State College News

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State College News
A
WEEKLY
VOL-71
JOURNAL
No.
N E W YORK
ALBANY, N.Y.,
17
COLLEGE CALENDAR.
TO-DAY: 4:40 p. m., Y. W.
C. A. Meeting, Dr. Moldenhawer, Auditorium; 4:35,
Newman Club Meeting,
Election of Officers; 5
p. m., Men's Interclass
Basketball,
Sophs
vs.
Frosh.
THURSDAY: Noon, Girls'
Interclass
Basketball,
Seniors vs. Frosh.
FRIDAY: 3:45 p. m., Auditorium, Prof. Stinard, Lecture on Cuba, Illustrated;
4:45,
Meeting of Press
Club; 7:30 p. m., Sophomore Reception.
SATURDAY:
3 p. m.,
Hockey, S. C. vs. Country
Club, at Country Club; afternoon, Soph-Senior Tea
Dansant; 8:30 p. m., Basketball, State College vs.
Hobart College; Preliminary 8 p. m., Class Championship Game, Sophs vs.
Frosh.
MONDAY: 4:45, Meeting
Industrial Organization.
HOCKEY TEAM LOSES TO
R.P.I.—SCORE 4 : 2
S a t u r d a y afternoon,the R. P.
I. hockey seven defeated the
Slate College team by a score
of 4:2 on the W e s t e r n avenue
rink.
T h e g a m e was hard
fought all the way.
Hut for
the very poor condition of the
ice the Purple and Gold seven
would have made a much better showing. T h e R. P. l . m c n
were by far the heavier and
this came them to good advantage. T h e State College men
who had hoped to depend entirely 011 their speed to win
were slowed up materially by
the rough ice.
R, P. I. scored two goals in
the first half while State College went scoreless. T h i s was
due mostly to the g r e a t work
of Power, the Rensselaer goal
tender. T h e State College men
came back s t r o n g in the second
half and had the puck in their
possession most of the time,
but again Rower spoiled many
a well aimed shot. C a s s a v a n t ,
who as usual starred for State
College was particularly good
in the latter half of the game.
T h e many bad spots in the ice
handicapped him badly in his
rushes.
One gained the impression that the presence of
fioewey in the line-up during
the second half would have
Avon the game for State ColContinued on Page 3
FEBRUARY 28,
STATE
COLLEGE
1917
FOR
$1.50
TEACHERS
PER YEAR
S. C. DEFEATS R. P. I. 22 : 21
Purple and Gold Takes Lead Early — "Honey"
Miller Outplays Woolsey
T h e State College basketball
team scored a 22 to 2\ victory
over the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute live in the Albany
High School g y m n a s i u m Saturday evening in a game admitted by local papers to have
been one of the greatest contests staged in Albany in years.
T h e result of the game was in
doubt up to t'hc '"rial minute of
play, and the closeness of the
score kept the spectators in a
frenzy.
T h e R. P, I. five was
accompanied by about one hundred and fifty rooters, who entered into a lively cheering contest with the large contingent
of State College s t u d e n t s who
sat in t'hc g r a n d s t a n d opposite
Hi cm. Keen interest was taken
in the g a m e and all sorts of
feelings were displayed. Once
when in the heat of the contest
two of the men got into a mixup the supporters of both
teams swarmed upon the floor
and for a second it looked like
trouble, but in a m o m e n t everybody was calm again.
T h e R. P. f. men never expected to meet vvit'll the opposition which the)' found here.
As one of their number stated,
We brought all our subs to
give them a chance. As mat-
GIRLS INTERCLASS
PROFESSOR STINARD TO
LECTURE FRIDAY
BASKETBALL
Frosh, 7— Juniors, 30.
Frosh, 9 — Sophs, 7.
T h e Freshmen girls' basketball team, with Helen Nolan,
captain, and Beulah Cunningham, manager, entered the interclass championship
series
last T h u r s d a y
noon.
The
Rros'h girls worked hard and
put up a plucky light to win,
but even then the game was an
easy victory for the Juniors, because of their effective team
work and Dorothy Austin's
accurate shooting.
In spite of
such
defeat t h e
Freshmen
showed by t'heir general play
that they are made of good
stuff ami will prove it in the
future. Miss Gray refereed-the
game.
In the line-up w e r e :
Juniors
Freshmen
Forwards
Austin
Rohne
11 ill
Wananiakcr
Centers
Shanks
Ciinniiigluuii
Side Centers
Austin
Cunini.ings
Guards
Keefc
Nolan
Cole
Kenning
Final score — 30:7. Substitutes,
sccrnd half, for Tumors — Keefc
lor Shanks, Hull for Hill, Hicks for
Keefe.
Friday noon, however, the
Frosh turned the tables, and in
a fast, close c a m e defeated the
Sophs. At the end of the first
Continued nn Pago 3
Topic is " Cuba." Lecture Will Be
Illustrated.
O w i n g to conflicting dates
the lecture which was to have
been given by Professor Stinard T h u r s d a y has now been
scheduled to L ake place Friday
afternoon at 3:45 in the Auditorium. T i n lecture is free to
all s t u d e n t s and everyone is
cordially invited to attend the
same.
Professor Stinard will
speak on Cuba, basing : his talk
on his travels to and on that
island last summer.
T h e lecturer, who is an enthusiastic
traveler and who kept a photographic record of his Cuban
trip, has a very interesting collection of slides which are
made from those p h o t o g r a p h s .
He will use these slides to illustrate his lecture, which will add
much of interest to the talk.
Professor Stinard has long
been interested in the Spanish
speaking peoples of Central
and South America, and what
he will have to say will undoubtedly throw some light
upon I'llc at present rather complicated political situation in
Cuba. Every student who can
at all do so should be sure to
set the date aside and attend
the lecture, Friday afternoon,
at 3:45, in the Auditorium.
ters turned out the subs remained on t h e bencJh, and even
the regulars could not accomplish what the subs had been
expected to do. Like Colgate,
R. P. I. j u d g e d the team by
past performances and did not
allow for Coach
Wachter's
work.,
C o a c h W a c h t e r is receiving
compliments from all sources
upon the wonderful showing
made by the team, especially
against Colgate and R. P. I.
H e is achieving wonderful success with his Williams live
also.
W h e n the final whistle blew
bedlam virtually .broke lose.
Fnthusistic State College rooters mobbed the victorious team
and carried the players from
the court on t'heir shoulders.
Stanley Fitzgerald w a s the
first to score, m a k i n g a basket
from the foul line.
Woolsey
made good on a try from the
foul line about a minute later.
Both teams passed the ball well
and several of the players
missed a t t e m p t s to score from
the field, Woolsey scored from
the foul line again and p u t
Rensselaer in the lead. A douCoritimied on Page 3
COLGATE SURPRISED AT
STRENGTH OF S. C
Maroon Held to 32:21 Score.
T h e Colo-ate team, winch
played here last
Thursday
evening, received the surprise
ol its life when the State College live not only refused to
j u s t give them a little practice
game,
but
even
seriously
threatened
to defeat
their
s t r o n g e s t combination.
Not
until the last two minutes of
play did Colgate put away the
victory.
U p to that time the
score stood, only 24 to 2r in
their favor, but in the last
struggle superior weight and
condition told the story. T h e
first half ended with a score of
14:13, which is a most remarkable s h o w i n g for the State College five, w'hen one takes into
consideration that Colgate is
Continued on Page 3
Page Two
STATE COLLEGE NEWS, FEBRUARY 28, 1917
STATE COLLEGE NEWS
A Weekly Journal
VoLI
February 28, 1917
No. 17
Published weekly, on Wednesdays during the college year, by the Committee on Publishing a College Weekly Newspaper, Class of 1918, New York
State College for Teachers, Albany, N. Y.
The subscription rate is one dollar and a half a year. Advertising rates
may be had on application. Articles, manuscripts, etc., intended for publication must be in the News Box before Saturdays of the week preceding
publication.
' _
,_
T h e C o m m i t t e e on P u b l i s h i n g a~College W e e k l y N e w s p a p e r ,
Class of 1918.
Alfred E. Dedicke, Editor-in-Chief
Subcommittees
Committee on Finance
Editorial1 Committee
Lillian G. Magilton
Alfred E. Dedicke
7os. A. Walker
Committee on Advertising
Stanley Heason
Committee on Subscriptions
Henry L. Greenblatt
Dorothy Austin
Alfred E. Dedicke
Kathryn Cole
Committee on Neivs
Mildred McEwan
Committee on Ckcuhtion
Stanley Heason
Mildred^ McEwan
Eloise Lansing
Henry L, Greenblatt
Kathryn Cole
Kathryn Cole
Elmetta Van Deloo
Committee on Cartoons
Ray Townsend
Maud Rose
Benj, Cohen
ATTEND THE HOBART GAME.
• While it is hardly believable, yet it is a fact, that many of the
students have not attended a single basketball game this season.
And, verily, there are members of the faculty who have no better
record. The basketball team is about to end a season which is
the most remarkable any .State College team has ever had.
Manager Pearsall scheduled only teams from the best colleges,
and as.a result State College has secured a good standing in the
intercollegiate athletic world. He and his assistants have worked
hard for your interests. The men on the team have played the
game in a manner that has brought honor to you and your College. Coach Wachter has given of his best to make the season a
success. Do you appreciate what those men have done for you?
Yes. Then prove it by going to the game Saturday night. Let
tis get together and show that we, after all, are of the stuff college
men and women are made of. Let the slogan be, " Have you
bought your ticket? " Let everyone of us work hard to make the
last appearance of our team on the court this season an occasion
long to be remembered. Let us endeavor to send llobart home
defeated, if possible, but, defeated or not, let us be sure to give
them the unmistakable impression that they met a good team and
a live college.
T H E MEANING O F T H E VICTORY.
Not one of us who witnessed the glorious victory of our basketball five over R. P. I. last Saturday evening but has acquired a
deeper feeling of loyalty for our College and a better appreciation of what it all means. We have heard much about love of
Alma Mater; volumes have been written ; appeal upon appeal has
gone forth to love the College and to be loyal. Yet all the
oratory of a decade and all the efforts of a hundred writers never
achieved that wonderful transformation in the student body
which that single basketball game on last Saturday evening
brought about. Twenty minutes of the hardest fighting a State
College team has ever done brought, it is true, a victory over
R. P. I, to us, but beyond that, and of much greater significance,
ft brought with it the awakening of real spirit, real love of College, genuine loyalty to the Purple" and Gold. No one can estimate how much that means. It certainly means that hereafter
nothing will be impossible, that the students will gladly sacrifice
their utmost for the good of State College.
Jones, Fitzgerald, Goewey, Miller, Hohaus. We have no hall
of fame for them, but if a niche in our hearts is a good substitute
they have it, and in our memory they have been placed never to
be forgotten, These men have come through a season of adversity with heads up, with a determination to make good and
a stubbornness of purpose which arc amazing. Every contest
they entered, no matter what the strength and the reputation of
the opponent, found them fighting to the limit, From week to
week their game improved until in the end they achieved what
to many had seemed the impossible, the defeat of the strongest
R. P. I. team that has played the game in years. It did one good
to see our old rivals go down to defeat before our,men. It wasour answer to their and other colleges' apparent unwillingness,
to recognize us as one of their number. VVe have forced them
to do so.' They will realize now that the Normal School on the
hill has grown into a college that must be reckoned with.
STUDENTS ARE READY FOR VOTE.
In class meetings held last Friday morning both the Junior and
Sophomore classes voted in favor of a tax "on the students to.
defray the expenses incurred by all student activities. • The
Sophomores in an open vote unanimously decided that a tendollar lax is the proper sum to assess. While this vote seems a
fair representation of the sentiment of the sttulentbody in.
general, yet much more reliance can be placed on the result of a
secret ballot taken among the Juniors. Each of the latter stated
the amount he or she favored, and the result was that out of
one hundred and thirteen Juniors twenty favored a tax of five
dollars, fifteen one of seven or seven and a half and seventyeight one of ten dollars. Since no tax will affect the present
Seniors next year they will undoubtedly be in favor of any reasonable amount decided upon. The Freshmen alone are still to.
be heard from. There is only a very slight possibility, if any,
of the ability of the first year people to block the measure, should'
they desire to do so, and besides we believe that they, like the
Uppcrclassmcn, favor the same,
The time is ripe for the measure to be introduced. All arguments pro and con have been heard; all minds are made up;
there is no time like the present to take the vote.
DR. DRAPER GIVES
LECTURE.
Dr. Edwin L. Draper rerecently spoke before the class
in Chemistry Methods on
" First Aid." He said that
one of the troubles that doctors
run across was that a large
number of people try to accomplish too much in the first aid
treatment they administer, and
that a great deal of damage is
done. First aid work, except
for minor cuts and burns,
should be only of the kind that
will be best until the doctor arrives, and he should be summoned at once if the injury is
at all dangerous.
Carbolic acid should not be
used as an antiseptic, as it not
only is a deadly poison, but
forms a coating on the surface
of the wound which will not
permit the passage of the acid
to that part of the wound where
the foreign material is congregated. Mercury bichloride is
also dangerous because of its
being a poison; at the same
time, (he wound is generally insufficiently washed to do any
good. Hydrogen peroxide is
good, and may be used diluted
with an equal volume of water.
The best treatment to give a
wound is !o wash it out with a
good white soap and lots of
warm water, and then bandage
it up using a compress and a
clean woven material. Dressings, such as carbolizcd vaseline, are generally worthless.
In speaking of burns, Dr.
Draper said that carron oil,
made by mixing equal parts of
linseed or olive oil and limewater, was a good, thing to ap-
. >^_
ply, although physicians now
were letting the air get directly
to the burn in many cases.
All through Dr. Draper's talk
he advocated the policy of " let
alone," and nature would look
after the injury, if -light, better
than any substance that could!
be applied.
NEW COURSE P L A N N E D
IN INDUSTRIAL DEPT.
At the last meeting of the
Industrial Organization the?
members had the pleasure of
having" Miss Perine deliver air
illustrated lecture on Design as:
Applied to Industrial Arts.
The Industrial men have always realized the necessity of
Design as an aid to improve
their projects, and as a result
of this splendid illustration a'
mutual agreement has been
made by Miss Perine and this:
Department to arrange for a
course in Design as Applied to.
Industrial Arts. All students
interested are invited to join
the class.
The next meeting will be
held on Monday, March 5th, at
4.45 p. m,, in Room 161.
FRESHMEN GIRLS E L E C T
CAPTAIN AND MANAGER.
Hclenc Nolan has been
chosen captain, and Beulah
Cunningham manager of the
Freshmen Girls' I!. P>. squad.
The Frosh will play their first
game Thursday noon at 12,
when they will meet their
sister class, the Juniors, on the
court.
STATE COLLEGE NEWS, FEBRUARY 28, 1917
GIRLSINTERCLASS BASKETBALL
Continued from Page 1
half the score stood 513 in
favor of the Sophs. Shortly
after the second half began
Marie Barry raised the Sophs'
score with a field goal. The
Freshmen retaliated by suddenly " coining to " and tieing
the score at j:J, Shortly before the end of the second half
Florence Oolitic, who had been
scoring steadily and accurately
through tile entire game, shot a
field basket and turned the
game over to the Freshmen at
7:9.
Line-tip:
Frosh
Forwards
Soplis
Bohnc
Curtis
Donehue
Barry
Centers
Jolinston
Iiarty
Side C e n t e r s
A. Nolan
Farrcll
Guards
Ted ford
Lukens
II. Nolan
Linelum
1
SubstiReferee — Miss Gray.
tutes, second half, for S o p h s —
La Rose for Farrell. F o r i'Vosh —
W a n a 111,'il<er for Donclnte, C1111-.
iiiiighain for J o h n s i o n , Ciiniinings
for A, Nolan, Kenning for Tedford.
TliUrsday noon (he Freshm e n will p l a y t h e S e n i o r s .
S. C. DEFEATS R. P. I. 2 2 : 2 1
Continued from Pnge 1
hie foul was railed and both
Woolsey and Fitzgerald scored.
R. P. I, was leading, 4 to 2,
when " Money" 'Miller look a
pass under the basket from S,
Fitzgerald and scored, tieing
the count. The lead changed
hands several times, but in the
last five minutes of play, field
baskets by Gocwey and Miller
gave the Albanians a good.lead
and when the whistle sounded
the score stood 16 to 10 in favor
of State College.
Rensselaer played a stronger
game in the second half. S.
Fitzgerald and Woolsey each
boosted the scores by making
good on tries from the foul line.
Robertson scored the first field
basket of the half after about
five minutes of hard playing.
This basket put Rensselaer
within two points of tieing
State College.
Here Jones,
right guard for State College,
was banished from the game,
having four personal fouls
called on him, F. Fitzgerald
was put in his place.
With the score 19 to 17 in
favor of Stale College Woolsey
scored a field basket on a back
hand shot and tied things up.
Stanley Fitzgerald broke the
lie by scoring from the foul
line. Woolsey had a chance to
tie things up again on a free
I brow but missed. Parrot committed a personal foul on Goewey and was put out of the
game. It was his fourth personal foul. Behan was placed
at left guard.
Fitzgerald scored from the
foul line again, but Woolsey
also scored. Woolsey scored
again, making the count 22 to
21 \\- favor of State College.
The game ended with R. P. I.
trying hard to score from the
field.
Woolsey, the big Rensselaer
pivot man, who is considered
one of the best, if not the best,
center in intercollegiate basketball, both for his door work and
bis scoring ability, was outplayed in every department
which he generally features.
"Money" Miller, though lighter
and shorter, outscored him
from the field 6 to 4 and held
him more than even as far as
floorwork is concerned, In the
department of foul shooting
Stanley Fitzgerald met his
closest rival to the claim of
being the peer of them all, but
even in those most trying circumstances be came through
with Hying colors, missing only
two out of twelve shots, a percentage for him of .833. Woolsey. who made thirteen out of
eighteen, 'has therefore a standing of only .722.
During the intermission between I he halves L. G, Weber
of R, P. I. and Charles Zeilman
of State College met in a
special
wrestling
match.
Weber gained four straight
falls in three minutes and forty
seconds.
Score of Game:
Page Three
COLGATE SUPRISED AT
STRENGTH OF S. C.
Continued from Page 1
absolutely one of the best
teams in the country, they
having been defeated only by
Syracuse by a one point
margin.
The star of the contest on
the side of State College was
undoubtedly
Stanley
Fitzgerald.
" Big Fitz" made
seventeen of the twenty-one
points scored by his team. He
scored three baskets from the
field and in addition shot fouls
in his usual excellent manner,
making eleven out of thirteen
shots count, a percentage of
.846. The shooting of Anderson and Calnon and the floor
work of West featured for Colgate.
The score:
Colgate
F.B. P.P. T.P.
Van A l s t y n c , r . f . . . .
1
0
2
Gabion, r.f
,.
4
o
8
Anderson, I.f
4
0
8
Reid, e
f
0
2
West, c
_
0
4
G l e n d e n n i n g , r.g. . .
1
o
2
Dwycr, I.g
1
4
6
Totals
14
4
Totals
6
10
22
F.B. P . P . T . P .
o
0
o
o
0
0
2
o
4
2
r,3 17
0
0
0
o
0
0
o
0
o
Totals
4
1,1
2r
Summary.
Score at half time — State College, 16; R. P. I., 10. Referee —
l.arlue. Colgate.
Timekeepers —
O'Brien, R. ft I.: H u b b a r d , State
College.
Fouls — S t a t e College,
<6: U. P . I., 11. Umpire — P..
Winchester, W e s l e y a n .
T i m e of
periods — 20 minutes,
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Hayford are the parents of a
daughter. Mrs. Hay ford was
formerly Lois Atwood,
Lovisa Vedder spent the past
week visiting at Delta Omega
and at the home of Caroline
Lipes.
We are glad to welcome
Winifred Moyner as a house
resident for the second semester.
DANCES.
The Slate College dances, directed by Miss Jack Wilbur
and Edwin Johnstone, will continue during the second half of
the year every Friday at the
usual time, 4:30 to 6:30.
These dances were very
popular and started many people on the road to be good conservative dancers.
The College Orchestra will
be used and every one is cordially invited.
,32
S t a t e College
F.B. P.P. T.P.
S. Fitzgerald, r.f...
3
n
17
Goewey, I.f
1
0
2
Miller, c
0
o
o
Jones, r.g
0
0
o
I l o h a u s , I.g
r
o
2
F. Fitzgerald, I . g . . .
0
0
o
Totals
5
11 21
Slate College
F B . F.F. T.P.
Score at half time — 14:13. RefS. Fitzgerald; r.f...
o
10 10
Goewey, I.f
3•
o
6
eree — Hill.
Timer — lluhhard.
Miller, e
3
o
6 Scorer — Dndicke. T i m e of halves
Jones, r.g
o
o
o
— 20 m i n u t e s .
F. Fitzgerald, r . g . ,
0
0
0
Ifohaus, I.g
o
o
o
R. P, I.
Ewing, r.f
Noyes, r.f
Robertson, l.f
Woolsey, c
O ' l l a r a , r.g
P a r r o i t , I.g
Behan, I.g
DELTA OMEGA.
HOCKEY TEAM LOSES TO R. P. I.
Continued from I'ngc 1
STUDENTS AND TEACHERS
for VACATION WORK write us
COLLEGE
BASE
'"0^J» B A L L
1917
SPALDING
BASE BALL RECORD
Over 100 tinges (if pictured—records—reviews— college notes—dual series—mimes
iminiigers, 1'iiptiilii mill conches—
lege, as he and 'Cassavant work ill'
schedules—In fact, everything that n
well together. Mowever, Coach phi.ver or fun wants to know, with nil
usual
coiienrnlng the profesHubbard rightly decided to re- sional features
slilc for which this remarkable
move him in order to save him book is noted.
400 pages; 25 Cents
for the basketball game at
night.
A. G. SPALDING & BROS.
52 State St., Albany, N. Y.
The score:
P . P. I.
Slate College
Goals
1'mwcr
TT. Lohdell
"Your friends can buy anything
you can give them except your
Photograph."
Cover Points
Keefer
Jones
V. Lohdell
College Rates $3.50 per dozen
and up
MacAvery
Reference Ihc Senior Clan
Cassavant
THE PEARSALL STUDIO
Points
Patterson
Rovers
Omcrly
Centers
ETA PHI.
Kraehn
Left
The Eta Phi girls were delightfully entertained by Ruth
Kimmey, at an informal dance
in Kimmey\s Bakery on February 17th.
Flmelta Van Dcloo entertained the Eta Phi girls at her
home Friday evening, February 23d. Needless to say, we
all had a most enjoyable time.
Wings
Johnson
Ncad
29 No. Pearl St.
Right W i n g s
Livingston
Goewey
Summary.
Score —- 4:2. Score at half time
— 2:0. Goals — R, P. I., Livingston, K r a e h n , O m e r l y , . J o h n s o n ;
S. C , C a s s a v a n t , Nead.
T i m e of
halves — 15 m i n u t e s . Referee —
l l u h h a r d . T i n i e r — Burns.
SCHNEIBLE'S
Developing, Kodak Film*, Printing
We develop any size of six exposure
films for ten cents, and prices for printing are the lowest in the city - and the
work is the best.
SCHNEIBLE'S PHARMACY
Corner Western and Lake Avenue*
Patfe Four
STATE COLLEGE NEWS, FEBRUARY 28, 1917
NEWMAN CLUB NOMI- fuel in internal combustion engines. The difficulties of using
NATES CANDIDATES
it for this last mentioned purFOR OFFICERS.
pose are: first, a source of obtaining the alcohol without
The newly established New- using up any of the needed
man Club met last Friday af- food-stuffs from which it may
ternoon for the purpose of be manufactured; and second,
further
organization.
Pro- a substance that will be enfessor Louis B. Ward, State tirely satisfactory as an agent
College '14, now a member of for denaturalization, there bethe
Albany
High
School ing large prizes offered for such
faculty, presided temporarily, a substance.
Of course, a
Josephine Keating, '17, gave a specially constructed engine
report on the progress of the must be used, as the ordinary
organization, whereupon can- gasoline engine will not work
didates were nominated for the satisfactorily with alcohol.
various executive offices.
•Miss Verna McCann was apA series of lectures and en- pointed as reporter for the
tertainments will be given in Club and will assume the duties
St. Patrick's Hall until the at once.
completion of the club rooms
in the Vinccntian Institute.
Monday evening, March 5th,
KAPPA NU.
marks the beginning of this
series. The tickets, which adWe welcome to membership
mit one to all the lectures, are
Kat'hrvn Resile '18,
free to all who will make good
Mildred O'Mallcy, Eileen
use of them. Application for
the same should be made to Kecfe, Mae Cronin and Aileen
Russell spent the week end of
Professor Louis Ward.
February inth at St. Stephen's
College,
Anuandalc-on-fFudson.
Y. W. C. A.
A • very enjoyable house
To-day at 4:40 Dr. Molden- dance was held at the Kappa
havver will give the second of Nil Mouse Monday evening,
his talks on the " Book of Reve- February rgt'h.
lations." Don't stay away because you didn't come last
week, t'he first talk was intro- COLLEGE LABORATORY
OPENED.
ductory.
If you have any
doubts as to the interest of
these talks ask someone who Albany Medical Students Greatly
was, present last Wednesday,
Benefited by N e w Equipment.
or, better still, come and see for
yourself.
A new physiological laboraFive Mission Study groups tory was recently installed in
are being formed, "Comrades the Albany Medical College
in Service " is the subject for costing about $2,000. This adtwo of these groups, one led by dition which does much to
Esther Aldrich on Tuesdays at place the college on a level with
nine-twenty, the other by the best in the country., was
Verna McCann on Thursday at made chiefly
through the
one o'clock. A third group efforts of Dean Thomas Ordwill study world missions and vvay. The latest equipment
world peace on Thursdays at was obtained and about $1,000
two-fifty with Marion Putnam, more will be expended next
A challenge to service is the year for further improvements.
subject for a group to meet
Because of the new laboraMondays at two-fifty with
Helen Fay. The fifth group, tory, several classes may be
which is open to juniors and added to the college course.
seniors only, will consider Mis- For the last few years students
sions and Sociology on Thurs- I have been obliged to work in
days at two-fifty, with Myra the Bender laboratory and
DnMond. Can't you joint one much time was lost each day on
the trip between the two places.
of these?
Dean Orel way said, while it
will still be impossible to do all
CHEMISTRY CLUB.
the work in the college laboratory, however, very little will
At a meeting of the Chem- have to be done at the Mender
istry Club, held recently, John laboratory in the future.
MacCracken gave a very interAnother innovation at the
esting talk on " Industrial Alco- college will be the installation
hols." Me mentioned briefly the of a smoking room which is
various sources from which nearing completion. Until last
alcohols are obtained and told fall smoking was permitted in
about some of their uses, such the 'halls between classes and
as solvents for different sub- at Dean Ordway's request the
stances, their use in explosives, students refrained from smokand particularly their use as a y ing [11 the building.
BROWN'S
Stylet
Quality
SHOES
At Medium Price*
149 CENTRAL AVE.
PHONE W.2230.J
I HE COLLEGE SHOE
STORE
Our Complete Line of
FRENCH PERSIAN IVORY
is the largest to be found
north of New York City
Very Acceptable Birthday
Presents
DONNELLY & HANNA
Up-to-Date
Pharmacy
Neckwear, Hosiery,,
Shirts, Sweaters
and Gloves
251 Central Avenue
Dawson's Men's Shop
2 5 9 Central Ave.
Ht'u J-foFot>l Clothiers
Near Lake
71 Stole Sired.
AlUy.NY.
THE
Avenue
WEST
END GROCERY
GEORGE KORETZ
ESSEX LUNCH
470
WASHINGTON AVE..
TELEPHONE W . 2 9 3 4
The Restaurant
College
favored
by
students
Marshman-Beebe Company
Incorporated I S M
Central A v e n u e
2 blocks^ f r o m R o b i n Street
PRINTERS
414 Broidwiy, cor. Btiwr Sf.,
ALBANY, N. Y ,
N. Y. Phone Main JI4-J
H. MILLER
John J. Conkey
NEWS DEALER
Cigars, Candy and Stationery
PRINTING u d DEVELOPING
ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES
215 Central A v e .
LADIES' A N D GENTS' T A I L O R
Cleaning, Repairing and Pressing
S P E O A l PRICES TO COUEGE STUDENTS
291 Ctntral A n a m
Writing
CAMERA FILMS
N. Y. Pbon. Weit 3973
Neat Essex Lunch
Paper
for
Students;
HALF M O O N LINEN
150 Sheets
Sheets Paper } # 1 __
125 Envelope!.
,]*1.<»5
Paper Per Box
EUGENE SISSON
35c.
Envelopes Per Pack
15c
CAMERA FILMS SCHOOL SUPPLIES,
PRINTING A N D DEVELOPING
A SPECIALTY.
R.F.CLAPP.JR.
207 CENTRAL AVE.
70 N. Pearl St
2 DOORS ABOVE ROBIN
State and Lark Sts.
PRICE, SERVICE AND QUALITY PRINTERS
Vrinttrs of Slate College fft(ew
HAMILTON PRINTING
2 4 0 HAMILTON STREET
:r
COMPANY
A L B A N Y . N . V.
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