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Young Speakers Divide Honors 4~hrm * if -m * Roaringcreek, Briar C-rcckj and Sugarloaf Pupils Are Winners Roaringcreek, Briar Creek and Sugarloaf pupils copped first places Saturday in the annual speaking contest of the Columbia County schools, held 'in the College auditorium before a good sized audience. Lois Adams, of Briar Creek, won the third and fourth grade contest; Geraldine Kile, of Sugarloaf, the first and i second grade event; Emory Rarig, oi Roaringcreek, in the fifth and sixth i grades, and Kathryn Hufnagle, o \ Roaringcreek, in the seventh anc ???eighth grades. The judges were Mrs. Harriet Kline, I Miss Alice Johnston and Miss Dorothy Christian, and the tellers were Fred Aten, Edwin Kramer and Helen Sees! Competition was unusually keen, bu'1 a few points separating the winners. | The summaries: * Seyeiith and Eighth Grades First.???Joseph Maurer, Roaringcreek -Give Us Men???; second, Betty Grasley Briar Creek, ???A Message of Peace??? | ??? third, Reginald Remley, Orangeville I ???Americans All???; Eloise Kline, Madi son, ??????Americans All???; Verdella Ellis Greenwood, ???Give Us Men???; Hale Mar shall, Sugarloaf. >???Work"; Junior Leh man, Mifflin, ???Work???; Ruth Mauser Main, ???Give Us Men???; Margaret Les inefsky, Beaver, ???Americans All.??? Teachers of the three winners were {respectively, Kathryn Hufnagle, Anns A. Girton and Kenneth Merrill. Fifth and Sixth Grades First. Emory Rarig. Roaringcreek j ???The Treasure of the Wise Men,??? E I Kathryn Hufnagle. teacher; second 'Ruth ??? Stiner, Briar Creek, ???Speak Gently,??? Dorothy J. Jon&s. teacher: 1 third. Clair Bardo, Madison, ???Speak Gently.??? Edwin M. Kreamer, teacher: ??? Betty Singley. Main, ???Speak Gently???: j QaUroknnis. ,Su.??arloaJL ItK ville, ???Famous Names,??? Elsie M. Lewis, teacher; Rudolph Kitchen, Oranges township, ???Where Do Our Years Go???; Lois Slusser, Mifflin, ???The Brown Thrush???; Julia Freas, Greenwood, ???My Playmate???, Muriel Bauman, Main, ???We Thank Thee???; Isabel D. Bolinsky, Beaver, ???An Arbor Day Tree???; Leah Plastow Sugarloaf, ???The Brown Thrush???n| VTary Beaver, Roaringcreek, Tne book! of Winter.??? First and Second Grades First, Geraldine Kile, Sugarloaf, ???At the Zoo,??? Geraldine H. Follmer, teach- ii er; second, Martha Stiner, Briar Creek, J ???Lost,??? Dorothy J. Jones, teacher; | third, Neiman Derr, Main, ???At The | Zoo ??? Dorothy Johnson, teacher; Randall???Baker, Beaver, ???The Swing???; Jean Rarig, Roaringcreek, ???The Swing???; El-1 mer Kline, Orange township, ???Oh Look . at the Moon???; Arwilda Love, Madison, | ???Lost???; Barbara Baker, Greenwood, I ???Oh, Look At the Moon???; Philip Ger- | asimoff, Mifflin, ???At the Zoo???; Joanne -Parse'll, Orangeville, ???Oh, Look At the Moot). sg Tennis Team Wins Opener W/f^ HuskiH Triumph Over Millersville By 7 to 2 On Saturday -Bloomsburg State Teachers College tennis team opened its busy 3937 cam-; paign with a decisive 7 to 2 victory at! Millersville on Saturday afternoon. 1 Considering the fact that three of) the Husky team were making their! varsity debut and that the local racquet wielders had practically no outside practice prior to the match, the work of the lads coached by John ( Koch was exceptional. Bill Strawinski, Harrisburg; Walter ; Withka, Simpson and, Hopkins, a Frosh from Lost Creek, are new men on the Huskies. Strawinski played number one position to win handily p I while both Withka and Hopkins wont 'singles matches and lost their i in a long three set match that for spec-1 Itator interest was the best of the aft- j! jernoon. Zalonis, Gering and Smethers, vet! erans on the team, all did nice work. Singles Strawinski, Bloomsburg, defeated | Buckwalter, Millersville, 6-1, 6-1. I Zalonis, Bloomsburg, defeated Mill; er, Millersville, 6-2, 6-4. Smethers, Bloomsburg. defeated Shindler, Millersville, 6-2, 6-2. Garman, Millersville, defeated Ger| ing, Bloomsburg, 6-4, 3-6, 6-3. i Withka, Bloomsburg, defeated Wil- I liams, Millersville, 6-1, 6-2. Hopkins, Bloomsburg, defeated Mor- I gan, Millersville, 6-0, 6-1. Doubles I Strawinski and Zalonis, Bloomsburg, | defeated Buckwalter and Shindler, ' Millersville, 7-5, 3-6, 6-3. Gering and Smethers, Bloomsburg, !] defeated Miller and Garman, Millers- I ville, 6-4, 6-0. Thorpe and Morgan, Millersville, defeated Withka and Hopkins, 6-3, 4-6, 110-8. ! Tennis Team Wins Again j Sweeps Every Match in Contest With Susquehanna On Local Courts Bloomsburg Stale Teachers College | tennis team defeated Susquehanna; University here yesterday for the I Huskies??? second triumph of the sea-1 son and the first on the home courts.u The margin was 9 to 0 but the Crusader racquet wiciders gave Bloomsburg more of a battle than the score would indicate. Susquehanna, coached by Amos Alonzo Stagg Jr., a Big Ten tennis champion in his college days, is better than last year and improving rapidly. The Crusaders are definitely on their way up in the sport. The Huskies of Coach John Koch ployed steady tennis all the way. One thing that has shown prominently in the early matches is that the members of the Husky team have staying qualities. They are going to serve I "Bloomsburg in good stead in matches which lie ahead. singles Strawinski, Bloomsburg, defeated Hostetler, Susquehanna, 6-0, 6-1. Zalonis, Bloomsburg, defeated Sklanhki, Susquehanna, 7-5, 6-4. Smothers, Bloomsburg. defeated ??????laksys, Susquehanna, 6-3, 6-4. Goring. Bloomsburg. defeated Keim. .Susquehanna. 6-2, 6-2. Withka. Bloomsburg, defeated Gav- Susquehanna, 6-3, 6-0. Hopkins. Bloomsburg, defeated Wiliams, Susquehanna, 6-2, 6-4. Doubles Strawinski and Gering. Bloomsburg, defeated Hostetler and Sklanski, Susquehanna, 6-2, 6-4. Smetbers and Zalonis, Bloomsburg, defeated Keim and Raksys, 6-0, 6-1. Withka and Hopkins, Bloomsburg, defeated Gaver and Schuck, Susqueianna. 4-6. 6-3. 6-?. _J FANNING !+ ??? /^7 Bloomsburg State Teachers College | imile relay team, which will perform | in the Penn Relay Carnival at Frank-1 lin Field, Philadelphia, on Saturday : *drew number six position in a field of Ififteen in the mile relay for the teachers college championship of Amreica. The field averages around half the * number of entries and number six po- ] Isition in the fin: drawing ought to give Coach George C. Buchheit???s Huskies a pretty fair spot. There are six Pennsylvania schools I lin the event, Bloomsburg, West Ches- | iier, Lock Haven, Shippensburg, Che- iaey and Philadelphia. Here are the drawings for the relay I ??as announced by Penn Relay Carnival f officials: Pole, West Chester; 2, St. I Paul Normal; 3, Savage Normal; 4,1 I Bowie Normal; 5, Montclair Teachers; | |5, Bloomsburg Teachers; 7, Miner! I Teachers; 8, Michigan Normal; 9. Phil-j, iadeiphia Normal; 10, Lock Haven F Teachers; 11, Tuskegec Institute; 12, | I Cortland Normal; 13, Shippensburg | STeachers; 14, West Michigan Teachers; | 115, Cheyney Teachers. In the years that Bloomsburg has j* |been in the event the Husky quartet [' ??? has always finished well up in the | field. The boys this year are after \ ???ictory but competition in the event | s keen and it is one of the fastest | pniles in the carnival. something To Think About Shippensburg and East Stroudsburg |l'eachers College track and field teams, both to meet the Huskies later in the Reason, clashed at Shippensburg over be weekend and Shippensburg won 76 to 50, taking nine of the fourteen events and tying in another. East Stroudsburg is here a week from Friday and Bloomsburg is down in the Cumberland Valley to clash with Shippensburg the following Tuesday. The thing that is of vahie to the Huskies is the marks set in the dual meet. Here they are and the probability is that better ones will be set in the later season matches but some of those made Saturday are pretty good: Javelin???lB4 feet, 71-2 inches; 440 yard sprint???s 2.6 seconds; mile run-4:46; high jump???s feet, 9 inches; 100- yard dash???lo.2; feet, 9 inches; 120-yard high hurdles???lB seconds; 880 yard run~2:oB, discus???l 23 feet, 71-2 inches; polt vault???lo feet; broad jump???2l feet, 2 inches; two mile run???ll:3o; 220-yard dash???23:B 1-2 seconds; 220 yard low hurdles???27.B Tondf |
Object Description
Title | Scrapbook Page 2336 |
Headlines |
Young Speakers Divide Honors Tennis Team Wins Opener Tennis Team Wins Again FANNING |
Description | Page from scrapbooks, consisting primarily of local newspaper articles, compiled by library staff at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College |
Publisher | Morning Press |
Date | 1937-04-19; 1937-04-20 |
Type | Newspaper |
Format | image\jpeg2000 |
Identifier | ScrapbookPage2336 |
Source | Microfilm |
Language | eng |
Rights | Copyright held by The Press Enterprise Inc., Bloomsburg, PA |
Description
Title | Scrapbook Page 2336 |
Headlines |
Young Speakers Divide Honors Tennis Team Wins Opener Tennis Team Wins Again FANNING |
Description | Page from scrapbooks, consisting primarily of local newspaper articles, compiled by library staff at the Bloomsburg State Teachers College |
Publisher | Morning Press |
Date | 1937-04-19; 1937-04-20 |
Type | Newspaper |
Format | image\jpeg2000 |
Identifier | ScrapbookPage2336_0001.jp2 |
Source | Microfilm |
Language | eng |
Rights | Copyright held by The Press Enterprise Inc., Bloomsburg, PA |
Transcript | Young Speakers Divide Honors 4~hrm * if -m * Roaringcreek, Briar C-rcckj and Sugarloaf Pupils Are Winners Roaringcreek, Briar Creek and Sugarloaf pupils copped first places Saturday in the annual speaking contest of the Columbia County schools, held 'in the College auditorium before a good sized audience. Lois Adams, of Briar Creek, won the third and fourth grade contest; Geraldine Kile, of Sugarloaf, the first and i second grade event; Emory Rarig, oi Roaringcreek, in the fifth and sixth i grades, and Kathryn Hufnagle, o \ Roaringcreek, in the seventh anc ???eighth grades. The judges were Mrs. Harriet Kline, I Miss Alice Johnston and Miss Dorothy Christian, and the tellers were Fred Aten, Edwin Kramer and Helen Sees! Competition was unusually keen, bu'1 a few points separating the winners. | The summaries: * Seyeiith and Eighth Grades First.???Joseph Maurer, Roaringcreek -Give Us Men???; second, Betty Grasley Briar Creek, ???A Message of Peace??? | ??? third, Reginald Remley, Orangeville I ???Americans All???; Eloise Kline, Madi son, ??????Americans All???; Verdella Ellis Greenwood, ???Give Us Men???; Hale Mar shall, Sugarloaf. >???Work"; Junior Leh man, Mifflin, ???Work???; Ruth Mauser Main, ???Give Us Men???; Margaret Les inefsky, Beaver, ???Americans All.??? Teachers of the three winners were {respectively, Kathryn Hufnagle, Anns A. Girton and Kenneth Merrill. Fifth and Sixth Grades First. Emory Rarig. Roaringcreek j ???The Treasure of the Wise Men,??? E I Kathryn Hufnagle. teacher; second 'Ruth ??? Stiner, Briar Creek, ???Speak Gently,??? Dorothy J. Jon&s. teacher: 1 third. Clair Bardo, Madison, ???Speak Gently.??? Edwin M. Kreamer, teacher: ??? Betty Singley. Main, ???Speak Gently???: j QaUroknnis. ,Su.??arloaJL ItK ville, ???Famous Names,??? Elsie M. Lewis, teacher; Rudolph Kitchen, Oranges township, ???Where Do Our Years Go???; Lois Slusser, Mifflin, ???The Brown Thrush???; Julia Freas, Greenwood, ???My Playmate???, Muriel Bauman, Main, ???We Thank Thee???; Isabel D. Bolinsky, Beaver, ???An Arbor Day Tree???; Leah Plastow Sugarloaf, ???The Brown Thrush???n| VTary Beaver, Roaringcreek, Tne book! of Winter.??? First and Second Grades First, Geraldine Kile, Sugarloaf, ???At the Zoo,??? Geraldine H. Follmer, teach- ii er; second, Martha Stiner, Briar Creek, J ???Lost,??? Dorothy J. Jones, teacher; | third, Neiman Derr, Main, ???At The | Zoo ??? Dorothy Johnson, teacher; Randall???Baker, Beaver, ???The Swing???; Jean Rarig, Roaringcreek, ???The Swing???; El-1 mer Kline, Orange township, ???Oh Look . at the Moon???; Arwilda Love, Madison, | ???Lost???; Barbara Baker, Greenwood, I ???Oh, Look At the Moon???; Philip Ger- | asimoff, Mifflin, ???At the Zoo???; Joanne -Parse'll, Orangeville, ???Oh, Look At the Moot). sg Tennis Team Wins Opener W/f^ HuskiH Triumph Over Millersville By 7 to 2 On Saturday -Bloomsburg State Teachers College tennis team opened its busy 3937 cam-; paign with a decisive 7 to 2 victory at! Millersville on Saturday afternoon. 1 Considering the fact that three of) the Husky team were making their! varsity debut and that the local racquet wielders had practically no outside practice prior to the match, the work of the lads coached by John ( Koch was exceptional. Bill Strawinski, Harrisburg; Walter ; Withka, Simpson and, Hopkins, a Frosh from Lost Creek, are new men on the Huskies. Strawinski played number one position to win handily p I while both Withka and Hopkins wont 'singles matches and lost their i in a long three set match that for spec-1 Itator interest was the best of the aft- j! jernoon. Zalonis, Gering and Smethers, vet! erans on the team, all did nice work. Singles Strawinski, Bloomsburg, defeated | Buckwalter, Millersville, 6-1, 6-1. I Zalonis, Bloomsburg, defeated Mill; er, Millersville, 6-2, 6-4. Smethers, Bloomsburg. defeated Shindler, Millersville, 6-2, 6-2. Garman, Millersville, defeated Ger| ing, Bloomsburg, 6-4, 3-6, 6-3. i Withka, Bloomsburg, defeated Wil- I liams, Millersville, 6-1, 6-2. Hopkins, Bloomsburg, defeated Mor- I gan, Millersville, 6-0, 6-1. Doubles I Strawinski and Zalonis, Bloomsburg, | defeated Buckwalter and Shindler, ' Millersville, 7-5, 3-6, 6-3. Gering and Smethers, Bloomsburg, !] defeated Miller and Garman, Millers- I ville, 6-4, 6-0. Thorpe and Morgan, Millersville, defeated Withka and Hopkins, 6-3, 4-6, 110-8. ! Tennis Team Wins Again j Sweeps Every Match in Contest With Susquehanna On Local Courts Bloomsburg Stale Teachers College | tennis team defeated Susquehanna; University here yesterday for the I Huskies??? second triumph of the sea-1 son and the first on the home courts.u The margin was 9 to 0 but the Crusader racquet wiciders gave Bloomsburg more of a battle than the score would indicate. Susquehanna, coached by Amos Alonzo Stagg Jr., a Big Ten tennis champion in his college days, is better than last year and improving rapidly. The Crusaders are definitely on their way up in the sport. The Huskies of Coach John Koch ployed steady tennis all the way. One thing that has shown prominently in the early matches is that the members of the Husky team have staying qualities. They are going to serve I "Bloomsburg in good stead in matches which lie ahead. singles Strawinski, Bloomsburg, defeated Hostetler, Susquehanna, 6-0, 6-1. Zalonis, Bloomsburg, defeated Sklanhki, Susquehanna, 7-5, 6-4. Smothers, Bloomsburg. defeated ??????laksys, Susquehanna, 6-3, 6-4. Goring. Bloomsburg. defeated Keim. .Susquehanna. 6-2, 6-2. Withka. Bloomsburg, defeated Gav- Susquehanna, 6-3, 6-0. Hopkins. Bloomsburg, defeated Wiliams, Susquehanna, 6-2, 6-4. Doubles Strawinski and Gering. Bloomsburg, defeated Hostetler and Sklanski, Susquehanna, 6-2, 6-4. Smetbers and Zalonis, Bloomsburg, defeated Keim and Raksys, 6-0, 6-1. Withka and Hopkins, Bloomsburg, defeated Gaver and Schuck, Susqueianna. 4-6. 6-3. 6-?. _J FANNING !+ ??? /^7 Bloomsburg State Teachers College | imile relay team, which will perform | in the Penn Relay Carnival at Frank-1 lin Field, Philadelphia, on Saturday : *drew number six position in a field of Ififteen in the mile relay for the teachers college championship of Amreica. The field averages around half the * number of entries and number six po- ] Isition in the fin: drawing ought to give Coach George C. Buchheit???s Huskies a pretty fair spot. There are six Pennsylvania schools I lin the event, Bloomsburg, West Ches- | iier, Lock Haven, Shippensburg, Che- iaey and Philadelphia. Here are the drawings for the relay I ??as announced by Penn Relay Carnival f officials: Pole, West Chester; 2, St. I Paul Normal; 3, Savage Normal; 4,1 I Bowie Normal; 5, Montclair Teachers; | |5, Bloomsburg Teachers; 7, Miner! I Teachers; 8, Michigan Normal; 9. Phil-j, iadeiphia Normal; 10, Lock Haven F Teachers; 11, Tuskegec Institute; 12, | I Cortland Normal; 13, Shippensburg | STeachers; 14, West Michigan Teachers; | 115, Cheyney Teachers. In the years that Bloomsburg has j* |been in the event the Husky quartet [' ??? has always finished well up in the | field. The boys this year are after \ ???ictory but competition in the event | s keen and it is one of the fastest | pniles in the carnival. something To Think About Shippensburg and East Stroudsburg |l'eachers College track and field teams, both to meet the Huskies later in the Reason, clashed at Shippensburg over be weekend and Shippensburg won 76 to 50, taking nine of the fourteen events and tying in another. East Stroudsburg is here a week from Friday and Bloomsburg is down in the Cumberland Valley to clash with Shippensburg the following Tuesday. The thing that is of vahie to the Huskies is the marks set in the dual meet. Here they are and the probability is that better ones will be set in the later season matches but some of those made Saturday are pretty good: Javelin???lB4 feet, 71-2 inches; 440 yard sprint???s 2.6 seconds; mile run-4:46; high jump???s feet, 9 inches; 100- yard dash???lo.2; feet, 9 inches; 120-yard high hurdles???lB seconds; 880 yard run~2:oB, discus???l 23 feet, 71-2 inches; polt vault???lo feet; broad jump???2l feet, 2 inches; two mile run???ll:3o; 220-yard dash???23:B 1-2 seconds; 220 yard low hurdles???27.B Tondf | |