High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 33 text:
“
College Administration ir BAUER Behind the quiet re- serve of a man who holds his silence, is the poise of one educated at Pennsylvania State College. Practically be- lieing this calm atti- tude moves a seething interest in things more exciting as evidenced by an aquarium ot tropical fish, by his collection of pictures which indirectly prove his hobby of amateur photography and by his walk, swinging and typical. But this calm- ness is indeed not ar- tificial for his main ambition (so claimed i is — to keep out of trouble. BAXTER Beaver Falls. Pa . and Butcher ' s Business Col- lege lost a valuable cit- izen when Mansfield gained a new friend in her house Matron, i ' o job could become more tedious tlian this and yet no person is more capable of making us aware of her pleasant- ness. A reserve of ef- ficiency, a wealth of smiles, and letters f r o m her daughters seem to be the answer to her fine spirit. BUNN Good m o r n i n g. (said in a most enjoy- able voice) and Ihere ' v Miss Bunn. It may be that her training at Hornell Business Col- lege has its place in her career, it must be that kind-hearted good- ness which enables her to greet the world and its laggering payments with a smile, but cer- tainly it is some inner aid which helps her to fill such a large com- mand with so little con- fusion. DARRIN The Class of 1935 de- scribed Charlie as an individualist. They are proud that he was such to so great an extent as to win immediate rec- ognition. His love of nvimriiing. tennis, and the opera do not de- tract from his keen ap- preciation of literary work which strongly appeals as a career Equally alluring to such a versatile type is th? educational field, al- though Mr Darrin add- ed, not as a teacher. FREDERICK It would be prac- tically an impossibility to pay to any dean of women the tribute which is her just due. Officially her duties are defined as those spon- soring the activities of the women students, to provide the environ- ment in which each woman can develop to her maximum capacity. Thus Miss Frederick ' s innate artistic ability is also aptl - expressed through the medium of managing the lives of others. HABKNESS And an angel with a lantern came to each bedside. Thus was Florence Nightingale described and thus have her descendants b. ' cn considered by the ill. Nursing has always been an occupation de- manding high respect tor the main reason that such women as Anna Harkness have chosen to give their lives toward helping others. HEWSON Accuracy for detail. Miss Hewson has ;h? opportunity to observe many hundreds oi ' stu- dents who invariably forget the important items and stress the insignificant. but al- ways she keeps her eye upon the necessary, warns the foolish ot absent-mindedness, and adaots an awe-striking attitude of her position. But to those who know and also admire her as Edna . this clever dresser is fun-loving as well as forceful. JUPENLAZ Dr Jekyl had noth- ing on his Mr. Hyde in comparison to ihe seemingly sophisticated Secretary to the Presi- dent of Mansfield State or when she is merely Miss Jupenlaz. Tlie se- rious business-like look and tone drop into ban- tering laughter and often result in those clever jokes for which she is faculty-iamed As to hobbies and am- bitions — well — Jupie has em. 29
”
Page 32 text:
“
The Deans Their Messages Dean of Instruction Dean of Women The social life of the institution has altered with its growth and the increase of the average age of the student. What was once a private normal of the board- ing school type with both pupils and faculty housed under the roofs of the two school dormitories and eating together in the one dining room has become a state supported teachers college with the facul- ty mostly living in town and a large and growing group of commuting students. With a school population of student, fac- ulty and workers and their families and dependents larger than half the perman- ent population of the town, with the tradition of the rural boarding school and the private normal, it is easy to under- stand and to approve the local conven- tions. Our school song has it — For every law and rule of thine. Is made to fit our life ' s design. and the better one knows Mansfield the deeper one appreciates their truth and understands that Mansfield ' s success has been deeply rooted in the conventions lo which its traditional environment has for- tunately made it heir. — Dr. Belknap. With the help of the Faculty and the Students, the offices of the Dean of Women and Assistant Dean of Women have established a system where-in college activities such as club meetings, social affairs, lectures and visitors mav find a place in the College calendar. Through the cooperation of these organizations one with another each individual student is offered a greater opportunity for growth through the knowledge of outside inter- ests and activities. — Miss Frederick. Dean of Men Conventions may be good or bad — and there are times, no doubt, when even the best of them should be disregarded. Cultivation of the happy faculty of know- ing when to follow the beaten paths, and when to strike courageously away from them, is one of the worthwhile purposes of College education. Growth in this direction, as in any other, must come through exercise, for which there is abun- dant opportunity at Mansfield State Teachers College. — John D. Trimmer. 28
”
Page 34 text:
“
MacPHERSON New Jersey College for Women and Rutgers University gave a pret- ty face, a clever mind, and lilting laughter when Miss MacPherson came to us two years ago. But one must nec- essarily have a sweet sniile in order to koep a fairly even spirit dur- ing a day ' s deal in pull- ing out slightly tangled weaves. About ambi- tions? Well, after all, I repeat. Sally has a pretty face, cute ideas, and a nice laugh. McKINNEY TiiTie spent in Albany Training School for Nurses, work in Un iver- sity of Pittsburgh, and also in Unversity of Chicago, and graduate work at the George Peabody College for Teachers, has given to Mansfield ' s dietitian the confidence born of an already successful ca- reer. Then, in connec- tion with hobbies, there ' s something about a cabin near a lake where one may rest. PALMER Bei ' tha Roff Palmer has always been known to Mansfield as one of its finest citizens. Now Mansfield State Teach- ers College is allowing its students to discover her enduring qualities as assistant in the li- brary where she has never failed. When students judge. they judge harshly, but Mrs. Palmer fits her niche so perfectly that we greet, converse, and go away satisfied. PIERCE To E 1 m i r a Busi- ness Institute Mans- field owes a debt for one of the inost quietly efficient of her steno- graphers. Bookkeeping at the Y. W. C. A. in Elmira for a start, seven years with the sanrie company for reputation and some tiine with the Keystone Grange for extra experience would insure anyone ' s rec- ommendation. As to a stenographer ' s hobbies, well. Miss Pierce ' s likes are plain and simple: among them merely Mansfield niovies. REHBEIN How many of you loyal Rehbein fans know that she spent seven and a half years teaching kindergarten ? But how few of you would have to be told that buying clothes was to her a hobby? For how many of you en- vied her always sinart appearance, and yet. how few of you could have guessed with what clever witticism she answered the question, What is your future ambition? STRAUGHN Dr. Straughn will never stay idealized simply because he was a successful business man. nor because he served t wenty years and over as President of Mansfield, but be- cause he was the um- pire in unfair dealings, the confessor for sur- prising circumstances, and the father to hun- dreds of homesick ado- lescents to whom his memory remains sa- cred. TAYLOR R a y in i e is well known around the campus. His good hu- mor, his laughter, and his talk cause that, for no one could ever hear the story of some one of Mr. Taylor ' s wild escapades without for- ever after grinning with him. A fine fam- ily and a host of friends furnish this ge- nial man of the world with an admiring au- dience. THIEMANN Thankfully. M r s. Thieinann leaves little to the imagination. One knows that she is even tempered, that she is pleasantly successful, and that she is unhesi- tatingly happy. Per- haps her secret motto is — work done rightly and well done, is no longer work. ' Certain it is that she fulfills the qualifications for a good worker and a fine friend. 30
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.