Lebanon Valley College
BULLETIN
Vol. XXIV February, 1936 No. 11
Catalogue
1936
REGISTER FOR 1935-1936
ANNOUNCEMENT OF COURSES FOR 1936-1937
Lebanon Valley College
ANNVILLE, PA.
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SHERIDAN AVENUE
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LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE CAMPUS
KEY TO NUMBERS
1 Administration Building
2 Engle Conservatory
3 North Hall
4 Men's Dormitory
5 Library
6 West Hall
7 Residence of President
8 Heating Plant
9 South Hall
10 Conservatory Annex
A United Brethren in Christ Church
B Evangelical Lutheran Church
C Post Office
D Tennis Courts
fcB
MAIN STREET
I
Lebanon Valley College
BULLETIN
Vol. XXIV February, 1936 No. 11
Catalogue
1936
REGISTER FOR 1935-1936
ANNOUNCEMENT OF COURSES FOR 1936-1937
Lebanon Valley College
ANNVILLE, PA.
Entered as Second-Class matter at Annville, Pa., under the Act of August 24, 1912
CALENDAR FOR 1936-1937
1936
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College Calendar for 1935-1936
FIRST SEMESTER
1935
Sept. 18 Wednesday, 9:00 a. m. . .Dining Hall and Residences open to enter-
ing class
Sept. 18 Wednesday Registration of Freshmen
Sept. 19-21. . . .Thursday-Saturday Freshman Orientation tests and lectures
Sept. 20 Friday, 4:00 p. m Dining Hall and Residences open to all
students
Sept. 20-21. . . .Friday-Saturday Re-examinations and registration of upper
class students
Sept. 21 Saturday, 8:00 p. m Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. Reception to
new students
Sept. 23 Monday, 10:00 a. m. . . .Opening Exercises
Sept. 23 Monday, 1 :30 p. m Lectures begin
Nov. 2 Saturday Home-Coming Day
Nov. 22 Friday Mid-semester reports due
Nov. 26 Tuesday, 6:00 p. m President's Reception to the Faculty
Nov. 27 Wednesday, 1:00 p. m. . .Thanksgiving recess begins
Dec. 1 Sunday, 5:00 p. m Thanksgiving recess ends
Dec. 7 Saturday, 8:00 p. m Sixty-fourth Anniversary Clionian Literary
Society
Dec. 11 Wednesday, 8:00 p. m.. .Junior Play
Dec. 21 Saturday noon Christmas recess begins
1936
Jan. 5 Sunday, 5:00 p. m Christmas recess ends
Jan. 20-21 .... Monday and Tuesday. . . Registration for second semester
Jan. 22-31 .... Wednesday-Friday Semester examinations
Feb. 1 Saturday noon First semester ends
SECOND SEMESTER
1936
Feb. 3 Monday, 8:00 a. m Second semester begins
Feb. 22 Saturday, 8:00 p. m Fourteenth Anniversary Delphian Literary
Society
Mar. 27 Friday, 8:00 p. m Fifty-ninth Anniversary Kalozetean Liter-
ary Society
April 8 Wednesday, 1:30 p. m. . .Easter recess begins
April 15 Wednesday, 1:30 p. m. . .Easter recess ends
May 1 Friday, 8:00 p. m Sixty-ninth Anniversary Philokosmian Lit-
erary Society
May 2 Saturday, 8:00 a. m Scholarship Entrance Examinations
May 2 Saturday, 2 :00 p. m May Day Exercises
May 18-22. . .. Monday-Saturday Registration for 1936-1937
May 25-June4 Monday-Thursday noon Semester examinations
May 30 Saturday Memorial Day
June 4 Thursday President's Reception to the Senior Class
June 5 Friday, 1 1 :00 a. m Meeting of Board of Trustees
June 6 Saturday Alumni Day
June 7 Sunday, 10:30 a. m Baccalaureate Sermon
June 8 Monday, 10:00 a. m. . . .Sixty-seventh Commencement
3
\o%%xS
College Calendar for 1936-1937
FIRST SEMESTER
1936
Sept. 16 Wednesday, 9:00 a. m. . . Dining Hall and Residences open to enter-
ing class
Sept. 16 Wednesday Registration of Freshmen
Sept. 17-19 Thursday-Saturday Freshman Orientation tests and lectures
Sept. 18 Friday, 4:00 p. m Dining Hall and Residences open to all
students
Sept. 18-19. . . .Friday-Saturday noon.. .Re-examinations and registration of upper-
class students
Sept. 19 Saturday, 8:00 p. m Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. Reception to
New Students
Sept. 21 Monday, 9:00 a. m Opening Exercises
Sept. 21 Monday 1 1 :00 a. m Lectures begin
Nov. 7 Saturday Home-Coming Day
Nov. 13 Friday Mid-semester reports due
Nov. 24 Tuesday, 6:00 p. m President's Reception to the Faculty
Nov. 25 Wednesday, 1:00 p. m. . .Thanksgiving recess begins
Nov. 29 Sunday, 5:00 p. m Thanksgiving recess ends
Dec. 5 Saturday, 8:00 p. m Sixty-fifth Anniversary Clionian Literary
Society
Dec. 9 Wednesday, 8:00 p. m. . .Junior Play
Dec. 19 Saturday noon Christmas recess begins
1937
Jan. 3 Sunday, 5:00 p. m Christmas recess ends
Jan. 18-19 Monday and Tuesday ... Registration for second semester
Jan. 20-29 Wednesday-Friday Semester examinations
Jan. 30 Saturday noon First semester ends
SECOND SEMESTER
1937
Feb. 1 Monday, 8:00 a. m Second semester begins
Feb. 20 Friday, 8:00 p. m Fifteenth Anniversary Delphian Literary
Society
Mar. 19 Friday, 8:00 p. m Sixtieth Anniversary Kalozetean Literary
Society
Mar. 24 Wednesday, 1:30 p. m. . .Easter recess begins
Mar. 31 Wednesday, 1:30 p. m.. .Easter recess ends
April 10 Friday Spring Festival
May 7 Friday, 8:00 p. m Seventieth Anniversary Philokosmian
Literary Society
May 8 Saturday, 8.00 a. m Scholarship Entrance Examinations
May 8 Saturday, 2:00 p. m May Day Exercises
May 17-21. . . . Monday-Friday Registration for 1937-1938
May 24-June 3 Monday-Thursday noon . Semester examinations
May 31 Monday Memorial Day
June 3 Thursday President's Reception to the Senior Class
June 4 Friday, 1 1 :00 a. m Meeting of Board of Trustees
June 5 Saturday Alumni Day
June 6 Sunday, 10:30 a. m Baccalaureate Sermon
June 7 Monday, 10:00 a. m. . . .Sixty-eighth Commencement
The Corporation
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Representatives from the East Pennsylvania Conference
Mr. J. R. Engle, A.B., LL.B., LL.D. . .Palmyra, Pa 1936
Mr. John E. Gipple 1251 Market St., Harrisburg, Pa 1936
Mr. M. H. Bachman Middletown, Pa 1936
Rev. H. E. Miller, A.M.. B.D., D.D....346 N. 9th St., Lebanon, Pa 1936
Prof. H. H. Baish, A.M., LL.D 2615 N. 2d St., Harrisburg, Pa 1956
Rev. S. C. Enck, A.M., B.D., D.D 704 N. 16th St., Harrisburg, Pa 1937
Rev. p. B. Gibble, A.M., B.D., D.D. ...20 N. College St., Palmyra, Pa 1937
Rev. O. T. Ehrhart, A.B., D.D 344 W. Orange St., Lancaster, Pa... 1937
Rev. D. E. Young, A.M., B.D., D.D....2337 N. 6th St., Harrisburg, Pa 1937
Rev. a. S. Lehman, D.D 1508 Derry St., Harrisburg, Pa 1938
Rev. H. E. Schaeffer, A.M., B.D Penbrook, Pa 1938
Rev. J. O. Jones, A.M., B.D., D.D 258 Herr St., Harrisburg, Pa 1938
*Mr. C. L. Graybill 251 W. King St., Lancaster, Pa 1938
Representatives from the Pennsylvania Conference
Mr. C. a. Chandler 36 W. Pomfret St., Carlisle, Pa 1936
Rev. Paul O. Shettel, A.B., B.D 1005 Beechfield Ave., Baltimore, Md.l936
Rev. M. R. Fleming, B.D., PhD., D.D..Red Lion, Pa 1936
Hon. W. N. McFaul, LL.B 4023 Roland Ave., Baltimore, Md...l936
Rev. Ira S. Ernst, A.B., B.D., D.D 45 S. West St., Carlisle, Pa 1936
Rev. J. H. Ness, A.B., B.D., D.D 839 Maryland Ave., York, Pa 1937
Rev. G. I. Rider, A.B., D.D 712 Church St.. Hagerstown, Md 1937
Mr. Albert Watson 448 W. High St., Carlisle, Pa 1937
Mr. O. W. Reachard Dallastown, Pa 1937
Rev. P. E. V. Shannon, A.B., B.D 114 N. Newberry St., York, Pa 1938
Rev. F. B. Plummer, A.B., D.D 106 E. Franklin St., Hagerstown, Md.l938
Mr. E. N. Funkhouser, A.B Hagerstown, Md 1938
Mr. R. G. Mowrey, A.B Quincy, Pa 1938
Representatives from the Virginia Conference
Rev. J. H. Brunk, D.D Martinsburg, W. Va 1936
Rev. G. W. Stover Winchester, Va 1936
Rev. W. F. Gruver, D.D Martinsburg, W. Va 1937
Mr. G. C. Ludwig Keyser, W. Va 1937
Rev. E. E. Miller, A.B Martinsburg, W. Va 1938
Rev. W. H. Smith, A.B., B.D Elkton, Va 19.^8
Alumni Trustees
Mr. a. K. Mills, '04, A.B Annville, Pa 1936
Mrs. Louisa Williams Yardley, '18,A.B. 906 N. 64th St., Philadelphia, Pa... 1937
Prof. C. E. Roudabush, '03, A.M., D.Ped.Minersville, Pa 1938
Trustees at Large
Bishop G. D. Batdorf, Ph.D 1509 State St., Harrisburg, Pa 1936
Dr. H. M. Imboden, A.B., M.D 30 W. 59th St., New York City 1936
Members of the college faculty who are heads of departments are
ex officio members of the Board of Trustees.
* Deceased.
officers and Committees of the
Board of Trustees
President J. R. Engle
Vice President E. N. Funkhouser
Secretary and Treasurer S. H. Derickson
Financial Secretary J. R. Engle
Executive Committee
C. A. Lynch, Chairman
J. R. Engle S. C. Enck W. N. McFaul
J. H. Ness C. G. Ludwig S. H. Derickson
Finance Committee
J. R. Engle, Chairman
C. A. Lynch, Pres. S. H. Derickson, Treas.
H. H. Baish, 1936 M. H. Bachman, 1937 J. E. Gipple, 1938
E. N. Funkhouser, 1936 W. H. Smith, 1937 F. B. Plummer, 1938
Auditing Committee
H. E. Schaeffer, Chairman Albert Watson J. H. Brunk
Nominating Committee
D. E. Young, Chairman G. L Rider G. C. Ludwig
C. E. Roudabush
Faculty Committee
H. H. Baish, Chairman C. A. Lynch J. H. Ness
G. C. Ludwig C. E. Roudabush
Buildings and Grounds Committee
S. H. Derickson, Chairman C. A. Lynch P. S. Wagner
H. H. Shenk G. a. Richie P. E. V. Shannon
Library and Apparatus Committee
R. R. Butterwick, Cliairman C. A. Lynch A1. R. Fleming
W. F. Gruver H. E. Miller
Farm Committee
I. S. Ernst, Chairman C. A. Lynch S. H. Derickson
J. E. Gipple G. C. Ludwig
Publicity Committee
P. A. W. Wallace, Chairman C. A. Lynch P. E. V. Shannon
G. A. Richie S. O. Grimm Andrew Bender
6
officers of Administration
Clyde A. Lynch
A.B., A.M., D.D., Lebanon Valley College; B.D., Bonebrake
Theological Seminary; A.M., Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania
President
A. H. M. Stonecipher, Ph.D Assistant to the President
Samuel O. Grimm, A.M Registrar
Mrs. Mary C. Green Dean of Women
Helen Ethel Myers, A.B Librarian
]. W. Esbenshade, A.B.. .Secretary of the Finance Committee
ASSISTANTS IN ADMINISTRATION
L. Percy Clements, A.B Director of Publicity
Gladys M. Pencil, A.B Assistant Registrar
Almeda Meyer, A.B Assistant Librarian
Verba M. Miles Secretary to the President
Margaret L. Rice. .Assistant to the Secretary of the Finance Committee
Professor and Mrs. Clark Carmean ... .Counselors, Men's Dormitory
College Faculty
Hiram H. Shenk
A.B., Ursinus College; A.M., LL.D., Lebanon Valley College
Professor of History
Samuel H. Derickson
B.S., M.S., Sc.D., Lebanon Valley College
Professor of Biological Science
Samuel Oliver Grimm
B.Pd., MillersvUle State Normal ScJwot; A.B., A.M., Lebanon Valley College
Registrar; Professor of Physics and Mathematics
Christian R. Gingrich
A.B., Franklin and Marshall College; LL.B., University of Pennsylvania
Professor of Political Science and Economics
Paul S. Wagner
A.B., Lebanon Valley College; M.A., Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University
Professor of Mathematics
Mrs. Mary C. Green
Paris, 1901-1914
Professor of French; Social Dean of Women
Andrew Bender
A.B., A.M., Lebanon Valley College; Ph.D., Columbia University
Professor of Chemistry
Robert R. Butterwick
A.B., A.M., D.D., Lebanon Valley College; B.D., Bonebrake Theological Seminary
Professor of Philosophy and Religion
O. Edgar Reynolds
A.B., University of Illinois; A.M., Ph.D., Columbia University
Professor of Education and Psychology
Paul A. W. Wallace
B.A., M.A., Ph.D., University of Toronto
Professor of English
CATALOGUE
G. Adolphus Richie
alley College; B.D., Bonebrak
.M., University of Pennsylvai
Professor of Bible and New Testament Greek
Lebanon Valley College; B.D., Bonebrake^ Theological Seminary;
A.M., University of Pennsylvania
Milton L. Stokes
B.A., M.A., LL.B., University of Toronto
Professor of Business Administration
E. H. Stevenson
A.B., Hendrix' College; B.A., Oxford; Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania
Professor of History
Stella Johnson Stevenson
B.S., Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University
Professor of French Literature; Scholastic Dean of Women
V. Earl Light
A.B., M.S., Lebanon Valley College; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University
Associate Professor of Biological Science
Lena Louise Lietzau
Ph.D., University of Vienna
Professor of German
George G. Struble
.S. in Ed., M.S. in Ed., University of Kansas; Ph.D., University of Wisconsin
Associate Professor of English
L, G. Bailey
liversity; M.A., Ur.
University of Wis
Associate Professor of Education and Psychology
Lincoln Memorial University; M.A., University of South Carolina;
Ph.D., University of Wisconsin
Alvin H. M. Stonecipher
B.A., M.A., Ph.D., Vanderbilt University
Professor of Latin Language and Literature
Margaret A. Wood
B.S. in Ed., Temple University; M.A., University of Pennsylvania
Instructor in Hygiene and Political Science
9
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
Emerson Metoxen
B.S. in Ed., Lebanon Valley College
Director of Physical Education for Men
Coach : Basketball, Baseball
Jerome W. Frock
B.S. in Ed., Lebanon Valley College
Associate Director of Physical Educaton for Men
Coach: Football
G. E. SCHWEIGERT
.S., Washington and Jefferson College; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University
Acting Professor of Mathematics
Esther Henderson
.S. in Ed., Miami University; M.A. in Health and Physical Education,
Columbia University
Coach and Director of Physical Education for Women
LuLA M. Richardson
A.B., Goucher College; A.M., Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University
Acting Professor of French Literature
The Rev. W. A. Wilt, D.D.
College Pastor
10
Conservatory Faculty
Mary E. Gillespie, M.A. .Director of the Conservatory of Music
Valparaiso University, 1912-1913; Oberlin Conservatory, 1915-1916; B.S.,
Teachers College, Columbia University, 1926; Public School Music Super-
visor at Scottsburg, Indiana, and Braddock, Penna.; Director of Music at
Women's College, University of Delaware, 1925-1930; M.A., Teachers
College, Columbia University, 1934; Director of Lebanon Valley College
Conservatory of Music, 1930 —
Ruth Engle Bender, A.B. piano
A.B., Lebanon Valley College, 1915; Oberlin Conservatory, 1915-1916;
Graduate of New England Conservatory of Music, 1918; Teacher of Piano
and Theory, Lebanon Valley College, 1919-1921; Pupil of Ernest Hutche-
son, Francis Moore and Frank LaForge, New York City; Graduate courses
at Columbia University in Composition, Improvisation and Musical Peda-
gogy under Frederick Schlieder, 1922-1924; Director of Lebanon Valley
Conservatory of Music, 1924-1930; Instructor of Piano, Lebanon Valley
College Conservatory of Music, 1930 —
R. Porter Campbell, Mus.B. Organ
Diploma in Pianoforte, Lebanon Valley College Conservatory, 1915;
Diploma in Organ and Bachelor of Music degree ibid., 1916; Teacher of
Pianoforte, History and Theory, 1915-1917; U. S. Service, 1917-1919;
Pianoforte and Pedagogy under Aloys Kramer and Arthur Freidheim,
Summer Session, New York, 1921; Master Course in Organ Playing with
Pietro A. Yon, New York, Summer of 1923 and Season of 1924; with
Pietro A. Yon in Italy, Summer of 1924; Organist St. Luke's Episcopal
Church, Lebanon, Pa.; Instructor of Organ, Lebanon Valley College Con-
servatory of Music, 1920 —
Harold Malsh Violin
Graduate of the Institute of Musical Art, New York City (Dr. Frank
Damrosch, Director); Teacher in the Music and Art Institute, Mt. Vernon,
N. Y.; Instructor of Violin, Lebanon Valley College Conservatory of Music,
1924—
Alexander Crawford Voice
Student of Evan Stephens, H. Sutton Goddard and Wm. Shakespeare,
London, England; Private Studio, Denver, Colorado, 1916-1923; Summer
1919, Deems Taylor and Percy Rector Stephens; Private Studio Carnegie
Hall, N. Y. C, 1924-1927; Vocal Instructor, Lebanon Valley College Con-
servatory of Music, 1927 —
Edward P. Rutledge, M.A. Band and Orchestra Instruments
Institute of Musical Art, New York, 1919-1921; B.S., Teachers College,
Columbia University, 1925; Teacher of Instrumental Music, Public Schools,
Neodesha, Kansas, 1925-1931; Instructor in Music Education, Summer
Sessions, Columbia University, 1926-1931; M.A., Teachers College, Co-
lumbia University, 1931; Instructor in Band and Orchestra Instruments,
Lebanon Valley College Conservatory of Music, 1931 —
11
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
Ella R. Mover, B.S., M.A. Theory
Graduate Sternberg School of Music, Philadelphia, Pa., 1916; Graduate
of Institute of Musical Art, New York City, 1920; Graduate of Fontaine-
bleau School of Music, Fontainebleau, France, 1922; B.S., New York
University, 1927; M.A., ibid., 1932; Head of Theory Department, West-
minster College, New Wilmington, Pa., 1920-1923; Head of Theory De-
partment, Chatham School, Chatham, Va., 1923-1924; Instructor in New
York University, Summers 1926, 1927; State Teachers College, California,
Pa., 1927-1931; Instructor in Theory, Lebanon Valley College Conserva-
tory of Music, 1931 —
D. Clark Carmean, M.A. Band and Orchestra Instruments
A.B., Ohio Wesleyan University, 1926; M.A., Teachers College, Columbia
University, 1932; Supervisor of Instrumental Music, Erie County,
1927-1929; Teacher of Music, Cleveland City Public Schools, 1929-1931;
Teacher of Instrumental Music, Public Schools, Neodesha, Kansas,
1931-1933; Instructor in Band and Orchestra Instruments, Lebanon
Valley College Conservatory of Music, 1933 —
Nella Miller, B.S. piano
Winner of National Contest, Women's Federation of Music Clubs, 1923;
Fellowship in Juilliard School of Music, New York City, 1926-1933; Student
of Carl Friedberg, 1926; Olga Samaroff, 1927-1933; New York Debut,
Town Hall, 1930; New York Concert, Town Hall, 1931; Extensive Con-
cert Work Throughout the United States; Instructor in Piano, Juilliard
Graduate School of Music, 1931-1934; Private Teaching in New York
City, 1931-1934; Member of Faculty, Laymans Music Course Organized
by Olga Samaroff, Philadelphia, Penna., 1934; B.S. Degree in Music
Education, Teachers College, Columbia University, 1934; Eight New York
Concerts in Complete Cycles of Brahms Chamber Music, 1933; Instructor
of Piano, Lebanon Valley College Conservatory of Music, 1933 —
Hubert Linscott, B.S. Voice
B.S., University of California, 1906; Pupil of Frank King Clark, Jacques
Isnardon, Madame Heglon-Leroux, Paris, France, and of Eleanor Mc-
Lellan, New York City; Teacher of Voice, Brenan College, Gainesville,
Ga., 1909-12; Cleveland Institute of Music, 1922-24; Master Institute of
Roerich Museum, 1925; Private Studio, New York City, 1915; Teacher of
Voice, Lebanon Valley College Conservatory of Music, 1935 —
Beula Duffey Piano
Graduate Canadian Conservatory of Music, 1924; Fellowships Juilliard
Graduate School, 1927-1932; Graduated 1932; Lecturing Layman Music
Tours under Olga Samaroff-Stokowski, 1931-32; Four years chamber music
with Letz and Salmond, 1927-1930; vocal scholarship, Berlin, Germany,
1929. Broadcasting: Columbia Broadcasting System Nationwide hook-up
weekly two-piano recitals with Ernest Hutcheson, 1932-1934; National
Broadcasting System Nationwide, solo appearances and weekly two-piano
series with Rudolph Gruen, 1935; Mutual Network, weekly series piano
and violin sonatas with Eddy Brown, 1935; Canadian Radio Commission
soloist Concert Caravan, 1935. Recitals and soloist with leading symphony
orchestras throughout the United States and Canada. Teaching: Juilliard
Graduate School and a private class 1930-1933; Juilliard Summer School,
1935; Instructor of Piano, Lebanon Valley College Conservatory of Music,
1935—
Mrs. Leon Reissinger, B.S Piano
B.S., Music Education, Lebanon Valley College, 1932; Private Teaching,
Shippensburg, Pa., and Hershey, Pa.; Private Teaching, Lebanon Valley
College, 193S—
12
Committees, Assistants, Supervisors
COMMITTEES OF THE FACULTY— 1935-1936
Activities — Richie, Green, Metoxen, Rutledge, Stonecipher.
Admissions — Grimm, Gillespie, Derickson, Shenk.
Athletics — Metoxen, Frock, Gingrich, Henderson, Stevenson.
Band — Rutledge, Carmean, Campbell, Crawford.
Broadcasting — Rutledge, Mrs. Bender, Crawford, Struble.
Bulletin — Wallace, Gillespie, Grimm, Myers.
Chapel — Butterwick, Green, Lietzau, Richie.
Class Absences — Stokes, Bailey, Grimm, Light, Richardson, Schweigert
Commencement — Gingrich, Mrs. Bender, Grimm, Struble.
Credits — Grimm, Bailey, Bender, Reynolds, Stonecipher.
Curriculum — Stonecipher, Derickson, Gillespie, Stevenson.
Debating — Stevenson, Myers, Shenk, Stokes.
Educational Policy — Stonecipher, Butterwick, Derickson, Grimm,
Stevenson, Wallace.
Examination — Reynolds, Bender, Gillespie, Light, Schweigert.
Extension — Stokes, Derickson, Reynolds, Wallace.
Faculty-Student — (Men) Carmean, Bailey, Shenk.
Faculty-Student — (Women) Green, Lietzau, Wood.
Freshman Week — Reynolds, Bailey, Gillespie, Stonecipher.
Flower — Moyer, Light, Richardson, Shenk.
Honorary Degrees — Derickson, Bender, Butterwick, Richie.
La Vie Collegienne — Light, Struble, Stokes, Wallace.
Library — Myers, Butterwick, Lietzau, Wallace.
Men's Senate — Stevenson, Stonecipher, Struble.
Personnel — Bailey, Grimm, Stonecipher, Wood.
N. Y, A. — Shenk, Stevenson, Esbenshade, Clements, Wallace.
Physical Education for Women — Henderson, Lietzau, Moyer, Rich-
ardson, Wood.
Quittapahilla — Struble, Mrs. Bender, Gingrich, Stokes.
Registration — Grimm, Advisers, and Agent of Finance Committee.
Schedule — Grimm, Gillespie, Stonecipher, Metoxen.
Student Finance — Stokes and Organization Advisers.
Student Honorary Soctety — Stonecipher, Shenk, Stevenson.
Summer School — Gingrich, Bender, Reynolds, Rutledge, Stonecipher.
W. S. G. A. — Green, Gillespie, Lietzau, Wood.
Freshman Advisers — A.B., Stonecipher, Wallace.
B.S., Biology— Light.
Chemistry — Bender,
Economics — Stokes.
Education — Reynolds .
Music Education — Gillespie.
Pre-Legal — Gingrich.
Pre-Medical--Derickson and Bender.
Pre-Theological — Richie.
Social Service — Wood.
Y. M. C. A. Advisers — Butterwick, Richie, Stonecipher.
Y. W. C. A. Advisers — Green, Henderson, Myers.
The President is a member of all committees, ex officio.
13
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
GRADUATE ASSISTANTS, 1935-1936
ESTHER SHENK, A.B., Lebanon Valley College, '26 English
PAUL S. ELLENBERGER, B.S. in Ed., '33 Biology
STUDENT ASSISTANTS, 1935-1936
MARK HOSTETTER, '36 Bible and Greek
ROBERT CASSEL, '36 Biology
SARAH LUPTON, '36 Biology
BOYD SPONAUGLE, '36 Biology
ROBERT TROXEL, '36 Biology
ALBERT R. ANDERSON, '36 Business Administration
LOUISE SHEARER, '36 Business Administration
ROBERT EDWARDS, '36 Chemistry
JOHN H. MUTH, '36 Chemistry
C. WILBUR SHANK, '36 Chemistry
RUTH L. BUCK, '37 Education and Psychology
SYLVIA C. EVELEV, '36 Education and Psychology
MARIAN E. LEISEY, '36 Education and Psychology
SARA K. MECKLEY, '37 Education and Psychology
WINONA SHROFF, '36 Education a-nd Psychology
CALVIN H. REBER, '36 English
ROBERT H. SPOHN, '36 English
DAVID J. YAKE, '36 English
A. LOUISE GILLAN, '36 French
ELEANOR LYNCH, '37 French
H. EDGAR MESSERSMITH, '37 German
CHARLES B. KINNEY, '37 History
RICHARD L. HUBER, '36 Mathematics
MARY A. KAUFFMAN, '36 Mathematics
CLAIR A. SNELL, '37 Mathematics
IVA C. WEIRICK, '36 Mathematics
RICHARD BAUS, '37 Physics
VERNON HEMPERLY, '36 Physics
RUTH GO YNE, '37 Consen'atory of Music
ELNORA REEDER, '36 Conservatary of Music
MARTHA FAUST, '37 Dean's Office
CHRISTINE SMITH, '36 Alumni Office
14
CATALOGUE
SUPERVISORS OF PRACTICE TEACHING
Annville High School
O. EDGAR REYNOLDS, Ph.D., Columbia University, 1927, Head
of the Department of Education, Lebanon Valley College
CHARLES G. DOTTER, A.B., Lebanon Valley College, 1909, Super-
vising Principal
ADA C. BOSSARD, A.M., Lebanon Valley College, 1929, French and
European History
STELLA M. HUGHES, M.S., Lebanon Valley College, 1930, Science
J. GORDON STARR, B.S. in Ed., Lebanon Valley College, 1927,
History and English
IRENE M. MILLER, A.B., Lebanon Valley College, 1929, Mathematics
MILDRED E. MYERS, A.B., Lebanon Valley College, 1930, Latin
CARL W. ZIEGLER, A.B., Elizabethtown College, 1931, English and
German
HENRY J. HOLLINGER, A.M., Columbia University, 1929, English.
15
PRESIDENTS
Rev. Thomas Rees Vickroy, Ph.D 1866-1871
Lucian H. Hammond, A.M 1871-1876
Rev. D. D. DeLong, A.M 1876-1887
Rev. E. S. Lorenz, A.M., B.D 1887-1889
Rev. Cyrus J. Kephart, A.M 1889-1890
E. Benjamin Bierman, A.M., Ph.D 1890-1897
Rev. Hervin U. Roop, A.M., Ph.D., LL.D 1897-1906
Rev. Abram Paul Funkhouser, B.S 1906-1907
Rev. Lawrence Keister, S.T.B., D.D 1907-1912
Rev. George Daniel Gossard, B.D., D.D., LL.D 1912-1932
Rev. Clyde Alvin Lynch, A.M., B.D., D.D., Ph.D 1932-
16
Lebanon Valley College
HISTORY
THE quiet growth of Lebanon Valley College, now in its seven-
tieth year, has behind it an instructive and stimulating history.
It is the history, not of a few brilliant men, but of a people
and an ideal. The people were the members of the eastern confer-
ences of the Church of the United Brethren in Christ; the ideal,
that of a co-educational institution of learning in which the highest
scholarship should be fostered in a Christian atmosphere, and in
which religion should subsist without sectarianism. To establish
that ideal, Lebanon Valley College was founded at Annville, Pa.,
in 1866.
To an outside observer, the history of the College from its opening
by President Thomas Rees Vickroy on May 7, 1866, in a building
donated by the old Annville Academy and with a student body of
forty-nine, might seem to consist merely in increases in the number
of students, corresponding increases in the faculty, the purchase of
new grounds, and the erection of new buildings. But the inner history
was marked by a long and bitter struggle against what often seemed
insuperable obstacles, a struggle carried on by heroic men and women
on the faculty, among the students, and in the conferences.
There was, to begin with, the old controversy over the wisdom
of providing higher education for the Church's young people. In the
first year of the College's life a fierce attack upon the educational
policy of which it was the fruit came near to putting an end to it at
once. But the conference stood loyally by the institution it had
created and fought the matter through, though it meant in the end
the dropping of valued members from the Church.
Some twenty years later another crisis developed over the question
of relocating the College. The debate which lasted for some years,
so seriously divided the friends of the College that in the uncertainty
all progress came to a stop. In the emergency Dr. E. Benjamin
Bierman was called to the presidency, which he assumed in 1890.
On the wave of enthusiasm which he was able to set in motion, the
policy of permanency and enlargement was accepted. Buildings were
renovated, the student body increased, and when that year the
College received the Mary A. Dodge Scholarship Fund of ten
thousand dollars — by far the largest single amount that had ever
come to the institution — Lebanon Valley College was enabled to
17
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
close its first quarter century with a complete renewal of the con-
fidence in which it had been founded.
In 1897, under the presidency of Dr. Roop and with the assistance
of old friends and new patrons, the College entered on a fresh
period of expansion which saw the erection of the greater part of
the present plant. Engle Music Hall, the Carnegie Library, and
North Hall were first built. The destruction by fire of the old
Administration Building tested the loyalty of college supporters but
did not interfere with the program of expansion. The friends of
the College rallied to build a new and larger Administration Building,
a residence for the men, and a heating plant. Dr. Roop also provided
proper quarters and modern equipment for the science departments.
His vision and initiative laid the foundation for the success that has
since come to the College.
The inauguration of the late President George Daniel Gossard
marks the beginning of the greatest era of prosperity. During his
term of office the student body trebled in numbers, the faculty in-
creased not only in numbers but also in attainments, and the elimina-
tion of all phases of secondary education raised the institution to
true college status. During this same period two great endowment
campaigns were completed. Through the splendid support of the
conferences, the alumni, and other friends, the College was made
economically sound and her permanency placed beyond question.
As Lebanon Valley College moves forward under the energetic
guidance of her president, Dr. Clyde A. Lynch, she looks back
with a feeling of reverence over her past. She sees there the
small but proud history of a democratic institution, established by
a pious people in the faith that "The truth shall make you free,"
and carried through dark days by the unswerving devotion and self-
sacrifice of a faculty and a constituency poor in the world's goods
but rich in faith in the ideals for which the College was founded.
Lebanon Valley College is proud of its beginnings, and now,
strengthened as it is in its economic sinews, with policies established
and a vigorous administration assured, it looks forward in the spirit
of its founders to taking rank among the leading educational institu-
tions of the state.
A STATEMENT OF AIMS
The motto of Lebanon Valley College, Libertas Per Veritatem,
is indicative of the purpose of the College as conceived by its found-
ers and early supporters. Changing conditions but accentuate the
value of this fundamental purpose. Education is a liberating force.
Individual emancipation and social freedom are achieved by means
18
CATALOGUE
of truth. This ideal of freedom is consonant with our modern demo-
cratic ideals and advancements. It is opposed to stagnation on the
one hand, and to anarchy on the other.
In harmony with the general purpose of the College the following
aims are presented:
1. Educational Efficiency. This is promoted by a scholarly fac-
ulty, excellent courses of study, well-equipped laboratories and
library. The small college can deal with students in smaller groups
and take cognizance of individual differences. True to the ideals
of the Liberal Arts College, a broad cultural education is made to
minister to the total personality of the student.
2. Elementary Preparation for Certain Vocations. Without sacri-
ficing the ideals of a liberal arts education, fully accredited courses
are offered preparatory to the highly specialized training provided
by graduate and professional schools. Such courses are given in the
fields of religion, medicine, and law. Complete courses are offered in
preparation for teaching and business administration.
3. Loyalty to Christian Ideals. Faculty members are expected to
combine excellence of scholarship with Christian character. A Chris-
tian philosophy of life is presented and Christian ideals of character
and conduct encouraged. Daily chapel services, good courses in
Bible and Religion, various religious organizations on the campus,
and the college church provide for the religious development and
training of the students.
4. Denominational Service. The College was founded and is main-
tained by several eastern conferences of the Church of the United
Brethren in Christ. Realizing its special obligation to its denomina-
tional constituency, this institution makes special financial concessions
to our own ministerial students and to the children of all ministers.
The college is continuously supplying the Church with future leaders,
both ministerial and lay. All of this is done without sectarian dis-
crimination against students with other religious affiliations.
5. Training for Citizenship. The college campus is a miniature
society. Situations not unlike those that obtain in the larger world
of affairs necessitate the proper conditioning of the student in his
reactions to the group. Discipline is maintained by student-govern-
ment organizations. Physical education and various social activities
supplement the training of the intellect. Inter-collegiate and intra-
mural athletics, in addition to their physical values, foster the devel-
opment of desirable social attitudes.
ACADEMIC STANDING
Lebanon Valley College is fully accredited by the Department of
Public Instruction of Pennsylvania, the American Association of
Colleges, the Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools of the
Middle Atlantic States and Maryland, and the American Association
of University Women. It is a member of the American Council on
Education.
LOCATION
The College is situated in Annville, twenty-one miles east of Har-
risburg, in the heart of Lebanon Valley, midway between two ranges
19
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
of the Allegheny system, the Blue Ridge Mountains and the South
Mountains. It is on the Benjamin Franklin Highway and the Phila-
delphia-Reading Railroad, and is quickly reached by train or bus
from Harrisburg, Reading, Philadelphia, Baltimore, and New York.
BUILDINGS AND EQUIPMENT
The campus, of twelve acres, occupies a high point in the centre
of Annville. Around it are grouped the ten college buildings, includ-
ing the Administration Building, the Carnegie Library, the Engle
Conservatory of Music, the Men's Dormitory, and three dormitories
of women: North Hall, South Hall, and West Hall.
The Administration Building contains, in addition to the admin-
istrative offices, the college lecture rooms, science laboratories, biology
and chemistry museums, and a gymnasium.
Lounge rooms are provided for the day students.
Extramural and intramural sports are encouraged, the College
providing equipment where needed. The following special provisions
have been made for sports: an athletic field of five and one-half acres,
five tennis courts, an archery range, a field for girls' hockey, a
hand-ball court, and a gymnasium.
A well-equipped and comfortable Infirmary has been provided,
with a resident graduate nurse in attendance.
THE COLLEGE LIBRARY
The present library equipment is being expanded rapidly to meet
the growing needs of the College.
The library already contains a fair collection of the foundation
books needed by the various college departments. It is excellently
equipped with works of general reference, such as encyclopedias, dic-
tionaries, atlases, indexes, and year books. The periodicals room
is provided with a large and growing list of technical journals and
magazines of general interest.
Incoming students are instructed in the use of catalogues and refer-
ence books, and in the best methods of working in the library.
Books, unless specially reserved for reference work, may be taken
out by students. Inter-library loan courtesies enable the librarian
to provide student or faculty member with books not found on the
College shelves.
The library is open during these hours:
Monday to Friday 8 a. m. to 5 p. m.;
7 p. m. to 10 p. m.
Saturday. 9 a. m. to 12 noon;
2 p. m. to 4 p. m.
20
Student Activities
. . The Young Men's and Young Women's Christian
. . . Associations hold weekly devotional services and
conduct special courses in Bible and Mission Study.
They are centres of the spiritual interests of the students, and
deserve the hearty support of all connected vi^ith the College.
_ . Excellent opportunities for Hterary improvement and
„ . . parliamentary training are afforded by the societies
of the College, of vi^hich there are four: the Philo-
kosmian, Kalozetean, Clionian, and Delphian. The last two are con-
ducted by the girls of the College. These societies meet on Friday
evening, each in its own hall. They are valuable agencies in college
work, and students are advised to unite with one of them.
... . The Athletic Association is composed of all the
. . . students of the College and the cooperating Alumni.
Athletics are controlled by a Council consisting of
representatives of the Faculty and Alumni.
A group of students possessing ability in management
Journalism and writing is selected annually by the Faculty to
bring out a weekly periodical, La Vie Collegienne,
devoted to college and student interests. La Vie affords training of
a highly specialized kind to those interested in editorial work. Other
opportunities of journalistic training are afforded by The Qtdttapahilla,
the annual year-book published by the Junior Class; and by the
Green Blotter Club, whose membership consists of a selected group
of writers, of whom four are chosen each year from among the first
year students.
Debating
The College is a member of the Debating Association
of Pennsylvania Colleges, and supports a vigorous
Debating Club from which teams are selected to represent the Col-
lege in intercollegiate debates with neighboring colleges and univer-
sities such as Franklin and Marshall, Bucknell, Elizabethtown,
Albright, Ursinus, Western Maryland, and Susquehanna. Member-
ship in the Debating Club is open to all students, and four teams are
selected each year by competitive try-outs.
_. . Those interested in dramatics, and especially pros-
pective teachers who wish to prepare themselves for
coaching high school plays, will find experience in the annual Junior
Play, the anniversary plays presented by the literary societies, and
21
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
the monthly meetings of the Wig and Buckle Club. "Cub" member-
ship in the Wig and Buckle is open to all students who desire ex-
perience in any branch of dramatics — acting, directing, stage
mechanics, etc. Regular membership is limited to those who, on
taking part in a college production, show real proficiency.
Phi Alpha
Epsilon
This honorary scholarship society gives recognition to
those who have achieved a high scholarship record
during their college course. Those who have attained
an average of 88 per cent during the first three and a half years of
their college course and are of good moral character are eligible for
membership.
Those who play musical instruments or who sing are
"^**^ eligible for membership in the musical organizations main-
tained on the campus, such as the L. V. C. Band, Symphony Orches-
tra, College Orchestra, Glee Club, and College Chorus. For detailed
announcement concerning these organizations turn to page 81 of
this catalogue.
Many department clubs have been formed on the
rf^''*"^^ campus by groups of students interested in certain
fields of investigation. At informal gatherings reports
on current topics are presented and discussed, and visiting lecturers
are entertained. The following is a list of such clubs: the Chemistry
Club, Commerce Club, German Club, Green Blotter Club, Inter-
national Relations Club, Life Work Recruits, and Readers' Club.
PRIZES, 1935
Max F. Lehman Memorial Mathematics Prize
Established by the Class of 1907, in memory of a classmate.
Awarded to that member of the freshman class who shall have
attained the highest standing in mathematics.
The prize was awarded in 1935 to Roger Saylor and Donald
Walter.
Sophomore Prize in English Literature
Established by the Class of 1928. Awarded to the three students
in Sophomore English (English 26) who shall have done the best
work, taking into account scholarship, originality, and progress.
The prize was awarded in 1935 to Claire E. Adams, Grace Naugle,
and Karl Flocken.
Ancient History Prize
Clifford Barnhart.
Music Scholarship
Senior: Ruth Bailey.
Junior: Oleta Dietrich and Nancy Bowman.
22
.2.
i
Q
1
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cq
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3
s
o
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2
One of which must be
Plane Geometry
(M
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5
In the Economics Major
two may be chosen from
Commercial Subjects
8
c
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21*
One and one-
half units of Al-
gebra and one
unit of Plane
Geometry
(M
2
(Laboratory
Science)
1
Q
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One of which
must be Plane
Geometry
Three years of
one language or
two years each
of two
languages
1
(Laboratory
Science)
-
IC
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He WINrtiN
T}H CO CO fo (N cq
■-c|«'-ll«'<lN
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Elementary Algebra
Intermediate Algebra
Plane Geometry
Solid Geometry
Trigonometry
Latin
French
German
Greek
Spanish
Italian
Physics
Chemistry
Biology
Botany
Zoology
Greek and Roman History
English History
Mediaeval &ModernHistory
American History
Civics
Economics
Problems of Democracy
3
2
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s
Ad
mission
Persons desiring to enter Lebanon Valley College should make
application on official forms which may be obtained from the Reg-
istrar. The application should be accompanied by a transcript of
the high school record on the form provided for that purpose.
Students coming from other institutions must present certifi-
cates of good standing and honorable dismissal.
Graduates of standard high schools (approved by the Pennsyl-
vania State Department of Education, by the Association of Colleges
and Preparatory Schools of the Middle Atlantic States and Mary-
land, or by the state university of the state in which the school is
located) may be admitted on presentation of certificates, signed by
the proper authorities, showing the completion of a four-year high
school course or its equivalent.
Such certificates must represent a total of at least 16 units of
work and must meet the requirements outlined in the Table of Re-
quirements for Admission. They must also indicate that the respec-
tive candidates are qualified to pursue collegiate education success-
fully. Candidates whose preparatory records are unsatisfactory to
the Committee on Admissions will be refused admission.
A unit represents the work of a school year of no less than thirty-
six weeks, with five periods of at least forty-five minutes each per
week, or four periods of one hour each per week. A unit, therefore,
is the equivalent of one hundred and eighty recitation periods of
forty-five minutes each, or one hundred and forty-four periods of
one hour each.
Blank entrance credit certificates will be furnished upon application
to the Registrar.
REGISTRATION
Registration is the process of class assignment and is completed
over the signatures of the adviser and the Registrar. No student
will be admitted to any class without the proper registration card,
which is sent direct to the department of instruction from the Reg-
istrar's office.
The registration days for the collegiate year 1935-1936 are as
follows: First semester, Sept. 16 for freshmen and Sept. 18-19 for
other students; second semester, Jan. 18-19.
p . . To expedite the opening of the school year in
September, all students of 1935-1936 will be regis-
tered during the month of May for the ensuing year's work. A fee of
24
CATALOGUE
one dollar will be charged when this is not attended to at the time
appointed. Changes in registration will be made in September
without charge.
-. Students registering later than the days specified will
_ . . be charged a fee of one dollar. Students desiring to
register later than one week after the opening of the
semester will be admitted only by special action of the proper
committee.
Chane- f When change of registration is advisable or neces-
Reeistration ^^^^ ^^^^ changes must be made in the same way
as the original registration, namely, over the signa-
tures of the adviser and Registrar. Such changes will not be per-
mitted after the close of the second week of the session.
. Classification will be made on the following credit
C assi cation ^^^gjg. preshman standing, 16 units; Sophomore stand-
ing, 30 semester hours; Junior standing, 60 semester hours; Senior
standing, 90 semester hours.
Credits for work done in other institutions, for which
advanced standing is desired, must be submitted to
the Committee on College Credits and a copy filed
with the Registrar.
FRESHMAN WEEK
A few days are set apart at the beginning of the College year
for the purpose of helping new students to become familiar with
their academic surroundings. There are lectures, placement tests,
hikes, and informal meetings with members of the faculty in their
homes. New students are made acquainted with the College tradi-
tions, and are advised concerning methods of study and the use of
the library.
All incoming students are required to take a thorough physical
examination during the registration period.
ADVISERS
The student will find little opportunity for specialization in the
first year at College, but before registering for the second year he
must choose a department in which to pursue work of special con-
centration. This department shall be known as his major. The head
of the department in which a student has elected to major becomes
the adviser for that student. The adviser's approval is necessary
before a student may register for or enter upon any course of study,
or discontinue any work. He is the medium of communication be-
tween the Faculty and the students majoring in his department, and
stands to his students in the relation of a friendly counselor.
25
Credits
_. Class standing will be determined three times a year
_^ ,. for Faculty consideration: nine weeks after the opening
Standmg c n u ^ ^ .u ^ c u .
of College, and at the end of each semester.
The standing in each course is indicated generally by classification
in seven groups, as follows:
A (90-100%) signifies that the record of the student is distin-
guished.
B (80-89%) signifies that the record of the student is very good.
C (70-79%) signifies that the record is good.
D (60-69%) signifies the lowest sustained record.
E (below 60%) imposes a condition on the student.
F (Failed completely) signifies that the student must drop or repeat
the subject and cannot be admitted to subjects dependent thereon.
I (Incomplete) signifies that work is incomplete, but otherwise
satisfactory.
LIMIT OF HOURS
Every resident student must take at least fifteen hours of work
as catalogued.
The permitted number of extra hours of work, above seventeen,
is limited by the student's previous record, as follows:
(a) Majority of A's — three hours.
(b) Lower record than majority of A's — no extra hours.
26
Discipline
The rules of the College are as few and simple as the proper regu-
lation of a community of young men and women will permit. The
government of the dormitories is under the immediate control of
the student councils, committees of students authorized by the col-
lege authorities.
All students are required to attend the morning chapel service.
Failure to attend will be ground for action by the Faculty upon
recommendation of the Committee on Chapel Attendance.
.. Should a student be absent, without adequate excuse,
r\DS6nc6S
once beyond the number of times a class meets each
week, he will be required, in order to keep his class standing, to pay
three dollars to the College and make up the lost work by such
means as the professor in charge shall deem advisable. All fines for
overcuts must be paid before the student so delinquent may be per-
mitted to take his final examinations.
Absence from the recitations immediately preceding or immediately
following vacation will be counted double.
Students in the sophomore, junior, or senior year whose record
in the work of the preceding semester shows an average of 90%, are
not subject to the absence rule.
Hazing is strictly prohibited. Any infringement by mem-
^^^ ^ bers of the other classes upon the personal rights of
freshmen, or any discrimination against freshmen because of their
class standing, is interpreted as hazing.
DEFICIENT STUDENTS
p . . A student who has failed to pass in 60% of the courses
for which he is registered, will be placed on probation.
If, at the end of the semester, such a student has still failed to pass
in 60% of his courses, he will be required to withdraw from the
institution.
Students on probation are not permitted to take part in athletics
or any other major activity.
„ .... , Students obtaining a final average below 60%
Conditions and , , , ^r.^/ • u- . -n ,.
T, . ^. but above 50% m any subject will be given
Re-examinations .,„ ... „ , 1 ^ ,.,. ,
a Condition, and such Condition may be re-
moved by obtaining a mark of 60% or more on a re-examination
27
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
to be taken at the College on the days appointed for supplemental
examinations.
Supplemental examinations will be held twice during the year: in
September and six weeks after the beginning of the second semester.
A fee of $3 will be charged for each supplemental examination.
Except in the case of the final examinations of seniors, no immedi-
ate re-examination will be given to students falHng below the passing
mark on the regular examinations.
Conditions imposed at the end of the first year must be removed
before the student enters the third year, and those imposed at the
end of the second or third year must be removed before entering
the senior year. Failure to remove a Condition within the above
specified time converts the Condition into a Failure.
28
Expenses
The rates on the following pages apply to the school year 1936-1937.
MATRICULATION
A Matriculation Fee of five dollars must be paid by all full-time
students who are entering the College for the first time. This fee
should accompany the application for admission. If a student's appli-
cation is not accepted, the fee will be returned.
All students not enrolled in regular College or Conservatory
Courses will be required to pay a matriculation fee of one dollar,
once in each school year.
TUITION AND STUDENT ACTIVITIES FEES
An annual charge of $275, which covers not only tuition for sev-
enteen hours per semester in the College and Conservatory, but also
a fee for student activities, will be made for all students in regular
courses.
Eight dollars will be charged for each additional semester hour
of work taken in regular classes when the total number of hours
for the year exceeds thirty-four. This rate will also apply to students
who enroll for not more than twelve hours in regular courses.
It is understood that the charge for extra hours above the regularly
permitted seventeen per semester shall not be affected by the addition
of required hours in Physical Education; in other words, a
student may take without extra charge the required Physical Educa-
tion over and above his seventeen hours per semester of academic
work.
The payment of the annual fee entitles the student not only to class
room instruction but to the following privileges as well: The use of
the library, gymnasium and athletic field; admission to athletic games
on the home grounds or in Lebanon ; subscription to La Vie Collegienne
and the College Year Book; membership in the Christian Associations
and student government associations; the use of the infirmary and
care by the resident nurse.
Ministers' children in either the College or Conservatory are
entitled to a rebate of fifty dollars on full tuition. Scholarships do
not cover the tuition for extra work taken.
29
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
LABORATORY FEES
To cover the cost of materials used in the Laboratories, the fol-
lowing fees are charged:
EACH
SEMESTER
Biology 13 $6.00
Methods of Teaching Biology (Education 402) 4.00
All other Biology courses, each 8.00
Chemistry 18 8.00
Chemistry 28 and 38, each 10.00
Chemistry 48 12.00
Physics 18, 28, and 34, each 5.00
Psychology 13 and 23, each LOO
Education 82 1.00
Geology 16 6.00
Mineralogy 8.00
There will be no refund of laboratory fees.
A deposit of $2 is required of each student in the Biological
Laboratory as a guarantee for the return of keys and apparatus. This
amount, less any deductions for loss or breakage, is refunded when
keys and apparatus are returned.
Breakage deposit for Chemistry Courses: Chemistry 18, $3;
Chemistry 28, $4; Chemistry 38, $4; Chemistry 48, $5. All breakage
in the Chemical Laboratory will be charged against the individual
student and any balance of the above deposits due the student at
the completion of his course will be returned or credited to his
account, and any deficit beyond his deposit will be charged to his
regular college account.
All deposits shall be paid at the College office.
BOARDING
The domestic department is in charge of a skilled and competent
chef. Plain, substantial, and palatable food especially adapted to the
needs of the student is provided. The kitchen is furnished with
modern equipment, and all food is prepared in the most sanitary
manner.
The Boarding rate for the college year 1936-1937 is $200. The
College reserves the right to increase this amount at any time during
the year in case of unusual change in food prices. These rates do
not include Christmas and Easter vacations.
Students who leave college during the term will be required to pay
board at the rate of $6.50 per week during their stay in college.
30
CATALOGUE
All students who do not room and board at their homes are required
to room and board in the College unless special permission is
obtained from the Executive Committee to do otherwise. Students
refusing to comply with this regulation forfeit their privileges as
students in the college.
ROOM RENT
Room rent varies from $50 to $104 except when double rooms
are assigned to only one student, in which case the occupant will pay
the regular rent for two. Rooms are reserved only for those who for-
ward an advance payment of $25 not later than August 1; applica-
tions received after that date must be accompanied by $25 to assure
accommodations.
Occupants of a room are held responsible for all breakage and
loss of furniture or any loss whatever for which the students are
responsible. A breakage fee of $10 is required of each student room-
ing in the Men's Dormitory. All or part of this may be returned
at the end of the year. A dormitory service fee of $6 is charged
men in the Dormitory. A breakage fee of $5 is required for each
student in the Women's Dormitories. After deducting the cost of
repairing estimated at the end of the college year, the balance will
be returned.
Each room in the Men's Doimitory is furnished with a chiflfonier
and book case, and for each occupant a cot, a mattress, one chair, and
a study table. Students must provide their own bedding, rugs, towels,
soap, and all other furnishings.
The Men's Dormitory is under the supervision of a member of
the faculty who, with his wife, occupies a suite of rooms in the
building.
A reception room on the first floor is provided for the accom-
modation of parents and other visitors.
Each room in the Women's Dormitories is furnished with a rug,
bed, mattress, chair, dresser, book case, and study table. All other
desired furnishings must be supplied by the student.
All students to whom rooms are assigned are strictly forbidden to
sub-let their rooms to day-students or to others for a money or any
other consideration.
One 40-watt light is furnished for each occupant of a room. Only
40-watt lights are allowed.
The College reserves the right to close all the dormitories during
the Christmas and Easter vacations.
A day-students' room is provided for the men in the Administra-
tion Building and for the women in South Hall. A deposit of $5
31
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
per student is required from the men, and $3 per student from the
women to cover janitor service and breakage. The unused portion
of this fee will be returned at the end of the year.
SCHEDULE OF CHARGES
Tuition and Student Activities Fee $275.00
Boarding 200.00
Room Rent 50.00 to 104.00
Service Charge, Men's Dormitory 6.00
Matriculation Fee — payable only when student first enters
the College 5.00
FEE FOR PRACTICE TEACHING
A fee of $17.50 for each semester is charged to all students in
college and conservatory who do practice teaching.
GRADUATION FEE
Sixty days prior to Commencement, candidates for degrees are
required to pay the following fees:
Students graduating in the College, $15; students graduating in
Music, $15; students receiving certificates in Music, $8.
PAYMENT OF FEES
An advance payment of $25 must be made by each student to
provide for registration. Students who reserve rooms in the dormi-
tories are required to make this payment by August 1 to secure the
reservation. After this date rooms not so secured may be assigned
to other applicants. All other students in order to be certain of
admission to the College must make this advance payment by Sep-
tember 1. Registration is not completed and students will not be
admitted to class until this payment is made. No refund will be made
on this fee.
Bills for regular college expenses, including tuition, laboratory
fees, boarding, and room rent, are issued at the beginning of each
semester, covering the expenses for the full semester. These bills
are due on the day they are issued and are to be paid within ten days.
On all bills not paid at the specified time interest at the rate of 6%
a year will be charged.
Satisfactory settlement of all bills and fees is required before an
honorable dismissal may be granted or grades recorded.
Students who are candidates for diplomas or certificates must
make full settlement entirely satisfactory to the Finance Committee
before diplomas or certificates will be sealed and delivered.
Z2
CATALOGUE
ABSENCE AND SICKNESS
When students retain their class standing during absence from
college because of sickness or for any other reason, no rebate or
refund will be allowed on tuition. In case of suspension for any
reason there will be no rebate.
In case of sickness which occasions loss of class standing, a reason-
able rebate or refund will be allowed on tuition.
When a student is absent from school more than two weeks in
succession because of sickness, a rebate of two-thirds of the rental
for the time of absence will be allowed. No other refunds will be
allowed on room rents.
AID TO STUDENTS
Help is extended annually to a limited number of students, but
only to those pursuing full courses in the College. This help is
given in the form of Scholarships, Waiterships, Janitorships, Tutor-
ships, or Library work. Such help is given on the explicit condition
that the recipient comply with all the rules and regulations of the
College.
A student forfeits the privilege of a scholarship or other help
from the school when his average grade for the semester falls below
C, or when in any way he refuses to cooperate with the College, or
when he disregards the regulations of the institution.
Students rooming in dormitories and boarding at the college Din-
ing Hall will be given preference when work of various kinds is
assigned.
SCHOLARSHIPS AND TRUST FUNDS
The College offers a limited number of tuition scholarships upon
recommendation of the Scholarship Committee. It also makes some
loans.
In the spring competitive scholarship examinations for entering
students are held, particulars concerning which may be had on appli-
cation to the president.
Students who transfer to other institutions before completing the
number of years designated in their application for admission shall
be required to refund all scholarship and loan grants before their
transcripts are sent to other institutions.
Students preparing for the ministry in the Church of the United
Brethren in Christ and having quarterly or annual conference license
to preach, will be entitled to $100 reduction in tuition, provided they
maintain an average of C in semester grades,
33
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
PROFESSORSHIPS
Chair of English Bible and Greek Testament $15,230.00
Joseph Bittinger Eberly Professorship of Latin Language and Literature.. 40,000.00
John Evans Lehman Chair of Mathematics 36,430.04
Rev. J. B. Weidler Fund 200.00
STUDENT AID
United States Senator James J. Davis Scholarship Fund $ 100.00
Mary A. Dodge Fund 9,500.00
Daniel Eberly Scholarship Fund 514.66
John A. H. Keith Fund 100.00
Henry B. Stehman Fund 1,903.00
SCHOLARSHIPS
Allegheny Conference C. E. Society, Scholarship $1,000.00
Dorothy Jean Bachman Scholarship Fund 1,000.00
Lillian Merle Bachman Scholarship Fund 1,000.00
Baltimore Fifth Church, Otterbein Memorial Sunday School Scholarship 3,000.00
E. M. Baum Scholarship Fund 500.00
Biological Scholarship Fund 2,517.00
Eliza Bittinger Scholarship Fund 12,000.00
Mary A. Bixler Scholarship Fund 500.00
I. T. Buffington Scholarship Fund 2.000. 00
Alice Evers Burtner Memorial Award Fund 2,000.00
Derickson Scholarship Fund 2,750.00
William E. Duff Scholarship Fund 600.00
East Pennsylvania Branch W. M. A. Scholarship 3,000.00
East Pennsylvania Conference C. E. Scholarship 5,000.00
Samuel F. Engle Scholarship Fund 6,000.00
M. C. Favinger and Wife Scholarship Fund 1,000.00
Fred E. Foos Scholarship Fund 1,000.00
C. C. Gingrich Scholarship Fund 3,000.00
G. D. Gossard and Wife Scholarship Fund 3,300.00
Peter Graybill Scholarship Fund 1,000.00
Jacob F. Greasley Scholarship Fund 500.00
Harrisburg Otterbein Church Scholarship Fund 2,120.00
Harrisburg Otterbein Sunday School Scholarship 1,100.00
J. M. Heagy and Wife Scholarship Fund 500.00
Bertha Foos Heinz Scholarship Fund 1,000.00
Harvey E. Herr Memorial Scholarship Fund 1,000.00
Edwin M. Hershey Scholarship Fund 400.00
H. S. Immel Scholarship Fund 5,000.00
Henry G. and Anna S. Kauffraan and Family Scholarship Fund 1,000.00
Barbara June Kettering Scholarship Fund 1,020.00
Rev. and Mrs. J. E. and Rev. A. H. Kleffman Scholarship Fund 1,000.00
The A. S. Kreider Ministerial Fund 15,000.00
W. E. Kreider Scholarship Fund 2,000.00
Mrs. Savilla Loux Scholarship Fund 1,000.00
Lykens Otterbein Church Scholarship Fund 1,000.00
Mechanicsburg U. B. Sunday School Scholarship 2,000.00
Medical Scholarship Fund 245.00
Elizabeth Meyer Endowment Fund 500.00
Elizabeth May Meyer Musical Scholarship Fund 1,550.00
Mrs. Elizabeth H. Millard Memorial Scholarship 5,000.00
Bishop J. S. Mills Scholarship Fund 5,000.00
Elizabeth A. Mower Beneficiary Fund 225.00
Grace U. B. Church of Penbrook, Pa., Scholarship 3,000.00
Pennsylvania Branch W. M. A. Scholarship Fund 2,500.00
Pennsylvania Conference C. E. Scholarship 4,350.00
Rev. H. C. Phillips Scholarship Fund 1,300.00
Sophia Plitt Scholarship Fund 6.380.00
Ezra G. Ranck and Wife Scholarship Fund 1,000.00
Levi S. Reist Scholarship Fund 300.00
Harvey L. Seltzer Scholarship Fund 3,000.00
34
CATALOGUE
BOOKS FOR LIBRARY
Library Fund of Class of 1916 1,225.00
MAINTENANCE OF BUILDINGS
Hiram E. Steinmetz Memorial Room Fund 200.00
MISCELLANEOUS
Class of 1928 Prize for Proficiency in English 835.00
Rev. John P. Cowling Memorial Fund 400.00
Harnish-Houser Publicity Fund 2,000.00
Max F. Lehman Prize in Freshman Mathematics 400.00
35
Courses of Study-
Lebanon Valley College oflfers the degree of Bachelor of Arts (A.B.)
and the degree of Bachelor of Science (B.S.).
P ., Degrees will be conferred only upon candidates
P . who have spent at least a full year in actual
residence.
Candidates for degrees must obtain a minimum of 126 semester
hours' credit in academic work, and in addition 4 semester hours in
Physical Education, making a total of 130 semester hours. It is
understood, however, that a student who has a physical disability
may be excused (on recommendation from the college physician)
from the requirement in Physical Education without being obliged
to substitute other work in order to bring his total of semester hours
from 126 to 130.
Candidates for degrees must also obtain a minimum of 130 qual-
ity points, computed as follows: for a grade of A, 3 points for each
credit hour; for a grade of B, 2 points; for a grade of C, 1 point.
No quality credit will be given for a grade of D.
As part of this total requirement, every candidate must present
at least 24 semester hours in one department (to be known as his
Major), and at least 16 semester hours in another department (to
be known as his Minor). Both Major and Minor must be selected
before registration for the sophomore year, the Minor to be suitably
related to the Major, and chosen with the advice and approval of
the Head of the Major Department.
The A.B. degree will be awarded to those fulfilling the require-
ments for a Major in the following departments: Bible and New
Testament Greek, English, French, German, Greek, History, Latin,
Mathematics (Arts option). Political and Social Science, Philosophy
and Religion.
The B.S. degree will be awarded to those fulfilling the require-
ments for a Major in the following departments: Biology, Chem-
istry, Mathematics (Science option). Physics, Business Administra-
tion, Education, Music Education.
Those majoring in Education must take two Minors of not less
than 18 semester hours each.
For the special requirements for those majoring in Business
Administration, see p. 68; for those majoring in Music Education,
see p. 74.
36
CATALOGUE
GENERAL REQUIREMENTS
Certain courses embodying the fundamentals of a liberal educa-
tion, are required of all students. These courses, which vary slightly
according to the degree sought, are as follows:
A.B.
Bible 14, 52 or 82
English 16, 26
*French 16 or
German 16
History, four hours,
exclusive of Hist.
16
Philosophy 32
Philosophy 26 or
Economics 16 or
Pol. Science 16 or
Sociology 13 & 23
Biology 18 or
Chemistry 18 or
Physics 18
Psychology 14, 23
Physical Education
Hygiene
B.S.
In Physical Sciences
Bible 14, 52 or 82
English 16, 26
French 16 or
German 16
History, four hours,
exclusive of Hist.
16
$Math. 13 and 23, 46
Philosophy 32
Philosophy 26 or
Economics 16 or
Pol. Science 16 or
Sociology 13 & 23
Biology 18
Chemistry 18
Physics 18
Physical Education
Hygiene
In Education
Bible 14, 52 or 82
English 16, 26
French 16 or
German 16
History, four hours,
exclusive of Hist.
16
Philosophy 32,
Psychology 14, 23
Economics 16 or
Pol. Science 16 or
Sociology 13 & 23
Biology 18 or
Chemistry 18 or
Physics 18
Physical Education
Hygiene
* Twelve semester hours of Foreign Language are required of all candidates
for the A.B. degree; six hours of this total must be from French 16 or German 16.
t Pre-Medical students who are majoring in either Biology or Chemistry may
substitute an elective for Math. 46.
For explanation of numbers used above see the departmental announcements.
ARRANGEMENT OF COURSES BY YEARS
All the courses included in the foregoing list will ordinarily be
taken in fixed years of the college course. A maximum load of 17
hours a week, exclusive of physical education, is permitted for the
regular tuition. A load of 16 or 17 hours, including physical educa-
tion, should be taken each semester to meet the total of 130 hours
required for graduation. The normal distribution of requirements for
students seeking the A.B. or B.S. degree follows:
37
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
.p First Year , ^^""""^ %y|''
A.B. 1st Sem. 2d Sem.
English 16 3 3
French or German 3 3
Bible 14 2 2
Elect from the following: Education 124, For-
eign Language, History 16, Math., Science 6 or 7 6 or 7
Hj'giene 12 1 1
Physical Education 1 1
EngHsh 16 3 3
French or German 3 3
Math. 13 and 23 3 3
Bible 14 2 2
Hygiene 12 1 1
Physical Education 1 1
Biology 18, or Chemistry 18, or Physics 18.. 4 4
AB. Second Year
English 26 3 3
*French or German 3 3
Psychology 14 4
**Biology 18, or Chem. 18, or Physics 18 4 4
Physical Education 1 1
Electives
B.S.
English 26 3 3
Mathematics 46 3 3
The remaining two of:
Biology 18, or Chem. 18, Physics 18 4 4
Physical Education 1 1
***EIectives
AB. Third and Fourth Years
Bible 52 or 82 2
Philosophy 32 2
History 44 2 2
One of the following:
Economics 16, Political Science 16, Sociology
13, 23, or Philosophy 26 3 3
Electives
Bible 52 or 82 2
Philosophy 32 2
History 44 2 2
One of the following:
Economics 16, Political Science 16, Sociology
13 and 23, or Philosophy 26 3 3
Electives
* If French 16 or German 16 and Greek or Latin were taken the first year, an
elective may be substituted.
•* If one of these sciences was elected in the first year, an elective may be
substituted.
**• This must include French 16 or German 16 if course 06 was taken the first
year.
For special curricula in Education, Business Administration, Music
Education, and pre-professional curricula, see pages 68-74.
38
Courses of Instruction
The credit, in semester hours, received on the successful comple-
tion of a course is indicated by the last digit in the course number.
The number of hour periods the class meets each week is noted
immediately after the number and name of the course.
Students beginning the study of a language should note that
no 06 course will receive college credit unless it is followed by a
second year of college work, i. e., by a 16 course in the same field.
ASTRONOMY
Professor Grimm
13. General Astronomy. Three hours. First semester.
A course in descriptive astronomy. Reports on assigned readings.
Important constellations and star groups are studied.
A fine four-and-a-half-inch achromatic telescope adds to the in-
terest of the subject.
Open to Juniors and Seniors.
BIBLE AND NEW TESTAMENT GREEK
Professors Richie and Butterwick
The denominational college justifies its existence by the presenta-
tion of a varied and thorough study of Bible literature. The Bible
department, therefore, aims to consider the Hterary value of the
books of the Bible, appreciate the religious influence of ancient
leaders, estimate the power and value of these contributions to modern
institutions, life, and thought, and make a positive impact upon the
social and spiritual contacts of the student body. The ministerial
students are prepared for the pursuit of advanced studies and for the
active application of the principles of Christianity to the problems
of the parish.
Major: Bible 14, 26, 32, 62, 12, 52 or 82; New Testament Greek
46 or 56.
Minor: Bible 14, 52, 62, and ten additional semester hours.
BIBLE
14. Introduction to English Bible. Two hours. Throughout the
year.
An appreciative and historical survey of the literature of the Old
and New Testaments.
39
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
26. New Testament. Three hours. Throughout the year.
A comparative and interpretative study of the life of Jesus as re-
corded in the Gospels is made during the first semester. The second
semester deals with the life and epistles of Paul, and the practices,
problems, and beliefs of the early church.
Offered 1936-1937.
32. The Prophets. Tw^o hours. First semester.
A study of the lives of the major and minor prophets, and an
analysis of their contributions to the ethical and religious thought
of the Old Testament.
Offered 1937-1938.
42. The Christian Church. Two hours. Second semester.
A study of the growth of Christianity beyond the primitive church,
with special emphasis on the origin and growth of denominations.
Offered 1937-1938.
52. The Religion and History of the Hebrews. Two hours. First
semester.
The purpose of this course is to furnish the student with a true
perspective of the religious growth of the Hebrews during the period
of the Old Testament.
Offered 1937-1938. Dr. Butterwick
62. Principles of Religious Education. Two hours. First semester.
A fundamental course investigating some of the theories, principles,
and problems of Religious Education.
Offered 1936-1937.
72. The Church School. Two hours. Second semester.
A study of the principles, problems and methods in the organization
and administration of the Sunday School, Church Vacation School,
and Week Day School of Religion.
Offered 1936-1937.
82. The Teaching of Jesus. Two hours. First semester.
This course attempts an intensive study of the religious concept
of Jesus as set forth in the Gospels.
Offered 1936-1937. Dr. Butterwick
NEW TESTAMENT GREEK
Professor Richie
46. Readings from the Book of Acts and the General Epistles.
Three hours. Throughout the year.
Offered 1936-1937.
40
CATALOGUE
56. The Gospel according to John and Selected Readings.
Three hours. Throughout the year.
Prerequisite: Greek 16 and 26.
These courses aim to develop thoroughness of exegetical study,
to note the pecuHarities of the New Testament language, and to
examine the differences in the extant manuscripts.
BIOLOGY
Professor Derickson, Associate Professor Light, and Assistants
The work outlined in the following courses in Biology is intended
to acquaint students with those fundamental facts necessary for
the proper interpretation of the phenomena manifested by the living
things with which they are surrounded, and to lay a broad founda-
tion for specialization in universities in professional courses in
Biology,
Those completing the courses will be well prepared for the work
in medical schools, for graduate work in colleges and universities,
for teaching the biological sciences in high schools, and for assistant-
ships in university and experiment station laboratories in the depart-
ments of agriculture and the United States Biological Survey.
For outline of complete Pre-Medical Course, see pp. 69-70.
Major: Course 18 and any additional courses of higher number,
including laboratory work, in the department, amounting to twenty-
four semester hours.
Minor: Course 18 and ten semester hours from courses of higher
number in the department.
13. Educational Biology. Three hours. First semester.
Two hours class work and two hours laboratory work each week.
Required of students in Public School Music.
The course includes a study of the fundamental facts, principles,
and laws of biology that every teacher should know, particularly
of those that have a bearing on courses in education, psychology,
and sociology, as well as on certain schoolroom problems. Emphasis
is placed on the consideration of the laws of growth and develop-
ment, causes of variation, principles of inheritance, adjustment to
environment, and the origin, evolution, structure, and physiology
of the nervous system.
18-A. General Biology (Professional). Four hours. Throughout
the year.
Three hours class work and four hours laboratory work each week.
Required of freshmen majoring in Biology preparing to enter
medical schools or other lines of professional biological work.
Laboratory work Tuesday afternoon.
41
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
18-B. General Biology (Cultural). Four hours. Throughout the
year.
Three hours class work and three hours laboratory work each week.
Section A: Laboratory work Wednesday afternoon.
Section B : Laboratory work Thursday afternoon.
28. Botany. Four hours. Throughout the year.
Three class periods and four hours laboratory work each week.
The object of the course is to give the student a general knowledge
of the plant kingdom. The form, structure and functioning of one
or more types of each of the divisions of algae, fungae, liverworts,
mosses, ferns, and seed plants are studied.
Special attention is given to the phylogeny and ontogeny of the
several groups and constant comparisons are made of those struc-
tures indicating relationships. The principles of classification are
learned by the identification of about one hundred and fifty species
of plants represented in the local spring flora. These studies are
conducted in the field so that the plants are seen as dynamic forces
adapted to their environment.
Offered 1936-1937.
38. Zoology. Four hours. Throughout the year.
Three lectures or recitations and two laboratory periods of two
hours each, per week.
The course is intended to acquaint the student with the structure,
life history, and behavior of representatives of each phylum of ani-
mals. In the study of types, structure, function, and adaptation are
given equal emphasis. The principles of phylogeny and ontogeny
are considered.
The laboratory and class work is supplemented by field studies
including observations of habits, ecological conditions, and the use
of keys for identification and classification.
Offered 1937-1938.
48. Comparative Vertebrate Anatomy. Four hours. Through-
out the year.
Six hours laboratory work and two hours of conference and demon-
stration each week.
The course consists of the dissection and study of a suctorial fish,
a cartilaginous fish, a bony fish, an amphibian, a reptile, a bird, and
a mammal. Carefully labeled drawings are required of each student
as a record of each dissection.
Recommended to those preparing for medicine or majoring in
Biology.
Offered 1936-1937.
54-A. Vertebrate Embryology. Four hours. First semester.
Two class periods and six hours laboratory work each week.
A detailed study of the development of the chick up to the fifth
day with comparisons with other vertebrate embryos.
Offered 1937-1938.
42
CATALOGUE
54-B. Vertebrate Histology. Four hours. Second semester.
Two class periods and six hours laboratory work each week.
A study of the structure of the tissues of the vertebrate, especially
of the mammalian body, and of various methods of technique em-
ployed.
Ofifered 1937-1938.
64. Genetics. Two hours. Throughout the year.
Two class periods and two to four hours laboratory work each week.
This course deals with the mechanism and laws of heredity and
variation, and their practical applications.
Offered 1936-1937.
74. Biological Problems. Two hours throughout the year or four
hours either semester.
An honors course. Laboratory work with conferences.
This course is open to a limited number of students majoring in
Biology who have made a distinguished record in their previous
courses. It consists in working out problems assigned to them in-
volving a practical application of various methods of technique, orig-
inality of method and interpretation, and the development of the
spirit of research. A weekly conference and report on the progress
of the work will be required, and a detailed report including com-
plete records of the work done must be presented before senior
examinations.
84. Bacteriologfy. Four hours. First semester.
Two class periods and four hours laboratory work each week.
This course is designed to acquaint the student with various forms
of bacteria and their role in nature. It includes laboratory technique
in cultivation, sterilization, isolation of pure cultures, and staining
of bacteria.
Offered 1937-1938.
94. Physiology. Four hours. Second semester.
Two class periods and four hours laboratory work each week.
A course of instruction in general physiology dealing with the
tissues of the body and especially their function in respiration, diges-
tion, circulation, excretion, and reproduction.
Offered 1937-1938
Methods of Teaching Science (Education 442). Two hours.
Throughout the year.
This course is designed to acquaint students of the sciences with
methods of obtaining, preparing, and preserving all types of scien-
tific materials; the making of charts and models; photography;
lantern slide making; the fundamentals of taxidermy; various types
of tests and devices used in teaching; sources of equipment; and lists
of books and periodicals useful to science students and teachers.
Offered 1937-1938.
43
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
Professors Stokes and Gingrich
The purpose of the College in offering a course in Business Ad-
ministration is to give the student who is preparing for a business
career a training which embodies not only the essential principles
of business but also offers a general cultural education. The course
offers a preparation for entrance into the Law Schools.
For outline of complete course in Business Administration see p. 68.
14. World Resources and Industries. Two hours. Throughout
the year.
A course dealing with the more important commodities of the
world's trade — their production, export, and import in the various
countries of the world. Stress will be laid on the chief sources of
raw materials and their industrial uses, the marketing and trans-
portation problems of these commodities. Books recommended:
Economic Resources and hidnstries of the World, by Lippincott; World
Resources and Industries, by Zimmerman.
Economics 16. See page 65.
36. Principles of Accounting. Three hours. Throughout the year.
A course in accounting principles and their application in business
to sole traders, partnerships, and corporations; books of original en-
try; operating accounts and balance sheets; the preparation of finan-
cial statements; columnar books; controlling accounts; elements of
corporation accounting; branch house accounting; business papers.
46. Advanced Accounting. Three hours. Throughout the year.
The principle of balance sheet valuation; profits, their determina-
tion and distribution; instalment sales; insolvency and bankruptcy;
accounting for domestic and foreign branches and for holding com-
panies; consolidated balance sheets; a more intensive analysis and
interpretation of financial statements.
513. Cost Accounting. Three hours. One semester.
Principles of cost accounting; system of control over elements
of cost; wage systems and time records; overhead and its distribu-
tion; job orders and process costs; relation of cost records to gen-
eral accounts.
523. Auditing. Three hours. One semester.
Principles of and procedure in audits; internal and external; scope
and kinds of audits; office organization; internal check; analysis and
reconstruction of operating and financial statements; reports to ex-
ecutives; special features in different business and financial organi-
zations; legal decisions.
44
CATALOGUE
S3-A. Transportation: Railroad. Three hours. One semester.
Railroad services; principles of rate making as established by the
railways, the regulative tribunals, and the courts; radvi^ay policy in the
United States and other countries; railway rate structures.
53-B. Transportation: Water and Motor. Three hours. One
semester.
Ocean and inland water transportation. Ocean carriers; routes
and terminals; freight, passenger, mail, and express services; rates;
marine insurance; inland waterways and their relation to railroads;
government aid and regulation of water transportation; principles
of motor transportation; competition and cooperation with railroads.
Money and Banking. See Economics 33, page 66.
Business Law. See Economics 26, page 66.
63. Insurance. Three hours. One semester.
Insurance as a factor in private and business life; a study of the
principles and practices used in the more important forms of in-
surance; the economic services and business uses of insurance;
types of insurance organizations; types of life insurance policies;
legal problems arising in connection with insurance; reinsurance and
investments of insurance companies.
73. Marketing. Three hours. One semester.
The course deals with the methods and policies of the marketing
of agricultural products and the merchandising of manufactured
commodities; meaning and importance of marketing distribution;
marketing functions; trade channels; development of marketing
methods; co-operative marketing; price policies; trade information;
market analysis; merchandising costs and prices; an analysis of
the merits and defects of the existing distributive organization.
83. Advertising. Three hours. One semester.
A study of advertising as a business force. The course covers
the development and fundamental principles of advertising and an
examination of the methods of representative advertisers; problems
and the scope of advertising; functions of advertising; the appeals;
the presentation of the appeals; mediums; the advertising agency
and its work.
93. Public Finance and Administration. Three hours. One se-
mester.
Economic functions of the state; principles and incidence of taxa-
tion; national and local finance; public debts and their redemption;
revenue systems of modern states; central and local administration.
103. Statistics. Three hours. One semester.
General introduction to the use of statistics; methods of collection;
tabulation and graphic presentation; analysis and interpretation;
45
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
application to the study of business cycles, population, and other
problems; a survey of some of the principal sources of statistical
information.
123. Business Administration. Three hours. One semester.
A study of the fundamentals of business organization and ad-
ministration; the field of business administration; plant location; the
administration of personnel; market problems; finance; production;
risk-bearing; wage systems; welfare activities. Books recommended:
Marshall, Business Administration; Jones, Administration of Industrial
Enterprises; Balderson, Management of an Enterprise.
143. Corporation Finance. Three hours. One semester.
Economic services of corporations; capitalization; detailed study of
stocks and bonds; financing of extensions and improvements;
management of incomes and reserves ; dividend policy ; insolvency ;
receiverships; reorganizations. Books recommended: Gerstenberg,
Financial Organisation and Management; Bonneville, Elements of
Business Finance; Mead, Corporation Finance; Gerstenberg, Mate-
rials of Corporation Finance; Dewing, Corporate Promotions and Re-
organisations.
153. Investments. Three hours. One semester.
The course deals with the development and place of investment in
the field of business and its relation to other economic, legal, and
social institutions. The fundamental principles are presented along
with a description of investment machinery. An analysis is made of
the various classes of investments. Books recommended : Sakolski,
Principles of Investment; Lyon, Investment; Jordan, Investments:
Badger, Investment Principles and Practices.
163. Labor Problems. Three hours. One semester.
The nature of the labor problem; the rise of industry and labor;
the new technology and the wage earner; unemployment; the prob-
lem of child and woman labor; hours of labor; industrial accidents;
unemployment insurance; old age pensions; the labor movement;
economic program of organized labor; industrial conflict; agencies
of industrial peace; modern industrial policies; international control
of labor relations.
Economic Services and Periodicals
Students of the department are expected to make liberal use of
the following economic services and periodicals which have been
placed in the College Library: The Annalist, The Wall Street Journal,
The Financial and Commercial Chronicle, Harvard Business Review,
Review of Economic Statistics, Survey of Current Business, Business
week, Magasine of Wall Street, Magazine of Business, Labor Review,
Printer's Itik, Commerce Reports, Federal Reserve Bulletin, The Ameri-
can Economic Review, Forbes, The Annals of The American Academy
of Political and Social Science.
46
CATALOGUE
CHEMISTRY
Professor Bender and Assistants
The department aims to give students majoring in chemistry such
training in the principles and technique of chemistry as will enable
them to find employment in the chemical industry. Pre-medical stu-
dents will find that the courses outlined below meet the chemistry
requirements of the best medical schools.
For outline of complete Pre-Medical Course, see pp. 69-70.
Major: Courses 18, 28, 38, and 48.
Minor: Courses 18 and either 28 or 48.
18. General Inorganic Chemistry. Four hours. Throughout the
year.
Three hours of class work and three hours of laboratory work
per week.
A systematic stud}'- of the fundamental principles of Chemistry,
The rapid increase in knowledge of the material world we live in and
particularly the new knowledge of the constitution and structure of
matter demands a popular approach to Chemistry. While this
procedure is followed in this course, the aim is to lay a firm foun-
dation for those who will pursue the subject further.
Laboratory hours: — Section A: Wednesdays, 1-4; Section B:
Thursdays, 1-4; Section C: Fridays, 1-4.
28. Qualitative Analysis. Four hours. Throughout the year.
Two lectures or recitations and six hours of laboratory work per
week. The theories and principles of analytical chemistry are studied.
The course includes a study of the systematic methods of sepa-
rating and detecting all of the ordinary metals and acid radicals.
The laboratory work includes the analysis of about thirty solutions
and solids varying in complexity from simple salts to complex
insoluble artificial mixtures.
Laboratory hours: Mondays and Tuesdays, 1-4.
38. Quantitative Analysis. Four hours. Throughout the year.
One lecture or recitation and eight hours of laboratory work per
week. A study of the methods and principles of quantitative analysis
including chemical calculations.
The laboratory work includes simple introductory determinations,
acidimetry, alkalimetry, partial analysis of copper, iron, lead, zinc,
and manganese ores, analysis of coal, alloys, limestone, cement,
silicate rock, and steel, electrolytic analysis, gas analysis, calorimetry,
and a few organic analyses including wheat flour, milk, butter, and oils.
Laboratory hours: — Mondays and Tuesdays, 1-5.
48. Organic Chemistry. Four hours. Throughout the year.
Two hours lectures and recitations and six hours of laboratory
work per week.
The course includes a study of the sources, classification, and
47
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
type reactions of organic materials, of food-stuflfs and their
relation to nutrition, dyes, pharmaceuticals, explosives, coal
tar intermediates, manufacturing processes, and recent developments
in this field of Chemistry. The course includes a carefully selected
series of demonstrations, the display of a large number of represen-
tative materials, and the use of about one hundred charts and slides
especially prepared for this course.
The laboratory work consists of about sixty experiments covering
the preparation and study of a wide range of representative com-
pounds. Prerequisite, Chemistry 18.
Laboratory hours: Wednesdays and Thursdays, 1-4.
54. Physical Chemistry. Two hours. Throughout the year.
Prerequisites: Chemistry 28 and 38 and a working knowledge of
the Calculus. Among the topics studied are: gases; liquids; solids;
association and dissociation; thermodynamics; chemical and physical
equilibrium; the relation between chemical activity and electro-
motive force; atomic structure; radio-activity. The solution of fifteen
to twenty problems weekly is an important part of the course.
Offered 1936-1937 and thereafter in alternate years.
64. Mineralogy. Two hours. Throughout the year.
A study of minerals introduced by the study of crystallography.
The main purpose of the course is to acquaint the student with all
of the important ores and rocks, and to interpret their geological
history by their location with reference to other minerals.
The laboratory work consists of the making by each student
of a few representative crystal models, blow pipe work, and the
usual field tests by which one may identify all except very rare
minerals. The student is required to identify over one hundred dif-
ferent minerals at sight. Much of the work of the course is in the
field.
The Chemistry Department has over two thousand labeled
specimens all of high quality representing every branch of Miner-
alogy. The large collection of crystals illustrates every important
type of crystal form, the garnets, felspars and spinels being especially
well represented. These specimens offer unusual opportunity for
study.
Offered 1937-1938 and thereafter in alternate years.
Methods of Teaching Chemistry (Education 412), Two hours.
Second semester.
An elective course in Education designed primarily for Chemistry
majors who are preparing to teach in secondary schools.
EDUCATION AND PSYCHOLOGY
Professor Reynolds, Associate Professor Bailey, Professor
butterwick, and assistants
The major aim of this department is to provide professional
courses for those who desire to teach in junior or senior high schools.
48
CATALOGUE
And in view of the fact that education is one of the most important
concerns of society, a minor aim of the department is to acquaint
college men and women with the varied problems of education
and thus help give society intellectual leadership.
For statement of requirements for those planning to enter the
teaching profession, see pp. 72-73.
A major in Education includes Education 124, 13, 33, 73, 82, 136-A,
136-B, and Psychology 14, 23.
EDUCATION
124. Introduction to Teaching. Two hours. Throughout the year.
An introductory course for prospective teachers, intended also to
enable students to decide whether they have an interest in profes-
sional education, and to introduce the citizen to the problems of
one of the most important institutions in a democracy. It does
not necessarily presuppose an intention on the part of the student
to enter the teaching profession. A survey of the field based on
observation, assigned readings, and class discussions. Open to fresh-
men and sophomores only.
123. Introduction to Teaching. Three hours. First semester.
This course is similar to Education 124. It is an introductory
course for students in the department of music. Juniors and seniors
who may register for this course, will be required to do more work
than freshmen or sophomores.
13. History of Education, Three hours. First semester.
An analysis of the history of education from the time of early Greek
education to the present day. Special attention will be given to
the aims, content, organization, and results of the educational systems
of various countries, as well as to the great leaders of educational
thought.
33. Principles of Secondary Education. Three hours. Second
semester,
A course dealing with the high school pupils, their physical and
mental traits, individual differences, and the make-up of the high
school population; the secondary school as an institution, its history,
its relation to elementary education and to higher education; social
principles determining secondary education; the curriculum; the
place, function, and value of the several subjects of the curriculum;
organization and management of the high shool.
73. Philosophy of Education. Three hours. Second semester.
Open to juniors and seniors.
This course aims to supply a basis for constructive thinking in
the field of education. Various theories in education will be considered.
82. Educational Measurements, Two hours. First semester.
A critical analysis of the problems in measuring the results of teach-
ing. A study of the uses and administration of representative tests
49
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
and scales for junior and senior high school subjects. Prerequisite,
Psychology 14. Laboratory fee of one dollar.
92. The Junior High School. Two hours. Second semester.
A study of the principles and problems involved in the reorgani-
zation of Secondary Education. Special attention is given to the
need for reorganization, the aims of a junior high school, the present
status of development, present curriculum, courses of study, sig-
nificant features of certain junior high schools and methods of in-
struction.
Oflfered 1937-1938.
136-A. General Methods of Teaching in High Schools. Three
hours. May be taken in either semester. Open to seniors only, ex-
cept by permission of the Head of the Department.
A course dealing with high school teaching problems. Pre-
requisites, Psychology 14 and 23.
136-B. Practice Teaching. Three hours. May be taken in either
semester.
This course consists of observation, participation and teaching in
a public high school. Assigned readings, observation reports, lesson
plans, group and individual coafprences. The work is supervised by the
head of the department. Prerequisites: (a) Senior standing; (b)
Education 136-A; (c) An average scholastic ranking of C or better
for all work done in the college. A laboratory fee of $17.50 per
semester is charged for this course.
182. School Hygiene. Two hours. Second semester.
This course will deal with the place and scope of hygiene as it
applies to education. Special problems relating to the development of
the child, health defects, sanitation, hygiene of instruction, etc., will
receive attention.
RELATED COURSES IN HIGH SCHOOL SUBJECTS
The following courses given by other departments may be pre-
sented as meeting in part the requirements for a major in Education;
for the 18 hours in Education for a State Provisional College Cer-
tificate; or for meeting the requirements of some of the State De-
partments of Education in the issuance of a certificate to teach:
Note. — See the respective departments under Courses of Instruction.
402. Methods of Teaching Biology
412. Methods of Teaching Chemistry and Physics
422. Methods of Teaching English
432. Methods of Teaching French
442. Methods of Teaching Science
452. Methods of Teaching German
462. Methods of Teaching History
472. Methods of Teaching Latin
482. Methods of Teaching Mathematics
50
CATALOGUE
PSYCHOLOGY
14. General Psychology. Four hours. First semester.
This course aims to acquaint the student with the psychological
standpoint and with the fundamental psychological principles. It in-
cludes a study of such topics as native tendencies, acquired tendencies,
emotions, imagination, memory, and reasoning. Lectures, discussions,
and laboratory work. Not open to freshmen.
23. Educational Psychology. Three hours. Second semester.
Designed to meet the needs of students of education who are seek-
ing from psychology the facts and principles that have a bearing
on their problems. Special emphasis is placed on the learning process.
Prerequisite: Psychology 14.
33. Social Psychology. Three hours. First semester.
A study of mental growth and action as shown in social relation-
ships. Prerequisite: Psychology 14.
Offered 1937-1938.
42. Psychology of Adolescence. Two hours. Second semester.
A study of the anatomical, physiological, and psychological changes
characterizing adolescence; the question of motives, personality, emo-
tions, the environment and social relations will be handled. Pre-
requisite: Psychology 14.
Offered 1935-1936.
52. Applied Psychology. Two hours. First semester.
A study of the application of the psychological principles to prac-
tical problems in the professions, in business and industry, in voca-
tional selection and guidance, in personal efficiency. Prerequisites:
Psychology 14 and 23.
ECONOMICS
See Political and Social Science
ENGLISH
Professor Wallace, Associate Professor Struble
The department of English aims, first, to assist the student to write
and speak with accuracy and effectiveness; second, to introduce him
to the main literary movements in England and America, and to afford
him a close acquaintance with a few great authors. While the
courses outlined below are designed to provide the necessary back-
ground for high school teaching or graduate study, their prime
object is to direct currents of intellectual interest and to encourage
a love of good reading.
Major: Courses 16, 26, 66, 512, 42, 52, and four additional hours
of approved courses in literature or the history of the language.
Those majoring in English are required to take also History 34
(English History).
51
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
Minor: Courses 16, 26, and six hours of electives in literature or
the history of the language. Course 16 is prerequisite to all other
courses in English.
16. English Composition. Three hours. Throughout the year.
Required of all college freshmen.
26. A Sxirvey of English Literatiire. Three hours. Throughout
the year.
Required of all college sophomores.
32. Public Speaking. One hour. Throughout the year.
42. Eighteenth Century Prose. Two hours. First semester.
This course is open only to college seniors.
Lectures on literary tendencies betAveen 1660 and 1800, with special
attention to English life and manners of the time as reflected in
literature.
52. Nineteenth Century Prose. Two hours. Second semester.
This course is open only to college seniors.
An introduction to Nineteenth Century thought, with special
attention to Carlyle, Ruskin, and Arnold.
66. Shakespeare and Elizabethan Drama. Three hours. Through-
out the year.
A rapid survey of the drama before Shakespeare, and a closer
study of Shakespeare's principal plays.
113. English Activities, Three hours.
Public speaking, library work, and dramatics. An operetta is pre-
pared and presented by the class.
The course is for students in the Conservatory of Music. Credits
may not be applied to meet the requirements for a major or minor
in English except by students in Music Education.
Offered 1936-1937.
132. Contemporary Drama. Two hours. Second semester.
A survey of American and European drama since 1890.
Offered 1937-1938.
152. History of the English Language. Two hours. First semester.
Historical study of English sounds, inflections, and vocabulary.
Standards of correctness; current usage. Recommended especially
for prospective teachers of English composition.
162. Chaucer. Two hours. Second semester.
Offered 1936-1937.
512. Poetry of the Romantic Revolt. Two hours. First semester.
A study of early Nineteenth Century poetry, Avith special attention
to five poets: Coleridge, Wordsworth, Byron, Shelley, Keats.
52
CATALOGUE
524. American Literature. Two hours. Throughout the year.
542. Recent British and American Poetry. Two hours. Second
semester.
FRENCH
Professors Stevenson and Green
The aim of this department is twofold: first, to give an accurate
and practical knowledge of the French language, which will equip
the student for teaching French in the secondary schools; and
second, to develop an appreciation of the French spirit, as ex-
pressed in literature, and an understanding of the main literary
movements of France, which will be of value in any field of literary
activity.
Major: Courses 16, 26, 36, and 46 or 56.
Latin is required of all students majoring in French.
Minor: Courses 16, 26, and 6 additional hours of advanced work.
For entrance to French 16, the preparatory course 06 or its
equivalent (two years of high school French) will be required.
French 26 is a prerequisite for entrance to 36 or 46.
06. Elementary French. Three hours. Throughout the year.
This course is intended for those who begin French in college. Its
aim is to enable the student to write simple French sentences, to
carry on a conversation in easy French, and to read French of ordi-
nary difficulty. College credit of six semester hours will be granted
for this course, if followed by French 16, but it cannot be counted
toward a major.
16. First Year College French. Three hours. Throughout the year.
This is a continuation and extension of course 06, and includes
further drill in the principles of grammar, practice in conversation,
composition, and dictation, and more extensive reading.
Candidates for this course are required to take the French Place-
ment Test during Freshman Week, to determine the suitability of
their preparation.
26. French Literature of XVI and XVII Centuries. Three hours.
Throughout the year.
A survey of French literary history from the Renaissance to the
end of the period of absolute Classicism. Composition and conver-
sation.
36. French Literature of the XVIII and XIX Centuries. Three
hours. Throughout the year.
A continuation of the preceding survey, beginning with the Quarrel
of the Ancients and Moderns. Composition and conversation. Course
26 is prerequisite to this course.
53
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
46. The French Novel. Three hours. Throughout the year.
A study of the development of this genre in France, special atten-
tion being given to the later XIX Century and contemporary novels.
Composition and conversation. Courses 26 and 36 are prerequisite
to this course. Offered 1937-1938.
56. French Drama. Three hours. Throughout the year.
A study of the evolution of the drama in France with extensive
reading of XVII, XVIII, and XIX Century plays. Composition and
conversation.
Courses 26 and 36 are prerequisite to this course. Offered 1936-1937.
Methods of Teaching French (Education 432). Two hours. Second
semester.
An elective course in Education designed primarily for French
majors who are preparing to teach in secondary schools.
GEOLOGY
Professor Light
16. Historical Geology. Three hours. Throughout the year.
A general course in historical and structural geology giving atten-
tion to the processes and dynamic agencies by which the crust of
the earth has been formed and evolved into its present condition,
with special attention to the fossil remains of plants and animals
therein contained. The course includes lectures and discussions and
laboratory and field studies of material.
Laboratory fee six dollars per semester.
Offered 1937-1938 as a Saturday course from 8 to 12 A.M.
GERMAN
Professor Lietzau
The immediate aim of this department is to give a thorough
preparation in German; that is, a ready and accurate reading knowl-
edge of the language, as well as a satisfactory degree of proficiency
in written and spoken German. The larger aim is to give a broader
survey of the German language, literature, history, and civilization
that will fully equal in cultural and informational value any course
in English literature.
Courses are conducted in German.
Major: 24 semester hours, exclusive of German 06.
Minor: 18 semester hours.
Correlative: Courses in history, the literature of another language,
political science, economics, philosophy, music, or art, furnish a back-
ground or basis of comparison for work in German.
54
CATALOGUE
I. Introduction
06. Elementary German. Three hours. Throughout the year.
Intended to give students a reading knowledge of German of
average difficulty, and to enable them to understand the spoken
language and to express simple ideas idiomatically.
College credit of six semester hours w^ill be granted for this course
only if followed by German 16.
II. Intermediate
16. "Kulturkunde." Three hours. Throughout the year.
The making of modern Germany, its geography, its institutions,
its social and artistic life, illustrated by maps, pictures, and readings
from contemporary literature. This course is not only a preparation
for the study of German literature but is intended also for those
who wish to use German as a tool for advanced work in science
and other fields.
26. Introduction to German Literature. Three hours. Throughout
the year.
Outline of the history of German literature. Reading of selected
dramas and poems of Lessing, Schiller, Goethe, etc. Grammar and
composition.
III. Advanced
36. Nineteenth Century Drama. Three hours. Throughout the
year.
Special study of Kleist, Grillparzer, Hebbel, Keller, Ibsen, Haupt-
mann; their relation to classic and romantic art, and to the social
and philosophical problems of the century. Alternate years.
Offered 1935-1936.
46. The German Novel and Short Story. Three hours. Through-
out the year.
Theory and development of the novel and short story with special
emphasis on the Nineteenth Century. Alternate years.
56. Goethe. Three hours. Throughout the year.
A study of Goethe's life, of his lyrics, ballads, dramas, prose works.
Prerequisite: German 26. Offered 1936-1937.
Methods of Teaching German (Education 452). Two hours. Second
semester.
An elective course in Education designed primarily for German
majors who are preparing to teach in secondary schools.
GREEK
Professor Richie
The objectives of courses in classical Greek are to obtain a mastery
of the basic elements of the language, to secure facility in reading,
55
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
and to acquire an appreciation of the civilization of ancient Greece
and its contribution to modern institutions. The courses in the New
Testament and Patristics are designed to procure efficiency in the
handHng of the original sources, to acquaint the student with the
peculiarities of Koine Greek and with the textual problems, and to
prepare for the pursuance of further advanced studies in the seminary
and university.
Major: Courses 16, 26, 56, 36 or 46.
Minor: Courses 16, 26, 36, or 46 or 56.
16. Elementary Greek. Three hours. Throughout the year.
Study of forms and syntax, with easy prose composition. Selec-
tions from Xenophon's Anabasis. This course is intended for stu-
dents who enter college with no Greek.
26. First Year Greek. Three hours. Throughout the year.
Xenophon: The Anabasis; selections previously unread. Homer:
selections from the Iliad; scansion and epic poetry. Herodotus:
selections from several of the books.
33-A. Philosophy. Three hours. First semester.
Plato: The Apology of Socrates. Xenophon: Selections from the
Memorabilia. Lectures on Greek philosophy from Thales to Plato.
33-B. Drama. Three hours. Second semester.
Selections will be read from the tragedies of Aeschylus and
Sophocles. Lectures on the Greek drama and its influence. Pre-
requisite: Greek 16 and 26.
46 and 56. New Testament Greek. Three hours. Throughout
the year. Prerequisite: Greek 16 and 26.
For further description of these courses see the announcements
of the department of Bible and New Testament Greek.
66. Patristics. Three hours. Throughout the year.
Seminar — Open to seniors.
The Shepherd of Hernias will be read in the first semester; Justin
Martyr during the second semester.
Offered 1936-1937.
HISTORY
Professors Stevenson, Shenk, Butterwick, and Gingrich
The aim of the Department of History is that the student shall
acquire from his study of the past a truer and more comprehensive
view of the world in which he lives.
Major: Courses 16, 44, and additional courses amounting to 14
semester hours.
Minor: Courses 24 or 44 and additional courses amounting to 14
semester hours.
56
CATALOGUE
16. Ancient History. Three hours. Throughout the year.
The first semester will be devoted to the history of the Ancient
Orient and Greece, the second semester to the history of Rome.
Stress will be placed on the cultural contributions of the Ancient
World.
Dr. Stevenson
126. The Middle Ages. Three hours. Throughout the year.
In the first semester the political, economic and cultural move-
ments in Europe from the fall of the Roman Empire to the Renais-
sance will be studied.
In the second semester the course will deal with the period of the
Renaissance and Reformation. Dr. Stevenson
24-A. European History from the Reformation to 1815. Two
hours. Throughout the year.
The first semester of the course will deal with the transition from
medieval to modern times in the field of economic and political or-
ganization, and the social and intellectual developments which form
the background to the study of the French Revolution.
The second semester will be devoted to the period of the French
Revolution and Napoleon with attention primarily to the internal
history of France in the period 1789-1815.
Dr. Stevenson
24-B. European History from 1815 to the Present. Two hours.
Throughout the year.
The first semester will be devoted to the study of political and
economic developments in Europe from 1815 to 1914.
The second semester will deal with the period of the World War
and post-war European and World Problems.
Throughout the year considerable attention will be given to Cur-
rent History.
Dr. Stevenson
34-A. English History. Two hours. Throughout the year.
Political and Social History of England from the earliest time
to the present. Dr. Stevenson
34-B. Source Problems in English History. Two hours. Through-
out the year.
This course is designed to give the student practice in the handling
of original documents and to familiarize him with the bibliography
of English History. Candidates for this course must have had a
course in English History or take History 34-A along with this
course.
Dr. Stevenson
44-A. Political and Social History of the United States. Two
hours. Throughout the year.
A general survey of American History with particular attention
to social and cultural trends. Dr. Butterwick
57
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
44-B. History of the United States from the Civil War. Two
hours. Throughout the year.
History of the United States since the Civil War. A study of the
economical, political, and diplomatic history of the United States
from 1865 to the present time.
Dr. Shenk
44-C. Source Problems in American History. Two hours.
Throughout the year.
A course designed to acquaint the student with the use of source
material and the methods of historical research.
For 1936-1937, the topics for investigation will be taken from the
period between 1815 and 1861.
Dr. Shenk
64. Economic History of the United States. Two hours. Through-
out the year.
A study of the economic background of American History includ-
ing the growth of American agricultural and industrial interests,
from colonial beginnings to their present day development.
Professor Gingrich
113. History of Civilization. Three hours. Second semester.
A general survey of the whole field of history. Particular attention
will be given to economic, social, religious, and cultural development.
Required of candidates for the degree of Bachelor of Science in
Music Education. Dr. Shenk
Methods of Teaching History (Education 462). Two hours. Second
semester.
An elective course in Education designed primarily for History
majors who are preparing to teach in secondary schools.
LATIN
Professor Stonecipher
The purpose of the Latin department is two-fold, professional and
cultural.
Professionally, its design is to give proper training to prospective
teachers of the secondary schools and to lay the foundation for the
higher professional training of the university.
Culturally, it is intended to introduce the student to the field of
Latin literature, and through it to those elements of Graeco-Roman
culture upon which modern civilization is largely based.
Major: Courses 16, 26, 36, 46, 64.
Minor: Courses 16, 26, 64.
16. Freshman Latin. Three hours. Throughout the year.
The reading of Sallust's Catiline, Cicero's De Senectute or De Amicitia,
and selections from Pliny's Letters. Study of syntax from text and
58
CATALOGUE
grammar; Roman life and institutions; graded exercises in prose
composition.
Latin 16 is required of French majors.
26. Readings from Livy, Horace, and Catiillus. Three hours,
Throughout the year.
Study of syntax, style, and the history of Latin literature. Latin
16 prerequisite.
33-A. Seneca. Three hours. First semester.
Selections from the Epistulae Morales; study of style; Roman philo-
sophic thought. Latin 26 prerequisite.
Offered 1936-1937 and thereafter in alternate years.
33-B. Vergil. Three hours. Second semester.
Readings from Books VII-XII of the Aeneid and other works of
Vergil. Latin 26 prerequisite.
Offered 1936-1937 and thereafter in alternate years.
43-A. Cicero. Three hours. First semester.
Selections from his Letters; study of Cicero's life as reflected in
his correspondence. Latin 26 prerequisite. Oflfered in alternate years.
Offered 1937-1938 and thereafter in alternate years.
43-B. Mediaeval Latin. Three hours. Second semester.
Such readings are selected from this field as to acquaint the student
with the development of the Latin language and literature after the
classical period. Latin 26 prerequisite. Offered in alternate years.
Offered 1937-1938 and thereafter in alternate years.
64. Latin Composition. Two hours. Throughout the year.
Graded exercises in prose composition, attention also being given
to correct pronunciation and oral expression. Required in majors
and minors.
Offered 1937-1938 and thereafter in alternate years.
Methods of Teaching Latin (Education 472). Two hours. To be
arranged.
An elective course in Education designed primarily for Latin
majors who are preparing to teach in secondary schools.
Offered 1936-1937 and thereafter in alternate years.
MATHEMATICS
Professors Wagner, Schweigert, and Grimm
Major: Courses 13, 23 or 24, 36, 46, 56, 74, and 84.
Minor: Courses 13, 23 or 24, 36, and any additional six semester
hours.
A major in Mathematics may lead to either the B.S. or A.B.
degree. If the B.S. is desired, the candidate must take the General
59
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
Requirements for that degree (see page Z7), and must select as his
minor either Biology, Chemistry, or Physics.
If the A.B. is desired, the candidate must take the General Re-
quirements for that degree (see p. Z7), and may take his minor in
any department other than those named in the preceding paragraph.
13. Advanced Algebra. Three hours. First semester.
Covering ratio and proportion, variation, progressions, the binomial
theorem, theorem of undetermined coefficients, logarithms, permuta-
tions and combinations, theory of equations, partial fractions, etc.
23. Plane Trigonometry. Three hours. Second semester.
Definitions of trigonometric functions, goniometry, right and
oblique triangles, computation of distances and heights, development
of trigonometric formulae.
24. Spherical Trigonometry. Four hours. Second semester.
Definitions of trigonometric functions, right and oblique triangles,
measuring angles to compute distances and heights, development of
trigonometric formulae, solution of right and oblique spherical tri-
angles, applications to Astronomy.
113. Introduction to the Mathematics of Finance. Three hours.
First semester.
This course takes up the solution of the quadratic equation,
logarithms, progressions, permutations and combinations, and the
application of these to financial problems.
123. Mathematics of Finance. Three hours. Second semester.
The course seeks to present the mathematical principles and
operations used in financial work. A detailed study of compound
interest, compound discount, and annuities is undertaken. Appli-
cation of these principles is then made to practical problems of
amortization, sinking funds, depreciation, valuations of bonds, and
building and loan associations.
36. Analytic Geometry. Three hours. Throughout the year.
The equations of the straight line, circle, ellipse, parabola, and
hyperbola are studied, numerous examples solved, and as much of
the higher plane curves and of the geometry of space is covered as
time will permit.
46. Differential and Integfral Calculus. Three hours. Throughout
the year.
Differentiation of algebraic and transcendental functions, maxima
and minima, development into series, etc. Integrations, rectification
of curves, quadrature of surfaces, cubature of solids, etc.
56. Advanced Calculus. Three hours. Throughout the year.
A continuation of Mathematics 46, this course is required of all
candidates majoring in Mathematics.
60
CATALOGUE
63. Plane Survejnng. Three hours. Second semester.
A study of the instruments, field work, computing areas, plotting
and drafting, leveling, etc.
74. Differential Equations. Two hours. Throughout the year.
A course in the elements of differential equations.
Prerequisite, Mathematics 46.
84. Analytic Mechanics. Two hours. Throughout the year.
Resolution of forces, two and three force pieces, center of gravity,
acceleration, moment of inertia, friction.
PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION
Professor Butterwick
Philosophy concerns itself with spiritual values and the relation
of these values to the problems of life. The paramount function of
courses in philosophy is to correlate spiritual values with scientific
and all other curricular values in so far as they touch the problems
of life.
Major: Philosophy 02, 12. 26, 43, 53, 112, Bible 26.
Minor: Philosophy 02, 12, 26, 43, 53, 112.
02. Introduction to Philosophy. Two hours. First semester.
This course is intended to introduce beginners to the basic prob-
lems and theories of Philosophy and quicken them to some apprecia-
tion of the role played by philosophy in the whole movement of
civilization, while at the same time giving them at least an inkling
of the work of the greatest thinkers and arousing in them a desire
to go to the sources.
12. Inductive and Deductive Logic. Two hours. Second semester.
Open to juniors.
This course is intended to furnish the student with a knowledge of
the laws of correct thinking, the purpose and place of the syl-
logism in the processes of thinking, and the detection of fallacies in
thinking.
26. History of Philosophy. Three hours. Throughout the year.
Open to juniors and seniors.
In this course the aim will be (1) to trace the development of
Philosophy, pointing out what of permanent value each system as
it arose contributed toward a final solution of the nature of being,
and (2) to show the interaction between philosophic thought and
the practical life of the period during which it flourished.
61
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
32. Ethics. Second semester. Two hours.
Open to juniors and seniors.
The aim of this course is to acquaint the student with the academic
ethical problems, and to effect an awakening and a strengthening
of the moral sense.
43. Psychologfy of Religion. Three hours. First semester.
The growth of religion in the life of the individual is subject to
certain psychological laws. This course seeks to acquaint the stu-
dent with such laws so as to facilitate religious growth.
Offered 1937-1938.
53. Philosophy of Religion. Three hours. Second semester.
The purpose of this course is to properly correlate scientific and
philosophic truths with religion. The same truths permeate all fields
of knowledge. Conflicts of truth do not exist.
Offered 1937-1938.
102,, The History of Religion. Two hours. First semester.
Open to juniors and seniors.
This course is intended to provide the student with the facts con-
cerning the rise and development of religion in general. The his-
torical point of view is adhered to throughout.
Offered 1936-1937.
112. The Religion of the Hebrews. Two hours. Second semester.
Open to juniors and seniors.
The purpose of this course is to provide the student with a com-
prehensive view of the rise and development of the Hebrew religion
as set forth in the Bible and contemporaneous literature.
Offered 1936-1937.
PHYSICAL EDUCATION
Emerson Metoxen, Director of Physical Education for Men ;
Jerome W. Frock, Associate Director of Physical Education for
Men; Esther Henderson, Director of Physical Education
for Women; Miss Wood
The aim of the work in this department is to promote the general
physical well being of the students, and to assist them to gain the
hygienic, corrective, and educative effect of rightly regulated exercise.
In order that this object may be better attained, and to assist the
director in gaining a definite knowledge of the strength and weak-
ness of the individual, a careful physical examination and medical
inspection is required, which serves as a basis for the work.
It is strongly recommended that before entering college each
student undergo a thorough visual examination and be fitted with
glasses, if there is a need for them.
62
CATALOGUE
The Health Laws of the State of Pennsylvania require successful
vaccination against smallpox before one may enter private, parochial,
or public schools as a student.
All first year students are required to attend a course of lectures in
Personal and Sex Hygiene, given once a week for one year.
All freshmen and sophomores are required to take two hours of
Physical Education a week throughout the year, for which one
semester hour's credit will be given each semester.
12. Hygiene. One hour. Throughout the year.
Required of all freshmen.
The aim of the course is to bring to the attention of the student
early in the college course some of the common pitfalls in the path
of health and the methods of avoiding them, as well as to train him
for leadership in community health improvement.
The course consists of lectures, readings, and discussions relative
to the maintenance of health.
Courses for Men
12. For Freshmen.
Two hours per week. Throughout the year.
Instruction and practice in games and sports suitable to the
season.
21-A. For Sophomores.
Two hours per week. First semester.
Instruction and practice in such games and sports as touch-
football, soccer, mush-ball, out-door and volley ball, speed ball,
tennis, and in the fundamentals of boxing, wrestling, and
basket ball.
21-B. For Sophomores.
Two hours per week. Second semester.
Instruction and practice in such games and sports as basket
ball, boxing, wrestling, handball, track and field sports, tennis,
and in the fundamentals of golf.
44. Methods of Teaching Physical Education. One hour of theory
and three hours of practice. Throughout the year.
Methods are considered and practical suggestions are offered in a
wide variety of situations, ranging from the use of music in the primary
grades to the teaching of swimming, gymnastics, dancing, and athletics.
The everyday problems that teachers face are presented under the
headings discipline, drill, rewards and punishments, leadership, and
efficiency in class work.
63
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
Courses for Women
First semester. Two hours.
Instruction and practice in such sports and games as hockey,
soccer, tennis, archery, handball, and in the fundamentals of basket
ball.
Second semester. Two hours.
Instruction and practice in such sports as basket ball, volley ball,
badminton, baseball, track, archery, tennis, and quoits. Instruction and
practice in folk, national, character, and interpretative dancing.
Instruction and practice in games, tumbling, stunts, and natural
gymnastics.
Hiking — The whole year.
Organized hikes for all women who wish to participate.
Intramural Sports.
Interclass games are provided in all sports such as hockey, soccer,
basket ball, volley ball, and indoor baseball.
A short seasonal schedule of games in field hockey and basket ball
is arranged to be played with other colleges. The best material is
chosen from each class.
Students are required to provide themselves with gymnasium
suits. Do not purchase suit until arrival at college.
PHYSICS
Professor Grimm
Major: Physics 18, 24, 34, 44, 54, Mathematics 84.
Minor: Physics 18 and any eight additional semester hours.
18. General Physics. Four hours. Throughout the year.
Three hours lectures and recitations, and four hours laboratory
work per week.
The course will be a thorough investigation of the fundamental
principles of physical science, and is especially intended as a prepa-
ration for Physics 2, 3, and 4, and for those interested in the practical
applications of physical laws and principles.
Laboratory hours: Tuesday and Thursday afternoons.
24. Advanced Physics — Mechanics. Four hours. First semester.
This course will be a thorough investigation of the mechanics of
solids, liquids, and gases and sound.
Offered 1937-1938.
64
CATALOGUE
34. Advanced Physics — Electricity and Magnetism. Four hours.
Second semester.
This course will be a thorough consideration of the laws of the
electric and magnetic fields and the power applications of electricity.
Offered 1937-1938.
44. Advanced Physics — Heat and Light. Four hours. First
semester.
This course will be concerned with the nature of heat and light and
the transmission of each through various media including reflection,
refraction, and dispersion.
Offered 1936-1937.
54. Molecular Physics. Four hours. Second semester.
An investigation of the application of physical principles to molecu
lar, atomic, and electronic phenomena.
The Calculus will be a very great aid in these courses.
Offered 1936-1937.
Drawing 13. Elementary Mechanical Drawing. Three hours. First
semester.
Use of instruments, construction of geometric figures, projection
of simple solids, simple sections and development of surfaces, letter-
ing, sketching, tracing, blue printing.
The college will provide the usual drawing tables, etc., and
the student will provide his own drawing instruments.
POLITICAL AND SOCIAL SCIENCE
Professor Gingrich, Professor Stokes, Miss Wood
The aim of the department is to prepare students for citizenship
by acquainting them with the principles and problems of human
associations within the several fields of specialized study. The
courses are intended to be utilitarian as well as cultural.
Major: Economics 16, Political Science 16, Sociology 16, Political
Science 42 and 52, and 2 hours of approved electives.
Minor: Economics 16, Political Science 16, Sociology 16.
ECONOMICS
16. Economic Theory. Three hours. Throughout the year.
A course dealing with the fundamental principles of economics.
One hour a week in seminar groups is given to the discussion of
Economic problems. Text — Bye, Principles of Economics. Books
recommended : Adam Smith, Wealth of Nations; Marshall, Principles
of Economics and Industry and Trade; Fisher, Elementary Economics;
Taussig, Principles of Economics; Edie, Principles and Problems; Fair-
child, Furniss, and Buck, Elementary Economics ; Mitchell, Business
Cycles.
65
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
26. Business Law. Three hours. Throughout the year.
A course dealing with the elementary principles of law generally
related to the field of business, including Contracts, Agency, Sales,
Bailments, Insurance, and Negotiable Instruments.
33. Money and Banking. Three hours. One semester.
This course deals with monetary theory, the gold standard, infla-
tion, international exchange, business cycles, price levels, and specu-
lation. A study is made of the function of banks, bank credit, the
structure and function of the Federal Reserve System, agricultural
credit.
43. Advanced Economic Theory. Three hours. One semester.
A course dealing with the evolution of economic thought through
the principal schools from the Physiocrats to the present, and giving
special attention to the analysis of current theories of value, interest,
rent, and wages.
Books recommended : Adam Smith, Wealth of Nations; Malthus, Essay
on Population; Ricardo, Principles of Political Economy; J. S. Mill,
Principles of Political Economy; Marx, Capital; Bohm Bawerk, Capital
and Interest, and The Positive Theory of Capital; Gide and Rist, History
of Economic Doctrines; Haney, History of Economic Thought; Homan,
Contemporary Economic Thought; Gray, The Development of Economic
Doctrines.
This course is open to all students who have had Economics 16.
POLITICAL SCIENCE
13. American Government. Three hours. Second semester.
An elective course for the accommodation of students who are
unable to complete the more extensive course in American Govern-
ment and Politics. A required course for Conservatory students en-
rolled in the Music Education course.
16. American Government and Politics. Three hours. Through-
out the year.
A course designed to give the student a working knowledge of
the fundamental laws of Federal and State Government. Much
time is given to the study of leading cases.
42. Political Theory. Two hours. Second semester.
A survey of the different theories and philosophies of government,
ancient and modern, with particular reference to those discussed
currently in the United States.
Offered 1937-1938.
52. Foreig^n Relations. Two hours. First semester.
A study of the history and development of world politics with
special emphasis placed upon foreign relations of the United States.
Oflfered 1936-1937.
66
CATALOGUE
63. Comparative Government. Three hours. One semester.
A comparative study of the most important governmental systems
of the world, emphasizing especially the differences between federal
and unitary government. Special attention will be given to the gov-
ernments of the United States, Great Britain, Canada, Australia,
South Africa, the Irish Free State, France, Germany, Switzerland,
and Russia.
72. The United States and Latin America. Two hours. Second
semester.
A survey of the diplomatic and commercial relations between the
United States and Latin American countries.
Offered 1937-1938.
114. Law. Two hours. Throughout the year.
An orientation course in the general field of law and procedure,
touching the following subjects, viz.: Business Associations, Real
Property, Liens, Leases, Mortgages, Wills, Workmen's Compensa-
tion, Insurance.
SOCIOLOGY
13. Principles of Sociology. Three hours. First semester.
The course is intended to acquaint the student with the various
theories of society together with the place of Sociology in the
general field of learning.
23. Modern Social Problems. Three hours. Second semester.
32. Criminology. Two hours. Second semester.
A study of the causes of crime and the treatment of criminals;
criminal behavior; the police system and the criminal courts; treat-
ment of juvenile offenders; punishment, probation, parole, and re-
form. Observation and criticism of social agencies dealing with the
crime problem is required.
Offered 1936-1937.
PSYCHOLOGY
See Education and Psychology
SUMMER, EXTENSION, AND SATURDAY AND EVENING
SCHOOLS
In addition to the work offered during the regular class periods, the
college offers fully accredited work under three additional schedules
as follows: Summer School, Extension School, Saturday and Even-
ing School.
Persons interested in any of these schedules should apply to the
Registrar for the special bulletin pertaining thereto.
67
Special Plans of Study in Preparation for
Professions
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
Adviser: Professor Stokes
Plan of Course
_. _, Hours
First Year Credit
Hygiene 12 2
Chemistry 18, or Physics 18, or Biology 18 8
World Resources and Industries 4
♦Mathematics 13 and 23, or Mathematics 113 and 123 .... 6
English 16 6
French 16, or German 16 6
Physical Education 2
Second Year ^"^
Bible 14 4
Economics 16 6
Principles of Accounting 6
English 26 6
Political Science 16 6
Statistics 3
Physical Education 2
Third Year ^^
History 34 4
Economics 26 (Business Law) 6
Money and Banking 3
Marketing 3
History 64 (Economic History of the United States) 4
Political Science 43 3
Electives 10
33
Students may elect from the following: Advanced Accounting;
Public Finance; Labor Problems; Psychology; Advertising; Political
Science 63; History.
Fourth Year
Transportation (Rail) 3
Corporation Finance and Investments 6
Business Administration 3
Political Science 6
Bible 52 or 82 and Ethics 4
Electives 8
30
Students may elect from the following: Cost Accounting and
Auditing; Water and Motor Transportation; Advanced Economic
Theory; Insurance; any elective not taken in third year.
• All women students registered in the department are required to take Mathe-
matics 13 and 23.
68
CATALOGUE
PRE-MEDICAL
Advisers: Dr. Derickson and Dr. Bender
The following courses of study are outlined for those desiring to
qualify for admission to medical schools.
The work outlined for the two-year course includes the subjects
specified by the Bureau of Professional Education of the Pennsyl-
vania Department of Public Instruction as the minimum require-
ment for admission to any medical school.
The four-year course includes all of the subjects required for
admission to the medical schools which require a collegiate degree
for admission and fulfills the requirements of the College for the
Bachelor of Science degree. The student ranks as a Pre-Medical
Major.
The student should maintain a standard or not less than "B" in all
courses in order to obtain the recommendation of the college for
admission to a medical school.
In addition to the courses outlined the student is advised to read
the following:
Locy, Biology and its Makers; Stieglitz, Chemistry in Medicine;
Mendel, Nutrition: The Chemistry of Life; Garrison, History of
Medicine.
Current Biological Literature including Journals of Wistar Insti-
tute of Anatomy and Biology.
Bio-Chemistry by such authors as Bodansky, Hawk, Gortner.
Four-Year Course
First Year Hours per week Second Year Hours per week
Bible 14 2 Biology 18 4
Chemistry 18 4 Chemistry 28 4
English 16 3 English 26 3
French 16 or Psychology 14 4
*German 16 3 Physical Education 1
Mathematics 13 and 23 . . 3 Elective 2
Hygiene 1 ,3
Physical Education 1_ ^°
17
Third Year Hours per week Fourth Year Hours per week
Biology 48 4 Biology 54-A, 94 or 54-B, . . 4
Economics 16 or Chemistry 48 4
Sociology 13 and 23 3 History 44 2
Physics 18 4 Bible 52 or 82, or
Elective 5 Philosophy 32 2
• Elective 3
IS
16
A few medical schools require both French and German.
69
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
First Year Hours per week
Biology 18 4
Chemistry 18
English 16
French 16 or
German 16
Mathematics 13 and 23
Two- Year Course
Second Year Hours per week
Biology 48 or 54-A and 94. 4
Chemistry 48 4
Psychology 14 4
Physics 18 4
17
16
PRE-THEOLOGICAL
Adzfiser: Dr. Richie
The following course is designed for students planning to enter
the Christian Ministry:
Hours Credit
First Year
Bible 14 4
English 16 6
French 16 or German 16. . 6
Greek 16 6
Hygiene 12 2
Physical Education 2
*Elective 8
34
Second Year
Bible 26 6
English 26 6
Greek 26 6
One of:
Biology 18 or
Chemistry 18 or
Physics 18 8
Physical Education 2
Elective 6
Third Year
Bible 32 & 42
Greek 46 or 56
Psychology 14 & 23 . .
One of:
Philosophy 26 or
Economics 16 or
Political Science 16 or
Sociology 13 & 23 .
Elective
Hours Credit
4
6
7
Fourth Year
Bible 52 or 82
Bible 62 & 72
History 44 or 24 or 34.
Philosophy 32
Elective
32
34
Students are advised to elect such courses in Philosophy, History,
Science, Social Science, English, Economics, and Education as will
give a thorough, basic preparation for the advanced studies offered
by the theological seminaries.
Electives must be governed by A.B. requirements, p. 37.
70
CATALOGUE
SOCIAL SERVICE
Adviser: Miss Wood
The following is a suggested curriculum for students planning to
enter social service w^ork.
Freshman Year
English 16
French 06 or 16; or German 06 or
From the following 8 or 9 hours:
Bible 14
Biology 18
Chemistry 18
Education 124
Greek 16
History 16
Latin 16
Mathematics 13 and 23
Hygiene 12
Physical Education
Sophomore Year
English 26
Psychology 14
Sociology 13 and 23
Public Speaking (Eng. 32)
*Biology 18
*French 16 or German 16 . .
*Bible 14
Physical Education
Electives (see below)
Junior Year
Political Science 16
Economics 16
Psychology 33
Electives (see below)
Senior Year
Bible 52 or 82
Philosophy 32
History 44
Bus. Administration 163 . .
Electives (see below)
Electives
Hours
1st Sem.
3
8 or 9
Bible 32
Bible 62
Bible 72
Biology 64
Bus. Administration 63
Bus. Administration 103
Economics 26
Education 13
Education 82
I week
2d Sem.
3
1
1
1
1
3
3
4
3
3
1
1
4
4
3
3
Sociology 32
English 132
History 24
History 64
History 113
Philosophy 102
Political Science 52
Psychology 23
Psychology 42
Psychology 52
If not taken in Freshman year.
71
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
TEACHING
Adviser: Dr. Reynolds
The courses of the department of Education and Psychology have
been planned with special reference to the requirements of the State
of Pennsylvania. Students w^ho for any reason wish to teach in
other states, should early consult with the head of the department
in the selection of courses to meet the requirements of such states.
The Pennsylvania State Council of Education has approved the
following regulations for the College Provisional Certificate:
This certificate entitles the holder to teach for three years in any
public high school of the Commonwealth the subjects indicated on
its face, and to teach in the elementary field where the applicant is
a holder of a certificate for teaching in this field or has completed
an approved curriculum in preparation for teaching in such field.
The applicant for this certificate must be a graduate of an ap-
proved college or university and must have successfully completed
at least eighteen semester hours of work of college grade in educa-
tion distributed as follows:
Introduction to Teaching 3 semester hours
Educational Psychology (General
Psychology is a prerequisite) 3 semester hours
Practice Teaching in the Appropriate
Field 6 semester hours
Electives in Education selected from
the following list 6 semester hours
Secondary Education Educational Sociology-
Elementary Education Educational Systems
School Efficiency History of Education
Special Methods Principles of Education
School Hygiene Educational Psychology
Educational Administration Technique of Teaching
Educational Measurements
The practice teaching requirement may be met by taking Education
136-A and Education 136-B.
Three years of successful teaching experience in the field in which
certification is sought, together with a teaching rating of "middle"
or better, may be accepted as the equivalent of the practice teaching
requirement.
The holder of the State Provisional College Certificate is certified
to teach subjects in which not fewer than eighteen semester hours
have been completed.
In order to meet these requirements, students of the college
who are candidates for the A.B. or B.S. degree are advised to do
their major and minor work in subjects which are ordinarily taught
in the public schools. They should, furthermore, register for Educa-
72
CATALOGUE
tion 124 or 123, Psychology 14, Psychology 23, Education 13, Edu-
cation 33, Education 136A, Education 136B, and a course in methods
of teaching their major subject. The last named course should pre-
cede Education 136B or parallel it.
Those students desiring a major in Education should, in addition
to the above courses, register for Education 82 and IZ. In addition
to the above it is highly desirable that students preparing to teach
in our secondary schools should register for Psychology 42 (the
Psychology of Adolescence). Wherever possible, the work in edu-
cation should be started in the freshmen year.
By action of the Department of Public Instruction, in October,
1923: "The six semester hours of practice teaching may be met by
three semester hours of actual classroom experience in observation,
participation and practice teaching under approved supervision and
three semester hours of methodology or administration related to this
experience."
To those who are preparing for work in Education as a profes-
sion, and who desire to make a more complete preparation than the
minimum required by the State, a major in Education leading to
the B.S. degree is offered. For this, courses in Education or Educa-
tional Psychology totaling twenty-four semester hours are required,
and in addition two minors, chosen from related fields, of eighteen
semester hours each.
The residence requirements for this degree may be met either by
spending a full year in actual residence or by earning 30 semester
hours in residence either during the Summer School or during the
regular academic year. The student should consult page 49 for the
regular requirements for the degree.
Students whose college work falls below the median grade of
the college are strongly advised not to consider education as a pro-
fession. Such students are not barred from attempting to secure
certification, but will be admitted to courses in education of senior
standing with reluctance on the part of the head of the department
and in individual cases may be refused recommendation,
PLACEMENT BUREAU
In order to give students the benefit of calls that are received
for teachers and to render greater assistance in finding employment,
the College provides for a Placement Bureau to keep on file
records of students with their credentials for those who desire it
For registration with the bureau a fee of one dollar is charged.
The Placement Bureau of the College cooperates with the Place-
ment Service, Teacher Bureau, of the Department of Public Instruc-
tion, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, thus offering additional facilities
for the placement of graduates of this institution.
73
The Conservatory of Music
Miss Gillespie, Mrs. Bender, Mr. Campbell, Mr. Crawford,
Mr. Malsh, Miss Moyer, Mr. Rutledge, fMiss Miller,
Mr. Carmean, Miss Duffey, Mr. Linscott,
Mrs. Reissinger
THE aim of Lebanon Valley College Conservatory is to teach music
historically and aesthetically as an element of liberal culture ; to
offer courses that will give a thorough and practical understanding of
theory and composition; and to train artists and teachers.
ENTRANCE REQUIREMENTS
An applicant for admission must (1) be a graduate of a four year
High School, and (2) possess a reasonable amount of musical intel-
ligence and accomplishment, such as:
(a) The possession of an acceptable singing voice and of a fairly
quick sense of tone and rhythm;
(b) Ability to sing at sight hymn and folk tunes with a fair degree
of accuracy and facility;
(c) Ability to play the piano or some orchestral instrument repre-
senting two years' study.
MUSIC EDUCATION COURSE
For Training Supervisors and Teachers of Public School Music
(B.S. in Music Education)
This course has been approved by the State Council of Education
for the preparation of supervisors and teachers of public school music.
The outline of the curriculum follows:
First Semester Cla- ^--te^.j,
♦Introduction to Teaching 3 3
(Includes social guidance on the campus)
♦English I 3 3
Harmony I 3 3
Sight Reading I 3 VA
Dictation I 3 1^^
Private Study — Voice, Piano, Organ; Strings (Vio-
lin, Viola, 'Cello, Bass), Woodwinds (Flute, Oboe,
Clarinet, Bassoon), Brasses (Trumpet, French
Horn, Trombone, Tuba), and Percussion In-
struments. Chorus, Orchestra and Band. Work
arranged for greatest benefit of students 9 3
♦Physical Education I 3 1
27 16
t On Leave of Absence, 1935-36.
74
CATALOGUE
, „ Class
Second Semester Hours
♦English II 3
♦English Activities 3
(Includes library work, public speaking, and
dramatics)
Harmony II 3
Sight Reading II 3
Dictation II 3
Private Study — Voice, Piano, Organ; Strings
(Violin, Viola, 'Cello, Bass), Woodwinds (Flute,
Oboe, Clarinet, Bassoon), Brasses (Trumpet,
French Horn, Trombone, Tuba), and Percussion
Instruments. Chorus, Orchestra, and Band.
Work arranged for greatest benefit of students 9
♦Physical Education II _3
27
Third Semester
♦Science I — Biology 4
(Includes the physiology of the nervous system
as a basis of psychology)
♦History of Civilization 3
Harmony III , 3
Sight Reading III , 3
Dictation III 3
Private Study — Voice, Piano, Organ; Strings
(Violin, Viola, 'Cello, Bass), Woodwinds (Flute,
Oboe, Clarinet, Bassoon), Brasses (Trumpet,
French Horn, Trombone, Tuba), and Percussion
Instruments. Chorus, Orchestra, and Band. Work
arranged for greatest benefit of students 9
Eurythmics _3
28
Fourth Semester
♦Psychology I 3
♦Literature I or Literature II 3
Harmony IV 2
Elements of Conducting 2
Private Study — Voice, Piano, Organ; Strings
(Violin, Viola, 'Cello, Bass), Woodwinds (Flute,
Oboe, Clarinet. Bassoon), Brasses (Trumpet,
French Horn, Trombone, Tuba), and Percussion
Instruments. Chorus, Orchestra, and Band.
Work arranged for greatest benefit of students 9
Materials I _3_
22
Fifth Semester
♦Educational Sociology 3
Harmony V 2
History of Music I 3
Materials II 3
Private Study — Voice, Piano, Organ; Strings
(Violin, Viola, 'Cello, Bass), Woodwinds (Flute,
Oboe, Clarinet, Bassoon), Brasses (Trumpet,
French Horn, Trombone, Tuba), and Percussion
Instruments. Chorus, Orchestra, and Band.
Work arranged for greatest benefit of students 12
Eurythmics _3_
26
75
Semester
Hrs. Credit
3
3
1/2
1/2
3
3
1/2
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
_. , _ Class Semester
Sixth Semester Hours Hrs. Credit
♦American Government 3 3
Harmony VI 3 3
History of Music II 3 3
Materials III 3 3
Private Study — Voice, Piano, Organ; Strings
(Violin, Viola, 'Cello, Bass), Woodwrinds (Flute,
Oboe, Clarinet, Bassoon), Brasses (Trumpet,
French Horn, Trombone, Tuba), and Percussion
Instruments. Chorus, Orchestra, and Band.
Work arranged for greatest benefit of students.. 12_ _4
(Includes instrumental class methods) 24 16
Seventh Semester
♦Student Teaching and Conferences lOy^ 7
♦Technique of Teaching 1 1
Private Study — Voice, Piano, Organ; Strings
(Violin, Viola, 'Cello, Bass), Woodwinds (Flute,
Oboe, Clarinet, Bassoon), Brasses (Trumpet,
French Horn, Trombone, Tuba), and Percussion
Instruments. Chorus, Orchestra, and Band.
Work arranged for greatest benefit of students 6 2
Elective (§Music Appreciation or Elective) 3 3
Elective (§Advanced Problems in Conducting or
Elective) _3_ ^
23y2 16
Eighth Semester
♦History and Philosophy of Education 4 4
(Includes History of Education in Pennsylvania
and School Law)
♦Student Teaching and Conferences IOJ/2 7
♦Technique of Teaching 1 1
Private Study — Voice, Piano, Organ; Strings
(Violin, Viola, 'Cello, Bass), Woodwinds (Flute,
Oboe, Clarinet, Bassoon), Brasses (Trumpet,
French Horn, Trombone, Tuba), and Percussion
Instruments. Chorus, Orchestra, and Band.
Work arranged for greatest benefit of students 3 1
Elective (§ Organizing and Rehearsing of School
Orchestras and Bands, or Elective) _3_ 3
21^ l6
Core 36 semester hours
Student Tech. 16
Theory 33
Practical 34
Elective 9
128
* — Core Subjects. 8 — Elective for Teachers and Supervisors of Music.
76
CATALOGUE
OUTLINE OF COURSES LEADING TO BACHELOR OF
MUSIC DEGREE
First Year
Piano, Organ, Voice, Violin or Orchestral Instruments 4
Sight Singing 4
Sight Playing • 1
Harmony I and II 6
English 16 • 6
Dictation 4
Elective 6
Physical Education 2
33
Second Year
Piano, Organ, Voice, Violin or Orchestral Instruments 4
Sight Singing 3
Sight Playing ■ 1
Harmony III and IV 6
Elective 6
Harmonic Dictation 3
History and Appreciation of Music 6
Physical Education 2
31
Third Year
Piano, Organ, Voice, Violin or Orchestral Instruments 4
Musical Form and Analysis 6
Elective 6
Elective 6
Conducting 4
Junior Recital 2
Eurythmics 2
30
Fourth Year
Piano, Organ, Voice, Violin or Orchestral Instruments 4
Composition 3
Ensemble Playing 1
Counterpoint 3
Elective 6
Elective 6
Senior Recital 4
27
Above Electives may be selected from the college department.
Students may also elect other courses listed under the Music Education
course including orchestras, bands, glee club, and instrumental ensembles.
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
I. Theory of Music
Sight Reading Covirses
Sight Reading 1. Three hours per week, 1^ semester hours credit.
Sight Reading 1 covers the work equivalent to the first four years
of pubHc school music.
Sight Reading 2. Three hours per week, IJ^ semester hours credit.
Sight Reading 2 completes the work of the intermediate grades
and the first two years of the junior high school.
Sight Reading 3. Three hours per week, 1^ semester hours credit.
A continuation with exercises and songs of increasing difficulty
both tonal and rhythmic. Emphasis on reading from any clef. Study
and application of additional tempo, dynamic and interpretative
markings.
Speed and accuracy are demanded. New material is constantly
used, resulting in an extensive survey of song material.
Dictation (Ear Training) Courses
Dictation 1 (Ear Training). Three hours per week, 1^4 semester
hours credit.
A study of tone and rhythm planned so that the student gains
power to recognize, visualize, sing, and write melodic phrases in all
keys. This course covers the ear training necessary for the first six
grades of the public schools.
Dictation 2 (Ear Training). Three hours per week, V/2 semester
hours credit.
A continuation of the study of tone and rhythm, covering the
work of the seventh and eighth grades in the public schools. A
considerable portion of the time is devoted to the development of
the power to hear and write two parts played simultaneously.
Dictation 3 (Harmonic). Three hours per week, V/z semester
hours credit.
A study of the more difficult tonal problems and complicated
rhythms.
Designed to develop increasing ability to recognize and write
chord progressions, utilizing the various harmonies as they are suc-
cessively acquired.
Harmony Courses
Harmony 1. Three hours per week, 3 semester hours credit.
This course is designed to build a foundation for further music
study through a working knowledge of the fundamentals of music
notation, tonal and rhythmic, the major, minor, and chromatic scales,
rhythmic problems, transpositions, intervals, triads, and musical
terminology. The written work is accompanied by constant practice
in hearing, singing, and keyboard work.
78
CATALOGUE
Harmony and Melody 2. Three hours per week, 3 semester hours
credit.
Harmony 2 covers harmonization in four voices over a given
bass, the inversion of triads, the construction of melodies over ac-
companiments, the avoidance of parallel fifths and octaves, the
dominant seventh chord in fundamental position and inversion with
its resolution, serial modulations, directly related keys, the harmoni-
zation of given melodies.
Harmony and Melody 3. Three hours per week, 3 semester hours
credit.
Harmony 3 includes rules for melodic modulation, the use of
suspensions and retardations, passing notes of various species, the
working out of a continuous motus from a given germ set with
embellishments, anticipation, the dominant ninth as applied to the
harmonization of melodies and to modulations, imitation, modulation
to indirectly related and to foreign keys.
Harmony 4 (Keyboard). Two hours per week, 2 semester hours
credit.
Harmony 4 includes the harmonization at the keyboard of familiar
folk songs and of melodies, familiar and unfamiliar, of the rote song
type, utilizing the various harmonies at the disposal of the class;
and in the reading at sight of music of moderate difficulty, with
emphasis upon the playing of accompaniments, and with some ex-
perience in reading from the vocal score and in transposition.
Harmony 5 (Musical Form and Analysis). Two hours per week,
2 semester hours credit.
This course includes a study of the figure and the motive, the
phrase, cadences, period forms, two part and three part song forms,
rondo forms, the sonata form, the sonata allegro form. The work
is accompanied by constant analysis and by original composition in
the smaller forms.
Harmony 6 (Composition and Orchestration). Three hours per
week, 3 semester hours credit.
Original composition is continued in various vocal and instrumental
forms.
This course offers opportunity and guidance in arranging music
for various combinations of instruments and voice, including band,
orchestra, and chorus. The best productions of the class will be given
public performance.
Harmony 7 (Counterpoint). Two hours throughout the year.
Elementary work in strict Counterpoint (five species in Two Part
Counterpoint.)
II. Materials and Methods
Methods 1 : Child Voice and Rote Songs with Materials and Meth-
ods for Grades 1, 2, 3. Three hours per week, 3 semester hours credit.
79
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
A comprehensive study of the use of the child's singing voice in
the primary grades, including the treatment of monotones, acquaint-
ance with the best collections of rote songs, and practice in choosing,
memorizing, singing, and presenting a large number of these songs;
methods of presenting rhythm through singing* games and simple
interpretative movements; beginnings of directed music apprecia-
tion; foundation studies for later technical developments.
Methods 2: Materials and Methods for Grades 4, 5, 6. Three hours
per week, 3 semester hours credit.
A study of the child's singing voice in the intermediate grades;
special attention to the formal or technical work of these grades,
with an evaluation of important texts and recent approaches. Prepa-
ration of lesson plans, making of outlines, and observation is re-
quired. Music appreciation is continued.
Methods 3: Materials and Methods, Junior and Senior High
School. Three hours per week, 3 semester hours credit.
The junior and senior high school problems are treated sepa-
rately through an analysis of the specific problems, year by year
or in special groups. Attention is given to materials and methods
relative to the organization and directing of choruses, glee clubs,
orchestra, band, elementary theory, music appreciation, and class
instruction in band and orchestral instruments. Study in the testing
and care of the adolescent voice.
III. Student Teaching
Student Teaching. Twenty-one hours throughout the year, 14
semester hours credit.
The Senior Class of the Music Education course teaches in the
Derry Township School, at Hershey, Pa., and in the Cornwall School
District, at Cornwall, Pa.
This work is done under the guidance of the following faculty:
Mary E. Gillespie, A.M. Columbia University, Director of the
Conservatory, Lebanon Valley College.
Edward P. Rutledge, A.M. Columbia University, Instructor in
Band and Orchestra Instruments.
J. I. Baugher, Ph.D. Columbia University, Supervising Principal
of Derry Township Schools, Hershey, Pa.
Esther Bigham, B.S.M. Oberlin Conservatory, Supervisor of
Music, Derry Township Schools, Hershey, Pa.
Raymond H. Light, A.M. Columbia University, Supervising
Principal of Cornwall School District, Cornwall, Pa.
Leslie Saunders, B.S. Music Education, Lebanon Valley College,
Supervisor of Music, Cornwall School District, Cornwall, Pa.
A laboratory fee of $17.50 per semester is charged for student
teaching.
80
CATALOGUE
IV. Instrumental Courses
Elementary Class Instruction in Band and Orchestral Instruments.
Practical courses in which students, in addition to being taught
the fundamental principles underlying the playing of all band and
orchestra instruments, learn to play melodies on instruments of
each group, viz., string, woodwind, and brass. Problems of class
procedure in public schools are discussed; transposition of all in-
struments is taught and an extensive bibliography is prepared. En-
semble playing is an integral part of these courses.
String Class 1, 2 and 3 (Violin). Two hours per week throughout
three semesters.
Woodwind Class 1 and 2 (Clarinet). Two hours per week through-
out the year.
Brass Class 1 and 2 (Cornet, alto, trombone, baritone, or tuba).
Two hours per week throughout the year.
Percussion 1 (Drums). One hour per week.
Advanced Class Instruction in Band and Orchestral Instruments.
Advanced instruction in instruments is given in unit courses. In
these unit courses a student may study and gain practical experience
in playing the more rare instruments of each group.
String Unit (Viola, violoncello, and bass viol).
Woodwind Unit (Flute, oboe, and bassoon).
Brass Unit (All brass instruments not studied in Brass Class 1
or 2). Two hours per week throughout the year; 12 weeks each unit.
Junior Band. One hour per week.
Intermediate Band. One hour per week.
Junior Orchestra. One hour per week.
Students of the brass, woodwind, string, and percussion classes
are given an opportunity to play their instruments in the Junior Band
and the Junior Orchestra, thus gaining a type of valuable ensemble
experience not possible to attain in the instrumental classes.
V. Musical Organizations
College Band. Two hours per week.
Lebanon Valley College maintains a uniformed band, the mem-
bership of which is made up of college and conservatory stu-
dents. The band contributes to coilege life by playing at foot-
ball games, by appearing on several programs during the year,
and by providing the musical accompaniment for the annual May
Date Fete. Membership in the band is determined by an applicant's
ability on his instrument and by the needs of the band with respect
to maintaining a well-balanced instrumentation.
College Orchestra. Two hours per week.
The College Orchestra is open to all members of the Conservatory
and of the College who are sufficiently qualified to belong to this
organization.
81
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
Symphony Orchestra. Two hours per week.
The Lebanon Valley College Symphony Orchestra is a musical
organization of symphonic proportions. Open alike to advanced
players from the college and the conservatory, the orchestra adheres
to a high standard of performance. Throughout the school year a
professional interpretation of a wide range of standard orchestral
literature is insisted upon.
Glee Club. Two hours per week.
The Glee Club is a mixed chorus of selected voices. The personnel
of the organization, while open to all L. V. C. students, is limited
to forty members. During the Spring the Club appears in concerts in
several communities throughout this section of the state. Choral
literature of the highest type is studied intensively.
College Chorus. Two hours per week.
The mixed chorus is open to all on the campus who are interested
in this type of musical performance and who have had some experi-
ence in singing.
Instrumental Ensembles. In addition to the larger musical organi-
zations there is additional opportunity for advanced players to try
out for such ensembles as
(1) String Quartet
(2) Violin Choir
(3) Brass Ensemble
(4) Woodwind Ensemble
VI. The History of Music and Appreciation
History of Music and Appreciation 1. Three hours per week, 3
semester hours credit.
The first developments are treated briefly and special emphasis
laid on the work of the contrapuntal schools, the development of
the harmonic idea in composition, and the rise of the opera and
oratorio.
History of Music and Appreciation 2. Three hours per week, 3
semester hours credit.
Emphasis is placed on the growth of musical movements and
forms, and on the lives, works, and influence of the great composers.
VII. Miscellaneous Courses
Elements of Conducting. Two hours per week, 2 semester hours
credit.
Principles of conducting; study of methods of conductors, adapta-
tion of methods to school situations, a study of the technique of the
82
CATALOGUE
baton with daily practice, score reading, making of programs. Selec-
tion of suitable materials for various school groups. Readings and
reports.
Eurythmics 1. Three hours per week, 1 hour credit.
The course offers a three-fold training; mental control through
coordination; physical poise through movements made in response
to rhythm; and a musical sense through the analysis of the rhythmic
element in music.
Eurythmics 2. Three hours per week, 1 hour credit.
General survey of elementary and intermediate floor work, and
interpretation together with a discussion of the principles underlying
the presentation of this to children. Applied improvisation will be
an integral part of the course.
VIII. Individual Instruction
Voice, Piano, Organ, Chorus, Orchestral and Band Instruments.
The work in the foregoing fields will be organized from the stand-
point of the development of musicianship in the individual student.
The work continues through eight semesters and assures a well-
rounded and many-sided acquaintance with various musical
techniques.
Private instruction is provided in Applied Music (Piano, Voice,
Organ, Violin, and all instruments of orchestra and band).
Piano: Mrs. Bender, fMiss Miller, Miss Duffey; Mrs. Reis-
singer.
Voice: Mr. Crawford, Mr. Linscott.
Organ: Mr. Campbell.
Violin: Mr. Malsh.
Brass and Woodwind: Mr. Rutledge.
Viola, 'Cello, and String Bass: Mr. Carmean.
A bulletin describing courses in Practical Music will be sent upon
application.
IX. Junior Department
The Conservatory of Music sponsors a Junior Department espec-
ially adapted to children of elementary or high school age.
This Junior Department offers either private or class instruction
in piano and all instruments of the band and orchestra. A desirable
number for class instruction is from four to six members.
t On Leave of Absence — 1935-36.
83
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
MUSIC AND THE A.B. DEGREE
Music study may be credited toward the A.B. Degree to a total of
twenty semester hours (five semester hours per year). For such
credit the requirements are as follows: Two half hour recitations
per week in Applied Music, two hours per day in practice, two
hour recitations per week in harmony.
Before entering upon this course of study the candidate must pass
the examinations required by the Director of the Conservatory.
A student desiring credit for this course of study is expected to
continue the same until graduation. Credit will not ordinarily be
granted for a single year of study. Only under exceptional conditions
may such credit be granted by the faculty upon recommendation of
the Director of the Conservatory.
The College offers to students of exceptional merit the opportunity
under careful guidance of arranging special electives either in work
leading to the A.B. degree or the B.S. degree in Music Education
(Public School Music), so that upon the attainment of either degree
the subsequent degree can be earned by taking two or three semesters
additional work.
THE STUDENTS' RECITALS
The students' Tuesday evening recital is of inestimable value to all
students in acquainting them with a wide range of the best musical
literature, in developing musical taste and discrimination, in afford-
ing young musicians experience in appearing before an audience, and
in gaining self-reliance as well as nerve control and stage demeanor.
Students in all grades appear on the programs of these recitals.
Each senior is required to appear in one special graduation recital.
FEES
Matriculation for Music ranges from one dollar to five dollars.
No additional fee is required for music from students who have
already matriculated for college departments.
Semester bills are payable strictly in advance of recitations. Stu-
dents are registered at the office of the college Registrar over the
signature of the Director of the Conservatory.
The rates for the Public School Music Supervisors' Course will
be $275 per year, which covers not only tuition but also a fee for
student activities. Tuition will include two private lessons per week,
the use of a piano two hours a day for practice, and Theoretical and
Academic Courses not to exceed seventeen points. Charges will be
made for additional private lessons at the rate of $25 per semester for
one lesson a week. Extra hours in Theoretical or College Courses
will be charged at the rate of $8 per semester hour.
84
CATALOGUE
Private Lessons
The rates per semester, one lesson per week, are $25.00.
The rates per semester, one class lesson per week in the Junior
Department, are $12.00.
Rent of Practice Instruments
Piano, one hour daily per semester $4.00
Each additional hour daily per semester 2.00
Organ, one hour daily, per semester 20.00
Organ, two hours weekly, per semester 10.00
Band and Orchestra Instruments, per semester 6.00
RULES AND REGULATIONS
Regular Conservatory students are not enrolled for a shorter period
of time than a full semester, or the unexpired portion of a semester;
and no reduction is made for delay in registering when the time lost
is less than one-fourth of the semester.
No reduction is made for absence from recitations except in case of
protracted illness extending beyond a period of two weeks, in which
case the loss is shared equally by the college and the student.
Conservatory students are under the regular college discipline.
85
Addresses of Faculty and Administrative Officers
Name Address Phone Number
Bailey, L. G 403 E. Main St., Annville, Pa Ann. 17-R
Bender, Andrew 550 Maple St., Annville, Pa " 140-J
Bender, Mrs. Ruth E 550 Maple St., AnnviUe, Pa " 140-J
Butterwick, R. R 218 E. Maple St., Annville, Pa " 20-R
Campbell, R. P 22 S. 6th St., Lebanon, Pa Leb. 2037-J
Carmean, D. Clark Men's Dormitory, L. V. C, Annville, Pa Ann. 137
Clements, L. Percy 128 E. Main St., Annville, Pa
Crawford, Alexander AnnviUe, Pa Ann. 66-J
Derickson, S. H 473 E. Main St., Annville, Pa " 126-W
DufFey, Beula Conservatory Annex, L. V. C, Annville, Pa
Engle, J. R 622 N. Lincoln St., Pahnyra, Pa Pal. 19-R
Esbenshade, J. Walter 607 N. 9th St., Lebanon, Pa Leb. 756-J
Fencil, Gladys M 128 E. Main St., Annville, Pa
Frock, Jerome W 335 W. Main St., Hummelstown, Pa Hum. 7-J
Gillespie, Mary E 108 College Ave., AnnviUe, Pa Ann. 23-M
Gingrich, C. R 36 College Ave., Annville, Pa " 23-J
Green, Mrs. Mary C North HaU, L. V. C, Annville, Pa " 21-R
Grimm, S. 0 234 E. Main St., Annville, Pa " 79-W
Henderson, Esther 330 E. Main St., AnnvUle, Pa " 142-Y
Lietzau, Lena Louise West HaU, L. V. C, AnnviUe, Pa " 9183
Light, V. Earl R. D. No. 1, Annville, Pa " 73-R-13
Linscott, Hubert Box 144-A, R. F. D. 1, Doon, N. J
Lynch, Clyde A 26 E. Sheridan Ave., AnnviUe, Pa " 27
Malsh, Harold West Fairview, Pa Hbg. 3-5646
Metoxen Emerson 43 W. Main St., AnnviUe, Pa
Meyer, Almeda R. D. No. 2, Annville, Pa
MiUer, NeUa 1221 N. MiUer Blvd., Oklahoma City, Okla
Miles, Verda M 43 E. Main St., .^nnvUle, Pa Ann. 10
Moyer, EUa R 44 E. Main St., AnnviUe, Pa " 29
Myers, Helen Ethel 217 Maple St., AnnviUe, Pa " 17-J
Reynolds, 0. E 430 E. Main St., Annville, Pa " 118
Rice Margaret L 34 S. Manheim St., AnnviUe, Pa
Richardson, Lula M 330 E. Main St., Annville, Pa " 142-Y
Richie, G. A 466 E. Main St., AnnviUe, Pa Ann. 2-W
Rutledge, Edward P 216 Maple St., Annville, Pa " 124-J
Schweigert, G. E 48 N. Railroad St., Annville, Pa " 153-J
Shenk, Esther 438 E. Main St., AnnviUe, Pa " 41
Shenk, H. H 438 E. Main St., AnnviUe, Pa " 41
Stevenson, E. H 50 W. Main St., .Annville, Pa " 66-J
Stevenson, Mrs. SteUa 50 W. Main St., Annville, Pa " 66-J
Stokes, M. L 36 College .\ve., AnnviUe, Pa " 23-J
Stonecipher, A. H. M 44 College Ave., Annville, Pa " 124-R
Struble, Geo. G R. D. No. 4, Lebanon, Pa. (Cleona) Leb. 2254-J
Wagner, Paul S 124 CoUege Ave., AnnviUe, Pa Ann. 72
WaUace, P. A. W Maple and Ziegler Sts., Annville, Pa " 101
Wood, Margaret A South HaU, L. V. C, AnnviUe, Pa " 9180
86
Register of Students
GRADUATE STUDENTS
NAME MAJOR STREET NUMBER POST OFFICE STATE
Bicksler, Anna Sarah Physics R. D. No. 2 Lebanon Penna.
EUenberger, Paul Sylvester Biology R. D. No. 2 Annville Penna.
SENIORS
Anderson, Albert Robert Bus. Ad 62 Riverside Ave Roebling N. J.
Ax, Richard Leroy Mathematics 419 Canal St Lebanon Penna.
Balsbaugh , Dorothy History 403 E. Bertsch St Lansford Penna.
Bartolet, Charles Elsworth Education 2544 Jefferson St Harrisburg Penna.
Bauer, Francis Xavier Chemistry R. F. D. No. 3 Myerstown Penna.
Bemesderfer, James Orville Bible and Greek. .518 Hanover St Lebanon Penna.
Bigler, Adam Gochenauer, Jr Education West Willow Penna.
Bishop, Louise Emaline Education 86 Main St Oberlin Penna.
Bolton, Jay Henry Bus. Ad Linglestown Penna.
Bright, Ruth EUzabeth German Cornwall Penna.
Britton, Virginia Kathryn History 251 E. Areba Ave Hershey Penna.
Cassel, Robert Biology 118 High St Woodbury N. J.
Cohen, Ben Biology 363 N. 9th St Lebanon Penna.
Davis, John Thurston Bus. Ad Jonestown Penna.
Edwards, Robert LaMont Chemistry 1 18 E. High St Hummelstown Penna.
Erdman, Anna Mary Biology 59 E. Derry Road Hershey Penna.
Eshleman, Lela Irene Biology Maugansville Md.
Evelev, Sylvia Charlotte German 619 Walnut St Lebanon Penna.
Fauber, Earl Beckley Chemistry 613 Chestnut St Lebanon Penna.
Faust, Edward Henry, Jr Chemistry 524 Walnut St Lebanon Penna.
Feeser, Grant Quincey Education 916 Maple St Lebanon Penna.
Frank, Lewis Paul Biology 917 Maple St Lebanon Penna.
Frick, Evelyn Ceceha French 499 New St Lebanon Penna.
Fridinger, Victor Paul History Mountville Penna.
Gillan, Alice Louise French 52 W. Curtin St Penbrook Penna.
Gingrich, June Stauffer Soc. Science 36 College Ave Annville Penna.
Glen, John Stewart, Jr History 219 S. 2nd St Chambersburg Penna.
Grimm, Dorothy Fear English 414 S. 14th St Harrisburg Penna.
Grove, Alvin Russell, Jr Biology 2417 N. Fifth St Harrisburg Penna.
Gniber, Carl Frederick Bus. Ad 222 College Ave Annville Penna.
Gruber, Harry Gingrich Bus. Ad 222 College Ave Annville Penna.
Haddox, Mary Pickford Mathematics Wilkes St Berkeley Springs. . . . W. Va.
Harvey, Joseph Irvin French 1930 Kensington St Harrisburg Penna.
Heffner. Willis Howard Bus. Ad 30 S. Lancaster St Annville Penna.
Hemperly, Vernon Cletus Chemistry 1924 Bellevue Road Harrisburg Penna.
Herr, Anna Mary English Landisville Penna.
Hershey, Paul Whisler Bus. Ad R. D. No. 2 Palmyra Penna.
Hostetter, Mark James Greek Route No. 2 Annville Penna.
Huber, Richard Light Mathematics 2436 Market St Harrisburg Penna.
Karcher, Henry Jules French 68 Grove St Lodi N. J.
Kauffman, Mary AUce German Route No. 2 Lebanon Penna.
Keiter, Hallis Howe Bus. Ad Dayton Va.
Kendall, Daniel Homer Bible and Greek. . 557 W. Church St Hagerstown Md.
Kirkpatrick, John William Bus. Ad 2712 Woodlawn St Harrisburg Penna.
Krone, Harry Lester English Thurmont Md.
Kuhlman, Paul Edward, Jr Bus. Ad 47 Chestnut St Lebanon Penna
Leisey, Marian Estelle Latin 306 S. 9th St Lebanon Penna.
Light, Earl Chester Chemistry 625 Chestnut St Lebanon Penna.
Lupton, Sarah Margaret Biology 625 S. Stewart St Winchester Va.
March, Hazel Jane Biology 3787 Derry St Harrisburg Penna.
Meyer, Irvin Herr Latin Route No. 2 Annville Penna.
Miller, Paul Alfred History 346 N. 9th St Lebanon Penna.
Monn, Edgar Plough Chemistry R. D. No. 3 Chambersburg Penna.
Muth, John Henry Chemistry 267 W. Main St Hummelstown Penna.
Nye, Howard Harold History 1551 Elm St Lebanon Penna.
Patrizio, Raymond. Education 728 Eighth St Oakmont Penna.
Rader, Richard Cariton Education 23 Center St Lititz Penna.
Reber, Calvin Henry, Jr Enghsh 411 E. Chestnut St Lebanon Penna.
87
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
NAME MAJOR STREET NUMBER POST OFFICE STATE
Roberts. Louvain Ruth Biology 1432 N. 2nd St Harrisburg Penna.
Schmuck, Miller Samuel Bible and Greek . . 443 Lincoln St York Penna.
Shank, Carl Wilbur Chemistry R. D. No. 2 Hummelstown Penna.
Shearer, Louise Adaline Bus. Ad 129 Brookaide Ave Caldwell N. J.
Shellenberger, Mary Jane Biology Mountville Penna.
Sholter, Robert Hamilton History 627 Muench St Harrisburg Penna.
Shroff, Winona Winifred Mathematics 1414 Willow St Lebanon Penna.
Smith, Christine Anna History 1224 W. Oak St Lebanon Penna.
Spohn, Robert Harry English 501 Chestnut St Lebanon Penna.
Sponaugle Boyd Laymon Biology R. D. No. 2 Hummelstown Penna.
Troxel, Robert Benjamin Biology Jonestown Penna.
Weirick, Iva Claire Mathematics 144 Altoona Ave Lemoyne Penna.
Yake, David John English 332 Chestnut St Lebanon Penna.
Yetter, Earl F Bus. Ad 1918 Mulberry St Harrisburg Penna.
JUNIORS
Adams, Claire Elizabeth English 40 N. Tulpehocken St... Pine Grove Penna.
Bachman, Edward Robert Bus. Ad 316 Walnut St Lebanon Penna.
Baus, Richard Albert Chemistry 253 S. 9th St Lebanon Penna.
Beamesderfer, Harold Ebling Bible and Greek. . 1014 N. 10th St Reading Penna.
Billett, Paul Cyrus Chemistry 438 Peffer St Harrisburg Penna.
Bittinger, Gerald Eckels History 2334 N. 4th St Harrisburg Penna.
Brosious, John Marlin Chemistry 138 Hoerner St Harrisburg Penna.
Buck, Ruth Loretta French 552 Radnor St Harrisburg Penna.
Denhnger, Thelma Beatrice English 20 W. Chocolate Ave.. . .Hershey Penna.
Earley, Maxine Larue English Emeigh Penna.
Earnest, William Harry Bus. Ad 16 S^ 8th St Lebanon Penna.
Eastland, John Kenneth English 24 N. Island Ave Ramsey N. J.
Faust, Martha Clippinger History 114 N. Broad St Waynesboro Penna.
Flocken, Karl R Chemistry 502 N. 7th St Lebanon Penna.
Frantz, James Tilden Chemistry 627 S. 2nd St Lebanon Penna.
Grosz, WilUam George Bible and Greek. .West Main St Annville Penna.
Harbold, Lois Marie English 23 W. Main St Dallastown Penna.
Harkins, Geraldine Joyce Education Cornwall Penna.
Harnish, Mary Jean History 618 N. Railroad St Palmyra Penna.
Heisch, Arthur Richard Bus. Ad 3120 Bainbridge Ave. . . .Bronx, N. Y. City. .N. Y.
Himelright, Winfred Woodrow. . .Bus. Ad Martinsburg W. Va.
Hoffman, Charles Ira Chemistry 818 Walnut St Lebanon Penna.
Hollingsworth, Harold Chester. . .Philosophy 151 E. High St EUzabethtown Penna.
Kell, Robert Eugene Bus. Ad Loysville Penna.
Lazin, Norman Biology 225 Cumberland St Lebanon Penna.
Leech, Wilbur Arthur Biology 930 E. Market St York Penna.
Loose, Theodore Mandon Education 320 W. Greenwich St. . . . Reading Penna.
Lupton, Burritt Keeler Chemistry Franklin Ave Wyckoff N. J.
Lynch, Rose Eleanor History Sheridan Ave Annville Penna.
MacMullen, Francis WilUam Chemistry Sanitarium South Mountain Penna.
McCune, John Biology 75 Analomink St East Stroudsburg.. .Penna.
Meckley, Sara Katherine French 48 N. Enola Drive Enola Penna.
Messersmith, Harry Edgar German 122 S. College St Myerstown Penna.
Miller, James Henry Biology 1405 Vernon St Harrisburg Penna.
Mulhollen, Vera Belle German 549 Park Ave Johnstown Penna.
Naugle, Grace Marie Bus. Ad 242 N. 17th St Camp Hill Penna.
Needy, Elwood Edward Bible and Greek. Boonsboro Md.
Orth, Anna Herr History 122 N. 10th St Lebanon Penna.
Phenicie, Ruth Virginia. English Shanksville Penna.
Phillips, Harold German 704 Avenue I Brooklyn N. Y.
Prowell, Joseph Wilbur Biology R. D. No. 1 Cly Penna.
Reber, Howard Franklin Chemistry Main St EUzabethville Penna.
Rutherford, Frank Allen. Jr Chemistry 520 Cumberland St Lebanon Penna.
Schmidt, Jack Edward, Jr Chemistry 2 High St Lebanon Penna.
Shay, Donald Emerson Biology 603 Guilford St Lebanon Penna.
Sholley, Reta Joyce French 531 Cumberland St Lebanon Penna.
Shroyer, Charles Wilbur Biology 81 Sheridan Ave Annville Penna.
Smeltzer. George Light Bus. Ad R. D. No. 1 Harrisburg Penna.
Smith, Marjorie Helen History 200 W. Park \ve Myerstown Penna.
Smith, Richard Thomas Biology 669 S 27th St Harrisburg Penna.
Snell, Clair Albert Mathematics 513 Lehman St Lebanon Penna.
Spcg, John Louis Chemistry 31 Lan»a Ave Garfield N. J.
Stiles, Delores Romaine French R. D. No. 2 Red Lion Penna.
Straub, Louis Ernest Bible and Greek. . 2517 Francis St Baltimore Md.
88
CATALOGUE
NAME MAJOR STREET NUMBER POST OFFICE STATE
Strayer, Flora Mae English 1911 Beaver Ave McKeesport Penna.
Tallman, Edwin Homer Chemistry 523 Spruce St Lebanon Penna.
Trego, John Wilson Biology 229 S. State St Ephrata Penna.
Unger, Duey Ellsworth Biology 810 N. 16th St Harrisburg Penna.
Waltz, Paul Kenneth Biology 335 E. Areba St Hershey Penna.
Webb, Mary Gilbert Latin 149 E. Middle St Gettysburg Penna.
Yeager. Pauline Kathryn English 333 W. Main St Hunmielstown Penna,
Zimmerman, John Chemistry 151 N. Main St Manheim Penna,
SOPHOMORES
Baney, Martha Isabelle French 344 Pine St Minersville Penna.
Barnhart, Jefferson Clifford French 60 W. Chocolate Ave.. . .Hershey Penna.
Bender, Elizabeth Teall EngUsh 532 Maple St Annville Penna.
Berger, Lloyd Daniel Chemistry Reinerton Penna.
Billett, Ralph Edwin Education 438 Peffer St Harrisburg Penna.
Bollinger, Benjamin Ambrose. . . .Chemistry R. D. No. 2 Chambersburg Penna.
Bollman, John Adam Bus. Ad 439 Cumberland St Lebanon Penna.
Beyer, Clayton P Bible and Greek Glenmoore Penna.
Capka, Adolph James Bus. Ad Middletown Penna.
Cunkle, Paul Vincent Bible and Greek. . 459 W. Fairview St. Rd . West Fairview Penna.
Davies, Gordon Education 17 S. Atherton St Kingston Penna.
Deaven, Harry Walter Bible and Greek. .R. D. No. 2 Jonestown Penna.
Delhnger, Curvin Nelson Bus. Ad 100 S. Main St Red Lion Penna.
Derr, Elwood LeRoy Chemistry 1605 Chestnut St Harrisburg Penna.
Donmoyer, Homer Elwood Bus. Ad 423 S. 12th St Lebanon Penna.
Earnest, Dorothy Jean EngUsh 275 W. Main St Hummelstown Penna.
Ehrhart, Walter Melvin Biology R. D. No. 2 Red Lion Penna.
EUenberger, Herman Albert Chemistry R. D. No. 1 Annville Penna.
Engle, Eleanor CaroUne History 622 N. Lincoln St Palmyra Penna.
Etchberger, William Chemistry Box 66 Cleona Penna.
Fisher, Gilbert Earl Chemistry 1411 Berryhill St Harrisburg Penna.
Frey, Marshall Rosette Chemistry 268 S. 6th St Chambersburg Penna.
Fridinger, Walter Perce Bus. Ad 122 W. King St Shippensburg Penna.
Gasteiger, Dean WeUington Bus. Ad 2137 Swatara St Harrisburg Penna.
Gibble, G. Wilbur Bus. Ad 20 N. CoUege St Palmyra Penna.
Gongloff, John Rupp Bus. Ad R. D. No. 1 Harrisburg Penna.
Groff, John Yeagley Chemistry 128 Mifflin St Lebanon Penna.
Hance, Kenneth Perry History 3227 Fielder St Tampa Florida
Harclerode, Sylva Ruth German 2307 Harvard Ave Camp Hill Penna.
Hawthorne, Lucille Katheryn Soc. Science 1612 Forster St Harrisburg Penna.
Heminwav, Hazel Margaret Latin 3001 River Ave Camden N. J.
Hoerner, Violette Bertha Latin 269 W. High St Hummelstown Penna.
Holtzman, George Mark Biology 3104 Jonestown Rd Harrisburg Penna.
Houtz, Ethel Mae English Main St East Berlin Penna.
Jagnesak, Ernestine Mary Soc. Science 390 Broad St Emaus Penna.
Keiper, Richard Jacob Education 28 N. State St Ephrata Penna.
King, Kenneth Ramon Biology 19 W. Granada Ave Hershey w v'^'
Kinney, Charles Bamburgh History 51 Clinton Ave Farmingdale JJ- ^•
Klipa, Peter Bus. Ad 734 S. 2nd St Steelton Penna.
Kreamer, Dorothy Ellen History 472 E. Maple St Annville S^^f*'
Kroske, Harold William Education 235 S. Logan Ave Trenton N. J.
Lascari, August Lenard History 96 Spring St Lodi N- J-
Lazorjack, George Wilson Biology 227 Walnut St Lebanon Penna.
Long, Luther Kohr Chemistry 120 Mifflin St Lebanon Penna.
Marbarger, John Porter Biology 102 W. Main St Palmyra ^!^^^^'
Mason, Ella Tamszon English 55 Elizabeth St Bordentown N. J.
McKeag, Jean Ellen History 349 Gardner Ave Trenton N. J.
Mills, Catherine Lucile English 444 E. Main St Annville Penna.
Morris, Agnes Leonina English 7048 Woodland Ave Philadelphia Penna.
Moyer, Warren Franklin Biology 16 Mifflin St Pinegrove Penna.
Netherwood, Helen Arbella Latin 908 E. Grand Ave Tower City Penna.
Overly, Charlotte Biology Blue Ball Penna.
Price, Wanda Langden Latin 131 Fifth St Carney's Point N.J.
Raab, Charles Henry Biology 284 S. Walnut St Dallastown Penna.
Risser, Lena Evelyn English 115 N. Cedar St Lititz Penna.
Roberts, Mary Carolyn Biology 1432 N. 2nd St Harrisburg Z^^^'
Saylor, Roger Behm. Mathematics 43 Park End Place East Orange N. J.
Schott, Henry Orth Physics R. D. No. 6 Lebanon Penna
Schuler. Alan Edward Bus. Ad 23 Chestnut St Lebanon Penna.
Shaffer, Charles Boyd Chemistry 39 N. 17th St Harrisburg Penna.
Sheealey, Ross Russell Education 615 S. Front St Harrisburg Penna.
89
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
NAME MAJOR STREET NUMBER POST OFFICE STATE
Sloane, Helen Barbara Soc. Science 1006 N. 16th St Harrisburg. Penna.
Smyser, Emma Mary History 1906 Walnut St Harrisburg Penna.
Spangler, Gail Maxine Education 9 Mifflin St Lebanon Penna.
Spitler, Calvin Dubbs History Route No. 5 Lebanon. Penna.
Stefan, Theresa Kathryn Latin 602 S. 2nd St Lebanon Penna.
Stoner, Mary Louise English 562 S. 3rd St Lemoyne Penna.
Swartz, Chauncey Royalton Bible and Greel;;. .52 W. Sheridan Ave Annville Penna.
Thompson, Curvin Livingston Bible and Greek ..21 S. West St York Penna.
Tindall. John Carter History Dutch Neck N. J.
Uh-ich, Paul Theodore Mathematics 437 N. 11th St Lebanon Penna.
Walmer, John David Biology Jonestown Penna.
Walter, John Edwin. Mathematics R. D. No. 1 Hummelstown Penna.
Wilt. Ethel Virginia English 50 College Ave Annville Penna.
Zartman, Mary Elizabeth English 450 N. 9th St Lebanon Penna.
Zierdt, WiUiam Henry English R. D. No. 2 Jonestown Penna.
FRESHMEN
Aungst, Clarence Christian Bus. Ad 228 W. Main St New Holland. Penna.
Bacastow, Merle Stoner B. S 220 Java Ave Hershey Penna.
Baier, Howard Nelson B. S 244 Wiconisco Ave Tower City Penna.
Bartlett, Helen Marjorie A. B 502 W. 41st St Baltimore Md.
Black, Adele Louise A. B 1941 Mulberry St Harrisburg Penna.
Black, Robert Stanley Bus. Ad 20 Java Ave Hershey Penna.
Brown, Charles Willard McGaw. . A. B Hershey Indus. School . . Hershey Penna.
Brown, Robert Gayle Education 719 Hummel Ave Lemoyne Penna.
Bulota, Stanley B. S New Ringgold Penna.
Byerly, David Allen Bus. Ad 3001 N. 3rd St Harrisburg Penna.
Clark, William Ford A. B 608 W. 8th St Chester Penna.
Conrad, Louis Johnson B. S 2923 Derry St Harrisburg Penna.
Davies, Jonah A Education 17 S. Atherton St Kingston Penna.
DcHuff, Philip Greenawalt B. S 139 S. 9th St Lebanon Penna.
Dempsey, Carl Wilson A. B 1131 Hepburn St Williamsport Penna.
Ellenberger, Gertrude Mary B. S R. D. No. 2 Annville Penna.
Engle, John Warren Bus. Ad S. Raib-oad St Hummelstown Penna.
Etter, Samuel A. B 339 S. 8th St Lebanon Penna.
Evelev, Arthur Sherman B. S 619 Walnut St Lebanon Ppnna.
Fidler, Martin Spurgeon A. B 723 Walnut St Columbia Penna.
Flom, Esther Anna Biology 2200 North 5th St Harrisburg Penna.
Fox, Audrie Eleanora Education 455 Juniper St York Penna.
Freeland, Edward Bretz Bus. Ad 94 Front St West Fairview Penna.
Frey, Raymond Theodore Education 438 N. 5th St Lebanon Penna.
Garzella, Michael Frank Biology 194 Parsonage St Pittston Penna.
Gates, William Joseph Biology 530 Cumberland St Lebanon Penna.
Gingrich, Velma Stauff er Biology 36 College Ave Annville Penna.
Graby, Cora Elizabeth A. B 710 E. Maple St Annville Penna.
Guinivan, Thomas William Bible and Greek. .2216 47th St Pennsauken, Camden, N. J.
Haas, Mildred Elizabeth A. B 9 E. Sheridan Ave Annville Penna.
Hamm, Leander Herbert Bus. Ad 68 N. 17th St Harrisburg. Penna.
Heihnan, Catherine Ruth A. B 315 E. Main St Annville Penna.
Hocker. Kenneth Leverne B. S 356 Pine St Steelton Penna.
Holbrook, Margaret Bus. Ad 648 S. 26th St Harrisburg Penna.
Houck, Jean Ewing A. B 199 Walnut St Lebanon Penna.
Hummel, Mabel Ruth A. B 2419 Reel St Harrisburg Penna.
Johnson, Julia Ida A. B 145 North 9th St Lebanon Penna.
Kahl, David Ranch Bus. Ad 100 Newton Ave Oaklyn N. J.
Kinney, Hariin Shroyer B. S 51 CUnton Ave Farmingdale N. Y.
Kirkpatrick, Ehzabeth Virginia.. .Bus. Ad 2712 Woodlawn St Harrisburg Penna.
Kitzmiller, John Kunkel B. S 1325^ Derry St Harrisburg Penna.
Kleinfelter, Richard Theodore. . . .B. S 235 Cumberland St Lebanon Penna.
Kniley, Jesse Paul Bus. Ad 40 S. Harrisburg St Steelton Penna.
Kohler, Carolyn Estella English Smithsburg Md.
Kress, Edward Ken Education 11 6th St Minersville Penna.
Lawson, Catherine Sara A. B 90 W. Main St Dallastown Penna.
Lebo. Mary EmmaUne A. B 344 Crescent St Harrisburg Penna.
Lehman, Clarence Long B. S Campbelltown Penna.
Leininger, Pauline Lillian A. B 925 Cumberland St Lebanon Penna.
Levitz, Razelle B. S 128 Cumberland St Lebanon Penna.
Light, Anna Louise A. B 314 S. 12th St Lebanon Penna.
Light, Harold Hcilman A. B Cornwall Penna.
Long, Robert Winfield A. B 23 S. Walnut St Hummelstown Penna.
Lopes, Olga Weaber A. B Schaefferstown Penna.
90
CATALOGUE
NAME MAJOR STREET NUMBER POST OFFICE STATE
Ludwig, Donald Paul A.B 49 E. Main St Hummelstown Penna.
Lutz, Carl George B. S 12 Harrison St Princeton N.J.
MacEwen, Sarah Katherine B. S 101 Maple St Palmyra Penna.
Mangle, Richard Howard B. S 136 Race St Sunbury Penna.
Martz, Jeanne Marie A.B 1849HerrSt Hanisburg Penna.
Metzger, Edith Maude B. S 37 N. Union St Middletown Penna.
Miller, Charles Hood B. S 305 Elm Ave Hershey Penna.
Monteith, Amy Martha A.B 1002 Maple Ave Barnesboro Penna.
Morrison, NeUie Colclough A.B 210 Lewis St Minersville Penna.
Moyer, John Henry B. S R. D. No. 2 Hershey Penna.
Musser, Jay Charles B. S 2 Center Square EUzabethtown Penna.
Null, Dorothy Louise A. B 403 S. 12th St Lebanon Penna.
Pavlick, WilUam Emil A. B 208 Main Ave Wallington N. J.
Poloniak, Frank B. S Wallington N. J.
Raezer, Clyde B Bus. Ad 100 Parkside Ephrata Penna.
Rarig, Howard Raymond, Jr Education 510 Leconey Ave Palmyra N. J.
Rhoades, WiUiam Francis Education 266 Lake Ave Metuchen N.J.
Richie, Alice Mary A. B 466 E. Main St Annville Penna.
Rohrer, Ruth Romaine A. B McKees Half Falls. . Penna.
Rozman, Anthony John Bus. Ad 620 S. 2nd St Steelton Penna.
Rozman, Frank Albert Bus. Ad 620 S. 2nd St Steelton Penna.
Rutter, Samuel Peiffer A.B 7 E. High St Lebanon Penna.
Saylor, Herbert Alfred Chemistry 465 Maple St Annville Penna.
Sekulski, Joseph John B. S 2251 N. 3rd St Harrisburg Penna.
Shearer, Daniel LeRoy Bible and Greek. .Route No. 1 Spring Grove Penna.
Shenk, D. Eugene, Jr Bus. Ad 120 N. Grant St Palmyra Penna.
Sickel. Charles Herbert Bus. Ad Hotel Weimer Lebanon Penna.
Silvers, Damon Lee B. S 116 Lee Ave Trenton N. J.
Smith, Donald George Education 825 Water St Lebanon Penna.
Smith, Raymond Richard A. B 708 W. Broadway Red Lion Penna.
Suavely, Robert Miller Bus. Ad 230 E. Granada Ave Hershey Penna.
Snyder, Ernest Andrew L. A R. D. No. 2 Jonestown Penna.
Speece, Howard Anthony A. B R. D. No. 1 Dauphin Penna.
Stoufer, Carlton Price B. S 1835 Berryhill St Harrisburg Penna.
Strauss, Harry Daniel Bible and Greek. .R. D. No. 1 Lebanon Penna.
Striokler, Evalyn May Bus. Ad 324 N. 9th St Lebanon Penna.
Strickler, Warren Leo Bible and Greek. .R. F. D. No. 4 Schaefferstown Penna.
Thomas, Joseph Bowker A. B 38 Elizabeth St Bordentown N. J.
Trego, Donald Neal Education 229 S. State St Ephrata Penna.
Tschop, Robert Paul Chemistry 433 S. Main St Red Lion Penna.
Umberger, Jacob Quentin B. S 54 Harvard Ave Mt. Gretna Penna.
Weidman, Roy Andrew B. S Akron. Penna.
Weirick, Ernest Carl Bus. Ad 144 Altoona Ave Enola Penna.
Wenger, Howard Wayne Education S. Main St Telford Penna.
Wenthng, Dorothy Anna B. S 506 S. Lincoln St Palmyra Penna.
Wert, Robert Browning A. B 837 Willow St Lebanon Penna.
Wert, Russell Hopkins Education 837 Willow St Lebanon Penna.
Whister, Catherine A. B 37 Elizabeth St Bordentown N. J.
Zamojski, Beatrice Estelle Biology 276 New York Ave Newark N.J.
Zerbe, Grover Franklin B. S Valley View Penna.
Zubroff, Lillian A. B 221 Laurel St Minersville Penna.
Specials
Enck, Paul Seltzer B. S 704 N. 16th St Harrisburg. Penna.
SATURDAY AND EVENING CLASSES
NAME STREET NUMBER POST OFFICE STATE
Asper, Elda Mae 1616 Swatara St Harrisburg Penna.
Aumiller, Esther 1715 Market St Harrisburg Penna.
Batdorf , Mrs. Luella 26 E. Main St Palmyra Penna.
Beam, Ruth Hershey Indus. School.. .Hershey Penna.
Beaver, Martha E Women's Club Hershey Penna.
Brooks, Aldridge 0 27 S. 16th St Harrisburg Penna.
Curry, Sarah M Hershey Indus. School.. .Hershey Penna.
Dapp, Ross Edgear 2414 Jefferson St Harrisburg Penna.
EUenberger, J. Vernal R. D. No. 1 Annville Penna.
Fox, Ruth C 124 N. Railroad St Palmyra Penna.
Geyer, Edith Hershey Penna.
Goldsmith, Elizabeth F 2005 N. 2nd St Harrisburg Penna.
91
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
NAME STREET NUMBER POST OFFICE STATE
Hartman, Mary G 205 Kelker St Hamsburg. Penna.
Houck, Elinor 199 Walnut St Lebanon. Penna.
Hummel, Mildred E Hershey Penna.
Kenney, George V 136 Horner St Harrisbiirg Penna!
Kichline, Dorothy Berwyn Park Lebanon Penna.
Kindt, Ruth E Good Samaritan Hosp'tl.Lebanon Penna.
King, Anna G 209 S. Harrison St Palmyra Penna.
King, Eleanor G 209 S. Harrison St Palmyra Penna.
King, Elizabeth M 217 Cocoa Ave Hershey P^nna.
Linn, Emily 106 W. Main St Tremont Penna.
Malm, Pierre 17 S. 8th St Lebanon Penna.
Miller, Hazel I Woman's Club Hershey Penna.
Miller, Mabel E Good Samaritan Hosp'tl.Lebanon Penna.
Moody, Harold L 342 N. Partridge St Lebanon Penna.
Noll, Margaret M Quentin Penna.
Phillips, Mildred 518 Pershing .Ave Lebanon Penna.
Reinert, George A Pine Grove Penna.
Romig, Mrs. Howard 121 Cocoa Ave Hershey Penna.
Roud, Morris M., Jr 501 Chestnut St Lebanon Penna.
Rowntree, Urwin Box 223 Hershey Penna.
Snavely, Marion I Ono Penna.
Snyder, Dorothy Nancy Cleona Penna.
Spitler, May Wike Schaefferstown Penna.
Steigleman, Sylva M 534 Eshleman St Highspire Penna.
Stemler, Hettye 2347 N. 3rd St Harrisburg Penna.
Strickler, Mary M Schaefferstown Penna.
Thomas, Mrs. Earl J Sheridan Ave Annville Penna.
Wengert, Guy D 343 S. 16th St Harrisburg Penna.
Wolf, Florence 464 N. 5th St Lebanon Penna.
Yetter, Earl F 1916 Mulberry St Harrisburg Penna.
CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC
Seniors
NAME MAJOR STREET NUMBER POST OFFICE STATE
Bowman, Catharine Nancy Pub. Sch. Music Cleona Penna.
Dietrich, Oleta Alvah Pub. Sch. Music. . 221 N. Railroad St Palm\Ta Penna.
Elser, Martha Priscilla Pub. Sch. Music. . 1 17 Green St Penbrook Penna.
Francis, Anna Louisa Pub. Sch. Music. .54 S. Reading Ave Boyertown Penna.
Goodall, Virginia Mae Pub. Sch. Music. . 216 S. 19th St Harrisburg Penna.
Harnish, Samuel Sohlough Pub. Sch. Music Witmer Penna.
Jagnesak, Anthony August Pub. Sch. Music. . 390 Broad St Emaus Penna.
Keiffer, Irma Isabel Pub. Sch. Music. .E. Main St Elizabethville Penna.
Loos, John George Pub. Sch. Music. 1414-A N. 11th St Reading Penna.
Pool, Kathleen Pub. Sch. Music. 201 N. Ward St Ottumwa Iowa
Reber, Rae Anna Pub. Sch. Music. 71 E. Pottsville St Pine Grove Penna.
Reeder, Elnora Louise Pub. Sch. Music Fayetteville Penna.
Sandt, Donald Oscar Pub. Sch. Music. 537 Chestnut St Emaus Penna.
Sausser, Robert Jacob Pub. Sch. Music. 316 E. Union St Schuylkill Haven. . .Penna.
Schuler, Jack Hartman Pub. Sch. Music. 23 Chestnut St Lebanon Penna.
Showers. Jane Elizabeth Pub. Sch. Music Mountville Penna.
Stabley, Charlotte Louise Pub. Sch. Music. . 503 W. Broadway Red Lion Penna.
Summers, Mary Virginia Pub. Sch. Music. 511 Clayton Ave Waynesboro Penna.
Summy, Helen Hummer Pub. Sch. Music. . 314 W. High St Manheim Penna.
Juniors
Bingaman, Elizabeth Pub. Sch. Music. . R. F. D. No. 1 Harrisburg Penna.
Binkley. Edna Annabelle Pub. Sch. Music. . 104 W. Main St .Annville Penna.
Black, William Edward Pub. Sch. Music. .363 N. 2nd St Lebanon Penna.
Goyne, Ruth Estelle Pub. Sch. Music . 333 E. Mahanoy Ave . . . Mahanoy City Penna.
Hatz, Russell Condran Pub. Sch. Music. . 248 W. Sheridan Ave. . . . .Annville Penna.
Koppenhaver, Esther Leotta Pub. Sch. Music Pillow Penna.
Light, Sara Elizabeth Pub. Sch. Music. . 332 W. Main St -Annville Penna.
Mountz, Gayle Elizabeth Pub. Sch. Music. . 205 Herman Ave Lemoyne Penna.
Shadel, George Edward Pub. Sch. Music. 230 Twin St Minersville Penna.
Sheaffer, Cordelia Rebecca Pub. Sch. Music . 1 13 Main St Oberlin Penna.
Smith, Cvrus Good Pub. Sch. Music. 1224 Oak St Lebanon Penna.
Steiner, Henry Cyrus Pub. Sch. Music. 2630 Reel St Harrisburg Penna.
Stineman, Chester Arthur Pub. Sch. Music . 1214 N. 15th St Harrisburg Penna.
Unger, Earl Clayton Pub. Sch. Music . 1 17 Paxson Ave Schuylkill Haven . . . Penna.
92
CATALOGUE
Sophomores
NAME MAJOR STREET NUMBER POST OFFICE STATE
Barthold, Homer Merkle Pub. Sch. Music. . 1423 Elm St Lebanon Penna.
Butterwick, Helen Irene Pab. Sch. Music. . 218 E. Maple St Annville Penna.
Cox, Isabel Louise Pub. Sch. Music. 23 W. Main St Ephrata Penna.
Fink, Beatrice Lucille Pub. Sch. Music. . 23 E. Locust St Lebanon Penna.
Franklin, Nora Mae Pub. Sch. Music. .319 Cumberland St Lebanon Penna.
Heiland, Greta Annabelle Pub. Sch. Music. . 23 Henrietta St Red Lion Penna.
Heller, Russell Kratzer Pub. Sch. Music. 42 N. 5th St Emaus Penna.
Johns, Robert March Pub. Sch. Music . 306 S. 4th St Lebanon Penna.
Kindt, Emily Elizabeth Pub. Sch. Music. , 132 Church St Mohnton Penna.
Knoll, Kathryn May Pub. Sch. Music. . Penn Avenue Wernersville Penna.
Maberry , Lucille Smoll Pub. Sch. Music. . 1 22 Paxson Ave Schuylkill Haven . . . Penna.
Miller, John Rodger Pub. Sch. Music Rebersburg Penna.
O'neal, Marlin Ray Pub. Sch. Music .R. D. No. 1 Harrisburg Penna.
Oyler, Cecil Charles Pub. Sch. Music. 141 Juniper St Harrisburg Penna.
Schmidt, Karl Pub. Sch. Music. .788 High St Enhaut Penna.
Tschopp, Rose Stuart Pub Sch. Music . 259 High St Chambersburg Penna.
Yoder, Christine Dorothy Pub. Sch. Music. .341 S. 2nd St Lebanon Penna.
Freshmen
Bowers, Karl Edward Pub. Sch. Music. . 365 S. 18th St Harrisburg Penna.
Boyer, Geraldine Elizabeth Piib. Sch. Music. . 1951 Zarker St Harrisburg Penna.
Callen, Matthew Pub. Sch. Music. 1713 N. 5th St Harrisburg Penna.
Chppinger, Robert Smith Pub. Sch. Music. 124 W. 3rd St Waynesboro Penna.
Coover, Alice Lucinda Pub. Sch. Music. 119 E. Burd St Shippensburg Penna.
Druck, Margaret Elizabeth Pub. Sch. Music. . 140 S. Franklin St Red Lion Penna.
Fridinger, Evelyn Gertrude Pub. Sch. Music Steelton Penna.
Gangwer, Mildred White Pub. Sch. Music. . 20 E. 2nd Ave Lititz Penna.
Geyer, Grace Eleanor Pub. Sch. Music. . 53 Brown St Middletown Penna.
Heckman, Robert Raymond Pub. Sch. Music. . 1433 N . 12th St Reading Penna.
Himmelberger, Helen Irene Pub. Sch. Music . 2319 Herr St Harrisburg Penna.
Hirst, Fred Eugene Pub. Sch. Music. . 3246 Green St Harrisburg Penna.
Hoffman, Arlene Elizabeth Pub. Sch. Music .38 W. Main St Ephrata Penna.
Immler, Luther Henri Pub. Sch. Music. 2801 N. Front St Harrisburg Penna.
Keene. Ruth Catharine Adeline.. .Pub. Sch. Music. 29 E. Maple St Cleona Penna.
Koenig, William Ferdinand Pub. Sch. Music. 914 Spring St Reading Penna.
Kope, Nelda Romaine Pub. Sch. Music. 522 W. High St Hummelstown Penna.
Krum, June Harriett Pub. Sch. Music. 112 W. Park Ave Myerstown Penna.
Marbarger, Jean Isabel Pub. Sch. Music. . 102 W. Main St Palmyra Penna.
Meinhardt, Amy Mae Pub. Sch. Music. .315 Market St Lykens Penna.
Morrison, Anna Elizabeth Pub. Sch. Music. 534 Pine St Steelton Penna.
Mosher, Rita Marie Pub. Sch. Music. .Simpson Road Mechanicsburg Penna.
Niessner, Virginia Helen Pub. Sch. Music .819 Bedford St Johnstown Penna.
Patschke, Anita Eleanore Pub. Sch. Music. . 335 Canal St Lebanon Penna.
Ranck, Ida Irene Pub. Sch. Music Bareville Penna.
Saylor, Eugene Clyde Pub. Sch. Music. . 418 Reynolds Ave Lancaster Penna.
Smith, Robert William Pub. Sch. Music. 669 S. 27th St Harrisburg Penna.
Tilford, Robert Lowery Pub. Sch. Music. . 506 C. Street Sparrows Point Md.
Treo, Marianna Jeanette Pub. Sch. Music. 2629 N. 5th St Harrisburg Penna.
Umberger, Molly Elizabeth Music Schaefferstown Penna.
Worley, Charles Donald Pub. Sch. Music. 910 Graham Ave Windber Penna.
Yeakel, Dorothy Adelaide Pub. Sch. Music. . 800 E. Center St Mahanoy City Penna.
Yingst, Kathryn Blossie Pub. Sch. Music. 1012 Walnut St Lebanon Penna.
Yokum, George Eugene, Jr Pub. Sch. Music . 1627 Derry St Harrisburg Penna.
Zeiters, Dorothy Louise Pub. Sch. Music. 124 S. Hanover St Hummelstown Penna.
Zerbe, Harry William Music 47 N. Tulpehocken St. . . Pine Grove Penna.
Zettlemoyer, Elvin John Pub. Sch. Music .5410 Hadfield St West Philadelphia . . Penna.
Specials
Bender, Elizabeth Teall Pub. Sch. Music. .532 Maple St Annvtlle Penna.
Bender, William Trombone 532 Maple St Annville Penna.
Boltz, Joseph W Voice Sheridan Ave Annville Penna.
Brandt, Carl Cornet Class N. Lancaster St Annville Penna.
Breen, Robert Comet E. High St Lebanon Penna.
Brown, Charles Piano, Harmony.. Hershey Indus. School. .Hershey Penna.
Brubaker, Sara Saxophone Cleona Penna.
Buck, Ruth L Piano 552 Radnor St Harrisburg Penna.
Carmean, Mrs. D. Clark Organ Men's Dormitory Annville Penna.
Deaven, Myrle Piano Jonestown Penna.
93
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
NAME MAJOR STREET NUMBER POST OFFICE STATE
Deisher, Catherine Elizabeth Organ, Voice Jonestown Penna.
Faust, Martha Voice 114 N. Broad St Waynesboro Penna.
Fink John Violin 22 Lehman St Lebanon Penna.
Goodman, Stewart Voice Sheridan Ave Annville Penna.
Grimm, Richard Piano Class 234 E. Main St Annville Penna.
Gruber, Jane Piano Class 222 College Ave Annville Penna.
Harnish, Mrs. Clair F Voice 618 N. Railroad St Palmyra Penna.
Heilman, Jane Violin E. Main St Annville Penna.
Heisey, Mildred Voice 409 E. Main St Palmyra Penna.
Herr, Anna Mary Hist. Music Landisville Penna.
Holstein, Richard Organ 365 N. 9th St Lebanon Penna.
Hostetter, Mark Voice Correction.. R. D. No. 2 Annville Penna.
Houser, Meredith Piano Class 218 W. Main St Annville Penna.
Kerr, Elizabeth Piano 812 Chestnut St Lebanon Penna.
Kreamcr, Bernice Piano Class 471 E. Main St Annville Penna.
Kreamer, Donald Piano Class 471 E. Main St Annville Penna.
Kreider, Mary Jane Piano Class Annville Penna.
Levitz, Blossom Piano 128 Cumberland St Lebanon. Penna.
Light, Anna Louise Voice, Chorus,. . .314 S. 12th St Lebanon Penna.
Light, Oscar Piano Class 382 W. Main St Annville Penna.
Longenecker, Mary Grace Cornet Maple St Annville Penna.
March, Dorothy Piano Class 41 Church St Annville Penna.
Marshall, Elizabeth Piano 427 Cumberland St Lebanon Penna.
McClure, Jeanne Piano Class 225 E. Main St Annville Penna.
McClure, John Piano Class 122 E. Main St Annville Penna.
Metzger, Edith M Voice, Piano 37 N. Union St Middletown Penna.
Millard, Marian Piano Class Annville Penna.
Mills, Catherine Flute 444 E. Main St Annville Penna.
Moyer, John Trombone R. D. No. 2 Hershey Penna.
Mulhollen, Vera Belle Voice 549 Park Ave Johnstown Penna.
Myers, Carl Russell Voice 321 W. Main St Annville Penna.
Myers, Mildred Organ 321 W. Main St Annville Penna.
Nagle, Violet Mae Piano 327 E. Main St Annville Penna.
Null, Dorothy Louise Voice, Chorus. . . .403 S. 12th St Lebanon Penna.
Prang, Matthew Piano Class 414 B. Cherry St Palmyra Penna.
Rice, Elizabeth I Piano Class 34 Manheim St Annville Penna.
Ripani, Raymond Ivanhoe Saxophone Hershey Indus. School.. .Hershey Penna.
Rohland, Dorothy Piano 101 S. Lancaster St Annville Penna.
Rohland, Wayne Trombone Class.. .101 S. Lancaster St Annville Penna.
Rutledge, George Edward Piano 216 Maple St Annville Penna.
Smith, Richard T Voice 669 S. 27th St Harrisburg Penna.
Snyder, Elizabeth Piano Cleona Penna.
Sprague, Patricia Piano Class 113E. Main St Annville Penna.
Sprague, Susan Piano Class 113 E, Main St Annville Peima.
Stonecipher, Evelyn Piano Class 44 College Ave Annville Penna.
Stonecipher, Virginia Piano Class 44 College Ave Annville Penna.
Strickler, Hugh Piano 203 Hathaway Park Lebanon Penna.
Strickler, Marian Piano 203 Hathaway Park Lebanon Penna.
Tnrby, Myrle Voice Palmyra Penna.
Webster, Eugenia Piano 2036 Bellevue Rd Harrisburg Penna.
Williams, Harry Piano Class Annville Penna.
Wilt, Martha Piano Class 50 College Ave Annville Penna.
Witmeyer, Carl Cornet Class 38 College Ave Annville Penna.
Witmeyer, Eleanor Piano Class 38 College Ave Annville Penna.
Wolf, Ruth Ann Piano Class West Main St Annville Penna.
Wood, William Piano Class 8 Mifflin St Lebanon Penna.
Yingst, Mabel Organ 40 S. 9th St Lebanon Penna.
EXTENSION STUDENTS
NAME STREET NUMBER POST OFFICE STATE
Albright, Mary M Halifax Penna.
Arnold, Dorothy Marie 3506 Jonestown Road . . . Progress Penna.
Beam, Ruth Hershey Penna.
Beshore, Emma Louise 115 S. Front St Harrisburg Penna.
Blumenthal, Babotte 641 Schuylkill St Harrisburg Penna.
Bobs. Reba 702 East St Harrisburg Penna.
Brooks, Aldridge 0 27 S. 16th St Harrisburg Penna.
Bushey, C. N 2341 N. 4th St Harrisburg Penna.
Caveny, Nell 338 S. 17th St Harrisburg Penna.
Clouser, Elizabeth E 900 N. 18th St Harrisburg. Penna.
94
CATALOGUE
NAME STREET NUMBER POST OFFICE STATE
Coover, John L Oberlin Penna.
Curry, Sarah M 336 W. Main St Hummelstown Penna.
Dapp, Ross Edgear 2414 Jefferson St Harrisburg Penna.
Denny, Kathryn R. D. No. 1 Middletown Penna
Enders, Gertrude Dorothy 2011 N. 3rd St Harrisburg Penna.
Finton, Marie J 228 Maclay St Harrisburg Penna.
Fisher, Lydia Harrisburg Hospital Harrisburg Penna.
Grimm, Mrs. Nettie B 1536 Walnut St Harrisburg Penna.
Harkins, Anne F 115 S. Front St Harrisburg Penna.
Hartman, Mary G 205 Kelker St Harrisburg Penna.
Hiller, J. Edward 2316 Chestnut St Harrisburg Penna
Houck, Elinor M 199 Walnut St Lebanon Penna.
Ilgen, Dorothea Virginia 607 N. Front St Harrisburg Penna.
Jones, Thomas Henry 1808 N. Third St Harrisburg Penna.
Kenney, George Vincent 136 Horner St Harrisburg Penna.
King. Eleanor G 209 S. Harrison St Pahnyra Penna.
Kipp, John M R. D. No. 1 Grantville Penna.
Lamke, Cynthia M 235 Jefferson St Steelton Penna.
Lowe, Elsa Winifred 62 N. 12th St Harrisburg Penna.
Lutz, Jennie Barnett 133 Herr St Harrisburg Penna.
Miller, Leon F 2715 N. 4th St Harrisburg Penna.
Minnig, Blanch LaV 2227 N. 4th St Harrisburg Penna.
Myers, Ehzabeth M 115 S. Front St Harrisburg Penna.
Nixon, Elsie M 218 Maclay St Harrisburg Penna.
Parker, Donald Montrose 915 N. 6th St Harrisburg Penna.
Reinert, Grace P 19 N. 17th St Harrisburg Penna.
Schell, Katharine H 2031 Green St Harrisburg Penna.
Sheets, Margaret Virginia 1731 Derry St Harrisburg Penna.
Sherk, Esther S 229 N. 14th St Harrisburg Penna.
Shreeve, Margaret G. 236 Pine St Steelton Penna.
Steigleman, Sylva M '. 534 Eshleman St Highspire Penna.
VanHorn, Herman H 2339 N. 4th St Harrisburg Penna.
Weld, Mina J 2464 N. 6th St Harrisburg Penna.
Yetter, Earl F 1916 Mulberry St Harrisburg Penna.
Yingst, Edith E 115 S. Front St Harrisburg Penna.
SUMMER SESSION, 1935
Abraham, Kathleen L 220 Chestnut St Lebanon Penna.
Balsbaugh. Dorothy 403 E. Bertsch St Lansford Penna.
Barthold, Homer M 1423 Elm St Lebanon Penna.
Bartolet, Charles E 3215 N. 6th St Harrisburg Penna.
Bishop, Louise 86 Main St Oberlin Penna.
Blxler, Mary Elizabeth 318 Sixth St New Cumberland. . .Penna.
Boyer, Clayton P Glen Moore Penna
Britton, Virginia Kathryn 251 E. Areba Avenue. . Hershey Penna.
Clymer, Robert H., Jr 701 Chestnut St Lebanon Penna.
Davis, John T Jonestown Penna.
Enck, Paul S 1427 Market St Harrisburg Penna.
Eshenour, Lester Page 602 W. High St Hummelstown Penna.
Fake, ElvinB 1040 Lehman St Lebanon Penna.
Fetter. Charles Willard 132 N. Charlotte St Manheim Penna.
Furlong. Charles R Lykens Penna.
Goldsmith, Elizabeth F 2005 North 2nd St Harrisburg Penna.
Green, Harold Boonsboro Md.
Hartman, Mary G 205 Kelker St Harrisburg Penna.
Heilman, Luella M 128 Cherry St Palmyra Penna.
Houtz, Lester S East Berlin Penna.
Huber, Richard L 2436 Market St Harrisburg Penna.
Koch, Ernest H 829 Northampton St. . . .Easton Penna.
Kreider, Edna C Ill E. Cumberland St.. .Lebanon Penna.
Lamke, Cynthia M 230 Jefferson St Steelton Penna.
Lesher, .Alice South Potomac St Waynesboro Penna.
Light, Earl Chester 625 Chestnut St Lebanon Penna.
Loos, John G 1414-A North 11th St. . .Reading Penna.
Lupton, Burritt K. L Franklin Ave Wykoff N. J.
Lux, Ethel Adella 1408 Walnut St , . .Camp Hill Penna.
Maurcr, Marguerite E 1544 Oak St Lebanon Penna.
Mowrey, Kathryn 1504 Bridge St New Cumberland. . .Penna.
Moyer, Warren Franklin 14 Mifflin St Pine Grove Penna.
Nye, Howard H 1551 Elm St Lebanon. Penna.
95
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
NAME STREET NUMBER POST OFFICE STATE
Phillips, Mildred M 518 Pershing Avenue Lebanon Penna.
Ramer, Pearl S 827 Lehman St Lebanon Penna.
Kissinger, Thomas F Fredericksburg Penna.
Roberts, Bissett J ' 1432 N. 2nd St Harrisburg Penna.
Sandt, Donald 0 Emaus Penna.
Schwartz Harry Joseph 251 N. State St Ephrata Penna.
Snavely, Robert Miller E. Granada Ave Hershey Penna.
Spitler, May Wike Schaefferstown Penna.
Thompson, David Lawson Williamstown Penna.
Wren, Jean MeCreath 1011 N. Front St Harrisburg Penna.
Zerbe, Harry William 47 N. Main St Pine Grove Penna.
SUMMARY COLLEGIATE YEAR, 1935-1936
College Men Women Total
Graduate Students 1 1 2
Seniors 49 23 72
Juniors 42 20 62
Sophomores 49 27 76
Freshmen 71 34 105
Specials 1 ... 1
Saturday and Evening Classes 28 14 42
241 119 360
Conservatory of Music
Seniors 6 13 19
Juniors 7 7 14
Sophomores 7 10 17
Freshmen 14 23 37
Specials 24 43 67
58 96 154
Extension Department 12 33 45
Summer Session, 1935 26 18 44
Total in all Departments 337
Names repeated in Conservatory, Extension and Summer
Session 23
Net total in all Departments 314
96
Degrees
Conferred June 10, 1935
Honorary Degrees
Harry Miles Imboden Doctor of Science
Ira Sankey Ernst Doctor of Divinity
Oliver L. Mease Doctor of Divinity
Victor Otterbein Weidler Doctor of Divinity
Bachelor of Arts
Annie Rebecca Adams
Herbert Roy Blouch
Ann Elizabeth Butterwick
Elizabeth Anna Carl
Alma Marie Cline
Alice Helena Cockshott
Rose Katherine Dieter
Helen Frances Earnest
Elizabeth Amelia Ford
William Edward Gerber
Henry Harold Grimm
Sarah Estella Heilman
George Joseph Hiltner
Frances Witwer Keiser
Mary Magdalene March
Sarah Katharine McAdam
Samuel Wierman McCreary
Warren Franklin Mentzer
Bruce Manninger Metzger
Emma Jane Reinbold
Lester Fairfax Ross
Anna M. Salen
Stanley George Sherrifif
Evelyn Mildred Smith
Pauline Tillie Snavely
Allen Weidner Steflfy
Margaret Isabel Weaver
Bachelor of Science
With a Major in Science
Guy Allen Beaver Marietta Eugenia Ossi
Marshall Earnest Ditzler Jacob Henry Ricker
Robert William Etter Gerald Bernard Russell
Frances Louise Holtzman Arthur Good Spickler
Theodore Kohr Long Philip Underwood
Clyde Hugh Magee Donald Earl Walter
Lyle Alfred Moser Kenneth Samuel Whisler
With a Major in Business Administration
Casper Edward Arndt
Galen Benjamin Baugher
James Philip Denton
David James Evans
Charles Lawrence Hauck, Jr,
Michael Kanoff
Lester John Lingle
Howard Albright Lloyd
Kenneth Charles Shaeffer
William Hunt Smith
Richard Lehman Walborn
John Edmund Witter
With a Major in Education
Naomi P. Bair Charles Robert Furlong
Stewart James Barthold Elbridge Bradbury Hartman
Frank Patrick Boran Carrie May Lady
Frank Thomas Cullather Albert John Sincavage
97
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
Bachelor of Science
With a Major in Music Education
Myrle Evelyn Deaven Dale Henry Roth
Ida Katharine Hall Ross Leslie Saunders
Ethel Irene Keller Robert Luigard Scheirc/
CONFERRED AUGUST 10, 1935
Bachelor of Arts
Charles Willard Fetter
Bachelor of Science
With a Major in Education
Elvin Belden Fake Charles Francis Rust
Marguerite E. Maurer David Lavv^son Thompson
ELECTED TO MEMBERSHIP
Phi Alpha Epsilon
Honorary Scholarship Society
Helen F. Earnest Frances W. Keiser
Robert W. Etter Theodore K. Long
Henry H. Grimm Bruce M. Metzger
William H. Smith
98
Index
PAGE
Absence 27, 33
Academic Standing of College 19
Administration, Officers of 7
Admission, General Requirements 24
Admission, Specific Requirements 23
Admission, Music Department 74
Addresses, Faculty and Administrative Officers 86
Advanced Standing 25
Advisers 25
Aid to Students 33
Aims of the College 18
Application for Admission 24
Assistants, Administration 7
Assistants, Graduate 14
Assistants, Student 14
Astronomy, Courses in 39
Athletic Association 21
Bible, Courses in 39
Biology, Courses in 41-43
Board of Trustees 5
Board of Trustees, Committees 6
Board of Trustees, Officers 6
Boarding 30
Breakage Deposit, Laboratories 30
Breakage Deposit, Rooms 31
Buildings and Grounds ii, 20
Business Administration, Courses in 44-47
Business Administration, Outline of Course 68
Calendar, College 3, 4
Chemistry, Courses in 47-49
Class Standing 26
Classification 25
Clubs, Departmental 22
Committees of Board of Trustees 6
Committees of the Faculty 13
Conditions, Scholastic 27
Conservatory of Music 74-85
Corporation, The 5
Corporation, Officers of the 6
Courses of Instruction 39
Credits 26
Day Student Rooms 31
Debating 21
Deficient Students 27
Degrees Awarded 1935 97, 98
99
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
PAGE
Degrees Granted 36
Degrees, Requirements for 36, 37
Dictation, Courses in Music 78
Discipline 27
Dramatics 21
Drawing, Mechanical, Course in 65
Economics, Courses in 65, 66
Education, Courses in, 48-50
English, Courses in 51-53
Enrollment, Student, 1935-1936 96
Entrance Requirements, College 23, 24
Entrance Requirements, Conservatory 74
Equipment 20
Eurythmics, Course in 83
Examinations, Supplemental 28
Expenses, College 29-32
Expenses, Conservatory of Music 84, 85
Extension Courses 67
Faculty, College 8-10
Faculty, Conservatory of Music 11, 12
Fees, Graduation 32
Fees, Laboratory 30
Fees, Matriculation 29
Fees, Practice Teaching 32
French, Courses in 53, 54
Freshman Week 25
Geology, Courses in 54
German, Courses in 54, 55
Grading System 26
Graduation Fees 32
Greek, Courses in 40, 41, 55, 56
Gymnasium 20
Harmony, Courses in 78, 79
Hazing 27
History, Courses in 56-58
History of Music, Courses in 82
History of the College 17
Hours, Limit of 26
Hygiene, Courses in 63
Infirmary 20
Individual Instruction, Music 83
Instrumental Music, Instruction in 81
Journalism 21
Junior Department, Music 83
Laboratories 20
Laboratory Fees 30
Latin, Courses in 58, 59
Library 20
Literary Societies 21
100
CATALOGUE
PAGE
Loan Funds 34
Location 19
Mathematics, Courses in 59-61
Matriculation Fee 29
Medicine, Plan of Study Preparatory for 69, 70
Methods in Music, Courses in 79, 80
Music Education, Outline of Course 74-76
Musical Organizations 81, 82
Music, Department of 74-85
Music, Junior Department 83
Music and the A. B. Degree 84
Ofifiicers of Administration 7
Officers of Board of Trustees 6
Outline of Courses
Bachelor of Arts 38
Bachelor of Science with Major in Science 38
With Major in Business Administration 68
With Major in Education 72
With Major in Music Education 74-76
Pre-Medical 69, 70
Pre-Theological 70
Social Ser\ace 71
Payment of Fees 33
Phi Alpha Epsilon 22
Philosophy, Courses in 61, 62
Physical Education 62-64
Physics, Courses in 64, 65
Placement Bureau 73
Political Science, Courses in 66, 67
Practice Teaching, College 50
Practice Teaching, Conservatory of Music 80
Practice Teaching Supervisors 15
Pre-Medical, Outline of Course 69, 70
Presidents, College 16
Prizes Awarded 1935 22
Probation 27
Psychology, Courses in 51
Public School Music, Outline of Course 74-76
Quality Points 36
Re-examinations 27
Register of Students 87-96
Registration 24
Registration, Change of 25
Registration, Late 25
Registration, Pre- 24
Religious Organizations 21
Requirements for Admissions, College 23, 24
Requirements for Admission, Conservatory 24, 74
Requirements for Graduation 36, 37
101
LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE
PAGE
Residence Requirements for Graduation 36
Room Equipment 31
Room Rent 31
Room Reservation 31
Saturday Classes 67
Scholarships 33-35
Sickness 33
Sight Reading, Courses in 78
Sociology, Courses in 67
Student Activities 21
Student Activities and Tuition Fees 29
Student Assistants 14
Student Recitals 84
Summary of the Enrollment 96
Summer Session 67
Teaching, Requirements for Certificates 72
Trust Funds 33-35
Trustees, Board of 5
Tuition and Student Activities Fees 29
Tuition Rebate, Ministers' Children 29
Y. M. and Y. W. C. A 21
102