S t a t e College News SALARIES OFFERED BY PRESIDENT

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State College News
VOL. XV J. No. 13
STATE COLLEGE FOR TEACHERS, ALBANY, N. Y., FRIDAY JANUARY 8, 1932
$2.25 Per Year, 32 Weekly Issues
TAX TICKETS ASKED ALUMNI VOICE SEVERE CRITICISM
PLAN FOR REVISION OF TEACHERS'
SALARIES OFFERED BY PRESIDENT FOR CLASS PLAYS
OF COLLEGE'S ATHLETIC POLICIES
Graduates of Recent Years, Led By Newcomb, Adopt ResoluProgram, Explained Before State College Alumni in Syracuse,
Elementary Dramatics Class
tions; "Bigger And Better" Opponents Are Demanded;
Substitutes Large Increment After First Three
Has January 19 as Date
Coach Baker to Reply Next Week
Years for Present Annual Increase
for Three Plays
A p r o p o s a l to t a c k l e the w h o l e p r o b l e m o f teachers' salaries f r o m a n e w
s t a n d p o i n t was a d v a n c e d by P r e s i d e n t A . R. B r u h a c h e r i n an a d d r e s s bef o r e t h e State C o l l e g e A l u m n i r e u n i o n at t h e H o t e l O n o n d a g a in S y r a c u s e
d u r i n g the f o r t y - s e v e n t h a n n u a l m e e t i n g o f the N e w Y o r k S t a l e A s s o c i a t e d A c a d e m i c P r i n c i p a l s . S i x t y - f i v e m e n , m o s t o f t h e m school a d m i n i s t r a t o r s , h e a r d the plan as o u t l i n e d by D r . B r u h a c h e r .
Stating that "school administrators
m u s t not be ' p o l l y a n n a s ' in
facing
present
financial
upheavals b r o u g h t
.about bv the w o r l d - w i d e d e p r e s s i o n . "
he d e c l a r e d t h a t the s i t u a t i o n m u s t be
firmly
faced.
T e a c h e r s ' s a l a r i e s , he
p o i n t e d o u t , f o r m the h u b o f any
d i s c u s s i o n o f school finance a n d t a k i n g t h i s s t a n d , lie o u t l i n e d a plan to
e f f e c t a " t r e m e n d o u s r e l i e f f o r school
b u d g e t s , but at the same t i m e p r o tect the schools f r o m s u f f e r i n g . "
W o u l d Spread Raises
l i r i e l l y , his p l a n w o u l d e n t a i l a r e v i s i o n in the e x i s t i n g state l e g i s l a tion
regarding
teachers'
salaries.
Under
present
l a w s , teachers
get
m a n d a t o r y s a l a r y raises each year o l
t h e first e i g h t years o f t h e i r t e a c h i n g .
A f t e r t h a t , t h o u g h they m a y teach
t h i r t y years longer, m a n y get no f u r ther rccogm'tii
f increased ability
i n the f o r m o f h i g h e r salaries.
T h e President w o u l d substitute f o r
this a plan whereby beginning teache r s w o u l d teach f o r three j c a r s lief o r e they received any increase F o r
t h e i r f o u r t h year, tin > w o u l d receive
a l a r g e r increase t h a n they u- -v get
a n n u a l l y . Increases w o u l d lie g i v e n
t h e r e a f t e r at i n t e r v a l - of l o n g e r t h a n
a y e a r , o v e r a p e r i o d of t i m e f a r bey o n d the present eight years
T h e S l a t e college (liniu r was also
a d d r e s s e d by o t h e r leaders in eduea
l i u n a l w o r k in the state. A m o n g t h e m
w e r e D r . OcorgC M . W i l e y , assistant
commissioner
f o r secondary educa
lion;
Dr. A r v i e
F.ldrrd,
executive
s e c r e t a r y o f the S t a l e T e a c h e r s ' assoc i a t i o n ;' P r o f e s s o r | o l , n M . Sayles,
head o f the C o l l e g e e d u c a t i o n depart
nient ; a n d I )r. M i l t o n (,. N e l s o n , p r o
fessor o f e d u c a t i o n .
Proposes Plan
MISS FUTTERER TO DIRECT
Entire Class Aids Preparation
as Members for Casts
and Committees
Admittance
to
the
three
plays
w h i c h w i l l be presented by t h e elem e n t a r y d r a m a t i c s class o n T u e s d a y
n i g h t . J a n u a r y 19, w i l l be by p r e s e n t a t i o n o f the student t a x t i c k e t ,
t h e class c o m m i t t e e a n n o u n c e d t o d a y .
R e s e r v e d seats f o r students m a y be
o b t a i n e d f o r the p a y m e n t o f t w e n t y live .cuts,
\ l i - s A g u e - P u l t e r c r . as
sistenl p r o f e s s o r o f K n g l i s h , is c o a c h i n g the the t h r e e p l a y s .
T h e three plays to he g i v e n a r e :
"The
Dreamv
Kid"
by
P.ngene
O ' N e i l l ; " T h e ' D e a r D e p a r t e d " , and
"Pancy
Prcc",
both
by
Stanley
Houghton.
T h e cast f o r " T h e D r e a m y K i d "
will
be M a m m y
Saunders.
Helen
Dohertv,
' . V I ; her
grandson,
the
D r e a m y K i d , D o n a l d b.d.lv, \U ; Ceclv
A n n , I ' l e k n D a n a h v , '.1-1 ; a n d Irene.
M a v b e l l e M a t t h e w s , \<-|.
T h e - . - e n d play, " T h e D e a r De
p a r t e d " , has six c h a r a c t e r s :
Mrs.
Slater,
Margaret
Park. '.1.1;
Mrs.
Jordan,
P.lizahcth
Rasmussen, '.14;
H e n r y S l a t e r , B e r t r a m M c . N a r v . ',1-1;
Ben ' | , , r . k m ,
D i m ( I r o s v e u o r , '.1.1:
V i c t o r i a Slater, M a r y
M o o r e . '.1-J;
a n d Abe M . - I T V w e a t h e r . H e r b e r t Rose.
a special s t u d e n t .
President
A. R. Bruhacher
w h o o u t l i n e d a p l a n f, if t h e re
v i s i o u of i l u - p r e s e n t l e a c h i r-'
s a l a r y law al t h e a n n u a l S t a l e
college alumni dinner conducted
in S y r a c u s e o n D e c e m b e r 2 C
" P a n c v P r c c " i n c l u d e - in the cast,
F a n c y , M a r c e l l a C c h l e , '.11 ; D e l i a . Pea
I'.i-a.lt. '.12; P.thelbcrt, T h o m a s C a r r e l .
'.1-1; and A l f r e d . Ben I n e r a h . i . n . '.1.1.
T h e complete committees for tin
placs in. b i d e :
sellings,
Wire P i t /
P a t r i c k , '.14, general c h a i r m a n ; W il
h a m X . l - o n , ( i e o r g e K c t c h a m , and
H i l d a B r a d l e y , s o p h o m o r e s , assistant
h: i n n . n ; I i.'.r.ahv l l a i n i n , B a r b a r a
Wiekhain,
P.dith
T.pp.r.
Mini, r-;
P.ah
Bradt,
'.1..';
Helen
Danaliy.
K ,„,!,,n,.;l ,„, /•„,„• /. . . • / „ , „ „ .•)
ENGLISH FACULTY
TO BE SPONSORS
OF LOUNGE TEA
ALPHA PHI GAMMA
ASKS JOURNALISTS
TO LOUNGE PARTY
H o n o r Guests N a m e d
Other
guests
included
Harrison
V i m ( ' " I t , d i r e c t o r of j u n i o r
high
s c h o o l s iii the state e d u c a t i o n d e p a r t m e n t ; D r . A r t h u r K. I l c i k . p r o lessor
o f e d u c a t i o n ; I >r. 'Robert
h'redenck,
p r i n c i p a l of the M i l n e J u n i o r N i g h
s c h o o l • H o r a c e I!. M y e r s , M l . w i n n e r
T h e first o f the teas to be s p o n s o r e d
o f last year's W h e e l . . . k s c h o l a r s h i p ;
by the P.nglish d e p a r t m e n t w i l l In
and (ieorge
P. Rice. '.12, present
c o n d u c t e d next W e d n e s d a y , J a n u a r y
h o l d e r of the s c h o l a r s h i p .
1.1, in the L o u n g e of R i c h a r d s o n h a l l
F d w i n R. V a n K l e c c k , '11, s u p e r i n f r o m 3:.K) u n t i l 5:0!) o'clock.
t e n d e n t o f schools at W ' a l d c n , was
I l o i i a l d C. B r y a n t , i n s t r u c t o r
in
t o a s t m a s t e r , and O t t o
I-"., H u d d l e ,
p.nglish, w i l l represent the d e p a r t m e n t
supervising
principal
ai
Briarclilf
as c h a i r m a n .
T h e o t h e r hosts and
M a n o r , was c h a i r m a n in c h a r g e o l
hostesses w i l l b e :
Dr. H a r r y
W.
arrangements.
D o n a l d P.. T o w e r , '17,
H a s t i n g s , c h a i r m a n o f the
Knglish
p r e s i d e n t o f the a l u m n i a s s o c i a t i o n ,
d e p a r t m e n t , and M r s . I l a - l i u g s ; M i s a n d d i r e c t o r o f c u r r i c u l u m at P i n g
\ g n e s p.. P u l l e r c r , assistant p r o f e h a m t o l i , and I l i s l r i c t S u p e r i n t e n d e n t
- o r o f P.nglish; M i s s C a t h e r i n e W .
H a r o l d P. T r e n c h o f I . n u d u m die,
Pell.-, i n s t r u c t o r in P . n g l i s h ;
Miselected to these p o s i t i o n - ; l o r M a r y ( Isborne, i n s t r u c t o r in P.nglish ;
U(-re
the c o i n i n g year.
,nd ' M i - K u l l i Kell.-v, s u p e r v i s o r of
P.nglish in the M i l n e l i n i i o r
High
school.
1935 CANDIDATES
T h e student c h a i r m a n i- R u t h M i
FOR DEBATE TEAM
o l Us large p e r s o n n e l , t
SPEAK WEDNESDAYP nBecause
glish department
will
sponsor
\ l p h a Phi Camilla, national honor
arv j o u r n a l i s t i c f r a t e r n i t y , w i l l con
duel a social p a r t y f o r the m e m b e r s
o f the staffs ol a l l the Stale college
p u b l i c a t i o n s in Ihe L o u n g e o f R i c h
a r d s o i i hall on T i n sdav night al 7 .in
o f Bessie Lev inc. c h a i r m a n , V e r a 11
B u r n - , and
Michael
R
brohbeh,
seniors. R e f r e s h m e n t s w i l l he served
a n d i i i t . T i . i i n i n . i i t w i l l be p r o v i d e d
u n d e r the d i r e c t i o n o f the c o m m i t t e e .
SENIOR IS ENGAGED
I -' cemd lea the f o l l o w ing w
'
|
v
\
copv
oi
"Student
Book
oi
\ . rse," w i HI. n Iiv Stale college - I n
dents and c o m p i l e d and . . b l e d bv
Re hni
I IP K i r l l a u d , p r o f e s s o r o f
a t ' s i a l e colh-e.-. T h e judges a n d dal
f o r t h i s debate are In be chosen b
lie
debate c o u n c i l .
T i n De
crati. National Cornell
,,.,
,- u d u . t . d in T i i - . a l o o - a ,
Ma
.una in
n Willi i l l . I . . . w i l l
i HI . l a - .
hob I ,, vv. ieluv
New State
, --I -a , , i | , 1 a p i . . l o n e . , I I-.,Ml, , „ , T
h. i i o i i u n a ' i , H i -i I h . p i . i !, n l i a l
j ui.I v i . e pr, - i d , n i l ,1 , n i d i , l a , \
N i l l , -III.I. I l l - h . e . be, II p i . deed to
T h r e e , ,1 1 II. . o l l l l l n . - I, ,c,d f a v o r
jbappa D . l l i R I
e i m l v , I I..r,,|.| ,,,
,.,,,,, M ,.,n ,! i,,, pr, 1,1,-1,1:
U l l ,
H . i - w . l l . '.12. a m e i i i b e r ol i h , I r . i l . l j ,
, r M. K.
i C.di I, a u i . . . \ l r
m l ' . . i m m u n e , d I...lav
T h . - e ph de.
|,,.,|
|,,..,.,,,,. ., i „ , | , ,1 M i - - i - - i | . p i
, 1 1
' '
'"• D u n , l b
i n i t i a l . , ! the In I | I I M 1 | .
,,,,
;,,n|
I
,lh
M i l l . r.
bf the -, c u d s, inester. I n I o r i n ,1 | , han in an , ,f ihe N a t i n.,1 F \ c . u t i v c
i m l i;i I i< m w i l l take place I w o w e e k - ( l l |
,,,,.
nr. . . . l i n e ihe f o r m a l , I l a s w . II said
p | „ . ,,,-t , | m . , b a l l o t - were split
T h e pledges a r e '
\illnir Tempi,
, v.-nh
T h e n , C.,1
I Saunders of
I ' . s a s ar,,-e and gave an i m p a s s i o n e d
o r s : Rich
Ion and b l a n k Y o l i n
nation
T h . f o u r t h ballot w h i c h f o l
m l D e g n a n , D o n a l d h'.ddv, and b l a n k
ou.d
w a - a decisive v i c t o r y
for
P . t r o l i i s . s o i i h o i i i o i e s ; W i l l i a m Jones,
hairmaii Mill.-r.
Robei'l RalTertv, D a n i e l V a n l e i i v a n ,
The
cutest
for
vie,president
land Ceoige Pratt, frcslnneii
Voting For Pedagogue
"Mosts" To Be Today
e lea
V o t i n g oil lb.
"Mo-Is"
,..„,|i,
'J'i'll f i i e n l a c e in is,lv l l i i - m o r n
j,,,,
',, i l i n o ' . l . c k
aeeoi-dine to
, -,':, , ' l l m u s ' l ' e d i l o i in . d u e l
n u m b e r - of Ihe senior el.is- the f.,1
l , l U i l ) L , u j | | | „ . e h . i s . u |,v
popular
,,.
t | „ . most b e . u i l i f u l
the in..-I
p o p u l a r g i r l , the most p o p u l a r m a n ,
the g i r l w h o has d o n , m,,-l f o r S t a t e ,
the m a n w i n . has done m.,-1 f o i
Mate
and ihe n i o - l i , - p i , - , u i . i i i v e
, - o l l e e , student
Fraternity To Initiate
Neophytes
Advocates Change
A r e s o l u t i o n was also passed u n a n i m o u s l y to the effect t h a t the act i o n o f the m e e t i n g be m a d e k n o w n
to the a t h l e t i c c o u n c i l , the s t u d e n t
c o u n c i l , and the e d i t o r - i n - c h i e f o f the
\Tvv-.
Frederick W. Crum, '30 u b.
v a - a p p o i n t e d ( h a . i r i n a u of
I
j r a d i i a l e c o m m i t t e e to i n v e - t i
r.dlcg
Site a t h l e t i c s al S l a t e
i n . l i l u - a d v i s a b i l i t y of h a v i n g .
'home c o m i n g " weekend.
Speakers on the m o t i o n declared
that Coach R u t h e r f o r d
R.
Baker,
M a l e m e n t o r , was not u n d e r f i r . , but
i h a l a change in p o b c v b r i n g i n g i n
better type c o m p e t i t i o n was to be
p r e f . r r . .1 1.. the present contests.
President
\
R. B r u h a c h e r ,
Dr.
Milton C
Nelson. Dr. Robert
W.
F r e d e r i c k . Dr. A r t h u r K. Beik, a n d
P r o f e s s o r J o h n M . Sayles, a l l m e m bi rs o f | he e d u c a t i o n
department,
heard the r. m a r k s w i t h o i i l c o m m e n t .
ALUMNI MEETING
SUGGESTS CHANGE
FOR HOME COMING
A c t i n g upon the d e m a n d s o f the
i n , n. F.dwin R. V a n K l e c c k , '27, l o a s t W In tiler or not a new i n . l l l o . l ol niasier, appi i u t c l a c o m m i t t e e o f live
w e l c o m i n g the a l u m n i f o r
M i n i m i men to proceed w i t h the m o v e m e n t ,
I lav w i l l he adopted i- a q u e s t i o n l b n a m e d ( . c r g e S c h i a v o n c , '24,
brought
up at the second
a n n u a l F r a n c i s i .i i l l m , '20, F r e d e r i c k ( m i n i . ,
me. l i n e oi the a l u m n i , c o n d u c t e d in '.!., D r M i l l . H I ! , N e l s m i , and N e w e. m n e r t i o i i w i t h the a n n u a l i n . . l i n e c o m b . T h e c o i n u i i t t i . vv a- i n s t r u c t e d
oi ihe \ s s o c i a t e d A c a d e m i c P r i n c i
to report to ihe c. uv e n t i o n nest vear
p a l - ' in S v r a c u s e recently.
and vva- g i v e n a u t h o r i t y to take w hatP i c k e r i n g a m o n g the a l u m n i as |o e v . r steps it considers a d v i - a b l e in
die c o m p o s i t i o n of i h e team w h i c h b r i n g i n g about the c h a n g e - p r o p o s e d .
. l a v . . I the v a r s i t y , lack o f d e s i r a b l e
,ocial e v e n t - , and small attendance
although
cere a m o n g ilu- r e a s o n - g i v e n f o r the ih.- \ ' i vv - wen! t i p r . - - .
l i m i n a l i o i i o f the annual b a s k e t b a l l h i - a n s w e r to the c o n t e m p l a t e d a. l i o n
w i l l he published in the next issue o f
the Nl.Ws, I,eorge P. Rice, ',12. editor,
varsity.
Ii was suggested thai ( ol
eat.- or some o t h e r college be played
aim- -unc. .1 ihis morning.
Ii
w a - suggested that A l u m n i I hiv
he changed f r o m i t - p n -.-at -late in
June to F e b r u a r y or -..in.- dal.- at
w h i c h an i m p o r t a n t social
function
was scheduled, Mich as the eleiuentarv
d r a m a t i c s d a s - plays.
P l a i e were nebulous, a l t h o u g h the
m e e t i n g n o . v ed to get ill t o u c h W i l l i j
I n i i u i i o p i n i o n t h r o u g h l e t t e r s and j
Dr. Harold W. T h o m p s o n ,
the a l u m n i q u a r t e r l y . ' D i e game w i l l -,.r o i p.nglish and e a c h o l
n.,1 he abandoned t h i s vear, r e g a r d
has h e m u n i t e d to leach at
less o| the changes adopted.
u n i v e r s i t y , Ithaca, d u r i n g the
s u m m e r session, w h i c h opens
and closes \ i i g i i s l I 1 '.
NAMED CHAIRMAN
Dr. Thompson Will Be
Instructor At Cornell
pr.
debate,
Cornell
coming
lulv I I
I ' - i ( . a n n u a s. . r u n t y announces l b
I ir. T h o m p s o n w ill c o n d u c t
two
Robert R o b i n s o n , vice president ol
•neaeeiu. lit o f
M a r g u e r i t e W ilsoi
l i e w i l l give a e. airse in
he s o p h o m o r e class, w i l l be g e n e r a l class. .12. to Rol.erl B i l l i a r d , a g r a d u a t e o
Win
i
n
an
l
i
t
e
r
a
t
i
m
In
h
uv
tin
Civ
il
I ' n i o n college in l'MH.
Miss W i l s o n I chainn;
r ihe a n n u a l s o p h o m o r e
i- of
the t w o u n d e r g r a d u a t e - . . i r e e , a c c o r d i n g to W i l l i a m N e l s o n . W . " ' . " I n c h i- s i m i l a r to i l u ; hrst
Son.-.- w i l l be i,, ! - " i . - 1 . i - - t u . v in the P u g l i s h 21
i u . m b . r s of O m i c r o i i N u . h o n o r a r y ! . ! . - president.
h o m e e c o n o m i c s society.
\ p r i l Ihis vear, Robinson a n n o u n c e . I. course w hi. h h. . . - n d i i . l - al
Mile
_
• J
I college
The ..Ih, r c u r s e which Dr.
Dl hoiupw i l l leach is c a l l e d 111, d e l l l
. i ,
. ai ....
,,i i" ,S i x t e e n students w ill ti v out l m
Ihe f r e s h m a n d e l a t e t e a m , W C l u e s
d a y , l a u u a r v 1.1 at -I ;UI in \<> » m 2i
l-'.eh' trvout
w i l l give an o r i g i n ; )
speech of -I m i n u t e s oil i l l . subject
"Resolved:
T h a t President
llo.ve
s h o u l d be reel, i ted P r r s i d e l l l o f til
P o l l e d Stales,"
T h e team chosen w i l l debate Ih
lent' T h e c o l l e c t i o n includes several
,
, b> M r - Punic,• Rice M c - s c n t .
issi-ianl prof, - - a - of Knglish.
Severe c r i t i c i s m o f the present a t h l e t i c p o l i c y o f Stale c o l l e g e w a s v o i c e d
at t h e a n n u a l banquet of the a l u m n i at the H o t e l O n o n d a g a in S y r a c u s e
d u r i n g the h o l i d a y season w h e n r e s o l u t i o n s w e r e passed by the s i x t y - f i v e
men present d e m a n d i n g t h a t the C o l l e g e teams " p l a y m o r e d i f f i c u l t a n d
better k n o w n o p p o n e n t s and t h a t t h i s s e n t i m e n t be made k n o w n t h r o u g h
faculty authorities".
L a w r e n c e C. N e w c o m b , ' 3 1 , f o r m e r
p r e s i d e n t o f the senior class and a
m e m b e r o f the men's v a r s i t y debate
team f o r t w o years, i n t r o d u c e d the
resolution.
He declared that
the
t i m e had come f o r the C o l l e g e a t h l e t i c
policy to s h i f t f r o m a d e s i r e to p l a y
I
r o r m e d i o c r e teams in b a s k e t b a l l
and baseball and seek the a d v a n tageous p u b l i c i t y w h i c h w o u l d a c c r u e
f r o m c o m p e t i t i o n w i t h colleges l i k e
Hamilton,
St.
Lawrence,
llobart,
I ' n i o n , and Rensselaer
Polytechnic
institute.
Some o f the teams on the
present schedule w e r e d e c r i e d as u n w o r t h y o f c o m p e t i t i o n w i t h the State
t . a i n . " W e don't care f o r a l o n g list
..f v i c t o r i e s over u n k n o w n o p p o n e n t - . " In- said.
Miller Gains Democratic Nomination
For President After Lengthy Battle
it
l,,r
two
hour-
p r o v e d to In tin - | , . r m i , - l w i n
I in i n . n o v . a r Tin .audi.lab i •>, n i t o i
Mali.n
-I
\ l i- ,. In
; R. pr, -, m a i n . \ , C M - i N . v.
i,o, I i, in I , , , ,
I in.,
..I
| / m i . . . \ n . l . . . -• ad,a L ail ,-i M.u viand
I and I ...v. i n - u VI Ia I ill. ima ,
I
I Hi the III -I ball,,I, M . K e o l l bad a
| . . , ' , l I'
.resilient o l l l
q ,,|,i m a i o n i v . but 1... k, d tin n . . . - ' - l u d . nl a--.., ialn n, u as i n j u r e d Sun
| -arv
von
\ll.i
11 n
I In b , d
d.n n i - h t w hen t h , e a - t b o i l l l d I ,1 ev
a l l e r i i , . l e d u n t i l ti
ith ballot vv h i , h In m n l b u - in w hich -he vv as i , - l u n u n g
[
L a - ., l a n d - l i d .
n-i l b . I . h i
1,. I ..||, g. , ,,v, r t i i r n . d ileal R i e h l i e l d
lav. t i l .
j M-i nigs
Miss P. a i d - u l b r , - I f r o m
\ , , | „ e o n c l u - i o i i ol th
iniu.i
i... i.d lac. rations and shock,
.-shew.is
l i o n s . Delegate III
Ic m \l o-i-ip..,,
1, t a i n e d u n t i l T u . sdav al P a r k I n n
v ed thai the in . i n i u a l i o i i s b, mad,- in R i c h f i e l d S p r i n g *
W I n n she ar
| uuaiiiinoiis.
T h i s vv.,- seconded I,v l i v e d in Mb.uiv
I'm -d.iv a l l i n o o u .
M i . Regan of tin - a m . slate, a n d sh, was taken to the D u n e o f K a t h e r carried
T h e n o n n u e i s accepted vv i t h u i , T r a v . - r . '.12 M iss T r a v er r e p o r t e d
the p r o n i i s e to stand l.j ihe p l a t f o r m that M i - - Peard w i l l he c o n f i n e d f o r
I d r a w n up at t h a i c o n v e n t i o n .
I a week or ten days.
Isabel Peard Injured
Sunday In Bus Smash
STATE COLLEGE NEWS, ALBANY, N. Y„ JANUARY 8, 1932
State College News
Established by the Class of 1918
The Undergraduate Newspaper of New York
State College for Teachers
THE NEWS
BOARD
5-9373
GEORGE P . R I C E
Editor-in-Chief
EXIT: THE BUN TABLE
Discontinuation of the Young Women's Christian association bun table in the College cafeteria annex at the
order of the faculty is received with surprise by the
student association. W h y has this action been taken?
Who instigated it?
Answers to these questions were not readily forthcoming. As the NEWS went to press, the president was
out of town and repeated telephone calls to the home of
Dr. C. Caroline Croasdale elicited no response. Members of the N E W S hoard did obtain some information
from members of the faculty committee of which they
arc members.
455 Elk Street
T w o reasons were given. They a r e : the continuation
AUDREY FLOWERS
Advertising
Manager of the present plan was not conducive to the best health
Page Hall, 131 South Lake Avenue, 6-6-182
interests of the student patrons, due to lack of variety
ANDREW A. Hurra
Managing
Editor in the ingredients sold; secondly, the table "took up too
much room."
201 North Lake Avenue, 5-1011
These reasons, if they arc the only ones or even the
H E L E N ROHEI
Finance
Manager
chief reasons, a r e not sufficient to deprive an underChi Sigma Theta, 215 Partridge Street, 6-6126
graduate organization of one of its chief sources of
AI.VINA R. LEWIS
Associate Managing
Editor income. If sufficient variety was not served, that lack
could have been remedied by a suggestion of the College
206 Western Avenue, 4-1839
dietician to the manager of lite enterprise. It was no
BERNARD S. KERBEL
Associate Managing
Editor excuse for eliminating Y. W. control, for that organ57 Elberon Place
ization and its representatives would have been amenable
to reason and would have cooperated in every way.
SENIOR ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Ruth Brezee, Vera Hums, France
Keller, and Bessie Levine. JUNIOR ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Harrie
Dunn, Laura Styn, and Alaragaret Service. DESK EDITORS
Marion Howard, Hannah Parker, and Grenfell Rand, sophomores.
REPORTERS: Luisa Iglesias, Rose Kantor, Carolyn Kramers, Ruth
Putnam, Uessie Simmons, Hilda Smith, and Edith Tepper, juniors; Virginia Ahajian, Celia Bishop, Diane Boclmer, Ililcl;
Bookheim, Eleanor Contain, Katherine Cunneen, Helen Doherty,
jane Dooccy, Marion Mleczek, Mary Moore, Marilyn Rosenhcck,
Almira Russ, Betty Salesc, Kalhenne Simmons, Thelma Smith,
Bessie Stetkar, Mary Loll VValther, Katherine Wilkins, and Elizabeth Zuend, sophomores. CIRCULATION MANAGER: Frances Mazar,
'32. ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS: Mary Doherty anil Jean
Watkins, juniors. BUSINESS STAEF: Jean Craigmile, Marguerite
Crutchley, and Katherine Hang, sophomores.
The second reason may be answered in the same way.
If the table is too large,"as is alleged, a smaller one can
easily be obtained. From all present indications, however, the rush is not so great as to need the extra square
feet of space which the present table occupies. These
two arguments are. in the face of present information in
the hands of the Nrcws, utterly inadequate as an excuse
for the removal of the Y. W. privilege.
HONOR IS QUESTIONED
T h e honor of the freshman class was questioned this
by the Editoria
ibscriptions, $2.2: week when the principal of Turin High school, whose
anywhere in the team was a basketball opponent of the freshmen during
:ter at postoffice.
the recess, declared that a victory had been won from
his team because the freshmen had allowed a player not
of their class to enter the game.
This is a serious charge with the honor of that class
The News does not necessarily endorse sentiments cxpresse.l challenged. If the statement is true, then both the team
and the coach are guilty of gross unfairness in athletic
Anonymity will be preserved if so desired. The NEWS does not competition. If it is untrue, the columns of the Xi.ws
guarantee to print any or all communications.
are at its disposal to answer the charges. The freshman
class cannot afford to "win" games in which members
of
other classes do the playing, even in part.
PRINTED BY HAMILTON PRINTING COMPANY, ALUANY, NEW YOUK
Published every Friday in the college
Heard representing the Student Association
Albany, N. Y.
Jan. 8, 1932
Vol. XVI.
ALUMNI TAKE ACTION
No. 13
BOOKS:
Mit.
Loins
L'NTKRMEVER
Oi'FEHicu (ioou CRITICISM
OK A MK It I CAN
By G. P. K.
I'OKTRY.
College Students Show Lack Of Interest
In Education, Dr. E. D. Martin Declares
"Most people except College students are interested in education.
Education gives enlightenment to
people, rather than speed in increasing
the pay envelope and decreasing
working hours. A liberal education
is one which frees the mind and
makes one one's own master. One
thing that keeps Colleges from being
liberal is that the presidents must be
go-getters ; they must sell education."
These remarks were made Sunday
night by Dr. Everett Dcati Martin,
director of the Cooper Union Forum,
New York city, in the third of the
series of Norman Mendelssohn Open
Forum lectures, conducted by the
Jewish Community center. H i s topic
was "The Meaning of a Liberal Education."
"Americans have a resistance to enlightenment, and perhaps too much
speed and proficiency, he said. We
are an emotional rather titan a rational people. We think more of
good intentions than right thinking.
We have put humanitarian sentiment
in the place of reason. O u r utilitarianism, this short cut to everything,
stands in the way of a liberal education."
"It is the spirit of a College rather
than a device of organization which
makes it a University," said Dr, Martin.
"We give more attention to and a r e
more interested in moving pictures
and in 'Legs' Diamond than in college professors. We do not realize
how much richer o u r lives may be for
four years of daily association with
some of our college professors. We
can read, but we read tabloids, and if
there were anything worse than tabloids we would read that. T h e more
mob-minded any propaganda is, I hern ore popular it is."
Martin referred to Aristotle's definition of an educated person—one
who can govern his own mind. T h e
Creek had to learn to emancipate his
mind from ignorance.
He urged
Americans to follow Aristotle's adv ice.
"We try to excuse our failure t.»
broaden our knowledge by making a
virtue of gregariousness, but why do
this when all the other animals a r e
gregarious except cats," he concluded.
FRESHMAN TEAM
Library Students
To"Assist
In Operation Of Book Wagon
RESUMES GAMES
A group of Stale college Co-eds,
TOMORROW NIGHT students
in the Library school, will
work during the winter months in
The freshman quintet will open the
tssisling in the operation of a
1932 basketball program when they
k wagon to serve the stii.lc-nloppose the strong Mechanicville High
.f I lelmar. A truck will he
live on the 1'age hall court tomorrow
night. The contest will begin at 8:30 quipped wilh shelves, desk, and
looks, and will make the rounds
o'clock.
weekly.
The freshmen celebrated the holiSixteen stlldellls will have opday season by defeating on successive
portunity to sign up for the work
nights both l.ovvville academy and
which will last for two mouths
Turin High school. T h e freshmen
Time spent on this work will be
completely outclassed the Academydeducted from the practice leach
team and' led at the half, 8-0. T h e
ing of the students.
Academy coach used ten players in
an attempt to stop the visitors but
the yearlings continued their scoring
and won the game. 19-7.
At Turin the team engaged in a
rather hectic encounter with the local
team. lief..re the State men could
accustom themselves to the small
court, Turin had a twelve point lead.
After a few minutes of play in the
The advanced dramatics class will,
Second quarter, Turin still led 15-0. present a one-act play in the auditor
Sensational
playing
by Allan! ium of I 'age hall Tuesday, January 12,
coupled with three foul shots by at 7:30 oclo. k. T h e [day, which is
"Dave" Kroiunau brought a tie score the first one to be presented after the
21-21 at the end of the third quarter. Christmas vacation, is neither a farce,
Then the frosh produced a skillful a tragedy or a comedy, John Cros
offense which resulted in nine points veiior, 'X\ director of the play said. It
and victory. The final score was State is a play concerned with the personal
side of a stock market crash.
frosh 30—Turin 27.
'Die cast includes: Mildred Quick.
Frances Caynor, and Ruth lire-zee,
seniors, and William Regan, '.i1!.
The committees a r e : Katherine
Moore, 'Xi sets; Nils Clemens, '32.
The trial for the prosecution of properties; Catherine Travers, '.ii,
and make up ; Dab. I I lew in,
San ford Levinstein took an tines costumes
1
p.ete.l turn when lion. Bernard 'X :, advertising; Mildred Smith, 'M ,
cleanup;
and
Marcia Cold, 'Xy house
Simon, Levinstein's lawyer, declared
he would endeavor to prove that \ u
drew llrilz was robbed by an tin
DRAMATICS CLASS
TO PRESENT PLAY
ON TUESDAY NIGHT
Prospects of a revival in the College alumni associa(All Hooks Reviewed For Sale in Co-op)
tion appeared bright at a meeting of the men conducted
Modem
American
Poetry.
Edited by Louis L'nterrecently in Syracuse. Long noted as being decidedly inmever. Ilarcourt Brace and Company. Xevv York. 850
active in comparison with the associations of other
pages. $3.50.
colleges of the size of Stale, the alumni association
came in for strong criticism at the hands of a group
This most popular of modern anthologies contains
led by graduates of recent years.
7.111 poems and 15.1 poets in the latest and fourth printTwo focal points were the objects of the attack. The ing of the fourth edition. Some of the material pubfirst was the basketball situation anil the second was lished has not vet appeared in personal collections of the
the general attitude of the alumni association.
authors. Its prose comments are a valuable feature,
The charge was made that the quality of competition for they are condensed critical essays written only as
which College athletic teams met was sacrificed to gain can one write who is personally familiar with the lives
an impressive string of victories . It is obvious that an. I habits of his subjects. Schools, tendencies, and
State does not play well-known teams, but the NEWS movements a r e thoroughly analyzed.
declines to take a positive editorial stand on this parSome of the better known writers whose works apticular phase of the attack until word has been heard
from Coach Rutherford Laker.
It can say that in pear in this volume a r e : Dickinson, Frost, Robinson,
Sandburg,
Miliay, Wylie, and Aiken.
the past State teams have met teams of fine reputation
ami that while a local victory has not always resulted,
Of
the
newer
generation of coming poets who ltav<
the opposition always knew that it had played a good
game. In 1928 a manager signed up the strong Dart- merited space, I'ntermeyer includes: Robinson leffers
Langston
Hughes,
Archibald MacLeish, Merrill Moore
inouth quintet, recognized that year as the eastern intercollegiate champions. A scrappy State team made loseph March, Allen Tate, Hart Crane, and lameWhaler.
athletic history here when it took the lloor in a lighting
mood and held the Dartmouth team on even terms,
The publishers have declared that the anthologv
District Wt'o'rncs Kenneth NHllcr'
finally losing because it could not throw in reserves as
frequently as could Dartmouth. It was a game that bridges the- gap between 1830 to 19.1N. Actually, this is meanwhile stated that he would MI.State students are proud to speak of when referring rather misleading, for 1800 is the earliest date included ecssfully exonerate the \lbanv I'olicc
The acliv ilv vv rite tips of menib. i •
to outstanding athletic contests of their alma mater. Il and the works appear in quantity only after I'M I, In Force bv proving that I cs hist, in i- I of the senior class for the I 'edaeoL-u.
would seem, therefore, that really good teams can be drr.l, F.milv Dickinson is the main noet before 1X90 I (|H. robber.
will be colic, led Ibis coming vv. ek l-v
This
weakness
in
representation
of
earlier
periods
is
the
j
|
>,-.
Smart
Cay,
practising
pits
-irian
scheduled if the desire is strong enough.
"i-Cii lack ..f the volume.
| j„ \ | ] , - , m . took the stand to (,-slifv cubs under
. , ,the supervision ,,i l.oin
Men al l he meiting expressed very strongly the idea
Ka
T
l
,
.
.
;
•
,
I
,
-,.,•!•,;„
•
,
„
„
„
,
n
l
,
,
I
,
;
„
|
|
,
oil
the
injuries
r
r
r
r
i
s
e
d
be
M
r
l
l
t
i
l
/
V
,
,' , " . .
that the) were tired of having State teams meet "semi1
il. up
Uilds
here is also a .eilain amount ol iiuoiisisletK) in the ,,
, ,
, the niglil
, of - , ,,t the b. ok I
naries, institutes, and unions" and called for a schedule
Is
ie, crime
and
declared
them' ,,J p.
be
quanlical
representation,
l-or
example,
modest
Mr
!
„
'
'
,
,''
'
,
.'
'
.
,
'
"
'/'
includ,
all est
with trams of good reputation and similar numbers, termevcr publishes thirteen poems ,1 his own conn.. .1
lIC
.illusions about the head.
such as Hamilton, Cnion, llobart, and St. Lawrence. tioti along with the -am,- number for Conrad \iki
sears ol College. Tllo'se who ha e Ii
Slate has already had forensic relations with three of and l-'.dna St Vincent Miliay. Whs ?
list . I activili.s will h. Ip bv ban.!.n .
these colleges.
Dr. Thompson regards ih,. I k v 1 r.v highlv an
a iioi. I., thai ,11, ,1 ,,, ih, , nl, 1.,
It is admitted thai this College cannot alwavs have plans lo use it this summer when be gives a course i
ssh. in Ih. v are assigned
a team as g, ,„l a- that which met I lartnmulh, but then American poetrv at Ihe summer session at Cornell
'I In list ,,f sc 1- will be di id- I
university.
ueitlii r i an Darin nth duplicate its group annually.
alphabetical
F.a.li
, ni,,r 1- o
Wdtatioti for
e ehainte of Alumni Day seemed
Ii
\ speech by I'aul Harris and v.an nil. si,,I I,, hand his a. o in, - 11,
vs. II mad. Tin (ollce. needs a stronger bond be 77;,• /,',../ /SII.I.VM II',• 1 /,-.( ol ii.,,ir II ild,: ( omplete in f,,,•'•,„, sis" is the program plat
ij-ilclv I., lln cub in char-ae ,0
tuei-n the alumni ud the undergraduate bodv I nd.-r
gradual, s want l, i proud of their alumni and to I, ml
Dairy T a b , and Dialogues
I'.ju, Ribl
Series \|,- | | . , r i i , i. a ' Ii rtur'er'' for" t'hi Ruth ' I'm. rhi
\ I i •' \ , II,,- \\
'
their slipp, l I to
mini projects. Thev would I ke |,,
•Vevv York ( i l v . (.21) pages. $1.00.
I Young Men' I In ,-li,,, 1 ass,,, i.,|i
,, ' ' • ' ' ; R,,,-, r banc,,11. I I ; b !, I,
expect the same i the alumni. With both groups will
Mmost livroiiic in its sensationalism, the best known international n lal ion- lie has slud-ed I K'l
hail 1 , 1 1 ; Mars-a-ei l-.inil, , -,
i l l - - , il w o u l d
seel
that l.ek of ruiila. t and iliadeipial, ol D s . a r Wilde's writings are gisen the public ill Ibis h i
n.lili, 11, in s arioiis .-oiinlries of M I , D
D. I I..IL10I, 1 \l \ .
oreai i/ati n oi t
alumni is the barrier. Il is vviih Ida,- K'lbl„,ii ( lassie
I l-'ur.ipe.
1 uM, h was K'ussj,-, F.dilh T. pp,-r. O R : C t ' i , 1 b , bun,
!
ll
s
the idea of |„v:,|. ig down this obstacle thai the m< n
win,
Ii
he
i
n
,
,1
ihis
snniiner
in
lln
"
'
,
;
and
I
I
,1 K|, I . 111 I /
T h e s, lectin]
• chosen to illustrate the
ne the date to a time when sonic im
•aim p a n - wilh I'r, -,,|, nl lirnba, h, 1 |
1 - s . l t i l i l S o l 1.Ill o f i l l
.
edil-li literal
ii lion w ill bring both I,roups i
prill.il,I
.,. lal I
th. i
\li
l
l
a
i
n
u
1,.ii,
,,f
Ihe
sneakers
I
Kl
fl
I T U
vviiii is 1,1 mod,-in lit, latin,
Mis s.,|,histi,
at , sent- whirl will form a pb asanl baekgroin
drll-.dilrd and amused the I on.loll small -. I
,
1
i
h
e
v
\i
1
\
Y.
w.
c
\.
C
O
I
Newman
Hub
lo Begin
tliallv l.i.Hirial
lifiil fairy tab - P ok lb, hearts of bill, , hi
II,
!
'I hi- 11, liniiuarv a, lion h,
H H I lal
.ill
was a in.,11 who. hki lis ion, ,|
mated lirili
fr..m eiioigd. Those in, 11 who aie
a, e the
ihe backers
„i [•
bark.
r o o m , bv the brilli ,n,e of his wil and eonvi
CADICNDAR
plan have :, huge (ask all
,f lb. in. one whi. Il V
, b l , h will
Ill.tr,I
Ihe darinc- of h i - active philosophy.
ri-qniri much of ih. ir 1 in 1
id lime bin on. win.I
Today
worths in the highes! .1
Thev want I., m.
This dngl. work pies cuts poems he vviol, diiiine lb,
(heir C.,11, -.„ mean soin, il
D hi \ \ l . \ ..nihlv
Audit.,
Hot oidv to the sii.,1,
iinhapp) . xile in llals , the litcrah'ls immortal It.dlad of
I'loab, ih \ l , 1 a t u - h l i i i '3.' | , i , id,
mini
I'age hall
an,I alumni, but to the stud, ntss and fa,
fa. tilth
nltii s of o|
Reading Caol, writlen while he vv.o in piison, th.
"I
lb. 1 ( n l , - l a i d , , .
all,I
a
institutions. Slate has attained national reco.-nii
Sunday
Picture of Dorian Ci av ; famous dramas, in, ludim:
I 30, Salurdav in
im- il III n
more vvavs than one II is lime | o profit bv thai
\|
,j
8 on l- \ |
M|l .
Lads Windermere's I aiI. and Ihe liupol-lance of lieillii
Salurdas
1 bin. h, ,ai ,,' \', v. in
nition, lo expand, and to inaki 1 nlran. e into ih,
I.ouu-,-,
R „ l ,,-ds
nil
Frnesl which are cujn.v
Mouse; Salurdav a fieri
11 ,,1 ' "
hcrlv something to which to look forward
I h," dav : and bis grcatesl essays
Tuesday
'-nil,lav nioi'iiine ( omnium,a, la, ,,
7 30 lb \l Alpha bin (,.
a
I 'ndergradnates will not be fi
d wantiii"
Th. !
fast followiui- a nine ,,', | , „ b \ l ,
To scan this l„„,k is to become acquainted with sou
parlv Lounge Richardson hall.
faculty will lend its aid to any projei I sshii h will
Meetings will be al ill. Hob. Mam
« D lb M \,lv meed Dramatics
strengthen the College. The issue, therefore, i- placed <of ih, great, -t lit. rarv prodili lions of the past , uinrv
Ncidellis wilh Ih, esc, rlioll ol \ b ,
il with c;,re I, to add t , >-our mental Ir, .•-lire,
plav
\1nl1t0111m
|-.e-e ball
soiiarely before lb.- alumni for initial ion and protection j I
which will be coll,billed al III, ( i n ,t
lent conlribiilion of value.
What will be their response?
' I
Crollo, Mis, \ | , l.aughlin savs
Simon, '32, Defends
Levinstein In Robbery
Pedagogue To Collect
Write-ups Next Week
Paul Harris To Speak
In Student Assembly
Annual Retreat Today
STATE COLLEGE NEWS, ALBANY, N. Y„ JANUARY 8, 1932
N.S.F. A. DISCUSSES Business Conditions Cause Necessity
To Depart From Teaching Precedent
WORLD QUESTIONS
Economic geography,
commercial
C h a n g e s that are affecting the busin e s s a n d e c o n o m i c life of t h e U n i t e d l a w a n d b u s i n e s s E n g l i s h in p l a c e of
S l a t e s f o r e s h a d o w a n u m b e r of d e - E n g l i s h c l a s s i c s s t u d y w e r e h i s a d d i p a r t u r e s from precedent that m u s t tional r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s .
c o m e in o u r s c h o o l s , F r a n k C. DetlSS e n t e n c e s from his o t h e r s u g g e s l i e r g e r , s u p e r i n t e n d e n t of s c h o o l s a t t i o n s o n e c o n o m i c p r o b l e m s w e r e :
K e n m o r c , X e w Y o r k , told a n u m b e r
" W e must think a great deal about
o f p r i n c i p a l s of l a r g e v i l l a g e a n d c i t y t h i s p r o b l e m of a d d i t i o n a l
leisure.
Many
national
and
i n t e r n a t i o n a l high s c h o o l s at t h e i r recent sectional Y o u n g people a r e n ' t g o i n g to h a v e as
q u e s t i o n s w i r e d i s c u s s e d at t h e s e v - m e e t i n g at S y r a c u s e .
m u c h m o n e y for c o m m e r c i a l a m u s e e n t h a n n u a l c o n v e n t i o n of t h e N a " I t is e v i d e n t , " he s a i d , "if w e a r e m e n t s , t h e m o v i e s a n d d a n c e s , a s h e t i o n a l S t u d e n t F e d e r a t i o n of A m e r i c a , In u s e m o d e r n m a c h i n e s t o a d v a n t a g e , f o r e .
W i l l they h a n g a r o u n d
the
conducted
at
Toledo
during
the the o p p o r t u n i t i e s open to hoys and street c o r n e r s or can we give t h e m
C h r i s t m a s r e c e s s , a c c o r d i n g t o K l i z a - g i r l s in t h e f u t u r e will be d i f f e r e n t s o m e t h i n g e l s e ?
lielli G o r d o n , 'M,
r e p r e s e n t a t i v e of t h a n t h e y h a v e been in I h e p a s t . T h e r e
" W e m u s t be m o r e a l e r t t h a n e v e r
S t a t e college.
M i s s G o r d o n left f o r a r e s e v e r a l r e s p o n s i b i l i t i e s t h a t t h i s t h e s e t i m e s iu w a t c h i n g f o r u i i d e r T o l e d o , D e c e m l i e r 26, a n d r e t u r n e d v, ill b r i n g lo t h e s c h o o l s . "
m o u r i s h m e n l a m o n g pupils,
J a n u a r y 1. A c c o m m o d a t i o n s f o r all
I-irst, he c l a i m s ,
m e definite p r o I E d u c a t e S t u d e n t s E c o n o m i c a l l y "
delegates were p r o v i d e d at the Com
v isi. u in o u r colli'
•I s t u d y n e e d s I
m o d o r e I'erry I lute!.
" A s a profession we t e a c h e r s a r e
In lie f o r m u l a t e d to a c q u a i n t p u p i l s
M i s s G o r d o n a t t e n d e d m a n y d i s c u s - w i t h t h e e v e r c h a n g i n g c i v i l i z a t i o n in f a i r l y s e c u r e b u t n o n e of u s h a v e y e t
sion g r o u p s , i n c l u d i n g several on stu- w h i c h t h e y live." l i e believes that the insisted
on
contribution
of
funds
d e n t g o v e r n m e n t s , "I f o u n d n o o t h e r s o c i a l s c i e n c e s m u s t be t a u g h t m o r e a m o n g o u r g r o u p t o w e l f a r e w o r k t o
s e n i o r s e c r e t g o v e r n i n g s o c i e t y , s i m i - e x t e n s i v e l y a n d m u s t be i n t r o d u c e d i h e p o i n t w h e r e it h u r l s . T h e r e a r e
l a r t o M y s k a n i a , " M i s s G o r d o n s a i d . al a n e a r l y a g e .
b i g g e r p r o b l e m s f o r us t h a n i n c r e " M o s t o t h e r c o l l e g e s a r e g o v e r n e d by
" S e c o n d l y , " he c o n t i n u e s , " w e m u s t m e n t s a n d s a l a r y s c h e d u l e s .
the student
association, while
t h e m o r e effectively o r g a n i z e the d e p a r t
" W e m u s t e d u c a t e s t u d e n t s to an
s e n i o r s e c r e t s o c i e t i e s a r e p u r e l y h o n - a n ills of v o c a t i o n a l g u i d a n c e . " In t h i s e c o n o m i c u n d e r s t a n d i n g .
What
of
o r a r y , " she added.
M r . I >i u s h c r e c r c l a i m s t h a t t h e r e is t h e b o y w h o p l a n n e d t o g o t o c o l l e g e ,
A r e s o l u t i o n w a s p a s s e d a d v o c a t i n g I a p o s s i b i l i t y of r e c e i v i n g a d u l t s for g r a d u a t e d t h i s y e a r , a n d is u n a b l e l o
financially?
H e ' l l h a v e to g o lo w o r k
cooperation
of - i n d e n t
publications
i r e d i r e c t e d p r o g r a m of e d u c a t i o n ,
with the college a d m i n i s t r a t i o n .
The
"Finally,
during
the
confusion on a farm or road j o b o r s o m e t h i n g
l o u s e n s u s of o p i n i o n w a s t h a t t h e r e e a u - c d by a d j u s t m e n t at t h e p r e s e n t l i k e t h a t w i t h n o t h i n g m o r e u s e f u l
t h a n t h r e e v e a r s of L a t i n ,
French,
m e , t h e r e a r e difficulties t h a i th
s h o u l d be less sliperv i s i o n o n t h e p a r i
scl
Is m a y face in t h e p r o b l e m s of g e o m e t r y a n d t h e l i k e . "
of t h e a d m i n i s t r a t i o n o v e r t h e p u b l i
I )r. A v e r y W . S k i n n e r of t h e s t a t e
cation. Stale college publications a r c finance."
on
m u c h f r e e r in t h i s r e s p e c t t h a n m a n y . P u p i l s M u s t U n d e r s t a n d P r o b l e m s d e p a r t m e n t of e d u c a t i o n s p o k e
improvement
of
instruction
thru
A r e c o m m e n d a t i o n vva- m a d e In
" W e h a v e h e a r d a u r e a l d e a l a b o u t s u p e r v i s i o n , vvilh d i s c u s s i i u led by
c o n t i n u e the debate
program.
A led
logical unemplo) inenl and the W i l l i a m F . I l a w l e y of R o c h e s t e r . T h e
w o m a n ' s debate h a m from R a n d o l p h m a c h i n e
age.
These, along
w i t h o t h e r t o p i c at t h e s e c t i o n a l m e e t i n g
K a c o n , V i r g i n i a , will t o u r F . u r o p c t i n - c h a i n - t o r e s a n d b u s i n e s s m e r g e r - ,
w a s " O r g a n i z i n g f o r M a s t e r y in t h e
year.
T w o G e r m a n s p e a k i n g A m e r - h a v e so affected I h e o p p o r t u n i t y for
I l i g h S c h o o l ' by V e r n o n G. S m i t h of
ican s t u d e n t - will a l s o t o u r F . u r o p c . e m p l o y mi nl thai t h o s e of u s p l a n n i n g
S c a r s d a l c . H u g h (I. S t e w a r t of M o u n t
d e b a t i n g in G e r m a n s p e a k i n g c o u n - s c h o o l p r o g r a m s a n d g u i d a n c e
for V e n n n led d i s c u s s i o n .
tries.
A great many more studentnub should examine carefully what
s i g n i f i e d t h e i r d e s i r e t o d i s c u s s i n t e r | | | U , M , r l n n u c s iiu-iu
":l,i:"'al rt'l;iti"n lllis > v a r lll;m '" I
P u p i l s will 1,,-e r e s p e c t f o r t h e i r
>'l':irs liasti n s t r u c t o r s if t h e v a r e g i v e n n o m e n
In the spring, t h e N a t i o n a l S t u d e n t t;,| b a c k - r o u n d
to u n d e r s t a n d
the
F e d e r a t i o n will c o n d u c t a n a t i o n w n h
p r o b l e m s of t o d a v , M r . I > c n s h c r g e r
K . S. I-'. A. d a y , F.very s t u d e n t o n m
predicted.
cil, of m e m b e r c o l l e g e s , will s p . m - o r
" | can'l help feeling this m e a n s
T h e Y o u n g Men'- Christian associ
some money making project.
I Ins s o m e t h i n g s i g n i f i c a n t f o r u s a s t e a c h m o n e y will be t u r n e d o v e r t o t h e w a y - } r r - , " h e c o n t i n u e d .
" W e ' v e g o t t o a l i o i i t h i s w e e k is c o n d u c t i n g its final
and means committee.
I Hiring t h e | c h a s e t h e c h a n g i n g c o u r s e of c i v i l i z a - d r i v e t o c o l l e d t h e m o n e y p l e d g e d to
last s p r i n g .
The
p a s t y e a r this c o m m i t t e e has been ti.ui, i n t r o d u c e m o r e sociology a n d the o r g a n i z a t i o n
f u n c t i o n i n g on s u c h a l i m i t e d i n c o m e e c o n o m i c s . T h e s c h o o l s will b e h e l d d r i v e is u n d e r t h e c h a i r m a n s h i p of
W i l l i a m C N e l s o n . '33, t r e a s u r e r .
t h a t staff m e m b e r s h a v e h a d t o p r o - r e s p o n s i b l e m o r e t h a n e v e r , f o r p e n
M e m b e r s of t h e faculty w h o p l e d g e d
vide their o w n t r a v e l i n g e x p e n s e s .
L i e a r e b a c k lo t h e p o i n t ' o f t r a i n
m o n e y will be s o l i c i t e d by m e m b e r s
O f f i c e r s for t h e c o i n i n g y e a r w h o I i n g for n e w t h i n g s on a g r e a t e r seal
of t h e c o m m i t t e e .
A b o u t f o r t y dol
w e r e elected a r e :
F r a n c e s K. N'e- than ever.
will
be c o l l e c t e d
from
lllis
"I t h i n k we'll h a v e m u c h
m o r e lars
m a c k , U n i v e r s i t y of A r i z o n a , p r e s i I u s e d t o l a u g h at t h e s o u r c e , it is e x p e c t e d .
dent;
F.dna M a e C o f f e y ,
S o u t h e r n leisure lime,
M
a
l
e
m
e
m
b
e
r
s
of
th,
s
t
u
d
e
n
t
body
M e t h o d i s t . D a l l a s , T e x a s ' ; vice - p r e s i - i d e a of .111 h o u r s a s a w o r k i n g w e e k .
I'm c o n v i n c e d t h a t w e ' l l he w h o m a d e s u c h pledge-- a r e e x p e c t e d
dent ; Selwyn
Iv e s , L'niv ersit.v
of N o w
t o - e n d t h e a m o u n t of t h e i r pli d g e to
Florida,
treasurer;
and
L a u r e n c e l u c k y to h a v e t h a t if w e k e e p e v e r y Nelson.
Cook,
Colgate university,
r e g i o n a l b o d y at w o r k . "
Only
s e v e n l y live d o l l a r s of
tin
P
r
i
n
c
i
p
a
l
L
a
u
r
e
n
c
e
('.
[
o
h
n
s
o
n
of
r e p r e s e n t a t i v e for t h e N e w F u g l a n d
d i s t r i c t , i n c l u d i n g N e w Y o r k s t a l e . O r c h a r d P a r k , l e a d i n g t h e d i s c u s s i o n t o t a l e s t i m a t e d i n c o m e of $ 1 0 0 h a s
t h u s far b e e n c o l l e c t e d .
t
h
a
t
f
o
l
l
o
w
i
d,
u
r
g
e
d
e
v
e
n
w
i
d
e
r
e
m
F . d w a r d K. M o r r o w , p r e s i d e n t of F
T h e f o l l o w i n g i- Ihe b u d g e t u p o n
f e d e r a t i o n f o r t h e l a s t t w o y e a r s , h a s p h a - i s of b u s i n e s s s u b j e c t s t o m e e t
w h i c h t h e Y. M. C. V h a s b e e n u p d r e s i g n e d to t a k e u p t h e p o s t a s e.xecu- | t h e p r o b l e m
a t i n g for i h i - y e a r ; s h o w i n g the ncces
live
secretary
of
an
educational
sity of c o l l e c t i n g t h e m o n e y p l e d g e d
foundation.
Mr. M o r r o w addressed
to ihe o r g a n i z a t i o n :
t h e s t u d e n t b o d y h e r e la-i y e a r .
F.SI I M.VI Ml I XIOMK
M i s s G o r d o n s a i d t h a t a b o u t 2.1(1
Family Contribution
$10(1
students
attended
this
con fen nee
Student C o n t r i b u t i o n
oil
m o s t of w h o m w e r e s e n i o r s
There
Were also about a- m a n y m e n as
•loo
V m e m b e r of t h e S t a l e c o l l e g c T a c Women who attended.
T h e coin i n
i F . x i ' l X l i l l I Id iltv. M i s s M a d e l i n e G i l n i o u r , i n s l r u c
l i o n n e x t w a r will be c o n d u c t e d al
•pies, lltuliv. at
, a- in l i b r a r y sei, nee, is .-,, e d i t o r of
Male Colic
N e w I Irlcans.
e,,lller.il
'Dim-ted
High
School
lli-t,,rv
Miss Gordon R e p o r t s M y s k a n i a
U n i q u e as H o n o r Society
A m o n g Colleges
HISERT ANNOUNCES
PROM CHAPERONES
WEDNESDAY TO BE
DATE OF TRYOUTS
IN FRENCH PLAYS
T r y o u t s f o r t h e p l a y s l o be g i v e n
a t F r e n c h fete will be c o n d u c t e d in
t h e a u d i t o r i u m of P a g e hall o n W e d n e s d a y , J a n u a r y 13, f r o m .1:15 t o 5 : 0 1,
K a t b c r i n c D o n l e y , ',12, p r e s i d e n t of
French club, announced today.
One
of t h e p l a y s , " L ' e l e d c la S a i n t M a r t i n . " by M e i l b a c a n d H a l e y , is a
c o m e d y w i t h a cast c o n s i s t i n g o f a n
obi m a n , a y o u n g m a n . a y o u n g girl
and a housekeeper.
T h e story IOIIc e r n s t h e old m a n ' s f a l l i n g in l o v e
with his niece-ill l a w w h e n she c o m e s
in d i s g u i s e to w i n b a c k h i s f a v o r f o r
h i s n e p h e w , w h o m he h a d cut off b e c a u s e he m a r r i e d h e r .
T h e o t h e r p l a y s h a v e n o t yet b e e n
d e c i d e d u p o n , bill t w o o n e - a c t p l a y s
will p r o b a b l y be c h o s e n in a f e w d a y s .
T r y o u t s a r e o p e n to e v e r y o n e , M i s s
Do.,ley said.
T h e d a l e of t h e F r e n c h
b e e n set f o r A p r i l 9.
fete
has
Board Witheld Action
Against Post Official
Detroit
(IP)
T h e D e t r o i t l'„,ar,l
of E d u c a t i o n h a - v o t e d d o w n a re
ipie-l for disciplinary a c t i o n a g a i n s t a
( ' i l v c o l l e g e ,,f
I i. (roil
professor,
w h o is a l - , , ,III \ m c r i c a n I . e g i o n P o s t
C o m m a n d e r , lor opposing the e-lab
l i s h m e n t of a r e s e r v e officers t r a i n i n g
e . r p s ,il ("ilv c o l l e g e .
O n the c o n t r a r y , the b o a r d passed
a r e s o l u t i o n u p h o l d i n g I h e r i g h t of
free s p e e c h .
T h e p r o f e s s o r w a s I If.
W a l t e r (,, F o r e m a n , w i n , w a s u p h e l d
in h i s colli, nlioii a g a i n s t I h e c o r p s b y
h i - o w n p,,-t ,,f t h e A m e r i c a n L e g i o n .
T h e W a y n e County Legion council,
however,' a s k e d ihe slate council to
r e v o k e the posl's c h a r i e r .
Beby Lowell to Play at D a n c e ;
Kerbel to be Luncheon
Toastmaster
Dr.
Donnal
V. S m i t h ,
assistant
p r o f e s s o r of h i s t o r y ; M i s s M a r i o n
K i l p a t r i c k , i n s t r u c t o r in E n g l i s h ; a n d
Mr. E d w a r d Cooper, instructor
in
c o m m e r c e , will be t h e f a c u l t y c h a p e r ons for the a n n u a l j u n i o r p r o m to
be at t h e ' f e n F.yck h o t e l
Friday
unlit
l i b r u i r y 12 G e o r g e
llisert,
c h a i r m a n of t h e f a c u l t y c o m m i t t e e ,
announced today.
Chaperons
for the l u n c h e o n
on
S a t u r d a y . F e b r u a r y 1,1, at t h e
De
Witt
C l i n t o n h o t e l , will be
Miss
A n n e t t e D o b b i n , i n s t r u c t o r in F r e n c h ,
and Dr. Smith.
Bernard Kerbel will
be t o a s t m a s t e r
for
the
luncheon,
Mary Trela, general chairman, announced.
Miss Marion Chesehrough, instruct o r in L a t i n , a n d M r . D o n a l d B r y a n t ,
instructor
in E n g l i s h , will act
as
c h a p e r o n s for the lea d a n c e w h i c h
will be a t t h e D e W i t t C l i n t o n S a t u r d a y a f t e r n o o n , F e b r u a r y 1,1. ' R u t h
R e y n o l d s is g e n e r a l c h a i r m a n f o r t h e
dance.
O p p o r t u n i t y for s t u d e n t s to
sign u p lo a t t e n d I h e f u n c t i o n s o f t h e
j u n i o r w e e k - e n d will be g i v e n b e g i n n i n g iu t w o w e e k s .
P i d s a n d f a v o r s for the p r o m h a v e
b e e n .selected by t h e c o m m i t t e e b u t
will be k e p i s e c r e t u n t i l t h e t i m e of
the d a n c e .
I.aura Styn and
Ralph
H a r r i s a r e c h a i r m e n of t h i s c o m m i t tee.
ISchv P o w e l l a n d his All - A m e r i c a n
r e c o r d i n g o r c h e s t r a will p l a y for t h e
prom.
|olm
Detlefson
is g e n e r a l
chairman.
Women Move To Oust
Y M. C. A. CONDUCTS
Head Of Student Board
DRIVE TO COLLECT
lution
provided
MEMBERSHIP DUES t h a' ft h e" t e abcohaer dr s' s m ar ey s ofeel
Hiram, 0 . — ( I P ) — A
belated b u t
free to d i s ci!-- and e x p r e s s their honest opini o n - , o i i t - i . l e of i h e c l a s s r o o m , u p o n
all - n b i e e t s , i n c l u d i n g s o c i a l , e c o n o m i c
and political questions, w i t h o u t fear
,,f official r e p r i m a n d o r c o e r c i o n o n
th, p a r i of a n y o n e c o n n e c t e d vvilh
t h e F o a r d of E d u c a t i o n . "
COURSE
SOPHOMORES HEAD
LIST OF STUDENT
TAX DELINQUENTS
1 i,,
i
1,
I I 're-lii
| , , i n l c o i n , n nee
j \ i-iiin•.• s p e a k e r s
S, „ ial a e t i v i l i , ] S l a t e ( o i l , ,;, \ s h a l e in
I a n d N a l i o i i a l c o m , il-
i,
i
A GIFT FROM
''oil s T n l l . ' m s '
,,,'r'ui'l'V!'n
n'
t h e s"opl|,'„l,olY- il.l'.e 223 p.,id
i„ II p . o , i . . Ill, l i m e i - li., ,
a n d 103 ,„,ii p a n r - ; a n d lb,
haw
b„- paid Ihe l a s a n d I
" " ' '"'''"' '" ''"
Y
\l
Hair
111
'"'
' ';'•':
l b , ii
!
t
\
'I h,
Hi,I, in I o a r d o | final
In e m a , In i I. up - I I Hon p . o ,
Ibibhiuii
I'crmunclit
SVuvint!
ut I ' o p u l u r
133 \ . |'i via
in.,I 3-42JI
Finder
Prices
Si.
un.l M a r c e l
Attention
WiiviniS
il
/louses
Av
Westland
\
H IKMliUI V I II \KI II 'S
MADISON AVE. AT WEST LAWRENCE STREET
ANNOUNCING
J
|
U N . 1'rvui S i . J
Dial J Jo3_'
Dancing
n'TT^rtrt"(TTrn ?r?rft~nTro"r(r(rrH^'n^T^
IN I11I-. BOHEMIAN ROOM
s
AUSTIN CLARKE
AM) HIS COUNTRY CLUH
ORCHESTRA
-V.c,
WRITES ART1C1J'
Mi. .
M I M , 'f
I ,,
in , i , . i - o o
,h, s , a , e ( olleg. I - - p . ' 'h, " " t h o i
£
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D e e . I ill .i r i - l l e ol ill. Will n.il A s s o
}=
e i a l i o u ,,i C o l l e g e p o o k s t o r e s .
to Sorority
H-16 Mudi.scm
The
,,,!,,.., ,
I,,,. „
C
j
Albany, N. Y.
170 Mroadwu
' h o n e 6-1837
t Keep Beautiful at Palladino's
p.IV, I -
\ , p , , i a l e o l l e e l i -li - I l a x
e o n d u . i l , I m I — i n ''13 o „ \ \ ,
to e n a b l e l b , , - , \vi l i m e p . p.
tax
r. lb
board |
Ihe h I ,,l 3. l i n , | U , i i | s .
I I b, a u s p i e , - , ,| , h,
''"'" ' '' '"' ^'"
!
Stale
;;-:•';" 1\ : ;;;,;:, ;;!;,. \;i;::!;. \1V^ ^l 1T::;:"; M;::n:<-:::::
""
11.
MEANS MORE
The Van Hansen Charles Company
I . A. UOOKIIRIM
Reliable Meats and Poultry
l
''"",'; :""'l ''" p-u.h I
t
It c o i i l a i n s a n , x p l a n a l i o i i I I . o r i s , vJ,',, will a p p e a l
lrexlun.il hav,
,,, . , „ , , „ , „ , , , , | | r ,,, .,, „ • .,, m l i | s | , , , i - n „ . r „ i „ e is h r o m d i l
| n ]
STATISTICS
VAN HEUSRN CHARLES
Special
M o - (,Mm,,in- w a s ,, l i b r a r i a n al '
- In ,,,,|
.( lor,
] „ . ,t,h. e. , , ,lisi
, , , , „,,- | i, ,
a,ad,no
I I, r p a r i h a s b e e n i h e
\
g lb,- s p e a k e r s t h a t lln- o r
(|
in,i
- paid t h e i r - i n , b nl !•
Ihe student board
i 1 : 1 ' j ' ' . hibiar'v lesson.'
'
|,',hn I!, mi, n a n d K i r h v P a g e aul
t,„lav.
The
seniors
' " " ' I 1 ' 1 ' lh;
""".V','-'
l > ' e - u „ e „ l.,sL
Ihe
TEACHER'S
E n g l i s h I 1 ', a c o u r s e in s h o r t storyT h e U n i t e d S t a t e s Office of E d u c a will be g i v e n n e x t s e m e s t e r , a l t h o u g h t i o n r e v e a l s t h a t t h e r e a r e 153,306
il is m a a n n o u n c e d in t h e C o l l e g e o n e - t e a c h e r s c h o o l s in t h e c o u n t r y ,
catalogue.
' f h e c o u r s e is o p e n t o e m p l o y i n g a s m a n y t e a c h e r s w h o s e
s o p h o m o r e s , j u n i o r s and seniors, and a v e r a g e e d u c a t i o n does not go bewill lie g i v e n o n ' f u e s , l a v s a n d T h u r s - y o n d h i g h s c h o o l a n d w h o s e a v e r a g e
d a y s , a t 1 :30 o ' c l o c k , i n ' r o o m 20.
a n n u a l s a l a r y is $874.
MISS GILMOUR IS
CO-EDITOR OF AID^
TO HISTORY STUDY
S u i . l v " p u b l i s h e d bv Ihe W o r l d I b . o k
C o m p a n y of Y o i i k c r s vvilh M i s s Mice
M a g n u s ] i u - l r u c l o r in t h e S o u t h S i d .
H i g h s c h o o l at E l m i r u .
M a i , rial C o n t a i n e d in t h e 1
1, h a s
t o n h i , ,1 out I h r . e l i m , , w i t h six
OFFERED
none
the
less
vigorous
"feminist
movement"
has
been
launched
at
H i r a m college h e r e a n d for t h e m o m e n t h a s t a k e n a s its o b j e c t i v e t h e
o u s t i n g of R i c h a r d Pichon as presid e n t of t h e s t u d e n t b o a r d .
" M i l l i o n s for d e f e n s e , " w a s P i c h on's q u i c k c o m e b a c k to the girls " b u t
n,,( o n e c e n t - n o t o n e c e n t . "
ffimtUnmrft (jJatVtnia
| | , , c i l l l i b u l i il
"(healing
the I £
W a - t e b a s k . I," de il- w i t h Ihe m a n a g e - | £
I , n u t of t h e s t u d . n l p r o j e c t b o x .
Iy j l U . " , ^
Minimum
198 C e n t r a ! A v e n u e — a t
Many,
Robin
N.Y.
BUaUBBUaBBaauaaBaBaeaBBBtfBflUyBBUUUttmiBU
Check
%
O r c h e M r a Churyc: 2i
p e r pel s o n
Every Wednesday and Saturday
Nights
STARTING WEDNESDAY NIGHT
DECEMBER 23rd
STATIC COLLEGE NEWS, ALBANY, N. Y., JANUARY 8, 1932
CONVENTION SENDS
PLEA TO HOOVER
Is Y. W. C. A. Delegate
Volunteers Suggest Student
Delegate to Conference
for Disarmament
Eighteen students were selected at
the closing sessions of the Eleventh
Quadrennial Student Volunteer convention conducted in Buffalo from
December 30 to January 3, to appear
before President Herbert Hoover to
ask him to appoint a student as n
member of the American delegation
at the Geneva Disarmament Conference scheduled to meet in February.
In advocating his proposal that a
student be among the American delegation, Professor Ralph Harlow of
Smith college, said there is not a
single youth in that delegation and if
there were, it would prove for the
first time in history, that there is a
student opinion in America that
counts in the councils of the nation.
The delegates will specify in their
petition to the President that a student be selected not merely as an observer at the conference but as a fullfledged member of the American
delegation. T h e committee includes
representatives from Yale, Cornell,
Georgia, Texas, and California. They
were elected by the three thousand
students who represented more than
six hundred colleges and universities
from all sections of the United States
and Canada who gathered in Buffalo
for the convention,
L a u r a H . Styn, '33, w h o w a s
the Y. VV. C. A. delegate to t h e
i n t e r n a t i o n a l Student V o l u n t e e r
M o v e m e n t convention in Buffalo
D e c e m b e r 30 to J a n u a r y 3.
DIRECTOR NAMES
PLAY COMMITTEES
»<•.»*. » . « » * • • wtwr - ~
FOR
JANUARY
19
(Continued from piKjc 1, column i)
Helen Dohcrty, Maybelle Mathews,
Geraldinc
Peters, Alma
Kimkus,
Helen Flanagan, Mary Day, Leora
Geddes, Miriam Wood, Elizabeth Arnold, and Thomas Garrett, sophomores.
Properties, F.vclvn Grecnberg, '33,
chairman; Lima Albert, '32; William
Keagau, Margaret Beik, juniors; MaSince its organization in 1S86, the tilda Centner, Marie Benedict. MarStudent Volunteer Movement has sent celle Gehlc, Ruth Clickner. Kathryn
12,535 of its members into foreign Ctmneen, Geraldinc Martin, Helen
missionary service. In spirit and ad- Kluge, Laura Woman, Bertram Mcministration, the movement is defi- Xary, Tbelma Smith, Ruth Mellor,
nitely student; in purpose and pro- Esther Davits, Kathcrine Wordeii,
gram, it is distinctly missionary.
Marion Kelly, Marian Pike, and Don•About
five
hundred
Japanese, ald Eddy, sophomores.
Chinese. .African, and Indian students
Other committees a r e : advertising,
attended the convention. Intimate in- Cecilia box, '33, and Evelyn Duddeii,
terpretations of transitory
stages '34, chairmen; Mary Kosegarten, '32.
through which these countries are Evelyn Fsmay, and Benjamin Ingrapassing were given by these natives, ham, j u n i o r s ; Virginia Height, Richand by internationally known men ard Degnan, Marian Lloyd, Eleanor
who have made studies of conditions. Waterburv, Anne McKee, Catherine
Among these leaders, were Kirhv llelTern, Cclia Bishop, Mary Moore,
Page, author on disarmament and Mary Walther, Mary \ ' o ,nau. Marian
peace; Dr. 1). I). T. Jabavu, professor Welch, and Kalhlyn Lubking, sophoof language and literature in a uni- mores.
versity of South Africa; ami Dr.
Douse. I.ciitia Connelly, '31, chairJohn R. Mutt, of tin- International man; Oslo Abrahamson, Hilda BookMissionary Council.
heim, Kathryn W'ilkins, Eleanor An
Catherine
Simmerer,
Agnes
One of the features was a pageant, dre,
"Release", written, directed ami en Stephens, Muriel Denton, Florence
Ottos,,n, Margaret llalladav, Doroth
acted by college students.
Laura Styn, '33, represented the Barker, Marion Blakelv, lane Pod
Maurice, soph,,
Young Women's Christian association lew ska. Roselvn
mores; and o slumes, Helen Mahal
at the convention.
'31,
chairman; Beatrice Cue. luli
Shields, Mari, Hull. Rita Brown
lardl, Catherine Jamison, soph ,IH,,IT<
md Biielab Keays, special student.
PRINCETON ACTORS
LEFT UNDISMAYED
Levinstein To Organize
BY TRAGIC THEFT Freshman Tennis Team
Sixty-Nine Books Added To Library
Recently, Miss Mary Cobb Announces
Sixty-nine new books have been
added to the College library recently,
Miss Alary E. Cobb, librarian, announced today. T h e new books include: Yale one-act plays, Baker;
Holiday, Barry; Tomorrow and T o morrow,
Barry;
Effective
study
habits, Bird; Synthetic inorganic
chemistry, Blanchard; Handbook of
chemical microscopy, Chaniot; Oneact plays, Clark; Condensed chemical
dictionary; Life in the middle ages,
Coulton; Crusades, C o x ; Icebound,
Davis; Atlas of European history;
Dow; Complete Sherlock Holmes,
Doyle; Solid analytical geometry and
determinants, Dresden; Bird in hand,
Drinkwater; William Morris, a critical study, Drinkwater; Cainillc, Dum a s ; Five plays, Dunsany; Relativity,
Einstein; Jane Clegg, E r v i n e ; Principles of accounting, Finney; Plays,
Fitch; Entomology, Folsom; Man
who married a dumb wife, F r a n c e ;
Weather, F r e e ; Cultural history of
the modern age, Friedell.
Measurement of interests in relau o n to
human adjustment, F r y e r ;
Taming the criminal, Gillia; Waste,
Granvillc-Barker; Image and other
plays, Gregory; Irish Folk-history
plays, Gregory; Introduction to mental hygiene, Groves; Architect of the
Roman empire, Holmes; hive one-act
plays, H o u g h t o n ; Text bunk of physiology for medical students and physicians, Howell; Ruy Bias, H u g o ;
Aptitude testing, H u l l ; Stars in their
courses, J e a n s ; Biological basis of human nature, J e n n i n g s ; Alary goes
first,
Jones;
Statistical
method,
Kelley; Craig's Wife, Kelly; Show
off, Kelley; At home among the
atoms, Kendall; Good gracious .Annabelle, R u m m e r ; Selections, Locke;
NOONTIME DANCING
WILL BE IN PAGE
HALLGYMNASIUM
Social dancing at noontimes has
been transferred to the gymnasium ,,i
Page hall, Robert bloody, '31, chairman of the lloor committee, announced today.
Work has been started in the gymnasium of Havvley hall lor the new
library which is being constructed in
llawley ball.
Book stacks and an
elevator shaft are being built in the
gvinnasium, s,, Miat it is now imp,
si'ble lo hav, dancing lb,-re. bio,,
explained.
After
conferences
with
I 'ivsi h
the gymnasium instructors, arrant
incuts w ere , oinpleted si, that s'll lei
gvinna- iinu.
lleca
12 3 s , d o c k ill tills gv
will be lecessarv for lb, laiicin
legin | omptlv at 12:011 .dock.
ml pn iptiv ai 12:3 I o'c
dv
Sanford Lev instcin, '33, pn i n t in
PREDICTS SUPERIOR RACE
Monk-lair, N. I . — ( I I ' )
How the
theft of a I ruck load of the most im- tramural tennis champion, 1 i been
New York- i l l ' )
Speaking
portant costumes used by the Prince- appointed to organize the freshman
lure recently. Dr Louis Herman,
ton Triangle club produced the most tennis team, Coach Rutherford Baker
medical sociologist, predicted the
hilarious performance of that group's aunoiinced today,
ai'ilicia!
development
through
Levinstein has appointed Clifford
"Spanish Blades" vet put on the stage
glandular stimulation of a race of
was told bv members of the audience Rail and Wilfred Allar.l to be ten,
supermen who would attain Id
who came from ihe show here during porary captain and manager of the
feel ill height, require \ irl nally no
the holidays holding their sides with team. Carleton Coulter, Sam Specsi, ep and, at the will of the endotor, and Louis Bloomberg are pro
mirth.
c r i l l o l o g i s t , be e n d o w e d w i t h t h e
mental capacities of geniuses.
Seven hundred ami fifty patrons speetiye members of the freshman
bad gathered at the Mount Hebron organization.
school in I'ppcr Mont' lair for the'
matinee performance of the show
when it was announced to them that
the club's properties had been hijacked. T h e audience refused to accept the suggestion that they go away
and return for the evening performance, when it was hoped to have
some kind of coslunn s and mak. up
ready for the cast.
Luke A M
Opposite- llitfh St
So the show " « i ill on." and the re
suit was ten times funnier than ii
would normallv hav. been, the audi
nice declared. Tlu chorus ' g i r l s "
Special Prices On
appeared in Irons, rs, the beards nf
KI'DS
MI'.N'S SIIOHS
SNKAKS
lb, leading "ladii " glKb ne.l under
the sp, Might.
COIAMCMM
SIIOISIIOI'
The audi, n, e -how..I uproarious
prcfi rem < l",,r ., , bonis that l< ,,ked
Repairing;
4M Washington Ave.
lib, a i In i r I, a,lei', -quad , \ , r< isine
Assembly and auditorium activities,
M c K u o w n ; Afonna Vanna, Maeterlinck; Sister Beatrice and Adriane
and Barbe Bletie, Maeterlinck; T r a g edy of man, Maseheld; Textbook of
histology, M a d s m o v ; Radiation in
chemistry, M o r t o n ; Beginner's star
hook, Murphy.
Dawn of history, Alyres; Carlylc
and mill, NelT; Pantomimes for stage
and study, P a r d o e ; T h e Magistrate,
P i n c r o ; Yule-tide in many lands,
P r i n g l e ; Street scene, 'Rice; L'Aiglan,
Rostand, T h e Romancers, Rostand;
Reminiscences, c h u r z ; Doctor's Dilemma, S h a w ; Misalliance, Fanny's
first play, S h a w ; Vertebrate embryology, S h u m w a y ; W a r with Mexico,
Smith, T h e new mathematics, Stone;
International law, Stowell; Deidre of
the sorrows, Syngel; In the shadow
of the glen, S y n g e ; Tinker's wedding,
Synge; Well of the saints, Synge;
Clarence,
Tarkington;
Outward
bound, V a n e ; Landmarks in English
industrial history, W a r n e r ; Schenectady, past and present, Wcstover;
The home and the child, White House
Conference; Plays in prose and verse,
Yeats; and Introduction to the theory
of statistics, Yule.
!A
J
\
j
Hamilton Printing
Company
ALBANY, N. Y.
SANDWICHES
c*y,
(jf , . , .
^ ^myr Mujor in Smart Styles.
. . .
1 mi will enjoj
Pius
!
The official rushing period will begin Thursday, February 4, according
t,, Marjorie Loekwood, '32, president
,,l Intersorority Council.
The rush imitations will contain
bids lo a formal dinner on Thursday
night, February 4, a tea, Friday, February 5, and a breakfast the next day.
Official rushing will not begin until
0 o'i lock, mi Thursday, February 4.
and must be done only in the sorority
bouses at the above functions, according to the rules of the council, as decided last year.
Champ Clark Recalled
As Youthful President
lliinlingl
W. Va.— ( I P ) -Chicago university with its youthful
Robert M. I lutchins as president, and
Allegheny college with its 31-year-old
president, must not suppose that they
are the first higher educational institutions in the L'nited Slates to have
v i mtli fill administrators,
It is recalled here that near the end
,,i" the last ceiiturv the late Champ
• lark, Mien 23, was president of Marshall College here, l i e later became
a candidate for president and was for
a number of years speaker of the
1 louse of Representatives in Con
A I.HA NY
PROFESSOR WRITES
LIBRARY ARTICLE
IN STATE BULLETIN
•Association of Elementary Principals.
The title of Miss Pritchard's article
is "First things first in a school
library", in which she .aimmariz.es the
activities considered of first importance to the children by elementary
school librarians who checked a list
ol u tr, ilh ; : I school 111 r in ins on
which she had been working for some
lime. Ruth Ku.ipp, '2'), U.S. in library
I science, now school librarian at
I Clyde, New York, has also written
Ian article for this issue. " H o w Ihe
librarian works with teachers," is the
theme of Miss Knapp's article. The
title of the bulletin, published by the
association is "The Library in the
Elementary School", and may be
found in the library school.
675 Students Sign Up
For State Pedagogue
le b
igued up
Over (,75
f,,r Ihe 1032 Ped: ;,,LMie. Collectand
,•
this
week
i, uis are being nia
nest at the table o posite the inailIn >x. (In ,up picl iir - are also being
sold at the same able.
T h e price for t e P e d a g o g u e is
$3.75 until Ian. 15. After thai date,
the price will In $4.25. A n d r e w
l l r i t z , '32. circulal
luli:
ln< practiced c h a r g e of the c llectlolls.
I a nevvs- Fislcr, '32. is e n h i d i n g tb
I in 1921. ,f g r o u p pictures.
law in'lsa
paper in I.
MADISON SWEET SHOP
('. J . ( 1 1 ( 1 1 . A K I S ,
l'rii|i.
HOME OF
FINE H O M E M A D E CANDIES
DELICIOUS ICK C R E A M
LUNCHEONETTE
Let Us lull Your Party O r d e r s
Phone
Your
Onlcr—Wc
Deliver
785 M A D I S O N A V E N U E , A L B A N Y , N . Y.
PI I O N F
6-7619
Attention State College Students
Stale College Co-Ed Injured In
Bus Crash!
Semi
in your
applications
for
the
NI'M'
SPECIAL
POLICY issue! by THE
STC DENTS' ACCIDENT
AETNA
HIE AND Al I I LI AT ED
COMPANIES
of Hartford,
Conn.
l..\K<;i:ST AND S T R O . V J I . S T IN Till? WOKI.D
I'uvs all e\pense fur nil injuries up In one thousand dnllurs
lluspind Nurses Kx-Kiiys Doctor
$1,000.00
Cost $12.00 Hvcry (> months
1
seeing j
Liberal
llic new full hats, emits, drosses and hosiery
\
Unusual Models Low Prices I liiiji Values. !
S t i l l M \ . imOTIIKRS
Ada, O.— ( I P ) — Student exponents of dancing at Ohio Northern
university have won a partial victory in their campaign to overthrow an ancient ban on dancing
at the school.
Fraternity brothers and sorority
sisters, under rules announced by
university officials, now may dance
lo radio and phonograph music
twice a week in fraternity and
sorority houses off campus, and
they may have three formal dances
with orchestras in the coming year.
Students recently declared w a r
on the old ban, but were rebuffed
by university officials.
However, when it was announced that a meeting of the
Board of Trustees would be held
in January, University officials decided to canvass the 800 students
and ascertain if they wanted to
dance.
COUNCIL PRESIDENT
Miss Martha C. Pritchard, professor of library science, has written an
ANNOUNCES START
article which was published in a reOF RUSHING PERIOD cent bulletin of the .New York State
THE HKGH SCHOOL LUNCH
Cake
Ohio Northern Students Win
Victory Over Ban On Dancing
Practical
Pconomicnl
T H O M A S J. \ l < T : \ A I \ I : Y , Jit.
3.4151
A sic nt
112 State Street
Albany, N. Y.
Sliidcnls limy ulso apply to
Miss Audrey Flowers, Stale College News Ollicc
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