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Lebanon Daily News from Lebanon, Pennsylvania • Page 14

Location:
Lebanon, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
14
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Daily News, Lebanon, Sunday, May 22,1955 Lebanon Catholic High Has 70 In Clarence Arnold Elizabeth Arnold Faye Arnold Helen Arnold Josephine Agresta Marie Arnold William Arnold Margaret Bahstettcr James Batz Gerald Bcrtoli Joseph Brestovansky Sylvan Capifoni Anna Carberry Leo Casciotti Anne Connor Ronald DeAngclis Barbara DeSantis Marie DcSantis Paula Dcufel Carl Fisclicr Terrcncc Fisher William Fitzgibbons Anne Foster Joon Frazier Margaret Gable William Guyer Victor Manner Earline Hartman Edward Hartman William Hess Howard Hesse Patricia Heverling Patricia Horn Catherine III Rosernarie Imhof Brian Kildee Sue Kiminel Philip Kreider Virginia Kreiger Shiela Krumbeck William Leidy Catherine Lengel Frank. Loehle Patricia Mallon Edword Mattoli Irene Mayan Patricia McDonald Anthony Miller Christine Miller Fern Miller Irene Miller Mary Ann Nemec Deanna Pagiano William Pavone Sandra Payne Victor Peracchia Joan Pechini Anne Reilly Carrol Remlinger Roger Ren'aud Gettysburg College To Confer Honorary Degrees GETTYSBURG, 'Today Eichl honorary degrees will be conferred by Gettysburg College, at its IZSrd-annual commencement exorcises to be held Sunday, June 5. Three of the honorary degree candidates will receive the degree of doctor of divinity. They are, the late Rev. William C.

Day, Red Lion, Rev. Warren C. Ueinly Lancaster, 'and Rev. William C. Fla.

Rev. degree will be presented posltiiiuv and will be received by his Day, Cumberland The degree "of doctor of humane letters will be conferred upon Adam J. Jlazielt, Pittsburgh, and Rev. Francis A. Sticarcr, Philadelphia.

Edgar G. Miller, Now York City, will receive Hie doctor of science degree; (he degree of doctor of law will he conferred upon Gustav M. Wieboldi, Woodhaven, N.Y.; and John Gunther, noted journalist, author and international correspondent, will receive the degree College To Give Former Lebanon Youth Course On 'How To Study' ils Mooseheart Graduate KASTON, A course on I "How to Study" is included In the cumculum at this year's summer 1 session at Lafayette College which will open on 20. The course, primarily for-student's who have been accepted lo the new freshman class at Lafav- ctlc that will enter collage next fall, but also fc. 1 older students, is designed to leach the new college on how lo study properly.

Study helps and lechniiines of study will be given. Also in tin! curriculum Is a new course in conversational French for those who IKIVO no knowledge of the language. An intensive six- week planned lo give lliR 'sufficient grasp of the language 1 so that he will he- able In converse iti French, Scientific methods of linguistic and phonetic analysis, with constant use of lapn recordings will bn used. of doctor of Irtlcrs. (iimll.irr will he Gettysburg's commencement speaker.

ur wish to the graduates of 1955 is ne of luck and the sincere hope that your future is nothing but The PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK Of Lebanon, Pa. MtMBER FEDERAL OErOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION World Famed Judge Harold Medina Will Je MHS Speaker and He and. A former Lebanon boy, Ralpl Teinnlin, is a member of llui 3711 high school graduating class MooseJicarl, 111., the Moose Cit of Orphans. Tcmplin cnmi; lo Mooschenrt 10-10 with his sister and brother following the death of their falhor, a member of Lebanon Moose lixlye. While at Ihc City of Orphans he was active in the school's KOTC and starred in baseball, bnskelball football.

He won five tellers two numerals i'n tf.ie^u sports. majored in physical science in addition lo his neaiirnm' diploma, he' will receive vocational diploma in ornamental concrete. Ralph hopes lo enlist in the U.S. Marine Corps, hut in Iho meantime hn will make his home with a sister in Aurora, 111. Outdoor cnmmonccmrnl exorcises will IIP held 18 iu Ihc community's Illinois Memorial Sl.i- dium with Gordon of Toledo, 0., member of the heart Hoard of Governors, as the featured speaker.

Members of this year's class iconic from Hi states, Canada and Alaska. They have spent an aver- of eis'hl-aml one-half years scach at this unusual city. jvania loads with 13 lives and Illinois is close, I with in. Morn than half of the class iliave indicated that they will 50 an to schools of higher learning. the bench in 1947, the law firm of Medina and Sherpick had grown to substantial proportions.

In 1932 he'engaged in his first big criminal trial the prosecution of the officers of the Bank of the United States. To his own surprise and without political support, Judge Medina was made a United Stales District Judge by President Harry Truman on July 1, 1047. largely through pressure brought by various bar associations. Two of cases tried by Judge Medina as a District Judge attracted wide attention, In 19-1!) he presided over the trial of the eleven Communist leaders, and the efforfs of the defendants and their adherents to up the trial and demonstrate lhal the American judicial system was unequal lo the task of trying Communists accused of conspiring to advocate- the overthrow of thel government, by force and violence, made the one of historic and international interest. Immediately after (hat, he entered upon Ihe trial of what is sometimes described a.s the longest anti-trust case in American jurisprudence a civil nnti-lrus action against the seventeen lead- investment banking houses for made international history violation of the Sherman his handling of the .1940 trial of! Acl eleven Communist leaders, will bej Having been promoted to.

the the speaker at the Commencement! United States Court of Appeals in exercises announced by Dr. 1951, Judge Medina was un- 0. rrershey, M.H.S. superintend to take his place on the court dent. The" Commencement pro-lfor some two and a half years "ram is lo be held in the be was concluding the trial Community Theatre.

he case against the investment bankers. Finally, 1053 he took HE SMELLED A RAT D.ES MOINES When Jack C. Colvin, Des Moines salesman, had battery trouble, he bought a new battery. But that one ran down too. After considerable checking he found the answer.

A mouse had crawled into the generator and died there, cutting off the current so the battery would not charge. 1955 Judge Harold H. Medina, in the Fall of TUNNFL SUKVMYKI) AOMORI, Japan (AP) Japan build a lunnnl between Honshu and Hokkaido, where a ferry capsized in a September typhoon with ja loss 'of 1,000 lives. The National 'Railway which operates a ferry service "between Ihe two big lapancse islands, lias set aside for a thorouph survey. Tho would be about 22 miles Marie Rudccjeair Donald Saniterelli Kathleen Shirato Ernest Shott Rosemarie Stefonich Dennnn Troy Julici Troy Thomas Uffncr Patricia WenUel Nancy Zweier rmmrmx Prize for the hishe.si from Columbia Law School in jai2.

There had been a law- ycr on either side his family and the struggle to gel a foothold in the profession in the early dnys often called for working fourteen hours a day at assorted jobs. He formed his own Jaw office in 1D1S and. hy the time he went on nF lhc Fo rdc Hl1 ft" Jr and standish i Fo rde Medina, both lawyers and SJX grandchildren. The Yellow River of China has ibeen called ''Ctiina's Sorrow," its floods often get out of I control. We are happy for you on this occasion.

KKI) HOIIKOR i munist terrorists which British! KUALA LUMPUR Hor-i on and forces have: ror pictures are drawing record bccn hntllin crowds. The films show what hap- Tho scneral on the' gruesome mllrclion: I period la murder victims of Com-' "Horrible, but effective." Congratulations GRADUATES Of Lebanon City and County Schools OM- 2nd ond Cumberland Sts. Phone 2-5633 43 Cornwall High School Graduates Lebanon Daily News, Lebanon, Sunday, May Texas Classroom Goes To Boy Via New Speaker System Gene Wise Joseph Ycicklovich Paul Yurejefcic (iOOl) Fail Kcrslen, 9, takes part In classroom activities by means of speaker he confined to a wheelchair. WACO, thousands of other youngsters, a 9-ycar-old Waco boy grabs his books every morning and rides off to school. liarj Kersten rides lo school in a wheel chair instead of on a bicycle.

And his classroom is one corner ot his bedroom: Wcldon is in the third grade at La VORII Elementary School and lie participates with the rest the class through a speaker system which works on regular telephone lines. One speaker sits in the classroom and the other sits on a desk in Wclclon's Sometimes the teacher says, "Weldon, what answer did you get?" And Wcldon Clips a button on his speaker and gives his answer. Nobody awaits tho opening of school more eagerly than Wcldon, "I'vn tiMiyht Wcldon for two years and he's a good Hobert L. Roberts, county school teacher for shut-ins, "but this is making big difference. It's his first tnstc of competition." It's also first taslo of a lot of other things, which most children take for finmtect: the classroom singing and the giving of tho pledge of allegiance lo the flag.

Joseph Adams Charles Arehart Charles Arnold Paul Arnold Terry Bernhar.dt Morlin Bohannon Sara Ann Bucher Ernest Carpenter Janet Carpenter Janice Chernich Mary Ellen Clay Clair Enck Earl Fernsler Dolores Gristick Gene Gundrum Harold Haldeman William Hartman Jean Heisey Robert Herr Richard Hoke Kent Horst Clelland Hostetter Rose Iceman Carole Krick Marilyn Krick Robert Lee John Loser Christine Light Bernard Norton Stephen Novosel Elaine Plasterer Madeline Rcppert Jeanne Sattazahn Carol Seibert Karhryn Schott Kenneth Shuman Kenneth Wagner Richard Wctzel Francis Wirfa Kenneth Williams CLASS AT WORK Loudspeaker on desk at La Vega Elementary School, Waco, carries lessons to shut-in Wcldon, who can hear classwork answer questions. They'll Pound The Pavements To Leant About Better Roads OTTOWA, engineers from 42 states hope to keep 48 big trucks going around and around for two years to get you Letter roads. Tests planned here will go on 20 hours a day on four big highway loops and will cost around VI million dollars. The American Assn. of State Highway Officials hopes to learn how to build pavement, preserve old roads, put engineering facts behind truck weight laws and get data to use in building better trucks.

Final results seven years year lo plan, two years to build and pave roads, two years regular lesting and a year of special tesls and a year for analysis. Comparisons will be made belwcen Irucks carrying Irom pounds to 50,000 pounds per axle, some single, some double axle. JR. R. artels meyer says financing will come from federal- funds, 42 state agencies and industry which will furnish vehicles, oil, fuel, tires and other equipment.

Other road tests have been made, but Cliff Older, former Illinois highway engineer has said more scientific knowledge is needed. That was after an Illinois test in the '20s. Since then Maryland has finished one test and another in Idaho was completed last year. Dala from these tests will be used in the project here. Four Area Students Cited In Penn State'Who's Who' UNIVERSITY PARK, for the activities on the campus, nearly 375 students at the Pennsylvania Stale University are listed in the new edition of "Who's in the News at Penn Stale." The booklet, published for the past nine years, by Sigma- Delta Chi and Sigma Phi, professional journalistic fraternities, was edited this year by Philip B.

Austin, of York, with Mary M. Bolich, of Shanandoah, serving as associate editor. Among those cited in the publication are: Barbara A. Larpcnteur, of Cornwall: Allelta C. Manbeck, of Frcd- ericksburg; Route F.

Magrini. J03 Cocoa Avenue, ller- shey, and Evelyn L. Kicgel, Bern- villc Route 2. Dress For Occasion At Graduation Time By ALICIA HART Of all the festivities surrounding high school and college graduations, the actual commencement, believe it or not, is the most important part. This is the moment at which one is graduated and the other parlies, shows and class nights only serve to celebrate this happy event.

Those who graduate in dresses or uniforms arc probably already fussing with their problems of clothing for the occasion. Those who wear caps and gowns have their problems, too. The cap and gown is the ancient academic garb. It probably dates back to the Twelfth Century, when scholars wore the wool gown and hood to keep warm. Many gowns are still wool but the hood has become a long drooping affair that symbol ixes a particular academic do greo and a particular school, rather than warming the neck.

The academic gown and mortarboard can be very becoming to women. They should, how- over, be worn correctly if a graduate is to look her best on this important day. Many schools specify what i.s to be worn under the gown. it's going lo be a hot day and a long ceremony, and you wil have some place to change, an opaque cotton slip may be more comfortable than a dress. But) bo sure you won'l be out of lino with the orders from the school.

The length of your gown depends upon the length decided upon at your school. But make certain you're hemmed up to the correct distance from the ground. Plain pumps are the best shoes jlo wear. A medium heel wil! be jmost comfortable. If your gowns are while or some color other than black, wear shoes accordingly.

Hair thai does not irail down the back of the collar looks the jbcsl. If yours is very long, you may want to put it j'n a bun or for the occasion. If yours is getting shaggy, get a An academic gown is not the most ordinal outfit the world, but worn correctly it is handsome and llatttritiK lo li'iRli and college graduates alike. Eleanor Cate. of Cleveland.

Ohio, K'IVES a nrcvicxv (left) of (he way she'll, look when she receives her decree from Barnard Col- Icce in New York. Hor gown is hemmed up to the standard length for Barnard. She wears plain black pumps, a'while dress under the srown. Switching her lassel from the undergraduate to the B.A. side (rlRhl), Miss Calc shows the correct straicht position of the mortarboard.

She is wearins a clean white collar with her hair combed away from it, light but- sharp make-up. trim so you won't have trails on the collar and shoulders look your collar. sloppy. Make-up may be than the usual, if your graduation is night under stage lights. Give make-up to photographs, the evening luck tissues before you yourself i.

show up well in but don't put on look. Be sure lo around your collar powder. Trickles of The motarhoard is worn absolutely straight and looks best this way. If you note that a friend looks dashing with it at a sailor hal angle, you'll find she- looks out of place in the procession. Flowers are never worn on an powder onj academic gown.

Thi.s i.s uni- form symbolizing the- long Ira dition of scholars and the tradition of your school. A corsage is nol fitting Do not carry a handbag in the procession. Leave it with yom folks and collect ii if you need it. Keep your hands free to receive that long-awaitci diploma and lo shake Ihc hands of your proud teachers and fain ily. Eicholiz Painting Found For Penn State Exhibit Doily NEWS Photo.

ROBESOMA of the Conrad Wciscr School Center will hold its commencement exercises on 2 and 3 with these to graduate: Front row, left to right: Ruth Ann Watson, Patricia Auman, Greitje Flickinger, Virginia Steffey, Anna Mae Shump. Second row: Anna Wagner, Delores Helm, Lynda Gruber, Shirley Swope, Shirley Mathew. Third row: Herbert Bomberger, Patricia Gettel. Mary Ellen Livinghouse, Shirley Fogelman, Marvin Speicher. Fourth row: Carl Noecker, Harold Bucks, Norman McCook, David Putt, Paul Porter.

"characteristic of Eichholtz at his) best." The canvas was done about 1825 when Pctrikin, who was a person-! i UNIVERSITY PARK, To-jal friend of the artist and who, 1 iday One of the paintings to bej ilimsclf was tainted in art anrij included in the Centennial scrvin in lllc Statt at the Pennsylvania Slate Uni-j The exhibition, which will he held! vcrsity was located ton miles rom from pet. 7 to Nov. as one ofi the campus, in Bellefonle. thc highlifihls of the Centennial Dr. Harold E.

Dickson, nrofcs-i Yca Slate, will contain i works selected from mn.sctims and: sor of fine arts, who is arranging private collections throughout exhibition, said that several eastern part of the country. paintings by Jacob Eicholtz, of! Each of some forty lo fifty Pern-; Lancaster, were considered. jsylvania be represent-! cd at his best in one outstanding! But it was felt that a painting Jarnes Petriken, a popular Belle- tfonte jawy'er, was the best exam- Jple of Eichholtz's work and it was for the cxfiibit. Authorities on the works of the picture, and a number of- the best known pictures in American art will be included. Log houses were first introduced i artist have pronounced'into America by Swedish settlers! jlhe painting, located in the Centre in what is now Wilmington, 'County Library at Bellefonte, as'in Congratulate the Graduate! Hallmark and Gibson Greeting Cards Leather Wallets Costume Jewelry Jewelry Cases Stationery MANY OTHER FINE GIFTS Card and Giii Shop LEBANON, PA.

815 CU.MBKRLAND ST. Ring 21,000 Doorbells With A NEWS Want Ad. It's So Easy. Dial 2'5G Memo: For Your Next Formal Affair King Arthur's "forrnals" weighed 35 pounds! FORMAL COMFORT NOW WEIGHS THAN pf'20 OUNCES I We also rent complete outfits by After Six. Prices on request.

Armor kills nmour. Enjoy your knights-out in tho corn- fort of our featherweight "frosty white" dinner jacket (naturally st.ylecl to slim you without die Shy" fabric finish laughs off summer showers, just won't stain, STEIN BROS. Graduation Gift Center 21 7th St,.

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Pages Available:
391,576
Years Available:
1872-1977