Levora “Lee” Rodda Easterbrook (1903-1995) graduated from New Jersey State Normal School in Trenton in 1923. She taught grammar school in her hometown of Butler for four years until she married Neil Easterbook, principal, and later superintendent of Butler Schools in 1927.
Thencanic Society critic, 1893. Possibly the Rev. Milton R. Eastlack from West Virginia (the only person on FindAGrave with that name), but no definitive link is known. https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/121527613/milton-r-eastlack
Instructor of Geography at New Jersey State Normal School in Trenton.
Model School student Class of ca. 1889; Thencanic Society President, 1889. https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/75864857/andrew-howard-ege
President of The College of New Jersey from 1979 to 1998.
Model School Class of 1896; Thencanic Society member and treasurer. No known relation with Sarah Ely. https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/77521663/ryke-ely
Thencanic Society member, ca. 1890s. Brother to Richard Blossom Farley. https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/15330168/marcus-martin-farley
Victor Galassi (1917-2004) attended New Jersey State Teachers College at Trenton from 1935-1938 where he was the Varsity Sports Manager and participated in other school activities. He attended Rutgers in 1939, then entered the military. After WWII, he joined the New Jersey State Police where he retired with the rank of major.
Model School Class of 1888; Thencanic Society member and President. https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/271991549/gilbert-terbell-gale
Rebecca Gasn, who went by “Reba” was born September 3, 1899, to Russian Jewish immigrants Jacob Gasn and Annie Eisner Gasn, in Monmouth County, New Jersey. Her older siblings were Louis (1888-1917), Samuel (1890-1942), and Sadie or Sayde Blidner (1894-1958); and her younger sisters were Rachel “Rae” Blum (1900-1943) and Miriam “Mona” Weiden (1901-1982). She graduated from Neptune High School in 1918, then attended New Jersey State Normal School at Trenton in 1919. There she was active in Theta Phi which was “a society, which stands for the enjoyment of the Great Out of Doors,” according to the May 1920 issue of The Signal student newspaper, as well as the Camera Club, Glee Club, and Young Men's - Young Women's Hebrew Association. Her younger sister Miriam, who later went by “Mona,” also attended the Normal School during Reba’s second year. She served as a student teacher at Trenton Junction (later Fisk) School in Ewing, then graduated in 1920. Shortly thereafter, she taught the “special class” (Special Education) at the Normal School for about a year. Afterward, she taught “special class” in Atlantic City, and at Monmouth Public Schools, including Belmar, for several decades. She outlived all of her siblings and died on January 25, 1989, in Neptune, New Jersey.