator covers all phases
of college life. Cost o~ publication is covere.d. by the studen~ a~tlv~ty fund, and advertlsmg: the paper .Jsdlstrlbuted wIthout extra
charge to all students. ,The Spectator offers
an, excelle.nt °I;'portunlty for students to
' gain experIence In newspaper work.
activity since his relationship i'Sonly advisory.
6. Each activity is to have a Secretary,
whose duty it shall be to record and report
its membership and program as follows:
(a) A membership report to be turned
over to the Chairman of the Committee on
Student A~ti:viti~s early eacb semes~er..,
(b) PartIcIpatIon report of each Indlvld.
ual member,
of the
attendance
d office' b holders.
'
h
at
an
contrI
utlon
to
t
e
prog meetings,
Th '
t .
t
t
th
D
f I
ram.
IS repor
IS
0 go
0
e
ean
0
n.;
st ruc..,on
at th e end 0f th e semester.
( c) A monthly report of the activities
of the club to be given the Chairman of the
Committee on Student Activities.
Blanks for all these reports may be secured from the office of the Dean of Instruction,
The Conneautteean
The Conneauteean, the college yearbook.
published by the Junior class, is an enterprise in which the whole college takes an
active part.
The name "Conneauteean" is derived
from the original name of Edinboro Lake
-Lake Conneauttee,
The b00 k w hIC. h .IS d e fi nI .t e I y a s t u d en t
...
b y a sta ff 0 f stu d ents
enterprIse,
IS
put
out
d
and faculty a vIsors.
Dramatic Club
All students interested in participation in
dramatic activities on campus are eligible
for membership, Those who earn a total of
fifty points in acting and back-stage wOI:k
and who meet certain character and scholastic requirements are eligible for consideration for membership in Alpha Psi Omeg~.
National Honorary Dramatic Fraternity.
The club will produce two. publi~ dr:amatic
programs each year and will assist In the
ACTIVITIES
The Spectator
.~he Spectator's reputat.i«?nfor goo~ journahsm has been a tradItIon at Edlnboro.
40
.
..
r
-~
~--
41
presentation of dramatic presentations of .1
other clubs when requested.
.
Alpha Delta Sorority
The
Iota
The
Sorority
is
ScaRAB
/
The ScaRAB CI~b': is an organization
open to all art students. The program for
this year includes speeches, demonstrations,
films,
several
drawing
social
and
events
painting
Mi.
a Meet ngs a.re usually
onday night.
The College Ensemble
The
College
sessions,
at
.
the
ChrIstmas
Concert,
SprIng
St~dents
d
A
bl
M
~nterest~~
In.
camera
work
I
Special
help
is
given
to
begin-
evening
.
S
Delta
in
the
of women
ba~ed
on
being
ad,
the sorority
is to foster
the
of
all
these
traits
toward
de'
the
in
.
the
P
sorority
.
F
rooms
of
Music
Hall..
.
,
,Upsilon
Chapter of PhI SIgma PI, natIonal
I
professiona! educational f~ate~nity, is a mem'
I
I
~gma
I
ratemlty
ber of a nine-state
organl~atlon
that empha'
si~es the professional
development
of teach,
ers and promotes the spirit of scholarship,
brotherhood, and loyalty to the college. New
I
tIes provIded by the college. In. the baseme~t
of Normal Hall. MembershIp
In the club IS
participate.
Alpha
chapters
achievement of a socially integrated personality. The sorority meets every Monc!ay
Ph
will
limited to tWelve by selecting those who
attend m~etings regularly. Darkroom space
and privileges are extended to students who
the
seven
of the tot~l
enrollment
Th.e
req.ulrements
are
rating
wIth no member
purpose
of
velopment
!
b
find interesting actIvIty In the Photography:
Club. This group meets once each week
a.1\dmak~s use of excellent ?arkroom facili'
of
the
mitted with a "D"..o~
an "F" in. any s~b'
)ect. Character, abilItIes, and socIal attain'
ments are also taken into consideration. The
Mu'
sIca e, an
ssem y programs.
em ers are,
selected from the College Choir.
Th
Ph
e
oto~aphy CI~b
.
1
one'thlrd
students:
scholastIc
group
of men and women singers who perfoI'ln in'
formally for club meetings, social functions,
churches, etc. T~ey also present spec!al num'
bers
I
and
I
is a selected
of
State Teachers Colleges 0.£~en~syl,:,a~ia and
New,,! ork. Its membershIp IS limIted to
every two weeks on
Ensemble
Chapter
one
members are chosen' by the current member'
ship on the b-asis of scholastic standing, so'
cial aptitude, and ability to lead.
..
Kappa Delta Phi Fraternity
I
Kappa
leading
Delta
professional
Phi,
one
and
of
soc~al
the
nation's
frate~nities,
ners as well as to those more advanced.
was formed when the Beta XI Fraternity re'
42
43
r"
ceived a national charter. The members of
this. group are selected by the careful discretlon ~nd t~ought of current members in
conformIty wIth college rules for rushing.
The Kappa J?elta Phi Fraternity was honored by having Mr. Doucette, a member
of the faculty,. elected as National President
of the Fratermty for 1949.
.prerequisite
Delta PhI Delta
Membership in Delta Phi Delta, national
professional and honorary art fraternity, is
limited to those Junior and Senior art students who have maintained an average of
"superior" in art subjects and "good" in
academic work.' The purpose of the fraternity is to further a genuine interest in art,
to recogni:;e scholarship, a~d to promote
professional fellowship. Pledges are chosen
by members with the approval of the art
faculty sponsors.
Mu Kappa Gamma
Mu .Kappa Ga.mma,. the honorar,y music
fraternIty, takes fit? Its .membershIp th?se
students who contrIbute In an outstanding
way to the musical life of the college. Scho- .
larship,
leadership,
musical
ability,
coopera-
Alpha Psi Omega
A chapter of the largest national honorary
dramatic fraternity is maintained at Ediw
boro under the title of the The Gamma
Kappa Cast. Because the requirements for
initiation are very high, an average of only
five students are accepted each year. Member&hip in the Edinboro Players is the first
for consideration for the honor.
Each neophyte in the organi:;ation has excelled in at least one p~ase ?f Dramatic Art
or .has e~rne? fifty pOints In. the fields of
acting, dIrecting and backstaglng work.
Forum Cub
The activities of this organi:;ation include
intercollegia'te debating; panel discussions
given in the college assembly, before community groups, over television station
WICU in Erie, and in club meetings; and
visits with a faculty member to nearby high
schools to speak about college life. The
panel discussions are devoted to current
local, national, and !nterna~ional p':obleis
and range from. su~h toplcsr,as "Shoul~
students marry while In c.ollege. to. Shou
the l!;S.
land?
share her atomIc secrets wIth
.
Eng-
tion, length of service, and participation in
one or m?re musical or~an!:;ations are points
The club meets two evem~gs a month,
usually for an h.our each meeting. Programs
upon
for
whIch
membershIp
44
IS based.
these
meetings
are
45
arranged
so that
~
preparation by the students who ¥e pre'
senting the program will not be t~o time
consuming.
~
Membership in the club is open ~ the
entire student body, and any students who
may be interested are cordially invited to
join.
Beta Beta Beta
Beta Beta Beta the National Biological
Honor Fraternity, 'was installed on our cam'
pus by the national officers February 11,
1950. The purpose of the fraternIty is three'
fold: stimulation of sound scholarship; dis'
semination of scientific knowledge; and pro'
motion of biological research.
Only those colleges and universities that
have high rating are eligible to have chap'
ters. The Biology faculty must be excep'
tionally strong, and the courses and equip'
m,ent must. be adequate to provide a full
.~Iology major..
.To
qualify for membership in this fra'
ternity a student must have an average of
"B'~ or better in all of his biology courses,
and rate above an average grade in all
courses taken in college.
.<?ur
chapter has been designated Alpha
Chi. Twenty students and three Biology
faculty members composed the charter mem'
46
.
bership. M?nthly meet~ngs.are hel~ to dis'
cuss some Important bIologIcal tOpIC.
The College Choir
The College Choir is a choral group
whose repertoire includes sacred and secular
numbers. It presents annually a Christmas
Vesper Service and a Spring Musicale and,
in addition, sponsors each year the appear'
ance of some fine choral groups. Members
are selected by tryouts ear.ly in ea~h sem'
ester. All students wh? like to sing are
urged to tryout for thIs group.
Small Instrumental Ensembles
Small instrumental ensembles will be
formed into trios, quartets, two'piano teams
and other units if students who have talent
will. report ~o M~s.. .Campbell and indicate
an Interest In activIties.
The College Band
All students who are interested in instru'
mental music are urged to join this organi'
~ation. The band's activities during the
paSt schpol year included the .furnishing of
music for athletic contests, both at home
and away, for various assembly programs,
and for the Alumni Homecoming Day
Parade. The college owns many instruments
which are. available for student use.. The
band practIces every Monday from 6.30 to
9:00 P.M.
47
~
,
.J.
The Pershing Rifles
A National Honorary Military Fraternity
was
Lieutenant)
foundedJohn
in J.1894
Pershing
by General
at the Unlv~r(~hen
sity of Nebraska for the purpose of attal~ing
greater
proficiency
In close order
at
Edinboro
State
Teachers
College.
12, the Biology Laboratory, Loveland Hall.
The Canterbury Qub
Cant~rbury Club is an organization
of Episcopalian ~tud.ents, although members
of ot.her denominations are also welcomed
to Join.
Every fourth meeting is a soci~l meeting,
but the rest 0.£ the meetings are giveq
.
fargely
IS
a part of the Compa~y B,S of the Pershing
Rifles at Pennsylvania State College, and
members pledged here auto~atically become
members of the Pennsylvania State Chapter
f .
h
upon trans errIng t ere.
The Al ha Phi Omega Club
p
"
The Alpha Phi Omega IS a national service fraternity, composed of college and Un!'
versity men who are or have been pre'
viously affiliated with the, Boy Scouts.
each candidate for membership .must have:
(1) previous trainil}g in Scouting; (2) a
desire to render s~rvice t? others; (3) a
satisfactory scholastic standing.
48
and former Scouts of all ranks
are eligible for membership.
third
.Meetings
Thu.rsdays
are scheduled
of every for
month
the illfirstRoom
and
drIll
and to cultivate high morale among the
cadets.
..The,
Membership in the Pershing Rifles IS !1mited to those members of the R. O. T. C.
Cadet Corps who have shown a ~igh d.e~ree
of proficiency and interest In Military
Science.
The platoon organization of the Pershin~
Rifles
-Scouts
fiems.
to
~he
rst an
the
dl.scussion
,meetIngs
of.
are
important
scheduled
prob,
for
the
third Wednesdays of every month.
ATHLETICS
i
Men's Athletics
.
...
.The m~n s Interc?lIeglate athletic program
Includes Intercollegiate compe.titio~ in foot,
ball, .basketball, soccer, swimming, golf,
wrestling, track, and tennis.
Intramural Sports
The college has expanded the intramural
programs so that every student will have the
opportunity of participating in his favorite
sport. Besi~es th~ above'mentioned sports,
the college IS equipped for badminton, ping'
i
i
!"
'
'-
49
I
r
'
,
.
t " ""
II '
varsl y. E.In
I~terco eglate competition, is
to maintain a hIgh standard of athletics at
Edinhor.oo It' functions chiefly, therefore, in
connectIon with athletic events.
.Other important events of the year for
thIs club ate the "E" Club dance the annual intramural basketball games; This club
presents. sweaters to, all men earning varsity
lette~s, Jackets to three-year lettermen, and
specIal awards to outstanding athletes.
pong, volleyball, softball, and many others.
W.A.A.
The Wolnen's Athletic Association is a
mem.ber of the Athleti~ Federation of College Women. It also IS a member of the
United States Fi.eld ~aCkey Association. The
type of recreatIon IS carefully chosen for
the complete deyelQpment of each student.
Evet:y woman student, upon entering college, is elected to membership in either the
Phis or the ,Deltas, who make up the national health recreational sorority Phi Delta
Lambda. Throughout the year there is regular intramural competition between the two
groups.
Fall sports, outdoors, consist of field
hockey, tennis -and hiking; winter sports:
skating basketball swimming life saving
badmi~ton, and 'b~w.ling; spri~g. sports, out:
doors: arGhery, tennIS, golf, hiking, ~oftball,
and horseback riding.
.the
The W.A.A. IS governed by a student
council which meets every week to plan and
guide all activities. The Association is based
on a point system. .Awards are p~esented at
the enn of fall, Winter, and sprIng sports.
The "E" Club
The aim and purpose of the "E~' Club,
made up of the athletes who have won a,
50
YOUR CHURCH
h S .
urc
ervlces
The Edinboro Churches offer students a
yriety of religi,ous and social activities. The
.oung. Peoples groups hold weekly meetIngs, dlsc,:,sslo~ groups, suppers,. etc. Many
students S1ngIn the church choIrs 0, serve
~~ u:she:s .thr.oug~out the school year. A
rdlal ~nvltatlon. IS ex:t~nded to .all students
to continue theIr religIous affiliations with
churches here in town.
Ch
i
!
Advent Christian Church
10:00 A.M. Sunday School
11:00 A.M. Mor~ing Worship
~
8:00
P.M.
Everun~
8:00
P.M.
Wednesday,
Service
Pra
yer Service
Baptist Church .
10:00 A.M. BIble School
51
I
!
~
11:00 A.M. Morning Worship.
7:00 P.M. Young People's
8:0~ P.M..
Wednesday, Mid-week..Boarding
Service
Cathohc
ServiCes
10:00 A.M.
Mass-College
Auditorium
Episcopal Church
9:15 A.M. Holy Communion (S~cond
Sunday of the Month)
..the
Worship services once a month In a private home.
.
Meth.odlst
,
.Hall,
.
Presbyterian Church
10:00 A.M.
Church School
11:00 A.M. Morning Worship
7:00 P.M. Young People's Westminster
Fellowship
8:00 P.M. Wednesday, Mid-week Service
GENERAL
INFORMATION
Rooms For Men
Men students will be housed in Reeder
Hall or in any private home that has been
approv~d by the Housing Committee.
Rooms For Women
Women students will be housed in Haven
52
h~s been approved by the Housing
mlttee.
Facilities
Com-
All stud tnts WI
.11b e expected to eat In
.
the College Dining Room. However, other
arrangtments may be made if approved by
College President.
Bus Service
I
Edinboto
is situated
on the
between
Pittsb?rgh
and Erie.
Church.
9.45 A.M. Sund~y School.
11 :00 A.M. Mormng Wo(shlp
White ~all, or any private home that
main bus line
During
the
day and evemng the busses run approXlmately every two hours. Because of the fact
that the schedules are constantly changing,
we shall not attempt to print them. The
,schedule
may be obtained by calling 2481.
I
I
I
I
i
i
I
,.
Book Store
Book~ ~nd ot.her supplies are obtainable
a't Cooper s Stationery Store. It is advisable
to order your books as soon as possible
:after they have been designa,ted by your
Instructors. Each student is expected to own
the text books required in his classes.
..
Mad. Service
The College receIves two mail deliv~ries
e~ch day. Dormitory mail will be delivered
dIrectly to the students' mail boxes there.
53
'-
i
:.-
~
The College offers no service for the pQrchasing of stamp~; ~u~h matters should be
handled by the Individual students ~t the
local post office. Lock boxes at the Edmboro
post office may be secured at the rate of
$'"60 a quarter ...limited
Fire
General
Fire
are
required
drills
Regulations
by
t~e
persons
The
to particIpate.
following
drill
observed:
1. When
windows to
1. Empty
3. Order:
by faculty.
4:
Kee.p
to
procedure
of
the
should
be
..all
the alarm IS given, close
prevent draft,
first floors and basements first.
students to leave first, followed
,.
the
right.
Avoid
..
.
.
la,!,s,
Commonwealth. Signal for drills will not be
a.nnounced and will be given always ~y some
pa.rticular person designated for th~s duty.
The first fire ~a:m is always a. call to the
runnIng
and
rushing.
Responsibility for the ob~ervance of fire
drills and oHler fire regulations falls to all
persons --stQdents, faculty, and employees.
L1ustodians of the various buildings will see
h .
t'
'~n to meet the par'
t at mstruc Ions are gl-y~
'I
d.
tlcu ar nee s me. ach building
i
i
.
.
LaWldry
ironing boards and electric irons in the base'
ment of Haven Hall. The laundry is re'
served for the use of men on Fridays.
..
..As 3; part o.f ~ormltory ser,vlce students
llvmg m..laundry
dormitories
are
permitted
toto have
privileges.
Articles
be
washed
in
a
must
laundry
be
bag
Women's
foot
of the
Students are permitted the use of tubs,
for
securely
steam
i
Monday
I
m?re
mornIng.
than
Thl~
twe~ve
servI~e
pIeces,
mc~udes
IncludIng
no
two
shirts. Laundry IS to be called for Friday.
Laundry ba.gs may be purchased at a.ny
of several stores in Edinboro.
All
dl
.'
,stu
ents Ivlng on the campus are en'
titled
to
seventy,live
of la.undry
bd
. I. cents worth
"
ase on price 1st. For add Itlona
I I aund ry
of
~harge
be
ma.de
55
.
tied
on Wednesday mornings. These are to be
called for on Wednesday after lunch,
Men's laundr~ ba.gsare to ~e in ,the back
entrance to R~eder H~1l by ?me.o clock on
is completed.
54
and
e~pecially
la.undry
ba.gs a.re to be at the
ba.sement
stairs by nine o'clock
the
schedule
Paym~nt
will
Service
color-fast
made
laundry. All bags and articles to be washed
should be cclearly marked with the name of
the owner, Students are advised not to send
fine pieces to the college laundry.
should
when
be consulted.
laundry
work
f
---,
L
~
,
,
\
/JI
r
~
Telephone
Service
i
Telephones on a private College branch
(Edinboro
3301)
are
located
in
5. At the end of th;freshman
~
every
various
~?
semester'
"all-college
thereafter
average
year and
have
not
earned
less
than
places on the campus. Outside calls in Edinbord may only be made by students through
station "78", and ther~ it will be necessary
.to listeddialin "0",
before dialing the number
the directory.
C.
.
CommIttee On Student Employment
H. W. Earlley, Chairman
Lo ans
Long distance calls may only be made
over the pay telephones found in each
dormitory.
~ small loan fund administered by the
Edlnbo.ro Cha.pt~r of the Edinboro College
A~umnl AssoCIatIon is available. Consult the
1?lrector of Student Personnel for informatlon about a loan.
Student Self-Help
-There are a limited number of part-time
pos!t~ons available at the. college, and i~ is
antl.clpate~ that there wpl be a few Jobs
available m the community.
To be eligible for employment a student
must:
1. Be matriculated .as a student either in
a four-year Edmboro course or the
Commercial Art Curriculum,
2. Be boarding at the College Dining
Room.
3. Be rooming on the campus unless
existing facilities do not permit.
4. If a freshman, have scored not below
the 25th percentile on the American
Council On Education Psychology Examination which is administered to all
Edinboro Freshmen,
5:6
.
.
-
57
r
,
SONGS AND
I
CHEERS
Dear Home of College D~ys
Alma Mater
(Old
(Aloha)
Hail to thee, our Alma Mater glorious,
Fresh wreaths we bring to bind thy brow;
Trails past thou has withstood victorious
Never fairer, never statelier than now.
Dear home of college days so great and free,
Thy sons and daughters will be true to thee.
Thy love we'll cherish and thy fame declare,
Loyal to thee, and to thy name so fair.
0 Edinboro, Edinboro,
...
We revere thee, love thee, serve thee ever.
That
Sweep the Campus
Winds that sweep the campus,
Winds that stir the ~ree,
Sweep around her towers
Standing calm and still
Through the Winter's darkness,
Through the summer shine,
Bear her our blessings
Through glad good will.
58
Chorus
So raIse your voIces all, and honor gIve,
Her fame and glory may they ever live.
Through joy and sorrow as the years go by,
And with a constancy that cannot die.
While class speeds class
As swift years pass,
To thee our hearts are true.
Winds
Refrain)
.
.
Pep Song
Edinboro College, we will sing to you
We'll defend your standards
In whate'er we do.
"Hail, hail, the gang's all here,"
Round thy colors bright
.We'll
stick together for the
Crimson and White.
~i
c
t
c,
.59
I
;
.J
r
.
..
.
.
Hand Me Down my Bonnet
Hand me down my bonnet,
Han d me d own my sh aw,I
Hand ~e down my c:alico dress,
I'm
going
to
the
Cahco
First she gave me honey,
Then she gave me cake,
And then she gave me gingerbread
For kissing her at the ga,te.
.
0
as we go marching,
And the band begins to play
You can hear the people shouting
"Edinboro College wins today."
Victory Song
Id R d R .d
On you 0
e
al ers
Beat those darned invaders
And march on to Victory.
Down the floor we'll thunder;
We'll put then asunder
And
match
on to Victory.
Dribble,
dribble,?~ibble
.
down
the
Onward, onward piling up the score.
Sun will shine tomorrow;
For we've won E. S. T. -C.
floor.
,
Dick RockwEll 43
Jack Alton '44
60
Hello
.Two
Ball.
.
~
.61
11
Hello Cheer
(opponent), Edinboro says
" H eIIo. " ,
bits, four bits,. six bits, a dollar;
Everyone
and
from
holler!
Edlnboro,
15 Rahs
Rah, rah, rah-rah-rah!
Rah, rah, rah-rah-rah!
.Rah, rah, rah-rah-rah!
Ye~h, Team!
Yea Team
Y ea team, sock It., to em.
Yea team, sock it to 'em.
Yea team, sock it to 'em.
Team, sock it to 'em.
Dynamo
,
Dynam?, let ~ go,
DynamIte, let s fi~ht,
Dy~amo,
Let
s
go,
Dynamite,
let
s fight!
Rah Team
Rah team, fight, fight!
Rah team, fight, fight!
Rah team, fight, fight!
Fight! Team! Fight!
stand
up
C
c
~
~
locomotive,
Skin 'em alive.
Edinboro Special
Fight, fight, fight, fight
E-S-T-C
Fight, fight, fight, fight
E (clap three times) fight
(clap three times) fight
(clap three
three times) fight
fight
(clap
fight
fight
fight
fight
E-S-T-C
Fight, fight, fight!
Give It To 'Em
.
I
I
,I
,
Give
'em
Sock it to 'em
M
'
d
ow em own,
Come on, Edinboro, .(pause)
Let's go to town.
62
l
,
,
get
h
steam.
h
G
I
e JIve.
,
steam
Team, team, team.
Smear 'em
Beat (opponent)
..
DiVIded Team
TE -AM
TE AM
TE -AM
Team, team, team;
Let's Go Raiders
Let 's go raiders,
Let's
L
' go raiders
.d '
et s go ral ers,
Beat 'em.
63
er
'
Steam
toget
11
e team
a s on,
rea Edinboro,
y ep to
Come
S
T
C
E
S
T
C
Locomotive,
..et
t
I
B-E-A-M
th
eve_got
h
h
the
'
on
t
Th
That's
W
'
to
We've got the T-E-A-M
Locomotive Steam
get
I
er,
Jive Cheer
C ALE
ND A R
September. 1950
1950 -1951
/./
~
11. Mon.
Registration of freshman students
Freshman Mixer Party College Gymnasium -8:00
P.M.
12 Tues. '
..Regist rat.Ion 0f upper-c I assmen
Freshman Assembly -22.
College f.1;Iditor~um-9:00
A.M.
Freshman OrIentatIon -7:30
College Auditorium'~
1:30 P.M.
All College Dance College Gymnasium --8:30 P.M.
13. W e.d
14.
15.
Thurs.
Fri.
16. Sat.
.l~
Faculty-Student Re~eptlon and Dance -+
College Gymnasium -8:30
P.M.
17. Sun.
Affilia~ion of students with churches of
Edmboro
18. Mon.
64
.
.
.
..
.
.,
.September,
19$0
19. Tues.
W.A.A. Tea -4:00
20.
P.~.
Wed.
Assembly -Michael
M. Dorizas, lecture
21. Thurs.
Secondary School Curriculum Revision
Committee for Northwestern District
Fri.
All College Sing at Edinboro Lake P.M.
23. Sat.
Foot~all -California
2.00 P.M.
24.
at Edinboro -
Sun.
25.Alpha
Mou.Delta Picnic
26. Tues.
27. Wed.
A ssembly
28. Thurs.
.
Mus'c Club Picnic at Green POInt 7:30 P.M.
65
i
I
,..-
~
September, 1950
29.
Fri.
:-~~
..
.
.
.October,
1~50
7.
Y.W.C.A. Big and Little Sister Tea -Freshman
Haven Hall -2:30-4:30
P.M.
30. Sat.
Football -Edinboro
at Clarion
October, 1950
1.
Sun.
2.on.M
3. Tues.
Soccer -Edinboro
at Westminster
College
W.A.A. .color rush parade and
Phl'Delta game
Wed.
4.
Assembly
Thurs:
6
F.
5.
I
Ii
.fl.
Freshman Tests
Soccer -Grove
at Edinqoro
I
I
City Coll~ge
66
,
Sat.
':,:.,;;;':"i:'c
c.
Tests
Football -Edinboro
at Slippery Rock
Amateur Night -College
Auditorium 8:00 P.M.
8.
Sun.
9.
Mon.
10. Tues.
Soccer -Edinboro
11. Wed.
Assembly -All
12. Thurs.
13. Fri.
Soccer -Thiel
14. Sat.
at Allegheny College
American Male Chorus
at Edinboro
Football --Edinboro
at Indiana
Card Party at Haven Hall -7:30
15. Sun.
16. Mon.
W.A.A. Fall Meeting -4:00
17. Tues.
Soccer -Slippery
18. Wed.
P.M.
"
P.M.
Rock at Edinboro
6'7
f
:
..
October, 1950
I
.
I
19.
Thurs,
F ..Football
20.
rl.
,
Soccer -Edinboro
~
at Indiana
21. Sat.
Homecoming Day
Alum~ae -Varsity
Hockey game -::,"
10.45 A.M.
Football ~ Thiel at Edinboro
E-Club Ball -College
Gymnasium ~
.22.
111
October, 195(} ,
'
"
,
28.
Sat.
-Brockport
M~squerade
Party
at Edinboro
Gymnasium -8:00
29. Sun,
30. Mon.
Soccer -Wheaton
31.
,
--College
P.M.
at Edinboro
Tues.
"~""";
8:30 P.M.
Sun.
November, 1950
Haven Hall Open House
23. Mon.
Alpha Delta Founder's Day
1, Wed.
Assembly
2. Thurs.
24. Tues.
25. Wed.
Soccer -Kent
State at Edinboro
(Pending)
Charles Laughton -College
3, Fri.
4, Sat.
Football -Edinboro
at Mansfield,
Square Dance 7C College ~ymnaslum 8:00 P.M:
Auditorium
26.
-8:15
P.M.
Thurs.
5, Sun.
6.
27. Fri.
Haven Hall Tea -2:30
66
-4:30
Mon.
7, Tues.
Soccer ~ Edinboro at GoroveCity Collegc
69
..
.
r
November, 1950
,
8.
21.
Assembly
9. T~urs.
:.
23.
I
Thurs.
National
SectIonal
12.
13.
Field Hockey -Great
Tournament
Lakes
24.
Thurs.
Fri.
18.
Sat.
Hockey
"
"
Tournament
'
FIeld
Hockey
Tournament
25. Sat.
National Field Hockey Tournament
14. Tues.
15. Wed.
Assembly -Dramatic
16.
Field
Fri.
..
NatIonal
Sun.
Mon.
17.
~
22. Wed.
S
.at.
.26.
~
Club Program
.
.
.
.
Harvest Ball -College
8:30 P.M.
19 Sun
Gymnasium -
..
20
Tues.
Thanksgiving Recess Begins at the
Close of Classes
10. Fn.
W.A.A:
'
-~
Wed.
11
II
November, 1950
M
.on."
One Act Play .To~rnament in
College Audltonum
70
Sun.
27. Mon.
Thanksgiving RecessEnds at 8:00 A.M.
28.
29.
'
Tues.
Wed.
Assembly
30. Thurs.
,,!', ",0,',:,
D
ecem
b
er,
1. Fri.
'2.
1950
"
",.'1"
...'-
Sat.
I
71!
i
!
.J
-December, 1950
".
3.
Sun.
4.
Mon.
5.
Tues.
'-Dec:ember,'1950
,
16. Sat.
"Mistletoe Hop" -College
,
8:30 P.M.
17.Christmas
Sun.
Vespers by College Choir -
6. Wed.
Art Exhibit
Basketball -Allegheny
7.
Thur~.
8.
FrI..W.A.A,
Gymnasium
at Edinboro
4:00 P.M.
18. Mon.
.Alpha
Delta C~ristmas Party
'
.19.
9. Sat.
Card Party at Haven Hall ~
7:30 P.M.
10: Sun.
11 .
.on.M
Tues.
presentation
of guest
awardsspeaker,
-4:00 and
P.M.
meeting,
Women's Dormitory Christmas Parties
20. Wed.
Assembly -Llord's
12.ues.
T
Basketball -Fredonia
13. Wed.
Assembly --College
'
at Edinboro
Choir
72
Christmas Recess begins at Noon
22.
23.
Fri.
Sat.
24.
Sun.
25.on.M
26. Tues.
14. Thurs.
15. Fri.
.27.
The hanging of the green In Haven Hall
Puppets
21.
Wed..
,
73
,
,..December, 1950
.January,
1951
.28.
Thurs.
10. Wed.
29. Fri.
30. Sat.
31.
Assembly
11. Thurs.
S"
un.
..
January, 1951
1.
Mon.
2.
Tues.
3.
Wed..
Christmas Recessends at 8:00 A.M.
No Assembly
4. Thurs.
5. Fri.
6.
Sat.
Swimming Meet -Westminster
.
.
12. Fri.
13.
Sat..
14.
Sun
15. Mon.
16. Tues.
17. Wed.
~o Assemb!y
Fmal Exammations
18. Thurs.
First Semester Ends at Close of Classes
19. Fri.
20. Sat.
Basketball -Edlnboro
at
Edinboro
21.
Sun.
22.
Mon.
8.
Mon.
23.
Tues.
Tues.
Basketball--Slippery
74
at Alliance
Sun.
7.
9.
i
."
I-
Registraiton of Freshmen for
Second .Semester
Rock at Edinboro
.75
.)
I
January, 1951 .-February,
~
24. Wed.
Registration of Upper Classmen for
Second Semester
25.
Thurs.
Swimming
Meet
--Edinboro
1951
Swimming
Meet
at Edinboro
4,
Sun.
26. Fri.
27. .Sat.
Basketball -Edinboro
5.
6.
7.
Mon.
Tues.
Wed.
.Baldwin
--,-.;'::,;:;:'
Feb ruary, 1951"
1.
Thurs.
F
-
-
at Slippery Rock
"
Assembly
-Buffalo
at Edinboro
8.urs.
Th
9. FrI,
Wrestlit;lg Match--Edinboro
Bowling Green
10. Sat.
Swimming Meet -Edinboro
Wallace
Wrestling: Match --Edinboro
Baldwm Dan~e
Wallace
Freshman
-College
8:30 P.M.
76
'
at Indiana
-Brockport
Basketball -Edinboro
P.M,
28 Sun
..Basketball
29. Mon.
30. Tueg'...
Basketball -Clarion
at Edinboro
31. Wed.
Assembly -pr.
Ar~ur M. ~:arding,
"Glimpses of Other Worlds.
Swimming Meet -Buffalo
at Edmboro
11
.
Fri.
Basketball -Edinboro
3. Sat.
at
at Indiana
';;,;;,
2.
W.A,A.
Grove Winter
City College
,Sports Party -,
7:30,10:00
,
---:,!:;;
77
at
~t
at
,
GymnasIUm
"
'-
~
February, 1951
,
February, 1951
--II,
Sun,
M
I honD
o 1
R h P
,A
p a eta us
arty
13, Tues.
14. Wed.
22, Thurs,
23, Fri,
Basketball --Alliance
at Edinboro
24, Sat,
Swimming Meet ~ Youngstown
at Edinboro
Swimming Meet -Allegheny
at Edinboro
15. Thurs.
.26.
Basketball -Edinboro
at California
16. Fri.
Basketball -Edinboro
at Clarion
25.
12
17. Sat.
Swlmmm.g
..
M eet
.
S1
-.Ippery
Sun.
Mon.
27. Tues.
Basketball -Edinboro
28. Wed.
As~emb~y
SwImmIng
Meet -Grove
at Edinboro
Rock
at Edmboro
W.A.A. Intercollegiate Swimming Meet
18. Sun.
19. Mon.
20. Tues.
21. Wed.
Assembly
Swimming Meet -Edinboro
at Thiel
.Wrestling
Match -Waynesburg
at Edinboro
78
at Thiel
:,;;'f':i;';,':;:
City Coliege
March, 1951
1.
2.
Thurs.
Fri.
Basketball -California
3.
Sat.
Penn. Ohio Swimming -away
Card Party and Dance College Gymnasium -8:00
.:'
i
at Edinboro
'
P.M.
79
)
~
Marcil;
1.951
4.
5.
Sun.
Mon.
Mu Kappa Gamma Initiation7.;30 P.M.
6. Tues.
Basketball ~,Edinboro
at Grove City
7. Wed.
Assembly
8.
9.
-~';;~e¥j
16.
Fri.
Easter Recess Begins at the
Close of Classes
17. Sat.
18. Sun.
19. Mon.
T hurs.
20.ues.
.T
Fri.
21.
S
10.
March, 1951
22.
Wed.
Th
urs.
,.
at.
W.A.A. Intercollegiate Sports Day -23.
2:00 -5:30 P.M.
c
Music 'Club "Dance -College
Gymnasium -8:30
P.M.
11. Sun.
12.on.M
Alp'ha Delta Pledge Service
13. Tues.
14. Wed.
Assembly ~ Dramatic Club Play
15. Thu~.
Three-Act Play iriCollege Audit:Jri~-8;15 P..M.
80
24.
')5
~.
Fri.
Sat.
S
un.
26. Mon.
27. Tues.
28E
.Wed R
aster ecessE nd s at 8:00 A..M
Assembly , William Hacker, Pianist
29. Thurs.
30. Fri..
Assembly -Bert
Harwell,
American Audobon Society
31. Sat.
.
81
~
r
I
April, 1951
-":'
1.
2.
April 1951
'c""c"':
~Sun~
Mon.
14. Sat.
Talent Show -College
8:00 P.M.
15. Sun.
3.
Tues.
4.
Wed.
16. Mon.
Assembly
17. Tues.
5.
6.
Thurs.
Fri.
Art Conference
7. Sat.
Art Conference
Scarab Club Dance -College
Gymnasium -8:30
P.M.
8.
Sun.
9. Mon.
10. Tues.
11. Wed.
Assembly -Forum
Club Program
12. Thurs.
Northwestern Pennsylvania Council for
Social Studies Artnual Conference
13. Fri.
Haven Hall Tea -2:30'
4:30
"'82
18. Wed.
Assembly -Edinboro
19. Thurs.
20. Fri.
21. Sat.
Bowery Brawl-
Auditorium -
Choir
College Gymnasium-
8:00 P.M.
22.
Sun.
23.
Mon.
24.
Tues.
25. Wed.
Track Meet -Edinboro
Grove City College
26. Thurs.
Track Meet -Edinboro
Grove City College
83
at
at
April, 19S1
May, ~9S1
-
27.n. F .9.
28.
Wed.
Assembly
Track Meet -Allegheny
Sat.
29. Sun.
30 .on.
M
Golf -Allegheny
-
W.A.A.
4:00
at Edinboro
1
.
T ds.
Wue
2.
e.
and
Presentation
of
Fri.
Tennis -Edinboro
19S1
at f.,lIegheny
12.Junior'
Sat. Senior Prom -8:30
13.
P.M.
Assembly -Virginia
Davis,
Portraits in Song
Track Meet -Edinboro
at Slippery Rock
3. Thurs.
Spring Concert -College
Auditorium -Tennis
8:00 P.M.
4. Fri.
W.A.A. Dance -College
Gymnasium 8:30,11:30
S. Sat.
Archery Meet -1:30
P.M.
16. Wed.
Assembly ::.- Recognition Day'
6. Sun.
7. Mon.
17.
T hurs.
18.
Fri.
8.
.
.
Tues.
,
84
Awards
P.M.
10. Thurs.
.'11.
.May,
Tea
Triangular Meet
.
Sun.
14. Mon.
IS. Tues.
Match -Grove
City College
at Edinboro
W.A.A. Intercollegiate Telegraphic
8S
-./
r--
May, 1951
MEMORANDA
I'
1~~
Haven Hall Tea for Senior Women 2:30' 4:30 P.M.
20. Sun.
21. Mon.
22. Tues.
23. Wed.
24. Thurs.
25. Fri.
26. Sat.
Alumni Day
Dinner -College Dining Room 12:30 P.M.
President's Alumni' Senior Reception 3:30 P.M.
27. Sun.
BaccalaureateServices-College
Auditorium -3:30 P.M.
28. Mon.
Commencement
-College
10:00 A.M.
86
Auditorium 87
-
.1950 * CALENDAR'
* 1951
~
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.
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SEP 3 ;
;
6 ;
~:
MAR ~
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
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24252627282930
5
6 ;
8
9 10
1112 13 14 15 16 17
18192021222324
25262728293031
OCT
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
891011121314
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22232425262728
NOV 293031
---1
2 3 4
APR
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
891011121314
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22232425262728
MAY 2930
.-1
2 3 4 5
567891011
6789101112
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
19202122232425
20212223242526
2627282930
-.2728293031
-OEC
1 2
3456789
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25262728
29 30
.IAN 31
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2 3 4 5 6
JUN.
JUl
78910111213
14 15 16 17 18 1920
21222324252627
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3
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20
27
4
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