Bethany College - Bethanian Yearbook (Bethany, WV)

 - Class of 1940

Page 17 of 186

 

Bethany College - Bethanian Yearbook (Bethany, WV) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 17 of 186
Page 17 of 186



Bethany College - Bethanian Yearbook (Bethany, WV) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 16
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Page 17 text:

NEWS COPY edited by JOHN COSTANZA atively mild birth this year. Coach Walter E. Boettcher, con- ducting an initial meeting with typical informality on the steps of the Main building, found only three fraternities represented. While touch-footballers of Al- pha Kappa Pi, Kappa Alpha, and non-fraternity readily ayed his suggestions. Coach Boettcher formulated plans for the league season. Maximum size of any team is nine men. Quarters are 10 minutes in length. Players must wear shoes with heelless rubber soles, to protect the turf on the new Rine field. In the case of a tie game, Coach Boettcher and his pro- teges decided, a new game shall immediately be started, and the first team to score shall be de- clared the winner of the contest. • Subject of much legend and of an article in last year ' s Betb- antan, Milton Carlin, famed signer of bulletin board an- nouncements, dispelled some of the mystery surrounding himself when he visited Bethany several weeks ago. Carlin, who graduated in ' 37, is known to most Bethanians only as a signature scrawled on official notices. Actually he is a member of the United Press staff, in Buffalo. During his visit to his Alma Mater, Carlin stayed with Bill Marsh, of Marsh Manor. • Acting vigorously under the new Sunday ruling, Mrs. Gibson, proprietor of the College Inn, In spite of the rain, Bethany ' s Band helped open Rine Field, and cheered the Bison on Student rendezvous. Ousted three to victory over Westminster. Its new leader. Dr. Weimer. is not in the former rnll rrp ct-nrlpntc frnm i picture because he is in his usual position of pun formation. iuiiiici luiicl,c siuucihs iiuui a. • Miss Annamarie Dettinger, German exchange student at Bethany last year, recently wrote to Dr. W. H. Cramblet from her home in Biberach, Germany, say- ing in part: It was a very interesting and valuable experience to me to stay over here in such a lovely place, and to learn to know and to like the people, the country, and such a fine American Col- lege. I was especially fortunate to be at Bethany, which has shown me all the time the spirit of cheerful friendliness and the will of understanding. Another German student, Karl Heyers, who studied at Bethany during 1936 and 1937, has writ- ten to Alumni Secretary George C. Hettler, saying he would like to visit Bethany during the cen- tennial year, but must needs complete his studies at the Uni- versity of Bonn. Since Mr. Hey- er ' s message was written before the outbreak of the European war, it is not known whether he is taking part in the fighting. • Students join hands with pro- fessors in a new Bethany club created to expedite the inter- change of ideas between students and faculty in friendly, informal conversations. Named the Gargoyles , the new organization plans to meet twice monthly at luncheon or dinner engagements. Students in the Gargoyle club are Caro- line Butchko, Lester Raub, Don- ald Regier, Virginia Richard- son, William Rutter, Jean Short, and Mary Jane South. Faculty members are Dr. Flor- ence M. Hoagland, E. E. Rob- erts, Rev. Dwigh t Stevenson, Dr. H. O. Werner, and Dr. F. K. Woolery. • Interfraternity football, now rabidly partisan, had a compar- PAGE THIRTEEN

Page 16 text:

FRESHMEN ON THE FACULTY PROFESSOR CLYDE J CROBAUGH Head of the Economics and Business Department Here they are; new- members of the faculty. From the best institutions of learning in the country: Harvard, Ohio, Washing- ton, Stanford, Chicago, Boston, Indiana, Babson. Barnard, Columbia, Vir- ginia, and Princeton - these professors have come to Bethany to help keep Bethany primarily an educational institu- tion. ' ' Already they have proven that they can help make this process of edi- hcation a glorious adven- cure into the unknown. May they like us as much as we like them, and may they never graduate. MISS MARGARET CARRIGAN H ' ad of Residence at Fhillips Hall and In structor in English. Miss Carrigan is also in charg? of the social program at the coll-ge. MISS MARJORIE HENDRICK Faculty Resident at Gateway Hall and In structor in Speech and Dramatics MR. WILLIAM M. McCULLOUGH Assistant Professor of Economics MISS MARY ELLAN BIBBEE Faculty Resident at Helwig Hall and In structor in Sociology PAGE TWELVE



Page 18 text:

NEWS COPY cont ' d booth in which they were playing bridg.e The ex-Bethanians, Charles Hurford. Cloud Rutter, and Charles Williamson, not to be daunted by the new regulations, improvised a card table out of lutrtratre and continued their 00 O Came in front of the Inn. • Students who berate Dean Bernal R. Weimer ' s wit will be silenced when they learn that the Studebaker Motor Corn- pan)- has purchased a Weimer cartoon for advertising purposes. The cartoon is a picture of a centipede talking to a salesman in a Studebaker garage. The cap- tion underneath reads: I dropped in to look at the new Studebaker; I ' ve heard so much about the extra leg room in them. Dean Weimer has previously sold humorous poems to Col- lege Life , College Humor , and the Farmer ' s Wife maga- zines. • Dr. William H. Erskine, former assistant professor of mathematics, is now on the staff of Wright Junior College, Chi- cago, Illinois. Artist and pro- moter of the arts for the past few years on the Bethany campus. Dr. Erskine maintains a co-oper- ative studio in Chicago with sev- eral other artists. Having stud- ied for the past few summers at the Chicago Art Institute and the University of Chicago, Dr. Erskine has decided to spend more time at his favorite hobby, sculpturing. He has completed work on a sculptured bust of William S. Hamilton, w h brought Kappa Alpha fraternity to the Bethany campus; and also finished a plaque portraying Bethany education. • Nonplussed w hen student bowlers complained that the holes in his bowline balls were uncomfortable, Leroy Strasser, proprietor of the new Bethany Bowling alleys, solved the prob- lem by having the balls re- d rilled. Strasser boxed the wooden spheres and sent them back to the Pittsburgh house from which he bought them. Several days later the bowline balls came back, drilled so that the most fickle bowler could grasp them with ease. • Dr. R. H. Eliassen, head of the education department, has accepted the editorship of the yearbook number of the Open Book, publication of Kappa Phi Kappa, national professional education fraternity. When the editorial committee of the magazine invited Dr. Eliassen to edit their yearbook, they said they were seeking someone who is not wholly satisfied with the present condi- tion and who can see some fron- tiers in education. Already busy drafting plans for the yearbook. Dr. Eliassen said the theme will be New Frontiers in Education. Sched- uled for release sometime in the spring of 1940, the book will be packed with reviews of develop- ments and plans in progressive education. • Forty-four bulging sacks of mail, the largest shipment to Bethany since 1903, flooded the local postoffice on October 3, scrambling delivery schedules on the hill and hustling Postmaster S. C. Underwood and Assistant Verna Martin. The record mail weighed more than 1000 pounds. There were 500 pieces of first class mail, 300 pieces of third class ad- vertising matter, 100 daily news- papers, 21 insured packages, six Dr. Ersklne ' s plaque portraying Bethany Education. The figure on left renr-sents dln ? ?, r Knowledge from the Past :- picture on the right Th°kkng or Know!- ' pfe ' en? t N e ote Ut B , e r t e hany d , , o h w e e 1 PiCtUre ' Actln . °r Knowledge ofThe PAGE FOURTEEN

Suggestions in the Bethany College - Bethanian Yearbook (Bethany, WV) collection:

Bethany College - Bethanian Yearbook (Bethany, WV) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Bethany College - Bethanian Yearbook (Bethany, WV) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Bethany College - Bethanian Yearbook (Bethany, WV) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Bethany College - Bethanian Yearbook (Bethany, WV) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Bethany College - Bethanian Yearbook (Bethany, WV) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

Bethany College - Bethanian Yearbook (Bethany, WV) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943


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