STATE COLLEGE NEWS, MAY 16, 1935 Alice Allard To Be Junior President Classes Will Meet In Stunt Rivalry Alice Allard will be president of the class of 1937 in its junior year, as a result of rcvotcs conducted this week by Myskania, senior honorary society. The other officers elected that week F r e s h m e n , S o p h o m o r e s t o C o m p e t e were: vice-president, Thomas 11 eehau ; secretary, Rosemary Dickinson; reporter, T o m o r r o w a t 2:45 O ' c l o c k John Culleii; representative on men's athFor Three Points letic council, Edward Hulihan; men's athletic manager, Edward Sabol. MUST FILE Practice teachers in Milne High school for next year must file their teaching schedule cards by 5:0(1 o'clock today, according to an announcement from the office of Professor John M, Sayles, principal. Cards should be filed with the supervisors of the studi • majn The four classes will vie for supremacy in the annual Movlng-up clay stunts tomorrow at 2:A5 o'clock in the Page hall auditorium. The freshman and sophomore stunts comprise a part of interclass rivalry. The winner will he awarded three points. The directors of the stunts arc as follows: senior, Elizabeth Gregory; junior, Augusta K a t z ; sophomore, Alma Snyder; and freshman, Jean Lichcnstcin. Rohcrt Margison, '37, lias heen elected by the sophomore class to the position of editor-in-chief of the 1939 Freshman Handbook. The following sophomores will assist Margison as associate editors: James Bcalc, Fred Dexter, Hetty Gooding, Harry Gumaer, Evelyn ITauiann, Dorothy Knapp, and Virginia Sloel. T h e freshman representative on the staff will he Mildred Nightingale. State College Mews VOL. X I X , N o . 25 in The Advanced Dramatics class wi,. present its second performance of "Death Takes a Holiday," by Walter Ferris, tonight in the Page hall auditorium at B:30 o'clock. The first presentation of the production was last night. T h e play is under the direction of Miss Agncs_ E. Futterer, assistant professor of English and director of the Advanced Dramatics class. Students will be admitted upon presentation of student tax tickets. T h e cast for the play, in order of appearance, i s : Cora, played by Evelyn O'Brien, '36; Fedele, Irwin Stinger, '37; Duke Lambert, Cecil Walker, '36; Alda, Marjorie Whenton, '36; Duchess Stephanie, Elizabeth Griffin, '36; the princess of San Luca, Mary Kane, '36; Baron Cesarea, Kenneth Christian, '35; Rhoda Fcnton, .layne Buckley, '36; Eric Fenton, Frank Ilardmeyer, '36; Corrado. Angclo Zannicri, '36; Grazia, Barbara Clark. '36; Prince Sirki, Hugh Norton, '36; and Major Whilrcad, Paul Dillman, '38. Tlie following committees are assisting Miss Futterer in producing the play: advertising. Miss Griffin, chairman, Miss Kane and Miss Whenton; costumes, Augusta Katz, '36. chairman, Miss Clark and Norma Taylor, '36; house, Augusta Shoor, '36; properties, Elizabeth Brady and Margaret Delaney, seniors; and sets, darg Vera Shinners, '36, chairman, Hardmcycr, Walker, Miss Buckley, Miss O'Brien, Doris Slone, Frances Studebaker and Janet Lewis, juniors. St. Ainnntlt Mnrjorie Knlntdijan, Genevieve Curlcy, Charlotte llockow, Maria Sharkey, Doris Stone. Klxn Calkins, Martha Martin, Evelyn O'llrien, James Campbell, losejih Onelette, Cecil Walker, Aubrey KalhaiiRh, AuRltsta Sboor. Margaret llof, Phyllis Grossman, Anne Johnson, lluldah Classen, Alice Murray, Knse ICinhorn, JncmieHne Evans, Lois Potter, Myra Stevens. Lliclla Wersen. Vincent Donahue, Laura Dove, Jeanne Giroux. and Helen O'HHen. The following will take part in the sotihofrnre stunt: J o h n Deuo, Alice Altard, ICdward Saliol, Ren LaGrua, Catherine Brotlertck, ticorgo Mackle, Knhcrt MncGrcgor, Ruth Britt, Elizabeth Mcury, Grace Winner, John Murphy. Kobcrt Benedict, James Vain I e n met, Lanrita Seld, and Helen Murphy, Freshmen participating in their class stunt a r e : Warren Dciismorc, Ruth Frost, Ltzette Pnrshall, Paul Dittman, Muriel Goldberg, William Gleason, Nea] Katie, Gar A r t h u r , John O'Brien, Charlotte I.ihman. Sylvia MulTs, Audrey Burllngham, Lucille Zak, Ursula Tctrault, Charles Gaylord, Florence Xelbach, Leslie Knox, Charlotte Peck, Janet Dibble, and Mildred XiRhtniRale. Men's Group House To Dance Saturday Evans Will Head State Delegation To 'Y' Conference its a great oigarette Jacqueline Evans, '36, incoming president of the Young Women's Christian association, Kathleen Strevcll, and Mary llarbow, sophomores, will be among Slate college students attending the annual conference al Silver Hay, Uike Gcorgp, Miss Evans, who was recently elected recorder of the New York State Student Christian Movement, is sent as a delegate of the college Y.W.C.A., while Miss llarbow is a representative of the College Sunday School class of the First Presbyterian church, This conference, to he conducted from June 19 to June 27, will have as its theme: A Modern Christian Faces a Nationalistic World. Delegates from all the prominent colleges in New York and New England will attend. TO BE mcripUon. OPTICIANS. N.P.FREDETTE COMPtfTfc OPTICAL SfcRVlOfr S T A T E C O L L E G E FOK T E A C H E R S , A L D A N Y , N . Dramatics Class To Present Play H u g h N o r t o n , '36, t o P l a y L e a d "Death Takes a Holiday" T o n i g h t at 8:30 The participants in the senior stunt a r c : William Jones, William Nelson, U f a Mcluiyre. Julie Roil, Catherine Kearney, Eileen Wallace, Wilfred Allunl. Doris Howe, Carl* t/.n Coulter, Milton UnlilhurRcr, George Taylor. Harriet Ten ICyek, Gertrude Morgan, Lois Oilwcll, Lucile Ilirsli, Mary Whitney, Etlna Fehmel, and Donald Packard. The cast of the junior stunt is as follows: William linker. Barbara Clark, layne Hockley, Vera Shinners,, -Mary Kane, Elizabeth Griffin, William Shflhcn, IIURII Norton, Gerald Amyot, Frank Harclmcyur, ICdward Kramer, Marjorie The annual spring dance to he conducted at College house Saturday night will he in the form of a summer formal. Angclo Zannicri, '36, is general chairman. Faculty guests will he Mr. and Mrs. Donald C. Bryant, instructors in English. Mr. Donnnl V. Smith, assistant professor of history, and Mrs. Smith. Lew Ride- and his orchestra will furnish the music for the dance which will begin at 9:00 o'clock. The following committees will assist Zannieri; chaperones, Paul Bulger, '36; programs. .Martin Reed, '.17; floor, Thomas Harrington, '37; music, Donald DcSerio, '37; refreshments, Dnminick Seerra, '36; alumni, Alex Jadick, '35; and decorations, Warren Densmore, '38'. CARDS Robert Margison Will Edit Freshman Handbook For '39 fel lMVI,i«Gt'i-r>: Mvtits TOBACCO CO. GUESTS Miss Dorothy Lathrop, Albany artist and writer, and Miss Agnes K. Futterer, assistant professor of English, will be guests of honor at a tea tomorrow at the John Mistletoe bookstore on Lark street. Miss Eleanor Koote, formerly assistant manager of the College Cooperative bookstore, will be hostess at I lie tea. Rivalry Trophy Disappears During Potter Club Dance I t appears, according to campus rumor, that the intcr-rivalry cup has not yet decided with whom it wishes to permanently reside, the reason being that it disappeared from the Potter club dance Saturday night, at which function it was the guest of honor. I t seems that the silver cup was conspicuously displayed by the exuberant freshmen, much to the dismay of their rival class. Accordingly, during the course of the evening, the lights were mysteriously doused, in the middle of a dance number, and when they came up again after no little procrastination, the cup and three sophomores were A.W.O.L. T h e trophy is at the present time in the custody of the freshman class, having been returned before the dance was over. Placement Total Swells To Surpass Last Year's Figure , Appointments for leaching positions dirough the employment bureau have now reached a total of eighty-three, according to Miss Edna Lowerree, secretary of the bureau, in a recent interview. Tin's number is well ahead of placements a year ago. Commercial placements still hold the lead with nine more securing positions in this held. They arc Al Jadick, at Eldred; Josephine Barrile, at Pine Plains; Florence Davics, at Savannah; Ruth Brooks, at Hurlcyville; Marguerite IJscher, at Chautauqua: Margaret \ r oone, at New Berlin • Esther Patashnick, at Woodridge; Harriet Ten Eyck, at N a r r o w s b u r g ; and Beatrice Burns, at Oswego. Others who will begin teaching next September a r c : Kenneth Christian, English, at Malone; Hilda Van Alstinc, English, history, and library, at Mincville; Florence Ottorson, history and English, at Jamestown; Margaret Lowry, history and commerce, at Setaukct; Lillian Osterhout, Latin and French, at Hunter; (Continued an par/? 3, column 1) Y., M A Y 24, 1935 PRESENTS BUDGET Issues Assembly Program To Feature Budget Finance Board Total of Estimate Calls $13,113.87 With for Ten Dollar Tax The Student Board of Finance will present a budget to the Student association in the 11 :10 assembly today calling for $13,113.87 to pay for next year's student activities. Although the new budget is almost a thousand dollars in increase over last year's, the finance board will again ask the association to pass a ten dollar tax, according to Glenn Ungcrer, '36, member of the board and member of Myskania, senior honorary society, for 1935-36, who will present the budget. Myskania will announce this morning; the results of the preference ballot conG l e n n M . U n g e r e r , '36, member of ducted on budget items a few weeks ago. Myskania and junior representative on If not enough items are eliminated by the Student Board of Finance, who will the ballot to bring the budget down to* present the budget to the student as- $12,000.00, the finance board will makesembly todav. the following recommendation to the student body: '38 Speaking Contest To Be Tuesday Night Six freshmen will compete in the annual prize speaking; contest, sponsored by Dr. A. R. Brubachcr, president, to be conducted Tuesday at 8:15 o'clock in the auditorium of Page hall. President Brubachcr will present the winner with a prize of twenty-five dollars. The following are contestants: Ina Young, Sally Whelaii, Elizabeth Daniels, Hester Price, Dorothy Haner, and Jean Lichcnstcin. ANNOUNCES CHANGE Miss Elizabeth VaiiDcnburgh, registrar, announces the following change in the examination schedule: English IBa and English 1 BR; from Monday afternoon, June 3, to Wednesday morning, June 5. Budget Tabulations The tentative budget for 1935-36 which will be presented this morning by the student hoard of finance is as follows: 1934-35 1935-36 Basketball $1400.00 $14(10.00 Football 750.00 Music association fiOO.OO 800.00 Men's intramurals 75.00 250.00 Infirmary fund 1800.00 1800.110 Athletic contingency 200.00 200.00 Secretarial contingency 200.00 20(1.(10 Treasurer's bond 25.00 25.00 Cross country 150.00 138.00 Girls' Athletic association 1150.00 1150.00 National student federation 75.00 144.28 Baseball fiOO.OO 600.00 Tennis 200.00 200.00 Debate council 407.00 425.19 Freshman handbook 250.00 253.00 News 2600.00 2512.40 Dramatics and Art association.. 1200.00 1000.00 Lion 500.00 500.00 Echo 550.00 550.00 Myskania and Student council.. 300.00 206.00 T a x cards 10.00 10.00 Totals $2.25 P e r Y e a r , 32 W e e k l y $12,292.00 $13,113.87 T h e finance b o a r d r e c o m m e n d s t h a t the tax b e p l a c e d at t e n d o l lars per p e r s o n . Since a $13,113.87 budget presumes a per capita tax' of $10.85, the b o a r d feels t h a t t h e eighty-five cent difference be t a k e n care of in o n e of t h e following ways: 1. B y d r o p p i n g s o m e a c t i v i t y or activities from the budget by a m a j o r i t y v o t e of t h e s t u d e n t b o d y , so as to b r i n g t h e b u d g e t t o $12,000.00. 2. B y h a v i n g e a c h a c t i v i t y s h a r e p r o p o r t i o n a l l y in c u t s f r o m t h e budget. T h e major item which contributed to the increase in the budget was football, which calls for $750.00. Activities which took cuts were the Dramatic and Art association, Myskania and the N E W S . The hoard urges that the budget be passed this week or next in order that the new board may begin collections during registration week in the fall. Honor Fraternity Inducts Juniors; Elects Officers Delta chapter of Pi Gamma H», national honor society, inducted eleven juniors and conducted elections for next year's officers at a dinner last Wednesday night at the Candlelight Inn. Membership in this society is restricted to majors and minors in history or social science who attain honor scholastic averages in these subjects. The members for the year 1935-36 are as follows: Elizabeth Davis, Robert Poland, Elizabeth Griffin, Norbert R u ber, Mary Kane, Edward Kramer, Rita ICrcnzcr, Helen O'Brien, James Quigley, Charlotte Rockow, and Vera Shinners. Officers for next year a r e : Poland, president ; vice-president, K r a m e r ; treasurer, Miss Rockow: and secretary, Hubcr. 2 STATE COLLEGE N'EWS, MAY 24, 193S Myskania Taps Eight Successors In Moving'Up Day Ceremonies State College News Established by the C I S M of 1918 Undergraduate Newspaper of New York State College for Teachers The THE NEWS BOARD KARL D. EDERS Editor-in-Chief Kappa Delta Rho, 117 S. Lake Avenue, 2-4314 EMMA A. ROGERS Nezvs Editor Associate Editor llrtn Zeta, CH<) Madison Aveitiie, 2-3266 G L E N N M. UNCERER 413 Washington Avenue, 5-1847 FRED DEXTER Assistant News Editor Kappa Delta Rim, 117 S. Lake Avenue, 2-4314 HARRY GUMAER Assistant 413 Ncivs Editor News Editor Washington Avenue, 5-1847 VIRGINIA STOEL, Assistant 219 Ontario' Street, 2-1187 CAROLYN S I M O N E T Business Manager Business Manager Bttsinoss Manager Gamma Kappa Phi, 21 N. Main Avenue, 2-4144 J O H N DENO .Associate Kappa Delta Rho, 117 S, Lake Avenue, 2-4314 LAURITA SELD Associate 202 Western Avenue, 3-0090 SbMotiatrd golUgimtc frrc<» -31034 ffljjrsjllfl f l U H l 1935 •- Published every Friday in the college year by the Editorial Board representing the Student Association. Subscriptions, $2.25 per year, single copies, ten cents. Delivered anywhere in the United States. Entered as second class matter at postoffice, Albany, N . Y. The N E W S 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 N E W S . Anonymity will be preserved if so desired. The N E W S does not guarantee to print any or all communications. An astonished and dazed audience of twelve hundred people filed out of Page hall auditorium last Friday morning with the one question on it's lips: " W h y only eight?" Never before in the history of Myskania has the body been reduced to this low number. T h e average has ranged from eleven to thirteen. the long awaited moment art When rived and a hush settled over the auditorium, Dan Van Leu van was the first to leave the stage to tap his successor, Glenn Ungcrcr. Harriet Ten Eyck next tapped Frances Studebaker. Then Clifford Rail, president of the Student asso- ciation, walked around the black robed body, and to the amazement of the students assumed his position in back of his vacant chair, signifying he was to have no successor. The same procedure was followed by Gertrude Morgan. Sarah Logan relieved the tension somewhat when she tapped Frank Hardnicy er, but the assemblage was sent back into its dazed state when David Krotnan circled the stage without leaving it, The remaining five members of Myskania each tapped a successor. The juniors who completed the new body were Betty Griffin, Karl Ebers, Jaync Buckley, Paul Bulger, and Elaine Baird. G L E N N MAY U N G E B E R will bo vicepresident of Ida class and associate editor of the STATU COI.LEGB NEWS next year. He will also he president of the Lutheran club. l i e was reporter and desk editor of the N E W S in his sophomore year and senior associate editor and feature editor in his junior year. P n n r r e r was co-edltor of the 1318 Frcshmnn Handbook and served as representative on the •indent hoard of finance in his junior year. He served on the Directory In lllfl freshman and snnhomnre years. H e was secretary ami treasurer of the Mathematics club and secretary and vice-president of the Troubadours, in Id* sophomore and junior years resnecMvelv. He 1»«s been active In lntcr-cbis« basl'-tl'"'! for three vears and was a' member of t h e chorus in the operettas. "Patience" and ' T h e Mikado," H e htm nerved on various clans ami Student association committees and on the lion business staff. H e Is a member of the Edward Eldred Potter d « b . U n „ c r e r In a Brnrtuate of Lvons Hltrh school. He is majoring In mathematics and minorlng in history. P A U L G R U T Z N E R BULGER will be president of the Student association and manager of College house next year. Since his freshman year he has been an active member of In Ira-mural sports, In his junior year lie was vice-president nf the Student association, vice-president of Commerce club, and president of College house. He has also been active on class committees, He- is a member of Kappa Delta Rho fraternity. Bulger was graduated from Luzerne Hlflh school. His major is commerce and his minor, his lory, F R A N C E S A L B E R T A S T U D E I l A K E R will he President of Music council, and Student nflcnriallnri and senior class smut leader next year. She has been a member nf Music co*"iAlbany, N . Y. M A Y 24, 1935 Vol. X I X , No. 25 cil for two years and served as treasurer ibis vcar. Since h e r freshman year Miss Studebaker bas taken an active m r t in college dramatics. S h e was a member of the enst "f " P a t i e n c e " In h e r freshman year, nf " T h e With the fall of tonight's curtain on "Death Takes a Holiday," State closes its Sorcerer" in h e r sophomore year, and of " T h e Mikado" this She was co-author and dramatic season. Considered as a whole, it lias been successful, providing many dfr"Cor nf " Tvear. h e Farmer in tl"> Hell." •'•(• evenings of enjoyment through the dreary winter. Thanks are due the faculty Girls' Athletic association musical comedy members and students for their efforts to make State more than a hi-dc-ho and presented this yenr. Miss S t u d e b a k T bin been active member of the Voumr W o m f i ' s rah-rah college. As long as this feeling of co-operation prevails between the two an Christian association for three y e i r s . She bodies, State will give more than just plain "book-larnin 1 " to its graduates. lint served on class committees and was secrrtnrv nf her class last v - a r . She Is a member of Delta Omega sorority. Miss Studebaker was graduated from Troy High school. H e r major Is English and her minor is French. PRINTED BY FORT ORANGE PRESS, I N C . , ALBANY, STATE COLLEGE N'EWS, MAY 24, 1935 N . Y. THE CURTAIN FALLS J A Y N E C O P E L A N D BUCKLEY has been an active member of the Young Women's Christian associalinn for three years, acting as a cabinet member during her sophomore year and as social director during her junior year. Miss Buckley has been aclivc in debating, dramatics, and public speaking for all three years. In h e r freshman year she won the president's prize for public, speaking and was secretary of the Debate council when a junior. She has taken pari in many of the presentations of elementary and ad vi nerd dramatics and has participated in class stunt*. During her junior yenr she was delegate to the Nn'ional Student Federation of America, member of I he Pcdagofltir staff, chairmui o( the Junior Guide committee, assistant director of freshman ennui, and co-chairman of "he constitutional investigation committee, She has been an active member of Sophomore Soiree and Junior Prom committees for the past two years. She is a member of l'si Gamma sorority and graduated from Milne High school. Her major is English and her minor is history. R U T H E L A I N E HA1RD will he president of the Girls' Athletic association next year and is also the only girl chosen to be on the Honor Council this year. She has been a member of G.A.A, fur three years, acting as secretary in her sophomore year and re porter in her junior year. She has been on the varsity teams In hockey, soccer, basket College is what one puts in it and takes out of it. Not necessarily limited to F R A N K 1 0 S E P H H A R D M E Y E R will be ball, and baseball each of her three years. studies only, the well rounded-out college education should Include some participa- president of the senior class next year. I n In her sophomore year she was captain "I tion in extra-curricular activities which are available to students here at State. his frethmnn year, be participated in the fresh- swimming and assistant captain of baseball State, however, faces a difficult problem in its financing program as all income to man debate and was freshman represent"tlve and archery, This year she was captain of on the Handbook. During Hardmeyer'a three hockey and also captain of the junior wodefray the expenses of its activities must come from the students themselves. years at State, he has been on t h e tennis men's haskclball team. She has been ;•» This morning, the Student Board of Finance will present a tentative budget for team and this year was the captain of It, freshman camp each year, acting as chair next year. T h e passage of it will depend on the broadmindedness of the student He was reporter on the NEWS in bis sopM- man of swimming in 19.13 anil of recreation more year and sports editor this year. He stld enlerlainmeiil in ] O.l-l. has been an assembly. If petty prejudices and arguments arise, the proverbial "monkey wrench" has been active In dramatics for the oust active member of the Young She Women's Chris•will find its way into the works and disrupt an essential portion of Stale's social two years and this Year took part In "The tian association for three years. In 193.1 8"= and educational program. Farmer in the Dell," an original musical was delegate to Cornell and in 19.14 "lie WW He attended Christian Brothers' chairman of entertain men I for I he freshman All activities which arc presented should be supported. T h e Finance Board has comedy. Academy in Albany. Hardmeyer is malorlng reception. She is a rcporier on llie NKWC considered each and every item to judge its worth and value. Besides, every item In Eiifflish. H e is also a member of Kappa As a sophomore, she was president and vie that is included has received at least 60% support of the student body. The will Delta Rho fraternity. president of her class, and as a junior, she was president. Next yenr she will lie G.A.A. of the majority should be considered, Though some appropriations may ask for ELIZABETH ANTOINETTE G R I F F f N representative. Miss Itaird was a gradual-- ol larger amounts this year, let not the old argument arise that if an activity has will he a member of Dramatics and Art coun- Chester High school in 1933. She Is comsurvived one year on a reduced budget that it be asked to continue so, to its cil next vear. She has been a member of | h r pleting u major and minor in general sclcliiH. eventual demise. nnuticll for two yenrs and served mi secretary with a second minor lu mntheiimtles. year, Miss Grlfbri directed her class N e x t year's program, athletic and otherwise, will depend on the course taken by this stunt for Campus day in her freshman year, the assembly this morning. Let it be remembered thai we can receive no more and participated in Campus and Movlng-UP than what we are willing to give. 100% co-operation is a Utopian dream that day Blunts in her sophomore and Junior »«nr«, She served on Soiree and Prom oommltleei cannot be reached under our present system but an improvement over this year's and was a committee worker for " T h e Mikado" is not unattainable. Vote sanely and wisely for a complete program of extra- this year. Miss Griffin has been a member of the Young Women's Christian nssnHniliin curricular activities for 19,15-36. for three years, and has been active in dramatic! throughout her college career. She IAl a recent meeting, Newman club n member of Eta Phi sorority, and of Pi elected the following olliecrs for the (.annua Mu, uation-d h n i m n r y sorlnl science AT T H E BEGINNING O F T H E ROAD rraternlfv. Miss Griffin is a vrnthinte of rear 1935-36: president. Ethel Scbllck, Milne High school. Her major is English ami 36; vice-president, John Deno, '37; secWith this issue, the new board assumes command of the STATE COLLEGE N E W S her minor is history. retary, Nellie Ryder, '37; treasurer, SUPPORT THE BUDGET Schlick Will Head Newman Next Year to guide its course through whatever waters and elements may await it during the next year. Unforseen difficulties may awail it, obstacles will assuredly try to halt its progress, but may we, with the same courage and convictions as those of the outgoing board, meet and overcome them. T h e STATE COLLEGE NEWS is the pulse of the student body and its policies should bo tempered with sane thought. Conservatism rather than radicalism should be its motto in this period when certain groups are attempting to revolutionize the course of events of our present-day lives. Progress through a sane procedure is one thing; radical upheaval of the old ways is another. If they nrc to come, may they come through the first method; if they are to come through the second and make their results felt in the activities of the student body, may llie N E W S be a balance wheel through the whole course of events, I t is with this thought thai the N E W S Board looks forward into the future. K A R L D A N I E L E B E R S will be editor-inchief of the STATB COIXKRI! NEWS and a member of the finance hoard uexl year, l i e was a reporter and desk editor of lbs NltWI in hfs sophomore year, ami associate managing editor in his junior year, In his innlnr year- lie was also manager of baseball and Qlinirmnn of music eominittee fnr junior prom. He has participated In class n|' ,», has served on hawiuct eomrniUccs, and when i\ Hophoniorc was a member of the floor emu. iinltee for Sophomore Soiree, He is n memh e of Kappa Delia Rho frMerni'y. Ebe"s " B timjorlim in commerce and ininnrlnit in history. He Is a graduate of Rhlnclieclc High school. Margaret Hof, '36; reporter, Ruth Reuse, '37; senior councillors, Rcglna Ttarrelt and Joseph OuellcttOj junior councillors, Berenece Monnnt and Arlinc Webster; sophomore- councillors, Florence Nclbach and Anne Calvin; junior councillors to freshmen, Rose Fascc, Rosemary Dickinson, Rosemary Laffcrty, Pearl Szawlawskl; boy councillors, Ihomns Brecn, '37, and William Bnkcr, Mi. T h e honor key was presented Helena Shechau, ',17. in Class Exercises Will Terminate With Procession The concluding event of the annual class night ceremonies, Wednesday, June 15, will be the torch liejit procession from Page to Draper ball traversing the campus. The Class day exercises will take place in Page hall auditorium at 8:00 o'clock-, according to David Kroman, class president. The olliecrs who have been elected for class day a r c : historian, Hetty Gregory; testator, Luce l l i r s h ; prophet, Lois Odwell. Revotes will be conducted for llie office of noet; the candidates arc Dorothea Gahagan and Margaret Delnney, David Krouian and Evelyn Slachle will be directors of the torch linht procession. The torch light ceremonies will begin with the senior procession from Page hall willi each junior falling in behind bis senior as they come down the steps. They will then cross the campus to Western avenue and thence down Western avenue to Draper ball sidewalk, continuing up the walk to Draper hall and in front of the alumni who will have assembled there. T h e procession will then continue back down the walk, each senior falling into position on citber side of the walk so that two lines of seniors will be formed, one on each side of the walk; with the juniors standing behind the seniors making four lines on the walk, the two inner ones of seniors in black and the outer ones of juniors in while. The seniors will sing the lurch song during the march and after the procession lias halted and the singing is completed, each senior will turn and face his junior and after the new alumni president has assumed office and given a short speech, the senior president will pass his torch to his junior and the other seniors will follow. T h e president of Ibe alumni will then pass his torch to Krotnan, and as the students sing "Great Fires," the juniors holding their torches will remain, as the seniors march away into the night, i WILL DIRECT 'NEWS' POLICIES Eta Phi Will Head Sorority Council Election Results Are Announced; Marjorie Adams Will Preside o v e r 1935-36 G r e e k s Marjorie Adams, '30, E t a Phi, will he president of intersorority council for next year, according to recent elections. The retiring president is Elizabeth Harlman, '35, Delta Omega. The other officers of the new council will b e : vicepresidenl, Kappa Delta; secretary, Psi Gamma; treasurer, Chi Sigma Theta. Officers of the council a r e chosen in rotating order of sororities each year. The following officers have been elected h" the sororities: E m m a A . R o g e r s , '36, news editor member of Myskania and editor-in-chief of the publication for 1935-36. D E L T A O M E G A : president. Genevieve Curley, '.10[ vice-president, Marjorie Kalnldjlan, '.16; tor responding secretary, Mary-Lourdes Murphy, '.16 j record I DR secretary. Lula Duffy, M7; treasurer, Martha Conner, '38. of the N E W S , and K a r l D . E b e r s , '36, E T A 1*11 f: president, Marjorie Adnnifi, ' 3 6 ; of the N E W S , who will direct the policies vice-president, Elizabeth Griffin, ' 3 6 ; secretary, Clatre Leonard, ' 3 7 ; treasurer, Helen Lnmas, '37;. house president, Marian Steele, ' 3 6 ; house: treasurer, Dorothy Rusk, '37. K A P P A D E L T A : president, Elnliie Baird, '36; vice-president, Until Edmunds, ' 3 6 ; recording secretary, Anne Hand, ' 3 7 ; corresponding secretary, Carol Mires, ' 3 7 ; alumni secretary, Marjririe Crist, ' 3 8 ; treasuer, Mary Lam, '37; chaplain, Emma Mead, ' 3 6 ; critic, The 1 /./OH, college humor magazine, will LnVotinc Kelsey, ' 3 6 ; marshals, Hnlh Mullen be direcletl by editors-in-chief Ralph and Eli /.diet h Mall hews, freshmen. PSI G A M M A : president, Jnyne Dnckley, Altman and Samuel Silverman, juniors, vice-president, Doris H u m p h r e y ' 3 6 ; and Robert Benedict, '37, during the '36; treasurer, Mildred Grover, ' 3 6 ; social secrenext year, according to announcements tary, Elizabeth Whitman, ' 3 6 ; recording secmade by Donald Bryant, instructor in retory, Nino Ullnian, '36, CHr SIGMA T H E T A : president, Rita English, last Friday. The remainder Kane, ' 3 6 ; vice-president, Janet Lewis, ' 3 6 ; of the board is as follows; Herbert treasurer, Rosemary Latterly, ' 3 7 ; secretary, Drooz, '38, associate editor, and John Rosemary Dickinson, '37; alumnae secretary. Mary Spnllen, M7{ critic. Josephine Kirby, Murphy, '37, business manager, '37; stewardess, Kathryn McCorniack, '36. Echo Names Board Three Will Direct And Gives Awards Lion For Next Year Ralph Altman, Lois Poller, and Muriel Clarkson, juniors, will act as editors-inchief of the< 1935-36 Echo, college literary magazine, according to announcements made Moving-up day. Other members of the Echo hoard are as follows: literary editors, Elfreida I lartt, Lillian Shapiro, and William Swackhanier, sophomores, and Herbert Drooz, '38; business manager, Norbert Huber, '36', advertising manager, Augusta Shoor, '36; and circulation manager, Elizabeth The staff chosen to assist the board I-Icrr, '37. consists of the following: literary, Lena Louis Junes, instructor in English, also Levene, '3d; Rosemary Dickinson, John announced I lie winners of the annual Edwards, and lames Zubon. sophomores, awards for the best selections of prose and Uzeltc Parshall and Janet Dibble, and poetry published during the yenr. freshmen; art, Margaret Hof, '36, Martin Florence Oltoson, graduate student, re- Reed, '37, and Edward George, ' 3 8 ; ceived the prose award for her "Com- business, Lois Kraus, '37, and Rosella pensation," and Pearl Hamelin, '35, the Agostine, '36, and Lucille Zak, Muriel William G. Torpey, '35, will continue poetry prize for "Can This He the W a y ? " Goldberg, and Ruth Frost, freshmen, his college study at Syracuse university next fall, having been awarded a scholarship to the School of Citizenship and Public Affairs in the graduate division at that university. H e will pursue work B O O K S I Ambition Builds an Empire. leading to a Doctor of Philosophy degree in political science. Torpey, a member of Signum Laudls, will complete the requirements for his (On Sale in the Co-op) Master of Arts degree this June after four years of college w o r k ; he received S t a r of E m p i r e , by Grant Lewi. 310 pages. T h e Vanguard Press, New York. his Bachelor's degree last January. H e $2.50. is also president of Pi Gamma Mu, naJonathan Stark was not only ambitious, he was also a hard worker and a shrewd tional honorary social science fraternity, a member of Kappa Phi Kappa, national dealer. In his early teens he proved himself to he worthy of being placed in honorary educational fraternity, and the charge of most of his father's farms around Stark's Crossing. His amhilion Edward Eldred Potter d u b . spread with the rise of the "land craze" after the Civil W a r , and Jonathan soon The scholarship awarded Torpey cov- became known throughout the western slates. ers full college costs at Syracuse uniPower and fame became the possessions of the Stark family. Jonathan could versity for one year of graduate study. When he graduated from Ringhamton have what he desired. H e treated his family in the same manner that he managed High school in June, 1931, he received Ins farms, hut beneath Ins austerity lay a deep love for his kin. Nothing was too gootl for them. He was generous In his financial aid to college students. a $50(1 cash scholarship. However, Jonathan had that one trait so prevalent in persons in power, his judgment was always right regardless of cost in money or time and regardless of other persons' opinions. At length his empire included 12,000 acres of the best land in the west; but, as in all cases where power can no longer be adequately administered when a too confident spirit lies behind it, Jonathan reached the top and began his descent. (Continued from fraae 1, column 1) Edna Fchniel, English and library, at His wife died leaving him lonely and discouraged. Then came years of depresMatilius; Agnes LHIibridgc, history sion, the death of his son, and the subsequent loss of his fortune except for a and library, at Roxburyj Frances Max- small slrip of land in California. Even In old age, when forced to leave Ids old well, mathematics and commerce, at home and move to California, Jonathan maintained his proud, confident spirit. H a g u e ; l.ois O d w e l l , s o c i a l s c i e n c e , a t H e remained independent and made Ins small garden grow when others failed. Johnstown; Eileen Wallace, social sciGrant Lewi has portrayed a powerful figure in a fascinating story. It presents ence and history, at Van 1 lonisville; the rising and declining of economic tides, the opening of the West, and the offecl Veronica La Bombard, grades, at Schuy- of these coiulitous upon the lives of the people. It is hoth historically and enterler Fnllsj Mil burn Vroomnn, science, at tainingly "correct." Johnstown; Katharine Worden, history, Significant to State college students is the fact thai Grant Lewi was born in at Iloosick F a l l s ; Alvina Lewis, EngAlbany and that at one time he was a member of (ho State college faculty as an lish and library, at Dover Plains. instructor in English, Torpiey To Continue At Syracuse In Fall R. E. W. Employment Bureau Appointments Increase - (Continued on page 'i, column 1) Alumni To Have Annual Weekend Saturday, June 15 The Alumni association will conduct its annual Alumni day June 15. T h e feature of the clay will he llie laying of the corner sloue of the new Residence hall by Miss Anna li. Pierce, former Dean of Women. Miss Minnie P . Scotland, Assistant professor of biology, during whose presidency this project has been completed, will present the history of the effort. John M. Sayles, professor of education and principal of the Milne High school, as chairman of the holding corporation, will offer the building to the college, and Dr. A. R, Bru*bacber, president, will accept it. A chorus under the direction uf T. Frederick II. Candlyn, head of the music department, will sing during the ceremony. The program for the day includes registration in the rotunda of Draper hall at 9:00 o'clock, to he followed by class meetings at I0:(H) o'clock. The Half Century club will meet at 10:30 in Draper hall in conjunction with the Quarter Century club. At noon there will he a business session in the auditorium of Page halt. In the afternoon after luncheon at I ;00 o'clock and the laying of the corner stone at 2:30; Dr, and Mrs. llruhacher will give an informal reception for the alumni and the seniors. T h e r e will be a graduate council dinner in the cafeteria of lliMed hall at 5:30, At !):00 o'clock, immediately following the class dav events, Dr. Candlyn will direct the Alumni ''Step Sing. The day will end with the torchlight procession of the classes of 19.15 ami 1936, and the induction of the class of 1935 into the Alumni association. STATE COLLEGE NEWS, MAY 24, 1935; 4 STATE COLLEGE NEWS, MAY 24, 1935 Paul Bulger, '36, was announced as president of the Student association and Student council at the conclusion of the Moving-up ceremonies in Page hall auditorium Friday morning. Bulger was a member of Student council this year as vice-president of the Student association, and is a member of Mysknnia, senior honorary society, for next year. John Deno, '37, will be vice-president of the association and Leslie Knox, '38, will serve as secretary. Deno lias been a member of Student council for two years, president of bis class in bis freshman year and secretary of the Student association this year. Knox was president of the freshman class ibis year. Other officers of the Student association announced Friday a r e : college song leader, Frances Studebaker, '36; men's cheer leader, William Shahcn, '36; and women's cheer leader, Evelyn Hamann, '37. Chemistry Society To Honor Woodard The Chemistry club at a meeting Thursday appropriated $5.00 towards a fund to furnish a room in the new dormitory in honor of Clifford A. Woodard, former bead of the biology department. Mr. Woodard was graduated from the New York Slate Teachers college in 1893 l i e returned in 1907 to become an instructor in biology and later was appointed head of the biology department. Mr. Woodartl left Slate in June 1933. The committee appointed includes: chairman, John J. Sturm, '29; and Margaret Betz, '22, instructor of chemistry and supervisor of chemistry in the Milne High school. PP—WH—IHWHI Paul Bulger, '36, member of Myskania, and J o h n Deno, '37, who were elected to the positions of president and vice-president respectively of the Student association for 1935-36. Edward E. Potter Co-op To Conduct Club Establishes Tryouts For Staff Fraternity House Try-outs for student employment in the Co-op next fall are being considered now by Miss Helen T. Fay, manager, and her staff. All eligible applicants, those having a R scholastic average, are given five hours of experience in the spring in order that they may be familiar with the system and arrangement in the Co-op for the opening of college in September. Manner rivalry during each semester Geo. The ghosts of all the sorority sisters rose up last weekend to sec how events had gone in State since their departure. Lists of dozens of guests were reported. Among them were, at Phi Dell, Edna Abbott and Frances Smith, '28"s, Virginia Baxter, '2lJ, Ruth Van Black, '30, Dorothy Holtz, '31, Jean Credle, '32, India Newton and Grace Baldwin, both of the class of '33. Esther Mead and Genevieve Sborey were present at Phi Lambda. Among those who made merry al li '/. were Marion Odwcll, Babelte Hutzenlnubj Lillian IIowe, Laura Styn, and Mnrjoric Doniser. P A T found Itself encumbered with Belly Simmons, Elizabeth Kronenberg, Rebecca Levy and Eva Schwab. At Sigma Alpha, Madelyn Dwyer, Marjorie Pugsley, and Neva Boorn made their presence known, while a( A E Phi, Edith Tcpper, Rose Korcn, Shirley Wcinstein, Evelyn Greenberg, Hilda Bookbeim. and Florence M a r x were glimpsed. E B Phi was visited by Marion Cornell and Jessie McAvoy, Gamma Phi Sigma by Helen Daly, Loretta Lindacber, Melna Mace, Eleanor Lcary, Mary Kellebcr, Mercedes Martin, Hilda Bradley, and Louise Kelly, and Psi Gamma by Dorothy Griffin. Several sororities have also taken advantage of the occasion to announce that newcomers have joined the ranks of the many. B 7. received Ruth Nickerson '36, as a pledge. Among those received into full membership are Doris Batrd, '36, and Marjorie Crist, '38, at K D ; Elizabeth Driscoll and Florence Ringrosc, freshmen, at Sig Alpha; Marion O'Neill, Mary Kays, and Kathryn Carlson, freslv nien at Phi Lambda; and Rose Burkowitz. Ruth Frost, Muriel Goldberg, and Goldie Weintraub al A E Phi, The Edward Eldred Potter club has established a fraternity house, which it will occupy next year, according to Robert Stern, '35, chairman of the house committee. The fraternity house is located at 2S5 Quail street. The bouse, with facilities for about fifteen men, will be completely furnished and ready for occupancy about September 1. The committee assisting Stern with the house furnishings consists of: Ellis Lyke and Glenn Ungerer, juniors, ELECT TREASURER anil James T. Scale and John Murphy, French club at a recent meeting elected sophomores. It will be open this sum- Regina Barrett, '36, treasurer for next was the cause of several heated out- mer, however, for the convenience of a year, according to Elsie Pugsley, '35, bursts of rivalry, but each class suc- few men attending summer session. president of the did). ceeded in retaining its banner, and as a result live points in rivalry were awarded each class. The evening preceding Moving-up day brought the second push ball contest of the year for the men, and the sophomores succeeded in out-pushing their freshmen opponent to the tune of 15-0, thereby earning two points in rivalry. The girls' events which* followed were tlivided between the two classes, each class receiving VA points as a result. Moving-up day with its stunts was the high-light of the rivalry with the freshmen coining to the front and winning the stunts and three points in rivalry. Preceding the stunts they also defeated the sophomore debate team and gained - ' J points more. The sophomore class singed a slight comeback at night when they won the sing. The climax of the year followed when the class of '3H was announced as the winner of rivalry following the sing, and was awarded the silver loving cup and the privilege of having their numerals inscribed upon it. Rivalry Cup Qoes To Freshmen as Third Class To Down Sophomores For the third time since its history, the silver loving cup, given to the winner of freshman-sophomore rivalry, will hear the numerals of a freshman class. Success in inter-class rivalry came to 1938 after an exciting struggle with their rivals of 1937. On the night of Moving-up day, the freshmen were awarded the cup for their 20 points total against the 16 points of the sophomores. T h e lirsl rivalry event was an Campus day last fall when the men's and women's push ball contests netted the sophomores two rivalry points for the men's contest, and the freshmen two points for the women's contest, after two very spirited battles. The inter-class SUIK in assembly was the next event on the prog r a m , and the sophomores gained 2x/t points in rivalry when they were adjudged the winners. The basketball games between the men and women of each class followed at the close of the basketball season and the freshmen teams succeeded in carrying away the laurels in both contests, thereby gaining a lead of 3lA points after an award of three points for each contest, Baird Heads G. A. A. State Nine Downs For Year Of 1935-36 Hartwick Squad 9-2 WILL DIRECT ACTIVITIES Paul Bulger, '36, Will Be Student Association Head D. J e o n e y , Prop, Dial 5-1913 " 5-9212 198-200 C E N T R A L A V E N U E D I N N E R , $1.00 A L B A N Y , N . Y. The Purple and Gold diamond sipiad continued its winning ways Saturday afternoon when il decisively defeated the visiting Hartwick college nine by a score of 9-2. The home town team made good use of ibe experience il gained in its First game and last week's practice tu display a brand of baseball marred by a few errors. John Cullen, '37, varsity pitcher, went the entire route and kept the situation well in hand. Me allowed the visitors but seven hits. In addition, Cullen placed a hit over in the tennis courts for the first home run of the season. State never lost its lead. Another star shone out in the game in the form of Gordon Van Slyke, '36. Substituting for George Finnegan, '35, Van Slyke turned in an errorless game at short stop, batted in two runs, and hit safely for a double and Iwo singles. Stale scored five times in the third inning on two hits and several niisplays by the opposing players. Again in the eighth, three more runs eame home. Kenneth Drake, '35, captain, played a hcads-up ball game at third. James Quigley, '36, also hit safely twice for the Teachers, while Frank Minisci, Robert Rifenbcrick, and Drake, seniors, each hit safely once. Smith, for Hartwick, was the leading hitter for the visitors with two safeties. Cullen struck out eleven, and Nichols, of Hartwick, struck out twelve State men. Kappa Phi Kappa To Induct Pledges Kappa Phi Kappa, national educational fraternity, will conduct pledge ceremonies for eighteen neophytes today at 4:10 in the Lounge of Richardson ball, according to William Torpey, '35, vicepresident, who is in charge of the pledge services. The following men will be received into pledgeship: John llawes, Zaven Mahdesian, Claude Reed, Robert Stern, and John Steward, seniors; and Gerald Amyot, Cannela Di Gioia, Karl Ehers, Michael Griffin, Frank Ilardmeyer, Aubrey Kalbaugb, Allen Lewis, Richard Margison, James Quigley, David Rogers, Dnminick Scerra, Leonard Welter, and Angelo Zannieri, juniors. 'News' Discloses Playgoer's Identity With the close of the current dramatics season, the NTi;\vs Board wishes to announce that during the past year it has been ably assisted in its dramatics reviews by criticisms by Lucile liirsh, '35, As Playgoer, Miss liirsh contributed much toward making the dramatics sections of the \ i : w s valuable and worthwhile. During the season, Miss Hirsh was aided by Donald Kddy, '34, her Playgoer predecessor. IS V I C E - P R E S I D E N T Glenn Ungerer, '36, member of Myskania, senior honorary society for 1935* 30, was elected vice-president of his class for next year at a class dinner meeting on May 16. Boulevard Cafeteria and Qrill TRY OUR SPECIAL John Cullen, '37, P i t c h e s S e v e n - H i t Game and Scores First Season H o m e Run ttlestrrii at Quail ADD TO DEAN'S LIST As a result of the makeup examinations, the following students are added to the Dean's List for the first semester: Jeanne Humphrey, '3d, and Cecelia Sill* i Sophomore Class Wins Track Meet SPORT SHOTS T h e day has c o m e ! Oh, w o e are w e I T h i s once infallible barometer of inaccuracy has at last predicted correctly. T h e sophomores did w i n the track meet, H o w those b o y s can o v e r c o m e handicaps. W e always knew it was going; to happen s o m e t i m e . T h e law of averages enters in. Our big shock came when the tennis team won a match. On the level. Rumor is that thev'll win again at K e e n e next Thursday. Brace y o u r s e l v e s . T o c o m p l e t e a harrowing weekend, the baseball team bangs out a win. P i t c h e r Johnny Cullen (who should have known better) belted a h o m e run in addition to his mound chores. S o m e people are never satisfied. P r e d i c t i o n : T h e seniors will cop next y a r ' s interclass basketball trophy. B y then y o u should have forElaine Baird, '36, member of Mys- gotten. B u t w e won*t. N e v e r fear. kania, senior honor society, is to be president of the Girls' Athletic association for the coining year, as a result of elections conducted last week. The additional officers are as follows: vicepresident, Mary Elmcndorf, '36; treasReaching the top form of I he season, urer, F-lsa Smith, '37; secretary, Phyllis the Stale college tennis squad hammered lubsnii, '38; and song and cheer leader, their way to a 6-3 victory over St'. Stephens at Anandalc last Thursday. The 'Charlotte Peck, '38. Stale team showed clearly what a little practice can do for tennis players as thrv swept through five singles pint-h?" and one tandem contest to clinch their first victory of the season. The sumState will continue its baseball sched- maries : Connoly, State, defeated Kent, ule tomorrow afternoon when il meets St. Stenhens. 6-0. o-2; Wilson, St. SfcHamilton college of Clinton, New York, nhens, defeated Decker. Stale, lfl-8. 7-5; on the Ridgcficld park diamond. State Calm, State, defeated Smythe, St. Stewill attempt to avenge its defeat at the nhens, (1-0. f>-0; Hardmeyer, State, dehands of Hamilton at Clinton a year ago. feated T.e Febvre. St. Stephens. 2-6, 6-1, John Cullen, '37, will he on the mound. 12-10; Kali, State, defeated Rollins. St. Stephens, 6-4. 5-7. 0-7: Kramer, State, Paul Schmitz, '38, may also see service defeated Watkins. St. Stephens, 1-6. 7-5. if the going is rough. 6-2: Connolv and Rail, State, defeated Wednesday the Teachers will travel Kent and Wilson, St. Stephens, 6-1, 6-2; to Oneonta, New York, for their final Smythe and Le Fcvre. St. Stephens, name of the season against Hartwick defeated Hardmevcr and Decker, State, college. The Purple and Gold defeated 6-4, 1-6, 7-5; Rollins and Watkins, St. Hartwick 9-2 last week on the local dia- Stephens, defeated Calm and Kramer. mond with Cullen pitching. State, 6-2, 0-6, 7-5. State Tennis Squad Downs St. Stephens State Nine To Meet Hamilton Tomorrow Newman's To Have Dance Wednesday Newman club will conduct a dance Wednesday from 9:00 to 12:30 o'clock, in the Commons, according to John Deno, '37, chairman. The following committees will assist Deno: music, Catherine Kearney, '35, chairman, William Maker, '36; tickets, John Murphy, '37, chairman, Helena Sheehau and Julie Reil, seniors, Ethel Scblick, Joseph Oueletie, Nellie Ryder, and Frances Donnelly, juniors; floor, folin '(Mhieii, \W, chairman, and Thomas Median, '37; publicity, l.oretta Buckley, '36, chairman, and Thomas Preen, '37; chaperones, Rita Kane, '3u, chairman, Regin:1. Garrett, '36; door, Gerald Amyot, '36, chairman, Thomas Harrington and iiiven, sophomores. Fort Orange Press Albany, New York Awards t o b e Made in A s s e m b l y ; Coulter, Ryan and Story Are H i g h Scorers The class of 1937 carried off the honors hi the inter-class track meet conducted on Moving-up day. The freshman class came in second, followed closely by the seniors, with the juniors placing last. The awards, which will consist of a team trophy, medals for first places, and numerals for second places, will he presented in the 11:10 o'clock assembly period this morning by Dr. D'onnal V. Smith, assistant professor of history. The men who will receive medals, and die events in which they placed, are as follows: dashes: 100, Thomas Ryan, '37; 220, Thomas Harrington, '37; 440, Carlton Coulter, '35; and 880, Coulter. Mile, George Story, '35; two-mile, Joseph Dc Riisso, '38; broad jump, Robert Coutant, '37; high jump, Thomas Median, '37; shot put, Neal Kane, '38; discus throw, Sebastian Albrecht, '36; and pole vault, Story. These men are holders of the established college record in their respective events. Bard Batsmen Bow To State Nine 15-6 In a game replete wjth errors and poor playing, Stale's baseball nine eame out on top in its annual encounter with Bard college at Annandale, New York, to the tunc of 15-6. This extends the Teacher's string of victories to three. Paul Schmitz, '38, was the starting pitcher for the Purple and Gold. In the sixth inning, John Cullen, '37, relieved Schmitz and finished the game. State secured only eight safe hits off the Bard hurlers but coupled with poor fielding and niisplays, the home team allowed fifteen State players to cross the home plate. Hard used three pitchers. State's line-up consisted of Gordon Vail Slyke, '36, 2 b ; Frank Minisci, '35, I f; George Finnegan, '35, s s ; Robert Rifenbcrick, '35, c ; Cullen, p ; Kenneth Drake, '35, 3b; Gerald Amyot, '36, l b ; Stewart Harvey, '37, l b ; William Young, '37, rf; James Quigley, '36, cf; Schmitz, p; Robert Murray, grad, rf; George A D D S N E W BOOKS W i t h the aid of two benefit funds, the Rush, grad, cf; Dan Finch, grad, 2b. College library hns added five books to its shelves. They are "The Scarlet Pimpernel." by Oiezy, and "Anthology of Light Verse," by Kronenberger, purchased from the 1934 Pcdatjoffuc fund. From the Class of 1933 Rook fund, the library has secured "Sunset Gun," by Parker, "Three Lives," by Stein, and "The World's Rest Humor," by Wells. BILL'S BARBER De Luxe SHOP 62 R o b i n S t r e e t Specializing in MEN'S HAIRCUTTING W m . Streck, P r o p . $.35 rtption. [OPTICIANS. N.P.FREDETTE 61 CoWxMaStWdoorobox hZ. __. tOMPLCTe' OPTICAL SfcRVICe PATRONIZE THE COLLEGE CAFETERIA A Non-Profit Making Enterprise Special Students' Luncheon 20c Printers of the "News" "Lion" and "Echo" HIGH SCHOOL LUNCH A N D Pastry and "All American" honors Awarded our Year Books RESTAURANT Sandwiches Special 25c Dinner Daily—11:30 A. M.—7:30 P. M. 9 North Lake A v e n u e (Toll coin (r M$t»t SECTION National Collegiate News in Picture and Paragraph" STATE COLLEGE NEWS, MAY 24, 1935 6 Junior Guide Head Federation Elects Seven T o Comprise Sororities Elect Names Assistants Deno A s Chairman New Finance Board Their Officials Agnes Torrens, '37, general chairman At the sixth annual convention of the 1935-36 student board of finance For Coming Year willTheconsist of Karl Ebers and Emma of next year's Junior Guide committee, Federation of Catholic Clubs of the Cen(Continued from page 3, column 4) A L P H A KPSl LON 1*111: dean, Phyllis Grossman, '36; sub-dean, Ko.su Eiulioni, ' 3 6 ; scritii;, Eleanor lluscliius, '.17; treasurer, Lois K r a n s , '37, G A M M A K A P P A P H I : president, Eiulnra Tarrell, '.16; vice-president, Carolyn Simouet, '.16; recording secretary, Lillie Mae Maloncy, MO; corroipniidiiiK secretary, Odette Cuurtines, '37; treasurer, Helen McGowan, '37; house president, Elizabeth Vallanec, '3fi; house secrctary. Prances Wolak, ' 3 8 ; house treasurer, Edith Soholl, '3fi. B E T A Z E T A ; president, Elsa Calkins, ' 3 6 ; vice-president J e a n n e Giroux, ' 3 6 ; secretary, Helen Clyde, '37; treasurer, Charlotte Rockow, *36; alumnae secretary, Ramona Van Wie, ' 3 8 ; house president, Helen Gillett, '36; house secretary, Betty Gooding, '37. P I A L P H A T A U : president, Dora Lcvine, '36; recording secretary, Yctta IIabor t '36; treasurer, Lena Levene, '36; social chairman, Dinah Kapp, '36; bouse manager, Jeanne Jacobs, '37. P H I D E L T A : president, Martha Martin, ' 3 6 ; vice-president, Marjorie St. Amand, '36; secretary. Dorothy Smith, ' 3 6 ; treasurer, Evelyn Hr tin, '37; house president, Helen Jones, Mo; house treasurer, Virginia Chappell, '36. A L P H A R H O : president, J u d y Merchant, '36; vice-president, Margaret Woodruff, '36; secretary, Jean Shaver, ' 3 8 ; treasurer, Grace T a r k c r , '37; alumnae secretary, Phyllis Tucker, '37. E P S I L O N B E T A P H I : president, Betty Davis, '36: vice-nresident, Ruth Richard, '36; treasurer, Nina Laulie, '36; secretary, Marion Townscnd, '37; corresponding secretary, Helen Sheldrake, ' 3 7 ; chaplain, Beverly Johnson, MB; reporter, J a n e Miller, '38. G A M M A P H I S I G M A : president, Jeanne Cerriin, '36; vice-president, Ruth Reuss, '37; recording secretary, Betty Coogan, ' 3 8 ; corresponding secretary, Anne Reinhnrd, 37; house treasurer, 'Arlcne Webster, ' 3 7 ; treasurer, Lois Frnry, '36. S I G M A A L P H A : president, Emma Gnatt«ry. ' 3 6 ; vice-president, Alice Rittcr, '36; secretary. Flora Alexander, '37; treasurer, Helen Follctt, '37; corresponding secretary I mi a Ktiehn, '37; co-botise-prcsldeuts, Norma Blake, '36, and Helen Follett, '37; bouse treasurer, Catherine Paris, '36, P H I L A M B D A : president. Margaret Burnett e, '36 vice-president, Helen Sautin, '37; secretary, Mary Kays, '37; treasurer, Mary Elnieiidnrf; house treasurer, Mary Markl'nm, •36. Mead, juniors; Thomas Brcen and Fred Dexter, sophomores; and Muriel Goldberg, '38, according to recent elections. Mr. George M. York, professor of commerce, will again serve as chairman of the board, and Mr, Clarence A. Hidley, professor of history, will continue as treasurer. has announced her list of guide captains. The captains arc: Alice Allard, Thomas Harrington, John Deno, Norma Dixon, Rosemary Dickinson, Lula Duffy, Evelyn Haniann, Mary Hershey, Mary Lam, Robert Margison, Elizabeth Meury, Carol Mires, John Murphy, Alma Snyder, and Virginia Stocl. tral New York Province, John Deno, '37, was elected chairman of the organization for the coming year. Over fifty delegates from colleges and uhiversties throughout New York State attended the sessions on Saturday and Sundav which convened at Newman hall, 741 Madison avenue. 1'/// sometimes asked about cigarettes . . . and I believe they offer the mildest and purest form in which tobacco is used Scientific methods and mild ripe tobaccos make Chesterfield a milder better-tasting cigarette. LIGGETT & MYEKS TOUACCO CO. Pedagogue Names Staff For 193S-6 Virginia ChappeH, '36, editor of the Pedagogue for next year, lias chosen the following staff to assist her in the composition of the book: literary staff, Lorctta Buckley, Elsa Calkins, and Marjorit: St. Amand, juniors; Dorothy Graham, Catherine Quinn, Laurita Selcl, Dorothy Robinson, Lillian Shapiro, Rea T.a Grua, Anne Rand, Elizabeth Wildt, Elizabeth Mcury, Virginia Stocl, Rosemary Dickinson, and Frances McVeigh, sophomores; business staff, Rosemary Lafferty, Louise Taylor, Alice AI lard, Elinor Van Horn, Marion Similes, Dorothy Schumacher, Virginia Small, Catherine Jamba, Marie Kivelin, Agnes Torrciis, Grace Winner, Estelle Murphy, and Arlcne Webster, sophomores; photograph staff, Edith Brundage, Edith Schiill, and Kutb Oveihiser, juniors, and Evelyn Ilatnann and Helen Clyde, sophomores ; art staff, Margaret' I [of, '36, Martin Reed, '37, and Edward George, '38. ELECT OFFICERS At a recent meeting the Mathematics club elected the following officers for 19.35-1936: president, Rosa Peters, '36; vkc-president, David Rogers, '36; secretary, Norman Gundersoil, '37; treasurer, Laura Hendricks, '36. LYNK BROS. Beaver St. Quality Printing Cost—Note the "Death Taken Information PRINTERS Albany at Nominal Program (or a Holiday" In Co-op. Chesterfield is the cigarette that's MILDER Chesterfield is the cigarette that TASTES BETTER © 1933, Licnnrr & MYBKS TOBACCO C o , SILHOUETTED iigainst the darkening sky, two University of Washington (Seattle) women cyclists pause (or a chat before continuing their ride. EWINQ GALLOWAY PHOTO VICE-PRESIDENT . Phyllis Norton holds second highest office in the Associated Students of the University of Southern California (Los Angeles). SECTION National Collegiate News in Picture and Paragraph' STATE COLLEGE NEWS, MAY 24, 1935 6 Seven To Comprise Junior Guide Head Federation Elects Sororities Elect Their Officials N e w Finance Board Names Assistants Deno As Chairman 1935-36 student board of finance | Agnes Torrens, '37, u/enernl chairman Ai the sixth annual convention nf tile For Coming Year willTheconsist of Karl Kbi-rs and Emma of nexl year's Junior Guide committee, Federation of Catholic Clubs of the Cen(Conlinitrd from paua 3. cnhimu At ALPHA Kl'Slt.ON N i l : (lean, 1'hyllis (,,,, mi. '.!..; •uli-ilcan, Kosc Elnliorn, 'JO: Kr.-uis, '37. GAMMA KAI'I'A I ' l l l : president, litulnra Fnrn-ll, '.'(>: vIcLMtrcsiileiit, Carolyn Slmonel, Mr,; reconllnK secretary, Ulllc Mac Moloney, \t7; treasurer, Helen Mccinwnn, M7: house preilileiit, nnl»olielli Vnlliincc, ' 3 o | llcimc M-Irctory, Prances Wnlak, M8; house treasurer, Mcad, juniors; Thomas Rrecn and Fred has announced her list of guide captains. Dext.-r. sophomores: and Murit-l Cold The ca|nnins are: Alice Allard, Thornberg, '38, according to recent elections. ;,s Harrington, John Dcno, Morma Dixon, Mr. George M. York, professor ,,i com- Rosemary Dicltins Lula DulTy, Evemerce, will again serve as chairman of lyn llainnuu, Mary Hershcy, Marv Lam, the board, and Mr. Clarence A. Hidley, Knberl Margison. Elizabeth Meury, Carol professor of history, will continue as Mires, lohu Murphy, Alma Snyder, and treasurer. 'Virginia Sloe!. tral \,-w York Province, [ohn Deno, '37, was elected chairman of the organization f ,- :!,, coming year. Over fill\ delegates from colleges and tmiverslies throughoul New York Slate allendctl lb.- sessions on Saturday and Sunday which convened at Newman hall, 741 Madison avenue. " B O T A ' Z E T A : ' president, E l i ; Cnlkliu, '.».; I l e T c a ' c b d e , '37* treasurer, Charlotte Hockow! 1 'in sometimes ask.ee/ about '.is! Iioute president,'Helen Glllelt, '36; house Bccrelary, Betty Gooding, Mr. I'l A L P H A T A U : president, Dora Levlne, •16; recor E .ecrelary, Velto Ilabcr '.16; S;ff C L^ , a '^ V C &.e'S,uun! B cigarettes , , , and I believe they offer Lr:'ie= the mildest and purest form in which J ° P l i r D E L T A : preildent, Martha Martin, •36; vice-president, Marjorle SI. Amond, '36| tobacco is used . . . ' " A L P H A K i l l ) : president, J u d y Merchant, '.16; vice-president, Mnrtiorel Woodrllft. 36; seerclory, Iran Shaver, '3Bi Ircasurcr. Grace Parker, '371 alumnae .ecrelary, Phyllis Tucker, E P S I L O N BETA P i l l : lir.-5hl.nl, Betty Mavis, '36: vice-president, Hull, Richard, '36; treasurer, Nina Lauhe, ' 3 6 | secretory, Man.,,. Scientific methods and mild ripe tobaccos make Chesterfield a milder better-tasting cigarette. Sheldrake,' '37 ^"chaplain, Beverly Johnson, •38; reporter, lone Miller. '38. GAMMA I'lll S I G M A : preildent, .Iran,,. Ccrritn, '.»,: vice-president, Hutli BeiiM, 37; rceordlno secretory, Betty Coog-an, '38; correspondins secretory, An,,,- liclnhnrd, '37 i t„„,s,- trenitircr, Arlcne Weljltcr, '37; tri-:,s"'s'lCMA t,-ry. '?',; Mel.- LIGGETT & MYI-KS TOBACCO CO. AM II \'"' pn-sidei:-. Emtno f -.1 :, vice-president. Alloc Kilter, '36: i,In !!• • and H,'l,-ii Pullet '37 I'lll L A M B D A : preildent. .\L,r>:»,-.-! V ,-„-. Mi, vice-president, Helen Smittn, etrciary, Mai, Knys, '37: Ircasurcr. M ;i ndorfl house lrcosurcr, Mnry Mnrkln Pedagogue Names Staff For 1935-6 Virginia Chappi-ll. '.W, editor of the I'edanomic for nexl year, has chosen the following staff i,, as-ist her in the composition of tlu- book: literary staff. Lori-tta Buckley, Elsa Calkins, and Marjorie St. Atnaiid, j u n i o r s ; D o r o t h y lira- bam, Catherine Quinn, Laurita Seld, Dorothy Robinson, Lillian Shapiro. Rea l.a Crua, Anne Rand. Elizabeth Wildt, Elizabeth Mi-ui-v, Virginia Stoel, R ,-v Dickinson, and Frances McVeigh, so|i1ininorci; business staff, Rosemary Utterly, Louise Taylor, Alice Allard, Elinor Van Mom, Marion Shulics, Dorothy Schumacher, Virginia Small, Catherine fninba, Mark- Kivelin, Agnes Torrens, i,ran- Winner, E 1,-lk- Murphy, ai tl \rlcnc Web ler, sophomores; photograph staff, Edith Urundagc, Edith I I;,it!, Overhi er, junior , and Evelyn llnmann and Helen Civile, opbo mores; art staff, Mar 'el llof, Mo, Martin Reed, '37. and Edward ' „ . rg,, '38, ELECT OFFICERS At a recent meeting the Mathematics club elected il„- following ,, r» for 1935 193(3: president, Rosa I'.m , '36; vice-president, David Roger , '.(',: ci i.-tai-v, Norman Gundcrsnu, ',17; treas urcr, Laura 11,-n.lritks, '30, LYNK BROS. Beaver St. Quality Printing Cost—Note the "Death Takes Information PRINTERS Albany at Nominal Program for a Holiday" in Co-op. Chesterfield is the cigarette that's MILDER Chesterfield is the cigarette that TASTES BETTER © 1935, U0flflTT& MYHHO. TuiiAi-.r; COi SILHOUETTED .igainsl the- darkening sky, two University of Washington (Seattle) women cyclists pause for a chat before continuing their ride. EWINO GALLOWAY PHOTO VICE-PRESIDENT » Phyllis Norton holds second highest office in the Associated Students of the University of Southern California (Los Angeles). ©1S». K. J . lU-ynolJii Tub. Co. WE ASKED NEWSPAPER PEOPLE: I s THIS FACT IMPORTANT TO^bu I - STORM CENTER » John Strachey (Left),. British lecturer on communism, answers questions of University of Michigan students following his Ann Arbor lecture! Strachey, a well known author, was ordered deported by the immigration department because of his lectures. INTERNATIONAL PHOTO UP A N D OVER » George Pierson limbers up for the "Olympics of the middlewest," the Drake Relays, to' be held at Drake University (Des Moines, la.) April 26. LET'S DANCE » And 1,000 students did at the three balls which constituted the Senior Prom at Lehigh University (Bethlehem, Pa.). PRESIDENT-ELECT » Dr. Herbert L. Spencer (Carnegie Institute of Technology '21 and Delta Tau Delia) is the new head of the Pennsylvania College (or Women, % * PRACTICE COURT . DePaul University (Chicago, Illinois) student lawyers Iry a murder case and the ' defendant" was declared noi guilty by the jury. : • • • - : jaw ATHLETE-PRESIDENT-BEAUTy » Kathryn Stuart Conner heads the junior class at Northampton College of the University of Richmond (Va.). BEST H O R S E W O M A N » Betsy Jane Richey was declared the outstanding equestrienne at the Ohio State University (Columbus) Little International Livestock Exposition. KEYSTONE PHOTO "ATHLETIC ACTIVITIES" is the title of this C W A mural painted by an undergraduate artist for the student activities building at N,ew York University (New 'York City). COMMON LAW PLEADING Picture of the Week Arthur T. Henrici UNIVERSITY OF M I N N E S O T A SEND yOUR ENTRIES in this contest to Picture of the Week, Collegiate Digest, P. O . Box 472, Madison, Wis. Five dollars is paid to the winner of each week's contest. Each year singing organizations representing institutions of the Pacific Southwest meet tp compete for men's and women's glee club championships in contests sponsored by the Pacific Southwest Glee Club Association. Approximately 400 students gather each year at one ol the institutions entered to sing their way to high honor for their alma mater, banta Barbara State College played host to the choraf groups this year. Printed by Alco Gravurc Inc., Chicago, III, 5391.3-27 1BRARY GE FOR TEACHERS L'ANY, N. Y. SECTION 'National Collegiate News in Picture and Paragraph" STARS ENTERTAIN STAR » Robert McKee and Whitney Cook, of the current Harvard Dramatic Club production, Sarah Simple, take a few tips from Margo, leading lady of Rumba. F. M I L L E R PHOTO In ipso, Frederic^ Mclntyre Oickel, a slim, but very "big-man-on-thc-campus" Alpha Delt come out on the steps 0/ his fraternity house, where the Alpha Delta Phis still dwell at the University of Wisconsin, to pose (or the yearbook Jvjow he is Fredric March whose face has been /lashed on motion picture screens throughout the world. Fredric March won the Motion Picture Academy Award in 1932 Jor his versatile "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.' Last year, in a newspaper poll, Japanese maidens chose him their favorite American actor. His next role is that of Jean Valjean in Twentieth Century's film version of Hugo s classic "Les Miserab/es," a book, too thick, for Freddy to read in college. / CREDDY BICKEL came to the Badger campus Cardinal that he (the opponent) was glad he. I in 1916 hum Racine, an earnest, serious could roll hrs own cigarettes. hi BeU, the ScflBOl school Ul ' y M h Who wJMIci to t H l n ' H i W g t H o oe ah -^fhougn""nT-w3s no nhl'Sete, commerce gave Freddy a scholarship to study orator and a credit to his father's bank back finance at the National City Bank in N e w York. home. .He'won the freshman declamation prize; There was a change in bank management, and an then Alpha Delta Phi, taming his cowlick, told actor at heart was lost to banking. Fancying the him to be happy-go-lucky and try acting. This, city, he got Howard Chandler Christy to paint with his face ana orator's voice, he found no his profile for collar ads. Then he took his hard job,- he was soon the best of the thespians mother's maiden name, March, and pestered his in the Edwin Booth Dramatic club. way into a small part in a Broadway show. Chuck Carpenter, football-captain and Alpha Delt, could play the piano. Freddy teamed with N Los Angeles March's Barrymore in The Chuck in campus vaudeville in an act called Royal Family won him a Paramount contract. Two Gloom Picklers. They bottled gloom for His first picture was The Dummy, starring Ruth three years, even though Freddy sang Dardenella Chatterton. On his climb upward he played straight and has never oeen asked to sing on the twice opposite Clara Bow, once as a college screen since he became Fredric March. professor, once as a tough sailor. His prof was the first genuine professor on the screen, and his ARPENTER was football captain, so Freddy sailor was tough. Divorced from his first wife, became manager of the varsity and went he is married to Florence Eldridge, actress, who on trips free. He earned them by amusing the has a part in Les Miserables. boys at the piano in hotel lobbies on the eves of He wrote his Madison schoolmates last Homebig games. coming that he was. sorry he couldn't get to town: Aided by Gamma Phi Beta sorority, where A very annoying studio production schedule Bickel got his Prom dates, he was elected presikept him in Hollywood making screen love to dent of the senior class in 1920. It is said he Anna Sten! kissed 35 votes at the sorority house after his Very, very annoying indeed! victory, whereupon his opponent told The Dail.' I C U N V E I L I N G th p o r t r a i t of Dr. Charles Steinmetz at Union College (Schenectady, N. Y.) where he taught for 20 years. DID YOUR CAMPUS produce a perGOnallty who is now prominent in the radio, motion picture, statfc, art. business, or political world? If you want to see that personality the subject of a "Spotliu,htcr" thumbnail sketch, write The Spotli'ighter, Collegiate Digest. P. O. Itox 471, Madison. Wis. One dollar will lie paid for each acceptable picture submitted, in addition to one dollar for acceptable authentic anecdotes about the famed of today. N O N WILSHERE, Philadelphia Athletics pitcher, will return to Indiana University Bloomington) next to enter his senior year. He's a Theta, Chi. BEAUTY A N D BRAINS go hand in hand lor Laura Sprague, North western University (Evanston, Illinois) debater and actress, who repre sents Delta Delta Delta in Northwestern's beauty contest. WORLD'S LARGEST M E C H A N I C A L BRAIN » This intricate super-calculating machine has been placed on demonstration at the University ol Pennsylvania (Philadelphia). It is beihg examined by Dr. Charles G. Chambers, M. E. Nelson, and C. N. Weygantz. WIPE WORLD PHOTO ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ «1M», K. J. jurooldt Tob. C*. WE ASKED OUTDOOR PEOPLE: Is this fact important to Ifou Just for Fun V. P. Hollis UNIVERSITY O F M I N N E 8 0 T * Collegiate Salon of Photographic Art The University of Wisconsin (Madison) Camera Club selected the photographs reproduced here as part of its second annual National Collegiate Photographic Salon, which included 41 prints chosen from 140 entries submitted by amateur photographers in 14 colleges and universities. Highland Light, Cape Coa is one of the prints awarded a gold medal, unning Milton M. Abram U N I V E R 8 I T Y OF WISOONSIN Suniet William Weld UNIVERSITY O F IOWA Highland Light, Cape Cod Laurence S. Foster BROWN UNIVERSITY iWSiMWi*****—* i » > !; Above FIRST "PICTURE OF THE WEEK" WINNER » Slippery Walks, by David Rau, president of the University of Wisconsin (Madison) Cainera Club, is the first prize-winning print in the new COLLEGIATE DIGEST contest. SPRING T R A I N I N G . University of Rochester (N.Y.) women sports leaders tackled this fallen tree- with saw and ax when they desired a little extra exercise in preparation for their intramural spring SpOrtS. KEYSTONE PHOTO GOVERNOR A N D SECRETARY » Roy Powell (right) a University of South Carolina (Columbia) law student, is the personal secretary of Gov. Olin D. Johnston, South Carolina's chief executive. ATOP W A S H I N G T O N M O N U M E N T » These five Gallaudet College (Washington, D.C.) students were among the favored who were allowed to ascend to the top of the monument when it was given its bath. A New C o n i c it (or C o l l e g i a t e Digest Readers The Picture of the Week Each week Collesiate Digest will feature one picture that • its editors believe to be outstanding from the standpoint of photography, composition, subject, and the story it tells. Still life as w e l l as action photos will be eligible for the contest— and there are no subject restrictions beyond those of libel and decency. Five dollars w i l l be paid to the winner of each week's contest. The editors reserve the right to use any photo submitted in Collegiate Digest at their regular rate of one dollar— payment to be made upon publication. RULES . 1. Each entry must be made by an amateur photographer who Is now a member of the faculty or student body of a college or university. 2 The name, address, and college of each contestant, together with any information about the photograph, must be printed on the back of each photo submitted. No limitation is made upon the number of entries each contestant may submit, nor upon the size of the photographs submitted. 3. No pictures will be returned unless accompanied by return postage. 4. Address all entries to: Picture of the Week, COLLEGIATE DIGEST, P. O . Box 472, Madison, Wis. E n t . r this N « w C o n U M N o w - - W i n A F l v - P o l l i f P r l i « . NIGHT WEAR » One must have a bathrobe, but it needn't fit like a squaw's blanket, as the model at the left proves, it is in a light weight tweed, and is a model of comfort. The shirtwaist nightgown shown at the right is one of the smartest of the new models. It comes in silk crepe, voile or dimity. BUTTERICK PHOTO Printed by Alco Gnivun- Inc., Chicago, III. 5391.3-26 SECTION "National Collegiate News in Picture and Paragraph" '. • , TRADEMARK SERIAL NUMHZR aiS4.ll SI H O N O R STUDENT » Frances Wheeler, daughter of Montana's famed senator and one of the Connecticut College for Women's ( N e w London) smartest undergraduates, performs a psychology experiment. "MOST BEAUTIFUL BLONDE" » Northwestern University's ranking student actress, Jacquelin Wieland, a Delta Gamma, will go to Hollywood soon lor a screen test. P A U L B T O N E - R A Y M O R PHOTO W I D E WORLD PHOTO P O L O TWINS » W, O. and Oel Johnson are iwo of the SURF RIDING in a new style is created by Rosemary Carlyle, University ol Oregon (Eugene), whose star riders on the Alabama Polytechnic Institute (Auburn) team. favorite recreation is riding horseback along Oregon's beaches. BRAIN TESTING M A C H I N E » The ticker tape on this device developed at Harvard University records a pattern of the patient's brain activity by graphing the varying amount of electric current developed in solving mental problems. WIDE WORLD PHOTO TWICE A WINNER . Both the discus and hammer championships at the Penn Relays were captured by Bates ("VJIKOK'S champion. Anton College's champion, Antoi Kishon. His hammer mark was 167 feet, 7 and a quarter Inches Rowing's Biggest Thrill: 'They're O f f " at Poughkeepsie 01935,'R. J. ItoynoIdH Tob. Co. THEY DON'T GET YOUR WIND kCornell's Varsity Rows on Lake Cayuga. ATHLETES SAY Columbia Lions Work Out on Harlem River. T H E most thrilling moment—when does it come? Many D O W I N G is rich in tradition and the Poughkeepsie ' have been the sporting situations in fiction and in fact •^ Regatta glitters with rare color in this respect. To the which have been pictured to bring home this sensation, but winning crew in each race go the jerseys of all of the oarsto those who have ever seen the start of a varsity race in the men and coxswains in the other boats. When Columbia annual Intercollegiate Regatta at Poughkeepsie there can be won in 1929, the banner yeqr when nine crews were no other most thrilling moment. It's there, and it's got everyentered, the Blue crew collected 72 jerseys. In that race, thing that goes to give any fan excitement and gooseflesh. the failure of the Cornell crew to report to the starting line on time caused the race to be rowed in darkness Seven boats, each with eight oars protruding, lined up against a heavy tide. like as many centipedes on the west side of the Hudson river, each,held in place by a marker boat. That is the scene A ducking in the water is the reward of the winning upon which the .spectators in the 40 flatcars look. The coxswain. The ritual, which today follows every crew official yacht draws up astern. A n old, but erect man, race, is the gay method of expressing the boat's ' resentJames Can tier, 64-year-old rigger, preJulian. W. Curtiss, a Vale oarsman of the seventies and ment" for his bullying cries of the race. pares the Navys sleek shell /or the referee for almost three decades, steps forward. Since the death of Wisconsin's "Dad" Vail in 1928, Regatta. Silence in the observation train. The entire flotilla of there has been only one grand old man in rowing, Coach destroyers, patrol boats, canoes, yachts, and excursion Jim Ten Eyck of Syracuse, now in his 86th year and still steamers which follow the wake of the racing shells seem to pause in absolute quiet. active in the sport. His son, Young Jim, is coaching the infant Rutgers crew on the Clearly, Referee Curtiss' voice rings out for all to hear, "Are you ready all?"Raritan. Syracuse, under Ten Eyck, is always a threat. The gun barks. . So it j o e s , at Columbia, the Glendons, at Cornell, Jim Wray, at California, "They're off!" And anything may happen'—in fact, has happened, and probably minute Ky Ebright, at Pennsylvania, Rusty Callow, and at Washington, A l Ulbrickson, will happen again. A A * all stand-out coaches. The latter three are all Washington men, that institution ranking in crew coaching today as Notre Dame does in football. Other stories might be told about each of them. And more color can be found in the lakes and inlets and " ^ r / A T C H Cornell" has been the bugaboo of every shell since the first big race rivers, upon which the crews train, but late in the afternoon of Tuesday, June 18, all * » on the Hudson, July 2 , 1 9 0 1 . For it was the big Red crew that won the first eyes will be on Poughkeepsie, in the seven lanes leading out from the west bank of three races and 10 of the first 12 races. Since that time, the Cornell record has not the Hudson river. been as high although in recent years they have been standing with Columbia as the • • • best the East can offer against the double western threat of Washington and California. During the first 13 years of the Poughkeepsie Regatta, victory was an upstate New-York monopoly, for when Cornell did not win, Syracuse did. In the last three A T INTERVALS lof one hour, the three races, freshman, junior varsity, *and varsity races prior to the three-year lapse during the war, Columbia, Cornell, and Syracuse ' ^ will be rowed'for respective distances of two, three, and four miles, -, beginning t were the respective winners. When competition was resumed in 1920, Syracuse at four o'clock eastern standard time. Each time, the observation train will start and again won. It was not until two decades after the first race that Navy, a natural for 'follow the boats, as will (he river flotilla. Twice they will retrace their movements the rowing sport, was able to break the ice. Pennsylvania, the fifth member of the until the big varsity race. Intercollegiate Rowing Association, has never crossed the line a winner. Seven crews, Columbia, Cornell, Syracuse, Pennsylvania, Navy, Washington, While the membership of the I. R. A. is limited to the five original members, inand California, will face the starter's gun above Krum Elbow. A few days before, vitations are extended to other colleges with crews to compete. Wisconsin finished the race they will be assigned to their lanes, beginning with the treasured No. 1, third, when a guest at the first regatta, and took second and third places in the two the first from the bank. But good crews in the outside lane have been known to win. following years. Since 1929, the Badgers have not competed on the Huds_on, but From the coast will again come the favorite, Washington, rowing its victorious they continue to receive annual invitations. Of the other original guests, Georgefreshmen of 1934 intact as the varsity crew. California, once conquered by Washtown and Stanford dropped crew as a sport years ago, but signs of a revival are ington but ready to try again, will not be spurned as a contender. In the East, Syraimminent at the' Far Western college. cuse is looked upon with favor, while Cornell remains the perennial dark horse. Washington and California stand today as the most renowned guests and the Tradition decrees that Columbia will be there, but the loser, in a close finish, unles; best crews year in and year out at Poughkeepsie. Since 1922, the Huskies have been the worm turns, for in four close finishes, the Morningside Heights boat has been at Poughkeepsie to finish in the first three places every year with the exception of second best four times. Navy, under young Buck Walsh, may triumph, since a Navy 1930. First in 1923, 1924. and 1926, second five times, and third three times, they crew is always considered dangerous'in rough water. Can Callow do (or Pennhave a record that commands respect on the Hudson. sylvania what he used to do at Washington and what the Ouakers have never The fastest time ever recorded for the four-mile course which runs past Krum done—turn in a victory? Elbow and Hyde Park, home of President Roosevelt, and under the two bridges, was California's 18:35 4/5 in 1928. The same crew, which beat Columbia in this race The answers are a mystery, but tradition will be enriched on the afternoon of by less than a boat length, went on to win an Olympic victory. A similar record June 18. It always is at Poughkeepsie, no matter whether the race is as slow as that although not in time, was hung up by the Golden Bears of 1923. California also of 1929 or as close as the eyelash Syracuse-Cornell finish of 1908 and Washingtonwon in 1934, following the depression lapse of 1933. Navy of 1926. AOME AND KEYSTONE PHOTOS A general view of the Poughkeepsie course, showing the finish line in the distance. A part 0/ the large number 0/ vessels that carry spectators may be seen in the distance. Here is the University of Washington Varsity, a strong favorite for this year's Regatta winner. Composed of all sophomores, this crew rowed to win the championship over freshmen shells id other colleges last year. Left to right are: Bud Schacht, stroke, Rober Morris, Bob Green, Delos Schoch, Charles Hartman, hie Rautz, George Hunt, and George Lund, bow. George Morry, coxswain, is kneeliuv. TIACK GEORGE BARKER LOU GEHRIG has played in more than 1500 consecutive big league games —an athletic achievement that takes "wind"—healthy nerves—"condition." Lou says: "For steady smoking I pick Camels. They're so mild they never get my 'wind' or my nerves." O f course you want mildness in a cigarette. And the athletes—to w h o m "wind," healthy nerves, "condition" are vitally important— insist on mildness. - Lou Gehrig says: "For steady smoking I choose Camels. W h y ? Because Camels are so mild they never get my 'wind.'" Other stars noted for their "condition" agree. George Barker, intercollegiate crosscountry champion, says: "Camels are s o mild, they don't cut my 'wind' in any way." Bobby Walthour.Jr., star of the six-day bike grinds, says: "I've g o t to have 'wind' in bike racing. For my cigarette I long ago chose Camels." And golf? Here's T o m m y Armour speakr ing: "Camels never bother my n e r v e s . . . never shorten my 'wind.'" Tennis? Listen to Bruce Barnes: "Camels never interfere with my 'wind.'" And fancy-diving champion, Betty Bailey, says: "I must protect my 'wind.' That's why I smoke Camels." What does this kind mean to of mildness you? It means you can smoke as many Camels as you please. Athletes say Camel's costlier tobaccos never disturb your nerves —never tire your taste—never get your "wind." Successors to a long line 0] winning crews, the University of California oarsmen lost the most important west coast race to the University of Washington Huskies last month. Left to right are: Gene Berkemkamp, stroke, Ltroy Briggs, Ttvis Thompson, John Stage, Carroll Brigham, Elmer Moore J. McKinuey, and Harley Fleming, bow. Reg Watt, coxswain, is kneeling, GOOD N E W S ! The pleasant things in life are doubly pleasant when you're "in condition"—the difficult things, just half as annoying. So it's good news to hear that Camel's costlier tobaccos are so mild you can smoke as many as you please. Athletes say Camels never affect your nerves —never get your "wind." COSTLIER TOBACCOS • Camels ere made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS —Turkish and Domestic—than any other popular brand. (Sit»t4) It. J. REYNOLDS TOUACCO COMPANY, Wimlop.S.I«n>, N. C. ||iiHIM|i||l lililMH '.' . —I « -. .= ] | : | '•y> $ • t < • . . i li\ | ijjfc; • .v 3r ^ TB^aq^^W J" n>- ' •• • \ *> v --u- U ' • / .. 1 I ANOTHER RUN FOR N. V. U. is I brought in by Greenberg with his homer 1 in the close match with Wagner College. | - ••» W I D E WORLD PHOTO PACED By A RACE HORSE « Bob Fair,, crack Loyola University (Los Angeles) hurdler, is training on the Kellogg Institute ol Animal Husbandry track for an attempt to better existing hurdle records. DEMONSTRATING AGAINST "UN-AMERICANISM" » A portion of the large body of University of Detroit undergraduates who pledged themselves to "defend their country in a just war . . . unhesitatingly and to the end." INTERNATIONAL PHOTO NEWSPAPER'S FRESHMAN QUEEN . Jane Stowell was selected as a University of Toledo beauty by the staff of the Campus Collegian, undergraduate weekly. NAN WALLACE PHOTO H I G H JUMPERS » A tense moment in a DePaul University (Chicago) women's intramural basketball game is recorded in this unusual action photograph. KIHKLAND PHOIO COUNTING BULL'S-EyES » Betty Woodbridge, Swarthmore College (Pa.) archer, marks up the score she made in a recent practice meet. ACME IT'S THE SPHERILLUMINATOR . A n d is used to make photometrical measurements. The only machine of its kind in the world, it is here being operated by Prof. Erich Hausmann, of Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute ( N . y . ) HOW HOW TO HE AN ACCOUNTANT NEW H O N O R S were heaped on Evangeline Davey, daughter of Ohio's governor and Kappa Kappa Gamma, when she was chosen queen of Ohio State's fraternity ball. TO CLOSE THE BOOKS ' EDWARDS PHOTO > 1 . <°&>, rZVB • sTOP-Q.UAUTY TOBACCOS kv m ISMAIL /iBiVI' -+:***&* / HER B E A U T Y AND POPULARITY w e r e responsible forEllen Pratt being elected MayQueen at Sweet Briar College (Va.). AOME I K. K. K. RIDES O N U. C. L. A . C A M | PUS « This fiery cross at the entrance to University of California (Los Angeles) grounds was burned simultaneously with the distribution of pamphlets which read: "Communism will not be tolerated . . . the Ku Klux Klan rides again." ' WIDE WORLD F A M E D ARTISTS' QUEEN » Russell Patterson, John LaGatta and Howard Chandler Christy chose Ruth Hamilton as most beautiful at New York University school of commerce. CO-ED ENGINEER » Sarah Glaiber, Chi Omega at Alabama Polytechnic Institute, is surveying for her course in architecture. G O I N G A W A Y suits for the young bride are worn by these New York debutantes as a feature of the style show staged to raise funds for a new Bryn Mawr College building. ACME PHOTO SPRING FASHIONS IN REVIEW » The latest in co-ed styles was presented at the annual fashion show staged by these students at Pembroke College In Brown University. Gowns and ensembles for all occasions were modeled by these seven stylists. KEYSTONE NEW PRESIDENT » Rita V o n Oesen heads Skidmore College Government Association lor 1935-36. $100,000 BLAZE AT DARTMOUTH « An aerial view of the fire which partially destroyed Dartmouth Hall, colonial classroom building of Dartmouth College. WIDE WORLD DANCE QUEEN » Kathleen Gallagher ' ~ wlll reign over the annual prom of the Alpha Delta Gamma fraternity at Loyola University (Chicago), PAUL BTONE-HAVMOR Printed by Alco Grnvure Inc., Chicago, III. 5391.3-33 c«rdBrtaktrt SECTION National Collegiate News in Picture and Paragraph" VV / « 1927 "Pamp" Tone, Alpha Delt, was a Cornell University actor of attainments. Son of wealth, he was both a gentleman and a scholar, having made four honor societies and Phi Beta Kappa, franchot Tone's next film is M-G-M's "No More Ladies" with Joan Crawford, who is, public announcements repeatedly state, the object of Mr. Tone's private courtship. TRANCHOT TONE is distinguished from fel' low collegians working before Hollywood cameras in that he is a Phi Beta Kappa. This fact makes him a bookworm among many current "Great Lovers" of the films who dropped in on college mainly to perfect themselves in football. Mr. Tone also differs from the above in that he knew no poverty orr the way up to his present ernjnence. "descendant of General Theobald Tone, an 18th Century Irish rebel, whose features and excitable blood unmistakably came down the years to descend on him, F/anchot was, in eastern ariance, "prepared" for Cornell University y private tutoring, European travel, and the stylish H i l l School in Pennsylvania. The Tones of Niagara Falls, N. Y., were people of substance and dignity who hoped they were raising a son of tastearid culture. V I N THIS they were not wrong. "Pamp" Tone ' proceeded directly toward making Phi Beta Kappa and demonstrating a natural, intelligent instinct for the theater. The prize Cornell rusnee of 1923, he was won by the Alpha Delts. Two years later, in one of his periodic revolts against conventional living, he left the Alpha Delta Phi house to live in an apartment. He assiduously worked four years in. the Cornell theater, performing with recognized ex- .tJ". pertness in such plays as Shaw's Arms and the Man, Wapplri wharl, and Right You Are. He accepted in his stride membership in Phi Kappa Phi, Book and Bowl, and Sphinx Head, all honor societies, without decreasing the wide latitude of his social life. ( ~ \ N GRADUATION in 1927 he began with ^ - ^ characteristic directness to become an actor by working as stagehand and "walk o n " player in Buffalo stock, later, in N e w York, he took a room in afirst-classhotel and waited for a C b. Proving his brisk confidence came from a elief in himself as an actor, not his background, he accepted roles with the New Playwright's theater, a poor but idealistic group of thinkers headed by_John Dos Passes^ and the Group Theater, another body of poor players not interested in having capitalists among them. After a season with Katherine Cornell and the Theater Guild, Franchot heeded the Hollywood call in 1932. The " N e w Republic" thereupon printed a paragraph of regret that a fine actor was going the way of all flesn. This seemed the case. Franchot Tone has a tea-time look fatal in movieland. His first important picture was Gabriel Over the White House. In Bengal Lancers he started his struggle for emancipation from playing a stenographer's dream of a Prince Charming in a Dusenberg. i DID YOUR CAMPUS produce a personality who is now prominent in the radio, motion picture, stage, art, business, or political world? If you want to see that personality the subject of a "Spotlighter" thumbnail sketch, write The Spotlighter, Collegiate Digest, P, O. Box 473, Madison, Wis. One dollar will he paid for each acceptable picture submitted, in addition to one dollar for acceptable authentic anecdotes alxnlt the famed of today. SECRETARY OF WAR DERN GIVES PERSHING AWARDS to W.H.Glenn, Jr., Georgia Tech.; J. C. McHaney, Texas A . 8 M . ; A. E. Lawson, University of lllinoisi W. J. Haberer, Jr., University of Dayton; and A. D, Merry, Cornell University. I AOML Keith Brown, Yale's pole-vaulting ace, clears 14 feet, one and one-half inches to break Penn Relays record. KEvrroNC W e s t e r n Golfers Threaten S u p e r i o r i t y of E a s t e r n e r s golfing circles throughout the INTERCOLLEGIATE country are becoming hot debating societies these days over the one major question that has captured and is holding the attention of the varsity locker-room orators: Resolved, that the East w i l l lose its supremacy in the 39th annual intercollegiate golf championships to be played at the Congressional Country Club, Washington. D. C , June 24 to 29. Intercollegiate golf was once exclusively an Eastern affair. O f recent years, however, invaders from the middle west, south, and southwest have all but taken over the snow. The responsibility of making an impressive showing for the East rests almost squarely on the shoulders of an untested Yale team. Yale has won more team (nineteen) and individual (thirteen)champlonships than any other school in the country. THE DEFENDING C H A M P I O N Charles Yates, of Georgia Tech, is th< present holder of the intercollegiate title which he will battle to retain a the 1935 Intercollegiate Championship in Washington. © IMS, R.J. Raymildj Too. Co. LANE BROS. PHOTO "CANDID CAMIM" close-up o f Harold ("Dutch") Smith, Olympic Fancy High-Diving Champion, enjoying a CameL He has smoked Camels for nine yean — smoked Camels even before he took up diving. He says, "I'd walk a mile for a CameL "Among his teammates on the American Olympic squad who are also Camel fans are: Leo Sexton, Helene Madison, Jim Baiuch, Bill Miller, Josephine McKim, and Georgia Coleman. YALE will be strong, as it always is. Excellent coaching and plenty of material make Yale a strong dark-horse contender, but what did last year's Yale eastern intercollegiate champions do against the boys from other sectors? Charley Yates pf Georgia Tech, the nation's sixth ranking amateur, won the individual title. Michigan's well-balanced team took the team championship out of the East for the first time in history, nosing out Yale by three strokes. Yates is back and Michigan is back with practically the same team. Last year only Law Weatherwax, of the three Yale qualifiers, got past the first round of the individual play, and he lost to Yates in the second round. Only 13 golfers from Eastern schools landed among the 32 qualifiers. Only one, W. Y. (Willie) Dear of Brown, reached the third round. Charley Kocsis of Michigan won the qualifying medal with a brilliant 147. Notre Dame set a new record by qualifying five men for the match play. I HE picture for 1935 can not fairly be painted any brighter for the East, which has won all but one team title and all but six individual championships. Michigan is as strong a ever., Georgia Tech, the third place team, looks stronger than last year. Notre Dame is fully as strong as its fourth place 1934 team was. Oklahoma can also make trouble if everyone is clicking. Texas, Rollins, and Colgate will all make their strongest bids for the team title this year. . The individual field is the most brilliant in the history of the tournament, and certainly the most colorful. More than half of last year's qualifiers are back this year, and among them: CHARLEY YATES, Georgia Tech, defending champion, thrice a participant In the national amateur, twice Georgia state champion, low amateur in last year's Master's tournament, protege of Bobby Jones from Atlanta's famed East Lake course, at 21 one of the country's greatest amateurs. Walter Emery of Oklahoma, 1933 champion who was put out in the second round last year. Ed White of Texas, last year's runner-up, individual champion of the Southwest conference which Texas dominates, and the man who has given Spec Goldman, Jack Westland, and Gus Moreland all they could handle in various tournaments. Charley KoCsis of Michigan, last year's medalist and semi-finalist, Big Ten individual champion, Michigan state amateur champion. Johnny Banks of Notre Dame, former Western junior champion, medalist in the 1933 intercollegiate, quarter-finalist last year. Winfield Day, Jr., of Notre Dame, who carried Yates to the 18th hole and forced him to play.par golf to win in his first and hardest match in.last year's tournament, Chicago district junior champion, quarter-finalist in the national amateur in 1934. ^WILLIE DEAR ofBrown, former national interscholastic champion, who drbppecTa 3r>Fiole matcK"to rates lasfyeaf; s? ana' i. Capt. JoTTlyicri of Georgetown, president of the association and winner of last year's driving contest. One of his drives traveled 340 yards. Freddie Haas, Jr., or Louisiana State University, Western junior and Southern amateur champion. John Brown and Robert Servis of Rollins, Maine and former Ohio state amateur champions, respectively. Capt. Warren Alton, Dick Stewart, and Otto Nord of Colgate, the latter a qualifier last year. Stewart was a finalist in the N e w York state junior tournament. Cliff Perry of Duke, the southern conference champion. No mention of those former giants, Harvard, Princeton, and Dartmouth? They just don't hjve It this year. GOLF H E L E N HICKS Former U. S. Women', Golf Champion Read below what leading sports champions say about Camels With the preference of star athletes overwhelmingly for one cigarette, that cigarette has to be exceptionally mile!! Its name is—Camel. Here's what Olympic champion diver, Harold ("Dutch")Smith, says about Camels: "I've found a great deal of pleasure in Camels. They never interfere with my wind." Rip Collins, no unflrBBf world-champion St. Louis Cardinals last season, says: "Here's the best proof I know that Camels are mild: I can smoke them steadily, and they never get my wind." From the ranks of the squash stars comes this experience. Rowland Dufton, of the New York A. C, says: "I've found that Camels are so mild I can smoke all I want, and they never upset my nerves or get my wind. That's what I call real mildness!" . Dick Shelton, world-champion steer dogger, and those two brilliant campaigners in the golfing wars, Denny Shute and Helen Hicks, have come to the same conclusion —"Camels do not get my wind." How this mildness is important to you too! Camel smokers can smoke more — and enjoy smoking more. You get more satisfaction, knowing that sports champions have found Camels so mild that they never jangle their nerves or get their wind. YOUR OWN PHYSICAL CONDITION—your wind ,.. your energy... the good health of your nerves —is important to you too. So remember this: Camels are so mild you can smoke all you want. Athletes say Camels never get their wind or nerves. COSTLIER TOBACCOS! Frederick T. Haas, Jr. will represent Louisiana State John B. Brown, Maine amateur champion, will compete for Rollins College, • Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS—Turkish and Domestic—than any other popular brand. U'/fW>AHJ. Kcyoi>ldiTab.ccoCii..VCiraionS«l«in.N.C SURVEYING The Billiard Player James Watrous U N I V E R S I T Y OF WISCONSIN PICTURE OP THE WEEK RULES: Pive dollars is pild each week to college students and faculty members whose pictures axe selected by Collegiate Digest as the best that It receives from amateur photographers. Any photo submitted is eligible for publication in Collegiate Digest at regular rates. Print name, institution, name and size of camera, kind of film used, and tune of exposure on back of photo. Address entries to: Picture of the Week, Collegiate Digest, Box 472, Madison, Wis, C O P y CHASER » Gertrude Carey is coeditor of The DePiulio, yearbook publication at DePaul University (Chicaso). Right H f G H FLYER. James Ashcraft is about to do a backdisl ocation on the rings in the C o r t l a n d Normal School ( N . y.) symna- JUST LIKE THEIR BROTHER O A R S M E N , members of. the Wellesley College (Mass.) crew do their daily practice stints on the machines when It's too cold for them to take to the open water. I N T E R N A T I O N A L PHOTO NOBEL WINNERS H O N O R E D » Dr. G. R. Minot, Harvard, Dr. H. C. Urey, Columbia, Dr. W, F. Murphy, Harvard, and Dr. G. H. Whipple, University of Rochester, are feted at a testimonial dinner in N e w York. K E Y 8 T 0 N E PHOTO Printed by AIco Gravurc Inc., Chicago, III. 5391.3-31 Jhe SP0TU6HTEK. A • • Star W h o Studies Stan SECTION "National Collegiate News in Picture anil Paragraph' Born in Minneapolis 37 years ago, Lewis Frederick Ayres had a brief tenure as a banjo-playing scholar at the University of Arizona, where he pledged Kappa Sig and gazed at stars at night, a hobby which he still pursues {left}. Lew had a grim-lipped face of sober mold that made his freshman smile {above} an event, and astronomy, not the banjo, an appropriate absorption. IF A FACE MEANS ANYTHING, Shotputter A. Irfan, of I N THE fall of 1928, Lewis Ayres, who was. no more nor less than a good banjo player from San Diego (Cal.) high, began eating his first free meals. as a rushee of Kappa Sigma fraternity at the University of Arizona. That year a half-milliondollar future was being made for him in Germany where a tragic-faced Teuton, Erich Remarque, had finished writing a grim war tale titled " A l l Quiet on the Western Front," a book that also took care of Mr. Remarque for the rest of his life. Had the 20-year-old freshman, who still prefers not to wear a tie, known of this fourth dimen- tional relationship, he could have avoided three years of very tattered existence. This knowledge not given him, freshman Ayres proceeded humbly to enlarge on his reputation as a fast banjo strummer. H e joined the Kappa Sigs, the college band and glee club almost simultaneously, and took an interest in astronomy. N o w , in Hollywood, he finds it difficult to convince colleagues that he has really read Chaucer's long-winded "Treatise on Astrolobe" and that he looks through his telescope at something more than passing night mail planes. NEAR the end of his first college year Lew joined a roving dance band. Playing in a Holly- wood hotel, he first saw movie stars frolicking stylishly. He thereupon sold $500 worth of musical instruments and hired an agent to get him picture work. Ejected from t w o rooming houses for rental arrears, he was at the point of going home to San Diego for regular meals when theagent proved worthy of his hire. Lewplayed in '.'Sophomore"; then was the juvenile in Garbo's "The Kiss," but Garbo, not Ayres, was the sensation. He was tested, like every youth in HollyWood, for the richest plum of the year, the lead wooa. :_ " A I I ror r v . ;tne _ i ••i Jpyjng o u [ | n t n e hospital scene in " A l l Quiet." that few people who saw the picture forget, he wept genuine tears from sheer despondency. He won the role. So vividly real were his five months of make-believe in the trenches near Los Angeles that he still occasionally talks like a member of the Reichswehr. AOME PHOTO V, H E W A S slumping, after bad^ roles, when Phil Stong, another author, sold "State Fair" to Fox, and Lew acted in it with Will Rogers. His last picture was Fox's "Lottery Lover." Divorced from Lola Lane, he is now married to Ginger Rogers, a girl whose slim lines on the screen have helped make the Ayres household, with its telescope, a concentration of stardom. DID YOUR CAMPUS produce a personality who is now prominent in the radio, motion picture, stage, art, business, or political world? If you want to see that personality the subject of a "Spotlighter" thurnbna.l sketch, write The Spotlighter, Collegiate Digest, P. O. Box 47a, Madison, Wis. One dollar win be paid for each acceptable picture submitted, in addition to one dollar for acceptable authentic anecdotes about the famed of today. A Cambridge University (England), has broken the international records for this field event. SHE'S THE TOP » Kathryn E. Caswell is the new president of the Colby College (Waterville, Me.) Student Government Association. Jrfal NO V 7 you SEE IT, NOW you D O N ' T » These invisible murals are on exhibition at the Franklin Institute (Philadelphia). The photograph at the left was taken under ordinary light, while that at the right was made with ultraviolet light. STUDENTS DEMANDED HIS RETURN when "Skipper' Spencer, v teran conductor ol the Intercampus street-car line at tfie University o Minnesota (Minneapolis), was translerred by company olficials to another O N E AGAINST A WHOLE TEAM » Sir George A . Thomas played members of the o l d U n l ' e r ' l y (England) chess club simultaneously and single-handed bu our correspondent forgot to tell us how the match turned out. «LO B E PHOTO HIS HIGHNESS, Drum Major George Neblett, University of Mississippi, demonstrates the correct aloofness for a successful marching maestro. MA'JI CIBttW . Anl Wre'l M br be about Frances Louise McGee being the most popular woman at the University of Delaware (Newark), for she's also president of the senior class. :l STAR PITCMM. "I HI" Camels, and I've found that after a hard game a Camel helps me to net back my energy," says Carl Hubbell, star pitcher of the N. Y, Giants. "Camels are so mild they never ruffle my nerves." skullduggery, either, Dr w. u> JUCJIC, u4-year-old University c Michigan (Ann Arbor) archeologist, will te you when he starts to talk about the mysterious perforated Indian skulls which were recently unearthed in a pre-hlstoric Indian burying ground near Flat Rock, Michigan. In fact, Dr. Hinsdale believes that some ancient superstition was responsible for the perforations, and he is convinced that they were made alter death as, in no case, is there the slightest bit of evidence of healing Despite the fact that the skulls are usually the more interesting to the layman, Dr. Hinsdale puts in his vote for the perforated leg bones. No definite reason for the boring of these holes is known, but one theory is that the skeletons, or portions thereof, were strung together like dolls and used for magical or religious purposes at ceremonials. GAS MASKS AND WET HANDKERCHIEFS were added to the classroom equipment at Creighton University (Omaha, Neb.) during the recent midwestern dust storms. Here is a well-protected co-ed idministering First aid to a not so fortunately equipped classmate. The perforaclons found In the Michigan skulls are not to be confused with the trephined skulls often found amongst ancient remains. The practice of trephining consisted in removing a disc or "button" from a bone, leaving a hole the shape of the lece removed, while the skulls and bones being studied by r. Hinsdale have round holes that were undoubtedly bored or drilled. Trephining was practiced in ancient surgical and religious rites, and performed on living persons. MILLIONS MORE PAID FOR FINER TOBACCOS'! "Camels a r e m a d e f r o m finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS - Turkish a n d Domestic — t h a n a n y o t h e r p o p u l a r b r a n d . " / (Sinned) R.J.REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY Winston-'Siilem, N. C. H M CAMEL'S COSTLIER TOBACCOS NEVER GET O N YOUR NERVES! B ldyimliU Tot). ''"• COLLEGE FLYERS GREETED BY SEN. M e A D O O » Intercollegiate Flying Club officers who met in Washington included (L lo R) M . W. Doman, William ancTMary; W. D. Strohmeier A C M E PHOTO Amherst/ Mary Kimball, Smith; Sen. McAdoo,- R. O . Jacobs, Minnesota. a m WHEN the University of Wisconsin (Madison) b West Virginia University (Morgantown) ringmen held before 9,500 spectators in the Badger field: generally acclaimed as the winners of the mythi> • championships. The Badgers won the West Virgi score of 6 to 2, after previously downing Syracus* time national champions, by a like score. The Wiseexclusive pictures are not wearing jersies. j downed the i recent bout !•, they were lional boxing Hatches by a iversity, onemen in these SCOFFING at scientistsfears, Bruce Gillespie, University of Minnesota (Minneapolis) graduate student, downs a long drink of "heavy water. ' The Chime Ringer Martin A . Husing ST. LAWRENCE UNIVERSITY "PICTURE O F THE WEEK" RULES » Each week Collegiate Digest features one picture as the best that it receives from amateur photographers who are college or university faculty members or students. : Five dotUrs is paid the winner of each week's contest. Any photo sub." mirtScfis eligible for publication in Collegiate Digest at its regular rates. HORSESHOEING is I part of the Bristol Uni- [ versity course in metallurgy taken by these ' two co-eds in the English institution. GLOBE PHOTO HISTORIC S A N T A BARBARA MISSION becomes a "classroom" when students at Santa Barbara College (Calif.) decide to move their art classes outdoors. ACME PHOTO CHAMPIONS » The Wesleyan University(Middletown, Conn.) Glee Club recently won the New England Intercollegiate Glee Club Contest staged at Portland, Me. A unanimous decision of the judges gave the W e s l e y a n g r o u p , which Is under the direction of Gustave Tegnell (In Inset), the prize. A PLEA FOR INTERNATIONAL PEACE Is addressed to the students of the University of Florida (Gainesville) by the world's.king of speed, Sir Malcolm Campbell. THIS PICTURE W A S M A D E IN TOTAL DARKNESS » A special plate sensitive to infrared rays was used by the Ohio State University (Columbus) department of photography in taking this unusual photo, Heat radiating from an ordinary electric iron produced the Images.:, The heat rays hit the pitcher with varying degrees of intensity and produced the contrast caught by-the camera. Printed by Alco Gravure Inc., Chicago, III. 5391.3-30 Jhe SPOTU^HT£K Football to .Filmland SECTION "National Collegiate News in Picture and Paragraph" U. S. "TRADEMARK SERIAL NUMBER J1MIJ C H A M P I O N BIG 10 G Y M N A S T » Wettstein of the University of Iowa (Iowa City) won the title of best all-round nnast and first on the side horse in the Big 10 meet at the seal hunting ; „ Patersoh, and Virginia Bruce, newest ladies oj the screen. ""CHARLES ROBERT STARRETT was sent from Athol, Massachusetts, to Dartmouth in 1920 to study commerce and prepare for an office in the L. S. Starrett Tool Company, his father's moneymaking firm. This aim in life Charlie postponed ""Ay .ouraiiiry? a consumirg (rtrife-yetfr-dw)iWon-te^~ wln a " D ' in football. The ambition was not fulfilled until his senior year when he took a forward pass and strode fifty yards for a touchdown through Cornell. The final score was Dartmouth 63, Cornell 13, but it was the brightest afternoon in Charlie's life and the last of the Saturday massacres that had made the 1925 Dartmouth team national champions. Long-limbed and long-armed, Charlie won two "D's" in swimming and pleased his fraternity, Psi Upsilon, by being elected to Green Key and Casque and Gauntlet. RICHARD DIX was making "The Quarterback" in New York. Looking for summer jobs, Charlie and a handful of Dartmouth athletes applied for, and got, jobs furnishing the background. Director Fred Newmeyer told Charlie that he had a face that would be just dandy, indeed, in the movies, but he'd have to learn to act to get nearer the cameras. This advice Charlie took seriously. In a sad family conference he renounced profitable toolmaking and departed for the hurly-burly of a stock actor's life in West Virginia, Cincinnati, and Indianapolis. BACK IN NEW YUKK, trained, he played in two Broadway shows that opened and closed with sickening thuds. Varrick Frissell took him to Labrador to act a snow-driven seal hunter. Then Paramount put him in Miriam Hopkins' first film, "Fast and Loose." In it he was a poor but honest auto mechanic who went swimming every night. A swimming suit was no new garment to Charlie. He tamed fast-and-loose Miss Hopkins so handsomely that he won a contract. But for that pact he would have gone with Frissell on a second picture expedition North. The boat blew up; Frissell and most of the actors died in the tragedy. In Hollywood Charlie Starrett has played in a half dozen football epics and has been poor but firm with spoiled daughters like Mary Brian, Sally Eilers, Carole, Lombard, and Sally Blane. In "Sons of Steel" and Warner's ' Desirable," he is getting away from strong, silent stuff. To Charlie, his wife, formerly Mary McKlnnon of Athol, and twin sons, this is good news. DID YOUR CAMPUS produce a personality who is now prominent in the radio, motion picture, stage, art, husiness, or political world? If you want to see that personality the subject of a "Spotlighter" thumbnail sketch, write The Spotlighter, Collegiate Digest, P. O. Box 471, Madison, Wis. One dollar will lie paid for each acceptable picture sub' mitted, in addition to one dollar fo'r acceptable authentic anecdotes about the famed of today. CHOSEN AT A N A L L - I STUDENT ELECTION, 1 Catheryne Wilbur reigns as the Miss University of Chattanooga on the Tennessee institution's campus this year. She's a senior and member of Pi Beta Phi. Lelt UP ' N OVER » Lee Haring, Emporia Teachers' College (Kan.) stellar hurdler, steps out in Iront to win the Kansas City Athletic Club hurdles event. Haring holds the Central Conference record of 14.6, and finished among the six finalists in the national collegiate meet in Los Angeles. HOBBY HORSES are used to train Alabama Polytechnic Institute (Au' burn) polo teams, and here's Elwood Rouse, ace member or the 1935 squad, limbering up on the wooden pony b e f o r e a strenuous practice session. FASTEST SPORT » That's what the experts say about Japanese fencing. A n d here are Hoshio Asari and yoshiki Yoshida, of Santa Ana Junior College (Calif.), demonstrating how its played in their native land Gh Right A PERFECT V A U L T » J . B. White, of Oxford University (England), scrapes the bar as he goes over for a try at the record. win_ KEYSTONE PHOTO Below VERY BUSINESSLIKEI » Virginia Kingsberry, junior in the department / of business administration at Texas Christian University (Fort Worth) (| has been named "Miss Busiby her classmates. A cigarette so mild you can smoke all you want — that's what athletes say about Camels. And when a champion talks about "condition" — "wind"—healthy nerves—real tobacco mildtitss—he's got to know. Gene Sarazcn says: "Playing as much as I do — I have to keep in condition. I smoke Camels steadily. They are so mild they never get my 'wind' — never upset my nerves." Other athletes back him up... ."I smoke all the Camels I want, and keep in top condition," says Mel Ott, slugger of the New York Giants.... Georgia Coleman, Olympic diver, says: "Camels don't cut What this mildness means to you! It means you can smoke Camels all you want! Athletes have made this discovery: Camel's costlier tobaccos arc so mild, they can smoke all they please, without disturbing their "wind" or nerves. n OMILD i1 • (I I.J ALL YOU WANT! R A N D C A N Y O N N O W A CLASSROOM » Amy Thompson, Arizona State College (Flagstaff) student, looks over sites that will be used b/ students in summer geology courses. HIAITMY N i a V I S , " W I N D , " INIIIOY —Condition is i m p o r t a n t t o you, too, wherever you are —on vacation, in the office, at home. You can keep "in condition," yet smoke all you please. Athletes say: "Camels never get your wind." Camels COSTLIER TOBACCOS! • Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS —Turkish and Domestic—than any other popular brand. ( % « , / ) R.J, REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, Winston-Salem, N . C G> 1KB, It. J. Ifcyi'iihU T u b . Co. A NEW KIND O F CHAMPION » Opal Peters was named the posture champion at Rollins College (Winter Park, Fla.) in a competition conducted by the physical education department. SUCH GRATITUDEI » University of | Washington varsity crewmen dunk Coxswain Morry after he successfully piloted this group of Husky sophomores to a win over the University of California oarsmen. "VERTICAL" F A R M I N G is explained to Secretary of Agriculture Wallace (Left) by William J Hutchins, president or Berea College in the eastern Kentucky mountains, where "how-to-farm-at-a-50degree-angle" is taught. A C M E PHOTO Right F L A M I N G LIGHTNING is created by California Institute o\ Technology 0-os Angeles) electroscientists to inaugurate the first million-volt laboratory ever constructed. Th« arc is 40 feet long. KEYSTONE PHOTO Right STEVENS STOPS FAST ATTACK » Ed Otocka, Stevens Institute or Tech"nlr.gy ( H o b d W e n , i s . J.J goalie, successfully repulses a swift drive by the Lafayette College (Easton, Pa.) lacrosse team. I N T E R N A T I O N A L PHOTO Wl OE WORLD PHOTO Left S H O O T I N G AT STARDOM . This q u i n t e t of G e o r g e Washington University (Washington, 0. C.) co-eds are contenders for the national collegiate women's title. I N T E R N A T I O N A L PHOTO .IfT^i - Y A L E HEADS G O A L W A R D . The start of a long run which netted a goal for the Yalemen in their Bermuda match with ine Manchester Regiment teamAOME WORLD RECORD HOLDER for the 60 yard indoor high hurdles, Kenneth Sandbach, Purdue ace, prepares for a strenuous campaign against existing outdoor records. • • NEW V . M . I. C O A C H » F.ank Carek, former University of Illinois star, has been appointed head wrestling mentor at Virginia Military Institute (Lexington) PAUL STONE-RAYMOR PHOTO NEW PHOTOELASHCITy DEVICE » Dr. Nicholas Alexander, of Rhode Island State Golrege(Kingston), invented this machine for photographing the elasticity of woods and metals. Thomas H . Miller UN1VSRBITY O F IOWA PICTURE OF THE WEEK RULES: Five dollars Is paid earh week to college student! and faculty members whose pictures are selected by Collegiate Digest as the best that It receives from amateur photographers. Any photo submitted is eligible for publication in Collegiate Digest at regular rates. Print name, institution, name and size of camera, kind of film used, and time of exposure on back of photo. Address entries to: Picture of the Week, Collegiate Digest, 8o» 47J, Madison, Wis. •yj^mm^^^^m I DEMONSTRATOR » Chemistry I students at Bates College (Lewiston, Me.) perform public experiments in their well-equipped laboratories in the science building. r M i L ^ r S m T H | E W r F lVhz rulerrl'litt'lVfiguS1 ' '° mnut } ^ En3lnWS ' ^ at the University of Minnesot ^ " " " ^ ^ <°™<«« *« M Blinffl STAR DEBATERS . Pi J. D. Menchofer (.right) coached these Michigan Slate College (East Lansing) debaters to many victories In a recent eastern tour. OUTSTANDING "JOES" » The Very Rev. J . M . Noonan, president of Niagara University ( N . y . ) , congratulates r. J. Kantak (left) and W. E. Furey upon winning titles of "Joe Athlete" and "Joe Senior". Printed by Alco Qruvurc Inc., Chicago, 111. 5391.3-31 Jhe CPtYTUaHTfcK .TT From Horse Operas to Stardom Los Angeles Junior College "strikers" salute their peace orator. AOME AND KEYSTONE PHOTOS ' Son of a Montana circuit court judge who bad owned and lost a cattle ranch, Frank J. Cooper went to Grhmell to become an artist. An early taste/or the companionship oj horses, inarticulate like himself, defeated this aim. Hence, ironically, he is now a talkie star, newly married to Veronica Bal/e, Sandra Shaw of a brief film career, and he is to be seen next in "New Divorce," a title not of his choosing. I N SEPTEMBER, 1922, Frank J. Cooper of Helena, Montana, a lad possessing over six feet of taut grace, enrolled at Grinnell College in Iowa. . A complete greenhorn, he signed up to take Greek and Spanish the same semester, secured a meal job at the Poweshiek Cafe, and started to pursue a college career of tenacious silence and reserve that was broken only at the insistence of his classmates who, learning he was a western horseman, made him play a frisky maverick from time to time. O n one of these occasions he decked himself in A berug*llon—Skcteon oncMed-tbe-iorcWigtiV•" parade on horseback, his plainsman yells giving new flavor to the affair. On another he blacked up as a Numidian.guard and stood outside of the Egyptian temple background erected for the senior banquet, but all these appearances he made under protest. He preferred to remain in his room to fret over Spanish and Greek, a combination that confounded him mightily. N O W irrevocably called Cowboy Cooper, he failed in his sophomore year to make the cast of O'Neill's Beyond the Horizon; led a student raid on a five-gallon can of apple cider he had himself, as Saturday handy-man, pressed out for Prof. H. W. Tatlock's Halloween party; and Harvard pranksters protest the anti-war walkout. was chosen art editor of the yearbook. Cyclone. O n election to Chrestomathia Lit, a club with the motto "Society That Develops Men," Cowboy Cooper fell in love with a campus vocalist for whose company there was much competition, all of which the taciturn sophomore completely eliminated. When he proposed marriage, she sent him west to find a job. In the course of seriously preparing to return to her like Lochinvar, he drew cartoons a year for a Helena newspaper,- then hastened to Hollywood where, he had heard, he could make %-} .OO a day rtdinq in horse operas. Needing an inexpensive, untalkative cowboy for Winning ol Barbara Worth, Sam Goldwyn singled Cooper out from a posse of cowhands. The cameras showed Gary to be Owen Wister's Virginian come to life. H E MET Clara Bow in Wings, and the college romance disappeared in the resultant electricity. After Farewell to Arms, critics began to write about Cooper as an actor. In 1931 Gary paid the way of a Montana student through Grinnell. In 1929 he returned to the campus to stammer through a flashy Homecoming celebration that conferred on him a bewildering burst of glory. ity of Chicago peace enthusiasts mass to egg the antiwar paraders. DID YOUR CAMPUS produce a personality who is now prominent in the radio, motion picture, stage, art, business, or political world? If you want to sec that personality the subject of a "Snotlighter" thumbnail sketch, write The Snotlighter, Collegiate Digest, P. O. Box 473, Madison, Wis. One dollar will be paid for each acceptable picture submitted, in addition to one dollar for acceptable authentic anecdotes about the famed of today. Western Reserve peace-makers' cheer an address by Oswald Garrison Vlllard. "SLIDE KELLY, SLIDE" Coach Pep Young shows his Temple University (Philadelphia) nine the fine points of sliding into third base. FIGHTING FOR A N EDUCATION » One thousand Slate Teachers College (Memphis, Tenn.) students protest legislative proposal to close five state schools. INTERNATIONAL PHOTO ••-• \ *t^. 1 Vi Wi % f? ai 8 rf>J& r. ,-i->)•*'•• - > ' f v A N Y T H I N G GOES when you start goalward rugby, ai this action photo of the Long Island -Un venlty ( N . y.) learn In action proves. 'Wage peace," Norman Thomas tells Temple University demonstrators John Roosevelt, youngest son of President, laughs at Haivard protestors. Joseph mpara leads University of Iowa's League or the Promotion of War, W I D E WORLD PHOTO Caught in the A c t I "Fighting" Faces of Star Athletes Snapped by the Action Camera R U N N I N G the gamut of emotions, from sleepiness to tigerlshness, the varied facial expressions of battling athletes as they face their competitors are recorded by the lightning swiftness of the action camera. Caught unawares, these athletes had no time to assume the accepted ferocious expressions that are seen in the ordinary still photographs of collegiate athletes. xplosiveness Supremacy In our family of faces are included: 1. Footballer Remington Olmstead, University of California at Los Angefes; 2. Crewman Samuel Drury, Harvard University; 3. Shotputter J. M. Baillieu, Magdalen College (England); 4. Tackle Fil Sanford, University of Richmond; 5. Shotputter Jack Torrance, Louisiana State University; 6. Gymnast Rehor, University of Illinois; 7. Pugilist Paul Hartnek, Creighton University; 8. Highjumper A . Waley,, Eton College (England); 9. Speedster Ivan Fuqua, Indiana University; 10. Halfback Harry Patch, Villanova College; and 1 1 . Ballcarrier Ted Key, U. C. L. A . Piquancy Ferocity A L A B A M A DORMITORY DEMOLISHED » Gorgas Hall, newest of the men's dormitories at the University of Alabama (University), was completely destroyed by flames which also burned many a student's entire wardrobe. SCIENCE CREATES NEW PRESSURE APPARATUS . Dr. Frances Birch, of Harvard University (Cambridge, Mass.), can equal pressure found 20 miles underground with this- new device. WIDE WORLD PHOTO THE ARMY'S SINGING WAITERS » These five U. S. Military Academy (West Point, N. Y.) cadets starred in The House of 1,200 Cables, presented recently by the soldiers. KEYSTONE PHOTO J. Thomas Beck UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN "PICTURE O F THE WEEK" RULES » Each week Colle 3 iate Digest features one picture as the best that it receives from amateur photographers who are college or university faculty members or students. Five dollars is paid the winner of each week's contest. Any photo submitted is eligible for publication in Collegiate Digest at its regular rates. FIRST A N D O N L Y woman in the United States to hold a limited commercial pilot's license is Jean Barnhill, University of Minnesota (Minneapolis) co-ed. "THE SNOWBALL" » A n unusual photograph of the Ohio Wesleyan University (Delaware) student production of the same name. PEBATERS MEET CONGRESSMAN » Members of the crack Cumberland University (Lebanon, Tenn.) debating team chat with Cong. J. R. Mitchell (.Center) on their visit to the nation's capital. Printed by Alco Qravurc Inc.. Chicago, III. ,1391.3-29 3he SP0TU6H TtKTT Z A W h o l e Family of Stars SECTION "National Collegiate News in Picture and Parag'/aph" U. ft. THADKMAHK Rf:RIAL NUMBER ltJ4t2 I Dr. and Mrs, L. A. Mull/can of Indiana/a, Iowa, were the parents ojfour daughters who made a veritable nest oj songbirds and kept the doctor busy drilling teeth to pay Jor piano lessons. Three o] them former Simpson College students, Rosemary and Priscilla {below} are the Lane sisters on Fred Waring's radio program, Lola Lane {above} is ex-Mrs. Lew Ayres, a movie actress and Leota Lane sings in Broadway musical shows. The photo at the left shows Lola as she appeared when a student at Simpson College. WHEN Rosemary and Priscilla Mullican still had to be called in from the sandlots to practice piano lessons, their sister Dorothy was already a sensation in Indianola high school. She was the school's best alto voice, had been featured at the county h\r, and, in a stronghold of Iowa Methodism, was, ahead of her times, a correct flapper in bobbed hair and fashionable Russian boots. When Dorothy enrolled at Simpson College, in Indianola, the Mullicans were a family of crooning teams. Priscilla and Rosemary in pinafores harmonized " O n the Alamo" before the local Rotary and Kiwanis clubs. Dorothy and Leota, both members of Beta Xi sorority at Simpson, went about the state syncopating similar airs, once earning $150 before American Legiohaires in Davenport. Back home, all four were scintillating carolers in the First Methodist church. They were planning to become music teachers. G l I S EDWARDS, discoverer of kid stars, brought a vaudeville unit to Des Moines. Leota 'was persuaded to ask him for an audition. He listened, approved, and before he could sjy v \ . more, Dorothy was dragged before him. Would he listen to both? He would. They had faces and voices for musical comedy.. In N e w York and on the road, as Lola and Leota Lane, the Mullican youngsters became bright sppts in Edwards' revues. They played in George Jessel musical comedies. Despite 500 applicants, in 1929 Lola got the ingenue role in "Speakeasy," first of Fox's talkies. She has sung and acted regularly in pictures since. Divorced recently from Lew Ayres, she is now appearing in "Murder on a Honeymoon." Leota is stil) playing in Shubert musical shows. LOLA was to bring Rosemary to Los Angeles to attend the University of Southern California, but Rosemary went to Simpson to continue singing with Priscilla, who was still in high school. The sisters grew in popularity for talent and zestful beauty when they sang over W H O in Des Moines. In 1932 Leota brought them to N e w York. Fred Waring, building a vaudeville show around his band, heard them. N o w , at twenty, they are more widely known than their sisters in whose footsteps they closely followed. x HER BEAUTY A N D POPULARITY won Mathilda Simpson, Delta Delta Delta at the^ University of Illinois (Champaign), the title of "Most Popular" on the Mini campus. y? <*«?«•* WIN ARCHITECTURE PRIZES » R. A. Matern, J. H. Higbie, Richard Ives, and D. B. Gooch, University of Michigan (Ann Arbor) students, have been awarded prizes in the designing contest sponsored by the alumni association of the American Academy in Rome. Easter DIP YOUR CAMPUS produce a personality who is now prominent in tlw radio, motion picture. stage, art, business, or political world? If you want to see that personality the subject of a "Spotlighter" thumbnail sketch, write The Spotlighter, Collegiate Digest. P. O. Box 471, Madison, Wis, One dollar will lie paid for each acceptable picture sub' nutted, in addition to one dollar for acceptable authentic anecdotes about the famed of today. STARS » Juanita Cox and Wade Free played the leading roles in the Indiana University (Bloomington) student presentation of L\F* HARD SESSION.. & if. GYMNASTIC PATTERNS » Freshmen physi cal education students at the University of Kentucky (Lexinston) created these interesting formations as part of their regular classroom exercises. ^x< YE T O W N CRIER » Alexander Woollcott, noted author, playwright, raconteur, and conductor of one of the air's most popular programs, graduated from Hamilton College (Clinton, N . Y.) in 1909—taking the usual amount of time to acquire his Ph.D. " I ' M A NrWSPAFCII WOMAN. It's absorbing work—but I have lo put in Ions, irregular hours. When I'm feeling let down. I smoke a Camel to restore my energy and Interest. Camels are a smoother smoke, too. They do taste better." (Signed) MARGARET B. NICHOLS "I'M N O T O N E of those'natural born students'you hear about," says Capers Smith. "I have to buckle down and study to get results. When I'm not hitting the books, I work in the college bookstore from 12 to 4 every day. It's easy to see how full my time is! When I feel tired or 'logy,' I know that I'm nearing the end of my energy. Then I always smoke a Camel. It revives me—restores my energy. And each Camel that " I T ' S A HARD, ACTIVE life— bridging the Golden Gate with the longest single span ever built. When I'm worn out, I light up a Camel. It quickly relieves me of tiredness. I smoke steadily—have for years. Camels never upset my nerves." (Signed) R. G. CONE, Engineer follows seems to be even more chock-full of that mellow, rich flavor! I smoke Camels steadily. They never tire my taste. And Camels never make my nerves jumpy." HEADS W O M E N ' S O R G A N I Z A T I O N » Jean Seeley is the president of the University of Michigan (Ann Arbor) League, outstanding campus co-ed organization. STUDENTS FROM M A N Y N A T I O N S met at M l . Hoiyoke College (South Hadley, Mass.) for the New England Intercollegiate Model League of Nations to discuss trie important international problems of the day. "™*Mr-TUB'.. .£#.• ,'.'.- (Signed) CAPERS SMITH, ' 3 6 f. '•f ' ^. f 3b CAMEL'S TOBACCOS COST MILLIONS MORE! "Camels a r e made from finer, / V m cm MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS - Turkish and K 9*i 7-mfagB& Domestic —than any other popular b r a n d . " i. 1 (Signed) R.J. R E Y N O L D S TOBACCO C O M P A N Y Wiiibton-Sillom, N. C. THEY LABELED THEMSELVES so Coach Dick Harlow (right) could identily the 122 candidates who turned out for Harvard's spring grid practice. KEYSTONE PHOTO on II. J. Reynold. Tob. Co. CAMELS COSTLIER TOBACCOS NEVER GET O N YOUR NERVES 1_ COLLEGIATE T A R Z A N » Ed Holston coaches the University of Southern California (Los Angeles) water polo squad. BEAUTIES? » "yowzah," I chortled old Maestro Bernie I when he selected these co-eds as the most beautiful at Centenary College (Shreyeport, La.) Below CORRECT FACIAL EXPRESSION for champion shot-putters is demonstrated by M . Y. French-Williams, Oxford University (England) fer, of Cornei with his prize "Jane." — Above "FRAGILE" » A u d r e y Jane Truitt is Photogr a p h e r Paul Stone's selection as the most fragile type of blonde at University of lllin o is (Cham, paign). PAUL 8TONEHAYMOP. PHOTO Right O • L E A R y SAYS " L E G S UPI" » Coach Jacobs gives V i l lanova College (Pa.) b a s e b a l l candidates their warming, up exercises. THE M A N I N THE WIRE MASK » Robert Lewis, captain of the Swarthmore College (Pa.) lacrosse team, demonstrates what the well-dressed player will wear. WIDE WORLD METALLURGY TOOAV WE Will TAKE UP THE DIVISIONS Of METALLURGY - CHEMICAL AND MECHANICAL TRiATMENTOF THE QBE " " ! 1 1t..r...|.|. | . . i . PIPE URGE THE BEST WAY TO EXTRACT FLAVOR FROM A PIPE IS TO TREAT IT .WITH MILD, MELLOW,"NO-BITE1 . PRINCE ALBERT/ tU v^rd^f BESTCO-ED ORATOR » Maxine Wohlford won first place •the University of Akron (Ohio.) women's oratorical contest. _ One-Third Horsepower •\ •wjmte\ i NET WORK MANAGER » Norman H . Young, Jr., bosses the Pennsylvania State College station, which iscontrol unit for 1,518 Army Amateur Radio Network stations. 0.S j FREE RIDE » Brownell of Cornell plays "horse" for Gregory, of Princeton. Gregory won the match, INTERNATIONAL PHOTO Charles Lorenz WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY "PICTURE O F THE WEEK" RULES . Each week COLLEGIATE DIGEST features one picture as the best that it receives from.amateur photographers who are college or university (acuity members or students. Five dollars is paid the winner of each w .eeksi contest. Any photo submitted is eligible for publication in COLLEGIATE DIGEST at its regular rates. COLUMNIST O N TRIAL » Indiana University (Bloomington) law students convicted R. B. Hall Da/7y Student columnist, of printing libelous statements about them. O I L LAMPS A N D R O U G H BENCHES form the classroom equipment at Commonwealth College (Mena, Ark.), which is being investigated for red activities. Pres. Lucien Koch is here teaching public speaking. KEYSTONE PHOTO "IT'S A SCREAMJ" » That's what Funnymen Olson and Johnson ate saying about the University or Wisconsin (Madison) Horesfoot Club's script for its current show Break the News. CLASSROOM O N WHEELS » These Brooklyn College ( N . Y.) co-eds visited the United States Capitol lor classes on government and economics. The educational tour was conducted by Prof. Louis R. Warsoff (right.) STAGE STAR » Crescent!* Gufler played the lead in The Servant in the House at Kansas State Teachers College (Emporia). QI.OBE PHOTO Printed by Alco Gruvurc Inc., Chicago, III, 5391.3-28 jhe SP0TU6HTEK Seated before someone else's Packard car, Bud MacMurray, Carroll College freshman and pledge of Baa Pi Epsilon in 192;, was famous in a small way as a sweet saxophone player and a regular ball carrier on the frosh grid squad who grinned down at the world from six feet, three inches of Irish reticence. Lil{C Rudy Vallce and Wayne King, Fred MacMurray hoped to get ahead by concentrating on the saxophone. To his utter surprise this mild ambition made him a movie star, leading man to Claudette Colbert in "Gilded Lily," hero of "Car gg" and "Grand Old Girl" mith May Robson, I N 1925, Bud MacMurray was graduated from the Beaver Dam (Wis.) high school with the American Legion medal given yearly to the most .rounded scholar and athlete among the graduates. He was also th'e best saxophone player in the school and the boy who had made most of the drawings for the yearbook. Looking over these accomplishments, he decided he could be of some use to Carroll College (Waukesha, Wis.) »s a football star. The saxophone would earn his keep while he attempted to discover whether he could really draw pictures. By November, 1925, the horn and freshman football were interfering with his education. Beta Pi Epsilon had pledged him. He was thinking of buying some textbooks. O N FRIDAY and Saturday nights he played in dance pavilions with an orchestra called Joy's Gloom Chasers. Carroll College had a dramatics club from which Alfred Lunt, the noted Broadway actor, had graduated. To Fred MacMurray this was an unexciting fact/ he had decided against acting when he failed to make the cast of his high school class play. In June 1926, Fred gave up Carroll College and art fo be a musician, an occupation promising the money the MacMurrays had seen little of in Beaver Dam, where his divorced mother had worked hard in offices to keep up a two-room flat. He went to.Hollywood with his mother, where they hoped to find sunshine and many dance bands. His mother broke her hip in a fall. For five years she was confined to a hospital, and her son, to pay the bills, worked his sax, when he could, in and about Los Angeles. ANOTHER RECORD FALLS » Glenn Cunningham, great University of Kansas (Lawrence) miler, forges ahead of Hornbostel, of Indiana, to set a new world's record in the 1,000 yard event with a time of 2:10.1. He ran the mile during the same meet in 4:14.8. •-" NE PHOTO A T THE studios Fred applied as a saxophone player, and met, therefore, a saxophonist's cold reception. A band, the California Collegians, MacMurray with it, played a successful way eastward. In N e w York the orchestra was hired for Three's -a Crowd. Fred came from the orchestra pit nightly to be the man to whom Libby Holman, the star, sang her flaming torch, Body and Soul. In Roberta, Fred had some lines and a song on the stage. A Paramount scout saw him and brought him home to Hollywood—from Libby Holman to Claudette Colbert and a seven-year contract. These were swift and strange happenings to Bud MacMurray who had given no second thought to being an actor as long as he could stili play the saxophone. DID YOUR CAMPUS produce .1 personality who is now prominent in the radio, motion picture, sta^c, art, business, or political world? If you want to see that personality the subject of a "Spotli|>htcr" thumbnail sketch, Write The Spotliehtcr, Ccilletjiate Digest, P, O. Box 471, Madison, Wis. One dollar will be paid for each acceptable picture submitted, in addition to one dollar for acceptable authentic anecdotes about the famed of today. BETA'S COMPOSER » James Golseth, former University ol Minnesota (Minneapolis) student, has composed two songs which will appear in the forthcoming songbook of Beta Theta Pi fraternity. HULL RESISTANCES are measured by this novel apparatus set up at Stevens Institute of Technology (Hoboken, N. J.) by Prof. K. S. M . Davidson. THRUST A N D PARRy » Helen Vanderbuecken (left) successfully parries an attack by Florence Shaw during an hour of fencing practice at Hood College (Frederick, Md.t