S t a t e College News PROSH INVITED TO INTERS0R0R1TY TEA

advertisement
State College News
N E W YORK S T A T E COLLEGE FOR T E A C H E R S
Vor,. XI. No. 5.
FRIIMV, Oorontsit 15, l!)'J(i
PROSH INVITED TO
INTERS0R0R1TY TEA
Mildred Graves, '27, Is General
Chairman For Affair
Tomorrow
PRESIDENTS TO
RECEIVE
House Dances Either October
29 or 30, Council
Announces
'Tiltef sorority council invites all College freshmen to its annual tea in the
rotunda tomorrow afternoon from 3 to
5," Mildred Graves, '27, Kappa Delta,
general chairman, said.
The receiving line will consist of the
president of each sorority belonging to
Interson rity council:
Eudora Lampman, '27, Kappa Delta and president of
Iiitcrsoroity council; Rutli Empic, '27,
Delta Omega; Jane Green, '27, Eta
P h i ; Hilda Jane Sarr, '27, Fsi Gamma;
Ruth Lockard, '27, Chi Sigma T h e t a ;
Mildred Pawell, '27, Alpha Kpsilon P h i ;
Mary Mellon, '27, Gamma Kappa I'hi;
and Phoebe Skidmorc, '27, Beta Zela.
"The house dances this fall must take
place October 29 or 30," Miss Lailipman
announced this week. Open house will
not be observed by any sorority,
Each sorority probably will be pc'Vmitted this year to have one other house
dance in the spring, as in previous years,
according to Miss l.ainpman.
Committees a r e : refreshments, Delta
Omega, Esther Luyster, '28, and Eta Phi,
Grace Bronk, '27; music, Psi Gamma,
Harriet Parkhurst, '28; decorations, Chi
Sigma Theta, Margaret Moore, '28;
arrangements, Alpha Epsilon Phi, Mildred Siller, '27; ushers, Gamma Kappa
Phi, Edna Kempe, '28; flowers, iicla
Zeta, Marion Vedder, '27.
RUTH McNUTT WILL
DIRECT FIRST PLAY
WEDNESDAY EVENING
10 cents pel* copy, 83,00 per year
HER THRONE AWAITS NEW OCCUPANT
The first play of the advanced dramatics season, directed by Ruth McNttlt,
'27, will be presented Wednesday evening
in the auditorium at 8 o'clock.
The comedy, which is another of the
"eternal triangle" stories, is full of unexpected twists and situations, The cast
includes Agnes Hollcrah, '27, the woman, and Robert Shillinglaw, '29, who is
known for his work as the innkeeper in
"The Travelers" of last year and for
Mrs, Donald Moat,
his activity in dramatics at Albany High (Muriel L. Wenzel, '26)
school.
Last Year's
Rehearsals are being held daily to open
Campus Queen, Who
the 1920-27 season with a creditable
Gives Crown to
presentation, Chairmen of committees,
Etidora Lampman, '27, make-up and cosAnother
tumes; Metallic Grant, '27, house; and
Oct. 23
Louise Gunn, '27 stage. Miss Gunn will
be assisted by Lois Dunn, '27, Marcella
Street, '27, and Mary Merchant, '27.
The alumni will hold their quarterly
meeting and supper in the home economics cafeteria Thursday evening.
Miss
Mary (Irabu, instructor in English, will
lie in charge. Many alumni are expected
to attend the advanced dramatics class
play," Miss Grahn said.
STUDENT MOVEMENT
OUTLINED TO Y.W.C.A.
WorldCollegiansSeeking Higher
Goals, Miss Ashworth Says
Here Last Night
C H I N E S E
V E R Y
ACTIVE
"What Are American Students
Doing And Thinking?"
She Asks
An appeal to American undergraduate < to unite in a "student movement,"
as the students of Germany, China, and
Russia have done, was made lasl night
by Mis.-, Katherine Ashworth, secretary
: ii tli.' New York State Young Women's
Christian association, speaking before a
oid-sized audience in the auditorium.
The meeting was sponsored by the Colic e Y. W. ('. A. Miss Ashworth came
io Albany from New York yesterday.
"lias America a student movement?"
was the fpicstion which Miss Ashworth
proposed. "I:, there a wide-spread group
if students in this country bound lordlier by a common ideal towards which
hey are striving?"
"German youth,' 1 she said, "have or.auized hit" a national union. Single
(roups nf German students are scarchng for truth in new forms.
"i binese students have in past ccnuricj led their people. Today they are
taking an active, vital part in the naAll men's basketball games will be
tional life of their country,
played at home this season except those
"In F.urope, groups of Russian stuon the New York- trip, according to
dents convinced of the value of their
Clyde Slocum, '28, manager of men's
orthodox church are working for its
basketball,
preservation.
To Collect $11.00 Despite An Old Fashioned Program Will Be
"What are American students doing
The first game, with Jamaica Teachand thinking?" was Miss Ashworlh's
Increase In Budget Of
Marked
By
Costumes,
"Eats"
ers, December -I, will open the season a
question.
Ten Per Cent
And Stunts
week earlier than last year's.
Miss Ashworth was met by local asThe student lax of eleven dollars per
"An old-fashioned parly with a new- sociation representatives on her arrival
No games have been arranged for the
yesterday.
She is a graduate of HarNew York (rip, but contracts are ex- student will be collected in the history fashioned kick," is predicted by Dorothy vard college, class of 1925, She reoffice, room 203, on the following dales: Rabie, '28, chairman of the committee
Under a new ruling of the Student pected in a few days.
turned
a
few
months ago from the
seniors and special students, Monday and
Council, two new student-elected officers
Practice will start November 1.
Tuesday, October 18-19; juniors, Wed- of juniors who are to entertain their World Student Christian federation, held
become members of the body. They are
nesday and Thursday, October 20-21; freshman brothers ami sisters Friday it Nyborg, Denmark, at which she repMelanic Grant, '27, song leader, and
sophomores, Monday and Tuesday, Oc- evening, October 22, in the gymnasium. •eseuied the United States.
Ethel Dullois, '27, cheer leader.
tober
25-26; freshmen Wednesday and
They attended the meeting for the first
Grandmother's guwn and grandfather's
Thursday, October 27-28.
time Wednesday, October 6.
The student budget totaling $12,808.50 suit will be the Com ct garb, according
Members of the Student Council conwas unanimously accepted by both assem- to Miss Rabie.
sist of: president of the student association, Bertha Zajatl, '27; vice-presi"If grandmother's gowi lias long
Dr. George M. Wiley of Albany, new blies Friday. The student tax this year
will be $11.00 although there is a ten since reached the scrapbag
dent, Francis Griffin, '28; secretary,
Frances M. Benedict '29, was married
and grandEvelyn Graves, '29; and the presidents state commissioner for secondary educa- per cent increase in the budget over lasl father's e. at and trousers
to Daniel Theodore Hill, Sunday. The
have been ceremony was performed by the Rev.
of tne classes, Marcella Street, '27; tion, will address the weekly assembly year. The increase will be met by the devoured by moths, let no
Richard Jensen, '28; Thomas P. Fallon. next Friday, President A. R. Brubacher larger student enrollment, and from the as an excuse for not eoinin; ne use that Howard (i. Hageman in the parsonage
'20. The freshman class president will
reserve fund of the student association. iug the party," she said.
and enjoy- if the Trinity Methodist Episcopal
has announced.
become a member when elected.
Nine of the departments receiving finan"An old-fashioned stunt, other old- church, after the evening's service.
"The purpose of the student council
No definite programs have been pre- cial aid from the budget will be given fashioned features, including old-fashMable Kcllerhouse, '29, and Leon
is to plan assembly programs and to con- pared for assembly this morning, ac- an increase.
Although the sum for ioned eals, are on the old-fashioned pro- Stapley, both of Albany, were the attensider class problems which interest the
men's minor sports is decreased, the ;ram, the exact nature of which is dants.
cording
to
Bertha
Zajan,
'27,
president
whole college," Mr. Griffin said.
difference will be used in the budgets veiled in secrecy."
Mr. Hill is a former student of Alof the student association.
of men's basketball and men's baseball.
Member.-, ol
the committee a r c : bany Law School and is a graduate of
Charlotte Jones, decorations; Emily Wil- Ca/.enovia seminary. Miss Benedict is
liams, refreshments; Dorothy Rowland, from Walton, where she taught a year
music; Ruth Lane, stunt; and Dorothy before entering State College
Lasher, other entertainment.
Mr. and Mrs. Hill will be at home
"The sophomores will place the code
at 288 Washington avenue, October 15
of penalty for freshman offenders be"The man who doesn't learn to play uis tournament for men this fall.
after a short trip to Syracuse, where
fore Myskania today," said Betty Eaton,
thev will visit Mr. Hill's parents, the
Thomas P. Fallon, '29, an assistant
'29. The names of all freshmen not will be a pitiable spectacle in his middle
Rev. Iloyt F. Hill and Mrs. Hill.
wearing their buttons were taken after age," President A. R. Brubacher told business manager of the NEWS was
Mrs. Hill is a member of Beta Zcta
freshman history lecture Monday, but seventy-five undergraduate and faculty toastmaster. Lloyd Fishbaugh sang two
adverse weather cou- sorority.
I [andicapped
no measure of punishment was meted men at a dinner in the cafeteria Saturicning
of
the
touruaselections,
accompanied
by
David
dilions
at
the
out to the violators. "A second offense day evening.
men have played only
ment, the Colt
Sehultes at the piano.
will merit serious penalty," warned Miss
Dr. Brubacher advised selecting a
the tennis elimination
Slocum Announces Basketball
Eaton.
Several three-round boxing bouts took five matches
sport for a life time.
contest.
Program Of Eleven Home Games
"Ten years from now you won't think- place in the gymnasium following the
Joseph Herney, '29, manager of the
'l'lie 1926-27 basketball schedule
back over the competition as much as men's dinner, sponsored by the N E W S tournament, announced that about twelve
Saturday
evening.
Those
participating
College Doors Are Closed Next
reads, as given out by Manager
over the outdoor physical life," be said.
mat lies remain to be played in the openwere: Clarence Nephew, '28, vs. George i ig round before the pair-offs can be
docum : :
Thursday And Friday Afternoons Dr. Adna W. Rislcy, head of the his- Taylor,
'30; Thomas P. Fallon, '29, vs. • wide for the second beat. In tlie sets
tory
department,
spoke
on
sportsmanI ice. 4—Jamaica Teachers, here.
All afternoon classes will be susBernard
Auerbach,
'29;
Abraham
Miller,
ship.
laved Arthur Lyman, '27, defeated
\hr. 10— Plattsburg Normal, here,
pended at College next Thursday and
'29, vs. Samuel Cooper, '29; Roy Sulli- .' bert I. Shillinglaw, '28, by the -.core
"If
a
man
loses
his
sportsman's
soul,
Friday, during the Albany convention
Jan. 8—Open dale, here.
van, '29, vs. Ward Cole, '30; Joseph 0-3, it 2. loseph Salmon, '27, won from
what
will
it
profit
him
to
gain
a
vicof the state teachers' association.
Jan. 14—Oswego Normal, here.
tory?" he said. " W e have here the em- Salmon, '27, vs. Leo Allen, '30; Louis Rejinalcl ' Stanhope, '29, 12-1(1, 0-2.
This announcement was made Tuesbryo for a fine college of men," he said. Klein, '29, vs. Michael Tepcdiuo, '28; Ralph Stanley, '28, won two out of three
Ian. 21—Buffalo Normal, here.
day by President A. R. Brubacher,
Plans for men's swimming lessons at Foscpli Herney, '29, vs. Rudolph Worth, sets from Samuel Cooper, '29, 1-6, 8-6,
Jan. 22—Clarkson Tech., here.
following action by the faculty Mon'30;
Hamilton
Acheson,
'30,
vs.
Abraham
Bath 3 were presented by Rutherford
9-7. Pa»e Matt.'ce, '27, took two sets
Feb. 5—Alumni here.
day afternoon.
R. Baker, instructor in physical educa- Folk, '30.
from William J, Clarke, '27, 6-4, 6-4,
Feb, 9-12—N. Y. trip, games pendForenoon classes will meet as usual,
tion, l i e also spoke of developing tenRutherford R. Baker, instructor in Thomas Herney, '30, won from Francis
ing.
but there will be no classes between
nis and boxing here.
physical education, was referee.
John Griffin, '28, by default.
Feb. 18—St, Michael, here,
12 and S o'clock. Classes will meet
Clarence L. Nephew, '29, captain of Gainer and J. Roland Stevenson, two
"The remaining matches in the first
Feb. 24—-Alfred University, here.
on Saturday as usual.
varsity basketball, spoke of basketball former students were judges.
round should be played off as soon as
March
5—Mechanic's
Institute,
T h e home economics and vocational
and baseball, "We have no one year
The decisions were given to Nephew, possible so that the contest can go into
here.
sections of the convention will meet
rule here, so we hope to see the fresh- Miller, Salmon, Klein, Herney and the second round before winter brings
March 11.—Open, here.
Thursday and Friday afternoon in
men come out for sports," he said.
\cheson, The judges declared a draw the sets to a close," Mr, Herney said.
Basketball practice will start Nothe College buildings.
Joseph Wcrney, '29, a member of the between Fallon and Auerbach, and
Tin' games not finished this fall will
vember 1, for the 1926-27 season.
men's athletic council, spoke of the ten- Sullivan and Cole.
I be played off in the spring.
BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
HAS ONE TRIP LISTED
STUDENT TAX DDE JUNIORS WILL GIVE
DURINGJHIS MONTH PARTY FOR FROSH
STUDENT COUNCIL IS
ENLARGED BY RULING
DR. GEORGE M. WILEY
SPEAKS NEXT FRIDAY
SOPHOMORE PENALTIES
ARE SUBMITTED TODAY
SOPHOMORE GIRL WEDS
ALBANY LAW STUDENT
Pity The Man Who Can't Play", Says Dr. Brubacher;
College Tunneys Furnish Fun At News' Men's Dinner
MEN TO RESUME GAMES
IN TENNIS TOURNAMENT
:
STATE COLLEGE NEWS, OCTOBER 15, l92fl
State College News
liSTAiiusirKn liv THE CLASS or 1918
The
Undergraduate Newspaper of New York
State College for Tcaclicrs
"
"
THE NEWS BOARD
EnwiM VAN KLEECK
Editor-in-Chief
Kappa
Delta
Rlio House,
West 4314
HELEN ZIMMERMAN
858 M a d i s o n A v e n u e , W e s t
Business Manager
4646-R
All "excuses" from payment of the tax should be
abolished by the board, If necessary, students unable to
meet the entire tax could be given the opportunity to pay
in amounts as small as thirty or forty cents a week. No
one would then be made to suffer unfairly.
Your board should, give full and early publicity to those
who attempt to cvfide the tax, since these students must
have themselves voted for it. There were no dissenting
votes in cither assembly Friday.
Your enforcement committee should see that all who refuse to pay or delay doing so unduly arc removed, by the
proper method, front any student office, and from participation in any extra-curricular activity, athletic or otherwise.
They should be barred from voting at student assemblies,
Sufficient publicity should be given them so that they will
not feel free to take copies of the Quarterly, NEWS, directory and other publications which must necessarily be distributed in a wholesale manner.
The College authorities should as in the past have their
attention directed to delinquent students. The same persons
who shirk their student tax will be dodging other obligations later. Such persons will not make good teachers.
There is no reason why the student tax cannot be collected before Christmas. To allow collection to drag
through until May is absurd because it is not necessary.
To allow students who pay nothing but promises to benefit
for six or seven months equally with those who do earn
and pay their share is unfair. To hamper organizations by
cutting their budgets and to delay their work because the
tax is slow in coming in is unfair.
No blame attaches to your body for these faults. They
are largely faults of the present system. To repeat, your
board cannot be expected to be its own policeman. But the
system can be improved. A policeman can be found.
Everyone has voted for the tax. Everyone should pay or
be-barred from the budget's benefits.
Zajan Says Budget
Acceptance Was
Childlike
BY BEUTIIA ZAJAN,
President Student, Association
Many of the upper classmen and the
faculty were disappointed by the manner
in which (he student budget was accepted in assembly last Friday, It,was
59 So. r.nko Avenue, West 1695-J
characteristic of an attitude of a child
TIIELMA TEMPLE
Subscription Manager
who has perfect confidence in his parPsl Gamma House, Went 2752
ent's plans for his career and accepts
SK.VIOH ASSOCIATE EDITORS
KATHARINE U I . E N I S , '27
J I / I . I A KAY, '27
ihem without question.
T I I E L M A L. BREZEE, '27
f.oiusE I). G U N N , '27
J U N I O R ASSOCIATE EDITORS
The btirget showed great increases in
ADBUIDK Hoi-LlSTER, ' 2 8
IjtUi VAN SclIAICK, '28
several instances. The increases were
MARY J U D I T H LANODON, '28
DOROTHY W A T T S , '28
probably justified, but it is natural to cxREPORTERS
Kuril H. M C N U T T , '27
Hosts DRANSKY, '29
ptvl a curiosity and a seeking of explaKENT PEASE, 'XI
MOI.I.IE KAUFMAN, '29
nations.
It is unnatural to accept it
MAROARBT PROVOST, '27
M A Y K I . I W E N , '29
IIKRTIIA .'<ATAN, '27
FLORENCE KOKN, '29
without
question as it was accepted FriKATHLEEN DOUGHTY, ' 2 8
tlKSSllt I.AI'EDES, '29
R U T H FLANAGAN, '28
I.ORENA MARCUS, '29
day, and portrays a lack of interest and
MILDRED GABEL, '28
ELIZADLTH I'ULVER, '29
a ' slovenly attitude of "follow the
R U T H G. MOORE, '28
CAROLINE S C I I L E I C H , '29
GERTRUDE P.RASLOW, '29
ROBERT J. S I I I L L I N O L A W , '29
leader."
VERA IIELLE W E L L O T T , '29
A S S I S T A N T BUSINESS MANAGERS
The situation presented a striking
K R W I N r.. MAKER, '27
DOROTII c IIANDI.ON, ' 2 7
question and two possible answers. Why
T H O M A S P. FALLON, '29
A N N E HOLROYD, '28
do students accept a motion without disFRANCIS E. G R I F F I N , '28
MILDRED LANSLEY, '29
K A T H E R I N E SAXTON, '28
cussion and let themselves be heard comRUTH
KEI.LEY,
Assistant
Subscription
Manager
plaining in tlie college corridors later?
DR, HARRY W. HASTINGS, Faculty Adviser
SARA MARKLEY, Director of News W r i t i n g Class
The answers suggested are that they do
W I L L I A M M . FRENCH, Desk Editor
T H E L M A L. IIREZEE, President, News Club; D.IROTIIY W A T T S , Vicenot feel themselves a part of the whole
President; MILDRED LANSLEY, S e c r e t . r y - T r c a s u r c r
student body and hence lack interest, or
Published every Friday in the college year by the Editorial Board
else they fear being a member of the
Vssociation.
Subscription, $3.00 per
representing the Student
minority. There are times when groups Dear Blue
year, single copies, ten cent s. Delivered anywhere in the United
"HOW TO WRITE A THESIS IS HELPFUL; act on impulse; they are swayed by the .The "Ped
States. Entered as second c ass matter at poslofticc, Albany, N. Y.
AMHERST ALSO PRINTS STUDENT VERSE
personality of a speaker rather than not a com i
The News does not ncces airily endorse sentiments expressed in
contributions. N'o coaimunie, ti.ms will be printed unless the writers'
BY E. V. K
placing confidence in their own method
names are left with the K.I t.ir-in-Cbief of the News. Anonymity
Kill be preserved if so desir ill.
I low to Write a Thesis. By Ward (I. Rcedcr, 136 pp. f reasoning. If those in the minority,
OWE!
n the other baud, have confidence in
Bloomington, III.: Public School Publishing Co.
PRINTED BY M I L L S \ R T PRESS, 394-i'J6
Broadway
'Twas tli
Professor Reeder's book fills a long-felt need and fills it
their
view,
they
should
be
willing
to
qtt;
Friday October 15, 1926
Vol. XI. No. 5
well. Its treatment of its suject is adequate. It considers prove that they are in the right and
When
in order the scientific nature of the thesis, the seldctions,
a
Not fn
dclimination and planning of the problem, the working point out wherein the majority is wrong.
NOW COLLECT THE TAX!
Not cv
This would be an ideal democracy. Il
bibliography and the collection of material. It lells how
The fello
to organize and interpret material, how to make citations is not too much to expect of our student
AN O P E N L E T T E R T O T H E S T U D E N T
Neat ir
and footnotes, how to prepare statistical material and illusFINANCE BOARD
In hopes
trations. There is a chapter about the final bibliography, association.
Soon vi
The council is anxious to use assembly
Tin's is (lie ninth year in which yon have been commissome miscellaneous suggestions and some advice on how to
time in a way which will show best the
publish theses. The book is concrete. Sample pages from
sioned by the student body to collect its self-impoed tax
trend
of.
student
thought
hud
be
most
theses are included. There are questions for review purfur the support of student activities.
Ye moderi
pose and a very complete index. Those who aspire to useful to you. Select a leader, if you
V'uti have done great work in the last nine years. You
what the NE
Higher educational honors will get definite help from this wish, and let" us share your .difficulties.
merit much praise, for yours has been truly a labor of love.
book.
the copy rea
But despite your zeal there are still outstanding evils in
report hanrle
MR. PEASE ALSO
Amherst Undergraduate Verse (1026.) Compiled by
the tax collection system. Some of these are:
David Morton, 57 pp. Boston: Marshall Junes.
A large proportion of students, including scores of those
Mirs. Wooda
This book of student verse differs from that published
who vote annually for the "unanimous adoption" of your
Coast and ?
last term by State College in that all of its poems were
budget recommendations, evade paying the tax. The reihey returnei
written by men who were last term on the campus at Amsult is an unequitable division of the cost of student activiSficrb'iurne
liv KENT PHASE
herst, in their undergraduate careers. It is the second volties among those who do pay, and a cut in the budgets of
days,
lint t
For freshmen only. Everyone has They moved
ume of Amherst undergraduate verse. Most of the poems,
benefiting organizations which sometimes amounts, as it did
its editor tells us, first saw the light in meetings of the welcomed you, beginning with the seating his v
last year, to ten per cent.
President and ending with the News Woodard w
Poetry Society of Amherst college. The bonk is beautifully
Some of these delinquent students furnish no satisfactory
bound. The poems are varied, and their general excel- club. Yes, we're glad too, to add our There he m
excuse for non-payment and their names are read before
little
bit, but thai isn't what this is Welcome sin
lence is high.
the student association and published in this paper.
about. Welcomes, booster-talks, ban- spending
Hit! students equally able to pay, students who to the
a ft
quets,
parties, and such like are good,
knowledge of all their fellows, have money for many other
Caleb I'easlee. lly Frank K. Rich. .324 pp. $2,00. Phila- but remember they tell you only half wife,"
uses, convince your board that they are destitute. They
delphia: Altemus.
arc "excused" and the student body never, directly at least,
Those who read this book expecting to find it a second of it.
;
"Tuvctlearns their names. It would be difficult to prove definitely
The writer still remembers the joys of
"David Harum," are asking too much, but "Caleb Pcaslee"
; canary, ot
the truth of the prevailing belief that most of these excused
is, nevertheless a good yarn. Caleb is not so different from being a freshman. You've come to the I floss budi,
students are as able to pay as are several hundreds of
the David you recall so well and so fondly. He is a Maine front of all learning, good comradeship,
! nuilli/died
those who settle without complaint or hesitation. Such a
farmer and the things one remembers from the book are inspiration, and salvation. "Olympus
belief exists and conviction on the point is growing
largely his observations on subjects many and diverse, for has set its feast for you—only draw
[With the C
stronger.
Caleb is a good deal of a philosopher in an amateur way. up and begin the four-year partaking the only difft
Some of the benefiting organizations, including some
You will chuckle at the wholesome humor of this book of honey and ambrosia," (that's what •ey and a
which receive large amounts, make little or no effort to aid
after a few seasons of psychoanalysis and psychiatry. You all the others have told you, in one way I Ifcmpsey tool
tax collection. Openly, in many cases, they admit scores
will find the characters simply but well-drawn portraits,
or another.) But shortly you begin to minutes and |
of students to their entertainments without a show of tax
discover that the honey needs straining lakes a beat
cards. "It's all right; we must have a respectable crowd
Washington Irving's Diary (Spain 182R-1829.) Edited and that tlie ambrosia tastes suspiciously •ets a frater
for the 'artist,'" is the confessed statement of many of these
by Clara Louisa Penney. 142 pp. New York: Hispanic like hash—damnable stuff.
You've pay for.
organizations. The effect of their practice is to delay paySociety of America.
found it so already? Just as we thought.
ment of the tax by hundreds of students until the last posOne's acquaintance with Washington Irving may be
As we
The welcome-speeches do not tell you
sible moment. Many succeed in escaping it entirely.
limited to, say, the "Sketch Hook," but thai will not inter- how
How' ja
nasty the uelcoincrs are going to
The truth of many of the above statements is of course
fere with his enjoyment of this diary, written during
|
Take a
known to your body. But are you not without a remedy?
Irving's life in the country with which his name has come be as soon as you have begun to stick
:
stick
of d;
your
head
above
the
crowd;
the
boostcrYour board is a council to receive and govern the outlay
to be so closely associated. This part of Irving's history
about it.
of student budget monies, and cannot therefore be held rehas been presented often enough before, but never in such talks refrain from mentioning the penalties imposed on, any originality; the
sponsible also for the enforcement of tax collection. The
personal detail as in these notes which have been edited
Dear Twins,:
huge labor of collection enforcement that you have loyally
from manuscript in the possession of the Hispanic Society. banquets never mention the dishes that
I 'am in In
assumed in previous years has been therefore largely your
There are a number of reproductions of pages from tlie you'll have,to vvash (as a frosh and who admires
extra free-will contribution to student welfare. The stu"Diary." You will be interested in nearly all the entries, later) ; the parties tlo not, at first, sug- know my be
dent association appreciates and is grateful for this work.
gest how they talk about the cut of your
especially those dealing with Spanish society.
I do want to
But it would ask too much of your board, if it demanded
clothes and your need of a hair-cut.
do?
that you alone continue this work without aid.
That's what this is about. Just a
In consideration of the statements above, the NEWS theregentle warning that this fount of all
fore respectfully submits to your body the following sugTEN YEARS AG 1 IN STATE COLLEGE
learning draws its intelligence from a Dear Anxiou.'
gestions :
Why not b
very well-intentioned, but entirely huFrom files of News for Oct. 18, 1918
That some additional student machinery for the systemman faculty; that good comradeship is
atic collection of the student tax be set up immediately. A
a thing you'll have to work very hard
possible step would be the formation of a committee to act
He (over tl
"The University Convocation is to be held in the State yourself to secure; that the inspiration
with your board. This committee might consist of the
Education Building, October 18-20."
will probaly be mostly perspiration; and Are you goto;
treasurers, managers or cither financial officers of the beneShe
flluttc
"The State Military Training Commission, consisting of
that your salvation . . . well, if
fiting groups.
State Commissioner of Education John If. Fiuley, Dr. you're any good you've already got it. haven't a thin
This committee could set definite dates by which the tax
Thomas A. Storey, and Dr. George Fisher, recently met
He (poison
Understand me? Well, I'm not sure
must be paid, Sufficient time could be provided, so that
and appointed Dr. Storey State Inspector for physical
dear. . You v
that I do either.
there would be injustice to no one. A period, for example,
training in the C. C. N. Y."
voti ?
VIRGINIA HrcoiNs.
Managing Editor
550 Washington Avenue, West 2096-.; _
SARA BARKLEY
Associate Managing Editor
a
HIRES A HALL
STATE COLLEGE NEWS, OCTOBER 15, 192(5
SIX NEW TEACHERS
ARE STATE ALUMNI
FOUR NEW WOMEN FACULTY MEMBERS
BATTLE GROUND OF
REVOLUTIONARY WAR
IS SEEN BY HIDLEY
Clarence llidley, assistant professor
of history, attended the twenty-seventh
annual meeting of the New York State
Historical association at New York city.
September .30 to October 2.
The meeting was held to study Revolutionary history in and about New York
city.
Mr. Illdley visited Columbia university, and the Cathedral of St. John the
Divine,
lie attended a dinner at the
Columbia university faculty club . at
which President Nicholas Murray Butler spoke.
The chamber of commerce tendered a
luncheon to the delegates;
Mr. Hid Icy visited the American Wing
of
the
Metropolitan
museum,
and
Fraiinee':. Tavern.
The (!.'le;ates visited the house in
We.stclie 'ci' c 'tinty where Andre was
court nnrt'alcd, the headquarters of
Washing • •!
at
White
Plains, and
Colonel Hammnnd's house.
"Westt
unity," said Mr. HidMan's Land between
I British forces in the
the Am;' ;c
Revolution.'
Mr. Hal ey ai Led in Albany Salurite to attend the News
dub clinnci
"1 h a w a I way been a friend of the
\'i-:ws," s-| d Mr I lidlcy, "and I regret
could not be present."
ery inn h that
Others From Nebraska, Texas,
Maryland And South
Carolina
Six of tlic ten new faculty members
arc graduates of State College, according to interviews they have given tiie
NEWS.
"TEACHER" WILL BE
CONVOCATION THEME
Life Cf Alexander Hamilton To
Be Shown To Faculty And
Alumni By Films
State College faculty and graduates
.viil attend the sixty-second convocation
f the University of the State of New
York in the state education building,
Jctober 28 and 29. The theme of the
•oiiference will be "The Teacher," ac•irding to an announcement issued by
he State Department of Education. The
irog'ram has been shaped largely by a
•einmittee of schoolmen representing the
'ducatioiial organizations of the State,
villi George II. Covey, president of the
,'ew York Stale Teachers' association
erving as head of the group and as
.dec chairman of the convocation.
Dr, S. N, Brownell, new assistant
professor of education, is from Lincoln,
Nebraska. He is a graduate of the University of Nebraska, 1921, and has received his doctor's degree from Yale,
lie is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and
Phi Delta Kappa honorary education
society. He was for two years principal of the training high school of the
State College for Teachers in Nebraska.
Dr, Milton (i. Nelson, assistant professor in education, is from Oiieonta,
Among those wdio will address the
N. Y., and graduated from State Colinvocation are Dr. Harry Emerson Foslege in 1924. lie has studied at Oneonta
Jick, whose subject will be "The InNormal and New York university, lie
spiring Power of the Teacher," Profesreceived his doctor's degree from I urnell
sor William C. Bagley of Teachers'
in June.
aillcge, Columbia university, who will
Dr. Nelson is a member of Camilla
speak on the training and selection of the
chapter of Kr.ppa Delta lino at State
College, of Phi Kappa Phi, a profesteacher; Frank W. Ballon, supcrintensional education fraternity, and of Phi
lent of schools of Washington, D. C ,
Delta Kappa, an honorary education soHI the improvement of teachers in servciety, lie was in the army for fiftccen
ce, and President Mary Woollcy of
mouths in the World War, and served
Mount llolyokc college, wdio will disin l'i .uce in Company A, ,10th Machine
Gun Battalion, 77th division.
'liss leaching as a profession.
Miss Ellen Stokes, a graduate of
T. Frederick II I andlyn. instructor
Courtesy Albany Evening X<
One of the features of the sessions
Brown university, from which she has
of mil' c, will play "Sonata I )ramatica,"
ivill be the presentation of the Yale
received her master's degree, taught
li h won a national University Press Film Service screen
mathematics at Cokcr college, S. C , last
mposition, in New depicting the life and work of Alexander
year.
York r l i - h • 11t.
o"d week in Novem- Hamilton. 'Ibis will he accompanied by
Miss Julia Corinne Troy, from Centerville, Md., is now with the home ecoi lecture on the subject by Dr. Dixon
nomics department. She is a graduate
Proin'm
i in the music field wil Ryan Fox, Professor of History at
of Columbia university, having obtained
Professor Richmond H. Kirtland of
gcly .- «
the audience.
Columbia university.
both bachelor of science and master of
the education department invites the
'Sonata I Iramatir
II not he played
arts degrees there. She formerly taught Booths Will Be Open From 7 freshmen to visit him at his new home.
In announcing the plans for the conin Albai \ il
M . Canillyn said.
To 11, Says Ruth Maynard,
in Western Maryland college, West
7.38 Western avenue. "Come any lime,"
Mr. ( a.
;anisl and choir vocation, Frank P. Graves, commissioner
Minister, Md.
he said, "but you may find me seeding lirector at :
Y. W. C. A. Chairman
'f education and chairman of the colPaul's Episcopal church
my lawn this week if it doesn't rain."
Miss Jeanetta Wright, '26, is now
He rcce.ill) relurnei
from
England cue trustees, issued the following invi"Our goal this year is $500 profit," said
teaching in the chemistry department.
where he sti led cube Iral music during ation to teachers and school officials:
She was president of Kappa Delta soror- Ruth Maynartt '27, speaking of the Pollock P a s s e s State Test.
the summer.
"As this is the one time in the year
ity last year, a member of the Girls' annual Y. W. C. A. bazaar to be held
Carolyn Pollock, who received the de.vheu the Board of Regents and the
Athletic association, and a member of
gree of master of arts from State Colin
the
gymnasium
December
3.
Last
state Department have the privilege of
the College Y. W. C. A.
lege last June, received the highest rating
icting as hosts to the teachers and
Miss Jcancttc Sheffield, '24, has be- year the proceeds were $415.
in a recent examination for deputy regchool officials of the State, it is hoped
come a member of the Knglish departEntertainment will last about forty- istrar of vital statistics in Albany.
that we shall have as our guests as many
ment. She will assist Miss Katharine five minutes, but the booths will be open
Of the ,529 students registered in the of the educational people as our comoE. Wheeling, supervisor of practice
Betty Eaton is Pledged.
teaching, and supervises the freshman from seven to eleven o'clock, according
frcshliman class, thirty are men and lious auditorium can possibly contain.
Gamma Kappa Phi welcomes Hetty
class in Milne High school. Her home to present plans. The committee re.'00 are women. This is an increase of We especially wish that the teacher shall
is in Athens, N. Y.
fused to divulge plans for the enter- J. Eaton, '29, into pledge membership.
forty-four over the 2H? students who feel that the convocation is not only a
Miss Alice Clear, instructor in Eng- tainment, but promised "a complete surplace to discuss important problems in
Grace Brown, '26, Marries.
registered in the class of 1929 and an
lish, graduated State College in '22. She prise."
education bill is an occasion upon which
Gamma Kappa Phi announces
is from Albany, and a member of Chi
increase of five men over the twenty-five those directly connected with the State
A dinner will be served in the cafe- marriage of Grace Brown, '26, to
Sigma Theta. She spent the summer
men then registered in last year's fresh- department and those directing and perMilford Smith Playford.
studying at the Middlebury School of teria preceding the bazaar.
rmn c!a--s. Of these 329 students, scven- forming the real practical work in the
Gamma Kappa Phi announces
English, Middlebury, Vt.
Collection dates for contributions will
schools of the state may meet and come
Miss Marjorie Mellows, '26, has re- he from October 15 to November 15 marriage of Mildred Meservc '26, to '.ce i are registered in the bom
moniMr. David Ovitt, graduate of Colgate- ics department, twenty-nine ;
turned as instructor in English. She was
regis- to know each other and understand their
mutual problems better."
a member of Myskania and president of when all contributions must be in. Con- and a member of Theta Chi.
:crcd for the I!. S. of C. E. degree and
tributions will consist of all kinds of
Psi Gamma last year.
the remainini; 2H1 for the Bachelor of
David
Smurl,
'29,
in
A
r
m
y
.
Miss Alice Gooding, '26, is an instruc- fancy
work,
handkerchiefs,
towels,
tor in biology. She is a former presi- scarfs, collar and cuff sets, novelties,
David Smurl, Jr., president of the \ i t s degree.
The senior class has the next largest
dent of Biology club, a Y. W. Cabinet
class of '29 last year, is now a private
member and art editor on the 1926 Peda- fancy pillows, vanity sets, shoe bags, in the 26th regular United Slates In- registration with 2fi8 students, the sophogogue. She studied at the Cornell sum- dioc trees and handicraft work.
fantry encamped at P i t t s b u r g h , N. Y. more class has 2-17 and the juniors 244.
Approximately 6000 school teachers
mer session.
Miss Maynard is general chairman
He hopes to enter West Point from
Miss Jean Stuart, instructor in home and will be aided by the following com- the ranks and is making a record fur One hundred fifteen special anil gradu- will c .in.: to Albany October 21 and 22
ate students are registered making a to attend the district convention of the
economics, graduated from
Columbia
himself at the camp.
eastern group of (he New York state
university in 1911 with the degree of mittees :
grand total of 1,202 students.
Tickets, Dorothy Lasher, '28; supper, Miss W r i g h t Visits Keuka Lake.
teachers' association.
bachelor of science and obtained a mastunes
The
colic
;e
registration
Two sessions will be conducted simulter of arts degree in 192(1. She is a Margaret Stoutenburgh, '28; publicity,
Jeanetta
Wright,
'26,
c h e m i s t r y that of Milne High seho
wine
Katherine
lilenis,
'27;
tables,
Sara
Bartaneously
and will be held in Albany
member of Omicron Nil and Delta Zeta
laboratory assistant, stayed this sumThe principal
registered in the lour churches and theatres.
at Columbia. Miss Stuart spent the past klcy, '27; stunt, Ruth Lane, '28; music, mer at her cottage at Dundee, on 200 stu
din ng scventy-fi\
year at Texas State College for Women, Dorothy Rabie, '28; decorations, Ade- Keuka Lake. T e n n i s and s w i m m i n g classes,
the speakers will be Dr. Frank P. Graves,
slate
commissioner
of
education;
Dr.
a member of the home economics de- laide Hollister, '27; class booths, fresh- were the sports at the lake shore.
entering
V W. Heaver, minister of the Lake
partment there. "The life in the south men, Louise T r a s k ; sophomore, Louise
Mathcwson
;
junior,
Jcancttc
Waldbillig;
\ve-me
Baptist
church,
Rochester;
Alis vastly different from that of the east.
'icrt Edward Wiggau, New York City,
The people there seem to be more en- senior, Florence Hudson; faculty, Miss
Edith O. Wallace, instructor in Latin;
iournalist and author; and Thomas Skeythusiastic and open with their cmoti
lapanc.se,
Florence
Potter,
'28;
Ruth
'lill, an Australian poet.
she said. Miss Stuart has visited n irly
Moore, '28; flowers, Esther Millies, '27;
Delegates are expected from Albany,
all the states in the Union.
•andy. Goldena Bills, '28; ice cream,
'liuton, Columbia, Dutchess, Essex, Ful''The first Quarterly for the year will
Vera Belle Wcllott, '29; men's specialty,
ton, Greene. Montgomery, Rensselaer,
,.ulna Roys, '27; Y. W. C. A. house, be published early in November," Miss
Saratoga. Schenectady, Schoharie, W a r Martha Baker, '28; Co-op, Miss Helen Julia Fay, '27, editor-in-chief, has anMail 1,100 Copies of News Extra
•("l and Washington counties.
Austin
P. Fay, manager; grab bag, Caroline nounced. " W e are including a new de'•!. t'oulson. principal of Albany public
To Colleges, Schools and Alumni
Schleich, '29.
schiol 12, is president of the eastern
partment, and will retain the last year's
Eleven hundrci additional copies
division.
cover design."
of the birthday < •xtra edition puby
the
STATE
COI.lished Monday b
"Only two more weeks remain to send
to
l F.OE N K W S have becn mailed
copy in lor the first issue of the Quarcolleges in the United States, to
terly," Miss Fay said, "Copy may be
recent alumni, New York state high
Miss Maud Malcolmn, assistant in- put in the 'Q' mail box."
schools and Albany business men
The student directory, which is exstructor
of
French,
spent
the
summer
About 150 colleges with enrollSeniors and alumni
started a
pected early in November, promises to
seeing places of interest at Lake Ceorgc
ments of 1.000 students each, or
the
to
built
campaign
be
the largest the College has ever seen.
inscription
up
and
Lake
Champlain, and
visiting
more, were sent copies of the tenth
It will contain the names of the faculty
friends en route. Montreal was also list.
anniversary number.
About Inly
and
the entire student body. The home
A prize will be given for the best
among the places visited.
additional colleges in this state
address, Albany address, and telephone
"From Montreal to Prescott, on Lake work in prose and the best in poetry
w. re also on the list. Four hunnumber of each person will be given.
Ontario, the rise in the locks is in some during the college year. Types of condred College alumni of the last two
In addition, the class numerals will folplaces two hundred feet, making the tributions which may be submitted a r e :
classes were graduated were also
low each student's name,
essay,
short
story,
verse,
book
review
boat
ride
very
interesting,"
she
said.
Courtesy
Albany
Evening
News
sent samples. T w o hundred copies
The committee consists of the followFrom Prescott, Miss Malcolm took a and dramatic criticism.
went to prospective advertisers in
Stouteu- ing students: Abbie Crawford, '27;
boat to Toronto, then to Lake Huron.
Members of the Quarterly staff a r e : assistant editors; Margaret
Albany. T h e regular College alEvelyn Biddle, '27; Ruth Lane, '28;
A visit to a scientific farm featured the Miss Fay, '27, editor-in-chief; Dorothy bur h. '28, business manager; Helen
lotment of 1,200 copies was also
trip.
She also visited Niagara Falls Wardell, '27, Harold Perry, '27, Grace Mansi MI, '28. Mary Langdnn, '28, Mar- Margaret A. Wilcox, '28; Marion
printed of the extra.
and Ithaca.
Woodford, '28, Dorothy Walts, '28, garet Provost, '27, advertising managers, Sloan, '29; Zora Gerow, '30.
METROPOLIS WILL HEAR
CANDLYN PLAY SONATA
BAZAAR GOAL $500; COLLEGE BRIEFS
ASK CONTRIBUTIONS
282 FROSH SEEK A . B.;
29 IN COMMERCE WORK
6,000 TEACHERS TO BE
IN ALBANY 0CT0BER21
First Quarterly Will Be Published Early In November;
Prizes To Be Given For Best Prose And Poetry of Year
INSTRUCTOR JOURNEYS
TO FALLS AND CANADA
COMMITTEE WILL ISSUE
DIRECTORY NOVEMBER 1
STATE COLLEGE NEWS, OOTOIJEB 16, 1020 '•"
INSTRUCTORS STUDY
AND TOURCOUNTRY
At World Congress
Or. Croasdale Spends Vacation
Swimming And Hiking In
Adirondacks
Dr. Caroline! Croasdale, College physician, spent a few weeks with her family in Philadelphia, then went to a ramp
in the Adirondacks where she passed the
remaining; time. While at camp, she improved her physical condition by swimming, hiking and dancing. Dr. Croasdale says that although she regrets coming back tn civilization, she is glad to be
with the students again.
Hidley V i s i t s Monticello.
C. A . Hidley. assistant professor of
history, a t t h e close of t h e s u m m e r
session here took, with Mrs. Hidley,
a live week's tour south. T h e y went
to. G e t t y s b u r g via t h e S u s q u e h a n n a
(rail, then struck the S h e n a n d o a h valley, crossed the Blue R i d g e m o u n t a i n s
and continued into t h e P i e d m o n t region of Virginia and N o r t h Carolina
as far as Ashevillc, w h e r e Professor
Hidley was studying conditions in the
new south. T h e y retraced their route
to Charlottesville and Monticello, Jefferson's h o m e . T h e y visited Alexandria, in t h e midst of t h e old south,
W a s h i n g t o n , a n d t h e W i l d e r n e s s of
Civil war fame,
200 USED BOOKS SOLD SENIOR PICTURES FOR
BY Y.W.C.A. COMMITTEE PED DUE NEXT MONTH
"Seniors must have their pictures
More than 200 used books have been
sold by the Y, W. ('. A. book committee in by November 1," Constance Batimann,
since the opening of college.
. '27; editor-in-chief of the Pedagogue,
A n t i n g the hooks remaining to be sold said, "Underclassmen arc to get theirs
are;
Eugenie Grandet, Cyrano de Berrorac, Colletle flaudoche, Maria Chap- in as soon as possible and not later than
•lelaiue, Lc3 Corbcattx, Hazen's Modern lanuary 15." Lists will be placed on
liuropc, Thatcher and McNeal, Precis the main bulletin board next week for
.v'riting, Business Geography, Social the seniors to sign for appointments.
Organization,
Interpretation
of the
"We need snapshots at once," said
Printed Page.
Many of the books left will be used Miss Baumanu.
Juniors who wish to try out for posiin the middle of the term.
"Anv one who wishes his unsold books tions on the Pedagogue are now being
returned iinlil we have an opportunity
enrolled by Miss Baumann and Janet
to sell them, should call at the book
table in the lower corridor of the Gow, '27, business manager.
science building," K'uth Maynard, '27,
chairman of the book committee said.
"Notices will be posted on the main
bulletin board two weeks iii advance
,)f any need for books so that the students may obtain used books from us,"
The home management house oponc I
Miss Maynard said.
Monday,
October
4th, Miss May
Books sold to the freshmen include:
Siceloff and Smith's College Algebra, Fillingham,.instructor in home economics
has
announced.
T
h
e
family of four
•\tchiusoifs College Botany, Lmvillc
and Kelly's Zoology, Robinson's History students this month will be Rozilla Page,
j( Western Europe, volume 1, Robin- '27; Myra Rosch, '27; Doris Sinnott,
ion's Readings, Adam's Growth of the 27; and Ruth Wesley, '28.
French Nation, Emorloii's Introduction
The seniors have been assisting Miss
to the Middle Ages, Freshman Readings, Fillinglmm in getting the house ready
Sentences and Thinking, Thorudike, Fea- for the year's work.
sor and Squair's French Grammar andThe eastern district home economics
Bookkeeping and Accounting.
Association had its last dinner of the
fiscal year Friday, September .10, at the
Van Curler Hotel, Schenectady. Members'of the staff attended the dinner and
committee meetings.
Due to the crowded schedules this
OUR PARK B R A N C H
year, Dean Anna E. Pierce may not be
able to give the customary lectures to
WELCOMES
freshmen.
"However, 1 hope to find a possible
remedy by forming the class into two the Accounts of State College
or three groups which will meet me
Students
jnee a week," she said.
FOUR GIRLS LIVING IN
MODEL PRACTICE HOME
Courtesy .Albany Kvonlng News
DR. GERTRUDE E. Dyuca.As
DR. DOUGLAS ATTENDS
BOTANISTS' CONGRESS
Dr. Gertrude E . Douglas, assistant
professor of biology, attended the world
congress of Plant Sciences at Cornell,
which was held this year for the first
time in America.
Approximately 1,000 people attended,
of which ninety-three were
foreign
botanists from many far countries, including Czcchslovakia and Ecuador.
Dr. H a l e Goes t o H e r r o n Islands,
Those at the conference gave papers
Dr. Clarence F . Hale, head of the on what had been done in their departphysics department, spent the time from ments. Original research work was disluly 18 until after Labor day on Herron cussed.
"I received more benefit from the conisland off the coast of Maine. Professor Hale's chief occupations were fish- tact and interchange of talk with the
ing and motor boating. Each year the people themselves than from the papers
island is visited by many professors and which were, for the most part, too highinstructors. " I t is an ideal spot," said ly scientific," said Dr. Douglas.
She said that she considered herself
Dr. Hale, "for a college instructor,
weary after a long season of teaching, fortunate to meet so many distinguished
to relax before returning to another scientists from all over the world.
"Sad to say," said Dr. Douglas, "it
year's work,"
rained almost every day and poured the
hardest on the days trips were planned,
Miss Wallace Vacations Abroad,
thus spoiling them."
Miss Edith O . Wallace, instructor
The congress will publish its proceedin Latin, m a d e an extended tour of
ings some time this year, and President
Europe this s u m m e r .
Leaving N e w A. R. Brubacher has authorized the purYork J u n e 16, she a t t e n d e d the sum- chase of this book for the College
mer session of the American Academy library,
in Italy. Most of her time was spent
in Rome, but she remained a week in
southern Italy, Switzerland, and southern Franco,
S h e visited
London,
Milan a n d Paris, and returned to
America September 11.
Mrs.
Edith Louder, '25, is now educational director a t Whitney's departMiss Gooding Studies a t Cornell
ment
store,
She was graduated from
Miss Alice Gooding, instructor in
biology, attended the summer session at the University of Wyoming, and attended
Macy's
School
of Accounting in New
Cornell university, taking work towards
a master's degree. While in Ithaca she York City.
Her work is among the entire sales
attended the International Congress of
Botany, learning the most recent discov- force, many of whom are not high school
eries in that field. Miss Gooding spent •jraduates, She encourages the girls to
the rest of her vacation in an automobile :ontinuc their education.
She is also education director in a
trip through Pennsylvania, Maryland,
Schenectady store.
and New Jersey.
DEAN PIERCE WILL NOT
LECTURE TO FRESHMEfi
SPEND $1,000 ON NEW NATIONAL COMMERCIAL
CHEMISTRY EQUIPMENTBANK and TRUST CO.
Chemicals and apparatus costing about
$1,000 have been purchased by the
PARK BRANCH
chemistry department for the semester,
200 W a s h i n g t o n A v e n u e
according to Professor Barnard S. Bronson, head of the department.
New cupboards have been installed P h o n e W e s t 40-J
and stained recently in the chemistry
laboratory.
Catches N i n e - P o u n d P i k e .
After teaching at the College summer
session, Professor George M. York, head
of the commercial department, .•.ought
rest in a three weeks' motor trip with
his family through the Finger Lakes region. H e is justly proud of catching a
nine-pound pike. The longest stays were
at Lake Cayuga, Waterloo and Geneva.
Sees E v a n g e l i n e C o u n t r y .
Miss Alice T . Hill, instructor in
French and Spanish, spent m o s t of
the s u m m e r in the hospital but later
went to Nova Scotia to recuperate.
''I was especially interested in visiting the Evangeline country," she said.
Kennedy Tries Fishing.
w;ii,-o m r r.'„ I - -
After
if
Yoi
at
Whethei
A Swirl
A Peace
W e Specializ
Hi
T w o (2) E x p
F o r Appoin
H. ®. ffittttlr
MASQUERADE
MRS. EDITH LOUDER,'25, L.A.BOOKHIEM
EDUCATIONAL DIRECTOR RELIABLE MIL A T S
W o r k s for T r a v e l l e r ' s Aid.
"If you want to meet the cosmopolitan
world at its worst," said Miss Marjorie
Bellows, instructor in English, "work
for the Travellers' Aid." Miss Bellows
spent a large part of her summer vacation at the Travellers' Aid desk in the
Union station. "Old age and infirmity
join with adventuresome youth in asking information," she said.
affords b
the teeth
food part
Also it
and FRESH KILLED
POULTRY
Special Attention Given
to Sorovidj Wuiwa
W e s t 1837
816 Madison A v e .
cor. Ontario St
Masks, Wigs, B e a r d s , E t c .
COSTUMEF
C o s t u m e s Made to
122 Quail Street, (opposite car b a r n s ) ;
NEW YORK STATE NATII
(if) STATE STREET
AI
COLLEGE CANDY
203 Central A v e n u e (near ]
"Dependable Flowers"
We Telegraph Floioen to alt /'arts
' Ojthc.
World
TRY OUR TOASTED SAN
Willard W. A n d r e w s , Pros.
r~
F.
ALBANY TEACHERS' AGE
We receive enlln for tcnoliora from every stnte hi tlio uni"" ami can a
who wish to tench nml Wild AUK qUAUWlBD TO DO (JOOI) WORK
74 C H A P E L S T B E E T ,
STEUBEN STREET
Corner J a m e s
Phone Main 3775
Correspondence and Interviews Invite
tTlodel College o kor.
l4So.Pearlsl,Alkny„ll.lJ.J
Clothes that are Distinctive hut not Expensive
HATS
of e v e r y d e s c r i p t i o n c l e a n e d and r e n o v a t e d
also
H i g h G r a d e D r y C l e a n i n g a n d D y e i n g o f Ladies' and G e n t s ' G a r m e n t s
Superior Q u a l i t y and B e t t e r Service
SUPERIOR CLEANERS & DYERS
851
Madison
TllftO
Avenue
W o r k
Phone West5975
Called F o r and Delivered
I m i n i ru *
"Say it with Flower
AL
Ph
We Telegraph Flowers To All Parts o
STATE COLLEGE NEWS, OCTOBER 15, 1020
GREEKS BEGIN YEAR;
PLEDGES ANNOUNCED
Prof. Kennedy Bocks News' View
On Socialized Department Clnbs
Agreement with the NEWS' editorial
attack- last week on departmental
clubs which give (heir energies to
social activities rather than to aiding
their departments was voiced by Professor William (,i. Kennedy of the
chemistry department at a meeting
I'i'iday of the Chemistry club,
I Mr. Kennedy called upon the club,
as life eldest of the departmental
groups In college, to continue to devole itself to worthwhile activities.
The N E W S ' editorial, lie said, revealed a true condition.
Kappa Delta Rho To Entertain
Several Freshman Men At
House Tomorrow
A group of College freshmen will bo
entertained tomorrow niglil by Gamm.i
chapter of Kappa Delta Rho fraternity
nl its li.ime, 731 Madison avenue.
ALUMNI
VISIT
KAPI'A
OKI.TA
Carolyn Coleman,•'26/ of liuriit Hills,
and Alice Blair, '26, of Schenectady,
spent (V)lumbtts day at the Kitppa Delta
house.
STEVENSON, '29,
Professor
Barnard
S. Hronson,
bead of the department, urged coifs
liiiuauee oil a larger scale of the
club's previous practice of hearing
papers containing abstracts of material from chemical journals.
PLEDGED
Gordon Stevenson, '29/ has been welcomed as a pledge, member, of Kappa
Delta Rho fniferuity.'
Miss DKISCOU, IN AI.IIANV
Mary Driscoll, '25, spent the week-end
in Albany, Miss Driscoll is an alumna
uf Chi Slgnia 'I'heta.
"BOOKS BELONG TO
WORLIT-MISS COBB
Edits PtdagogkS*
Librarian ReturnsFrom National
Conference In Atlantic
City, Oct. 4-9
ION
NOVEMBER 9
rjrtce'OfYear Book la $3,50.
"After January 15 Coat
Jurrips 75 Cents
Miss Mary F„ Cobb, librarian, attended the fiftieth anniversary conference of the American Library association
:il Atlantic City, October 4-9,
Hundreds of librarians' from, • the
United tSates and Canada, and visiting
delegates front twenty-six foreign countries were present. Among these were
llic librarian of the Dibliotheimc. National in Paris, the Keeper of Printec
Books of the British Museum, the chairmen of the Carnegie United Kingdom
Trust, and the Director of the Imperial
Library of Japan.
November 9 has been sel as the dale
fjn;( the,, I'edagogue's subscription camlittt] am-mg undergraduates, according
Mildred I'a'wel, '27, chairman of the
innnttee.
" A l l ' the plans have been
mplcted and the work on the magazine
isj well, started," she said,
("Snlisc'rlplion's io (he Pedagogue paid
before January 15 will Cosl $3.50. Aflcr
that (Mtc, We will charge seventy-five
cunts' 'ifi'ore,"' Coiislance Baiimann, '27,
ieditor-in-chief of the annual, said.
.. -... :..,,. t'Aliig New
J T h c seniifr class subscribed one liiinJ-ed per cent at the senior supper Wedj'sday evening, October 6. Circular Icttdrs.hav'c been sent to the aluiniii.
J"Scliin'r snapshots should be in by
"Although I,/c'cl that, I camiaUjopt pfctoljcr, 15, All senior agency pictures
'(« fill l'atlic;i:,iOuiu^;,v'.'iijiia'ce.:ijli.M'*maiiw mjis't li'eju by November 15," Miss Band|il) -I, want every member<to kneiw that injmii s.-j'/d'.'
If
COMMERCE DEPARTMENT
3k-__a...
The question of inter-library loans Was
GROWS, YORK DECLARES
REV,
COLLim
SPEAKS
Ifscusscd in the College and reference
The growth of State College's Com- section by both American and foreign
\ATNEWMAN
RECEPTION
merce department was traced by Profes-
delegates.
sor George M. York, head of the de"All agreed," said Miss Cobb, "that
partment, at the first meeting of the .aluablc books were not the exclusive
haml.er of Commerce club, Tuesday, iropeny of one institution but belonged
'flic .'uiiiiial chapel vote will be held
[jstiuid as a fnend'rVa'iry to*MfffW^fny
io die world of scholarship,
October 5.
'I'be convention suggested that re- way p issiillef' ( W R'eV.'iJIotM^.r." CA\\\\\# L\ji'\"vinher 15.
"In I ' J ] 7 we had only two commerce
.u'iuis of valuable books should be eii- i J!d NWrnair clilb'A-W'dtit'sdb.Y,'' OiWkr ••' iThe llraii'dow Priuling cofhpany lias
majors," he said.
•ouraged.
X Ki\\;,\t; A | |, JI IKE. Pp.STI'ON Ell
6.
... i i l)i|eTr'a\VaWle(l'(lie contract for the prinl"The club should develop an esprit dc
"In the school of tomorrow' the center
"'IJie Newman hike, planned for Ocloi^ffib1''€6llfil^'lis*pTfcs9^1A'2vvr#Wiii m of (he Pedagogue. Jahii and Oilier
^ g r a v i n g company has the contract for
0' the school will be the library. T h e
i
f
!,
bcr-16, has been indefinitely postponed," corps in the department,'' he said.
,lljsf -oliib rrrfllil gW' o'fi' 'AnWlilj< '7ri rlfcin-- ' e engraving. Guslave Lorey will lake
Winifred Carey, the club president, lias
Carolyn LorenU, '27, president, ap- library should round out what the school
:
,
l
!i 1
y i'ai'' tis'iVHas
annoi give in formal Instruction in the .)irsh:p aMd iilfllic ilc^'lbis
a photographs.
announced,
pointed the following committees: re1
1
T,%'..l'edagogne hoard for l')J7 confreshments, Dorothy dale, '26, chair- class room," Mr. Joy E. Morgan, editor Jijne-in '(he tyrstv !'* unnifwiit! •••.•••
if
the
Journal
of
the
National
Education
Winifred
Carey,
'27,
NcwmnW'Scli'ib
ils of: Miss Batfinaim, editor-in chief;
man; Florence Vernon, '27, Josephine
pKATEHNITjY I'.NTKKTAI NS
association
(old
the
convention.
.
,
ijct (iow', liiisiness manager; Mildred
;
Lawrence,
'28;
entertainment,
Lloyd
pics-Menl,
aJLM^o'f
IhW
nltHflffal
d'A'thWrc
M. DeWitt l.andnn, '26, commercial
'I'be delegates visited (he Scscpii-cciH el ilv convention nhe attended rfl •PlWki
iWf, 'fhelma Temple and Rexlnald
teacher at Oyster Hay High school; A. Fishbaugh, '28, chairman; Thomas Fallennial
at
Philadelphia.
They
were
(he
Dixon,
subscription manager,; Winifred
Herbert Campbell, 26, principal of the lon, '20, Marcia Connolly, '27, Belly
ikjrptlia'-lli'ikl .WmmWvihl *>••• '•'
''"'
WJWfif/jAlUU! tiayiior, Ruth t o e , lose
Sclieiievus school and DcWill ('. Xch, Amos, '28; publicity, Anne Stedinger, '27, ittesls of the University of Pennsylvania
Newman
club
will
h
o
l
d
'
i
t
s
'
lirsl
'line Klepser, advertising; Ruth f.ockcx-'27, were recent visitors at the Kappa chairman, Dorothy llaeusser, '28, Agnes it a buffet luncheon.
Communion and Brcrtlrfmrt'of the year aild and Marcella Street', ioke editors;
McGarly, '20; collection of dues, Helen
Delta Rho house.
Paine, '27, chairman; Eleanor Welch,
it thf: t W . v \ Nai£;si J t g e i i y , • . Stfrjday, Helen Thoiii|ikius and Harold S. Perry,
alJilclics; .Sara B'arkley and Marv Nev'20, Helen Klein, '20.
DELTA OMEGA INITIATES
October 24.
ilfc'!- s-iiapsbof'-; Hilda Saar, pu'blicily;
Dorothy llaeusser was elected reportDelia Omega welcomes as full mem- er to succeed Mildred Pawel, '27.
jFalhn"' Collius.AgW• :ih'e,Jfirst'/(« a K itherinc Tanner, Helen Viels, Kent
bers:
Dorothy
Kabie, '28; Dorothy
siirjes of informal udks Thursday..ajjtcr- ''•''l.T {AWl. Mairian Vedder, literary;
Five hundred dollars in prizes "i§
Rowland; ' 2 8 ; Dorothy Terrell, '28;
U u|^ AlcN'mi, Anna Kaufman, Mad'eiffered by 'I'be World Tomorrow foij udoii,. al N e w p i n .hotjse., ."Tlfse ,;tnjb lii e fietjeii','pliiili'igraphs; Marv Harris,
Knth Wheelock, '20.
essays on "What Youth is Thinking." ' Tie open [o uyeryiyic-a^Gnllc^e ;\ud. will '.Vary Calvin, Marjorie Oil, ' Florence
'fhe essays will be divided i n t o - t w o bij held every ^Thursday •,{",,,fpnr,", VYini- Hitd'-oui.aud Eleanor Harrison, ari ediDELTAS I IAVK C H E S T S
•.roups, on. for any person less than iV-cd ('arcy, ^,'2/j, jjire^denl, of Newman, IP'fiJ W.iiliam (.;. Kennedy, assistant pl'fiDelia Omega entertained Mice Spentwenty-five years of age; and one for
fiisur of chemistry, faculty adviser.
cer, '26, Olive Tuejl, '26, Gcnrgiaua
The girls' chorus directed by T. Fred- pupils between twenty-five and thirtyBudd, '26, over the week-end.
crick II. Candlyn, instructor in music, live years.
'fhe articles are to be between 1,500
will sing at the afternoon session of the
GENEVIEVE W H I T E , '28, PLEDGED
md 3,000 words in length. Manuscripts
Chi Sigma 'I'heta welcomes Genevieve sixty-second convocation of the Univer- mu,I reach the editorial office at •52
sity of llic Stale of New York,
White, '28, into pledge membership.
Vandcrbilt avenue, New York^city,.beSchool publications will be exhibited fore November 10.
\ll iViir work this year is tending
"All mcHKiiremdtllS «for raps • and
in the corridors of Chancellors Hall.
A L P H A R H O INITIATES
Eight prizes will he divided:' First (gowns'.. miwt... hciititlteti' Wednesday',' tiKvard'ciii-zenship, the aim of (he Politl Siridiicurelub," Louise D, Gtluli, '27,
Alpha Rho welcomes Carolyn l.orctiU, There will lie other exhibits on the first pri/e, $100; second prize, $ 7 5 ; ' third Kii|-hcrim< (.fWnmp.l/?,.'chdirnlan of die
'27. I.ina Miusou, '28, Ilona Pekeruey, two floors of the Education building.
pri/e, $50; fourth prize, $25; will: be c iirunilteo,. lias. aininvml<edi" A •'.ircprewetK- n j d ^ t h e l i r . s t club meeting Wednesday
'26, and Hazel Bowker, '20, into full
awarded in each group. 'I'be winning jiaiive from Cwrclf ifmLTiJ'iidird's will ill nrliooiiV' ''Citizenship lias been taught
Miss CI.AU K, '26, WEDS
membership.
essays will appear in 'fhe World T o - be. .in'tlie loiver c(/|iridHr>'eff e tit?- science ifo .V eel'laiu extenl in liigh schools, and
The marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Ran- morrow of January, 1927.
. . V! building irmh JhH) iuntiilm4.;30 ..o'clock. vV' are going to make it of some imdall W. Woodcock was solemnized SatDetailed information may lie secured The seven, A>V}to''/?'in v*iU^curres,pondip« iii rtaticc in College through our club.
urday evening, October 9, at the home from 'fhe World Tomorrow.
,T iday we hear not only of slate citizenprices, raiigjug froin '$7,50, io $17.00. for Hljiftu of local.a:ili/eii,ship, but even of
of the bride. Mrs. Woodcock was formerly Miss Kmma I.. I lark, and gradu'.iw'iis" aii(j';'$2.JK(l fo $.V."() | o r "caps 'may ^'V'VW eijixenship,;' she said.
ated from Slate College in 1020.
li'ie bxaflfinctf'At 'rheMablc'ftV tne^Tofliiirfa
ireiice ,\. I|idlej-, assistant profesMr. Woodcock is a graduate of the
Fifty faculty and members of the
M-'iiday 'aiid..i!|;tn?.S(My. addord-mg"'til'Miss
if lilstory, spoke of his visit |,, i|iC.
University
of
Kansas,
The
couple
will
Blejijs'.rt .'J'Uui'.sante..'stylei'g6wn.:.asf tued Si t Tl(' J ni.slr>riral-association in New York
state education department attended the
live in t hicago.
ully.
'ireyillus .yieansnWill/nbc'WOiTi at?ain this
reception and t£a" given by President
A meeting of the Girl Scouts w a s year., - . 7 .j/fiiftv/ti'ilf
niiblnv>D ; ' i ' • < Ltiui-f'.iN'oUiiigbain. '27, was appointed
A. R, Urubacher and Mrs. Brubacher at I)E;\N PIERI K IX N'i'.w YORK
held in the gymnasium Wednesday, Ocnl :i.ii;tpaiT of the initiation conimitlee.
the Colony Plaza from 4 to 6 o'clock
Miss Anna I''.. Pierce, dean of women, tober 13. under the direction of Miss
Saturday afternoon.
Among the new attended a conference of the National Isabelle J. Johnston, captain, instructor
in physical education and Mildred Wilfacility members present were Dr. S. Women's Foundation lor Health in New
York city, Monday. Dean Pierce is a son, '27, lieutenant, 'fhe needle woman
N. fBrownell,,Miss Aljcc Clear, '22, Dr. member of the board of directors, chair- and dress-making badge questions were
Milton L. Nelson, '24, and Mrs. Nelson, man of the Endowment committee and discussed. Officers were elected.
"Nalioii^viilqgrowth , , "jn the .niemlier-.' 9
"Meeting of Citizen Scouts Troop ship of -hoiiH'*- cconirtrti's chilis ;'&• «•*»v» Cards from the gymnasium office are
nf the Better Student Health committee.
andj Miss Marjorie Bellows, '26, ,
suj'ed,"
Miss Floreuca.JifcWincliell, pro- iR.:essary for admission lo the swimbe
held
twice
each
month,,"
Miss
will
'ifhe
rooms
were decorated
with
fessor of home CCOIIOIITIV'< told the Home m mi;' classes al Bath 5. according to
Wilson said.
" K I T C H E N A m " INSTALLED
dahlias and cosmos.
Feouornies'- flU;h ftjt-^ls 5»jt5|'tii|ignVfyi<i'^,' Bridha 'Znjan,- '27, and Elizabeth Bender,
Freezing ice cream, chopping ice,
Among those who presided at the tea
Ootobc'r 5."
'2'. swimming captains.
grinding coffee, making bread and mixThe first classes were held Tuesday,
Miss WinalieJlf n\ as'iidectlKD cjiairrrtan
tabic were M r s . Frank P. Graves, wife ing cake are only a few lasks that can
Oflobcr
12. 'fhe class from eight to
the
N.a.tiiili:(Tt;i^lU(|eiit
cjul
I'lfii'imittec
o
p
of .the state commissioner of education; be done by "Kitchen Aid," a new equipnine: was for the instruction of those
at
I
jjie
home
eeiiiuimie.i>
.eumenUon
in
Mri. Adna VV. Risley, Mrs. William H. ment installed in one of the food laboraww:.cannot swim sixty feet, while the
MJIwiekee
tiiisi.
.summer?,$[!•!
Hopkins ami M r s . Clarence F. .Hale. tories of the home economics classes.
Grace Chippendale, Marion Sloan and
'flu' 'club' pliinrA'rftNiViioiu^'of rhe riie from nine to ten was for those who
Electric power is used, thus saving Marion Conklin were nominated for
ea i;,awsi.«i sixty feet or more.
Miss Mary Grahn, Miss Bellows, Miss
time and energy. The price ranges from song leader at the sophomore class meet- nekv faculty members,„and Mis,s Marion
iD.ilring. the second hour Miss Zajan
S. Van l ^ ^ , w J l ^ | M r e l u r i i & d > » f tf)c
EtlfcL Huyck and Miss Elizabeth An- $142 to $235.
ing Friday.
Elizabeth Pul'ver, Wallace State Department of, |,{nme Economics aiikll:M;iss-. Bender taught life-saving.
derson assisted in serving. Miss Anna
Strevcll, Eleanor Welch, Ann Stickler after a five years' absence.
Randolph Keim, Miss Anne d i s h i n g and
and Mary Boll were nominated for viecMcmlx'iVdWnssWi-'a: p a r t y for freshCALENDAR
Mrs.
Aver/y. JvV. Skinner assisted iniresideut.
men initiates, fo' be uelil fatc*tlTis month.
Today
To the
formally. * * ' • ' • - »8:15 P. M. French Club Initia'Grand Old
tion—Gym.
§eniors of '26'
Tomorrow
Lutheran Club Picnic.
«l During ynnr "first-your out" you'll more
2.30 P. M. fntersororily Tea—
State College students and faculty cat. .jrciyemeiit," she .sauly. " will welcofn'e
If an uver waul lo koep in much «lili colic?
Rotunda.
, :
Frederick Crumb, '30, of Watervlict,
•J A youthrnl |)C(lai,'omi(i in IIIK first job lias
the congested
nearly a bushel of sweet potatoes daily ' i('"'en'ons to " ailev
was elected manager of" freshman basM o n d a y , O c t o b e r 18
irmls ,n-|ili'iilv,, and tln> Fitruel cure fur •'Stain
for luncheon, according to Miss Laura cmditJQU of the cafeteria." Any favored
ketball for the coming season Monday.
4:00 P. M. Candlyn R e c i t a l fjckjjesh',, UUHI News.
F, Thompson, instructor in home eco- dishes''\vmch do not appear on the daily
October 4. Abraham Balk, '30, Albany,
Auditorium.
^
Von can't 'coinc back" every week ci
presided.
menu--will be prepared' upon the'"sugnomics and manager of the cafeteria.
T u e s d a y , O c t o b e r 19
binTbe college will come, io yon through ibe
Rutherford R. Baker, instructor in
4:00 P. M. H o m e Economics
"Approximately 600 students eat in the gestion of the . students, according to
onlnrKtll Nevvi'.
physical.' education, outlined the work (o
C l u b - Room 261.
cafeteria daily. From 500 to 600 sand- Miss Thpmpspn..:.,,
Q Ill's, like letieri! from linlf a ilozen pals
be dope, "if am willing to aid the class
W e d n e s d a y , O c t o b e r 20
"The congestion is great but can be
in any w a y . possible," he said, "but I
wiches arc consumed during the lunch
oxcepl lluil ll ore's mora in ll lliaii in a score
1
4:00
I
.
M.
Spanish
Club—Room
will not take charge of freshman baskethour. Salads, desserts, sandwiches, and managed if the students will lend a
of Idlers.
103.
ball unless I have full support of the
milk are the principal foods," Miss hand.
Unnecessary papers and 'o{fier
•Jj Yuur clubs, your sister class, that frnsti
0:0(1 P. M. Biology Club Picnic
freshmen."
sistcr.'of yoine, thu biincli al Ibosornrlly liousc
Thompson said,
S i n n e r - Biology Laboratory.
articles collect tin' the'Tribles'-beshlfte of
Three hundred dollars for the sport is
(,'(istip.froin (be (ircen Room—all lilts llilrty.
8:15 P. M. Advanced Dramatics
necessary, Mr. Baker estimated.
This,
"The conduct of the students is very the students' failure to observe a little
sovoiittmiis for tbrue ImcKs.
Plav—Auditorium,
lie said, must come from the class treasgood but there is still chance for im- care, "she sa.d.
ury.
' ' '
VISITORS
AT C I I I
SKIMA
TITETA
Margaret Lynch, '26, of Auburn, Mary
Flanagan, '26, of Chatham, and Pauline
Smith, '26, of Watertowu, were weekend guests at, the Chi Sigma Thela
house.
PRIZE ESSAY CONTEST
IS OPEN TO STUDENTS
COLLEGE BRIEFS
CAP AND GOWN SIZES POLITICAL SCIENCE AIM
mB&MWtWESDAy
IS WORLD CITIZENSHIP
SO FACULTY PRESENT
AT BRUBACHERS' TEA
COLLEGE GIRL SCOUTS
UNDER MISS JOHNSTON
HOME ECONOMICS CLUB
CARDS NECESSARY TO
TO GIVE FACULTY TEA
pTER SWIMMING CLASS
SOPHOMORES NOMINATE
FOR TWO CLASS OFFICES
FROSti ELECT CRUMB
BASKETBALL MANAGER
Students And Faculty "Sweet" qn Suieet Potatoes;
Miss Thompson, Cafeteria Manager, Seek Student AM
STATU COLLEGE NEWS, OCTOBER 15, 192fi
PICNIC SUPPER OF
NEWMAN PLEDGES NEW
BIOLOGY CLUB WILL
MEMBERS, OCTOBER 8
pledge party of Newman
BE HELD WEDNESDAY clubThewasannual
held at Newman flail, October
Senior Pretident
CLUBS ARE ACTIVE;
EVENTS ANNOUNCED
, The niology club picnic supper, which
was to have been hold Tuesday, will be
in the biology laboratory Wednesday
evening, according to Mildred A. Wilson,
27, the club president.
"The supper will he a collecting expedition," Miss Wilson said, "and all
the specimens are guaranteed edible."
Guests will include Professor G A,
Woodard head of biology department
and iVfrs, Woodard; Dr. Gertrude
i, Douglas, Mr, and Mrs. Robert Faust,
Miss Alice Gooding, and Miss Laura F,
I'd impson, manager of the cafeteria,
An assessment of fifty cents will be
'large:!. The committee comprises:
Miss Wilson, Elva Jochuniseii,
Madeline Tietjcn, '27; Mabel lierg,
Mildred Slimier, '2S; William
.'rc:ich, '2').
Former Horn* Economies Head
Here; Omlcron Nu Installs
New Membere
Four senior girls were installed as
members of Beta chapter of Omicron Nu,
honorary scholastic society in home economics, Monday. The new members arc:
l.ytlia rjowen, '27; Eileen Hnrlburt, '27;
Frances Schlebrtiber, '27; and Clara
Tcnncy, '27,
Miss Marion S. Van Hicn, formerly
head of the home economics department
here, spoke of the activities of Omicron
Nu, Miss Van Hicn is now state supervisor of home economics education.
SPANISH C'I.UII MEETS
110 G. A. A. GIRLS ON
INDIAN LADDER TRIP
j
Courtesy Albany Evening Mows
Meetings of the Spanish club will be
tile second and fourth Wednesdays of
MARCEU.A STREET
each month, according to Gertrude
Walsh, '27, the club president.
At the first meeting, Tuesday, October
5, a membership committee was appointed. It consists of: Anna StcidEighty seniors attended the senior diningcr, '27; Marjorie Edward, '27; and icr party held Wednesday evening, OcMarie Lynch, '29. Abbie Crawford, '27, tober 6.
and Oncita Devlin, '27, were appointed
Marcella Street, president, conducted
an entertainment committee,
a short business meeting. The class
budget, dues and gift were discussed.
To PHOTOGRAPH CLOCK
The new memorial clock in honor of Constance Haumann reported on the
Miss Cora Ann Steele purchased by the Pedagogue.
Marcella Street and Metallic Grant
Home Economics club will be photographed, if plans of the club are carried presented a dance in the gymnasium.
Cornelia Williams played the piano for
out.
Photographs are to be sent to alumni group singing.
win/ contributed to the fund.
80 STUDENTS ATTEND
SENIOR CLASS DINNER
CANW.YN PLAYS MONDAY
Violet Pierce, '28, was appointed a
member of music council to succeed
Louise Ciunn, '27, at the meeting of
music association in the auditorium Monday.
'I'. Frederick H. Candlyu will give a
pianoforte recital Monday afternoon in
the auditorium.
Wiilard Retalllck, '27, president of the
club presided.
NEWS Cuun OFFICER RESIGNS
Anne Stafford, '29, Mildred Brownbardt, '29, and Ivan Campbell, '29, were
nominated for secretary-treasurer of the
News club Monday, to succeed Mildred
l.ansley, '29, who resigned because of
having too many activities points.
WALKER ADDRESSES Y. W. C. A.
Professor Adam A. Walker, head of
the economics department, spoke on
"Student Problems or Student Interest"
before the Y. W. C. A., Thursday,
October 7th.
Ethel l)u Bois, '27, president, said that
Wellesley, Smith, Skidmore, and Elmira
colleges have successful student forums.
"All students are invited to attend the
next forum which meets Thursday," she
said.
CANTERBURY TO SELL CANDY
Canterbury club will hold i candy
sale in the basement of the science
building Tuesday.
NEWMAN HAS "OPEN HOUSE"
"Newman house is always open to
College students," said Margaretta
Smyth, '28.
"All freshmen are invited to attend
the study hour Tuesday evening at 7:30
o'clock. Newman house is more than
a dormitory for the Catholic girls. It
is a club house."
"Y"
GOLDENA BILLS NAMED
'28 CLASS TREASURER
Goldena Bills was elected treasurer of
the junior class and Florence Potter a
member of the Girl0' Athletic association at the junior class meeting Friday. Beatrice Wright and Ruth Lane
were nominated for junior member of
finance board,
"GREEN HAT" COMING
What is called the most talked of play
in recent years is "The Green Hat,"
Michael Arlcn's brilliant dramatization
of his fable about the infamously famous
May fair lady, which is to be presented
at the Capitol theater, next Monday,
Tuesday and Wednesday. Mr. Arlen,
the amazing Armenian from London, is
said to reveal himself as a playwright of
the first rank and must be reckoned with
as a brilliant dramatist as well as an
author of books that sell prodigiously.
"The Green Hat" will be presented in
Albany with a cast including Dorothy
Overend, Geraldine Browning, Yvonne
Dor, Margaret Temple, Rupert Lucas,
Arthur Metcalfe, W. Boyd Davis, Craig
Nelson, Courtenay Travers, J. Paul Callan and others.
SMART CLOTHES
for
YOUNG MEN and MISSES
CLOTHING, HATS,
SHOES, HABERDASHERY
Stcefcl Brothers
Inc.
STATE STREET
The fall Indian Ladder hike was held
October 9, when 110 girls left College
at 10 and 12 o'clock in busses which
traveled to the foot of the mountain,
The party was chaperoned by Dr, Caroline Croasdalc, College physician, and
Miss J. Isabel ic Johnston, instructor in
physical education,
The arrangements were in charge of
Dorothy Lasher, '28, hiking captain, and
Margaret Stoutenburgh, '28, Margaret
Steele, MO, and Marjorie Hogan, '30,
assistants.
SHILLINGLAW, '29, AT
SYRACUSE CONFERENCE
Robert J. Shillinglaw, '29, will address
the sessions of the New York Slate Sunday School association in conference in
Syracuse this evening. He will lead in
singing and cheering at the convention
dinner. He represents the young people
of Albany county at this gathering.
C.P,
Exc
8'
8. Many freshmen and tipperclassnien
attended.
Entertainment, provided by the upperclassmen, consisted of a Pierrot and
Pierrette dance by Mary Galvin, '27, and
A conipk
Margaret Moore, '28. Ethel Curlcy,
'27, toe-danced, and Marcella Street, 27,
danced to a piano accompaniment by such as
Melanie Grant, '27.
A farce study hour was presented by
Margaret Moore, '28, Eleanor Finn, '28,
Vera Kocheforl, '27, and Dorothy Doyle,
'29.
A burlesque hike featured Oucita
Devlin, '27, Dorothy Doyle, '29, and
Anne Stafford, '29, as hikers and lulia
Fay, '27, Ruth Lockard, '27, Margaret
Wilson, '28, and Grace Chippendale, '29,
as gypsies.
The fresllmcn were pledged and given
their certificate of membership. Dancing and refreshment followed.
EXCLUSIVE
PRINTING
Special to t
T h i s iiion
336 C E N T R A L A V E .
white siii
P h o n e W e s t 2037
Open Evenii
QUALITY
SHOE REPAIRING
84 Robin
Street
I block from
the College
9 N<
/
J. COSTANZO
IAP1TQL:£ALBANY
"We Understand Eyes '
OCT. 18, 19 and 20
A VIVID LOVE PLAY
pitwiiitiimJ
West 3479
PKOPRITOR
Shoe Shining and Repairing
EYEGLASSES
OPTOMETRIST
50 N. Pearl St.
Albany,
PATRONIZE T H E
American Cleansers ait
jfcwYom?!
CHICAGO AND^
LONDON WENT
WILD OVER I t .
DONT
Miss
LLi
DARESI
TO TELL THE TRUTH
POPULAR
PRICES:
Even: .50 to $2.20;
• Mat. Wed.: .50 In $.1.1.0
Burlesque Every Thursday, Friday
,'
and Saturday
Walk a Block,
We Clean and Dye all kinds of Ladi
Wearing Apparel
811 MADISON AVENUE
C o m p l i m e n t s of
HOLMES BI
FLORISTS
PRINTING OF ALL
Students and Groups at the State College
will be given special attention
and
Save a
Lot
at
«
Mills Art Press
394-396 Br<
Printers of
THE COLLEGE PHARMACY SHOP
Lake at Western Avenue
One Block West
HOUSE ELECTS
The officers at the Y. \V. C. A. house
for the year are: president, Martha
Baker, '28; vice-president, Josephine
Walker, '28; secretary, Betty Wyke, '27;
treasurer, Dorothy Bachmer, '29.
COTRELL & LEONARD
Albany, N. Y.
542 BF
ALBJ
Download