S t a t e College News 4 NEW INSTRUCTORS

advertisement
State College News
NEW) Y O R K
VOL.
X I I I . No. ]
STATE
COLLEGE
FOR TEACHERS
ALIIANV, X. Y. FRIDAY, SEPTISMBEB 2 1 , l!)2S
10 cents per copy, 82.25 per year
BUILDINGS ON WHICH CONSTRUCTION IS DELAYED
4 NEW INSTRUCTORS
ADDED TO FACULTY
MILNE HIGH DELAY
PREVENTS MOVING
New
Miss Snow, Former Myskania
Member, W i l l Supervise
Practice Teaching
DR.
DOUGLAS
Practice School M a y Be
Ready For Occupancy
In February
S e n i o r s M a y B e Graduated
From Auditoriun C f
Page H a l l
Miss Preston, Former Student
At Sorbonne, To Teach
French Here
State
Four
new
added
t o the leaching
lege;
I wo
granted
The
from
new
Snow,
this
s
- I >"' " i
n f liii'
a year
I-'. Preston,
The
are:
Marion
Martha
Caroline
two
who
DR. BOYNTON AVERS
are:
Pageantry,
, lioiial
(iertrude
Randolph
Those
K. D o u g l a s ,
Thev
Hooding,
Miss
a r e : Miss
l-'.dna
of praenee
lis.li
Milne
in Ihe
ceivtd
College
S h e l l ! . Id
supervisor
Miss
Redwav
Mills
l.ove
vear.
Miss
[luring
School.
She re
.nee
mill,
•,,,,,
|,,],|
degree
director.
Hulvokc
She
and
Miss
culm
is
and
has
Mins
ad,
Sorbonne.
Miss
I avion
Ciishing,
teaching
The
liyrn
Mawi
was
de |
a Slate
College
Ihe
department
siiiuled
Mis-
ibeie
C
f,,r degrees.
silh"
from
lie
in
are
eer.s
its guests
oilier
, xcrciscs
o l tin-
an-
our
u;
C. A., w i
I colnnies
heariily
practice
laying
Work
nill
and
Annrieail
c l
Madis,,,,
velv
I think
crowiled",
unable
he si
in three
a n d investigation
111,11 and
light
Miss
service
.1.
lies
another
responsihilitv
dial
Im
practice
ll
ihe
11,,111
higher
face
oi
College
making
be
ol
offend
students
assume | d u r i n g
ihe nexi
M l s
-
l l l
Wed
new
||„.
'n'.
M
C I l M M F n
e r u f \ t \ l
t i r n r
SCHOOL
HERE
of col j
, , , . ,,„
,
.
h m u l r e d and
^ > n
Hawaii
visited
and
study
Kit
i h e - , 1111 t r o p i c a l
route,
Ihe p e l r i l i e d
the
redwood
Miss
ol
lo
there.
Keim
home
region
reliirued
.llld In
h,
\ri/oii.i
o l 1 al
a.
a year
• | ],,
sludv
Kugland.
higher
M i .
by hei n
.1 Ihe I
p,,p n lai ,
.,,,, , |
. , | , , , , |,,neei
lining
lor Misvear,
Malcolm
is released
o i Mis-.
the
hv
lallei
ill,
pari
pel man
lor.y
|,|i(.
he luiict
inelelv
o l dailv
|IIIM.,, ,,
life.
III, i l l
and
while
C
"'
I'
ol llltll
I),
M
C. S'elsou,
eillll.
Will
assist.mi
addle
.
I
meluil
the
Miss
Hall,
l
mem-
1
In.in
le.irhrrs
;J
lii p
al
olhel
r
'l'
"
l
l
' "
l l l r
! ",'
|,
,l,n
-even
.,1 ,1
a l.oolh
I
tea. h< 1 - ,
n i i : l
"
i l l ihe
" "
n
, l l l
;
..ml
the lirsl
I
ol
Di.
topic
\
, | , mind's
Wo
hull,Hi
l
aitci
I
he " T i a
1
„
,„,„".
|o
I ,1a,
* • •
\l
| f
degree
...led
Mcmwliil,
\
•
*
^ ,
.
,11.1
the
A
in I h , edii,
j4M
(
^ j T T t
Itoviiloll
Hi uial
l.dibhlll
M
' • " " "
II.o.d
I
,
v.ml....I
1. 11, l i d .vail • , s | „ ,
.
1, , . '
Dl
1111
Im1 nn
all
iiuiy
lv
-iile
I |i,|,,|ee
,
inleiid.'n'l
',.|MI''lhc
W
J ) l
d , st I - i d .
Miv,
lies sic
Miller,
irirl,
alleuthd
blank
(,1-ess,
and
ithicalioii
feretiee
ol
Ihe lasl
Crowlher,
N t l h
eisin",
° "
the l i r s l
ainini, 1
nitinbei
repi'eseiilalives
ilepailmenl
yeslenlay.
out-
late i n
used,
next
June,
lo
class
of
administrative
I f it is
week.
1929
he g r a d u a t e d
Page
annual
will
from
be
the
the
new
building.
Ihe
will
sealing
capacity
be greater
than
packed
to the
nimenceinenl
-pi-ah- l , , , , ^ . | u . ( 1 | ) k , m
of
that
in llawlev
auditorium
" ' " " {was
Ihe t h e a t r e
o f the
Hall.
doors
present
The
during
latter
ihe
last
exercises,
and several
, (U,|)i(,t,
n t | n l i t t a n c e ,
n
v,\'| K .„ the new b u i l d i n g s are ready
,„.,.„„.,„,,. , , , , , , , , , ,.,,„„„,,„ ; „ , , „ „ „ ,
Hon
loted
Mugs
, h l
""«
In d e p a r l i u e n l s
will
' Sel
in the
be made.
I will
K
The
present
library
for
.
a |
huild-
w i l l be
«•
he moved
«•»•!«!
Which
Mln-I
Hall,
will
ai.d
..-.me
Draper
H a l l to
, ., , .
»«-•«'«" o » — <° *° Moved
, Sun
;
111c
I,r.„„
h e
ol
I he In a l l h dep.n l u i e i i l
c
si;
to M i l n e
department
will
move
from
he small
offices
in l l a w l e v
Hall
„,,,.,,.,., , „ | | „ s l , , | 1 J a | | a c c o
| i | ; , r |
„ , ,,,,.„.,„
L|;, ,
V
er,
|
.
U
plans.
,
u l |
|)(
,.,,,.,.
- Stephenson. |
,| | (
,
The
| | i i | u
,
( |
v
„ , „
,,,U|.|
n
to
|.
r t
Co..-
(j|riC(
,s
, , „
, ,
|
STATIC
,',.,,,
u
, „
,,.,
(
l n
|
Ian,
M a m v _ M i « , | . , N , U 1 , k and earlv this week.
T h e six
\1111e Mo,
1.0 e.
-lone p d l a i s o i l the p o r t i c o o f ihe
Apple
,
M a i hall vv, re ere, led d u r i n g the s l i m m e r .
( nace
\ \ dm 1
Hi.
I
M . Itradv, \ ' i i
b'vei,
Man
I. h'ulh
nn I
all
\
\ ,I
\ an
1
\ la,
ium n •
.
leaiuit
oi i h , construction,
1 oniph led, w i l l
he 1 lu-
jn.av
In had
11
1lie
i n any
..1I1 1,
any
1 ' .uiipii
'I his
in,
o l pi 11 .lv l,s
. ! null.n
II,,.,,,,
I
I I , attacked
•
oi
add,,.-ad
(lis j o l v o c a l i o l i a l
session j
o l con
i h e stale
ihe
P b , l i t la
11,1)011,1)1)1)
Ib.lilal
,,,11
Wailing
nig high
allsl,.,
in
Dr.
action
lialuuilv
,11
the .pre,id
lioynl
the pi mie
f o r admillanee
leclai'ed
standard
is givau
.,
ll l,Ml
.......
,
la, I,
i
,,
u
I.I
appearance
i,,,,,,,,
|
I ale"
ol
.,,„,
U lib
lie
ihe appendages
,1,,,,
u l l
| ,l
il . m u l e s
I on l b , l o
" " l '•
"
Ihe
thai al
is the
1 ui1i1n1.11,1 ,,11 Pom, ,), t ul
5;
|
iubll.e
.111. 11,l.i 10 1
4
-lllkl
"
has
and
In el
a la,I.lie.
in ihe p i o g i a n i
both
w
v.,
"
, , , . v,
a.
I,, i l
h l
.
hll
.,|
,,l
|,,,
ll
s
Sophoinoi 1
dl
,
in
facl
one
w ill
when i l
that
access
o f die
builtl-
vv n h nit
crossing the
be a r r a n g e d
and covered
e ihal
were
vt.us
pressed i n l ,
ago,
Miss
in si
iniulioii
according
Ilia,
l o ihe
\,w>.
I..una
was
fill
ll
the
laeiillv
",me,iled
hies
, , l the
was
uisliliiled
, III, ilaiiimelil
allei
ihe
period
111 l " - ' u ' .
Srvn
I ul
In
Ihe
I
U*
lii I
few
l o the
hygiene,
was
speclalors,
years,
depaitmeiil"buried"
and w i l h
ol
wilh
piolubilid
-IMVV.
connect
by a
passages,
the
three
:
al lite
was
I n l'w.:>.
, , I n slinienla
Mvskauia,
voled
oil
ov.-i
class
Songs,
ihe j l l h i h e
as power
submitted
Myskania
varied
Horn
stunts
being
I n |u..',t.
pally,
cheers
known
dancing
the
\ivv-'
and
games
were
under
lii si
when
as the " j u n i o r
-liinls,
dancing,
ami
hsled.
ihe new
spi iug,
posl t x a m
coiistilulioii
is vested
jubil.
expected
for
and
the
has
made
rules.
before
ihe
from
l ' | i day,
l » Myskania
sophoiuoie
the
regiilalion o f
appearance
1,1 M o v i n g
have
by Ivllssell
presitlellt.
no announcement
An
a
lunceinent
inlcrclass
rivalry
-I.II Is II, \ l week
,i< i h e eulei'I,limn,-lit
jamboree".
be
sludt nls
laeully
vear-,
some
lisletl
tpieeil
l o i the event
wilh
were
biologv
as ihe
v , ; u l o yeai
files
. . I , \ iinin.i
a skeleton
"buried"
pn-.eulid
was
hv \ l y -
,1 sluilellls
lions.
longing
was
Im 1
I 1 idav
\ \ , I .udllllll,
Alio
rules,
In 11.111 <
concerning
Pi..grain-,
filled,
and
uu-llmd o f choos
.ludenl-.
"old
is
,.ill.
rcp-ricd
l o Combal
the prcseul
,v „ „ •
| ;
" I1-"'1 ' "
ihe , ,
ediiealn.n.
school
l o college,
JJR-M-III
the
Kappa
Mv I 1111,1
I leadei ,
I, Id low m l
an "
lo
been
!l
Aiimociacy"
a
lodav
give,
L
elioii
Ihe
, e,l
tin I
'I his he eh.nacieri/.e.l a , a " d i a w
liaising
su|itiiiileinleill
here,
X. ,
'
D.
is ,1
,,1
Ih,
,ee,,nd
until
l o r the
first
.
p.indine
Flays "Intellectual
,
P a l i s , Who received
Ins master's
, , ' | ',
ul
" "
ilu
e Ison's
will
progressing
SOPHOMORE HULKS
|„
I
,|,
this
central
Function, Instituted By Myskania, lo Be Abandoned '
AUA
coiinly, Ibis
the
auditorium-theatre
be employed
Pulvcr,
..u... Post-Exam Jubilee Is Interred With "Queen Care;
I
siipeivisory
d i s l l i l Is
new
may
II rem e o l l e a t h e r s
III
se
sec-
present
not he ready
,,|
l o r directing
Mildred
Slitllt.-.
, lltverlv
vi 01
con-
.- W a l k n i s ,
lh.iv
Kalhuiii,
Webster,
\ h c , Walsh,
giuia
be
the
learned
to the
this
: . . . . , .
union
w.o:
i.i.ih.im.
.V) | i-.ni l \ \ a,Nw t . r t h ,
l.aeher,
six a,pel
may
I L I
and Monday
. H i '
eolleg,
1 lea,hei,
-,l
it
commencement
'M\, c h a i n
mi- ires
I
may
on t h e o t h e r t w o
declared
.
,".,wl'i!m-...
: i
I liihee,
.hided
hi,
el
'
depart-
during
is not
buildings
as w o r k
According
ihe
v
t o be oc-
as that o n
Hall,
authorities
will
",'
classes
Hall
thus
Marlon
n s
thai
\\'ll"»»
' " " '
• guide coin lee.
.
.
.
l
11
V
";'"',
''"llimllee
]"
N||
' " " • ' l-aeheis,
l.«-'|ls.
,|.i,,l, s
. 1 / 111 : Holt,,,
pnvale
,1.,
I "uise
cleineiilaiy
1.
colltge-,
one
spcial
,p,,|s,
- I -
the
second
'"'''I
"
' ' ' " ' "•'"""".'«•
nioved m l l a w l e v
I l a l l , being located i n
w i l l he served.
\tecet\
,,,,,.
,,,-,...,,,,
andiloriuni.
Milne
High
: ' " '','
! "
1
as fast
the N E W S '
I 11
he has, 1111 -111
• '•'"'''
" , " " "
"
" been
assigned
junior
eu.de l o accompany
I
or he,
„ „ , , . , ,H
« • ' - ' " " • siipei
•
" I'-"""
live
1111, I , d l i c d ,
1
the
Hall,
>n Page
three
Tin-
oMntisical
s
" "
d
, l u
,'"
" " '
; >
I''- « ' • " ' ,
.(M 1
for
Occupancy
for
economics
nearly
in Richards
rapidly
Hall
I he
(,«.nuley.
•' p r o g r a m
the
look,
Hetty .1.
lk-tly
blorencc
(,
i i : i u
'"';
•'••hin. ills
11
l
said.
ihe spring.
May U s e Page~Hair"in Jiinn ~ " "
named to
party.
, , , , , , ,
A . K. l i r i i h a c h c r
Miss
",':1"1'"1
" " i ,
ofhee.
" " ' " ' " "
U,
" - " I "
!
pn,
j
s,|
I
"•"•liirs,
line,
ol
ol
'
I
,|,ail-.
pen
l<< hei
NELSON WILL ADDRESS
:!c£i"ili"^
TEACHERS' CONFERENCE!,,"'l,,;,111,1i,;|,1,,r::il
f.,c, , ,1,.
I ' ' " «•"•'
'
I I , 1- .eeiug
children
l-egislrar's
w i l l be
sufficiently,
Hall.
buildings.
" " . '
include:
and
I'" ' ' "
,ill 1
l o ., , o i n p i l a t i o n
' " " «li-lnl"'l
iuiend.-iii
-
applicali'ffli
o l tliabliug
his
I'""-''
'
sireel M T >
vv ilhoiu praelical
veo, acciding
bv Ihe
«
is c h a n g i n g " , lit
in the
a • a means
, , , ,|,e a l l a i r s
pi,.
,-plioi
man
III , , ., , , , n e r e . a i v
I Y,-s
last
C r l . n e d Ihal r o l l
, ''" " ' • " """'''''made
rev Is, ,1 lo Colli,il 111 l i i
" '
education
•• | | „ .
- booie, who was u h n ml disciplun
,,|
appoiuliueiil
llovul
Douglas
,,|
front
in
is released
Miss I'lea
Ia,|
forest
economies
Tarlelon
Dr.
I, g,
weeks
Richards
semester,
as
" " " ' a - s o c h i o u , uncle 1 the ,h
M a r i o n I o n k l i n , 'Jo, its presi
l
,
-ludenls
the
of
temporary
been
for
t.ertrtidc
»'>"
'
SUMMER
ol
J- , S I ! I , I | | , I , 1 « I , I ' W -
" " " ' b c i ..
|,
Medievalism
model
week.
l
"1'-'
• ' « niuiules.
o t h e r s l o atltlrcss
" - • i n mien and Iheir j u n i o r guides , „
\
h-
„'Z,:: 740 STUDENTS ATTEND
nre-enl
.vl,111
| , . ... M , 1 n |
i . ,
h
Y . W . C.
vv,ek., al
l 1
ihe
by ihe home
is possible
ond
30, vice p r c s i t c m ofhave
members
" I aiisley
' '"'
nc
demand I'm
ilia
ihe pi-ohlei
Allacks;
Ivvo
the
future
and to serve as g e n e r a l class r o o m s ,
duct, d
chairman.
'_'u, was
'!'"'" •
Myskania
K»lv';l
de
h is . n l
In
lo join
to
Hall,
he taken
i l was
Constritcli
presidenl
the summer
M. Brady,
; "J
as M . h r c u c h
sin
nine,
during
Myskania
I.aiislev
will
. \ i Ibis
be
col-
School,
to d r y
will
is assured
progressing
associal
is general
" ' I " I' 1 " -1 , 1 "
"-
wdl
direction o l
" ' " " " ' J 1 ' " ! association, and several
c e r t a i n in
1 an o'v ervv helming
education,
much
of o u r c o l -
each
is
gymnasium
the
'_"),
^ " ' ^ m preparation
ihe
women
Craves,
M . I.-mslcy,
o l i h e I'--"'".'.
Church,
lo allend,
I Icloher
Hall,
wilh
pas|„,-
Reformed
I'.olh
candle
•MIJI.V,
laid
al -I o'clock,
\venue
1
j
l l ( l
vent
in Ihe
under
association,
nc- / ' r a r e
o f ihe
,o Draper
A. Vruwiiik,
-nr invited
'Hie
years
lo
o f ,,|der
r : i V 1
'
to freshmen
o l i l u student
<'hairuian
l
t o our
tonight
I lall,
I'-velyn
welcome
new
•.aid.
speaker.
chnls
i,|
'
,-rs
ihe M i l d r u l
service
rotund,-,
"icm
through
are
I.aiislev
Mawle\
of "ludnil
a l l o f those
afleruooii
ileiiry
said.
Miss
Vespers
l
,,f | "
a message
"We
who
reception
' » ' eondlicled
preside
issues
Ihe X r . t t s ,
be in ihe
Rev.
I.aiislev,
lodav
ment
h
faculty
on
cupied
.
Hie
lo nlli
u was
from
semester.
and!
Member,
aileud,
many
lirsl
Sunda\
ralh
are
of
ihe
The
t i n f.-cqiientlv
Ihal
M.
the ! . p i a i n l u u c c . "
as candi
according
High
plaster
Hall
under
will
applied
Milne
Several
this
o f lloors,
Milne
juniors
now
semester, at
week.
heini?
Milue
lime
Milne
'-;;;;,.;,;;;. ,,,„. ,iM „ . , ,,, we,,,::,;,;.,:,;;;,',;,"!,"ll,,!;:,;,,,;:,;',:.,,, uil:'i,''lT^,l:<:..:iii,,^::'.n7.r:,.^'.r..,.!::r.^., \ : . ± ,,,;:,r,",i-<:;,i"7!:l;;..;:::,:',,!:,1'",,
...
post-
classes
Hall
next
this
new
unit.
for
more
ol
pageant.
of
t o ihe f r e s h m e n
the | college
to limit
mav
C. A.,
Ameri
llhe
told,
been
veal's leave, D r Douglas - . l u d n d al l l i e l
\||,„|,im,
C iversi.v
d Toroiilo
and
.1! C o r n e l l
, , . , , .,,',..,
||o,a
is
to i n f o r m a t i o n
ih,-
, , f ihe
needed
buildings
is now
of
and
lnna
he m i the c a m p u s . 1
the association.
classes
W.
o l ihe
will
is i x p c c l c d ,
,,l
adequate
l i e criticized
adinitled
aillbor
allrndancc
o f welcome
It is both ••uiiscieiilili,-
coll,- K l -s
ha\e
that
slandards
questioned
mil v
During
day
to have
o f Hustecl
until
authorities
home
associalion
l o the i r e
program
Mildred
crow
discussion
hiolog
who
t w o vears.
i h e new
V. W .
feature
is ihe
freshmen
he charged
liovnlon
"W,
ihal
alumna,
,,l
ling,
l o r students,
o f sindenls
al
Mr. Douglas
release
RECEIVES
FRESHMEN TONIGHT
( o'llcgc.' - i n i i l c scienlilic
staleincn' n, prove t h a i I members w i l l he f o r m a l l y
,ice, pled m i , , - 1 ' 1 ' ' - - , 'his is m o r e than an assumption.
Herein
ihe associalion.
Opportunity
will
be
I rcsiilcnl
I'.eloii
dining
of
upon
o f the
reception
large
\ssocia
providing
,1 slalc.nenl
al Ihe " I
formerly
declared
iiol
' ,,f entrance
leges
I'nivci-siiy.
study
supervisor
leave w i l l
are
re
M i - .
her master's
at
lihaea
iher
in mathematics,
return
war'.,
l-'rcnch.
of
and
|„ ,,,
colleges
Dr.
h'diiealion
w i n , is superintendent
• el
,nd
A
IV.
ran
Maude M a i
resident
h'rc'ncii
siihsiitulc
Miss
main
Ihe
presi
o f ' siiperintenil
coiiimcneeniciil
I'.OMIIOII
,|al,s
Hopkins
had
Paris,
siriiclo'r
'in'
Wisconsin
will
in
i h , annual
al
ap
hioii-il
I,,„,
rais
library
\
in t h e i r
llovnloii,
ihe class o f I'lJK and
M l .t r a i n i n g
of
librarian
Mis,
received
from
She
director
failing
I)
deparliuenl
i„
l'ir
Prilchard.
i h e permancnl
succeed
is a g r a d u a t e
college,
llii-
year,
are
frank
al
this
School.
as i n s t r u c t o r
,,,.,.,.
Miss
formerly
Preston
I'resloii
school
he acting
of
Normal
lo
Catherine
and Ihe stale
was
< Ineoiila
|)„intee
Mis,
is a g r a d u a l ,
College
school,
l'L'fi.
o l M v skauia.
in Ihe l i h r a r y
will
in
-
colleges
Dr
. , i ihe
w i l l assist
l.ove
iiiissiun
,|,.. I
I Huh
Ihe absence
\merieau
aliiniiia.
as a - a Man!
in Cue
is a f o r m i r inemher
the
A.
leaching
her haehellor's
Miss
the
Alice
Tarlelon,
a Slate
Miss
lege
Raising Entrance Requirements \v,dm-.day'ai'Ton'',,Yl'o,-k'' hi! 'n-iu-c M - S t u d e n t Association Officers
Is " S i l l y , " School Head
(„,riuley, who wrote ihe musical comedy I
A n d Myskania Members
I for the (oils' Athletic association las't I
Are In Charge
Tells Graduates
were
-
Snow,
succeed
She
substituting
Sheffield.
Miss
will
be
Anna
iiual
who have h e m
released.
lanel
Miss
Keim.
based
purpose
new
west
least, according
iMIlFfiF
IS FAIIINP. 'Y.W.C.A. WILL RECEIVE FACULTY
W h l m l b f A,LlflU
'
FRESHMEN WEDNESDAY
1
Dr.
*:msmmy- ' ~'^
re
Anne
ahroad
moving
expected
to wail
Plaster
Professor
Miss
from
! l:
walls
I.avion.
are:
Ihe three
obliged
Miss A l -
I'ritchard,
to return
in
who
construction
Miriam
dishing.
The
;
m K ii .
wen'
alirnad.
meinhcrs
of ahsenee
"
Sindenls
l
others
Miss
l-'dna
t w o faculty
leave
' " ' '
two
Redwav,
Miss
l
College's
poned.
week
faculty
o f study
appointees
Miss
ceived
I..
members
wire
leave o f absence, and
retunieil
icia-
instructors
TO BE MOVED
LIBRARY
RETURNS
with
sole
ASSEMBLY
PROGRAM
President A. R. Brubacher will
address both student assemblies today.
His topic in the freshman
assembly at 11:35 o'clock will be
"Sell Education".
T h e assembly
for sophomores and uppt-i classmen
will be at 10:SS o'clock.
Members
of Myskania, in cap and gown, will
be seated on the platform during
both assemblies.
STATE COLLEGE NEWS, SEPTEMBER 21, 1928
State
College News
Established in 1910 by the Class of 1918
The Undergraduate Newspaper of New York
State College for Teacheri
^, HE
WILLIAM
NEWS
JJOARD
M. F R E N C H
Editor-in-Chief
Kappa Delta Rho House, 480 Morris St., Dial u-4314
T H O M A S P . FALLON
Business
12 Garfield 1'lace, Dial 6-48/4-tt
L o u i s J . WULNEK
Managing
54 West Street, Uial U-.S595-K
MARGARET J, STEELE
Associate Managing
224 Jay Street, Dial 6-2091 W
MARGARET H E N N I N O E
Advertising
Manager
Editor
Manager
PRINTED UV MII.I.S ART PRESS, 394-396 Broadway—Dial 4-2287
Sept. 21, 1928
Vol. X I I I , No. 1
PEA N UT FA R T1CI PA TI ON
T o the entering freshman class, greetings.
You have been at State almost a week. You have doubtless been caught in the swirl of extracurricular activities as
well as in the whirl of classes.
You have received advice from sources innumerable.
But on top of all this advice, the NEWH ventures to add
more. It's this: don't pay In much for your whistle.
Go into extracurricular activities, of course. They enrich your college career. They save you from becoming
that despised creature, the "greasy «riiic]". Put at the
same time, choose wisely.
Weigh the relative merits of one activity as contrasted
with another. Pick the one which interests you. Of the
multiplicity of choices, make yours the one on which you
wish to concentrate.
And if you are going out to make a name for yourself,
get into something which has a future in it. Avoid petty
activities as you would petty quarrels. They take too much
time and lead nowhere. They fritter away your time on
this and that committee; you will fly hither and you, consuming energy that might much mure justifiably he used
in study or might be put to use in gaining a place in the
extracurricular activities thai count.
Beware the club mania. The goblin is around the corner,
disguised as a upperclassman with a shiny insignia, wailing
to snare you. Your reward fur biting will he a bill for
dues and perhaps a picture in the senior annual. You
might even gel a free initiation, with ice cream for refreshments.
Having chosen a subject for specialization, join that departmental club, if you are assured il is worth while; but
make them prove il j
Avoid peanut participation. There arc enough big things
at Slate. Vou need not fritter away your time on blind
alley tasks.
The goblin will get you if you don't watch out I
I UHI I.
"STREAM OF HISTORY" IS STRONG;
"CAPTAIN CANOT" OUT-HORNS HORN
By W.M.F
Editor
Newman Hall, 741 Madison Ave., Dial 6-6484
Published every Friday in the college year by the Editorial Board
representing the Student Association. Subscriptions, $2.25 per year,
•ingle copies, ten cents. Delivered anywhere in the United Statei.
Entered as second class matter at postoffice, Albany, N. Y.
The NEWS does nut necessarily endorse sentiments expressed in
contributions. No communications will be printed unless the writers'
names are left with the Editor-in-Chief of the NEWS. Anonymity
will be preserved if so desired. The NEWS does not guarantee to
print any or all communications,
Albany, N . Y.
cover is the best y e t ' o f the nine Lions to be published.
Beginning with a feeble yowd, the Lion at last is beginning
to roar—and to cause other people to at least break into
smiles. W e daresay that the more jovial could "roar with
Leo".
UIXS SCRAP PILE
Post exam jubilee today j
titer outworn relics on
the figurative scrap pile.
In the announcement by My.skania that this party is to
be wiped from the calendar of events this year, a healthy
frame of mind can be discerned. The first few jubilees,
so records have il. were successes. The latter day jubilees
were anything bin that. Lack of interest in recent years
has been apparent, both no the pari of the students ami
the faculty.
It seems thai there is really but little to be jubilant about
at the time the parly is scheduled, faculty are tired with
wading through examination books, written by at least
equally tired students. Marks are not yet announced, and
many a student who rejoices, later finds he has rejoiced
too soon.
Perhaps way back in the days when there really was a
skeleton of old Queen ( a r c |o bury, there may have been
interest on the part of students ami luridly alike. Hut
the Queen lust her appendages one by one, and ihen even
the ribs went into the unknown. Ami along with the Queen
went student ami faculty interest.
To speak in the language ol tin- streets, the jubilee for
several years has been "a llop". Myskania, which starled
the tradition in \{)li and which has administered it since,
rendered a disliucl service in discarding a worn-out custom, a custom thai has long s u n ived Us usefulness.
Till' XKKI) PoR \ DIRKCTORY
L'ppcrclasstneii will ai the. nine be missing a great boon
they enjoyed last year.
1 11< > will miss the little yellow
covered directory. And while tin-) are gelling along as
best they can, they will reinembci ihe speed ami efficiency
with which the director) nhioi s l,i-i vear published the
little book. The directory l.,-i w ai «,is distributed weeks
before Ihe directory ol any other year.
That is a mark the new hoard of editors will have |o aim
at. As soiai as students a n located in their college homes,
work bliuuJrJ be begun. The need lor the hook is immediate
' I h e nerd this year is even greater than last year, lor not
a single telephone number listed in last w a r ' s directory is
useable Ibis year, The change to the dial system wrecked
tile utility of the directory.
Hut a new directory will have the addresses and new telephone numbers. The siudcnis have faith in the directory
editors. They expect a director) earl) next month,
'nil'
I.IU.Y C R O W S
mi.l.Kl.lATK
The editor and staff of Ihe State I.ion are to be congratulated on the first issue of the third volume of that
publication. They have succeeded at last in giving Stale
College students a humor maga/me that looks like a collegiate publication, and nol a funny sheet from a select
school for young ladies. The first issue is proof that there
By Geoffrey Parsons. 590 pagi s.
The Stream of History.
$5. N e w York; Charles Scribner's Sons.
"This short sketch of the past has one principal aim, to
present the centuries not as the mountains of sunlit lac:
which history has tended to portray, but rather as a streai.i
of mingled fact and theory, now clear, now muddied by
passion and prejudice, eddying about this hero or that, and
reaching each generation through the shifting channels of
individual minds". That is the statement of the author,
and The Stream of History well bears out his purpose in
presenting the history of the world as an ever-flowing current, rising one knows nol where, and flowing on, now
placidly, now swiftly, to an unknown destination.
There is no finality in history, the author holds, declaring that as new approaches lo (he part are discovered, the
complexity grows greater; that a purely scientific attitude
toward history may lend lo obscure unknown facts.
It is a severe task to put before a man—to condense ihe
history of the world into a single volume. Necessarily there
must be omission ami brie I interpretation. 'Ibis has led
to ihe widespread questioning ol ihe value of a single
volume treatise on the subject. To write with a sense of
proportion must he a difficult task.
Hut the author has
succeeded in presenting in these live hundred-odd pages a
concise, clear cut and remarkably well balanced history of
civilization.
'Ihe biologic interpretations are perhaps the best. While
the author cites con Hiding authorities, he does not fear to
assert positive opinion. ,\'o attempt was made to present
a lifeless rag of neutrality.
Jt is undoubtedly unfair to sample one part of the book
in a review, but "From Amoeba to Man" will be of particular interest lo the student of evolutionary leanings.
The first paragraph sets flowing a current that runs
through the ensuing chapter.
Once in the stream, it is
difficult to stop reading, lake a river, ihe book at times
has its eddies and whirlpools, but fur Ihe large share of
its course il is a strong, clear si ream.
Adventures
of An African Slaver.
I!v Captain Theodore
Canot. 376 pages. S-l. New York: Albert and Charles
Boui.
Once slave trading was an honorable profession, bul il
took a slump in public opinion as has the more recent liquor
production trade. Bul il bootleggers in these matter of fact
days have their adventures, niiisi not the slavers in the days
of windjammers and dirt)' crews have experienced thrilling
incidents? This book, purported to have been written by
the prince of the illicit trade in black ivory, supplies apparently authentic narrative ol" the declining days of an
international criminal practice.
Captain Canot was horn an Italian, became an American
by adopting the Coiled Stales, and spread his adventures
over the African continent, the Atlantic and Ihe pearl of the
Antilles. As a boy, he shipped aboard a trader, fell in
among wreckers anil pirates and then was graduated to
male of a slaver. Mis graduate course was pursued in a
slave post on the African coast, amidst adventures a-plenly ;
uis highest degree was won in combatting John Hull ami
escaping from his cruisers.
This is tin- tale of a self made man. Canol began as a
humble secretary to an African magnate, who hail "gone
black" with a harem of thirty buxotn negre.sses; by steps he
rose to the ownership of his own factor), and treated with
dusky Moslem princes mr their captives in war. We are
told that Moslems considered the greatest penall) to befall
criminals was .sale to ihe infidels. In Ibis connection, there
is the laic of the beautiful princess who was supposed to
be sold lo Canol because she refused lo man') a wife heal
Hut our gallant i anoi came to her rescue;
ing prince.
you may read how.
While tin- publishers have not dcpo.siled bond to guarantee
the authenticity of the authorship, we like lo belie\e thai
il is true. \ ' o mailer, for n u isn't, nothing is lost. It
is all plausible, ami il ihe laic was manufactured, why the
manufacturer has done a n I job wilh a facile imagination. It might all be true; if these ineiilcnls didn't happen,
why, others like litem did. The slor\ i- Caiml's "own
story as told in the year I.S>I lo Hranl/. Mas er, im U edited
with an introduction by Malcolm Cowley". Canol related
the story while plaviug uharl ral in Halliiiiore, we are told.
lake frailer Horn, he had thrillers lo tell. Hut person
ally, we think that as a thriller, il rail Horns ih, venerable
llli pail seller discovered by \ o \ e l i s | Lewis and press
agented by Simon and Schuster.
Malice Toward Xoue.
\U I loiiore W'ilKie Morrow.
,1-IJ pages. $2.51). New York: Morrow.
Mis. Morrow has done it again and done il eve
ire
successfully Ihe second lime ibau the first, Her borerer
I ree has been hailed as one ,,l ihe loreuiosi Lincoln m u d s
of recent years; now one scarceli knows how to -.a am
tiling heller about II illl Mali.,
Iowa III Vnac. il one
decides to call il "a human pi.
i liie in ihe W bile
House", or "an illuminating fimiiiuii i i Miicriraii history",
or "a moving story", m just pi.on, incrwoikrd "lasein.it
illg", one finds lJi.it all (In -i- choice epithets h a w been
burled at borever I ree In
loan |lo Ion p . Portland,
\ Louise Trask Sees A Student Festival At Heidelberg;
London Is Groaning With Its History, She Declares
[Louise E. Trask, '30, who recently
returned to Albany from an extended
Student tour of Euro/>e, in this ex-
Capri wlicrc the famous Blue Grotto i
located.
And, as for Rome— all roads lead to
Koine . All that T had studied about
elusive article for the STATE COLLEGE
Koine came to life in imagination as I
N E W S describes the high lights of her
looked at the ruins of the Forum, (he
trip.—Editor.]
Colosseum and the Baths of Caracalla.
Venice, where the main street is the
By Loutsis E. TRASK, '30
Grand Canal, where there arc no taxis
Contrary to the "See America hirst"
and where there is much music and wonslogans, it was my good fortune to be derful moonlight evenings, is decidedly
one of the 400,000 tourists in Europe different. Florence will be as eternal as
its art for its art.
this summer.
In Switzerland I was enthralled by (he
I had a most delightful crossing with
majestic snow-capped mountains and ihe
freedom from the prevalent mal dc mcr, robins-egg-bhie lakes.
Heidelberg ofbut was overjoyed to be on terra firma fered a real treat as we were spectators
again at Gibraltar. Gibraltar is a most at a .student festival held the night we
W e sailed down the Rhine
cosmopolitan town. It seemed a fairy- arrived.
from Mainz to Bonn. Coining from ihe
land to me—all the semi-tropical gardens, Hudson valley, 1 was nol over impressed
the touches of the orient, and the mag- by the renowned scenic beauty of Ihe
nificent defiant rock. After visiting Al- Rhine, Amsterdam means one thing in
l
giers and the charming island of Sicily my mind ihe Olympiad of \ )2H, where
I witnessed two records broken, lirtisselwe landed al Naples. I shall remember
recalled the guild houses of my fresh
Naples for its famous hay, and its sub- man history course.
urban spots—Sorrento, Amalfi (no wonParis is jusl an intriguing, delightful,
der it's called the most wonderful drive spacious, artistic, gorgeous city. The
opera
I allinded because I ihoiight n
in the w o r l d ! ) , Pompeii and the island of
the "thing to do" and I found it quite
worth-while,
Il was our good fortune
lo be al Versailles the firsl Sunday in
Ihe month, when Ihe fountains play. To
walk in Ihe gardens and promenade
| through tin I bill of Mirrors was one of
the high spnls of the lour. My mcni.m
cherishes manv things ahotil i'aris
Eiffel
(both by day and night I, the Lollies, tin
NEWS,
KUITHK, Si,MI: (IH.I.KI
beautiful
Champs
filysees,
the
K'ue
dc
State l idlest- is pii larily a professin
la Pai.x, the Louvre', and Ihe Are dc
solution tin tin- train -IK of teachers, I
power which il puss, ises of conferri |« H» Triomphe where the French 1'nknowii
Soldier rests. Loudon after 'T'aree' ibachelor of arts degr e has placed it
i|iu'le disappointing. Il is anything bin
elass of a liberal artss college. To be
attractive exceedingly
dull,
groaning
liln-ral ails college, a
with
English
history.
Oxford, the
ilium of Ihe I'm,- .
Ihe arts. Tin
Shakespeare Country and English Lake
eh in its present:,
Iiarlineiit
District redeemed mv disappointment in
eight eon
to llu student. The run
Ihe big English city. Edinburgh is a
Ml' III,- MM
depart
perfeel Scolch cily w h i n an inlercsi in
thin do
Scotch history L involuntarily awakened
orchestra
truction.
We sailed from Glasgow for a cold and
In eolil.se 1, stmt
stormy voyage homeward.
f the
intelligent appreciate
ii.llyn
The entire (rip was so pleasing and
Al Ihe piano, Dr. Can
instructive thai the desire In repeal il
lectures. Hut we won,lei il' llu
if
student,
is
omnipresent.
ma he supplemented by II
e and ap
Iheiuselves. Is nol the
M III
expression
Ills
n who ha;
leelings? Can a
never moulded clay fully enter the seulpto
mood when lie sees a statue? Will nol a si
lent appreciate more fully the sharp •nacc;.
The sltidcnt constitution, voted on last
I if he himself has fell the In
i
the
spring, was this week declared by Evelyn
Tin
apt'I
Graves, president of the studetil asso
ciation, |o have been ratified.
al appliealh
Miss Graves announced that a stil'ii
opportunity lo
ii'i'dlyn's'itvi
cienl majority of (wo lliirds of ihe
and repi intuitu
association members voted in favor m
liled n. one ebis
Ihe change. Several did not vote, she
led lo I hose stud
said.
Many of Ihe Voles were g tlhered by
slituiion which fails in
ei|ual oppoilll lies lo the student* wilh personal solicitation, according lo hei
mis kinds of mi eal uhilil) is i-mlanm-iinu announcement.
\ ' o time was affordi i
iKliis lo be Has.. I .i- a libeial arts collet,-.
last spring for a v dc in sltidcnt a--, in
'c now been, le
elioii hail lo In
lilies, since discussion of the propo-ed
,.
Dr. I'ainllyi
constitution was cnitiuiied through tin
. k of student
lasl iiuctings ni ihe year.
nine of I IK- ,o.
The executive power of Ihe nssneia
Hill lie I
lion, il pro\ ides, is vested in ihe student
Is u pi
council, which consists of student asso
ruts llu
rested i
eiali
liicers and class president-,. Ilale have
dulies arc to arrange association pro
.0 III.
grams, t,, provide for publication ol a
roups?
COMMUNICATIONS
CONSTITUTION PASSED,
MISS GRAVES CLAIMS
v I., i
hieh I
N
bin
Hie I..I.SI i n
III. l e d In II
ellim Ih,
e l . lll.ll
al a l i l l i l -
With
l i o n budget, and l o ei
r e all Irgislalmi
eliaclcd by the legi-dalive -Imleiil a
semi,lies.
A r l i c l e fi, w h i c h ,le,Is w i t h ihe JIKII
r i a l power is e n l i r e l v new. I i ve-l • hn i
j u d i c i a l p.,wer in N h s k a n i a in Ihe i .1
l o w i n g cases:
| . | M ,, disagreenu-i
between boards and l l u association . J
i -i 11 I ' l W I
( in
'"'
CALENDAR
i/i/e
"I III.' HI./u III il/l.O,
/'..id /in.' i.i /niM./av /..•/..!.• /'iio/io ,1 ..„
V../i
Ii t i l l ,
m i /.,' fli„,i,;l
I.. Ih, I , / , / , „ / , „ „ •
until
IH . . ' , / u . / • I u.-i.t.i.
ill.//,;,
Oregon.
Without knowing thai we a n ma plagari/.iug some other
reviewer's jiluase, we venture lo s,,y dial litis is ,i down
right humdinger of a novel, Which, lor the uninitiated, we
will translate as "corking g I".
The prcscill hook deals Willi ihe last l u o years of the
( ivil W a r ; with the grim Sumner, beloved by Lincoln, yei
a bitter opponent oi the administration in recoiisiiucliou;
with Tad and the dead Willie; with I'red Douglass, a oiu
lime slave who raised ihe lir-i negro troops for the Union;
wilh Grant, "the butcher of Sbiloh" whom Lincoln could
not spare because "he lights". Hul Lincoln and .Mary lake
up the main portion of Ihe narrative. Mrs. Morrow show-.
ihe latter as a much misunderstood and wrongly maligned
mate of the president.
And with true romanticism, Ihe author leaves the two
not at Ihe marlyr's deathbed bin as "in deep happiness they
watched ihe sliding Virginia shore".
II.ai
"ilice Holding, lii arrange a l.iculn re
cej
lo charier all boards ami coin
indices receiving I Is fr
ihe ass,,ci,i
Today
Assetnbl) of sophomores and upper
classmen. Auditorium. 111:55 A. M.
Assembly for freshmen. Auditorium
I I :JS A. M.
Faculty rcrcpiiiiii. Gymnasium K 15
I'. M.
Tomorrow
V. W. C. A. Vespers. Koiunda of
Draper Hall. 4 I'. M.
Wednesday
V. W. ('. A. lawn party ami reception. Campus. 7:.I0 P. Al.
Friday, Sept. 28
Gut Wise parly for freshmen.
«
P. Al.
lillllillll.
Mysk.-mia is i
emlei
uhison .
ispllti belween | ic .nideiil as
ml Ihe , l u , | , i i l , n i h i l
Ii)
a t w o third mlc,
ihe as
may relet am ni.itU i l,, \ L I. una I,.I
final decision
Myskania i- aiiilioii/ed I
m ,i .
and i • Kiil.it. mo i, |; l v , rivain : In d
M'v.ral „,i i.d aeliMiies, including Mm
ing I p day, I aiiipus das, Gel \\ i
I'ari.s, and Lo a Lsam jtibilei ; lo uphold
and enforce college Hadi'limis and lo
•il'l'b such penalties for infractions a
lieen pi
legislaii,
Hear
Si
ilher p,
\ elo power
VI sled III Illl fa. nils
council, which
empowered Ii ilcclari
void any act ,,| ih,
boards.
Amendment is provided for by a ma
jniil) vole ol the a-soeialioii. Provision
is made for pndrsl and appeal b)
minorities.
A full Copy of |he conslillltioll is
primed in the \').U edition of the fresh
man handbook.
STATE COLLEGE NEWS, SEPTEMBER 21, 1928
1932 "GETS WISE"
NEXT FRIDAY NIGHT
STUDENTS ASSOCIATION OFFICERS
BOYNTON ASSAILS
33 ISSUES OF NEWS DR. AMERICAN
COLLEGES
WILL BE PUBLISHED
Ludlum, Rival President, Aims
At Penalizing Freshmen
Not Attending
'News Hound'To Resume Place
As House Organ For
Staff Workers
The "get-wise" parly given by the
class of 1931 to the freshmen ncxl l r r i day night will open intcrclass rivalry
between the two classes. "Committees
will be appointed at a meeting next
week," Russell VV. Ludlnm, sophomore
president, announced Tuesday.
A l l freshmen will he required lo attend and take pari in stunts I" entertain
the sophomores and other students.
Members of Mvskania will supervise the
party, according to the new constitution
voted on in June. The sophomore president will preside.
The purpose of the meeting is to instruct entering student-, concerning Ira
dilions and rivalry at the college, .mil
to distribute class insignia. Women students will receive distinctive bullous
bearing their class numerals, and men
will be given caps anil toques.
Freshmen will be required |o sing the
college alma mater. A member of Mvs
kania will read and explain the inter
class rivalry rules.
Sophomores will
check attendance. Penalties, determined
upon by the rival class, and approved in
advance by Mvskania, will be indicted
upon the freshmen not attending, the
rules provide.
Two years ago. Virginia V. Similes,
'.it), won the prize as the prettiest baby,
and Agnes M. Altro, '.in, received the
award as the best nourished baby in the
baby parade of all freshmen in the gym
nasium.
Irving K. MeCniincll. '.51, cnlering a
gray pig, won first prize in the pedigreed
slock show 1,'isl year.
Thirty-three issues of the STATE t'oi.i i:ia: NEWS will be published during the
present college year, according to a program announced this week following a
conference between William M. b'rench,
'29, editor-in-chief, and Thomas P, Fallon, '2(>, business manager.
MISS HUNTER MARRIES
BEAVER, SEPTEMBER 3
Announcement is nude ol the mar
riage of Miss loiia I liinler, '17, ol 7'H)
Western avenue, to Ralph Alexander
Beaver, instruclor in mathematics.
The ceremony was performed in the
Kirst Methodist Church by the K'ev.
Marion Cole, pastor, Moiida\, Seplem
her A. kichard A. Jensen, '_'X, a irater
In t
Mr,
intv lirotlier
man.
Mr. Heaver is a inembei oi the Kappa
Delta Kbo fralernity. l b was graduated
from Stale College in P'.'-l, and w.iniade an instructor in 1 '_'.->.
ENGLISH DEPARTMENT
NAMES 77 STUDENTS
\EXEMPi ED BY SCORES
Seventy se\ i n I reshmeu \vi
einpl front t.iking their required elenieunl written courses, the de
parliuenl oi Kuglish ,ni
iced this
u n T . Those exempteil will lake l\ng
li-li _M, a course in types of poetry taughl
by Miss ( atherine \V. I'eltz, iiistruclor
in haiglish.
The exemptions were determined by
averaging lbe standing of the freshmen
in the regents' examinations with the
scores obtained in the special Kuglish
I. si Monday, according to Miss Helen
M. I'hillips, instructor in Kuglish. Those
uitli the highest averages were exempted.
The list oi exemptions follows:
|P..i,.|ln I!,
.inn, H<,sr llnxler, K.olii v
.-lkh,i|.. I in, si \. I!
I,. Katlli-i lilt' HornI ion i- \
Miliki-, I
lln II
HUM-, l l e l i . .
D o r o l h v Cale, '-"'. will he.nl 111. ( mil
merce club. ( Uhcr ..flic i - .o die club
are Agnes McCarn, '."', MC< pre-i-leiii ;
l.eolia lew ell, '_"'. seerel.ny . .111.mil.i
Mel,any. '-"'. treasurer; .mil K'uilolph
Wurtb, '.'D. re|)i.rler
3RAD>'
Kvi n i m
\ , u s
( Hlicers of the studeul associalion ulu
will In in charge of ass, m' lies loday
Miss Craves, 'Jo, ;„ |„-rsi,|eul ; Mis
I5rad.\, '.ill. vice pi, o'.li m ; Miss Xorn's
'.II. secretarv.
II,.... ,,,,,,!,,
Miiini,
Mi,-.,I,, III I I, k.
K.
Mi i .
I...
Khn.
Iv'il.
l..ill,iii.
Is.
I
l,n.
hi
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i.
M.illm
.Hi-
A m i i s
.HI,
I.,,.,
i.
It..II.IMI
b.lHs,
K,
U,,,i
Il
I ,,n; . s !
IUIVH.
S\l\
Kul,i
lln
Mililli.
I.I I
\nti.i
M . l . n m i s s
I It-l.-n
Muni
\ l , , n l . l-,l,i.n,l \ l , . n . Man I.,,nil,
Nu.i M.itiii.ni. Man,MI ,\YI-.,,n.
\mi
M u x
ls.,l„l
Ill
Is.,,
I.. ...,
1-1,,o ,,,,,•
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j/0111'
I'litroiiiK/e
Phone 6-3933
CkQTH.ES
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STEUBEN STREET
Corner J a m e s
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ESTABLISHED
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YOUTHFUL
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UNITED
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i
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D I M . -1-KI.27
A M E 8 - A S W A D CANDY S H O P , I n c .
222 CENTRAL AVENUE
P
Suits * 4 0 , * 4 5 , * 5 0 Overcoats
IIOMK MADE CANDIES ami DELICIOUS ICE CREAM
SANDWICHES. COKEEE AND PASTRY
Auuwaii (£lvanvv8 and Hyin*a
Wf Clean and Dye all kinds of Ladies' and Men's
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811A MADISON AVENUE
Phone 6-0273
We Have It
Endicott - Johnson
Have you visited our new Central Ave. Store
for latest styles in fall Oxfords and Dress Pumps?
$
,9,S - $ 3 . 9 5 - $ 4 . 9 5
OPEN
451 Broadway
IIV So/ile
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l'.\ IK )NI/.K THE
ALLING RUBBER CO
215 Central Avenue
Tin- home i\f lint mill Colli Lunelle
( 'miilij iiml lee < 'ri'iiin
Tin- Fliiexl'l'iii'hr on Central Ave
DEAN HAS BIRTHDAY
"JUST AROUND M i l ' . CORNER AUOVE ROBIN STREET"
KUBBER
cApollon
Tea. Room
.
(l.sli.na
BERTHA" E.''bALTON" ''
of
Visit The New
. nil,!,. I i ii.in., i. n I., i tin. . . i
Graduate Burnham School formerly
of Madame Otgiato
178 Washington A v e n u e
If it's made
,v\.
Culllh-sy, Alloiiv
Dean William I I , ,\lel,-|e, eelebi.ilei
iii
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c.ii.isk'v, Kml.ilpli i
is. his sixty li i ili birllnkn 'Im-il.n
1
- Dr. Mei/ler's s,xlh war a
j ; ; ! , , ' . ' , , ^ ^ IH^ ^^VuJ^
.vfnn, fc!!
line dean at Stale Colli ee.
• \t. |i,,iU,in,
mi,
iiim-m-v, Knbei
! K.,.m. <,.»!. ':•-'<<', .T \ ™ ' - ' ' ? t I J ^
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^,"L.,;|I„.,-1 ,.-,!,',';,',,'i'iV, s,»," \ti,-, i'!„,„„
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''Dependable Flowers''
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IIV Teleijru/,1, Flour,;* to all Part*
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•
It.i.HI.li.
.M.UB.-UII
I I , m i ,
Ksih.-i I
Oftlic World
t i n . I . . . I ,,,,i..i M,,,|,:r
liisepliine H u l l . I.illi.m
M.,o
\l
MISS GALE HEADS
THE COMMERCE CLUB
MlS'S G K A C l .
Beginning with today's issue, the NEWS
will be published each Friday until May
31, except during vacation periods, Fallon declared.
The sVl'.US today- has (he besl equipped
plant in its history, editors declare, During the summer, two steel filing cabinets
were purchased for the filing of business
papers, advertising contracts, supplies,
and cuts used from lime lo time.
Ki sumption of the "News 11 mind" is
announced today by the editorial department. This is ,i bouse organ devoted to
ihi purpose ol obtaining |>< tier co-operation between members ol the staff, and
n the puhlicalion of a heller newspaper.
I be "News II,,mid" will be a mimeographed s l i d , and will be issued when
occasion requires.
An editor for the organ w ill be named
this n ih, it u is announced today.
t .1 ue\ ii vi' l ole, '„">, senior associate
idilor ol the Vt.us, was editor of |he
pap' r when il was published two years
ago.
I'libliealion was discontinued last
y ear.
Circulation of the "News Hound" will
be for stall members and candidates for
•I.ill' positions only.
A greater share of the \ ' i ws' copy lo
he sent lo the printer Ibis year will he
typewritten. This action is made possible
In die purchase ol a new Ivpewriler
which will be added lo the ha ft cry now
used by tin \ ' i w s. Heller service can
be obtained In ihe Use of typewritten
(Con 11 luted from Page I, Col, 2)
session of a retentive memory. But a
retentive memory is by no means the
prime requisite for independent intelletital work, he added. l i e said he
favored as criteria other such qualities
as honesty, leadership, character, industry, and participation in extra curricular
activities as well as scholarship.
President A. R, Brubacher, who presided al the commencement program,
welcomed the criticism by Dr. Hoynton
as "a healthy frame of mind of American education", He declared that the
future of education is bright when an
educator can disjoin himself from his
profession sufficiently long to stand aside
and observe its workings.
Miss Cornelia S, Adair, president of
the National Education Associalion, was
awarded the honorary degree of doctor
of pedagogy.
Miss Adair is a class
room teacher in the public schools of
Richmond, V'a.. and is a graduate of the
I ollege of William and Mary. She is
the lira class loom teacher to head the
national association, which includes a
million teachers in its membership.
The degree of master of pedagogy was
conferred upon K, (i. I.anlman, of A l bany, secretary of the state teachers'
pension bureau.
Mary
Judith
l.angdon, '28, was
awarded the l.iah Lovenheiin prize for
excellence in Kuglish composition. Dorothy Walls, '28, won Ihe Quarterly prizes
lor excellence ill poetry and prose. _
87 Central Av<
WBV
h
SPECIAL APPOINTMENT -3
OUR STORE IS THE
_.
HShtcctet l o u s e
O F ALBANY
The character of the suits and
overcoats tailored by Charter House
will earn your most sincere liking.
Steefel Bros.
INC.
EVENINGS
60 No. Pearl St.
,rm./
STATE COLLEGE NEWS, SEPTEMBER 21, 1928
38 MEN, 259 GIRLS
IN FRESHMAN GLASS
Trait Index Test Experiment
Admits Several After
Rejection
Two hundred and ninety seven freshmen were admitted to State College this
week in the class of 1932, according to
an announcement of Miss Elizabeth Van
Denburgh, registrar,
Thirty-eight of die freshmen arc men.
This is the largest number of men stuents admitted to die College since the
fall nf 192S, when die present senior
class entered with 44 men on its class
roster.
Miss Anna E. Pierce, dean of women,
and Miss Mary Elizabeth Cobb, librarian,
spoke to the freshmen Monday and
Tuesday in the auditorium of I lawlev
hall,
Miss Pierce cautioned the freshmen
girls not to place ton much emphasis
upon sorority affairs. She warned them
that several would not receive bids from
the social organizations during the rush
period next semester.
Formal registration for classes was
conducted for freshmen Wednesday in
the gymnasium, with faculty members in
charge.
Of the number admitted, several were
accepted who had regents' averages below
WHFEUlMGr
tlie required eighty per cent.
These
Two faculty members who returned
were the students who successfully
passed the trait index tests administered from England for the opening of Collast week under the direction of the edu- lege: Miss Winched, professor of home
cation department. They had been pre- economics, toured England, and Miss
viously rejected, but were admitted after Wheeling, instructor in English, studied
at Oxford university.
passing the tests,
In an interview, President A. I\. Ilrubacber emphasized the fact that the
testing was largely experimental. It will
not be applied to all entering freshmen
until it is well standardized, according
to accepted educational procedure, on a
Agnes M. Allro, '30, will be president
large number of cases, Dr. Brubaeher of the Lutheran club this year. Other
declared.
officers a r e : Wilma Adams, '3(1, secretary; Pauline L. Bailer, '31, treasurer;
and Olivia D. Nurnberger, '30, reporter.
AGNES ALTRO TO HEAD
LUTHERANS THIS YEAR
FRATERNITY SENDS 7
TO BUCKNELL MEETING
Seven un.iergradunle and alumni members of Gamma chapter of Kappa Delta
Rho attended the annual convention of
the fraternity at the lota chapter, Bucknell University, following the close of
the regular session in June.
Dr. M. G. Nelson, assistant professor
of education, attended with b r a n d s E,
Griffin, '28; Gilbert E. Ganong, ' 2 8 ;
William I. Clarke, '27; Rov V. Sullivan,
'29; G. La Verne Carr, '29 and Cordon
P. Stevenson, ex-'29.
Carr was the
official delegate of the local chapter at
the Lcwishiirt; convention.
HEWETT'S
SILK SHOP
80-82 No. Pearl Street
VANKLEECK IS NAMED COLLEGE HUMOR WILL
METAL VALUE AT $75
WALDEN SCHOOL HEAD PRINT WATTS'CARTOON TAKEN FROM BUILDING
Return From England
Edwin R. Van Kleeck, a graduate of
State College, this fall was named superintendent of schools at Walden. Before
going to Walden,
Mr. Vail Kleeck
was principal of
the j u n i o r high
school at Platls
bttrgh,
H e was editor-in
chief of the STATICot i.wn: \ T E\VS dur-
Boulevard
der ideal conditions.
un
WEEK OF SEPT. 24
Finijev
Marin;/.
mill
Eijehrair
Miiiiieiirim/
ami
Mtirccl
Arehimj
Four Walls"
ALSO OPERATING ALBANY AND
THEATRES IN ALBANY
I.UGII.I.K AI.TOPI'.DA
20S Q U A I I , S T . f R l c e Bldg)
Dial 6-5787
PrniHiiii'iif,
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Ternpest"
Lucille Beauty
Salon
LELAND
REGENT
CLINTON
SQUARE
HOME OF FILM CLASSICS
EXCLUSIVE
lutein/
PICTURES
C. H. BUCKLEY, Owner
THE ONLYTHEATRE SHOWING
NEXT WEEK
FIRSTRUNDOUBLEFEATURES
N E X T WEEK
44 NORTH PEARL ST. lover Fearey's>
)o« will call it "A ll<i/)/iy Discovery"
66
63
A Certain])
T b e Desert
V9
w i t h Betty C o m p s o n
L.ADIES S P E C I A L T Y S H O P
NOVELTY SHOES.
HOSIERY
AND SILK
LINGERIE
Special for this Friday and S a t u r d a y - F R E E H O S I E R Y w i t h pair of s h o e s
J
Tfc>e ^\atloe@
With
4') C e n t r a l A v e n u e
©
Johnny Walker- Bessie Love
Ramon Navarro
COLLEGE CANDY " S H O P -
B. m. STRASSE%
203 Central A v e n u e ( n e a r R o b i n )
542 BROADWAY
TRY OUR TOASTED SANDWICHES
V E R Y S N A P P Y E A R L Y FALL HATS
$3.75 and $5.00
PALLADINO
BEAUTY SALONS
DANKER
H o m e S a v i n g s Bank Bldtf
U N , Pearl S t .
Strand
1.W N . IVarl St
"SAYIT WITH FLOWERS-
0 and 42 Maiden Lane
Brennan's S t a t i o n e r y S t o r e
••EYEItYTll/Xa
IX SCHOOL
Parker's, Waterman's and Moore's Fountain Pens
Loose Leaf Books, Brief Cases, Eversharp Pencils, Kic
Fine Stationery, Greeting Cards For Every Occasion
li'ashiin/Inn
iiiul Luke
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Albany, N. Y.
BURIED TREASURE
DRAWS NO INTEREST
SUPPLIES'
The safest place for money - your money - is in the
hank. Not only is it protected, hut it is earning money for
you 24 hours a day, Sundays and holidays included.
VA'i ( I T V S A V I N G S HANK 4 u.<>
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ALBANY, N. V.
(ieo. I). Jeoin-y
Teachers
particularly a n d the public yen
PRINTING OF ALL KINDS
erally w e l c o m e d at all times.
BOULEVARD DAIRY GO,, Inc.
23 I Third Street, Albany, N. Y.
Telephone West 13 14
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flic sensational
Really Has - What Others Claim to Have - '/'/"if in - Delicious
Wholesome - Well-Balanced - HOME COOK/:/' MEA/.s
Cur,
a n d distributed
PROCTOR'S
Grand
HIGH CLASS VAUDEVILLE
VDTRAND
WEEK OF SEPT. 24
The Ainslie Hewett Restaurant
0/1/1, Albany
Produced
John H. Bergstrom, engineer employed
by the Pancieri-I logan company, engaged
in the construction of the new Milne
Hall this week informed police that two
rolls of copper valued at $75 and several
pounds of lead, worth $10 had been taken
Sunday night.
ing his senior year,
chairman o f the
debate council, and
a member of Myskauia.
Mr. V a n Kleecl
While at P i t t s AND
burgh, Mr. V a n
THUR.. Fm.. SAT.
Kleeck was instrumental in directing the
SEPT.
20-21-22
MISS C R A W F O R D MARRIES
campaign for a new junior high school
MARIE PRE OST
Kappa Delta announces the marriage
building, which was carried at a cite
in
VI
BLOND
hOH
A NIGHT"
of Alibie Jeannette Crawford, '27, to
MON. TUES. WED.
election.
At Walden. he will direct Charles E. Stewart, Saturday, .August
SEPT.
24-23-26
among the other schools a new $3110,01)11 11, at Bergenficld, N. J.
RAMON NOVARRO
junior-senior high -i hnol, said by school
In FORBIDDEN HOURS"
men to be one of the finest i" tii • slali
Mr. Van Kleeck is a manner of Phi
DIRECTION STANLEY COMPANY OF AMERICA
Delta Kappa, national honorary education
f >
MARK
fraternity, having been elected by tin
MARKT1
Cornell chapter during his attendance al
the summer session of tbe imiversiij
Ibis year. I li is spci ializing in edncaI'final administration at i oi mil.
Mr. Van Kleeck is also a charter mem
her of Chi chapter of the Kappa Phi
J o h n Barry in ore in
J o h n Gilbert
\appa professional education fralerniu
I Slate I'olleee.
Cor. Columbia
A Reliable Place to Buy
R E L I A B L E - SILKS
WOOLENS - COTTONS
CRETONNES and
INTERIOR
FURNISHINGS
Twelve hundred copies of the State
Lion were placed on sale Wednesday,
according to Robert J. Shillinglaw, '29,
editor-in-chief,
The mast head and
cover design were drawn by Ruth M.
Watts, '29, art editor.
College Humor will publish in its
October edition a cartoon by Ruth M.
Watts, '29, art editor, which appeared in
the June number of the Slate Lion,
Shillinglaw announced.
i
Elections for advertising manager will!
be conducted next week to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of
George Taylor, '30, he said.'
Jgimlntaro (gafVtma
198 Central Avenue- al; IVobii
Albany, N. Y.
Students and Groups at the Stale College for Teachers
will be given special attention
H
Milk
Art" P^fifi
M U 1 &
f \ l l U C M
394,396 Broadway
4-2287
Printers of S u t e College News
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