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  • THE NORMAL ADVANCE71UtterarpALETIIENAI.There is no darkness but ignorance.—
Shakespeare.THE Alethenai are still continuing the
study of English authors.No...

    Review of The
Tempest

    Review of King Lear, and Cur¬
rent Events.The Lake Poets Day was observed Decem¬
ber 5. Roll call was answered by quotations
...

    Review
of Tintern Abbey

    Review of The Rime of
the Ancient Mariner

    Review of Macedon

    
Current Events, and Parliamentary Drill.Two old members, Miss Zoe Bodenhafcr, of
Middletown, and Miss Clara Applegate, of
Bloomington, visited ...

    Indiana State University Archives
    No subjects listed

  • 154THE NORMAL ADVANCEP. M. Watson, who developed his wings in
flights of oratory while an active Daedalian, is
now using them as a ...

    Indiana State University Archives
    No subjects listed

  • An employee newsletter.

    theOLIVER MIRRORVOLUME 2, No. 2Branch SuggestionPlan ImprovementNoted by KoegleCHICAGO, ILL.-A marked im­provementin both number of sug­gestionssubmitted and&#x...

    Business & Industry

  • 8THE NORMAL ADVANCEThis is the eighteenth year in the life ofThe Normal Advance. During these seventeen years much has been attempted andmuch...

    To think without confusion clearly,To love his fellow-man sincerely,To act from honest motives purely,To trust in God and Heaven securely.—Van ...

    Indiana State University Archives
    No subjects listed

  • 354 THE NORMAL ADVANCEOn the road trip to Hanover Normal lost an exciting game by a close score, the game being in doubt until the...

    Indiana State University Archives
    No subjects listed

  • 84THE NORMAL ADVANCEform an idea of an ideal man ? I think that itwill help us to see that a man, to be an idealman, mus...

    Indiana State University Archives
    No subjects listed

  • An employee newsletter

    the ·OLIVER MIRRORVOLUME 3, No. 2 FEBRUARY, 1951Donagher, Miles, RichieElected Vice PresidentsHOMER F. DONAGHERW. E. MILESL. PIERCE RICHIECHICAGO, ILL.-A.&...

    Business & Industry

  • THE NOEMAL ADVANCE.mit of no doubt. Indeed, this might almost be considered the modern, new standpoint from whichhistory is to be written an...

    Indiana State University Archives
    No subjects listed

  • THE NORMAL ADVANCE.197The second game was probably the best playedgame of the season. Both teams played in goodform and at no< time durin...

    Normal f, Wabash 9.Cavanaugh, Spindler, Cummings, and McFer-rin deserve especial mention for their work thisseason.MY COLLEGE BOY.He is handsome as Ap...

    An expert man at football,You can see that by his hair.He can swim and shoot and fence, too,Also jump and dance and run

    Is a favorite with the co-eds.,And is in for all the fun.He can play on any instrument,His singing is divine,And when it comes to ...

    But he cannot learn his lessons,To save his precious soul.—Exchange.Mrs. Perkins—Did you see any of them horseless kerages up in the...

    Indiana State University Archives
    No subjects listed

  • THE NORMAL ADVANCE.33settled, when Miss Osenberg said that she wassure that it was her chair for she had held thechair many times, while...

    Indiana State University Archives
    No subjects listed

  • 50THE NORMAL ADVANCE440 run—Entries: 1, 8, 21, 27.880 run—Entries: 14, 15, 16, 18, 19, 21, 28.One mile run—Entries: 4, ...

    E. Childress, 12

    A.Fishback, 17

    N. Wilson, 18

    R. Johnson, 27

    R. Hyndman, 28.Sophomore—G. Houk, 9

    H. Huck, 11

    C.McDonald, 19

    R. Smith, 23.Junior—J. Fortner, 8

    E. Stiffler, 25.College—H. Knauth, 1

    M. Sublett, 2

    R.Rightsell, 3

    W. Unverferth, 5

    W. Wright,14

    J. Eddy, 15

    H. Sakel, 16

    I. Koch, 24

    E. Hemmer, 21.The officials were: A. F. Westphal, starter

    Prof. J. N. Stephenson, of Rose Polytechnic,referee

    Prof. R, G. Gillum, umpire

    Prof. F.R. Higgins, Prof. Baxter and Prof. M. L. Lu-back, judges

    the Rev. L. C. Talmage, chiefinspector

    Walter Carnahan, George Burgettand Oscar Haney, scorers

    William Clowser,Ralph Smith and Clausterman, clerks.The winners and their classes follow:100-yard dash: Fortner, junior

    Smith,sophomore

    Childress, senior

    Sublette, college course. Time, 11 seconds.220-yard dash: Fortner, junior

    Johnson,senior, Stiffler, junior

    Houk, sophomore.Time, 27 4-5 seconds.440-yard dash: Knauth, college course

    Fortner, junior. Time, 1:11 3-5.880-yard dash: Hyndman, senior

    Sakel,college course

    Wilson, senior

    Hemmer, college course. Time, 2:22 2-5.Mile run: Hyndman, senior

    Rightsell, college course

    Hemmer, college course

    SakeJ,college course. Time, 6:52.Shotput: Stiffler, junior

    Childress, senior

    Wilson, senior

    Houk, sophomore. Distance,27 feet, 9 inches.Broad jump: Fishback, senior

    Huck,sophomore

    Fortner, junior

    Unverferth, college course. Distance, 19 feet 2>4 inches.Discus: Unverferth, college course

    Smith,sophomore

    Knauth, college course

    Houk,sophomore. Distance, 83 feet, 1% inches.Pole vault: Sublette, college course, andFishback, senior, tied for first place

    Knauth,college course, third

    McDonald, sophomore.8 feet, 8 inches.The summary gives the meet to the Seniorsby a margin of two points, they having 32points, the College C...

    Indiana State University Archives
    No subjects listed

  • 156THE NORMAL ADVANCE.Teaching as a Profession.In the ideal professional man or woman, selfishness has no part. To perfect ones self in any ...

    to become a living sacrifice at the altar of thought inleading others to think, to feel, to live. It is thegoal of noblest ambitions&#x...

    todie, that others may live. Such was the purposein the life of the worlds greatest teacher, and suchmust be the teachers purpose if sh...

    not the agent ofa powerful universal force striving to refine themost precious of heavenly legacies, the human soul,but a servant of the Sta...

    but at graduationhe is turned loose upon himself, his own master.If he has been rightly taught, the early need of ateacher dissolves itself&...

    it maybuild a squadron that will sweep the seas

    it maybridge a river or span a continent

    it may capturea city or destroy an army

    but it cannot teach. Inthe presence of a towering will, spontaneity islost, thought is stricken dumb and slinks away.What Hubbard calls the ...

    but a woman who bore the basket fromthe rushes.But we have long since learned to look to notfor the ideal. To say that a teacher&#...

    Froebel a type of femininity. The former couldlay nations at his feet, but his children learned tohate him

    the latter never awed a man into subjection and his pupils adored him. Where Napoleon saw a germ of thought he stamped it out...

    Froebel made it bear a hundred fold.The average teacher is a dreamer, not a doer ofthings. She thinks upon questions of idealty inher s...

    Indiana State University Archives
    No subjects listed

  • a room full of other peoples babies. The train¬
ing you will acquire before and during your
teaching experience is a good one ...

    Indiana State University Archives
    No subjects listed

  • .J1PrincipalsMessageTo Students, Faculty, and Friends:Once again I would like to expressmy best wishes to all students, faculty and friends of th...

    Ellettsville High School
    No subjects listed

  • The wife of a city council member, Catherine Richardson describes the tense hours leading up to the Ohio River flooding the city of Jef...

    Jeffersonville Township Public Library

  • Sta-Var# 3er\\ov^JUXTAPOSITIONSbt|lauren hurriesThroughout the 20th century, gender rolesin America have taken a dramatic turn. In1920, the Ninet...

    Bloomington High School South
    No subjects listed

  • An employee newsletter

    MIRRORVOLUME 3, No. 3 MARCH, 1951Charles City Plant SuesFE For Strike DamagesDUBUQUE, row A-A suit to re­cover$122,815 in damages result­ing...

    Business & Industry

  • THE NORMAL ADVANCE.43mands that they be not less strict but more just.An easier world would be one in which idleness,vice, and inefficiency ...

    andvirtue, energy and efficiency correspondinglyworse. A more just world would see that each ofthese characteristics received their proper reward.Our colle...

    but inwhatever station of life these incapables arefound, they must be borne by those who are capable or else they perish the victims o...

    but themajority of these have never been, could never beanything else than what they are. They are incapable and are probably the descendant...

    butat a certain period, it attaches itself to anothercrab, sends arms into the tissues of its host, soonloses head and legs, and degenerates...

    Indiana State University Archives
    No subjects listed