State College News Campus Edition MILNE MAY MOVE ~

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State College News
Campus Edition
NEW
VOL. XIII. No. 16, Section 1
YORK
STATE COLLEGE FOR TEACHERS
ALBANY, N. Y. FRIDAY, Kioiiiu AI;Y I. 1929
MILNE MAY MOVE ~
LATE THIS MONTH
WILL BECIN AS INSTRUCTORS HERE MONDAY
82.2o Pet'Yfl&h 38 Weekly Issues
PRESENT WILL BE
AT PROM TONIGHT
P r e s i d e n t A . 14. B r u b a c h e r w i l l p r e s i d e
: as c h a i r m a n w h e n t h e m e n ' s v a r s i t y d e bate t e a m argues the a b o l i t i o n o l the
| j u r y s y s t e m w i t h (he U n i v e r s i t y o f P i l t s ! inirgli
i n Chancellor's hall,
Wednesday
' niglii a t 8:15 o'clock, Louis M . K l e i n ,
! -V, p r e s i d e n t o f the d e b a t e c o u n c i l , a n j notinced today.
"Moving
day''
into
the
new
Milne
month
Hall probably
w i l l be late ibis
o r e a r l y i n M a r c h , it d e v e l o p e d
today
when contractors began to install electric
f i x t u r e s a n d t o f i n i s h Moors o f the n e w
home for Milne H i g h School.
Alice Walsh And Leonard Shea
To Open Grand March In
Ten Eyck Hotel
More
than
ISO c o u p l e s
will
dance
to-
n i g h t f r o m 9 t o 2 o'clock w h e n the class
I Jr. H a r o l d T . A l e x a n d e r , d e a n o f t h e
. A l b a n y L a w . S c h o o l , w i l l j u d g e t h e c o n - o f 1930 c o n d u c t s t h e a n n u a l j u n i o r p r o m
I test.
, to the music o f J a c k S y m o n d ' s o r c h e s t r a
I lie
are exdays.
Albany
oiclnstra,
All
t h econstruction
work
on
the
M i l n e , Page and Richards buildings w i l l
be c o m p l e t e d by M a r c h 1, i f t h e p r e s e n t
s c h e d u l e is m a i n t a i n e d , a c c o r d i n g t o A l d o
I ' a n z i e r i , o f the
l'anzieri-1 logan
company, general contractors.
High
under
the
school
symphony
direction
i n the g r a n d
Ihe
he
rendered.
will
The
high
school
sing.
S |
I intci-ity
Cuuiti'sy,
Albany
Kt-iiiiiij
Four
new 'faculty
begin
Monday,
Miss
- • of
— the
' • • - ••-••
" ' " " J imembers
i i w i i B i i n who
n i i u will
will o
e g l l l iduties
l l l l l C s A)
OIHiay.
-Miss
liesig
will
teach
Fnglish;
M r .Vollbrechl,
govermneiit;
M r Bryant,
Knglish; Miss Mauley,
Knglish.
..
,
_
_
.
i 05.000 square feet, or approximately\2o rer Lent Increase hives College Record Faculty;
Thee wii h, an „i in.
i almost
Miss Gooding Released To Teach At Hunter College
s i x t y r o o m s t o the present n u m b e r , i n !
W i l l i n e a r l y 2 ^ p e r cent i n c r e a s e i n
e l u d i n g o n e w i t h a f i r e p l a c e i n i t , t i nn u m b e r s , t h e f a c u l t y w i l l b e g i n t h e n e w
n e w g y m n a s i u m , a n d t i n new a u d i t o r i u m
seinistir
with
ihe greatest
number
ol
T h e g y m n a s i u m is . m o l t h e l a r g e s t i i
pro,ess,,rs, a-s;~la„, professors and i n
any stale built - c h i m l , a e c o r d i u g t o W i !
- t r u c l o r s ever e m p l o y e d here.
l i a m K l e i t z , t h e s l a t e in s p e d , , r o l e o n
n e,1
w l y'• a
i i i . s""'%',
i r u c l o r' .
I, w e h e
, 'p' p o1i n t e d' 1 "'•'
struction.
I l m e a s u r e - (>H i<•< i w . d e by
n.ll assume (heir
c a c h i n g d u t i e s M..11
X(i feet l o n g a n d is 11 i e e l h i g h . f l u d, . h e h s| day , 1 , h e see,,,,,! s e i i i e s t e r .
clear
spaee a v a i l a b l e
between
posts i
noihe
a p p o n l e e . Ku>sell K . l l i e , „ . , „ .
•10 feet by NU f e e l , m a k i n g a w e l l i l i u i e n
";"
' "',.'
","V "''
" ' " u"1'1" " '
sinned basketball court. T h e a u d i t o r i u m
,
, V , i 1
"
'
"
"
'
p
i
:
'
;
'
'[I'*'
'
'
»
' " ' , l l m - '
r
w h i c h is a b o v e the g y m n a s i u m , w i l l seal
Party for N e w
Faculty
1200 c o m f o r i a b l y , a c c o r d i n g
t o p n senl
'"'
""" , " ' " , l " " '." ""• '«™"> « ' "
plans,
'I he C e i l i n g w i l l be \1 Ieel h i g h
'r K T '
'', " ' ' " ' ' - 1 V V < " ',", ' " , " '
a n d t h e r e is t o be a b a h , ,uy s e a l i n g -100
,y
','" ' • ^ ' > , . n e i n b e , s . M
l a y , I eh
Heating and Ventilating Modern
\'ey\
Vork
City,
,\) j . . , C o d i n g
Favors
.|<,
ag,,
l'^-«""'ils
as h a v i n g
„ , which
-iKin-.J a r e
,.,,,„,,.
M
1\ ,-
1
;r.:l:; \i::\;:^{V rSiiir-v'
v;
1
—
—
^
^
the
girls.
,]uK,(1|
c | g h l
cakes
i n
will be
The
the
leather
chain
chain
f o r each
charms
key
bracelets
bracelets
programs.
by
one
are
gold
The
the
program
woman.
sdlL
and
prom
men, and
for
charms,
serve as
Attached t o
are
man
carry
two
gold
and
the
each
college
seal.
o l Pittsburgh team will
Corsages of
IR,sias.
w h i t e sweet
in the colors o f
peas a n d
blue
the class, w i l l
be
presented lo the patronesses.
Patrons
and
patronesses
for
the
prom
ire:
President
A . R. B r u b a c h e r
and
Mrs.
Brubacher, Dean A n n a E . Pierce,
Dr. H a r r y W . H a s t i n g s and M r s . H a s t ngs,
Dr. T . Frederick I I . Candlyn and
M i s . 1 anillvii, Dean W i l l i a m I I . Metzler
and
Mrs.
Metzler.
D r . Harold W .
T h o m p s o n and M r s . T h o m p s o n , D r . E a r l
B. S o u t h a n d
Mrs. South, Dr. C . K.
Power
and
Mrs.
Power,
Miss
Ellen
Stokes,
Di.
A . \ V . Rislev
and
Mrs.
Risley.
T i n j u n i o r . « I n , n i l t a i n i i i l p i o i n , am) t l i r i r
x i u s l s . are:
Mice »'aJ»Ji ami Leonard W .
Slu-a of lie- Utiivernity of P e n n s y l v a n i a ; K t h c l
Hay anil P r r . l r r i c k Crane of Princeton U n i versity;
Mililm]
Cuianl
and
William J .
K u t l i i inicli, J o , <>( I ' n i o i i College; Florence
M a r i a K u r e n k o , R u s s i a n s o p r a n o s o l o - l.nodiiiu and H o w a r d Lanifwiff, .Mhuny: K a t l i I ist, w i l l g i v e a r e c i t a l i n C„h„a, nl ct ;e,l lu ol r ' .s, , i ) M H e l u l i - i and Jn~iio I . .Murpliy o f H o l y
Mis,
i v
,
||(
been
Hall
„i;M
Friday-; n i g h . ,
under
the
aus- JJ ; ™
' , » » ^ K l J ^ l l " ^ ^
tiSXk
ihev
reappointed
have
M . Annel.e
.,r||
f
been
as
, |
" ' " ' "
•'"' '"'Kan
Dobbin. ^ " ' " ^
, M j
IicU.s
„ , |
her
he,,,,
work
sale
as a c o n c e r t
i n ihe
r
nda
I U |
War,',,,,
Redwav,
hbrarv;
Russell
K I ".' \ " ^ r
.
M""«la,
and T u e s d a y .
I K L i l i a n a n d Mis.s H e l e n T Lav
h i s • N | ' " 1 " ^ " i l l he a d m i t t e d o n s t u d e n t l a x
,,„-,.
,.,„„„ N | v
( ; , | ( | j j 1. k 1 .
D o w n t o w n sale o f t i c k e t s w i l l
N | i s s
1
J^cr^zz:\\;x
z
u
Ihe
lacers
the
Uni-
intermission.
for
for
a f e
Punch
. e n ed d u r i n g
fur
the
p i c e s o l Ihe M u s i c a s s o c i a t i o n .
h a m - an,I S i a n l e j \ „ r e y of Syracuse Lfnlvcr..
. " f:
M.a.d a m e. .K u, r e n k o •i-, —
011 h e r r e t u r n. t r i p .- a, y , . l,l .„i /„i l. . .i .; , „ „ l , l i . ami
C l e n i n i U A .r l—
l m, r, -o
V
, , ,,,,. s , : i l , College
faculty, effective
" '
" >" j * ^
^ ^
» " " " ' ' " t h e , )}'
Uesleyun
, , : > : ! " . . . «C,,He
. . " » «Kf,'.
- . . I. ' l•a" i'u. .e»s 'IJale
* ' . « . . "and
'»' «
Uolic
« '
I', i i i i u i i i ^ a . l i o f Holy d o s s College; l l i l d c Monday.
H e r r e l e a s e w a s g r a n t e d by ! l ' " " " l r > '
•sl":' ' " l l l « l l l > '
recommended,
Kiirde M. Koliyns ami ! h o s J. T a y l o r of the
a idumn ii ii iui ss ii ir .ai i m
n fml iccec rr ss
wh
she w
w aa s
s: • " ' o r d i u g l o Dr. T. Frederick H . ( a n d
o
i v ee o
w
i nuui
slie
If i'i i i e d I S
•-t a l l s Naval
\ia,|eniy al Anua|ioiii>;
,,„.
„ „ ,
,,
. „
ly,,. , „ •
• „ „,„ inilliil,
l l ( T m , |
• inner l o l l , , i l and H a r o l d K J o d r l l o f Col..
.
e 1 „
, n v
I . ' i n I'nn'riBity;
Lena Kciyer and
Michael
,,,,- . „ , , , _ , ! , - , , ,
, been n a m , d .
I ,Madam
,lilL.
Kurenko
studied
l a w i l l \ , , „ , ! . . „ « n v , Ji . ,,l K
d a r r Polyteelnile I n •, , ,. , | r u , , , „ „ , | I K . m |
, ,
J R u s s i a , a n d U : i s aaddm
ar K
T
,\ ,' ' , ' , " " ; ! ! ; ; , ' i ; : " , ' " l > , " ' ' , " " , ' »
miitttteedd .I I„I tIhI e
I " bh:,r
I
v m
.' ••'! ^ " ' " ' • L
.
l i r y a u i . Miss Eleanor Mauley and M i s '
I l e a l m g a n d v e n t i l a ! l u g w i l l hi by l l n " ' | V
1110,1 i i n .del n sy - t e l i l s
T h e
ii~ a n
equipped w i t h a u t o m a t a leiupei d u n ad
jilslurs,
\ n a r i . , w is t t i r i i e i l i n l i e d e
s i r e d t e m p i 1 a i m 1 a n d ih.e 1 ,, 111 1 a u h 1
111.1! i c a l l y b r o n c h i 1., u i l l i n h m
K g n eW,|s l i i t l II I \ 11,1111 < ' I a l l i e l l l b e l
i d the
o f 11. T h e v e n l i l a t i o n • \ 0 i n . i n - i a l h d
Mny
Have Masters' Degrees
n o l i , g \ d i p.u I n n i n a l I I l i n t e l
( ,dirge.
by t h e I ' l i t 1 e l i l o w e i l 01 p o i a l i o i i , In al A • „ , , 1 , n a n o l i h e c o l l e g e r, c o n b
a n d p u r l i n •-. t h e a l l he l m
hi i n g i i i g 11
iin
lieu
lacully
m i n i b , I's sl
lo the l o o m .
'I In
.01 1 h i I pa -seil
that |
n e a i ly a l l I a n - n i a - n 1 ''s d i g 1 1
t h r o u g h ,1 i t i l d c h a i n h i 1
ihen
ihioiigh
jai 1 •iiiii).', w o i k ' " e a r n I h e m .
!
a w a r m 1 'lie
F r o m l l n r,
n 1 • | , , n ed
I
Mi.s
Manlev
v
Kiaduale.1
lloin)
lln oiigl
.1 • 11 n . u i - p l a y • w l i i . h 1 I. H I
\
I
Sl.,l|.|.-| i l .
Iipe
e l l d i III -.1 M 1,1.11' h i l l y
( "liege
W i l l i i h e class o l
the d i l l
11'1 an 11
\ l l e l hi i n g w .11 n i r i l
., I
I i n M i l i e u , - I ady , ma 1 he I In pi 111
|0_'7, 11 ceiv ing l l n ha 1 h e l m n l a i l s d e
a i r e i n o i 1 i l is i.,i 1 ed u p l o i h e i n ails
' Ipal -lii i k i 1 a l I In m i l i.d 1, ai ' l . i l i i i 1 1,1 g i i i .
."die s t u d i i d
d i e lie sl
veal a l
li
I k a p p a P i n K a p p a , \\ 1 d
k i l l g ' I 1,III gi . I IllVel s l ! \ u l I . o l l d o l l ,
u
,,,„„,;
half.
cases
\V. Shea, o f
MARIA KURENKO GIVES
RECITAL NEXT FRIDAY
°
announced t w o
was
. „.„,
.-arli
Debates w i t h I l a m i h o n and D a r t m o u t h
may
he s c h e d u l e d , a c c o r d i n g
to Louis
Al.
K l e i n , '29, p r e s i d e n t o f t h e d e b a t e
association.
News
Leonard
o f Pennsylvania,
cersitv
S t a t e C o l l e g e has c o m p l e t e d i t s b r i e f
i n final
and a r g u m e n t , and w i l l
meet
conference
today
with
Dr.
Harold T .
T h o m p s o n , faculty debate coach.
3feyasrr
Eyck
p r o m , and
also
u p h o l d H e a l l i r m a t i v e side o f the s a m e
question against Colgate L n i v e i s i t y ' l u e s day n i g h t In l o r e c o i n i n g l o . A l b a n y .
The
t h r e e i b b a l e r s w i l l be a c c o m p a n i e d b y
iheir coach, Richard M u r p h y ,
instructoi
i n p u b l i c spi a k i u g .
lUCrH T
Ten
win
I t is p r o b a b l e t h a t C . J o h n
Phillips,
A i n b r i d g e , Pa., w i l l open the d e b a t e l o r
l i . Buerger,
PittsI'.it-iaugh.
David
b u r g h , P a . , is e x p e c t e d l o s p e a k s e c o n d ,
'and
Roger S. H a m i l t o n ,
Warrensbtirg,
I \ . 1 ., may c l o s e i h e a r g u m e n t f o r t h e
I nlhiniat.ve.
anou.
o f the
-,-\
i
. i
n i
i i
I he g r a n d m a r c h w i l l be o p e n e d b y
, , . . ? , , ,
,
,
AllL
'<-' W a l s h . g e n e r a l c h a i r m a n f o r
the
o l Ml iael eq u(e os lt li eo gne, "w
Riel ls oul vpehdo,l d T ht haet tnheeg ajtui vr e
y
- y s . e i i i i l l t i n I n i h i l S l a t e s be a b o l i s h e d . ' '
I he o r d e r o l s p e a k e r s w i l l h e :
George
P. N i c e , 3 2 , f i r s t ; L n i a n u c I G r e e n , .SO,
s e c o n d ; a n d L o u i s J . M o l i i e r , '.10, t h i r d .
K o b c r t T . K'oss, 2';, w i l l be a l t e r n a t e .
T h e w o r k , b e g u n o n A u g u s t 20, 1 0 2 7 , !
will
have
taken almost
two
years t o
complete,
exclusive
o f t h elime
cons u m e d in d i g g i n g the f o u n d a t i o n s .
Duri n g t h i s t i m e , a n a v e r a g e o f 100 m e n
have had constant e m p l o y m e n t .
I
ballroom
o f I v r a i i k I hoti-1.
li. Bailey, w i l l play selections before the
, , ,
I
,
,
.
, - i
debate and ( h i r i n g the p r e p a r a t i o n o f t h e 1
judge's
decision.
A recessional
march
ulee club
D r a p i n g 1.500.0(10 b r i c k s o v e r a f r a m e w o r k o f 450 tons o f steel, w i t h s e v e r a l
l i t t l e odds and ends l i k e
17,000 c u l m f e e l o f c u t s t o n e w o r k , ,15 c a r l o a d s o i
cement,
1011,000 s q u a r e
feet
o f terra ,
c o t l a , a n d S.W.0UU w o r t h o f t i l e w o r k I
and
marble
thrown
i n , the I'anzieri-I
llogan
Company
will
sunn have
sue-1
ceeded
i n completing
t h e three
new
b u i l d i n g s f o r w h i c h the c o l l e g e has l o n g
waited.
T h e c o n t r a c t s f o r t h e w o r k w e n t not
only
i o the
l'anzieri-1 logan
Company,
but also l o three o i l i e r l i n n s w i n c h a r c
to
iiislall
the heating,
lighting, and
p l u m b i n g systems.
Besides these direct
contracts,
there
are
many
other
sub
contracts let b y the c o n s t r u c t i o n
com
paily t o outside l i n n s .
Buildings
Cover
45,000
Square
Feet
T h e plot o c c u p i e d b y the new
build
• ••• j
••- •-••,
ings
consists
o f 110,000
square
feet,
while the actual
land covered
by t h e
feet.
Thus, j
b u i l d i n g s is -15.000 s q u a r e
t h e r e w i l l be a n a d d i t i o n l o t h e c a m p u s
150 COUPLE DANCE
IN CHAIR AS STATE
DEBATES PITTSBURGH
New Buildings W i l l Be Finished
By March 1 If Schedule
Is Maintained
Desks and seating equipment
pected t o a r r i v e w i t h i n a f e w
WHAT THE PROM GIRL
WILLWEAR--Pa K e7.
fr
'!' '
'"•"ri""
1
S
"nwdway,
: , , r 1:,y
„!„: f,:;:tl::.'' at!:- ^ . d
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K... ,yiM. ')'!. L .
i" !
Z u '
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'.,' ,',' • " " > V '•'••»« ^ l
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V-' ^ . i u r " f ' : i ,
i
V
"JJ
and
W a
. J M , . . : , , ! . . „ ' , : i " , ' , , . ' i T "1"" V i i ' , '
',,., ,'j
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' I l a ^ ' " Klcrcfc „ , „ l i i " o r « e
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WHITE WILL BE T F r , - -"••••-•?«,,'«
- COLORS AT TEA
D A N C E ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
Wti<
' '" " "
and
while
" " J""""-
will
lea
be t h e c o l o i
dance
tomorrow
K
1
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1 , " ' , " " " ' ! ' • ' i n . •:, l b - l i l . , o - . , " . I M i . l . ' i . l M I . I I S of l ( " l ' " j
Mall
l a c k > \ n i o i i d s o r c h e s t r a f r o m t h e p, .1 p
I U ill
l i . Konvill,- „ f 1'„!,.„
' r l'l e l i e i l . n L .
Willi1 "I
N, II
IL'lel
\ - • ' ( • i i•i h 1
I' * -i'i'1 J',In. I'n Laid „ |
play l " i d a n c i n g
I M a, ,,, , i.i.l, M.
<,l,..ki„,
a,„| | , a n )
,.,.,,
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'file administrators
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P, n > M M , i h .,! I ' m . , n 1 ,.l|.air; M a i t a u - I Me
I,, w h o m l l n > a r e a d d r e s s e d w i l l be
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ibeiii i n the
high
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l u l u S u l f o o l , 'it. and Paul W .
Ibain
il.slriei
w i l l I " d i d . i l e 1 or the m a s t e r ' s d e g i e e t h e r e t h i s
'I h e i h r c e in w 111 -s 1 r i n t ' n • 111 I h e d e
school l i b r a r y , m I n hand llieiil t o
i , , i l l . n l i , i ol Ul.aii) I.an S i l n . o l ; M a r y Me
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Miss
in111, a n d , il 11-. M iss I u i i i i a l i i s i g . w i l l
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'I Ills l.. i h e s e c o n d i j l l l e l l i a l
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l i e s i g has l a u g h l h i g h school E n g l i s h a l
assist
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IN T H I S ISSUE
M l , and lii-oiKe I'. ll'-dlJMMi of l<- P, 1.1 I l r l r l i
ii p o r t i o n o l i h e N i . w . s h a s been " r e
Keelii
Valley,
I Hoiideioga and N o r ill
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S'lu • 1 ad.mis
I i . . i i i i e r M e C a i l y , '19, a m i K i e l i a i d H u n o f
p o i I, I J nig I s l a n d
d e s i g n a t e d as F n g l i s h 7, vv i l l he o p e n t o
B o t h " I ,iIII]JUs" and " S t a l e " e d i t i o n s
l(. p, I , D o n ' , l i i i l l r i , M l . i,'id ClieMrr K m
I Wo s c c l i o i i « , I h e new 5 a n d i d l t o i i.d
Mi
B r y a n t was g r a d u a t e d f r u i n l ' o r
sophomores
as w e l l
,1- j u n i o r s
next
nl
i h e see.aid
N'l.ws published
this
oi U. J'. L ; ( l i n e l.yuuk. '31. and T. p r a n c i s
sei 1 i.ai o l 1 i g h l p a g i s, a n d ,1 p h o t , ,
n e l l I l i i v e i ' s i l ) i l l 1927, W i l l i t h e d e g i e e
semester, D r . H u s t i n g s said
l l . l f i o i i of U. P. ( , | K. V i r g i n i a I f a J i l i r , 7 " ,
wai
were d i s t r i b u t e d , the latu-r edi
g i ,11 u i e
s u p p l e i i n III o l l o i n
pages.
.mil
V i i i , , , M e l , a n . ' of l i . - i u l i ) S . i m o l , l l o n l o n ;
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w i l l be r e q i l i l ed o f a l l
H o n b e i n g sent | o t h e m e m b e r s , o f l a s l
C n l e s s y o u h a v e b u i l t , y o u h a v e ,111
M a r i o n l'".«. 'i'K and li.-oiue Shaw o f U. p .
b h and
public
speaking.
Since
thai
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o r Illinois in
y
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l l a i l n i a n , 'I'), and K o l i r i l Scoif of
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linn
he l a s partly
completed
credit
li P. I , ; l u e l y n (iiai'L-s, ' « , and (L L a V'enic
English, beginning next
Sepleinbei.
teaching.
i
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,
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Koer
l l r a n s k y , 'i'i, a m i - M u e i l GuLL
(.Cuiilinucd (10111 Pam' I)
hers, Miimiy
L a w .Sulloul.
STODDARD MAY SPEAK
TO KAPPA PHI KAPPA
NEW COURSE OFFERED
IN ADVANCED WRITING
News To Distribute 300 Copies
Of State Edition To High Schools
STATE COLLEGE NEWS FEBRUARY I, 1929
2
State College N e w s
Established in 1916 by the Claw of 1918
The Undergraduate Newspaper of New York
State College for Teacher*
THE NEWS
WILLIAM
BOARD
M. FRENCH
Edttor-tn-Chief
Kappa Belts Rho House, 480 Morris St.. Dial 6-4314
THOMAS P. FALLON
Business
12 Garfield l'lacc, Uiai 6-4874-R
Managing
Ldins J. WOLNER
54 West Street, Dial 6-J595-R
MARGARET J. STEELE
Associate Managing
22* Jay Street, Oial 3-1780
MARGARET H E N N I N G E
Advertising
Manager
Editor
Editor
Manager
Newman Hall, 741 Madison Ave., Dial 6-6484
Published every Friday in the college year by the Editorial Hoard
representing the Student Association, Subscriptions, 12.25 per year,
single copies, ten cents. Delivered anywhere in the United Mates.
Kntered as second class matter at postoffice, Albany, N. Y.
The NEWS does not 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.
I'aiNTED nv MILLS ART PRESS, 394-396 liroadway—Dial 4-2287
Albany, N. Y.
February 1, 192"
Vol. XIII, N o . 16
ITS HONOR SULLIED
Shall a class let its honor be sullied? That is the qucslion confronting the freshman class as long as it permits
its name lo he used by a supposedly "freshman" basketball
team, two members of which are sophomores. When the
freshman quintet scores a victory, that victory does not
belong to the class. It must be shared with I lie sophomores.
The honor of the freshman class is at slake when it permits any but freshmen to play on its teams.
If the appeal to its honor will not move the freshman
class to clean house in its athletic events, an appeal to its
iulerests in interclass rivalry may. The interclass rivalry
rules provide that "Three points shall be awarded to the
class whose men's team is successful in games played between the two rival classes according to the schedule of
interclass basketball games". It would seem that if the
freshman class is training its opponents in its games, it is
weakening ils own chances at winning three points in the
rivalry.
It may be argued that the sophomores were used in the
games contracted for by the freshman class for one of two
reasons:
1. To replace freshmen who failed lo appear for the
game. The answer to this is that if the freshman class
cannot persuade five men lo play on ils team, il might
close up shop athletically, and disband its team.
2/. To act as a training school for the varsity. While
it may be admitted that playing on the freshman quintet
may afford experience for sophomore candidates for the
varsity, there is more at stake than building a winning varsity team for two years hence. Training in clean sportsinaship is supposed to have more value in life than the
building of a winning team irrespective of honor, Another
answer is this: why should the freshman class, composed
largely of girls, pay llu; following apparently unequal bills:
Class athletics for jjirls
§50
Class athletics for men
§225
Why should it spend §225 on a basketball team when only
three of its members are regular players on that team?
Whether ils action may or may not accord with the
athletic policies outlined by the men's locker room, the
freshman class might well consider its honor and its status
in interclass rivalry,
ARE SORORITIES Op VALUE.
Freshman girls will he besieged by sororities early next
semester, rushed here and there, and then, after a bewildering show of gaiety and social effort, will be bid to membership. Many a freshman will spend troubled hours, debating
whether to Join ibis or that sororily. Many another girl
will wonder why she did not receive a single bid. Another
girl will question the worth of joining any sorority.
Sororities here an- ol greater practical use than at other
colleges where adequate dornntor) facilities are provided.
The one great material advantage' oi being a sororily girl
here is the use of the sorority's house. There is, of
course, the more intangible side of the sorority question:
contact and friendships.
In choosing her sororily, the freshman girl should con
sider how she will enter into thai particular social group.
She should nol only consider tin iipperclassinen, Inn also
the sophomores, and I lie frcslimeii she thinks thai sororily
will bid, It is with these tatter that the greater pan ol her
college home life will be spent. Tin' senior, will soon be
pone; ilu- junior,, next, Jt i- a maxim of Creek letter
societies, that tin destinies of a society depend upon tin
character of the freshmen ii net-'. Perhaps, no other organizations can .so quickly make a complete aboul face in
its standing.
The would be sororily girl should nol place loo much
of a commercial value upon sorority membership. One
gets out of such an organization what one puts into it.
The girl who is not bid must remember that il is not
because she is unfit,
Il is merely because lite sorority
system is essentially nun democratic, that much of the decision is made upon outward appearances, ilia! true worth
i-> of immensely greater value than all the Creek teller
insignia in the world.
J hough a door may be closed to
the uou-nieniber, there are many more doors that open
easily: these are the doors of friendship, irrespective of
lodges and irinketK,
Sororities here fill a valuable need in providing good
housing facilities and in providing social contact centers.
Properly directed, the sorority can be a great factor in
getting the most out of college; improperly directed, it
can mean the opposite.
Convention Says Student Newspapers Must Lead;
Faculty Control And Commercialization Attacked
NEED FOR A TRAFFIC LIGHT
Installation of traffic lights at two street intersections
west of the college will meet with the general approval of
the students living in that direction. Those who live east
of the college, and who daily incur risks in crossing
the intersection of Western avenue, Robin street, State
street, Eilgiewood place and a Washington park road, will
wonder why the traffic bureau did not also see the necessity
of a traffic light at that intersection,
Any corner where one has to look six directions before
crossing, is certain to be dangerous. A member of the
State College faculty was injured while crossing at the
intersection. Many minor traffic accidents have occurred at
the corner. When hundreds of students of State College,
students from two high schools anil one grade school daily
use tlie intersection, there is more than justification for the
placing of a traffic signal there. These students have to
cross (lie streets during the morning traffic rush between
eight .iiid nine o'clock, and again when the traffic is heavy
late in the afternoon.
The commissioner of public safely last spring refused to
approve the erection of a traffic light at the coiner. Since
then, the pavement of Western avenue has been improved
and many motorists who formerly shunned the cobblestone
washboard street, now exceed the speed limit on the smooth
surface of tlie great Western avenue speedway.
Safety of students and pedestrians in general demands the
erection of a traffic light at the corner. The student association should call the attention of the ritv admini-tration
lo this need.
that "the honor attached to an editorship
should be sufficient inducement without
financial remuneration. Ill no case should
the board become so obsessed with the
idea of making money that (he profits
are increased at the expense of a good
newspaper.
In oilier words, the publication shotild exist for the students,
nol for Ihe editors."
The editor in chief should have full
control of the board, as far as internal
If a student newspaper is to justify management is concerned, to insure effiits existence, it must lead, not follow, cient operation, delegates pointed out. He
they agreed. Delegates also stressed the should resign whenever he no longer reinjury which conies to the reputation of tains the confidence of the board, they
an institution from an editorial staff added.
which is not representative of the best
Board Should Elect
student opinion.
It was thought thai editors should be
It was felt that faculty control should
be reduced to a minimum if it can not elected by the board without supervision,
be wholly eliminated. Delegates argued cither by the faculty or by the students,
that faculty supervision strides independ- in order to cluck political tampering and
ent student thought, and chokes the ex- favoritism.
That the editor should confer frepression of free opinions.
Commercialization of editorial posi- quently with the administrative officers
tions was severly attacked by the group. of the college and keen thoroughly in
Profit sharing or the paying of salaries formed of the faculty point of view oil
is undesirable and should be restricted controversial matters, even though Iv
to those cases ill which il is difficult to may nol agree with them, and should
obtain students to do newspaper work, be free to criticize Ihem in a proper
manner, wis a point of view stressed at
il was suggested.
A summary of the discussion indicated tl
STATE TAKES A WISE STEP
25 Per Cent Increase Gives College Record Faculty;
Three Alumni Will Return Among 13 New Instructors
Steps taken by the stair department of education lo require four years of professional training for the leaching
of special subjects in secondary schools may be regarded
as logical and significant. Under the ruling of the regents
of the university, any candidate for teaching such special
subjects as home economics and music, commerce; or physical education, must present a certificate of four years of
training leading to the bachelor's degree, pins eighteen
hours of professional courses.
For many years it ha.s been fell by school administrators
that the teacher in the special fields needs thorough training quite as much as the teacher of the traditional academic
subjects. This training should be cultural as well as professional. Though the ruling of the reguits will not go
into cffecl iinlil 1933, a great step has been taken in the
raising of the professional slalus of teachers of the several
special subjects.
EXPENSIVE XECLECT
When one is offered a position at practically no cost,
it would seem that one would hasten to comply wiih ih<
few easy requirements set up. The statement by I'rofes.sor
John M. Saylcs, secretary of the college placement bureau.
indicates that this natural line of reasoning is false. His
statement shows that nearly forty per cent of the class of
192° have failed to submit agency pictures lo hi-, ollice.
Such failure in neglectful, and will injure no one except
the student who has failed to provide the bureau with the
necessary tools with which lo work for a position for thai
.student. When every teachers' agency requires pictures as
a prerequisite for an application, the request of Professor
Saylcs for the pictures can not be questioned.
Probably
the only reason for the delay is neglect. Such neglect may
cost the lardy senior a well paying position.
BOOKS:?;;
,\'K\V
I
( 'ui.ua.i:
PlsI'VS
i ii,.\ ii M \i<;
I.VII-.l.ri.l-TKD
-Hs W . M .
A College Crammar.
By Mason Long. .L'.i page.. >S.
New York: Ronald Pre,, ( ompau>.
Crammar may be classified as philological and •!• -ci piivc
For descriptive or common ordinal) grainin.ii thai one
meets in llienic writing, f i l e r compo-.it
peich, .1
College (inwiinar is die best book thai ha, eouie to oiu
attention, it is cntirel) new, written In an a .-ociale pro
lessor of Fuglish literature al die l'--un-.\ Ivnuia -> ale I ol
lege. In ieckinp In present with accural} ifit iM.uuiuaiic.d
fuels ol our language today, ihe author ha, pie-., uled m an
understandable manner the accepted l a . i a i , oi IMIUII-II
Usage, plus much material with a new point oi c m
VVe waive ihe point as 10 whether il is m a
> |., le.uh
grammar in the colleges. Ii would ,CMII, ibougb, lli.r ain-i
an exposure to grailllliai for al b a . i as or sewn o a r , , ihe
sliidenl should have acquired a stilliciciu nia-h n ..i tin
sllbjicl. However, since il seellls the liadilloii lo pie.inl
nouns and pronoun,, verbs and advelb, a-. MIIICHI,- mill
ii seems thai Mr. Long has .lone n uiicoiiiuioim , , , ' |
\, ,\
11 iiich procedure wen- not ai i epled, we upp.. , ill- Mwould In no need for collegi granuuai
Samuel I'epys.
H) Arthur Ponsonby, M, p
loO pages
$1.25. \ e U V , „ k ; Macimllaii l oinpaii}
When one reads the cclt-biahd Pepys' / ' n o , , be g, i m
excellent impression oi social conditions during the Res
(oration, but ihe aspect ol P e p } . hiin.eli J OIII> one of
Ibree possible I'cpy*.
Ill Ibis new addilioii lo tin Mac
iiiillau I'nglish Men of Letters series, one im I, iwo other
Pepys, besides ihe better known I'epj nan P. p>.,.
I he
other two an- the Pepys a. known lo bis i oiilcnipoiarics and
the little known Pep} s in the ceului) p n i i c d i n g lie Ir.ius
lation of his diary from its shorthand code. In this liille
volume, the author seeks to pre.sciil the man) ided Pep)»
and to analyse Ins work as a diarist.
Mr, Ponsonby shows a knowledge ol diaries In general,
and draws many comparisons between Pep>s' and others.
Quotations from Ihe Diary arc freqmul to illustrate points.
The hook is nearly as much a text on diaries, villi dins
iratioii* from Pepys, as it is a study of ihe man.
1'epy.s' reputation as a man of letters rests solely on the
JHary, Ihe aulhor declares. Ju forecasting a long continued
popularity for die work, he declares dial "it is not only
for Historians and men of Idlers; it is nol a literary curiosity or a museum piece, Jt is as near a living being as
any inanimate written pages can well be."
Bv Louts J. WOLNER
University and college newspapers
should break away from the apron
strings which tie them down to parroting a reflection of student thought, and
should attempt to mould undergraduate
opinion along progressive lines, delegates
at the National Student Federation of
America convention pointed out in a discttsioii group on student publications.
F o l l o w i n g Is Condemned
(CuntiiiUfil on Page -', Columns .1, 41
there for the master's degree in public
speaking. For a sear and a half, lie was
assistant instructor in public speaking at
Cornell, and comes here from the high
school at Ardsley, where he has been
instructor in history and public speaking, l i e was in charge of dramatics al
Ardsley.
While an undergraduate at I oruell,
Mr. Hryanl was elected to the campus
chapters of Phi lieta Kappa, Phi Kappa
Phi and Delta Sigma Kilo.
Graduate of Indiana
Mr. Hickman, who is a graduate of
Indiana University, is a member of Phi
lieta Kappa and of Phi Helta Kappa,
lie received his master degree from liar
vard University in February, I°2K, and
has completed one year of credit low.nil
earning ihe P h i l , degree al ihe L'niversil) of Wisconsin.
Hi, teaching experience includes 0111
year at the high school ai Stillwell,
Indiana; two years al the high school
at Noblesville, Indiana, and two w a r ,
at the Washington High School, Cedar
Rapids, Iowa.
In these schools he
taught history and allied subjects.
Miss James was graduated from Vas
sar College with ihe A . I I degree and
from the New York stale libra.) school
with the I1.I..S. degree, from 1M15 to
ibis year, M i , , James was assistant in
the stale library, except during part oi
1919 when she bad leave of absence lo
serve as assistant librarian al the Fox
Hills, Staten Island, federal debarkation
hospital. Her home is Albany.
Miss Dobbin Studied Abroad
T h e M a l e College of W a s h i n g t o n
I be represented mi the l o c i ! l a c u l h
u
il|
I'm
marking regent-' papers n Fuglish for
ihe stale department oi education. Sinl a , studied ,,i i • iliiinbia University, and
c lines r i Slate I n an a lacullv po .jtioii
in ihe high scl 1 al I hid-., n." She will
ing in Fuglish in the Milne High School
Mi,, | ,,t received her bachelor's and
master's degree, lure, and ha- lead grad
uate work .al Cornell L'niv ersitv and at
ihe I 'uivcrsii) of Toid, >u e, k ranei .
.sin- founded the c , opi rativc book -tore
in 102(1. and i- .it pre-cnt its manager.
She will contain, io direct die book
store. Miss Fay w.-is instructor in his
Dr. Doiuiildt, who U J - graduated
fr
Si.lie College ill I'L'li. i, also a
gradual. ..I the Album M.dical I ollege.
I |e has b • luri d MI In gien. here for t w
nsu-. and n.,w will'take over i
e ..|
bin work in addition lo ph) deal e.\
M i , , I , -:, i holds both bachelor's .and
m a s t e r ' , . leg re.
Ir
I oinell I iliver
-in.
Mr. \ oil'MU In I- i, graduate oi X'orili
and received h i ,
west! i-ii l'iiner-il)
master's ib-gree al C ilumhia i ui\ ersitv.
lie i- ,, niuiib.r oi phi DDi,, Kappa.
Moose, '2r>, Ret tuns
Mr. M e will relieve Mis, Flix ibeth
F. ."-hater, nper, i,..i ol pi in lice I eai Ii
ma in hisloi) ,,nd biolog), ol her biology
• upi i vision. ] I, is ., graduate oi Slate
I ollege in lie ila- ol \>)Ji,. He laiighl
,1 Cobb kill, and w i enrolled ai Corn,-!!
I uiv i i .iv during die h i t i im • u r [hi.
Mis, Kidwav. who h a . been -ail,
uisliucloi in libinn
en nee ibis
IMII l« bbrai
i ihe Milne
si I I. III. d. I pi.,. I .. mill
sin
; wlia: is believed (he lirsl nine in hisloi-i
! win II Miss Dobbin leacln s here. Sin
I , S'ill,
; holds her A . M . degree from W a s h i n g t o n
! State, and the M . A . degree from 'I each
•-la
' - Ik ;o
l- a
,| n in i
c.,r
High
. .niie
II IM i ' l . I I l l e . i I l M V o |
'-• l . i. 111 i!
i.lllc
|.,|
| er-.' College, Columbia I ' m u T - m
She
:
spun live months studying al the Sol
j bonne, Pan-., Ia,i ,,.,-,,•, .she has lauglil
languages at the high si hools ai Kin,
Washington, and F n i e r p i i ,
(Jngoii
Mis,
Dobbin is ., mcinbc! „, Siguin
"'dm b'lio and Sigma Kappa Pin, I,
i
Pan l .
! societu . in Spanish and i
.nice km
I oil,-,j guages, respeclivel)
.t.ale
EXPERIENCED SINGERS
COMPOSE NEW QUARTET
M i s s I o l l k l l l l Is il g l i d l l . i ' l
1
uivcrsii),
dwaid
o | SMS
and has had , \p, nen.i- in
I n , i , . i , n si,iih
l-N
I.II On, .l.-IMMM,,-,,! „ . , | I„ ,,
l " ' a . | I..i . a i i , | a i ,
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|„
|,„ , , , ,
\ b t ,„i
| ,
Hold
Toinonow
Luncheon, I P M , I >< \ \
I lillloll b o l l I
Imiior Tea Dance, .1 lo 5 P M , l,w,i
ib
'.
lu
<i
Ililolpl
I W null
.10
I 11,
' ii„
i i..iii,.„i in
CALENDAR
In,ooi
\
(
\ A Mlliniiae liask, r,,,|, i„ Cimiia nun, H P M
Tuesday
Men', \ ' , , i o | ) liasketball v. S'o.
wich, I,Mima -.Mini. K IS P M.
Wednesday
Kappa Phi Kappa iiiiualion, Di.ipei
Hall, A l l e n
u.
Kappa Phi Kappa d
el, I unci nil
Hub, ir.M) P. M.
Dibale, State VS. Pittsburgh, « ban
cellor's Hall, 8:13 P . M .
j
.1 l o l 'I
I, l!,oek,w
.,.',!• i . n o i
" ' ' • M'=-. •lii.n I.
.1 k . o i . b . l
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'l.aii , c i l l u
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"'I.
I I I m d l i i i , in It ii. t .,• u, nni I,
Will d u e , I III, ipi.,11,
"1,1 l .in,!!,,,
has p i . > I I I I i d lo In l|, i l n c | ihe I louba
doiu
bow "
, i . , | Miilln,,, l , m , •,, l „| ,,
lb. ijn.it li I I-, loin
i| with the I louba
dolll . D l I allilltl, will a l s o d l l e c l dial "
DK. K1SI.ICV S F K A K S
lb
\dna \ \ , lv',,1, y, I, ,„| ,,| ,|„. | , j ,
I or J depailllienl, .poke oil ill, Kellogg
Hriand p e n . pad b, lor,- nieinbei , ol
Ike Koiau Dub k. i I nd.i) in the I en
l'.)ik hold.
^^B
STATE COLLEGE NEWS, FEBRUARY 1. 1929.
Hundred Seniors Will Begin Practice Teaching Assignments In Milne High School With New Semester
OMIT USELESS DETAILS,
MOOR TELLS STUDENTS
MANY CLASSES WILL
GET 2 INSTRUCTORS
All
Omission of unnecessary and irrelevant
details from hobbies and vocations was
advised by Arthur Moor, a graduate of
Oxford University and V. M. C. A.
secretary of the new medical center iti
New York City, when he addressed a
joint meeting of the Y. M. C. A. and
Y. W. t'. A. Friday night, January 18.
Only by such omission can one find
time to do what one really wants to do,
he declared. "Scrutinize your day and
you will not find it easy," he advised.
"Unity and variety are two of the most
beautiful things—unity without monotony
and variety without chaos. Most of us
are after a life that is not dull."
Mr. Moor also placed Mozart's "Symphony in (i Flat" and several other selections on the piano. l i e sang one of
own compositions.
He described student life at Oxford
before two student assemblies during the
morning, demonstrating the costumes
worn by students there. To take an
examination at Oxford, one must wear
a while bow tie and black shoes," he
told the two assemblies.
Hesides Oxford, the speaker lias attended Stetson College, in Florida,
Princeton Inivcrsity and Columbia University.
Departments Except Home
E c o n o m i c s File S c h e d u l e
Of Teachers
Mori- limn mil- hundred seniors will
teach in tin- Miiue High School, model
practice unit, next semester, according
to ii list announced by Professor John
M. Sayles, head of the education department, and the supervisors of practice
t aching. The semester will begin Minimally of die classes will have two
teachers, due to the lame number of
-eniors who tmiM fulfill die practice
I' aching requirement.
All de|iartinents except home economics are included in the following
schedule. The home economics practice
I.-acini |. assimniu-n:-. will he made In
dial department.
subject
t(
The Mluihiie,
First Period Teachers
i
At K:IU to 0 o'clock- haiglish 1, liar i
h.ira Andrews and Uiaris Sunderland,
in 1 h i ; t.(i irude llraslow and Doro I
die ( ole, r
is 111 and 1(11 ; l'jiglish _',.
A l p h i a I'roinwell and Anna Widmer,
21 1 ; biology, John Sturm and
Waterman, room 2(15; elementary
bra, M a n ' Mitchell and Kleanoor Sucll,
r,,om JllO; ljii>!og>, Marion Fox and
I mm.i I Juluison, room 304; intermediate algebra, Virginia Haxter, room 200.
and Irene Sntliffe,
in 303; plane
ge-.,in. try. I .uc, MrAv.,\
r
201;
l.al n ..', K'nh Smith, room 1111;; comm u n a l law. Lorena Man in and Thomas
P. 1 all,,ii, room .\ ; lu-ton A, Her
man Koerner, loom 200 and Florence
lineman and Isabel Williams, room 202.
At '< to Hi o'clock Knglish 1. Sarah
Shapiro and I',inline Am.,It, room 109;
Mabel I J iii and Charlotte Bailey, room
205; M.irjorie' Mix and Hetty Faton,
room 200; Prances MclJoiiough and
Uorothv l.uiidv, ro
210; Knglish 2.
Wallace IP Sircscll and Klcanor Vail,
room 25M, Friday, 200; plane geometry,
K'aiidolph Spragiic,
.foil, and Km
\ . Mill ,.:ii. I
ii .104; Vergil, Miss
lodi.i \nlioiniic Johnson, supervisor of
303
piael
' ''
M d aIIrev, room 302
.', Mai
1,,'SIOM l , Man I T I PI ink and Flizabctl
K.kkeeping I, DoroP,liver, room I5K
IJI> Hilliiigli.un
d i ieorge I aylor, room
\l . Civics, Ktl
Duller and Margaret
l,onion, room
12; Man
Fitzgerald,
M. W. I . mo, 103, T. ' i h . room M ;
a.hanc -I -Me
apliv, Ivan Campbell,
ii
HI.,mile
Steps toward the raising of the standard of teaching in special subjects in
the secondary schools of the state were
taken recently by the board of regents
of the University of the State of New
York, when it ruled that, beginning in
September, 1933, candidates for such
positions intra present credentials showDR. RISLEY COMMENDS
ing the completion of four years training
the subject. Eighteen hours of proWORK ON BATTLEFIELD infessional
courses will also be required.
The work that has been accomplished
Among the special subjects mentioned
during the
past two
tw years on the preser-] ,,, (h c 'ruling oP'thc "board"off regents
die past
vatioii .1 the Saratoga battlefield is re-jI are
.iic physical educati
education, home economics
markablc, according to Dr. Adna W. u m | drawing. A bachellor's degree or
Rislcy, heid of the history department. I ||S equivalent will be demanded.
"The appearance of the place has been
To comply with the ruling, the Corttransformed," Dr. Rislcy said.
, land Normal School will change its
lie commended the research that has three-year course in physical education
been done, and the subsequent erection h o a four-year course. Among the other
of buildings and markers, lie said that I schools affected by the ruling, is the
he considered the work done on the high- Platsburgh Normal School which at
ways especially line, since the improved j present gives a three-year course in
re,ads render the place easily accessible. : commerce.
I50A; typewriting, Agnes McCariy and
I lerford Smith, room A ; Spanish 1,
Margaret Kelly, loom 100; history C,
lean Russell and Fli/.abcth Smith, room
205; hinglish 2, I I, In, McCormick and
\ui, Puoy, room 200; Fli/aheth llagen
and Anne Mo.sher, room 2ol, M. W. !•'.,
room 2',0, T. 'I'll. ; l.aliu 3, Irene Ashley,
room 210. M. W !•'., 200 T. Tli. ; chemistry, (ieucvieie Cole and Bernard Auerbach; elementary aleghra, (ilady.s Andun's, room 101).
At I :30 to 2:30 o'clock, T. W. Tli.,
-olid geoincin, Margaret b'orliuie, room
300.
ADVERTISEMENT
I
I. ick'Aood
anil
W.ller
LEARN
Tllllll
F'X, Huh. ii Ko-s .mi! Del, n Dal
lo, ,,, . V ' l .
|. | „ | |. | | , , , , n . o Is
. ' I I , n,d I loi-.n.i PalI ,, : I, I. I , i „ , , Mark
\IMII,
W .:;,. i, M . w
I
I I, i •• in \ ; I i n : '
,,,,1 I I Id., . . , . - i i . M
\
I
I h i ...in I 1 u : I m i
THE PIANO INj
TEN LESSONS!
TENOR-BANJO OR
MANDOLIN IN LIVE
LESSONS
, r,„
I. r
21
and Mane,
A
looll
With
lllg
!. I .,h, I Pa\ \ . III
\. I
I
in Ii
lo ephn i H i .
I,. , plime
M i u / o , loom
2?H;
i , \he,
I I I ! , i i,an .(02; Ins!
\ i . , , H,.i-Mi II. i
i 303; i lie 1 I I
.(oil
l o l l , ll
s, ale.,
i k u i e , |,
e-.eiuse-e
.Hid
I I,leak
Vo||
.,,<
lauglil to pla . by note in n-gnlai pro
lessioual choid -Hie.
In l o u r yen
lllsl
I, s o n
toll
will
be aide- l o
populai niiiobe, In I
I I, wel
menial I iielnh, Ma
in M , I ,li,i I, PI,n
I„ I I,, i!
Ion , 11VII .. .mini
II
ig.i I loin, loom 205
12 35 o i l ,ck hiologj
,„l . M Tajlor, rooii
S1111
-, P . , i •
II ,• and |,
- ( oiiboj
,MI4
\ l . e e -I
, .
-I,.-,-,
ah
i
,
ion
V... I
I u n i h I, Mai) Hei
li.ii,
i ...in .i
bin .md I,II, Paul, M W. F. loom
hi.l, ban II,,win,m and
I I I , I 'Ih i.„
M l , e S o v s a U ) , loom 100, Punch 2,
, .
,„ ,. ••
Mollic Is, num. in
Augusta
n.oiu 303, |)h) si n,^Mai)
Hart,Hnlhps.i
room
• end .in v liione,
Ilin n, w ill, ihod
ih'posll
Will,
Ihe
,11
I
leu doll.II -,
11 soil an- not entirely
atislied, Ihe money paid will be le
I in ned in lull, upon w i ilien 1.-quest
I he Publishers aie anxious to place
this ".Sell lllnll in till " in the hands ol
lllilnii lovers all ovei the t u i l l i l i y , and
i-. in a position to make AH attrat live
proposition lo agents, Send lor your
copy today. Address The "Hallmark
Self l i i s l r u c l o i " .Station l i , Post Office,
|iux
MJ|
NBW
york(
N
l a r g e cities
Baltimore,
Detroit,
Cleveland
a semaphore
halts
flyer
by
steam
drawn
simple
lakes
Win n you receive
,,i lea, In,,,; inn-i,,
1 ' • ' 1 1,1 , , I t h e
York,
a pulling
switching
maneuver,
charge.
A
giant
unci
a
New
soon
luxurious
engine.
and
electric
cjuidsly u n d e r w a y , glieles
SFND FOR IT ON APPROVAL
b L a t i n C l a s s e s at 1 0 : 5 5
uc, i -,,i j e x a m i n a t i o n d u e l -, is h o i i i u
Ii, '.. | , . II 15 ,,'. I,,, I.
F.I, in,-i i . m in „ i „ v o l u m e
I he l i i s i le- - o n is nil
„ .
Ili.o.tlo
o
, ..ml
II, In,
, .,1, ,1 v . h i i h Ihe - i n , ! . Ml in,is e v a i u i n i
, ,
I i..in .ii.3, \,ii,e l . o l c i i s k i
.md ami l„ In- own " I I ' I M . I - and H
KV.'
i.
i IN;,In I! l o o m
'.oil, I ,
I, I he I.il In pail ,,l Ihe "IF,Hi,,.nl. Sell
P.,,. 1 He i .- in ' l o . I .11 in I, |-|,,i
llisliu, lor," i seal, ,1
P i , I i. ; .in 10.1. \ \ l,
e,| \ .in
He
,,, lo.-',. I ..tin I. I
e M.,1 o i i l l , " H a l l m a r k S, Ii l i . - n u ' , i,,r" w i l h
. ,,, '0.' . I ,11,, 5, I- , ( I M I M I
ll,e
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I,
,
e, 3U1, I i i H i s h
I,
M i l , I n , I mil Ml
,i . p.0,1
,i i
l o o ; M ,,
M i , uc, , ,,„
I lo .iina/lio' S, ll In . l l l l , loi will hi
• ,.• , i ,,,,, i . ,i,i . ' , , '
, , a i i u i i i, i.il
r i l l ,,1M Will l e
'l o i l do Hut Heed to
ml I, l.a\ , in
I
T the portals o f o u r
A
electricity
play .
.
Ihe "Hallmark Nell I n . l i u , t o , , '
, .
ii.,mill/
P.,si
III,in,ki ami
Fight y,
,- Mn P.. i
30-1, l„.,il,.,,„l 1 the till,- ,,1 ibis II Ihod
wen, e i p i i i , , | lo p
pel
Mils g,.,i eat
e l I,l , ,, I this
ui-i \ ..... i. loom M.
woik
Ihe
entile
ionise
Willi
ill,
,1 .
Special Subject Teachers M u s t
Have 4 Years' Training,
Regents Rule
Sibyl Blake, '20, sustained a fractured
skull and a broken nose Friday, January
IK, when the automobile in which shewas riding skidded and crashed into a
telephone pole at the side ,,f the road.
Miss Blake and her companion were
driving to a dance when the accident occurred. The young man, who was d n \
ice. cscapcel without injury.
Miss Blake had hern teaching French
2 in Milne High School with KatherineDoyle, '2'). As a result of this accident
she was unable to finish her teaching, HI
to lake her examinations.
A
23 Seniors Teach at 10 o'Clock
\ i Hi 1., In 5u o'clock
Fncdi-h
i
Professor John M. Sayles, pri..
ipal of the model unit
when
eniors will^ teach.
We have it that Hetty I'ulver,
caused two sophomores a bit of discomfiture some time ago. It seems
that Hetty who is a quiz teacher in
history 2. attends history lecture in
the auditorium every Monday and
Wednesday. Two sophomores, checking up mi freshman girls buttons,
asked Petty for hers, as she left the
auditorium. Diminutive Hetty replied
by displaying her Myskania key as a
possible substitute. The .sophomores
evaporated, more or less.
BOARD WILL RAISE
TEACHING STANDARD
iSIBYL BLA™ MURES
Paul
SKULL IN AUTO CRASH
alge-
E£^fe
i
1
"Where's Your Freshman Button?"
Her Response Is A Myskania Key
locomotive,
silently
into
the
In i n i e si retch w i t h its l o n g s t r i n g o f P u l l m a n s .
l a k e a t h o r o u g h b r e d it makes t h e r u n
lessly. Passengers a l i g h t in a clean
clean because there is n o s m o k e or
Another
milestone
in
life-
terminal
soot.
transportation
an-
o t h e r event i n the l i f e o f t h e i r o n h o r s e !
Civilization
is p r o g r e s s i n g ,
m the v a n . I l o w far t h i s
us, is a p r o b l e m
is
loi
l•
(lietn
•
for
our
lo develop
f l
• •
with
advance
electricity
will
lake
f u t u r e leaders. It
.
...
anil u t i l i z e n e w
,
/•
,
a p p l i c a t i o n s of e l e c t r i c i t y
t h e f o r t e that
.,., ,. ,
I lie O r . monogram is
found on large e h i m i
lotoinolives ,in,l MII
M A / D A lamps, elcurii
v,ii mini lie,,nen, and ,i
is
multiiudecjliidiwaiiplj.
D o i i i t i i i L ; t h e w a y o v e r u n c h a r t e d courses,
n o t o n l y i n r a i l r o a d i n g , b u t i n vvury
phase
"
'
o f progress
aiacs whaliserveu»Jl.
11 is die m.nk ol mi
oruaiiization ih.u is
elediuad lo the muse
ol eh-, tried progress.
y
O t N Ii K A L
li I fc c Y l i
I C
LAL
C O M I' A N «
a c ii
B N II
QS4S09OH
t " f A i) »
N li W
X O H K
STATE COLLEGE NEWS FEBRUARY!, 1929
College Male Throws $2,000 On Beauty's Altar;
EIGHTY NEW BOOKS State
Barber Shops Put Large Dent In Adonis' Appropriation
ADDED TO LIBRARY
Will Marry Dean
WOMEN TO DEBATE
WITH ST. LAWRENCE
TEAM ON MARCH 13
Nearly §2,000 is spent every year by be taken before the "get wise" party,
State College men students on the terri- tile sophomore soiree, the junior prom,
The women's varsity debate team
tory above the neck, exclusive of the the senior hop,, and one elective date.
Safety R a z o r s Preferred
I will meet the St. Lawrence l'niversity
H. G. W e l l s ' " N e w Machiavelli" more or less daily soap used in washing.
Each man spends on an average of
For
everyday
shaving,
the
men
find
| squad, March 13, Louis M. Klein. '_"i,
Is Included, Miss Cobb
$18.51, according to statistics compiled safety razors most convenient, they de| president of the debate council, an, Announces
from a symposium conducted by the clare. §472,80 is spent on this indoor
j nounced today.
The teams will argue
NKWS.
T h e total amount listed was sport every year. Of this amount, $375
Eighty liew books, including "New $1,981.
i government control and operation of
goes for blades, while only S98 is spent
Machiavelli," by If. G. Wells, have reOne man who patronizes (he barber for cream. Some men make the already
i hydro-electric power. T h e topic has
cently been added to the college library, shop frequently reported spending $36.40 low cream bill still lower by using soap,
not yet been worded, Kit in said,
according to Miss Mary E. Cobb, librar- annually, while another who admits using n five cents a bar, instead of the thirtyi Slate College: will be represented b\
ian.
anybody else's shaving cream and blades, five cent tube of cream. Some of the
The list follows:
spends practically nothing on bcautify- men of the college say that their room
Audrey O'Kaidy, (ilatlys I lungerfonl,
ng his head.
mates have found even a better way to
: and Wilheltnina Schneider,
sopho
The next lowest total is claimed by a save money than that. Unite a sum can
i more;, and Lcuore (!. S. I Intchi.Miii,
smnoth laced lad who spends $7.30 a be saved, and is being saved by their
'29.
T h e team was chosen in N'ovent
Wives laUs ; IIPMSUII <ih<] utiieis, L'sycliol- year, six dollars of which goes for hair- room males, they say, by not being tool
cuts.
her.
careful which cream tube is used when
H a i r c u t s Biggest I t e m
shaving.
Haircuts are the biggest item on the
Lotion, powder, after shavin" prepara- i
men's beauty budget, making up sixty lions, and hair "slickum," take up onlj i
Coryell, "Evrtluatlon
of
Kxlensivc
Teaching
per
cent
of
the
total,
or
$1,345.20.
The
Coiiflesy Alliiiliy Kvr-nliiK .Newan inconsiderable seven net-rent of the '
of Literature'5 and Cable, "General Business most meticulous male, having his hair
\donis appropriation.
T h e individual:
Miss Julia C o n i n e Troy, inst
lor in home economics, u ho-e
Cubberley, "Stale School Administration"! cut ever} two weeks, leaves $19.50 in sums spent on these items vary from
(Special to the X K W S J
Davies, "Short History .if Women"; Davison, the neighborhood barber shops yearly, four dollars Io fifteen cents. The fifteen
gageinenl is announced.
"Laboratory Manual of Physical Chemistry"; while several men lie for low score with
Hi'iK I In i. EAI.I.S, l'.\., Jan. 3 1. -In
< nt bill was for an annu.il buttle of
" "
Dawson, "'iV.-icliiiig the Social Studies"; Ilea
an
even
six
dollars,
or
fifty
cents
each
ley, "'Foreign Policies of the United States";
vitalions for the State College student
De la Marc. "Collected I'nems"; Dricser, - month for twelve months. T h e average
"Sister Carrie"; Klli», "The VisitiiiK Traclioi is SI 1.21.
V. M. C. A. to send a delegate to the
in ttiiehester"; Kishli.uk. "Cliaracl.-r Kdnca
Joe College at State spends only Iwofield-wide men's conference which v. ul
the Junior High School"; l-'liek, "Mml
I'he barber -hups gel $207.00 more of
Ihirds as much as bis brother, Juh'n Col'l.al
eru World "History 1776-1926"; I
.';|lh( facial fund
?
oratory Class lilnivinn"; (inlswoilliy "Inn of,
. . , for
,, the..infrequent . barber
. .
lege of the L'niversity of Washington.
Tian.nullity"; dates, "Improvement of Head- shaves in which the College men indulge, That institution reports withdrawal of
inft" and Cilison, "I'oems."
I Kacll man eels on =• 11 average almost
I he conference is in answer lo n
?28.5(l
fro,,,
each
student's
pocketbook
|
j
.
-r
,
„
„
t n m m
liilbrelh, "The lloiiiemaker and Her Job" 'live a vear, spend--' 81.73 at the rate of I each vcar Inward the fund I'm- making . , M i s s
.,, r )Vi i l l !,> l r i l c i r
, .pealed requests by student o r*
g a n i-/ ,
dillihiiid. "Educational Measurements and ll
| home economics, will marry (be dean .., ,
supplement the work of ih
Classroom Teacher"; (irow.iii.-inn, "The ]•'. thirtv-fue cents each. These shaves may | men more beautiful.
ceptional Cliild"; (hum, "Table Service and — ----- — ) a college wl-.ere she taught before coming customary summer conferences.
\i
Decoration"; Hamilton, "Manual of the An
here, according to an announcement made 11 1 ! 1 "', M ".'"'' U l ' ! ' known in student ,
of Fiction"; Harris, "Every Day Poods";
M. C. A. circles, will
ibis week
ilatschek, "Laboratory Manual of Colloid
blc
Dr. Risley, Late For Quiz Class
Chemistry";
Hewlett,
"Forest
Lovers";
""''• |1|1 K- l'J'.
iront.v, ..i wind,
Alpha Ml
. . . . . .M
. .i <. s. | .! ?
.,, , ...... ,.,
Holmes, ' "Laboratory Manual of Colloid
Finds Student Playing Teacher
Troy is an honorary member, anciinecs ' 5 eonvention uill he I he ( h n Chemistry"; lloiisnian. "Last I'oems"; Ilous
man. "Shonsliire Lad" and llovvclls, "Iiu-ai
her
engagement
to
Professor
Samuel
H
'
eclmttpie
ol
Living.
1 ll-le.ld
Sclmlield, dean of Western MarvlainD
! tuber, "Children's Interest in Poetry",
when he i.'ls .1 lew mil tiles kite
iliintiiixtoii, "llusiness CeoKi-aiih)"; Johnson,
hive hike, for girl students are sche I
recenlK 1 i .i bi.-storv 2 |tiiz. Dr.
"Andrew Jackson": lohnson, "Textile Fat.
rics"; Jordan, "Children's lntere.il in Kead- tiled by the Cirls' Athletic a.-sociatimi
Ailna W. Kisley, head of the hisdepartment from 1921 to 1925. The date
iux"; Klapper, "Teaching of History"; Kruyt, for the remainder of the winter season.
i o n ,1,-pa intent, found lie i lass
for the weding has not hem announced.
"Colloids"; La line, "Menial Hygiene";
earn itiu.
HI business ; s 11 Hill.
Lewis, "Man Who Knew tooji.lge": McCol- Three of these are live mill hike., and
Miss Troy received her bachelor of
Spanish carnival will he April 2ll.
him, "Food, \utrition, an,I Health"; Mac- two are eight mile hike..
W a l t e r A t der.Min, '.i2. w,
ting
science degree from Teachers' College,
irolliv Thomas. '30. oresideiil ol
Donald. "HonieniakiiiK, a Profession for Men
as iii.strin tor and had he ptiz
Columbia
I'nhcrsily,
ami
her
master's
Spanish
club announced toda\
(v.- Women" and Maselicld, "lollecu-d Poems."
A >now tramp, u Inch \\ ill count as a
I he
mi tubers it the hoard null ling
degree from Columbia. She lias attended
M.iebhnan, "Public School Finance"; Moe
.
inmillees
will he appoiuteil al tin
hlman. "Puldic School Relations"; Monroe live mile trip, will be condticti d Salursynclirninii s charts of lis ppen n gs
summei
,
,,„
s
.,,eeoruarv
ions therev and at the I'ni- February meeting
meeting ol
of the
the club,
club accord
ill W e - t e n Kurnpe during the kitversifies ol 'I ennessee and Virginia.
iug lo M iss J'houia.s.
She was a public school teachci
of Arithmetic in the Intermediate Cades",
ter ntiddh ages. 'I'he s •clitu is
The second, also for five miles, will
Northup, "Introduction to Spanish Litcra- , .
, -,,
Maryland from 1917 to 1919, ami was
composed ol men only, a i m her
tore"; Palmer, "Principles of Language begin al Rensselaer and will go north
WiUanl W. AnJriwi.I'm. /•'. Ilaylmi,! Hniln.Sc:
fact which makes it uniqt e in the
assistant manager of the Barnard Col
"De^opmenfo'f' Virgil'," A, t."'"' ,'"'!,"J"'
through Hloomingrove, Sunday, h'ehruhislorv of I'feslunan .'lass
lege cafeteria in 1920 and 1921.
re.
Proetor, "Educational and Vocational (mid art 17. On Stindav. h'ehruarv 24, an
Y.M.C.A. IS INVITED
TO FIELD CONFERENCE
,,;;;::;:;;n;';l,:;.,',:;!,;.,niiu',iau',y Murc\Miss
TROY TO WED
DEAN OF A COLLEGE
WHERE SHE TAUGHT Z^Z™™"
'/'"'' ' ""'"
GIRL ATHLETES WILL
PARTICIPATE IN 5
MID-WINTER HIKES
^l^ST^;JZ^:\APRIL
20 IS DATE SET
FOR SPANISH CARNIVAL
^ ' ^ ^
f§^:^§.^^2i
KILr-i'lS^.I5™*1 ,s MINTED
Shipherd, "Fin.- 'Art of Writing"; Steel!
TlmXiay, ' " T h r ' ^ - w u l a L . ' ; ' ' ' ' , l ' y 5 ' ' V ' "'"'
Thompson, "Works"; "Three Problem Cliil.
dreu ; rreganza, "Dcroiations and I'urnnhiugs of Homes"; Tiitlon, "l'i vstallinr Fo,m '
and Cltemic-al Coiulituliou", Wells, "History
A live-mile hike will be conducted oi
Sunday, March 3, lo t.lciinmnl and at
eight-mile hike will start from Delaware , , . Rudolph,
(leruian I
avenue, .Sunday, March 111.
!
i__
cording to
Albany
Agency, Inc.
CUPID IN AN ENCORE
Teachers'
TEACHER OF GERMAN] WHEN FRESHMAN WEDS
74 Chapel St., Albany,N.Y.
S, u i n g, , .'29,. will, , leach
tin- j h\>r the third time ibis semester. Dan
,
cla-s heginiimu Mmn ,i\. ae- Cupid visited Stale College when be
,
, ..
W e need t e a c h e r s for S e p t e m b e r
I ' m i e ^ n r Win I red ( . Decker, officiated in the marriage of Jean Kuapp,
'.U, io Harold Pierce, a graduate of
l,t : 1 1 ll
1
appointments.
W r i t e for inforthe Corning High Scl I. The couple
t
t
M
cc
S.udy Kdectivelr;', Wi .Id.y.^F . , , c e n , a l i / W / 5 5 GRAVES
TEACHES
m a t i o n o r call at the office.
ivas h, nil in liermauy, and is a major | are living in Corning, Mrs. pierce ha
u (iernian lure. l i e expects lo leach j ' " " withdraw n from college.
Miami l'niversity, Ohio, aider
Loom Weaving."
Evelyn Craves, '29, president of the receiving his bachelor's degree here.
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
student association, is teaching home
Announcement is made of the birth of economics " c l o t h i n g " at the St. Mar TUMD1
H QTIIDP\ITQ
PUT
a son, Richard Winston, to Mr. and M r s . ' garet's H o m e s for Nurses, K.Ik street. ' LmiLC
01 UULiMO
UCi
II. Van Allen Lobdell, of Albanv. Mr.} Willi Winifred Wescotl, '29, she re
CHAPTFQ
M? PHI
DPITA
l.obtlell wa.s graduated in 1922, and is a ceully laughl "foods" lo the pupil
\*liftr I Ml
wr mi UCL.IH
E v e r y s a n d w i c h made u p fresh t o i n d i v i d u a l o r d e r
members of llie Kappa Delto Kilo I r a - j t h e eighth g r a d e at public school 18.j Km chaplci of I'ltj Delta surorilv
lernily.
Ilurlbul street near Delaware avenue ' w ; l , r n e n t h installed at I eniple I'ni
ipter
~—V
j College credit is given lor this prat V i - i l v , Philadelphia
Al|
lice leaching.
- is located al Male Colli go
AMERICAN
AND
CHINESE
HARPER METHOD
D a n c i n g 10:30 till I A . M„ E x c e p t S u n d a y
$ $\?Pf:J?&
"$$^$r' i\
A
SBC ^Jr^h.;£\
,
.nu/rcTri^rc
I ' " ," ' " *" "'"" «w™««- *>-"«
"CLOTHING" TONURSESZ;:;
,.
COLLEGE CANDY SHOP
203 Central Avenue (near Robin)
Salads - Pastry and Toasted Sandwiches
(Oriental and Occidental Ktestanvant
Open 11 until 2 A. M.
The Modern1
Way to Write
is on a
BROWNELL'S BEAUTY SHOP
271 I . A R K
Phone
1-3618
Remington
Portable
T
H E complete a n d incomparable little writing machine. Fits in a
case only four inches high
— the smallest a n d lightest portable w i t h s t a n d a r d
keyboard. Call in a n d let
us s h o w you this wonderful t i m e a n d labor saver.
44 State St
STREET
Phone 3-5943
F R E D E R I C S PERMANENT WAVING
Open evenings by appointment
A R K A Y FLORIST
Ten E y t k l l o l e l l t i i i l t l i n g
PHONE 3-4439
Branch
15 So. Poarl Street
PA I K O M / . K T H E
We Clean and Dye all kinds of I.adits' and (Vlen's
Wearing Apparel
8I1A MADISON AVKNUK
Phone 6-3072
I). Je.iiiev
I'luine
COMPOUNDED 4 ^ 2 ' . QUARTERLY
INTEREST
CITY
AnuH'trmi CIcam*ni a nit Dyi»rg
Uco.
JvVVE!
T h e day may come when you will find the
little treasure a faithful servant!
1..76I1
I (JO S T A T E
SAVINGS
ALBANY,
N. V.
KOHN BROS.
"A G o o d Place T o B u y "
As Narrow As
AAA
Jgwilwari (gatVtnta
198 Central Avenue
Albany, N. Y.
HANK
STREET
ES
As W i tl e As
EEE
AT POPULAR PRICKS
Downtown
Hudson Ave.
1 Dour off Pearl St.
ALBANY
Uptown
125 Central Ave.
I Hlock from " S l a t e "
STATE COLLEGE NEWS, FEBRUARY 1, 192!)
STUDENT AGES ARE ! * " & » * ^ 2 ? , f T ^ ' J * ^ J ' * L ., SENIOR COMPOSES
FROM 15 UP TO 57
Majority Of The Freshmen Are
17 Years O l d , With Other
Class Ages Higher
Liftccn
limits
of
and
lifty-siven
iho
students
are
tlu'
attending
ant
Stale
I ' O I I C R U , iici-urcliiiK td M i s s Kliztibetli V a n
Dcuhuridi,
the
1
ftffi
registrar,
freshman
lumr
ami t w o Kradnates
The
i;reale,l
17 y e a r s
members
ela>^ a r e mily
students
i i u m h e i ' of
of
15 y e a r s of
a r e $7.
freshmen
old; sophomores,
IN;
are
juniors,
modern Youth Is Degenerating, Debate Class Decides
T h e m o d e r n g e n e r a t i o n of y o u t h is I " X e a r l y e v e r y s o r o r i t y a n d f r a t e r n i t y
d e g e n e r a t i n g , a c c o r d i n g to a vote follow-1 h a g sheltered i n e b r i a t e s at s o m e t i m e , "
m g a d e n a i e in t h e r . n g h s l i ,?1 d e b a t e
, . „ . , i
,.,
• . ,
,
,
,- u
,,
, , ,>•'-,.,
c o n e r e d M s s JJ o h n s o n . S h e p o i n t e d out
c l a s s ol D r . H a r o l d \ \ . I n o n i p s o n r e - •
'
;lml
s e x
ceiitiy. T e n s t u d e n t s t o o k t h e pessimistic ™ t " l ) 1 " " 1 d a l e s
excitement
I p o i n t of v i e w , w h i l e s i x held dial y o u t h ! w e r e d e t r i m e n t a l t o t h e m o r a l s of y o u n g
r e m a i n s practically the same morally as j people.
in o t h e r g e n e r a t i o n s .
" F o r a g i r l t o be p o p u l a r , s h e m u s t
V o i i t h of t h e p r e s e n t d a y is u n e q u a l p e t , " M i s s J o h n s o n a d d e d , " a n d p e t t i n g
lo t h e s t a n d a r d set by its f o r b e a r s of j is d i e p r i c e of p o p u l a r i t y . "
R n p E Companionate Marriage
half a c e n u i r y a g o , die allirmative, con- j
s i - t i n g of F.nmia L o u l n h n s o n , '29. a n d
,•
•
,
•
n i
i-i
i ' , ' , " " " ' , , ' J"""* ">. - • "•'
( o m p a n i o n a l e m a r r i a g e w a s called a n Pahvant
Oslmrn,
3 1 , s u c c e s s lull v d e .
•
..a,a,,,,.., i... ,i.„ ..M',,.,,,.,
f
elared
'
• "
).,'."
' ',
'•• , ' " ' ' " • n , , l | m
T l i e v d e c l a r e d t h a i t h e p r e s e n t d a y l,,V1"I ' " ' m o d e r n g,rl goes out when
y o u t h is w i t h o u t a s e r i o u s 1 p u r p o s e in. ( s l l l . W I s l K . S i h l ) W .,,„. w l s h e S ] w l i e n s l l c
where she wishes, and com
life a n d t h a t his g r e a t e s t d e s i r e is lo g e t
w h i n s h e feels l i k e it," said M i s s
I
a "llirill".
M o d e r n y o u t h is a d d i c t e d t o
d r i n k i n g , s w e a r i n g , "thrill seeking
and,
..^
. .,
.
j
}
;
DICTIONARY MANUAL
ECHO IS DISTRIBUTED
SECOND TIME FRIDAY
The second issue of the Echo, literary magazine, was distributed last
Harold F. Reed, ' 2 3 , Is Author week by staff members.
Among' the contributors are: WarOf Book For Encouraging
Use Of Vocabulary
ren Cochrane, '.!(); Helen Mead, '32;
Ernest Booth, '32; William M, French)
H a r o l d F . R e e d , ' 2 9 , is t h e a i i l l u
'29; Gcorgiana King, '2'); Alabelle
of a d i c t i o n a r y m a n u a l n o w b e i n g d i
MVNulty, '29; Albert Ritchie, '31;
tributed by the Funk and W a g u a l l
C o m p a n y t o p r i n c i p a l s a n d t e a c h e r s Genevieve Casey, '31; Helen Otis, '31;
throughout the c o u n t n
W'illielmiua Sebesta, '30, and Marion
. .,„„.,i
T , , „ ,,,,,., . . , „ , . - , i „ , " . . , „ „ . , i
Fox, '29.
' l u p u r p o s e ol t h e m a n u a l , a c c o i d i n g t o K e e d , is t o d e v e l o p t h e h a b i t
Preliminary preparations have been
,„• ( l k . , i o l l a r
„, t r a i n
r c f c r c n c e
a n d
to r e g a r d t h e dictionarv nmade for the next issue, according to
nipanion and guide.
T o s u s t a i n Florence M. Gormley, '29, editor in
t h e p u p i l ' s i n t e r e s t , a s e l e c t i o n of t e n
w o r d s f o r e a c h w e e k of t h e s c h o o l
y
e a r is g i v e n .
T h e w o r d lists w e r e
h e r of s p e c i a l s t u d e n t s a r e m o r e t h a n 11 l « w t y p e s o l c o n v e r s a t i o n , M i s s Jol»»-1 „ l l i o „ , o t h e r p o e p l e , a n d t h e p r o b l e m s
compiled
from
the literature,
geog!
1
\ c : i r s o l d , t h e lisl a n n o u n c e d hy t h e
"" '
ol life iii g e n e r a l a g e n e r a t i o n a g e ? " r a p h y ,
and history
text
boohs
of
"Minority Gets Publicity"
| a-ked Miss D o n o v a n . " T o d a y people are s e v e n t h ,
registrar shows.
eighlh
and
ninth
grades.
M a n y of F o r e i g n D e s c e n t
I
M a r g a r e t D o n o v a n , ',51, d e c l a r e d t h a t j living in a n a g e t h a t c a n n o t he j u d g e d T h e y a r e a r r a n g e d in c o r r e l a t i o n w i t h
\ l a r g e n a n of t h e s t u d e n t b o d y is ol j llu 1 a c t i o n s of y o u n g m e n a n d w o m e n a r e j by i h e s t a n d a r d s of t h e a n c i e n t s p i n s t e r n a t i o n a l h o l i d a y s in s u c h a m a i m e r
,
. , , birth or descent.'
A m o n g t h e ) p e r f e c t l y n a t u r a l a n d t h a t t h e y w e r e a I o r b a c h e l o r of l o n g a g o , " s h e c o n c l u d e d , j j | i ' ; ; ' " J | ' 1 ' 0 ^ u u i V i i t ' u ' i l f ' l r i \ V ' -, v-'-Vn". I-.VA
, , , „ „ „ , , . , , „ , , , , „ , „ „ . . r v p r , s , „ U , | are produc,
of
their
environment.
She
Allegedly
a t r o c i o u s p e r f o r m a n c e s of
!'„. . |s^
'
, \,Hl
! h ' / ' 1 ' .C
C e r m a i n . K u J i a . C a n a d a , I r e l a n d , h'.ng | <Hi»l«l s t a t i s t i c s to p r o v e t h e d e c l i n e in I c o l l e g e s t u d e n t s w e r e r e c i t e d |,j t h e a t - [!* " ' , V ^ i , , ' , ,
,'vV,ei! s • I u H
I l u n u a i w , \ i i s i r i a , T r i p o l i , P o l a n d , j Hie u s e " f a l c o h o l i c b e v e r a g e s .
S e v e r a l . I i r m a f v e to p r o v e t h e d o w n w a r d t r e n d y
' ,
. " •;
{
, ' !
\. '
1 z e e h o s l o v a k i a . F r a n c e , l l a l v . D e n m a r k . I c o l l e g e s , p r o m i n e n t l o r c a m p a i g n s a g a i n s t I , , | ;l , p r e s e n t g e n e r a t i o n .
i n c l u d e d in t h e n i a n i r ,
kuni.uii,,.
scoiland,
Gre.'ce.
S y r i a , • d r i n k i n g , w a r e c i t e d a s e x a m p l e s ol t h e ;
Concluding, Miss J o b ,
, said, " I f t h e '
' , , .
„ "
I the L'niversilv
Sweden.
I.ilhuaiua.
Aiisitalia,
A F a c e I m o v e m e n t o l > o u t h t o s t a m p o u t the c o u i u i g g e n e r a l i o n f o l l o w , t h e e x a m p l e , „ x |
.
. , ! \H
'"
'.
" ' ' ''> ,
I , r r a i n e and Switzerland
| w i l . " D o not c o n d e m n t h e w h o l e g r o u p , ol d i e p r e s e n t , t h e eiiMiing d e p r e c i a t i o n I
' " . \\. ' ' , U , ! ' ' " ' • ' ' ! , " ,
|
• ,1
l,,s
, l t n
,l
1 lisi s h o w i n g t h e n u m b e r
for t h e m i s d e e d s of a f e w . In e v e r y in
will c i r l a i n l y h a v e t h e effect of l o w e r ' lower• ' school.
*
'
' " ' ' Milil;
"' ''"'
Folloc.ii:
De Vcaux
e l a s s a n d o l s p e c i a l s t a n c e it is o n l y i h e e v i l - d o i n g m i n o r i t y ing t h e g e n e r a l s t a n d a r d s of m o r a l s a n d
(ach
\ c a d e m y , N i a g a r a Kails.
,1. ai i h e v a r i o u s a g e s t h a t g e l s all t h e p u b l i c i t y , " s h e sank
living."
maadual, •
20, a n d s e n i o r s , _'!.
T h e greatest
iiuin-
l
't£^i:!l]k ,,ari"^{PLACEMENT
BUREAU MEN WILL NOT MEET
:
!;;;;;:,:;; tv^iSX?
LACKS 40 PERCENT
ALL-CANADIAN TEAM
Uluxii
I:
t h a n lhai
liuuibel
l-
In o r d e , ... c i n p a r e d i e s e n i o r c l a s s
Qf
SENIOR
PICTURE
I h e m e n ' s v a r s i t v ,1, h a t e „ ,
,!v. ith i h e 11 it s. el i r c s l i u i a i i c l a s s , n will ,
.
,
| „ ,;,'•,'.. '„•> , . , ! , .
1,, a d d 3 y e a r s t o I
N e a r l y 4 0 p e r cent of I h e s e n i o r c l a s s | l u " ' " ( el i h e t h r e e n u n w h o a r e r e p IP, \,,[.',,||,' ( i r e s h m ' e n o r s u b s t r a c t j I m v e failed t o s i i p p l j t h e p l a c e m e n t I111- j r e s e n t i n g all t h e c o l l e g e
and univer
I e,,•',',-, i r . a u t i i ' . . . ..i t h e s e n i o r s . L i k e - : r e a u w i t h a g e n c y p b
g r a p h s of H u m
„,•,,,., i n {-,uv.nh
d u r i n g t h e i r l o u r ,,i
e
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s
,
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,1, , , • ; , . . , . o r , v , l s o he c o m - s e l v e s , a c c o r d i n g t o I ' n , l e s s o r | o h n M.
,
, • • , , .
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tt,i,l
of tthhee eedduuccaattiioonn'' ddeeppaarrt t :
V
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'
SSaavylleess,, hheeaadd of
' l l l l ' : " l l 1 ' " l l 1 " " ' S l ^ " - »' l - ' 1 " ' "
C
•4 F
--r e s h m e n 15
-- Y
>'e a r s O
« lud
!\ , man
, „ . , , , a-,,„i
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11,. a r e . L o u i s M . K l e i n , '2'l, p r e s i d e n t .,1
n d s e c r e t,.,,.,
a r y of
h ,e, , bI,,,,-,.-,,,
ureau.
Hi
15, -I fo-liir.-ii, 1.17 |ii-r eeni of class., h a s a s k e d e a c h s e n i o r to file ill his ol'lict
f - . ' ^ ' I live g l o s s y p r i n t s , i h r e e l,y live i n r l i c , , . . - u c.
,„ ,,,.,, U l .
\.. n
lid not ai
I, 11 | nt'XI w e e k .
A C o m p l e t e tile will m a k e
1
1 1
,;i
„,,!),
"
'"
p o s s i b l e h e l l e r , e r \ i c e of d i e b u r e a u l o : ' ' " " ' ' " l > l i K ' l ' x l " ' '
turn ol the e
ieil.
" ' ; tj-'>\ s l u d e n t s , h e p o i n t e d o u t . h'.aeh s e n i o r is e x p l a i n i n g tl
\«r
I S , '('I IM -1
II. .Is |
lo ndeeppoossiilt ttw
weennttyy--lfiivvee cceennttss,,
Z\ nTii""^ sVn'.'.'.'is'"'. M " m T ' e c n t . ' A"H'<- l'J, I ;al ll sh o" ;a| s kk en dl •"
IMi
lie i n v i t a t i o n t o m e e t I h e C a n a d i a n
DIRECTION
HI , , , . ! , .
|„.|
nail
.ils.. I 17
nil
1 '/..'
„,;
I ,,„•, ials,
\ | . . i ,•
llail,
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1.17 |...
y e a , -,
I
rent.
flclr
. 1.17 |,
H j«
VPOSTLES' CREED
,•1 |,.
is
PRACTICE HOUSE WILL
BEGIN DUTIES MONDA
•uts for -ein.M s in I h e h o l m
( h p a r i i u e i i l I n I n e at t h e
151 W e s l e r u
111
I,
.1 e . l l h
nesl
\ni
M
W, ek b \ I h e d e | , , , I I I I U . I I
lion
M.n
Filliiiuhain,
iosirmioi
, ,
h s,
is d l l e , l , „
ol
Ihe
is
The i o i u m i l t e e
died
Movietone Nov
ALSO
.•r
llaMF
80-8J No. Pearl Street
Cor. Columbia
ALBANY
GOSPEL TABERNACLE
A Reliable P l a c e to B u y
R E L I A B L E - SILKS
WOOLENS - COTTONS
CRETONNES and
INTERIOR
FURNISHINGS
64V-651 WASHINGTON AVK.
1 J u s t west of I ' u r l i i d H e S l r e e l )
Rev. F. L. Squires, Pastor
Morninu jService* at '14.45 o'clock
Visit The New
Lucille Beauty
Salon
cApollon
Tea Room
e ,eh s, nn I, 1 . " M o . I n ! ! uidi.un
an
• loan e u l s
n , h Iheie ..I one nine,
she , ai! 1
1, - . a l i n e ... manager, as
I I C I I . I . K M l O l ' l 1) \
20M ( , ) U A M . S I . ' R i c e H h l g '
D i a l fc-5787
215 Central Avenue
h . a i s , k , . ' p , '1 "
The
Imnwof
'l'h<
ami
Fim-tl
Ur
CM
IJnhnnl
CIIKI,/
l'urlnr
SiulicH
Iff
„„
f/,,11,
SPECIAL
Permanent Wave $7.00
/aua'/iw
Cmun
d-utml
su,,,,,,,,;,,,,,,,^
11,000/ „„
/...»./ Unir
S/.; i
F„r />'„/,/«,/ //,„,$/. ,11
An:
I'ufriiltmjr
Phone 6-3933
MnnimrliniMi,:.
I uriul
.!/„ >,,„/, $ I.
BUCHHEIMS
QUALITY
CLEANERS
AND
432 Central Ave.
I'ludin r.l on,I (li.stiiljiiled under ideal conditions. I eachera
parlii ularly a n d tlie public Kt;"crully weleoined at all times.
2i 1 Third Sued, Albany, N. Y.
THttphuno I il.'-s
SWAGGER"
OF
AMERICA
R ITZ
4
WEEK OF FEB. 4
Dolores Del Rio
u
OPERATING
THEATRES
Revenge'
Puthe Sound
Ne.es
Vitaphone
Acts
ALBANY AND
IN
ALBANY
REGENT
OF FILM
Itl-.l: K
11:11.
CLINTON
SQUARE
hi
CLAS.SK S
FA CI. FSIYK
IK< ©in^a^ce of
"GRAIN OF
DUST"
with
jMargiiret Livingstonl
Mary Astor
Ben Bard
'
ALL
DAY
FIRST
RUN
DOUBLE
FEATURES
I "A WOMAN' S WAY"
I
2.=;c
1'ICTFIiKS
• II • • • ! ! > Ill I I I I I I W i — —
it*
25c
Mat. 20c
BUCKLI-.Y
with Warner IBaxter
1 1 11 i»m—1
Night 25c
Owner
Smart
Coats - Hats - Dresses
or
Girls and K lisses
I u|.;s - I Insici \
Steefel Brothers, Inc.
PALLADINO
Personality Bobs-Finger Waving - Permanent Waving
Ilointn S a v i n g s l l a u l i lilil,
U N ,
lV-arl S t .
.)-.Hi2
BOULEVARD DAIRY CO,, inc.
1.2
MARK"7
Vitaphone
Acta
Ci\m
DYERS
Albany, N. V.
'TEMPTING
ers
C. H
boils.'
SAT.
FEB,
R O O L A R O C Q U E In
COMPANY
LELAND
and
nighl.
FBI.,
31,
n'iKiNfi Tin-: S I L I : \ T DRAMA
aske d for a
dollars
JAN.
5ins Of Tbe
arranging
Sunday night 7:3(1 o'clock
"I \ , M en,,a-, w i n , is w a k i n g foi ill
di g r e e -I ha, in I, I , i . u e e in l e a n e ecu
I.ml
ur.
w Inch
HEWETT'S
SILK SHOP
Second Coming
of Christ
M„
1 A i m i i , a.
AND
THUR.,
p ,
WEEK O F REB.
Emil Jannings
u
CLAS'S'V'AUDEVILLE
STRANU
MARK
is fosl.i'n, ii. i . i l n ' i i e i ,.•„!: si, sophui
-s. j Willi M i s . G e r t r u d e M . H a i l , s e c r e t a r y
,.,,.. a ......
, , ,
,,
...
.7.5.. e n , , „ ; :-i ' u „ i „ , , . .U „ , , , , „ . ; 21 , „ r r „ f e s s o r S a y l e s , t o c o v e r m a i l i n g ' ' " ' " ' " ' ' V
'
' , " " ' " l ' " " " 1 " '>V
— , „ , . . •..., ,.,;__;;.-»;. ii J -1 — 1 a...l Br...l....l< | , , , , , „ „ , , „ , , , u . vUcmKnX
|m,,.,n
j Miss M a r t h a II. Itiehle. rXectltlve see
j r e t a r v ol I h e l o r e i g n r e l a l i , o n s c o i n
naas, .is,..'!
ALUMNA HAS SON
I
t e e 01 i h e N a t i o n a l S t u d e n t h ' e d e r a ,), ll;i
()mi
'' %7't"''
'
' « . ' a n n o u n c e s d i e h i r l h ol ' ii
"J!i juMi.a.s,! a s,„i 10 M r . .and M r s . C h a r l e s l ! o i c e . | ' ' "
|..i e.-iu; - i l M r s .
Hoice
was
formerly
M a r j o r i e I l•'l "
M.ilhewsoii,
'_'-), a n d is a s i s t e r of I g u .
|,
1 i'.i.i"|,i-, 1 L o u i s e Malliew.s.
STANLEY
PROCTOR'S
Grand
HIGH
Strand
l.i.f N. IVarl St
4-6280
DANKER
"SAYIT WITH FLOWERS"
-IU and 42 Miiidcn Lane
Albany, N.
V.
PRINTING OF ALL KINDS
SWi'iits and (iiiui/'s iii ilw Siaw CulL'gn for Teachers
11 ill />(/ jji'jvn special aiwniion
x /* • 11 , A . ! > „ , . , ,
M l l l h /AIL" 1 LCSS
394- 396 Broadway
4" 2287
Printers of Sm» CoUpgj N»w«
6
STATE COLLEGE NEWS, FEBRUARY 1, 1929.
THE
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
FOR THE
THREE NEW BUILDINGS
ARE
PANZIERI - HOGAN COMPANY
INCORPORATED'
BUILDING CONSTRUCTION
go STATE STREET
ALBANY, N. Y.
CAMPUS
EDITION
State College News
NEW
Vol.. XIII. No. Hi. Section '_'
YORK
S T A T E COLLEGE
FOR
ALBANY, N. V. PittiuY. KKIIKI ANY
•"..:
-
. , < . ; - ; ?
'
:
• ' - .
- • • '
• ' • • : . : . .
•
- .
vvfe?«
:
-
:
:
:
-
-
' . .
,
;
-
^ / ; - : - V f - ;
• • • • • • > < * - v ; * ^ "
• /: -- ^•y^i^uW'^^-^^¥"
PHOTOBRAVURE
SUPPLEMENT
TEACHER5
1. 1.929
I'-'.'-'S Per Year, 83 Weekly Issues
.
<
>
$>;
••••'••.
—
l*iiulv(fia|.h by While Studios
fur the IV.Iiig.iuui'
ill..vi iv,I \si Ki'.v.isKn in illi-, liiilirnii winuhlinlial |)lii)iugrajjli ui tin- .ninth pnriiiii of Draper Hull, al lull, and front view ui Hartley Hall in the shade of one of ilie giaiu campus eliiii.
STATE COLLEGE NEWS, PICTORIAL SUPPLEMENT. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1929.
t ni-:nri-\Tiiiv.\i l i m i u n lic'wuii Virginia K :i. then ,i -,.|,|i,, m , , IV
lydi' Slnniin. J.N. i-c-tilli-d in llicir in.irri.i-c an hour al'tt-r his graduation
I iililisl<ill, where ilit hitler i- teacher in iIn- hi^h sHm.il
l-'ii-'i I:J-:x Tg.v.,.-gi.rflci'.\ (ibovc, placed in the
center nf Pag^lllall; i t w uiu|e£ construction,
Hy live I'aiizieri-F'Intfiiii I'oinuamV general coin
tractors.
DON'T IIUII IT, C.'luuhs Wuriliinan.' jauiloi
for ,?o rears,' t e l l s M u r e Fanning. Inlow.
Charles likes Ijpiig MiVlttj girls.
i l o K h 'J'llK.N SlIIKi'n
wHI IV-Jlll
gage in liie ainiuaJ |><de nish, Phutu I"
the das* iiwitfiiitt. Ia»l MrilHj,„
: .
|ce>l)ma»] and m)\)lunnurv clamps next spring en
aljows undent junior men successfully defending
STATE COLLEGE NEWS. PICTORIAL SUPPLEMENT, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1929
V I M , \'K,III( A M I VITALITY iii athletics for Stale co-eds, above, left, I'.vclyii McN'ickle, '-"', all
dressed up in chew niarsliinallows; center, a spirited contest between Kuili Wheelock ;mtl Alice
iliiiKliam, seniors; rifiht, K'.'itlierine N'orris and Artlith Down, sophomores, in a three I'KKt'd race
The
Ventilation System
In the
Three New Buildings
\\"i 11 ii M 11. M m i I;.\TKW.\Y In I'result-ill A \i. Itrulwichcr.
alms, 11L;I.•. arc Mildred Contain. '.'0; Man I- ( ....I;, MJ,
K'mh \\ lifi-ln.-k, '."'. .Hid K'iiihrvii M. Tulliill, MJ.
IIOKI M I K,I
, ,<'fiiiinMl) (In mil iroulih- Kiliim |.IM-|IIII
II, '."). ..i the I'.-II.IL-. -«ue, liclnH and (il.ulv-. Hales. Mil,
il.
i llic -I.ill
Has been installed
By the
PIERCE BLOWER CORPORATION
Engineers - Contractors
Fan System of Heating and Ventilating
27 Carolina St.
BUFFALO, N. Y.
STATE COLLEGE NEWS, PICTORIAL SUPPLEMENT," FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1929.
rnm.K, Bunni.E, toil and trouble
the home economies department
11 tin' board of regents recently
•(I to abolish (lie course in thai
eel here. Miss Anna May Fillaiu, instructor,
and Florence
2(). ai the home iiiaiiagei house. Below, Hetty Van Allen,
peeling potatoes scientifically.
TIM
S'l'A'M- ('OI.I.KI.K N'I-'.US u r a i e f u l K
.ickuuwlcdne
the a s s i s t a n c e ..I t h e . A l b a n s
K\eiiuiK' X e u , .
Times
LHi..11. K n i c k e r b o c k e r l ' r e v s and t h e I V d a ^ ' K i i e h.r th
use cii inanj ctil.s and p h u i n K r a p h - u s e d in ihi-. p i c t o r i . i
supplement.
T i l D S I . k l T T K N I S I I •itniU- as tlu-v made t h e i r rli-l.ul L. c l l c e r |n
il\ circle-..
A b . , v e , lcl'l in ri,ilil. l l i a r h . l t e A I U I I T M H I . M a r t h a i ami
THE
LUMBER AND FLOORING
USED IN THE
THREE NEW BUILDINGS
HAS BEEN FURNISHED
BY THE
ALBANY LUMBER H i
Ai.i. Sin" TO QQ is Durham Andrews,
'29, in the latest basketball tuug«ry
jur co-eds.
D
BRIDGE AND MILL STREETS
ALBANY. N Y.
wDmmmmmmjr.
STATE COLLEGE NEWS, FEBRUARY 1, 1929
CONTRACTOR HERO
OF "ALGER" TALE
Directs G.A.A. Comedy
iz^ij:; ritrL:\J:::.
TO PRESENT COMEDY
ALL HAY COMPETE
FOR G.A.A. DRAMA
Prom Climaxes Colorful History Of Junior Class;
Kidnappings, Fights And Banner Hunts Were Many
With one of the most colorful his- to a cottage at Lyon's Lake, later bringtories of any class in recent years, the ing bun back to Albany, where he
junior class today enters upon what is escaped.
generally conceded lo be the greatest
The sophomore year saw numerous
Panzieri Began As Immigrant;
Candidates W i l l Try FOP Parts social function for juniors.
battles with the freshmen, and the yearlNow Erects Many Public
Week From Tomorrow
Several extraordinary events have ings, too, were robbed of their coats for
Buildings
In Auditorium
characterized the life of the juniors here. one day and had their names written over
The first one was the night the class was the shower room. Two scrimmages took
Tryouls for the musical corned)' of administered an "initiation" at the tradi- place hetweeii the sophomore and the
I'S Al.l-'RKtl I! A si II
ihe (lirls' Athletic association will he tional "get-wise" party early in the fall freshman girls during the banner rivalry.
Tlie story Ml' Aliln Panzieri, of tin
conducted next Saturday morning at 9 af 1926. Aided by a policeman and a In spite of the struggle of Margaret
Puiizicri-Hogan Company, tlie linn now
light watchman from the Elouisc apart- Skidmore, in whose charge the class
engaged in constructing the three new \
o'clock in the auditorium in ETuwlcy nents, the freshman men hanged the banner was, and in spite of the plot to
buildings lor |lie college, reads like .1
Hall, and every girl is eligible lo com- rival sophomore class ill effigy from a seize Marion Gilbert, '31, the freshmen
typical Alger tale.
[turn ill a litt lc
pete, according to Florence Gormley, '29, campus elm. They were later pursued succeeded in capturing and retaining the
Italian seaport, and spending his youtn
Washington park by rival 19.10 banner.
director of the comedy. The comedy through
iherc, lie is now president of one ol
will not be written until after the try- sophomores.
Capture Banner Early
Albany's mosl prosperous construction
The first till between the classes within
Attempts to capture Kaplan and
outs, Miss Gormley said.
It will he
companies.
the building occurred when freshmen Richard Whiston, '30, before the pole
presented
Friday
and
Saturday,
March
fAiss
Fuo«.e.Mte
GORMUY
Kami, I Inly, Mr. Panzirri's early domistarted to divest sophomores of their
15 and 16, in the auditorium of lite Al- coats. Nearly all sophomore men at- rush of their sophomore year were failMiss Gormley will write and dicile, is a town with a population of
ures. Whiston put up a hard fight
e d a musical comedv for the Girls
bany Institute of History and Arts.
alioin 27,(100, eighty miles east of l-'lor
tended class that day without coats. against the freshmen, while Vincent
dice. Mr. Panzieri came to America
Allilelic Association.
A musical comedy under the auspices Twenty-two were seized, and the owners' Fcsta, '30, phoned (be police. All were
-•
-•
from there in 1902, landing in New
of the Girls' Athletic association was names written on Ihe shower room wall, taken to the fourth precinct police stafirst produced two years ago, when il where they remain,
York. I'poii landing, he obtained a job T n n r 7 D , n n f 7 D C D t . » ,
tion, and when freed, they relumed to
replaced the vaudeville which was given
as carpenter, contllining 11, tins p.isiuon | IHOUBADOURS
PLAN
college together.
Kidnapping A t t e m p t Fails
annually in the auditorium. It was given
Armed with "jimmies" and hooded
In the institute of History and Arts in flashlights, freshman men spent a few
order to raise money to build a cabin nights in the college building while
,l
l
:iclcnz 1 s
Mi
lo which hikes can he conducted. Tin hunting for a mascot hidden by Ihe
site of the cabin has not yet been chosen. sophomores, lis hiding place was later
l
The Troubadours, men's minstrel orWandering Workman
Last year the comedy, called "The revealed as in the boiler room.
Two one-act plays will he given by
I lis fir I -tup was al \ewporl, l\. I
ganization, may present a one-acl iim- Third Act," was written by Miss dorm
\\ ith the banner rivalry but a day old,
where
he
was
in
charge
of
a
gai
Icy,
who cooperated with Marion Sloan, the yearlings managed to get possession the advanced dramatics class, Thursday,
lis:in 11 mi a liridgi coiistruclion joh. ed\ l.y James .1. Cissidy, '30, as part
February 14, according to Miss Agnes
Edna nf ihe rivals' banner.
When 1 In- work was completed, lie re ol its minstrel show program in April, '2°, in composing the music.
Frederick W.
A
smned hi- Inn els along the Allanlic sea according to Randolph I). Sprague, '2'), Wolfe. '28, and Alice Hills, '29, played Crumb, (ieorge Taylor and Bernard Sul- l-ulterer, director of dramatics.
melodrama, directed by Lenore G. S.
the parts of hero and heroine.
cnasl. with irccpicnl lint slinvl sto|is al
livan hurried with it to a photographer's Hutchison, '29, deals with a battle of
presidenl
of
ihe
Troubadours.
"On the Fence" was the comedy pro- where their picture was taken with the
many of ihe cities.
1 assidy is now c pleting the play duced two years ago, the (heme being captured insignia, ami later used in the wits and portrays an uprising in the
In the nine years intervening hetweeii
country. Those taking part in it a r e :
based
on "Then You'll Remember," a Pedagogue.
Pur.sued by sophomores, Marion Sloan, Marion Palmer and
which he will submit for the approval
lidmieiil 1 if .1 perniani 111 residence in of the organization at a meeting early1 popular song of the time.
they narrowly escaped capture by a Pauline Crowley, seniors.
Alliany, In -penl most of his lime in
llight in a taxi.
The second will be a comedy directed
Viil/uni.
Thai cily liecame a he.ul- in I In- semester. lie wrote a comedy
Attempts at capturing Thomas P. by Dora Dadmtin, '29, and the parts will
tiuaricrs limn which he started his ire which was presented by ihe TroubaFallon, sophomore president, and counter- he taken by Eleanor Welch and Gertrude
ipieiit nip.-, ami t " which he relnrned dours last year.
attempts al kidnapping freshmen char- Hall, seniors. The names of the plays
after each I rip. According lo the ol I
acterized part of the year. Sophomores are not announced.
"It is probable thai the sbow will he
saw, the roll ng stone gathers no moss,
captured Israel Kaplan, '.30, the night
presented
in
the
new
auditorium,"
linl Mr. I'an/ieri imisl have accumulated
before the annual pole rush, took him
"Dependable
Flowers"
some uf thai green mail rial, fur in I'M 1 Sprague told the Xl-.ws. William <i. j Friendships at Stale College are not
In- hail sufficient capital lo go ml- hus Kennedy, assislanl professor In elieui j measured in terms of dollars. That is
We Telegraph Flowers to all Par „
if Mary Alexander, '.12, reiness independently ill Albany.
islry, will direci ihe perforiuauee, he the opini
Of the World
cently not died thai she had inherited
Began on Small Scale
said. Kobert J. hi ly ... Duaile linker, I $10,000 from the estate of a grandI lis In -1 venture was In Imild a group
freshmen,
may
.In
ei
1
ihe
orcheslra,
I
lather.
Syddum Hall entertained twenty-two
of small houses for residential purposes
She declared thai she is glad thai she house' mothers yesterday afternoon at
'I his unch-rl aking proved so successful according |o Sprague.
an informal lea. There was no definite
thai Mr. Panzieri decided to -eiile 111
Pari ..I ihe regular minstrel show I has made no new friends since her in- purpose in the gathering, according to
FkOWCR CHOP
Albany permanently, lie r.uiliiiucd hi- program or musical numbers 111,n he . heritance was announced. This proves
that friendships here are inn commer- Miss Anna E. Pierce, dean of women,
I,lidding operations ,,n a small scale for
broadcast
tlirough
WIIAX,
radio
broad\
who,
with
Mrs.
Sarah
Dunn,
housecialized, she said.
nine more \cais, Oil he became the litis
casting .tali
.1 die Rensselaer Poly
Miss .Alexander said that as yet she keeper of Syddum I hill, acted as hostess.
a s , partner ..f Mr. I loean in I'lJn.
Insliliile, it prop..,, i| plans are had made no definite plans, hut admitted
Invitations lo the lea were sent lo
Mr. Ilngan a: lhal nine had also lechnic
adopted at Ihe next 11111 one ol the j lhal she intends purchasing a car, sev- "those who have more or less responsiheen iiilercNled 111 ei 111.-.I nielMii, luill: men
riiuhad.uirs
P h o n e 4-3775
eral g I I ks and that she desires lo bility in ihe home life of the student
ll il|
;
1
V
" W 'I"-'. ; "" ' 'VPe of work. In l'L'H. "Ti',;r |Vo'iihadoiirs were org, :cd tw
group houses," Miss Pierce said.
lour Europe during the summer.
••'< Mi. heiglil ol III. real e-iale I ,1 ol | U M | S . | ( , u i ) U | U ( . n . . | ( | | 1 1 | l i l . j . , l h | W
l!
,1
'!'•" " " ' : | "' ' « " " " " 'healed I- pool] n i / M , , „ y, h ., k ; „„,, , „ „ , , ,,,,, w , „ , ,.,,,
!In.-.r c a p i t a l . r e > o i u e e > , a n d a h i l u y , a n d , . il I. Shillinglaw. '29, was the first
" " ' i-'"ii|>an> I president.
form a single e.mi|
:, lhis e!a n!ry.
" ""' ' "''"
TWO STUDENTS DIRECT
PLAYS ON FEBRUARY 14
IN MINSTRELS SHOW
FRIENDSHIP IS NOT
MEASURED IN MONEY
HERE, SAYS HEIRESS
HOUSE MOTHERS MEET
AT SYDDUM HALL TEA
I
STEUBEN STREET
Corner J a m e s
was
a siiccc-s
iri.nl
the Marl, and
:::::: Z'Z ::;:^\:z:fL
' ' iu'l'H •iiE;!' \ ! 2 2 1 Z
I PROFESSOR RETURNS
H0ME AFTERILLNESS
pane h.,- 1 -reeteil, n has also had Ihe
Dr. A. K. Hoik, assislanl professor
coiinai is for mam of tlif city's public I of educalioii, has returned to his home,
buildings .Simie ol its 11m l red nl cmi 2 (denwood slreel, following an opera
-mielioii.. HI-IV 1 lur l.mh of Angels' lion at ihe Mi 1 aal hospital. Dr. Ileik
Si-In ml, .1 lathi.lie ,ehuol ,.11 Sheridan will prohahh resume his leaching w iihin
:.ve •, ..ml Public Sell....I I", on \ e w a few weeks. I h- plans lo attend Ihe
Sri -tl, ...I I avenue
I milialioli ol Ihe local chapter ol Kappa
WOMEN VOTERS LEAGUE
WILL HEAR MISS HUTT
l.i-g'sla'.ne prngiaiii-. for Ihe presein
M ,1 uill In , iillined belore ihe college
una - 1 the I , m
\\
ell \ oti is
lis Mi,, M.II , I h.-.ilii-ih I hit:, M.unlai
.11
I Ml l o , k III I
II P
The
Painting and Decorating Work
In the
If it's made
of
You will enjoy the
RUBBER
HOME COOKING
W e Have It
served at
Three New Buildings
W a s done by
John H. Harrigan
Painting - Decorating
Mrs.
VAN'S
Dining Room
2% Lark St.
Dial 3-5191
462 Orange St.
ALLING RUBBER CO.
451 Broadway
Albany, N. Y.
STATE COLLEGE NEWS, FEBRUARY 1, 1929.
TEAM TO FACE FOE
TWICE NEXT WEEK
Buildings Not Made By Slapping Bricks Together;
100 Drawings Required, Superintendent Declares
Heads Juniors
DANCERS RANSACK
HALLS OF FASHION
If anybody thinks that building a school is just a matter of putting down one
brick, Rutting cement on top of it, and then laying down another brick, he is
respectfully referred to William Kleitz, superintendent of construction, who
Alice Walsh Will Wear White
is state inspector of construction for the three new college buildings, H e will
Varsity Opposes Cooper Union quickly dispell any such illusion.
Taffeta Dress Trimmed
And Norwich Quintets
There must be more than a hundred drawings, from the original plans drawn
With Ruffles
by the state architects, under Colonel Acheson, state engineer, to the final workOn Home Court
ing plans used by each carpenter, electrician, plumber or plasterer. When the
BY BETTY HARRIS
Resuming court activities alter the state drawings are made, the contractors must make delail drawings from them
Wardrobes of fasbiondom have been
ransacked to provide color and variety
examination period, Ihc men's varsity giving all specifications. These drawings are forwarded to the state architect's
office, where they are checked and corrected. T h e work then goes forward from
for the gowns of the State College girls
basketball team will run into plenty of these drawings.
who will grace the junior prom at the
opposition when the Norwich University
Besides this ever present source of deArt W o r k More Thorough
Ten Eyck ballroom tonight.
lay, there are several other things which
(|iiintct invades the local court for a
Alice Walsh, chairman of the prom,
The art work must go through even
game Tuesday night. Next week will more hands than this, Mr. Kleitz said in serve very effectively to hold up conwill wear a white taffeta dress, trimmed
struction.
The present buildings have
be a busy one, as the Cooper Union team an interview. The plaster relief work
with
silver edged maline ruffles; Virginia
had more than their share of these.
Shultes, member of the favors comwill come lo Albany Saturday night to over the proscenium of the stage in the
D u e J u l y 1, 1928
mittee,
a blue taffeta period
frock
new
auditorium
and
the
Indiana
limeplay the Purple and Gold.
. According to the contract, the work
trimmed with blue velvet; Mildred ConAs usual the Norwich team is a strong stone reliefs over the entrances to the should have been finished by July 1,
new
Page,
Milne
and
Richards
halls
tain,
chairman
of
the
music
committee,
outfit this year, meeting the best teams
l')2H. However, as is often the case,
a bouffant white and pink taffeta dress.
in the New England region. The visitors are examples of this kind of work. The it takes time to get a large construction
contractors make a working drawing of
Eunice Gilbert, chairman of invitations
also face Union and Albany Law School
job organized. Material must be gaththe design to be used in Ihc decoration,
committee, a black period dress; Marered from distant sources and men must
on their trip to the Capital District.
which is sent to the slate architect's
garet
Henninge, chairman of publicity
be
employed.
Usually,
the
time
necesThe Cooper Union outfit was in town office. If that office approves it, it is
committee for the tea dance, a period
Marion b o t t o is president of the
last week playing the Rensselaer Poly- sent to an artist who makes a plaster sary for organization is taken up by
frock
of
crimson moire.
junior
class
which
this
week
has
digging foundations. The digging of the
technic learn at Troy. The New Yorkers model of the work.
This is photoDoris Williams, distribution committee,
scheduled a series of social acwere bothered by the large Troy court graphed, and the photograph is sen! foundations, however, bad been done
tivities.
a period dress of changeable rose and
previous to Ihe letting of the contract.
and went down to a 38-19 defeat."
back lo the architect's office, where il is
[silver laffeta; Gladys Hates, taxies and
The regular State team of Herncy, examined for depth of carving and suit- .Accordingly, when ihe I'anzieri-I logan
• dowers chairman, a turquoise blue taffeta
Carr, Klein, Whiston and Kuczynski ability of appearance. I f it is again Company started work mi August 20,
| and tulle; Alice Benoit, member of inviwill be in shape to start each game. If approved, a stone culler is employed 1927, it could noi accomplish much. By
tations committee, sunset yellow shaded
the two weeks of tests have not affected who works from the piaster model (he lime materia! began in arrive, winter
bad come and weather interfered with
taffeta with tiered skirt; .Van Brennan,
the work of the team, it ought to be directly on the building.
the
operations.
The
lime
lost
through
I
chairman
of refreshments for tea dance,
hitting about the best form of the season
President A. R. Brubacher, I'rofes
In all ibis negotiation, there is a Ibis one means was probably the main
I a period gown of orchid taffeta with
in next week's games.
strong possibility of delay, as the con- reason i,,r the delay in the completion John M. Sayles, head of the education | \'u\raperies,
Brooklyn I s Swamped
department, and Dr. M. G. Nelson, assist-]
tractor may not go ahead on any work nl the work, according to Mr. Kleitz.
Green Is P o p u l a r
am professor of education, will repre- I |
Walls A r e Rebuilt
Displaying a strong attack and a clever until the plan for that detail is approved.
Frances Dale, luncheon arrangements
This was not the only trouble to be sent the college at the meetings of the I committee, a
defense, State wound up its first semester
pale green
georgette
Society of College Teachers
overcome by the contractors. The cen- National
schedule by handing the Brooklyn C. C.
, , , , , , ,
...
,
, | trimmed with lace; Marv Nelson, a green
ter building, which is to contain the new
Cleveland, Monday, I ucsdav and ..,,;,, ,\r..<<. i.-..,i, , \\>„i, , „ \ •
X. V. quintet a severe 49-18 trouncing
w
i.
,
ii
',,,
,•
,-,
sauu
dress,
Katliryn
Webster,
chairman
gymnasium and auditorium, has a portico Wednesday, February 25, Id and 17, at ,,<• ,
„,.;, ,,„
: , . ,
n
two weeks ago. The game was rough
',..„,:„,, ,,( a,,, " ' decorations ffor tea dance, a flame
mi il similar to that now on the present the fifty-ninth annual
at times and the heavier metropolitan
Munition
of
KJ
,,lored
chiffon
gown
worn
over
silver
t
chapel.
The great amount of cut stone department of superintcndcin
1,1
team did more than its share of roughing
| cicth; llildegarde Ruby lis. member of
used in this type of portico has a tre- National Education Association,
it up. Carr and Kuczynski starred for
mendous weight, and ihe soft sandy fill
President John Gabbert Bowman of] refreshment committee for tea dance, a
the Purple and Gold five, scoring 16 and
Professor Adam A. Walker of the
the University of Pittsburgh will speak I black laffeta period frock trimmed with
18 points respectively. It was a pleasure economics department will speak on "I the laud on which th
;
a ,unchc
IX-.-ig
erected
is
incapable
of
supporting
>
"
" " lhe f i r S < ' ^ " f l h e «'»
to see Carr hack in top form as he has "Utopias" Sunday, February 10. in the
Hazel Goodell, a black satin dress;
been having difficulty getting into shape auditorium of the Harmanus lilcecker the mass. When H, r foundations were vention.
Edna Roshirt, a green taffeta
frock;
I his season. Three of his eight fields library. His talk will touch upon ideal laid, no account was taken of this feature
Alice Baiber, member of the faculty
were tap-in shots under die basket. Kuc- worlds which have been depicted by " ' Ihe building, and the found al ions concommittee
will
wear
blue
crepe
over
Looks Like Rain, Boarder Says;
zynski and Ilerney played a fine brand a succession of bold spirits from ihe sequently had lo he taken mil and recoral; Belli Root, member of the favors
of floor work and were passing nicely. prophetic writers oi the Old Testament laid with a concrete base.
It Might Be Coffee, Is Answer comm.ttee, a peach laffeta period dress
Tn the preliminary encounter tlie State to II. G. Wells. Some of them thought
"Add to all this Ihe time it is necestrimmed with maline.
William G, Kennedy, assistant proCollege "freshman" team kept its record that the present world is altogether bad, sary to lake out because of weather
fessor of chemistry, thinks the folBernice Gilbert, green taffeta period
of never having lost on its home court according to Professor Walker. Others conditions," said Mr. Kleitz, "and _vmi
lowing joke may be read sympadress trimmed with cloth of gold; Kathby swamping the Collegians by a .311-7 thought that by varying amounts of can easily understand why [he company
thetically by those students who live
erine Graham, member of the invitations
score. Ott, a sophomore, with Kissatn change, an improvement could be made is behind schedule.
I have sometimes
in boarding houses. One morning one
committee, an apple green laffeta period
and Goodrich, freshmen, led the yearlings on the present condition.
seen building- two or three years behind
of the boarders remarked, "It looks
I'mek trimmed with contrasting green
lune,
and
s
in scoring.
I think Slate College can
like rain." "Indeed," responded anAmong the latter type of dreams of
shades of taffeta; Anne Moore, chairman
other, "but I noticed a slight aroma
ideal worlds, perhaps the most noted is consider its i fortunate In having only
of the hnise committee, black velvet
this
delay.
•lay, considering the difficulties
and color that might lead one to beSir Thomas More's "Utopia".
Pro•.rimmed with gold; Ruth Van Vlack,
which the contractors have bad
lieve that it is coffee."
fessor Walker will base most of his talk
luiichc
committee, a black period taf
on this book, and will illustrate with
fela dress.
selections from it.
The Albany public library has been
Thirteen alumnae are expected to return lo play in the rj 'ime between the offering Sunday afternoon lectures since
January
10. Everyone who is interested
alumnae and girls' varsity basketball
teams tomorrow night at 8 o'clock in is invited to this series of readings and
jomments
on books. Meetings are at 4
the gymnasium of I law ley Hall.
Among the alumnae who are expected ('clock. Rev. William II. Hopkins will
be
the
speaker
Sunday.
In play are Elizabeth Milmine, '26;
Dr. Harold W. Thompson, professor
Georgiana Maar, '27; Dorothy Hoyt,
'25; Florence Craddock, '25; Emily of English, is scheduled to speak somefielding, '24; Ethel DuHois, '27; Flor- time during the spring, but the date is
ence Potter, '28; Margaret Doughty, not settled definitely, according lo the
'28; Dorothy Rowland. '28; Esther librarian al Harmanus lilcecker.
Luystcr, '2K, and Mary VV'inslow, '17,
The varsity line-up will include Juanita
McGarty and Agnes MeGarty, seniors;
-Marie Havko and Anna Moore, juniors;
Frances V. Peck, Beatrice Van Stecnhurgh, and Winifred Hurlhtit, sophoTwo members of Lutheran club will
mores.
attend the national convention al Gettysburg College, Gettysburg, Pa., February
21, 1,\ and _'4. The club will choose the
two delegates al a meeting next week.
The convention will discuss religious
problems, relations of the studem to colSpcaki rs fur the junior luncheon to- lege life, and the world convention al
morrow ai 1 o'clock at the De Witt Copenhagen, Denmark next summer.
Clinton hotel will he Alice Walsh, toastinistrcss; Professor George M. York,
head of the commerce department ;
.Marion JJotto, junior class president;
Anne Moon-, Emanuel Green, Louise
Trask and Frederick W. Crumb. Jane
Four additional students have pan!
Formanck is general chairman.
llieir student lax since the announce
juniors may lake guests to the lunch inenl of ihe non-payers Iwo weeks ago,
run, according to Miss Walsh.
according to an aniiouncemeiii of the
sludeni board of finance. The students
"No News Is Good News," Believe
who thus become members of the sin
dent
association are l.oretta l.indachcr
Freshmen In Regards To Marks
and Ralph I. Slanlev, senior-,; Gladys
" \ ' o news is good news."
Green, Ml, and Clin Delehaiily, '.(_'.
Thai's the slogan of
freshmen
The names of Frederick Appleimi,
after taking their first semester ex
Kenneth Miller, sopl
lores, and Mai ,
animations. It results from Ihe re
Driseoll, '2<>, should not havi been in
poi! thai marks of those students
eluded in ihe I'm mei list of student •
'flunking" in any course will be re
who have nol paid then sludeni lax,
corded by the registrar's oilier first,
according to the student board oi liuam < and thai grades of those who pmsed
Miss Driseoll paid alter Ihe Nl-.W s went
to p r e . , two weeks ago, anil the name
enough onuses to remain in college
will he entered on the records later.
ni Aplllcl
md Miller were unhide,!
through error. All three names were
No grades will be given out In slti
on ihe |is| submitted lu the S'l-Ws. In
dents personally in Ihe registrar's
the hoard.
office, They will be sent lo Albany
addresses by ihe office stall, provided
that students leave self-addressed,
TO PLAY L E A P HOLE
.stamped envelopes in the office oi
Doium Vce Campbell, Ml), will pi«)
Miss Elizabeth vail Duiburgh, regis
a lead role in "What Anne brought
trar.
Home," io be produced by the Albany
DeMuluy players in the spring.
3 FACULTY MEMBERS
TO GO TO CONVENTION]
PROFESSOR WALKER
TO DESCRIBE UTOPIA
IN ALBANY LIBRARY
ALUMNAE AND VARSITY
WILL MEET TOMORROW
The Flat Roofing
LUTHERANS TO NAME 2
CONVENTION DELEGATES
Copper Hoofing
Skylights and Ventilators
SIX SPEAK AT JUNIOR
LUNCHEON TOMORROW
FOUR STUDENTS PAY
TAX, BOARD REPORTS
W e r e applied by
CRAIG & CO., Inc.
118 Erie Blvd
Schenectady, N. Y.
"Believing our Efforts mean Service"
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