Document 14064573

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PAGES
Jtoude,
KAPPA DELTA
P r e s i d e n t Mary Lou Eisenman
'63, announces that Cheryl Werbin,
Nancy Rubin and Mary Ann Meind e l , S o p h o m o r e s , w e r e pledged
October 16.
A coffee hour will be held Monday evening with Kappa Beta.
Judy F a v i l l e '63 has been appointed Homecoming float c h a i r man for the s o r o r i t y .
PSI GAMMA
P h y l l i s Cipolla '63, p r e s i d e n t ,
announces that R a n d i e B r a d l e y ,
Dottie T o m e s , and B a r b Watson.
S o p h o m o r e s , have bee:? n a m e d
c o m m i t t e e h e a d s for an u p c o r r i n g
date party.
A coffee hour with Kappa Beta
Jtowh\
w a s h e l d Monday night.
CHI SIGMA THETA
P r e s i d e n t Jean D a v i s '63, announces that Esther Keith '63 has
been appointed Pledge Master. A
faculty card party will be held at
the s o r o r i t y house tonight.
A coffee hour was held for the
b r o t h e r s of Theta Xi Omega last
Monday evening.
GAMMA KAPPA PHI
Sue P i a t t ' 6 3 , p r e s i d e n t , a n n o u n c e s that an open house for
S t a t e s m e n will be held Sunday
e v e n i n g f r o m 7-9.
A coffee h o u r will be given Monday night for the b r o t h e r s of Sigma
Lambda Sigma.
Greeks Slate Coffee Hours,Parties, Open Houses,
and Work Parties; SLS Elects New President
BETA ZETA
Loraine C r i s p e l l '63, president,
announces that the s o r o r i t y held an
open house last Sunday afternoon.
A date party was held last F r i day night, and a coffee hour with
Alpha P i Alpha last Monday.
PHI DELTA
P r e s i d e n t J u n e Druian ' 6 3 , announces that a d a t e party will be
held tonight at the Italian B e n e volent S o c i e t y .
SIGMA ALPHA
Judy S t r o n g ' 6 3 , p r e s i d e n t ,
w i s h e s to thank all of the people
who a t t e n d e d the s o r o r i t y ' s open
h o u s e l a s t Sunday.
A coffee h o u r w a s held Monday
e v e n i n g with P o t t e r C l u b .
KAPPA BETA
P r e s i d e n t Frank Banta '63, announces that a date party will be
held tonight from 8-12 at the Fort
Orange P o s t .
An open h o u s e will be given Sunday afternoon f r o m 2 - 4 : 3 0 .
ALPHA PI ALPHA
Larry C o l e m a n ' 6 3 , president,
announces that the fraternity will
hold a date party t o m o r r o w night
at the F o r t O r a n g e P o s t f r o m
8-12.
A w o r k party will begin at the
fraternity house tomorrow morning at 9:30.
THETA XI OMEGA
Charles Baker '63, president,
announces that the m e m b e r s of the
rush c o m m i t t e e a r e : J i m H o t t o i s
'65 and Lee P a c k m a n ' 6 4 .
The
m e m b e r s of the pledge c o m m i t t e e
are Bob Gibson and Bob S a r g e a n t ,
Sophomores.
Other c o m m i t t e e h e a d s include:
Float, J i m Morgen ' 6 5 ; S m o k e r
John Mason ' 6 3 ; F o r m a l Rush
C h a i r m e n , J i m H o t t o i s '65 and
R o b e r t Sargeant '64.
Sigma Lambda Sigma
Doug F l a g g , v i c e p r e s i d e n t , a n n o u n c e s that Don G r e y ' 6 3 w a s
e l e c t e d a s the new p r e s i d e n t of
SLS and that Howie Woodrull ' 6 3
was elected song lender.
All articles lor House Howls mutt be
in the News office by Sunday night.
Senate:
State
ALBANY, N. Y., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1962
Freshmen Keep Ballot;
Letters To Be Sent
ews
'94»
Z464
by Linda McCloud
ALBANY, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1962
VOL. XLV1W No. 20
Smith to Hide University Banner;
Hunt to Begin From Draper Steps
Hunting for the official State
College banner, beginningnt 9 a.m.
t o m o r r o w , will be the last R i v a l r y
event before C a m p u s Night.
F r e d Smith ' 6 4 , Rivalry c h a i r m a n , will hide the b a n n e r and will
be the only one to know its l o c a tion.
The b o u n d a r i e s for the b a n n e r
hunt will be the e a s t wall of .Albany
High to Hobin St. and Washington
to W e s t e r n Avenues.
The b a n n e r may a l s o be hidden
on any individual who will r e m a i n
in the s a m e position d u r i n g the
hunt. It will not be hidden inside
any building o r v e h i c l e .
Regulations
The Rivalry c h a i r m a n will a n nounce the r u l e s on the front s t e p s
of D r a p e r before the s e a r c h b e g i n s .
If anyone is found on the g r o u n d s
before 9 a . m . , the hunt will be
cancelled.
The b a n n e r hunt is worth two
Rivalry p o i n t s . The c l a s s to locate
the b a n n e r first will win the hunt.
II the b a n n e r is not located by
1.! noon, the hunt will end.
Other Rivalry Points
'63 CHEVROLET IMPALA SPORT SEDAN
The Rivalry s c o r e now s t a n d s al
S o p h o m o r e s , 9, and f r e s h m e n , 3.
N e w s p a p e r , c h e e r i n g , sing and
skit points will be announced on
C a m p u s Night, which will begin at
7: 3d p . m . , next F r i d a y .
'63 CHEVROLET BEL AIR STATION WAGON
£ /?:':•. W $&>
IFC to Begin
Frosh Rushing
With Smoker
•tfxWS
•v.-v.<':v.<
••;
MWS:
;-:-:•::•:•:-:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:::•;
;v:-X';'::-:v:-;sv:^:.;.v.:o:o:Xv.:
f::::;::::::::;:-:::::v£vi££v;£::::::':::::
'63 CHEVROLET IMPALA SPORT COUPE
N0W...G0 CHEVROLET
FOR ONE-SHOP SHOPPING IN '03
us ExcmNG!
This is about the best thing that's happened to buying cars since
Chevrolet started building t h e m - f o u r entirely different kinds of
cars to choose from at your Chevrolet dealer's One-Stop Shopping
Center. If you're a luxury-lover, you'll probably want to go no further
than those 13 plush new Jet-smooth '63 Chevrolets. Want to give your
budget an even bigger break? Step over and see what's new with those
10 nifty models of the '63 Chevy I I . Or maybe you've been eyeing
sports-car caps, in which case have a go at a sporty new '63 Corvair
(8 of them, including three snazzy bucket-seat Monzas and those big
Greenbrier Sports Wagons). There's even something for the all out
sports-car set—the daring Corvette Sting Ray. Picking a new car has
never been easier. (Unless you'd like to own them al !)
'63 CHEVY II NOVA 400 STATION WAGON
Fresh and Sophs vie for Rivalry points in last week's pushball
contest. The present Rivalry score now stands at 9-3 in favor of
the C l a s s of 1965.
Editors Report Experiences
Smok er P u r p o ses
It's Chevy Showtime '63!-See
'63 CORVAIR MONZA CONVERTIBLE
four entirely different kinds of cars at your Chevrolet Dealer's Showroom
Hill Leo '64, P r e s i d e n t ol I F C ,
s t a t e s that, " The p r i m a r y p u r p o s e s ol tin' s m o k e r a r e to i n t r o duce tin' men nl the I reshmaii c l a s s
In the 11 ve I r a l e n u t les and to give
l he I r e s h m e n an idea ol what I r a ti' n u t les a re I ike and w hat In- can
P e t r i e k & Tlusty
expect from f r a t e r n i t i e s . "
" I he evening I s designed lor
a n ' mil i m o l v o d . i' lenison e xpee I e n t e r t a i n m e n t p u r p o s e s , but e s a pcacelul integration 'Alien I hi
sential inlurination r e g a r d i n g the
N e g r o student a r r i v e s in F e b r u a rv
s e r i o u s 'i s p e e t s ol Irate nil t ies
The Tiger, the school n e w s p a p e r ,
should mil he neglected bv the
h a s been i i i s t n i m e n l a l in p r e p a r t reshmaii."
ing lite s t u d e n t s I'liinl lonallv I>v it>
Committees
e i h t u n a I IH>I lev.
i oiniiiillees a s s i s t ing with the
I Ft ' Iuin i inn a r e : a rrangemeiil s
We a l s o l e a r n e d that we w i r e
one ol tile lew s c h o o l s I'epre sellli •< I and publicity, Alpha Pi \lpha; re
I r e s l i m e i i t s , Kappa Mela, set up,
which d o e s not luiiiiloli uudei a
Sigma I imbda Sigma; and " P r o
faculty ad\ i s o r .
\\ e w e r e a Isi i
speelii••.'' ( p r o g r a m s ) ,
I heta
\i
unique in the l a d thai holiora r i i i m ( Hnega.
a re not aw a riled lo seve ra I gi >\ e I'll
All male u n d e r g r a d u a t e s a r e
nielli oil l e e s
in! edltori :i I posi welcome to the S m o k e r ; h o w e v e r ,
lions,
those m a l e s ol the c l a s s ol 1966
The highlight ol the e o i i l e r e n . ' c
are e s p e c i a l l y urged lo attend.
w a s an a d d r e s s by H a r r i s o n Sails
b u r y , d i r e c t o r ol national c o r r e s p o n d e n c e lor the New York T i m e s
IVCF TO HEAR SPEAKER
and l o r n i e r Moscow c o r r e s p o n d The p r o b l e m s and p o w e r of p r a y e n t , e n t i t l e d " A New Look at tin•
e r will again be tile topic of d i s Soviet C h a l l e n g e . "
He s t r e s s e d
c u s s i o n when the I n t e r - V a r s i t y
the u n r e a l i s t i c altitude that the
C h r i s t i a n F e l l o w s h i p meets
A m e r i c a n s have taken in the past
T h u r s d a y , N o v e m b e r 8.
twenty y e a r s r e g a r d i n g Soviet
Joan Snyder, p r o g r a m c h a i r achievement.
man, announced that Mr. Ronald
Not all the Inn. til., ol tin eon
K l a u s , f o r m e r p r e s i d e n t of the
l e r e n c e can lie eiiiiiiineraled, lor
K.P.I, c h a p t e r of i n t e r - V a r s i t y
they a r e intangible., s p i r i t , goodC h r i s t i a n F e l l o w s h i p , will continue
vvill and a new p e r s p e c d v e .
as speaker.
At ACP Detroit Parley; Look
Forward To Try Techniques
by
Blanehard,
Having just r e t u r n e d from the
Associated Collegiate P r e s s Confere nee in Detroit, we a r e en t h u s l a s l i e a l l y looking f o r w a r d to p u t ting the t e c h n i q u e s and i d e a s which
w e l e a r n e d into p r a c l ice.
F o r two days we attended l e e l u r e s and s e m i n a r s on the v a r i o u s
facets of y e a r b o o k p r o d u c t i o n .
t h e s e m e e t i n g s p r o v i d e d a s with
s u g g e s t i o n s on p r o d u c i n g a b e t t e r
yearbook.
Aside from this formal l e a r n i n g
e x p e r i e n c e , we had an o p p o r t u n i t y
to meet student e d i t o r s from all
s e c t i o n s ol the c o u n t r y .
There
w e r e J31 c o l l e g e s and u n i v e r s i t i e s
r e p r e s e n t i n g 37 s t a t e s , D i s t r i c t ol
C o l u m b i a and C a n a d a .
NEW CORVETTE STING RAY SPORT COUPE
Another kind of " R i v a l r y " will
begin at 7:30 p . m . , Monday with the
a n n u a l I n t e r - F r a t e r n i t y Council
S m o k e r , the official beginning of
freshman rushing.
Joe / . w i c k l b a u e r ' 6 3 , of Hdward
Kldred P o t t e r C l u b , will act a s
g e n e r a l m a s t e r of c e r e m o n i e s . He
will c o o r d i n a t e the s k i t s o r a c t s
p r e s e n t e d by the five f r a t e r n i t i e s .
Kach f r a t e r n i t y will also have
its own MC? to i n t r o d u c e the g r o u p ' s
performances.
F r a t e r n i t y M C ' s in o r d e r of
a p p e a r a n c e will be Al Di C a p r i o
'64, Alpha Pi Alpha; I .ance A n d e r son '(if), Kappa Beta; Dick Middleton ' 6 3 , Sigma Lambda Sigma; .John
Mason ' 6 3 , Theta Xi O m e g a ; and
.Marty Kppner ' 6 5 , T.'dward Kldred
Pott.'i' Club.
We enjoyed d i s c u s s i n g t h e p r o b l e m s ol i n t e g r a t i o n with s t u d e n t s
from C l e n i s o n C o l l e g e , which will
be the l i r s l college to a d m i t a
N e g r o student in South C a r o l i n a .
A c c o r d i n g to the C l e m s o n s t u d e n t s
t h e r e have' been s e v e r a l i n s t a n c e s
ol peaceful i n t e g r a t i o n in the South,
which we r a r e l y h e a r about ;n the
N o r t h , b e c a u s e a c t s ol v i o l e n c e
Final action on whether f r e s h men should be allowed to vote for
Myskania was taken at Wednesday
night's Senate m e e t i n g .
Mary
A l i c e Lynaugh '63, chairman of
the Senate Auxiliary Committee,
r e p o r t e d Myskania itself felt
f r e s h m e n should be able to c a s t
votes.
Myskania feels the f r e s h m e n a r e
part of the s c h o o l , t h e r e is an a t t e m p t to know the u p p e r c l a s s m e n ,
and they do not know p e r s o n a l i t i e s
a s do the u p p e r c l a s s m e n .
"Why
s t e p on the e n t h u s i a s m of the
f r e s h m e n when we c o m p l a i n of the
p a s s i v e n e s s of the u p p e r c l a s s m e n ?
B e s i d e s o p p o r t u n i t y to vote d u r ing the week, s t u d e n t s can vote
S a t u r d a y and Sunday in the Student
Union.
Senator L e n n y
Lapinski '64
a s k e d if t h e r e w e r e any p r o v i s i o n s
for keeping the f r o s h vote s e p a rate.
It was s u g g e s t e d that the
b a l l o t s be c o l o r e d p a p e r r a t h e r
than the conventional white.
Froth Votes
The p r o p o s e d a m e n d m e n t that
f r e s h m e n be allowed to vote only
for c l a s s and S. A. o f f i c e r s was
defeated.
Dippikill Trip
Sue Murphy, c h a i r m a n of F i n a n c e C o m m i t t e e p r e s e n t e d a bill
allowing $150 for e x p e n s e s for
C a m p Dippikill. It w a s a c c e p t e d .
'The Senate t r i p to Dippikill will
be t o m o r r o w , with the p u r p o s e of
i n s p e c t i n g the w o r k done on the
building.
Don Allen ' 6 3 r e p o r t e d that a
50 s t a r flag h a s been h e r e for
s o m e t i m e ; it just h a s n ' t been put
up a s yet.
Book s a l e s in the C o m m o n s
w a s then d i s c u s s e d . 'The only p o s s i b l e way to a l l e v i a t e this would
be to sell only books in t h e C o - O p .
T h i s would d o u b t l e s s p r o v e unfavorable.
Tuition
Libby Stroud '64 opened the d i s c u s s i o n about tuition. T h e r e will
be a letter sent to parents uring
them to write to their c o n g r e s s man p r o t e s t i n g tuition. A motion
w a s made that l e t t e r s be sent out
a s soon as p o s s i b l e , seconded and
passed.
A suggestion was made
that provision be made for people
o u t s i d e Senate to work.
Constitution C o m m i t t e e will look
into formulating a policy for what
kind of o r g a n i z a t i o n n e e d s a c o n stitution.
S h i r l e y B 1 a n c h a r d announced
that p i c t u r e s of Senate will be
t a k e n next week at 8:30 a c c o r d i n g
to c o m m i t t e e s .
Recreation Reorganization Committee
A motion w a s m a d e to a c c e p t
the r e p o r t of J o h n L i l g a ' s '64
Recreation Reorganization Comm i t t e e . It was p a s s e d and will be
t a b l e d until next week.
P r e s i d e n t Condojani '63 t u r n e d
the floor o v e r to Gary P e t r e , Stud e n t - F a c u l t y M i n i s t e r who spoke
of two p r o p o s e d p l a n s for the new
campus.
T h e p l a n s a r e e i t h e r the faculty
s h o u l d be given s e p a r a t e dining
f a c i l i t i e s o r they should be given
a lounge and s h a r e the student
d i n i n g f a c i l i t i e s . Senate will s o l i c i t
s t u d e n t opinion on t h i s i s s u e .
Don Allen r e p o r t e d on the radio
station.
The p r o b l e m now is to
lay a c a b l e through the d o r m i t o r i e s and t r o u b l e with t h e B r u b a c h e r
electrical system.
S e n a t o r Stroud r e p o r t e d that
S t a t e s m e n a r e a s k i n g Senate to
a p p r o p r i a t e $1500 for 30 c o l l e g e
b l a z e r s and t r o u s e r s .
The s u i t s
would be p a s s e d on to next y e a r ' s
S t a t e s m e n . 'This w a s t u r n e d o v e r
to the F i n a n c e C o m m i t t e e .
P r e s i d e n t Condojani r e a d a l e t t e r of formal r e s i g n a t i o n from Roz
F e r a r r a '64.
M a r y M a r g a r e t W e l k e r made a
m o t i o n to adjourn. It w a s s e c o n d e d
and p a s s e d .
NEWS Lauded by ACP,
Gains First Class Rating
The Stare Co//eae News has r e c e i v e d a r a t i n g of first c l a s s by
the A s s o c i a t e d C o l l e g i a t e P r e s s ,
national c r i t i c a l s e r v i c e , for last
semester.
The A C P , which r a t e s n e w s p a p e r s from all s e c t i o n s of the
c o u n t r y , judges on the g e n e r a l
f e a t u r e s of c o v e r a g e , content and
physical property.
Within these b r o a d c a t e g o r i e s ,
the News r e c e i v e d s u p e r i o r r a t i n g s
for its e d i t o r i a l page f e a t u r e s ,
s p o r t s c o v e r a g e and s p o r t s d i s play.
Kxcellent s c o r e s w e r e r e c e i v e d
for inside news p a g e s , headline
s c h e d u l e , typography, p r i n t i n g and
masthead.
Judging Methods
P a p e r s a r e judged a c c o r d i n g to
the e f f e c t i v e n e s s with which they
s e e m to s e r v e t h e i r individual
c o l l e g e s c o m p a r e d to o t h e r n e w s p a p e r s with s i m i l a r school enr o l l m e n t s and frequency ol publication.
R a t i n g d i s t i n c t i o n s a r e thus
b a s e d on c o m p a r i s o n with o t h e r
student n e w s p a p e r s r a t h e r than
with s o m e m y t h i c a l " p e r f e c t " pap e r o r a m e t r o p o l i t a n publication.
Suggestions
Kach r a t i n g is a c c o m p a n i e d by a
guidebook showing the b a s e s for the
s c o r e , r e f e r e n c e s to good o r bad
j o u r n a l i s t i c t e c h n i q u e s in specific
i s s u e s , and s u g g e s t i o n s and c o m m e n t s for i m p r o v i n g effective
s e r v i c e to the c o l l e g e .
Specific s u g g e s t i o n s given the
Newj involved such v a r i e d topics
a s m o r e i n t e r p r e t a t i o n of s p e a k ers, more emphasis onstudentand
faculty r e a c t i o n s to such i s s u e s a s
r e t r o a c t i v e tuition, a continuing
b r o a d e n i n g of the e d i t o r i a l field,
and m o r e and b i g g e r p i c t u r e s .
S u m m i n g up his s u g g e s t i o n s ,
M r . M e n c h e r , judge for the weekly
p u b l i c a t i o n s of 2000-400U c i r c u l a tion, c o m m e n t e d , " A l l in all, you
should be on y o u r way to a fine
newspaper."
Students To Hear
Air Force Talks
Tuesday in Draper
Students i n t e r e s t e d in obtaining
i n l o r n i a l i o n about a c o m m i s s i o n in
the t i n t e d States Al r F o r c e w 111
have an o p p o r t u n i t y to talk to
MajiM' I b e o d o r e J a b l o n s k i , a r e a
iMIicer I raining School s e l e c t i o n
s p e c i a l i s t , on 1 uesilay t r o m
I (i a . m . until 3 p . m .
A c c o m p a n y i n g Major J a b l o n s k i
will be s e r g e a n t William J. Miner,
the local Air F o r c e R e c r u i t e r .
I hey will be on c a m p u s at Room
u s , D r a p e r Hall.
Though the U f i i c e r
1 raining
.school p r o g r a m is d e s i g n e d for
persons possessing a degree, college s e n i o r s can apply in t h e i r
s e n i o r y e a r and, if s e l e c t e d , may
e l e c t t r a i n i n g after
graduation.
Through its Officer
Training
School the Air F o r c e t r a i n s c o l l e g e
g r a d u a t e s , both men and women, to
become commissioned officers.
STATE COLLEGE NEWS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1962
PAGE 2
STATIC COLLEGE NEWS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1962
'2.0' Supported With Reservations
A week ago last Wednesday, the student Senate succeeded in mustering a 3/4
vote for an amendment to the Student A s sociation Constitution. The amendment
i s subject to student body ratification in
a referendum, which will be held in a
few weeks.
If ratified this amendment will require
all candidates for Myskania, SA officers,
s e n a t o r s and c l a s s officers to have a 2.0
cummulative average.
We of the Sfaie College News believe
that this amendment d e s e r v e s the support
of the student body. Although we believe
there a r e serious drawbacks, it does
s e e m better than having no standard
written into the constitution.
We do not believe the first s e m e s t e r
index is an accurate judgement of the
ability of an individual to participate
productively in an office, or of this
individual's ability to improve an index.
Yet at the same time, there should be
something to protect the student from
himself.
We do not believe participation on
student Senate, for example, necessarily
l e s s e n s the chances of a person to get
off probation. We know of no senator
who has flunked out in recent y e a r s . We
do know of people who entered Senate on
probation who served actively and well
and who a r e no longer on probation.
We do not believe that the marking
s y s t e m of our college is necessarily a
fair judgement of a p e r s o n ' s ability. We
all know of examples where a person
actually worked in a course and yet
failed. Either the person should not have
been admitted or the marking system is
faulty.
It should be noted that the 2.0 is not
required to remain in the college, but in
o r d e r to graduate, according to the
catalogue, on page 46, b.
Myskania in stating its position did
not say that it would oppose the amendment if it called for a 2.0 minimum. It
did state its reservations.
These reservations included that the
individual student has the right to decide
if he is capable of assuming an office,
that the students are aware of the situation and can vote accordingly and that
people with less than a 2.0 can be outstanding l e a d e r s .
After voicing all of these doubts we
want to restate our view that this amendment is deserving of student support.
The student wishing to voice his or her
approval of this change will cast a " y e s "
vote.
Since it considered that " i n good standing" means with a 2.0, we favor a
senate in good standing. We also favorhaving office holders take student teaching after their tenure, but we realize
this is not always practical.
We hope that at least 2/3 of the student body supports this proposal and that
at least 20'? of the student body votes.
JWG
Freshman Suffrage..Who Suffers?
name, his record and his smile. It is
easy to see that a popularity contest can
result, and with the election structure
a s it is now, freshmen a r e often more
i m p r e s s e d with the candidate's superficial qualifications than with his conc r e t e achievements.
If it is decided that freshmen retain
the voting privilege for .Myskania memb e r s , we believe that the following e l e c tion revisions should be considered:
1. A compulsory informative session on
elections in general, giving freshmen some c r i t e r i a to consider in the
selection of candidate's for all offices.
2. More information to all students on
.Myskania candidates,
including
stands taken on past and present i s sues, an accurate list of activities,
and pertinate academic information.
3. A careful record by l-.'lection (.lornmission of c l a s s voting percentages
and patterns for Student Association
officers and Mvskania m e m b e r s .
STATE COLLEGE NEWS
ESTABLISHED MAY 1916
BY THE CLASS OF 191b
I U1DAY , NOVKMHLK i, IfXi'i
No 20
Juniors May
Apply For
Ambassador
M rt 'i K( I M i l l
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name has been extended until the middle of November.
All students and faculty m e m b e r s a r e urged to
submit e n t r i e s on 3x5 c a r d s to the Student Personnel
Office o r to Shirley Bowler Blanchard by Student Mail.
The contest judges would like to remind e n t r a n t s
Officers of SEA
Attend Conference
"Reckon that's them mail-order womenfolk comin' in
Rip."
Common
Stater
R e p r e s e n t a t i v e s of Student K d u cation A s s o c i a t i o n
attended the
Annual F a l l L e a d e r s C o n f e r e n c e
held in the New Y o r k Stale l e a c h ri's
\ s s o c i a t i o n H e a d q u a r t e r s on
t I c l o b e r 27 and JN. \ | r . A n d e r s o n ,
advisor;
Mom; Me \ l l i s t e r , Ii r s l
v i c e p r e s i d e n t ; liob ( l i b s o n , second
v i c e p r e s i d e n t ; and Nancy A M e n ,
see rota r y , a t t e n d e d .
F r i d a y a l t e r m ion M r. ( ' . n r r i g a n ,
studcnl
N t. \ i h re. ' l o r ,
jrave -in
a d d r e s s rel.atinn edin\aIiona 1 p r o b l e m s lo p r o f e s s i o n a l
orgnniz.a
lions.
\ l l e r workshop session-,
i i r . K u l l n i a n , .Jr., assislanl e \ e
• • M I i v i ' s e e r c t a r v o l N V s I \ spoke
on the i-elalion o l s c h o o l h o a r d s I "
I'Mli h e I's,
I Veiling
u
' H'kslll ip
S a t u r d a y m o r n i n g , \1 r. s i . i ,,• r
m a i n , state e o i i s u l l a n l ol N \ -• I \ ,
"Alas.
Our d r i e d v o i c e s when we w h i s p e r
meaningless."
— 'I . S. Kliot
t o g e t h e r , -i n- qua •
-poke
,|,
||,e
role
ol
s|
W-,
>.
\ l l e r a 'A ' i r k s l n ip , m p r i ih s s i u n . ' i l
• • l'i al ion, i 11 I n , i HI N Y s I \ \ !| -
THE HIGH SCHOOL GOSSIP COLUMN . . .
Y o u r P h a n t o m R e p o r t e r t h i s week h a s n o t i c e d t h a i I ) . I . m l i
( t w o of o u r c a f e t e r i a h o n e y s ) a r e d e v e l o p i n g q u i t e a l i t t l e r o m - i
.More p o w e r to v a , k i d d i e s .
If m i a p p r o p r i a t e n a m e is s e l e c t e d , the yea r h o o k wi 1! r c l a i n the
p r e s e n t name ol Pedagogue. A ten
d o l l a r ( ' " - ( ip gall c e r t i f i c a t e w i l l
be aw n r d e d il a w i n n i n g p e r s o n o r
g r o u p is lo111111.
ses
- n i n - eon -1 s l e d i il p r i o r : i m , e m u
m i m i c a l ions and p u b l i c r e l a t i o n s ,
and m e m b e r s h i p .
l i v Stroud a n d S m i t h
that suitable n a m e s for a U n i v e r s i ty publication w i l l only be c o n s i d ered.
I his means that a c e r t a i n
amount of dignity must be m a i n t a i n e d , and that a p p e a l , a t t r a c t i v e ness and a p p r o p r i a t e n e s s a r e i m portant.
II is hoped thai e n t e r i n g students
and l a c u l t v m e m b e r s w i l l i n c l u d e
the s i g n i f i c a n c e of the n a m e s they
submit on Ihei r cut r y ca r r l s . 1 h i s
w i II enable the judges to e v a l u a t e
the e n t r y in i t s s i g n i f i c a n c e lo
S l a l e I nive r s i l v life and I r a d i t i o n .
CAMPUS QUEEN
Elections
MON.-WED.
9 til 3
REAL COOL . . .
Man,
l i k e who c o u l d e v e r snv we d o n ' t s w i n g " Why il it <•••
f o r S e n a t e ' s a p p r o p r i a t i o n ul m a n y " l u l l s , " w e ' d he r i g h t
.'
column.
.,
\ p p l i c a t i o n s f o r the 19f!3 C o l lege A m b a s s a d o r P r o g r a m w i l l be
a<oe.pted t h r o u g h M o n d a y , N o v u m
'"'r '
I l u -y m u s t hi; t y p e w r i t t e n
and s u b m i t t e d to H U S K Dunn Mi:),
M o n s t e r ol C u l t u r e , , t h r o u g h S t u 'I'-i'l M a i l . Kach a p p l i c a t i o n must
include the following i n f o r m a t i o n :
(1) a statement ol the student's
approximate c u m u l a t i v e a v e r a g e '
(2) a s u m m a r y ol the student's
college a c t i v i t i e s ; (3) a choice of
two or three c o u n t r i e s that the
student would like to visit and the
reasons for his choices: (4) a
statement explaining how the student believes he can represent
the U n i v e r s i t y and t h e , n a t i o n
a b r o a d and contribute to interna
tional understanding.
P i c t u r e s of the C r e e k o r g a n i z a tions for the Pedagogue Will be
taken in the individual houses on
these days:
Wednesday, Nov.
Kappa Beta
Srs-6:15
Jrs-6:20
Sigma Alpha
Srs-6:35
Jrs-fi:40
Phi Delta
Srs-7:0(l
J r s - 7 ; Dfi
S i g m a Lambda Sigma
Srs-7:2~i
. I r s - 7 ; 30
Sigma Phi Sigma
Srs-7;.)(l
,lrs-7:5,")
7
Sophs-6:25
Sophs-6:45
S o p h s - 7 : 10
.Sophs-7: :la
Sophs-8:0(1
Thursday, Nov. 8
* I beta \ i ( Uiicga
Srs-4:45
•Irs-l:."i0
Alpha Pi Alpha
Sophs-1: .~i
S r s - f i : 1)5
, I r s - 5 : 111 sophs-fi: 1
K d w a r d F l d r e d P o l l e r Club
S r s - f i ; 10
.)rs-l',: 15
S(iplis-(i; J
Heia /.eta
Srs-lr.30
Jl's-fuHf)
Sophs-fi: 1
I ..annua Kappa Phi
S r s - f i : fill
J r s - l l : ."I.'I
sophs-7;()
• C r o u p w i l l meet in the l.owe
I ounge ol Hi-ubacl'icr.
Friday,
P s i (la m m a
srs-4:05
.Irsi ' h i Signia 1 heia
Si's--1:2~>
.IrsKappa D e l t a
M-s- l:l.">
Jrs-
Nov. 9
I: III
N i p h s - I: l.">
l::ill
Sophs- l : : l . ,
I: 7(1
Sophs- l:.Vi
Communications
To the Editor:
To the Editor:
As a " v e r d a n t
freshmen," I
c a m e to State with my t r u s t y handbook, a l r e a d y read and r e r e a d . I
was very e x c i t e d and a l i t t l e s c a r e d
about the start of all these new
events.
Heading about R i v a l r y
gave me the idea that this would
t r u l y be a part of college life that
I would never forget. U n f o r t u n a t e ly, I now want to forget it.
Recently Senate went on r e c o r d
as a p p r o v i n g a m i n i m u m r e q u i r e m e n t of a 2.0 a v e r a g e for student
government.
As a S e n a t o r and as a m e m b e r
of the student body, I would like to
o f f e r my v i e w s on the subject. I
am d e f i n i t e l y
in favor of the
amendment,
It s e e m s to me that
a p e r s o n e l e c t e d to student g o v e r n ment who docs not have a 2.0 must
follow c i t h e r of two courses:
I.) Because of the t i m e he must
spend on his s t u d i e s , he w i l l not
ie able to f u l f i l l his duties as
thoroughly as he should. C o n s e quently, the school s u f f e r s ,
2.) Tie w i l l do a v e r y good job in
student g o v e r n m e n t , but w i l l not
have the o p p o r t u n i t y to b r i n g up
his grades.
Since the main p u r pose of c o l l e g e is to get an e d u c a tion, the school and the student both
suiter.
There a r c those who m a i n t a i n
that being in student g o v e r n m e n t
gives a p e r s o n the incentive to
b r i n g up his g r a d e s . T h i s may lie
I r u e , but doe-, it not also make it
h a r d e r for the p e r s o n to c a r r y out
this plan'.'
To me, the whole tone of R i v a l r y
I b i s year was very b l a s e I think
thai the Sophomores and their a t titude I n w a r d the new f r e s h m e n
decide the success or f a i l u r e of
Rivalry.
The feelings shown by
the Sophomores this y e a r (as I
o b s e r v e d them) were e i t h e r ones
of d i s i n t e r e s t o r contempt for the
I rcshniiMi. P e r h a p s the reason for
this lack ol s p i r i t was the d i s appointing lie score in last y e a r ' s
Rivalry.
1 think 11 w as very d i f f i c u l l f o r
M y s a n k i a to keep Ihe I r e s h m e n ' s
interest in H i \ a i r y up w hen the
I rush ba\ i • been e i t h e r ei i m p l c l e l y
ignored i n plainly ridiculed during
the week-. n| he, a i r y . F r i e n d l i n e s s
and a t r u e s p i r i t ol c o m p e t i l i o n
w e r e m i s s i n g . M v s k a n i a has done
a W o n d e r f u l job I ' o u - i i l c r i n g the
l a c k n | sophi m i c r o spi r i l ain I e n t h u s i a s m -In iw l l u - , \ , ai r.
I ei i n g r a t u l a l u e M y s k a n i a on a di l l i c u l l
t a s k w e l l done.
AMP THEM
GOO
THEME WAS ©ME
INSIDE A MAILBOX . . .
The question of eliminating freshman
participation in Myskania elections will
soon be a fervent one, and we feel that
a positive vote for this m e a s u r e is
necessary.
The qualifications for election to Myskania a r e nebulous.
Someone
who " h a s done a lot for the school" can
easily be soneone who " h a s his name
around a lot" — in the right places at
the right t i m e s .
F r e s h m e n , we feel, a r e in no position
to s u m m e r i z e a Junior candidate's a c cumulative college achievements. A list
of activities in the News can be as m i s leading as seeing a certain name or face
all over campus.
.Myskania candidates take no stand on
c u r r e n t campus issues. They neither
campaign, p r o m i s e , advertise nor d i s c u s s their m e r i t s , because the position
is often looked upon as an honor rather
than a job to be actively sought alter.
A candidate's only drawing card is his
VOL. .VI.VIII
Suggest Pedagogue Name Pedagogue
Contest Extension Announced Slates Greek
Shirley Bowler Blanchard, Editor-in-Chief of PedPhotographs
agogue, announces that the contest for a new yearbook
PAGE 3
Have you d e l v e d i n t o the d e p t h s of y o u r s t u d e n t m a i l l a t e l v , ..• h
the p r o s p e c t of s o r t i n g through r e a m s ol last m o n t h ' s m , . - , , . ; ,
scared you"
Be b r a v e — we hear r u m o r ol a m u e h n
I i ' i l l m : ::i
V. P. SPEAKS OUT . . .
A s h o r t c o m m e n t a r y on V . P . ' s n e w - c o i n e d " s l u r b . " Whv not "'-.'•
his " s l e a s y , sloppy, s e m i - c i t y ol the w e s t " d e l i n i t i o n , lo m •]•• :•
v e r y f a m i l i a r c a p i t a l city o l the e a s t ' '
* ^ 7 W ? ^ : ^ ^
INTERESTING OBSERVATION . . .
i i o o d heavens,
What HAS b e c o m e of o u r g l o r i " U - n o " " • c ; ,
lust at the moment when we i m a g i n e d I h e v ' d b e g i n pi iiirni..'.
I n u n d a t i o n a r o u n d the m u c h l a b o r e d - o v e r pi -kei h-i, ,-, . o
p r i z e 'A-is swept away to the olo.-,er s u r v e i l l a n e e ol ih.- a-it.- I I o a, I :
Blue
Bluejay
UlllSt
pel ' p i e
'•hrolhor"
no I
Ieel
1
" 'hose ol \- on \ \ h u i MI | o v e i | the s t i m u l a t i o n " ' las
k'
'•V|- s h a l l re I u r n . N e v e r t e a r , van who m i s s e d tin- pi or.' W -n • I •
•A a r n t h i s evenl one m - r k m a d v a n c e , lo dele, ei '. •,a • • "
I'onlusion.
Winston
' OF T H E WEEK
ip l o r the s e n i o r p l a y
K I N O
U I 91 IB
V I I. T »': l*
t: i l l A H
Iluste,:
Page
| i . n,«
DR. W M . GRIMES
nf the
n u m b e r one filter c i g a r e t t e . . . f i r s t in sales because it's first in f lavor.
T h e next time you buy c i g a r e t t e s , buy p l e a s u r e by t h e c a r t o n . . . W i n s t o n !
Philosophy
TONIGHT
P.,,..,
SVII m m
PURE WHITE,
)
lickets on sale lor \lunlc in llir (.uthedrul
H./. Coffee Hour lor SI.S
Keturn ol Senior Pedagogue Proofs
Hru. -
PLU
s FILTER-BLEND UP
FRONT
in
I). H.
Return of Senior proofs tor Pedagogue
Hru. H
i V I D N K S D A Y , NOVF.MHKK 7
IJt
.•••••;•••-•-•-.'.-. • •
•••••••
.••
fmi.li,
I'-niJisli
10-1 - Air Force Representative
"
.•:•:
WHO WIU THE PENGUIN BE??
it
"THE CASE OF
DOCTOR L A U R E N T "
I I laSDAY, NO Y F M I i l . l t <'
7:30 p.m. . Kappa Delta Epsilon Special Meeting.
\<>\ i Mm
IFG Presents
M O D E R N FILTER
MONDAY, V ) \ l M i l l |{ a
•Tv.'.'.-.-.-!-!-!-'.-.'.-.-.-.-,-. 1 .-. •'
Dept.
7::i0 P.M. Kid ( I M U M . w i :
H-'PI" '
8:30 p.m. - I.K.G. Film
S \ l l KDAV NOV! MUI K :i
l
':00 a.m. - lianner Hunt
SI VI) \\, NOV I Mill |{ 4
2:30 p.m. - Potter Club Open House
a
Presents
Its
Mruii.n lu-r
8:00 p.m. - Potter Club Date P a r t i
II i r
;l they d i d
I I I 111 q l l.'l 111 l e d .
t< I' I »•: w
Start with a carton and you'll end up k n o w i n g why W i n s t o n is America's
7: H) p.m. - Married Couples Club
\, lie
First Faculty speaker
FKIIMY, NOVI Mill U 2
1:00 p.m. - Frosh Orientation Meeting
Placement Interviews
n, il
STUDENT PEACE GROUP
College Calendar
1:00 p.m. - Sigmu Pi Sigma Meeting
WI > I | | | I
o r •• s i s t e r "
I n l e s s si u i i e w av i - Ii mild Ii i al li iw the I l'i ish lo I I I I I I I a I rili • app r a i s a l ol M v s k a n i a eandi d a l e s ,
Iheii I do mil t h i n k thov - h o i d d v o l e .
Ro Pelrick '63
ALWAYS AIM TO P L E A S E "
\\ hen 'lo Ae sign
A
M e m b e r s ol studcnl government
should be l e a d e r s , and t h i s includes
being a studcnl in good academic
standing.
The question ol allowing the
f r e s h m e n to v o t e l o r Mvskania has
also been brought up. \ l the r i s k
o f being l a b e l e d a " d i s g r u n t l e d
l o s e r " in last yea r ' s e l e c t i o n s , I
must say that I think that f r e s h m e n
should not v o l e .
Kememberingmy
o w n e x p e r i e n c e as a I reshmen and
h a v i n g --eon t w o l i v s h m e n c l a s s e s
s i n c e t h e n , I do not t h i n k that the
I reshmen know e n o u g h about the
c a n d i d a t e s to v o t e o b j e c t i v e l y .
This w i l l b r i n g up the q u e s t i n
o l w h e t l l e r u l ' Hi a Ihi • i i p p o r e l a s s n i c i i v o l e o b j e c t i v e l y . I t h i n k they
do to a la r g e d e g r e e . 11 you k n o w
a c a n d i d a t e p e r s o n a l l y , you a r e
b o u n d lo tin nk he i s m o r e q u a l i f i e d
than s o m e o n e you do not k n o w .
s i m i la r l v , in tin • easi • i il two e q u a l ly w e l l - q u a II I l e d 'andidales, pe rsona I II V w i l l play i | r i it in d e l c l ' ni millg V nil" v i l l i - ,
I a in sure that
Wnmi§toeto§te§itood.
I k e a, efi^arette Blhoimlci oy
iw Hi
subtitles
7:0(1 & 9:15
I) It!)
PHONOGRAPHS
REPAIRED
BLUE NOTE SHOP
HO
'",» I
O I I I I Oftfc
AVI
III y r
M
t
STATE C O L L E G E NEWS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1962
PAGE*
Players Offer Tickets
For RPI Productions
T i c k e t s for the 1962-63 s e a s o n
of the t h r e e p r o d u c t i o n s by T h e
P l a y e r s , the d r a m a group of R e n s s e l a e r P o l y t e c h n i c Institute a r e
now b e i n g sold. This is the f i r s t
t i m e in ten y e a r s that s e a s o n
t i c k e t s have b e e n offered.
Opens November 9
T h e 34th s e a s o n by the R e n s s e l a e r s t u d e n t group o p e n s on
N o v e m b e r 9 with Maxwell A n d e r s o n ' s w i n n e r of the C r i t i c s ' C i r c l e
award,
rV/n»tr*er. It will be followed by an evening with G e o r g e
B e r n a r d Shaw in March and Period
of Adjustment, T e n n e s s e e W i l l i a m s '
s e r i o u s c o m e d y e a r l y in May.
T i c k e t s $3.00
T i c k e t s for the s e a s o n may be
p u r c h a s e d for S3.00 by w r i t i n g to
the R . P . I . P l a y e r s , 707 B r o a d w a y ,
T r o y , o r d u r i n g the opening e n g a g e m e n t . R e g u l a r a d m i s s i o n s to
the p r o d u c t i o n s is S I . 2 5 .
The P l a y e r s will continue t h e i r
t r a d i t i o n a l p a t t e r n of four nights
of p e r f o r m a n c e s , F r i d a y and Satu r d a y , on two s u c c e e d i n g w e e k ends.
W/nfersef. frequently p e r f o r m e d
by t h e a t r i c a l g r o u p s c o n c e r n s i t self with the a f t e r m a t h of the
c o n t r o v e r s i a l Sacco-Vanzetti m u r d e r t r i a l in Boston d u r i n g the
1 9 2 0 ' s . T h e c o n v i c t e d m a n ' s son,
now grown, p e r s u e s all t r a c e s of
w i t n e s s e s in a d e s p e r a g e a t t e m p t
to p r o v e h i s father innocent.
Shaw Evening
The e v e n i n g with Cieorge B e r n a r d Shaw will feature the " D o n
J u a n in H e l l " s c e n e from the t h i r d
act of Man and Superman and Overruled, a one act play.
Performa n c e s for the Shaw shows will
open March 8.
Period of Adjustment
is a d e p a r t u r e from the traditional Will i a m s fare into the world of c o m edy.
Newsweek said it was "ail
i r r e s i s t i b i l y c o m i c swatch of c a s e
studies hilariously
illustrated."
The final production will open for
P a r e n t s ' Weekend on Mav 10.
STATE C O L L E G E NEWS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1962
British Films
Repeat Motif
Of Angry Men
Visitor Finds Favor (s)
On Off - Campus
Treks
bv Sandy Donaldson
With the H o m e c o m i n g Weekend
s e a s o n upon o u r Stately g i r l s , many
v a r i e t i e s of d a t e s can be o b s e r v e d .
F i r s t , t h e r e is the opportunist
date; she " g o e s with a c r e e p to
look o v e r the c r o p ; " w h e n e v e r she
is introduced to a b r o t h e r without
a d a t e , she is i m m e d i a t e l y " s i m ply c h a r m e d with y o u r house, i t ' s
the s h a r p e s t . And all those t r o phies."
The g o l d - d i g g e r can a l s o lie o b s e r v e d c o m i n g back to the d o r m
laden with p o s t e r s , m a g a z i n e s ,
m u g s , and p l a c e m a t s .
The only
r e a s o n she g o e s to a weekend is
for the favor, free e n t e r t a i n m e n t ,
and free m e a l s .
The girl who h a s been to h e r
f i r s t f r a t e r n i t y weekend can be
s p o t t e d a mile away. She is so
s u r p r i s e d by " t h e t h i n g s " that go
on, like 265 people t w i s t i n g in a
16' x 18' r o o m , o r " t h o s e d e c o r a tions."
Or t h e r e is h e r exact o p p o s i t e
who v o l u n t e e r s e v e r y t i m e to go
on a blind d a t e . She has been to
about 20 weekends at six different
c o l l e g e s (and institutions).
She
knows all the " c o r r e c t " n a m e s of
the f r a t e r n i t i e s , like FOGGY o r
SAP, and which o n e s supply the
most c l a s s o f f i c e r s o r a t h l e t e s o r
beer.
T h a t wonderfully funny B r i t i s h
c o m e d y Only Two Con Play, s t a r r i n g
P e t e r S e l l e r s , at first g l a n c e
s e e m s to be j u s t a s a t i r e on sex
and e x t r a - m a r i t a l a f f a i r s . Indeed,
t h i s i s m o s t a s s u r e d l y what the
p i c t u r e i s , and t h e r e is nothing
w r o n g with t h a t .
A bit of thought, h o w e v e r , will
r e v e a l a s t r o n g c o n n e c t i o n between
it and a g r o u p of films m a d e by
Britain's "angry y o u n g men."
P e o p l e like Tony R i c h a r d s o n , Alan
Sillitoe, John O s b o r n , and John
:
l r a i n e a r e a n g r y about the d i s t i n c t i o n s and s t r u g g l e s between
s o c i a l and e c o n o m i c c l a s s e s .
E x a m p l e s of such a n g r v i i l m - ,
c h r o n o l o g i c a l l y , a r e Loot Back in
And, of c o u r s e , t h e r e is the girl
who f i g u r e s she " o w e s him so much
for the wonderful w e e k e n d " and
b e c a u s e he paid h e r bus fare " a l l
the way up t h e r e " and just spent
so much on h e r ( t h a t ' s b e c a u s e he
was such a c h e a p - s k a t e that he
m a d e s u r e she saw just how much
lie paid for e v e r y t h i n g ) . Now she
h a s to send c o o k i e s to him e v e r y
two weeks and write e v e r y o t h e r
day.
\nger, Room at the Top, the
Entertainer,
Saturday
Night and Sunday
Horning,
a n d The Loneliness ot the Long
Distance
Runner.
T h e y a l l put t h e i r s o n a I
Finally, t h e r e is the girl who's
pinned to a f r a t e r n i t y m a n . . . w e l l ,
h e r weekend is a n o t h e r s t o r y .
p r o t e s t s in an e x e e p t i o n a l l v r e a l i s t i c s e t t i n g , the g r i m y , i n d u s t r i a l
towns of E n g l a n d .
Room at the Top, p r o b a b l y t h e in - >-1
famous film of this s o r t , c o n c e r n Joe L a m p t o n , a r u t h l e s s social
c l i m b e r whose r o m a n t i c p r o w e ^ e n a b l e s him to e s c a p e Irom hi-.
w o r k i n g m a n ' s s t a t u s into upper
s o c i e t y . Significant in the a-1! i"ii
is an a m a t e u r d r a m a t i c s group,
through winch J o e c o n i e s m n n
tact with the u p p e r c l a s s e s .
|<v
s t e p p i n g on p e o p l e , .)
iall\
r e a c h e s the u p p e r m o s t
social ladder.
rung ol I n -
But this e n d i n g is not a " I v i p p v "
one, s i n c e he knows that althi nigh
he m a y , to tin- public, a p p e a r '•>
tit into this s o c i a l c l a s s s t i l l , i,
h i s own mind, he realize-- thai he .
an o u t - s i d e r and a fraud.
I'he S e l l e r s film h a s a d c e i le lh
s i m i l a r plot. I he m a m c h a r a •>'•;•,
John L e w i s , is a p o o r , u n d e r p i: :
l i b r a r y w o r k e r in a s m a l l , - m r d : i
Welsh town.
When the higln-i
paying post ol a s s i s t a n t l i b r a r i a n
is v a c a t e d , John a t t e m p t s to - i n nit.
Through an a m a t e u r t h e a t : •
group he m e e t s the w it.- ot the
c h a i r m a n ol the l i b r a r v boa r :.
R e a l i z i n g that she can inlluen •
Der husband about tlie job, he e
t e m p t s an a f l a i r with h e r .
\|
thought the a t t e m p t n e v e r n- dl\
s u c c e e d s , the woman d u e - lall '.•<:
h i m , and n e e d l e s s to sav he i - ..'
fered the job.
All this is played f.11- Laugh- i,
the most e x p e r t A ay pi i s s i h l e , m l
is a s u b t l e spool ol the Room g e n r e
However il - ending I d l e r - >• ,P
those ol the i r i g m a l '• n l , , , . , • •
Minis, and this innovation ' n >
s h a d o w s a change in the ait:' i !•
ol the m o r e iaaaaii pi -t n .• this s o r t .
Instead ol aci ami ing -u •,.
sour though it mav be, a
' <
l a m p t o n did, John I ew is r e a l ; .'••
that he is b e c o m i n g nothing m •;••
than the w it.-' - I,,<>], a puppet Mm
s t r i n g s i,l A h i • • J I -.he
-nt i • -1
he
rejects
one,
the
|.,l,,
77ic Loneliness
Runner,
the
1111 u ,
has
llel'O
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cepted
bv
i el a i m ,
says Sulla (Skipper) Augustus, famed leader of the Roman fleet. "When you're out on the aqua," says Skipper,
"there's nothing like a Tareyton! The flavor is the maximus. In fact, inter nos, here's de gwtibws you never
thought you'd get from any filter cigarette'"
/-y"^^^^^y-~^sa:"^-•'''•'/•''X'sS'iiMfWtft,
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hitler
make*
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r e h i t iv e h
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ill it N • ^ p u i j l o l
at the Top\\
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In a I d i ' ; i n ,
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DUAL FILTER
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been
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"Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!"
r e I a I 11 s l i .
a n d r e t u r n - , I n In , A l i e
l i i I, c. e
i
,- n d i n g ,
l i n n i n g pi i i i . t
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JAKES
FOOD MARKET
504 Hudson Ave.
A l b a n y , hl.Y.
(V 2 - 4 2 1 1
IV 2 - 9 8 9 4
>'
Campus Current
by Sue Murphy
How r e a d i l y we b e c o m e b u r i e d in o u r little world, oblivious to all
the c r y i n g n e e d s of the peoples a r o u n d u s . We grow to be p r e s u m p t u o u s
of o u r nation and its g u a r a n t e e s , and we take for g r a n t e d those
f r e e d o m s which c o s t so very much.—And then we awake to an O c t o b e r t w e n t y - f i r s t , and a r e suddenly a w a r e of a horizon m o r e vast
than y e s t e r d a y ' s , and we turn hopefully to the sky.
We have lived so long without r e a l f e a r , for though we e x p e r i e n c e
c o n t i n u a l m o m e n t s of i n s e c u r i t y and doubt, we have n e v e r really
known the fear which confronted o u r p a r e n t s . But now we a r e made
to feel a rejuvenation of o u r i d e a l s , for with this challenge to our
beloved f r e e d o m s , o u r love and d e t e r m i n a t i o n a r e r e v i t a l i z e d , and
we e x p e r i e n c e a new and d e e p e r a p p r e c i a t i o n of and g r a t i t u d e for our
freedom.
Though we fear for o u r safety and the safety of o u r loved
o n e s , it is a d e e p e r , r i c h e r anxiety, one i n s p i r e d by s e l f l e s s n e s s .
Do you r e m e m b e r how you felt a s a 1 0 - y e a r - o l d when you saw a
s o l d i e r o r sailor'.' They s e e m e d so tall and s t r o n g and a w e s o m e and
so v e r y old; we were so proud to think of them as the d e f e n d e r s of
our country.
Well, the s o l d i e r s a r e still tall, s t r o n g and a w e s o m e ,
but they a r e now o u r b r o t h e r s and o u r friends.
Though we still feel p r i d e , it is now t e m p e r e d with this d e s p e r a t e
fear.
F o r we know now of the t r e m e n d o u s waste of w a r — the loss of
so many young, unfulfilled l i v e s , the inefficacy of so many y e a r s of
p r e p a r i n g to give s o m e t h i n g to mankind — b e s i d e s a dog tag.
This fear then is good, for it a w a k e n s in us o u r d o r m a n t goals and
m a k e s us long for the g r e a t n e s s which we all c o v e r t l y wish to achieve
— not the g r e a t n e s s of m a t e r i a l wealth and fame, but the g r e a t n e s s of
which all men a r e capable —the g r e a t n e s s which c o n s i s t s of the s u m mation of little things —that g r e a t n e s s which will e n a b l e us to leave
the world a little bit b e l t e r than it was at o u r conception.
Peace Group Stages First
Of Several Open Talks
by Toni M e s t e r
" T h e s p e c i a l i s t these days
l e a r n s m o r e and m o r e about l e s s
and l e s s until finally he knows
e v e r y t h i n g about nothing, while the
undergraduate learns lessandless
about m o r e and m o r e until he knows
nothing about e v e r y t h i n g .
Hither
e x t r e m e is f a t a l . "
T h e s e w o r d s w e r e s p o k e n by
Dr. Victor P a s c h k i s , a p h y s i c s
p r o f e s s o r of Columbia University
and a p a s t p r e s i d e n t of the Society
for Social Responsibility in S c i ence.
Dr. P a s c h k i s ' a d d r e s s r e cently at Student C e n t e r c o m p r i s e d the first formal p r o g r a m
p r e s e n t e d by the newly o r g a n i z e d
Student P e a c e C r o u p .
Dr. P a s c h k i s s t a t e d that e v e r y
p r o f e s s i o n a l , r e g a r d l e s s of the
n a t u r e and l i m i t s of h i s job, must
a s s u m e r e s p o n s i b i l i t y for the a c tions of the society in which he
l i v e s . " C o n s c i e n c e must be guided
by reasonable knowledge ofconse-
q u e n c e s , " he said and added that
a t t a i n m e n t of such knowledge inlp l i e d s a c r i f i c e s , both of an indiv i d u a l ' s l e i s u r e t i m e and ol his
a c c e p t a n c e by the m a s s e o m m u n ity.
In a c c e p t i n g this p e r s o n a l r e s p o n s i b i l i t y Dr. P a s c h k i s p a r t i c i Dated in a r e c e n t r e p o r t i s s u e d to
C o n g r e s s in opposition to the national fall-out s h e l t e r p r o g r a m . A
s p e c i a l i s t in t h e r m o d y n a m i c s , he
w r o t e that portion of the paper
d e a l i n g with the effects of heat
p r o d u c t i o n and r e t e n t i o n within the
shelters.
Dr. P a s c h k i s d o e s not
b e l i e v e that the A m e r i c a n public
is fully informed of the facts ot
n u c l e a r w a r , and he s t a l e d that on
the p a r t i c u l a r i s s u e of tall-out
s h e l t e r s , the information issued
by civil defense w a s m i s l e a d i n g a n d
inadequate.
Dr. P a s c h k i s then p r e s e n t e d the
n a m e s of s e v e r a l o r g a n i z a t i o n s ,
b o o k s , and m a g a z i n e s winch he
r e c o g n i z e d as r e l i a b l e s o u r c e s . A
student must be willing t o ' ' d i g " to
a c q u i r e the t a c t s , he said and r e c o m m e n d e d that s t u d e n t s ot e d u c a by Caye F r u s c i o n e
tion e s p e c i a l l y should a c c u s t o m
The Importance ol Being Earnest IS
t h e m s e l v e s to s e a r c h i n g , c o n d e n s a c l a s s i c of its kind ol h i g h - s t y l e , ing, and p r e s e n t i n g ideas Irom
drawing-room comedy.
F r a n k l y , a r t i c l e s and books.
lie called
we w e r e d i s a p p o i n t e d by the C l e v e t h ] s o | H . ( ) fessioiial t rnininjjt. *'
land P l a y h o u s e production which
, 1 U ( . s t i ( i m , ( | i,v ., student
u h| n
the D r a m a t i c s and A r t s Council ( | u l . i n ( , ,|„. question and a n s w e r
p r e s e n t e d last Tuesday night in [n,vnn\
which followed his talk,
P l l e HHI1
S
'
Dr. P a s c h k i s outlined what he hcAt first we w e r e i m p r e s s e d - b y
| i ( . v i . h ,,, |„. ., l e a s i b l e plan lor
the very s i m p l e s c e n e r y and by the o b t a i n i n g n u c 1 e a r d i s a r m a m e n t ,
a s y m m e t r i c a l l y balanced a r r a n g e n „ . | ' m l l . ( | s t a t e s , he said, should
meat o| the white w r o u g h t - i r o n
, 1 ( ,„ p , M p r o g r a m ol u n i l a t e r a l n m
l u r m l u r e all ol which s e t a p r o p e r , , . , , , v , . S i w h l t . h m e a n s giving up
'.V l o r m a l tone.
,,, ,,,,, | ) ; l S l , s s u r r o i i n d i n g
S1)mr
Hut the acting was something
Hns-ma and a n u m b e r ol our atomic
e l s e again. N e a r l y the whole l i r s l
However, these steps
Wl..miJll,
act d r a g g e d uncomfortably.
I he | | | l | s , | n . ; , , . , . , , m p a n i e d by wide
f a m i l i a r lines c a m e out ol the publicity in o r d e r to be elfeetivc
a c t o r s ' m o u t h s sounding b k e n o t h m ehalleiiging Hussia to " the peace
ing that O s c a r Wilde had e v e r
,..,, ,. ,. | !,',. I mted s t a l e s has taken
written.
., |,. w initiatives toward b e t t e r i n g
It was so d e p r e s s i n g that we Soviet \ n i e r i o a n r e l a t i o n s , s u c h
w e r e t e m p t e d not to c o m e back lor ; l s m , . n n n o v a l ol t r a v e l r e s t r i c Act II.
In laid, tlie only bright
l l l l l l s ,„, visiting R u s s i a n s , but he
spot in-all of Act One was Vaughall s t a t e d that they w e r e not p r o p e r l y
M e H r i d e a s the vary i m p r o p e r
p u b l i c i z e d b e c a u s e " t h e govern
manservant.
Mr. MeHride stood
„,,.,,, I s ,,f,.Mil| ,,l s o m e ol its own
out in tins tiny p a r t .
citizen..,," within such o r g a n i z a
That would have been a t e r r i b l e
Society,
tlo|ls
!la
m , , .j,,tin Birch
m i s t a k e ; lor during tlie rest id
B e c a u s e ol the s h o r t notice given
the play, e v e r y o n e gut down to bustt o , h ,. student body on Dr. Paseh
n e s s . Tlie r e s u l t was s h e e r delight.
k i s ' a p p e a r a n c e , few s t u d e n t s o t h e r
E v e r y little nuance ol W i l d e ' s
than group m e m b e r s w e r e p r e s e n t ,
verbalislie brilliance, especially
| | j s hoped that in the future the
s e v e r a l u n n e r v i n g puns, was r e t j t ol the student c o m m u n i t y will
b r o u g h t out.
tak,. advantage ol .sharing kiiowlJo Ann F m n e l l who played the l , ( | t4 ,, „,„( exchanging ideas with
t'linliliili'il on page 8
such cnligfitencd s p e a k e r s .
Play Starts Slowly
Picks Up Speed
Observer
Studiesby P a t J e w e l l
Probably his first impression,
a s he e n t e r s the u p p e r floor, is
that of the dim light c o m i n g in
through the s t a i n e d g l a s s windows
— b a r e l y enough to i l l u m i n a t e the
faded m u r a l s on the wall.
His
f i r s t feelings of awe may be inc r e a s e d a s he s e e s the t a b l e s
p a c k e d with s t u d e n t s , elbow to
elbow, t h e i r h e a d s bowed r e l i giously o v e r t h e i r work. (At l e a s t ,
u s u a l l y i t ' s t h e i r work; at t i m e s o n e
of t h e m may get mixed up and
r e a l i z e i t ' s his n e i g h b o r ' s work
h e ' s reading.)
The t a b l e s a r e
lighted by quaint little study l a m p s ,
which can be t u r n e d off for s l e e p ing.
Reference b o o k s , magazines,
and c a r d c a t a l o g s a r e duly [Minted
out to the e a g e r v i s i t o r , as he
s q u e e z e s between the v a r i o u s t a b l e s and s h e l v e s to get a c l o s e r
look, s t u m b l i n g a s he d o e s o v e r a
l o w e r d r a w e r of the c a r d catalog,
which s o m e b o d y h a s left open.
When he h a s been t h e r e a few
m i n u t e s he soon r e a l i z e s that the
first i m p r e s s i o n of quiet was a
false o n e .
There is an u n d e r c u r r e n t ol noise — a c o n g l o m e r a tion of r u s t l i n g , munching, c r a c k ling, w h i s p e r i n g , s c r a t c h i n g , int e r s p e r s e d by the " c l a n k " of
s o m e o n e o p e r a t i n g the m i c r o f i l m
machine.
D o o r s open ami shut,
s t u d e n t s shuffle in and g r e e t t h e i r
friends; c h a i r s scrape.
Hut o u r v i s i t o r h a s not much
t i m e to a b s o r b the a t m o s p h e r e of
the u p p e r l i b r a r y , for now he is
guided to the s t a i r s leading to the
lower level.
Hut before they
descend — hark.
They must put
t h e i r e a r s to the ground to d i s c e r n
w h e t h e r s o m e o n e is around the
bend of the winding one-way s t a i r c a s e — for to meet s o m e o n e on
the way, e s p e c i a l l y an e n d o m o r p h
— may be fatal, and traffic is
often heavy on this little pathway.
Hut t h i s t i m e , fortunately, nothing is h e a r d , and p e e p i n g c a u t i o u s ly d o w n w a r d , noonc is seen; so o u r
v i s i t o r and his guide c a u t i o u s l y
m a k e t h e i r way down to the lower
level.
Here, alter our visitor's eyes
adjust t h e m s e l v e s to n o r m a l light,
he s e e s m o r e b o o k s h e l v e s , a n u m b e r of b o o t h - l i k e c in t r a p t i o n s
called " g a r r e l l s "
dch block both
the s t u d e n t ' s view, and the student
h i m s e l f from sight, and again,
s o m e t a b l e s anil c h a i r s .
The c h a i r s at t h e s e t a b l e s p r o vide o u r inquisitive v i s i t o r with an
object of i n t e r e s t . 'They a r e not
ordinary chairs.
'They a r e wide
a r m c h a i r s , such as the m a s t e r ol
the family might use m sitting at
the head ol tlie t a b l e . ( )| c o u r s e in
most f a m i l i e s t h e r e is only one
m a s t e r (and one head ot the table),
while h e r e at each table we find
an a v e r a g e ot about twelve, juding
by the n u m b e r ol d i a l r s . 'This is
line — no student will get all 111l e n o r i t y c o m p l e x — but the problem is the c h a i r s a r e so wide that
the a r m s o1' adjoining c h a i r s lock
— and pulling the c h a i r s out in
o r d e r to sit in them is quite a
prol lelll.
They also make it i m p o s s i b l e for
the s t u d e n t s to pull the c h a i r IN
c l o s e enough It) the table. In tins
c a s e the student h a s tile choice ol
1) c h a n c i n g c u r v a t u r e ol the spine
by leaning o v e r the d i s t a n c e Irom
the c h a i r to the table, o r - 2) leaning back in the c h a i r and holding
the work on his lap — now chancing
the c o n s t a n t jest ling and pushing as
s t u d e n t s s q u e e z e past his stuck-out
chair.
Mere on the lower I loor the mi
avoidable u n d e r t o n e ol noi.se lound
in all inhabited l i b r a r i e s is inter
s p e r s e d by loud m e t a l l i c b u z z e s
p e r h a p s a signal ol s o m e kind
between die l i b r a r i a n s u p s t a i r s
and down, o u r a l e r t student hypothe s i z e s ; p e r h a p s it m e a n s the coast
is c l e a r in c a s e anyone wants to use
those " s u i c i d e s t a i r s . " It would
be m o r e u n d i g n d i e d , a l t e r all, lor
a l i b r a r i a n to he caught on them
than a student.
'The tour ol the l i b r a r y o v e r , the
duly i m p r e s s e d student is led away
to see the c a l e t e r ' a .
PAGES
Current Comment
Challengers Mentioned;
More Issues Discussed
by J o s e p h Galu
T h i s is the l a s t of a s e r i e s of
pre-election articles.
Since p r e v i o u s a r t i c l e s have
been devoted to the i s s u e s of the
g u b e r n a t o r i a l c a m p a i g n , this one
will c o v e r the c a n d i d a t e s involved
in o t h e r s t a t e - w i d e e l e c t i o n s a s
well a s a few c a n d i d a t e s for l e g i s lative p o s t s .
The s e c o n d c o n t e s t on the ballot
i s for the C o m p t r o l l e r s h i p .
The
major candidates are DemocratL i b e r a l A r t h u r Levitt and Republican John L o m e n z o . L o m e n z o is
an affable, p o p u l a r c a n d i d a t e with a
" n i c e - g u y " i m a g e , but he is without q u a l i f i c a t i o n s g e r m a n e t > the
office.
Levitt h a s held tin | )st
for eight s c a n d a l - f r e e y e a r s . His
careful administration has saved
the s t a t e a s much as .>2Uu,U00,000
p e r y e a r . He is c l e a r l y s u p e r i o r .
Poor Candidates
The third contest is for the post
of Attorney G e n e r a l .
Republican
l.efkowltz h a s done an u n e x c e p tional job, His D e m o c r a t - L i b e r a l
opponent, I am afraid, was s e l e c t e d
l a r g e l y b e c a u s e of r e a s o n o t h e r
than his a c c o m p l i s h m e n t s — his
race.
The nomination of 'he two men
for the State C o u r t ol Appeals h a s
again r a i s e d n e w s p a p e r opposition
to the e l e c t i o n of j u d g e s .
In the c o n t e s t l o r b a i t e d S t a t e s
.senator, c h a l l e n g e r to Republican
• I acob K. .1 a v i t s is I i e m o c r a t I l b e r a l .James Donovan.
•Javils h a s fought lor liberal
c a u s e s d u r i n g his l i r s l t e r m ; so
much so that one ot the most
d e d i c a t e d b a c k e r s of civil r i g h t s
l e g i s l a t i o n c o m p l a i n e d that J a v i t s
k i l l s b i l l s in this field with h i s
c o n s t a n t strengthening amend-
We all
m e n t s . Donovan c o n t i n u e s to be
unknown due to the t i m e he h a s
spent in a t t e m p t i n g to gain the
r e l e a s e of the Bay of P i g s invasion
prisoners.
Congressmen and State L e g i s l a t o r s
Several New Y o r k State c o n g r e s s m e n have done o u t s t a n d i n g
jobs and d e s e r v e to lie r e - e l e c t e d
— Otis Piek ( d i s t r i c t 1, D e m o c r a t L i b e r a l ) , Hugh C a r e y (15, D . - l . ) ,
• J o h n Lindsay (17, Republican),
Samuel S. S t r a t t o n (35, D.-L.) and
C h a r l e s Goodell (38, R.).
O t h e r s in New Y o r k ' s delegation
have p e r f o r m e d so inadequately
that they should be r e p l a c e d i m mediately — Steven Derounain (3,
R.), Frank B e c k e r (5, R.), Adam
Clayton Powell (1H, D.) J a m e s
Henley (21, D.), ( d i a r i e s A. Buckley (23, D.) and K a t h e r i n e St.
George (27, It.),
Among s t a t e s e n a t o r s , four R e p u b l i c a n s no longer s e e m to r e p resent their party or their dist r i c t s — W illinm Conklin ( B r o o k lyn), MacNeil Mitchell ( M a n h a t tan), William Condon ( W e s t c h e s ter) and W a l t e r Van Wiggeren ( F u l ton, H a m i l t o n , H e r k i m e r , and
Montgomery).
A m o n g assemblymen, several
R e p u b l i c a n s d e s e r v e c r e d i t for
c o u r a g e in defying t h e i r p a r t y ' s
s t a n d s on r e - a p p o r t i o n m e n t and
tuition at the1 s t a t e u n i v e r s i t y .
These men a r e R e p u b l i c a n s J e r r y
Black (Schuyler), C h a r l e s H e n d e r son (Steuben), and Paul 'Taylor
(Yates).
Some u p s t a t e D e m o c r a t s m e r i t
r e - e l e c t i o n b e c a u s e of t h e i r r e c o r d s and the fact that they have
helped c r e a t e an active two p a r t y
s y s t e m in u p s t a t e New York. They
a r e Vincent Arnone and Albert
Hnusbeck ( D . - L . ' s , Buffalo a r e a ) ,
Charles S t o c k m e i s t e r (D.-L.,
R o c h e s t e r ) , and Paul Worlock ( D . I.., Oneida).
Lastly, t h r e e Repunlican A s s e m b l y m e n d e s e r v e to be r e p l a c e d
on the b a s i s of g e n e r a l i n c o m p e tence.
They a r e W i l l a r d D r u m m
(Columbia), J o s e p h C a r l i n o ( N a s sau) and W i l s o n
Van D u z z c r
(Orange).
Some m e n , from both
p a r t i e s , e s c a p e d this last c l a s s i f i cation by r e t i r i n g o r by being d e feated in the S e p t e m b e r p r i m a r i e s .
make
mistakes.
ERASE WITHOUT A TRACE
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EATON I'AI'KIt COHi'OHAriON {'JB'i PITTSriELD, MASS.
STATE COLLEGE NEWS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1962
STATE COLLEGE NEWS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1962
PAGE 6
CHEERLEADERS
In recognition of their fine s e r v i c e s , the News i s
printing, below, the pictures of the varsity and frosh
cheerleaders.
These g i r l s , who have done so much in building both
team and school spirit, may be seen at all home
s o c c e r and basketball games. They will be down front
clapping, jumping, and leading State fans in c h e e r i n g
their t e a m s to victory.
Don't let these girls get hoarse alone, stand up
and shout right along with them; that's what t h e y ' r e
there for so l e t ' s all go out and give them a hand.
F r o s h c h e e r l e a d e r s k n e e l i n g l e f t to r i g h t : Nancy Schaeffer, J o Ann
Leone. Standing l e f t to r i g h t : G i n n y B o r y s , Vera K o m a n o w s k i , a n d
Toni Marco.
by Bill Colgan
by Bill Branick
In their s e c o n d consecutive
match with A.B.C. last Monday
night, the State bowlers finished
second to a determined bunch of
Owls who were seeking revenge for
Inst week's crushing 4-0 defeat.
Led by Ed Westermann's 235-621,
A.B.C. reversed the score of their
last match with the Peels, who just
couldn't seem to get the ball rolling. J e r r y W'igler fired a 221 to
insure an eight pin victory in the
first game. The second game told
much the same story as Westermann's big game, backed by Chuck
Brown's 194, more than offset Bill
Branick's fine 230 to give the Owls
the game by 37 pins. In the third
game, Westermann and John Demkowski combined games of 198 and
203 to inflict an 18 pin loss on the
men from State.
Leading the Statesmen were Bill
Branick with 230-505 and Paul
Beaudin with 172-509. Splits ngnin
meant the difference, but all was
not lost as Dave Roegner again
showed his splil-mnking ability by
converting three of the more difficult ones. State couldn't string
tht? strikes together while the Owls
came through with sonic great
clutch bowling. Strange as it may
seem, A.B.C. will be next week's
opponent.
This is explained by
the fact that the C.U.I. J. league
has a place round every other
week, which gives some teams a
chance to pick up points on the
leader, K.P.I, at this time. During a place round, the first-place
team bowls the second-place team,
the third-place team m e e t s the
fourth-place team, nntl the team in
fifth place battles the cellar-dwel-
bv Paula Uuhik
I III I I e I i i li e r 2 5 , sjgm.a \ Ipb
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m a n who is i n t e r e s t e d in g o i n g o u t
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( ' u a e l i ( i a r e i a in the Page < i y m .
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"VOI It .11 W l l . l l t "
Can You Imagine?
Now let your imagination run away for a minute.
P i c t u r e t e a m s from other colleges m a r c h i n g onto the
College Playing Field, only to be devoured by the
Potter machine. P i c t u r e the flags waving, the band
playing, the c h e e r l e a d e r s cheering, and the booze flowing. Siena today, Ohio State tomorrow!
Okay, now that we've built you up to a mad frenzy,
forget it. Like it o r not, there won't be any more
football g a m e s at State this y e a r . Not that Potter
hasn't tried i t s best to get a few games set up h e r e .
Rut like Murphy said, anything that can go wrong, will
go wrong. In this c a s e plenty has gone wrong, and
it can all be summed up in one word — insurance. Yes,
insurance has another meaning besides the Pavlovian
response of $27.50 on registration day. In the s i m plest t e r m s in r e g a r d s to State football, it means no
insurance, no football.
Now, State students a r e insured up to their e a r s
for any d i s a s t e r that might befall them during the
y e a r . But, what about the men from Oneonta o r Siena'.'
Well the answer is obvious.
If Minerva herself
speared them, they still couldn't collect a dime of
insurance. Now the .administration takes the view that
men engaging in a touch football game might just suffer
something more serious than a stubbed toe (though we
hope nothing a s fatal a s a s p e a r wound). T h e r e ' s just
no way Potter can get around this ruling. T h e r e a r e
no other suitable fields in Albany to play on. So, E E P
will be forced to play all ol its games away from the
eyes of most State students. So maybe next y e a r ?
.ehade'
• h',1 I in Mi
. . • i l l .'la.IK
I'll
•>J)1 Central Avenue
No r e a d e r , y o u r s truly hasn't gone o v e r the top,
and you a r e n ' t having Hedrick's Hallucinations. We
admit that we did s o r t of stretch things in the title
a might, State College being exchanged for Potter
Club.
But we enacted o u r little subterfuge to r a m
home our point—for the first time in i t s history,
State College has a football team competing with other
schools on a regularly scheduled basis.
Once again the men from Potter have made a
shambles of the AMIA football league, winning the
title behind a machine-like offense, and an especially
stingy defense. Last y e a r Potter, after winning the
local title of c o u r s e , marked a first h e r e at State by
playing the winners of the R.P.I, i n t r a m u r a l grid loop.
Not to have their winning ways s h o r t - c i r c u i t e d by a
band of c o m p u t e r s , the men of EEP rolled to a 15-0
victory.
This y e a r the Club h a s e n l a r g e d i t s offcampus schedule to five g a m e s , making for one whale
of a season. E E P h a s already played one of these
games, against the Cobleskill Barons, and e m e r g e d
with a 24-0 runaway triumph.
IhA
II , l / e | ,
'
Siena
Oneonta
Cobleskill
Hudson Valley
,11.I
ii V . ' I ' • I i,dd
i i , . -11 i n I ' l a I
' ' '.
,i l i i l 'i i
Harold Finkle
Nov. 1
Nov. 5
Nov. 8
Nov. 10
State's v a r s i t y soccer team will face i t s oldest
r i v a l , R P I , next Wednesday in a night contest at
B l e e c k e r Stadium. It will be the P e d s ' second straight
night game, and it is hoped that a large crowd will
turn out.
In a s i m i l a r night game last Wednesday, the Peds
evened their s e a s o n ' s record off at 4 - 4 , by clipping
the highly-rated Hawks from New Paltz 2 - 1 . A cold
r a i n turned the field into a quagmire, slowing up the
offense of both t e a m s .
The first half was particularly rough on the P e d s ,
who were unable to move the ball at all, while falling
behind 1-0 on a goal by Al Cotze. The second half
witnessed an entirely different story, however, as the
P e d s dominated play from the opening kickoff.
The third q u a r t e r was only two minutes old, when
Luis Espina broke lose from a wild melee twenty y a r d s
in front of the goal and blasted the ball into the net to
tie the game. The Peds continued to p r e s s the tiring
v i s i t o r s , just missing goals on several occasions.
Then five minutes into the final stanza, Al Henrekson
moved in from the left wing and boomed the ball into
the upper right hand corner. This proved to be all the
m a r g i n State needed to ice the game.
State Cross-Country Team Takes
13th at Canissus Invitational Meet
Frosh Booters
Drop Another
Close Game
The f r e s h m a n s o c c e r t e a m , s t i l l
looking for their
first victory,
fought h a r d a g a i n s t N o r t h A d a m s ,
but S t i l l went d o w n l o defeat —
t h e i r s i x t h o f the y e a r — _ ' - 1 .
Freak Goal
I h e Peds t e l l b e h i n d 1-0 in the
I i r s t h a l l o n a I r c a k g o a l , a shot
w h i c h w o n ' t be seen to o f t e n . An
A l b a n y f u l l b a c k a t t e m p t i n g lo get
Ihe b a l l back t o h i s g o a l i e so he
might d e a r it, accidentally kicked
the b a l l past the s t a r t l e d n e t m i n d e r , who w a s n ' t q u i t e p r e p a r e d
t o r the k i c k . W i l l i t h i s a s s i s t a n c e
I r u m the \ I b a l i y t e a m , North
A d a m s r\\u\o
to the l e a d f o r the
r e m a i n d e r o l the 11 r s l ha l l .
Peds Bow to Bridgeport 3-1
Last Saturday at the University of Bridgeport, the
P e d s played one of their best g a m e s of the season,
but were n e v e r l e s s forced to bow to their undefeated
hosts 3-1.
Most of the first half was a s e e - s a w affair, with
neither team able to find the nets. It was not until
15:45 of the second period that Bridgeport halfback
Al Cuylo tallied the game's first s c o r e on a nearly
perfect cornerkick, which he headed past State goalie,
Gary Penfield.
R a l l y in Second H a l f
The determined Peds rallied at the start of the
second half, scoring almost immediately on a goal by
Luis Oepina.
The score was s e t up on a beautiful
a s s i s t by State co-captain Ed Broomfield, and knotted
the game up at one all. The r e s t of the third period,
and the s t a r t of the fourth saw many attempts by the
w i n n e r s to break the tie. The tremendous goal keeping
of Penfield stopped them cold, as the Ped s t a r came up
with 12 saves during this time.
The tie was finally broken by Bridgeport on a very
c o n t r o v e r s i a l play with just eight minutes remaining.
On a c o r n e r kick Penfield leaped high and speared the
zooming ball. On the way down he was pushed into
the goal, and Bridgeport was awarded a s c o r e . P e n field said after the game, "I didn't even have a chance
to hit the ground, before I was h i t . "
This goal had a demoralizing effect on the Peds,
and five minutes later Bridgeport left wing Joe Checcio got away from his defender and blasted the last
point of the game into the upper right hand corner of
the nets.
Co-op
Guddot Again
I h e f r o s h k i c k e r s got back i n t o
the g a m e i n the thi r d p e r i o d o n a
g o a l b y , who e l s e , ( l e o r g c ( i u d d a t ;
a l l o l the A l b a n y g o a l s t h i s y e a r
h a v i n g been s c o r e d by M r . ( i u d d a t .
I he g a m e r e m a i n e d t i e d u n t i l the
l a s t m m u l e o l p l a y , when w i t h f i f t y
s e c o n d s to go, N o r t h A d a m s s c o r e d
' l i e t i e - b r e a k i n g g o a l and p i n n e d a
l o u g h d e l e a t on Ihe f r e s h m a n .
A g a i n , as h a s 1 n p o i n t e d out in
p r e v i o u s , '.ases, the I 'eds w e r e
h a m p e r e d by Ihe lack o l a w e l l
c o o r d i n a t e d s c o r i n g attack.
I he
w h o l e s c o r i n g a t t a c k s e e m s to be
c e n t e r e d around (ioorge (Iuddat,
and in no s p o r t c a n i me man en rrv
a t e a m to a s u c c e s s f u l s e a s o n .
\\ i t h o n l y one g a m e left to p l a y
( t h e I r o s h p l a y e d T u e s d a y against
((range County) t i m e
is really
g r o w i n g s h o r t and i l i s hoped that
the Peds w i l l be able to s a l v a g e a
v i c t o r y out o l the s e a s o n - a se i
son w h i c h h a s 1 n r o u g h f o i - I I .
SUPPORT
THE TEAM
by Mike Kolbe
State's H a r r i e r s journeyed to C a n i s s u s , New York
for the Canissus College Invitational C r o s s - C o u n t r y
meet last Saturday. The t e a m ' s previously undefeated
number one man dropped h i s first r a c e this season.
Tom finished eleventh in a field of 170 r u n n e r s with
24:23. Bruce Kidd, University of Toronto, copped the
m e e t by striding the 4.7 mile Delaware P a r k c o u r s e
in 22:14.5, bettering his last y e a r ' s course r e c o r d by
19.6 seconds.
Second place went to Ed Winrow of the State Univ e r s i t y at Buffalo. The third spot was nailed down by
T o r o n t o ' s Bob Buchanan. Tim Burns of Buffalo State
was fourth and Bill Mills of Toronto was fifth.
Buffalo State Wins
In team standings the University of Toronto was
first with 4 1 , The State University at Buffalo was
second with 87, Roberts Wesylan was third with 153,
and State's Peds finished thirteenth out of twenty-one
schools with 368. Le Moyne was fourteenth with 377.
The scoring H a r r i e r s besides Tom were: 69 Dennis
Tuttle, 74 Bill Bronson, 106 Dick Sarnowski, 108
Steve Doleski, and State's displacer Guy McBride 124.
" I t wasn't his d a y , " said Coach Munsey when asked
about the performance of State's number one Ped, Tom
Robinson. The course was the longest he had ever
run over and the competition was the stiffest he had
e v e r faced. He got off to a bad s t a r t but worked his
way up to sixth and held that position throughout the
r a c e . It was in the last crucial 350 y a r d s that Tom
was challenged and couldn't quite answer his challeng e r s . " H e just didn't seem to have i t , " commented
Coach Munsey.
T e a m D i d Well
While Tom didn't win, he and h i s fellow P e d
t e a m m a t e s came up to all of their Coach's expectations.
The team was in the top fifteen and for a school that
h a s had C r o s s - C o u n t r y for only two y e a r s this is
quite an accomplishment. " I t was a team effort all
the way and they c a m e through with flying c o l o r s . "
Quote Coach Munsey.
Next to Siena's, perhaps the toughest dual meet
competition State's X - C e r s will have will be the New
Paltz meet tomorrow.
This team, whose two key
men a r e exchange students from Kenya, defeated
Siena two weeks ago 21-33.
Potter Club Wins Football Title;
Defeats APA In Last Tilt, 18-0
In the final week of the A.M.I.A. football season, Potter Club finished the y e a r
vvith a pair of victories, beating S.L.S. 33-0, and topping A.P.A. 18-0 to clinch the
league championship.
In the bit game of the season Monday, Potter Club ground out a convincing 18-0
victory over A.P.A.
As usual, the weather failed to cooperate, a s a cold wind
whipped a c r o s s the field and early d a r k n e s s made the ball hard to see late in the
g a m e . On A . P . A . ' s f i r s t p i n y I r u m
s r r m i i n a g e fc> 1 I u w I n g P o t t e r ' s
o p e n i n g k i e k o f f , I'al Spiooi p i c k e d
( i l l a p a s s .ui I h i ' 13 y a r d l i n e .
A l t e r a s i x y a r d l o s s , P o t t e r (,iH
Mike ('.aiiierata
p a s s e d to V i to
D ' A n g e l i c u l u r Ille I'D. I'lie PA I'
I r y f a i l e d , a n d f o l l o w i n g Ihe k i c k o i l , A . P . A . u a s f o r c e d to p u n t .
H . - g i ,1 I'al lull in B i a i
p. ' I '
i ', .|,. I l i a l
O I ' l - N Y O U R OWN
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ON m i ; A V F M T ; "
S l ' l l ' l ' Mill
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I J I uydoy Toinorru w
Seven l o a m
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Irateniilie.-i.
I hose l o o n - , A I H . '.sill !»• i'urn
p o t m g again-,1 P u l l e r H V a -, h,l
luw.v K M , •• i j i ( a111 • • < I by l o n v I d
".'•'. i T l ' i , \\ a t o r b u r y , • a p l a u i e d U\
Hon l l . ' i l r ; M'nli ,., n lluii.-,o- I \ ( i,
c a p t a i n e d b\ H i l l
H r a n i ' k ; tinsophs,
ipl.a Hi' d l.v \ r i m - J-ii .1. i n ;
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api a • t n -< J liy I ' l n l
I h u i i i ' ; - , , :uii| t) i< - N e w m a n I ' h i l i ,
'• .-ipl.'tirn-iI by i l r v r Mm gii-
i l l i;i K ; n i \ I' ui
Ihe
k m . M I al pi ,• ,i i l l .
I he
AMIA Sets Up Keg Loop
llelwei'll
in.I I h'H' day le agin- is
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I'cggy
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Pin and s i g M p h , lb,- l i r a
plaee
Janic
A <•**"»*;-•* •
State College Football Schedule
WAA Ends
Soccer Season
Next Tuesday
Varsity c h e e r l e a d e r s s t a n d i n g l e f t to r i g h t
B i o t e y , ,lo Ann I z / o , Joanne <;ross.
Booters Home Against RPI
In Night Game at Bleecker
Spinning; the
Sports Wheel
Ped Bowlers
Defeated
By Owls, 4-0
PAGE 7
DOVER - GROVE - BANTAM
MERIDIAN - BEACON
COLLIER - DELL
MENTOR -APOLLO
SIGNET - HARPER
SPECTRUM - CREST
at the Co-op
Oyster
Mall
Mack
While tt
(', ray
SWEAT SHIRTS —
Yours for only $ 0 8 9
m>
and up
CREW SHIRTS — $1.98
while they last
;W;
bJfci-^
Hotter C l u b quarterback Mike c a n i a r u l a r e c e i v e s hike from center in
game
game w i t h Al' \ iiionda.v. I l l ' v\on 1H-0 to c i n c h \MI.A f o o t b a l l
championship
M a r l i n g I r u m I hi-1 r o w n ll:.', P o l l e r g r o u n d , mi v a n i l l i c In A. P. A . ' s
M , I n . i n w h e r e D ' A n g e l l o o look :i
l a l e r . a l and p a s s e d to Spieei on the
Avo, a m i o n Ihe lin.'il p i n y o l Ihe
pe i i.i.l, i ' a i n e r.ala swept Ihe end l o r
the s c o r e .
In Ihe s e c o n d q u a r t e r ,
Potter
a g a i n c o m r o l l e d Ihe p i g s k i n , lull
b i l l e d lo s e n r e when A . P . A . ' s
Charlie Hunter intercepted n P o t l e i a e r i a l a n d r a n i l b a c k 45 y a r d s
to P o l l e r ' s 4 ' i y a r d l i n e . A l t e r an
•xohange o f p u n t s f o l l o w i n g t h t '
s e c o n d hall kickol'l, Canierata
t e a m e d up w i t h U ' A n g t s l i c o a g a i n ,
t h i s t i m e o n a 58 y a r d p a s s a n d
r u n p l a y f o r the i c i n g o n P o t t e r ' s
championship cake.
T h e f o u r t h p e r i o d w a s m a r k e d by
Ihe i n c r e a s i n g c o l d and s e v e r a l
f u m b l e s as the b a l l b e c a m e h a r d e r
to s e e i n the i n c r e a s i n g d a r k n e s s .
i •
•
•
•
• •
•
.-V/.1-,
. . . . . . .
•
(••,-,.,-
•
.
:•
:.
•
.
mmsmsmomsemm
.
S T A T E C O L L E G E NEWS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1962
PAGES
OnGatnp* MocShtuman
JtotUe
Jtowli:
(Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf," "The Many
Loves of Dobie GiUit," etc.)
Ticket*
n o u n c e s that the following u p p e r c l a s s m e n w e r e pledged on Monday
evening: Paul B r i g g s , Phil Manitt a , J i m F r a l e y , C h u c k C o o n , Marty
M i l l e r and Marv L a s h e r .
SIGMA PHI SIGMA
EAT, SLEEP, AND MATRICULATE
T h e trouble with early morning classes is t h a t you're too sleepy.
A t late morning classes you're too hungry. At early afternoon
classes you're too logy. At late afternoon classes you're too
h u n g r y again. T h e fact is—and we might as well face i t — t h e r e
is no good time of d a y to take a class.
W h a t shall we do then? Abandon our colleges to the ivy? I
say n o ! I say America did not become the hope of m a n k i n d and
t h e world's largest producer of b u t t e r f a t s and tallow by r u n n i n g
a w a y from a fight!
If you're always too h u n g r y or too sleepy for class, then let's
hold classes when you're not too hungry or sleepy: namely, when
y o u ' r e eating or sleeping.
Classes while eating are a simple m a t t e r . Just have a lecturer
lecture while the eaters eat. But watch out for noisy food. I
mean who can hear a lecturer lecture when everybody is c r u n c h ing celery or matzo or like t h a t ? Serve quiet stuff—like a n c h o v y
paste on a doughnut, or steaming bowls of lamb fat.
And kindly observe silence while lighting your post-prandia
Marlboro Cigarette. D o n ' t be striking kitchen matches on y o u r
Lee Kerpel ' 6 4 , P r e s i d e n t , a n n o u n c e s that t h e r e w a s an open
h o u s e f o r o f f - e n m p u s men last F r i day. She w i s h e s to thank the s o r o r i t y r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s for a t t e n d ing.
The c h a i r m e n for s e l l i n g f l o w e r s
for H o m e c o m i n g Weekend a r e Ruth
S a m p s o n , Shelia S t r o m w a s s e r , and
Doris Wexler, J u n i o r s .
KAPPA BETA
P r e s i d e n t F r a n k Banta ' 6 3 , a n n o u n c e s that the f r a t e r n i t y h a s
p l e d g e d the following u p p e r c l n s s men: Dave B r a t t , Bob Dietz, Bob
L u c z y n s k i , Ray S e v e r n s , A r t John ston and T o m D e l a m a t e r .
GAMMA KAPPA PHI
ALPHA PI ALPHA
P r e s i d e n t Sue Piatt ' 6 3 , ann o u n c e s that Paula Dulak '64, w a s
pledged Monday night.
Larry Coleman '63, President,
a n n o u n c e s the pledging of the following u p p e r c l n s s m e n : Doug M o r gan and Paul S l u s a r , J u n i o r s , and
Rich O l e n i c z a k ' 6 5 .
A work p a r t y will be held at
the f r a t e r n i t y h o u s e t o m o r r o w
from 10-1 and 1-4.
BETAZETA
Loraine Crispell '63, president,
a n n o u n c e s that Peggy Ives and J a n is B i s c e g l i a , S o p h o m o r e s , w e r e
pledged Monday night.
A pajama p a r t y was held for
the s i s t e r s last F r i d a y night at the
sorority house.
A coffee h o u r will be given Monday e v e n i n g for the b r o t h e r s of
Sigma Lambda Sigmn.
THETA XI OMEGA
Charles Baker '63, president,
w i s h e s to w e l c o m e the following
u p p e r c l n s s m e n who h a v e been
p l e d g e d to the fraternity: Walt
P e t e r s ' 6 4 , and Al Drake, H a r r y
Kenyon, Doug P e t e r s o n , Don P i c k w o r t h , and J i m Slenker, Sophomores.
PHI DELTA
P r e s i d e n t June IJruian ' 6 3 , ann o u n c e s that the Phi Delta b a n n e r
was s t o l e n
r e c e n t l y , but was
fortunately r e c o v e r e d .
The f a l l h o u s e - c l e a n i n g took
p l a c e last Saturday afternoon from
3-5.
B a r b a r a Hummel '6-1 s e r v e d
as chairman.
EDWARD 6LDRED POTTER CLUB
* tut Wlcfout frijoiyfaj.'
jeans. Instead carry an ember from the dormitory fireplace in
y o u r purse or pocket. I'lace the Marlboro against t h e ember.
Light it quietly. Smoke it quietly. Oh, I know I ask a great
d e a l ! I know t h a t one's natural instinct upon e n c o u n t e r i n g
Marlboro's fine flavor and filter is to throw back one's head a n d
bellow great, rousing cries of joy. B u t you must not. You m u s t
contain your ecstacy, lest you disturb the lecturing lecturer.
You can, if you like, permit yourself a few small shudders of
pleasure as you smoke, b u t take care not to wear g a r m e n t s
which will set up a clatter when you s h u d d e r - l i k e taffeta, for
example, or knee cymbals.
P r e s i d e n t Gary P e n f i e l d ' 6 3 , ann o u n c e s that Uick O d o r i z z i and
G a r y Moore, S o p h o m o r e s , w e r e
appointed h e a d s of the H o m e c o m ing float c o m m i t t e e .
A date p a r t y will be held tonight
from 8-12 at l l a p p e r s R e s t a u r a n t .
An o p e n - h o u s e will be held Sunday afternoon from 2:30-5:00. Dan
T w o m e y will show s l i d e s of his
r e c e n t t r i p lo South A m e r i c a . On
Monday evening, the followingpeople w e r e pledged: J i m Olson ' 6 3 ;
T o m C r n h n n , Roger Ritzmann,
Mike ( i i m i g l i a n o , R e r n i e C a r r o l l ,
J u n i o r s ; Tom Robinson, Pat P e a r son, l.ee Co menu, J o e M a z z a r u l l i ,
anil John S c h n e i d e r , S o p h o m o r e s .
Let us turn now to the problem of learning while sleeping.
First, can it be done?
Yes, it can. Psychologists have proved that the brain is
definitely able to assimilate information during sleep. T a k e , for
instance, a recent experiment conducted by a leading Eastern
university (Stanford). A small tape recorder was placed under
t h e pillow of the subject, a freshman named (Hebe Sigal'oos.
When Glebe was fast asleep, the recorder was turned on. Softly,
all through the night, it repeated three s t a t e m e n t s in (Hebe's
slumbering ear:
Don
-
SIGMA LAMBDA SIGMA
Gray '63, president,
an-
Play Starts
continued from page 5
d r a g o n i s t i c Lady B r a c k n e l l may
well b e c o m e the new H e r m i o n e
Gingold, given a few m o r e y e a r s '
experience.
M a r g a r e t Victor a s
the flirty Gwendolen F a i r f a x and
Linda Ryan a s s w e e t Cecily C a r dew w e r e e s p e c i a l l y effective in
the s e c o n d act s c e n e in which the
two g i r l s b e l i e v e they a r c both
e n g a g e d to the s a m e man.
Sue Kelly and Richard O b e r l i n
b r e a t h e d new life into the e s s e n t i a l l y s t o c k c h a r a c t e r s ol the
s p i n s t e r i s h g o v e r n e s s and the stufy country parson.
The l e s s said about C h a r l e s
K e a t i n g ' s p e r f o r m a n c e a s the r a k ish Algie the b e t t e r . Mr. Keating
s u f f e r e d from a bad c a s e of o v e r acting. Richard Halverson as Jack
W o r t h i n g , the man who invents a
b r o t h e r , is quite a n o t h e r c a s e .
His acute s e n s e of timing, notably
in the v e r y l a s t s c e n e , w a r r e n t e d
the e n t h u s i a s t i c reception he r e c e i v e d from the a u d i e n c e .
Open Eve. 'til 9
assic
1. Herbert Spencer lived to the age of 10!) and is called " T h e
F o u n d e r of English Eclectic Philosophy."
When (Hebe awoke in the morning, the psychologists said to
him, " H e r b e r t Spencer lived to the age of 1111.). What is he
called'.'"
shop
(Hebe promptly replied, "Perennial Herb."
Replied (Hebe, "Perennial S e r b . "
Finally they said, "Is the banana plant a tree'.'"
But (Hebe, exhausted from the long interrogation, had fallen
back asleep, where he is to this day.
o wo* M». MUUWO
*
*
D
DANCE
DRESSES
Gift-O-Rama
EVERYTHING IN
STOKE AT WHOLESALE
DISCOUNT PRICES
Unusual Gifts From The 4 Corners of the World-A Full
Selection of Keligious A r t i c l e s - H a n d b a g s That Are Dif
f e r e n t - A n d The Largest Selection of Costume Jewelry
in T h i s Entire Area
181 Central Ave., (2 Doors Helow Bobbins St.)
P H O N E HE 6 - 9 3 1 0
Opun Daily From 10 A.M. tu (> P.M.
GOLD
OR
SILVER
2498
SIZE
I O A »
State College News
Z464
Homecoming and Campus Night Head Weekend Events
Rivalry to End With Campus Night-
The G r a d u a t i o n fee of $19 will
be c o l l e c t e d from all s t u d e n t s
g r a d u a t i n g in J a n u a r y of 1963,
Monday, N o v e m b e r 12 through F r i d a y , N o v e m b e r 16.
All a p p l i c a t i o n s for d e g r e e s
m u s t be filed with the R e g i s t r a r
not l a t e r than J a n u a r y 1, 1963.
Kappa Delta Epsilon
Kappa Delta E p s i l o n , P r o f e s sional E d u c a t i o n S o r o r i t y , a n n o u n c e s that a b u s i n e s s m e e t i n g
for c o m m i t t e e h e a d s and for m e m b e r s i n t e r e s t e d in a t t e n d i n g the
Washington c o n f e r e n c e will be held
Wednesday e v e n i n g at 7:30.
Placement Bureau
Attention is r e q u e s t e d of c a n d i d a t e s who will c o m p l e t e d e g r e e r e q u i r e m e n t s at the c l o s e of the 1st
s e m e s t e r 1963 and who s e e k t e a c h e r p l a c e m e n t in F e b r u a r y , 1963.
Two r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s from the
G r e e c e C e n t r a l School, a s u b u r b o f
R o c h e s t e r , N.Y., will be at the
U n i v e r s i t y to i n t e r v i e w for J a n u a r y 1963, p l a c e m e n t in all a c a demic subjects.
Any one i n t e r e s t e d can sign up
on the i n t e r v i e w s c h e d u l e in the
P l a c e m e n t Office, R i c h a r d s o n ,
172.
The i n t e r v i e w is s c h e d u l e d for
W e d n e s d a y , N o v e m b e r 7 at 1 1 a . m .
to 3 p . m . in D r a p e r OK,
Attention Senior Women
Senior women a r e a s k e d to notify
E'velyn P e t r i c k '64 of any change
of n a m e not r e c o r d e d with the
R e g i s t r a r p r i o r to S e p t e m b e r ,
1962. T h i s i s e x t r e m e l y i m p o r t a n t
if y o u r n a m e is to a p p e a r c o r r e c t ly in the 1962 y e a r b o o k and d i r e c t o r y . P l e a s e leave information in
Student mail not l a t e r than F r i d a y ,
N o v e m b e r 9.
Campus Queen to Receive Crown
Rivalry officially will come to its close tonight at 7:30 p.m. in Page Hall with
the presentation of the freshman and Sophomore skits. Campus Night also marks
the start of the annual Homecoming Weekend.
This year's Campus Queen ceremonies, which open the evening's program, will
be more elaborate than ever before. Class attendants and usherettes will be
presented first. In a routine similar to that used in the Miss America pageant,
the four runnerups and the queen will be presented. Shelly Kellerman Pollero '63,
last year's q u e e n , will
crown the lucky girl. ConCampus Queen to Reign Over Annual
nie Thorne, daughter of
D r . and M r s . Clifton T h o r n e , will
s e r v e as c r o w n b e a r e r . O r i g i n a l
m u s i c c o m p o s e d for the queen by
Walt P e t e r s '64 will be h e a r d
d u r i n g the p r o c e s s i o n a l of the royal
court.
After the p r o c e s s i o n a l , the frosh
skit, "My Fair Coed," directed
by J i m Lobdell will be p r e s e n t e d .
Two s p e c i a l a c t s f e a t u r i n g Roz
F e r r a r a , Art P u t n a m , and Lib!
Stoud will follow. The Soph skit,
" J u l i e and C l e o , " w r i t t e n by P a t
F a s a n o and d i r e c t e d by Lee L i s s
will then be p r e s e n t e d .
Between the two s k i t s , F r e d
Smith ' 6 4 , R i v a l r y C h a i r m a n , will
p r e s e n t the m e m b e r s of h i s c o m m i t t e e ; Pat C e r r a , Bob F a i r b a n k s ,
and Marilyn Weink, J u n i o r s . Dir e c t l y following the Soph skit, the
C . A . I . T . m e m b e r s will be r e v e a l e d
and the R i v a l r y Cup will be
awarded.
The 15 points to be announced
C a m p u s Night may p r o v e to be
m o s t c r u c i a l a s the s c o r e now
s t a n d s : S o p h s - 9 and f r o s h - 5 .
NOTICE
A talk will be given on " M i s s i e s and Space N a v i g a t i o n " by
M r . R.A. Welch of the (leneral
E l e c t r i c Company at 8:00 p . m . ,
T h u r s d a y , N o v e m b e r 15, 1962, in
the Faculty Dining Room, lower
Husted.
Homecoming Weekend and Campus Night
T h e Homecoming Committee: standing (left to right) Barb Waite,
Marlee Sorenson and Hob F a i r b a n k s , Co-Chairmen, Donna Skinner.
Seated (left to right): Dick P i e r c e , Lenore McCabe, Dick Stannard,
Piret Kutt, Fred Smith, Kneeling, (left to right): Ron Richley.Scotty
Mangini, Fd Uudnikas, Gary L e o n i s .
Parade, Game, Party, Dance
Mark 10th Homecoming
\%>*^3*
F i n a l i s t s for Campus Queen are: (left to riant) Connie Crowley,
Mary Lou F i s e n m a n , Pam Carter, Geri Schleifer and P a t Woinoski.
by J i m M i l e s
The coronation of the f o r t y - f i r s t
C a m p u s Queen will highlight t o n i g h t ' s C a m p u s Night c e r e m o n y in
P a g e Hall.
The five finalists from the Senior
C l a s s c o m p e t i n g for the coveted
c r o w n this y e a r a r e : P a m C a r t e r ,
Connie Crowley, Mary Lou F i s e n m a n , (ieri Schliefer, and Pat Woi-
by Joan Asfoury
State College Theater will p r e s e n t Murdir in tht Cathmdral by T.S.
E l i o t , Nov. 12-17 at 8:30 in the
C a t h e d r a l of All Saints. It is being
d i r e c t e d by Dr. J a r k a M. B u r i a n ,
well known to State College T h e a t e r - g o e r s for his many fine p r o ductions.
The play r e l a t e s the story of
T h o m a s A. Meckel, a r c h b i s h o p ol
C a n t e r b u r y in 1170.
Thomas,
against the union ol church and
s t a t e , had refused the King's offer
of the C h a n c e l l o r s h i p .
Alter a
p e r i o d of exile in F r a n c e , he r e t u r n s to England and r e s u m e s Ins
position as A r c h l u s h o o . Although
*« e n '• i ' o l l u i • i | i i n i u i w i n p r e sent i t s i n - ,i s p e a k e r , M r . 1 .A.
R i e l i o l i i c i i e i al L l e o t r i c next F r i 1:1
v 'it
I p.m.
in D r a p e r 349.
\li
I d ' - h is a noted i n v e n t o r , and
•sill
>peak on " I r a i n i n g l i n e n
tors."
PL.W
- OR - CHARGE
IT
Gerald Drug Co.
217 Western Ave.
.231 CENTRAL AVE.
Announcement
Shelly K e l l e r m a n P o l l e r o , C a m p u s Queen of 1961, will c r o w n h e r
successor.
T h i s past week, the
1962 C a m p u s Queen was e l e c t e d by
the l a r g e s t n u m b e r of s t u d e n t s to
vote in a C a m p u s Queen E l e c t i o n ,
but as t r a d i t i o n d e m a n d s , h e r i d e n (Continued On P a g e 3)
T h o m a s is overtly r e c o n c i l e d with
the king, he r e a l i z e s the d a n g e r to
h i s life. The King has him killed
to maintain his own power.
His
death b e c o m e s a symbol of a
s t r o n g devotion to Cod and a willm g n e s s to die for o n e ' s b e l i e f s .
Non- sectarian
Albany, N. Y.
Phone 6-3610
Mil It 1)1 It IN T H F CATIIFDKAF'S c a s t r e h e a r s e s a s c e n e at All
S a i n t ' s Cathedral.
H o m e c o m i n g Weekend will lie
t h r e e fun-packed days for A l b a n y ' s
s t u d e n t s and a l u m n i . 'This y e a r ' s
a c t i v i t i e s include C a m p u s Night,
the t r a d i t i o n a l c l i m a x of R i v a l r y ,
the biggest H o m e c o m i n g p a r a d e
y e t , in which all the f r a t e r n i t i e s
and s o r o r i t i e s a r e p a r t i c i p a t i n g .
T h e r e will also be a s o c c e r
game against Brockport, a Homec o m i n g Dance, a jazz c o n c e r t , and
a n e w - r e i g n i n g queen.
To those finding it h a r d to c o n c e i v e of a play enacted in a place
of w o r s h i p , H m u s t b e r e m e m b e r e d
that the s e r v i c e itself is a play
with a p r e s c r i b e d s c r i p t
and
actors.
The production c a r r i e s a
m e s s a g e for all d e m o n i n a t i o n s .
Admission is the student tax o r
$1.50
the s o c c e r g a m e between the P e d s
and the E a g l e s of B r o c k p o r t Stale
is 2:00 at U n i v e r s i t y Field.
At the Inn Towne Motor C o u r t
from 5:00 until 7:00, a punch p a r t y
will be h e l d for Alumni, F a c u l t y ,
A d m i n i s t r a t i o n , and S e n i o r s only.
H e r b e r t ' s R e s t a u r a n t will c l o s e
its d o o r s to the public this y e a r
from 9 p . m . until 1 a.m. d u r i n g
t h i s y e a r ' s H o m e c o m i n g Dance.
C h a p e r o n e s will be Mr. and M r s .
McKinnon and Dr. and M r s . P o l sander.
Invited g u e s t s include
P r e s i d e n t C o l l i n s , Dean D e r r i n g e r , Dean M a t t h e w s , Dean Stokes,
Dean H a r t l e y , Dean T h o r n e and
the S e c r e t a r y of the Alumni A s s o J a n Concert
ciation.
The jazz conc e r t will he held
Sunday in the Bru1) a c h e r
1ow e r
L o u n g e from 3
thr
iij>/<eurp . m . to r, p. in. MuIm.htu.rud
sic will he p r o vided by the Bob
Ceda r (,Hiinlel.
Schedule
The schedule will be a s follows.
Tonight, at 7:30 at Page Hall,
C a m p u s Night will m a r k the end
of Rivalry and the beginning of
Homecoming.
One of the highlights ol the evening w i l l be the
c r o w n i n g ol the
C a 111 p U s Queen
who will, for the
Hu'hirf.it
,n, .at
. j , . . . - ..' V , . , r \
first t i m e , reign
over Homecoming
W eekend.
BULLETIN
Ca«t
The main part ol Thomas A.
Recket is played by Douglas R o s s .
The east includes twenty o t h e r
c h a r a c t e r s , i n c l u d i n g knights,
p r i e s t s , and the townspeople.
New at State
Murder In tin Cathedral is the first
State production held o u t s i d e the
school.
It will be p r e s e n t e d in
the C a t h e d r a l ol All Saints, at the
c o r n e r of Swan and Elk S t r e e t s ,
behind the State Education Building. Suggestion for the play c a m e
from R e v e r e n d F r a n k Snow, the
C a m p u s Minister.
Dr. B u r i a n
and Dr. Pettit a r r a n g e d for the
production with Deun Ball of the
Cathedral.
STOP IN ANYTIME
AND BROWSE
USE OUR LAY-A-WAY
noski.
State To Present Eliot Play At All Saints
Science Collocqulum
5-15
VOL. XLVIII No. 21
ALBANY, NEW YORK, F R i p A Y , NOVEMBER 9, 1962
January Graduates
Married Couples
Ml m a r r i e d . •.,. i[ 11. • , I :i< -n 11 \ o r
s t u d e n t , i n t e r e s h ' , 1 i i , i n i ' i i i i n g •,
I'lb al s t a l e :ire 'i !•,.• I I,, e o n i e In
the ' i i g n n i / . n l ion i r i< •> -1 nig m n ,-,,
b a r h r r R o o m ' hulas al 7; 311 p . m .
*
(Hebe sleeps, but you, we trust, are up and about. Why not
improve each waking hour with our line product
—Marlboro
Cigarettes?
You get a lot to like- tiller, flavor, pack or box.
All Hallmark and Nor cross I v e r y d a y
and Christmas C a r d s - l t i b b o n and
Paper
iri Price
N
Hill.I
Hilie 1 a n n o u n c e s that its n e w s l e t t e r will be d i s t r i b u t e d to the
s t u d e n t body next F r i d a y , N o v e m b e r 9.
Pedagogue
A r e p r e s e n t a t i v e from M e n u
Studios will In- a v a i l a b l e in B r u baehi'i' Room 8 this Monday and
I uesday lor the r e t u r n ol .senior
y e a r b o o k p r o o f s lor the 1963 Pedagogue. S e n i o r s who had their Senior
p i c t u r e s taken in the Spring, but
did not r e t u r n the proofs a r e a s k e d
to do so at this time
DATE
Next they asked him, " W h a t has Mjilas ('vetnic been called''"
Freihmen
An O r i e n t a t i o n m e e t i n g will be
held today at 1:00 p . m . in P a g e
Hall for al] f r e s h m e n . A t t e n d a n c e
i s r e q u i r e d , and the topic will be
" M a k i n g Use of L i b r a r y R e sources."
Sigma Pi S i g m a , P h y s i c s H o n o r a r y , will hold a m e e t i n g today at
1:00 p . m . in Husted. M e m b e r s a r e
a s k e d to c h e c k the h o n o r a r y ' s b u l letin b o a r d for f u r t h e r i n f o r m a tion.
SKK OUR FABULOUS
COLLECTION OF
A
T i c k e t s for T . S . E l i o t ' s MurJtf in
tht Cathtdrol which will be held N o v e m b e r 1 2 - N o v e m b e r 17 w i l l b e o n
s a l e s t a r t i n g Monday in the l o w e r
p e r i s t y l e b e t w e e n D r a p e r and
Husted.
Sigma Pi Sigma
2. T h e b a n a n a plant is not a tree but a large perennial herb'A. T h e Archduke Ferdinand was assassinated in 1014 a t
Sarajevo by a young nationalist named Mjilas ('vetnic, who has
been called " T h e Trigger of World War I."
Notices
I hi
Sa lu r da y at
noon, the faculty
and a 1 i m n i will
meet for a luncheon in the A hlciiW a t e r b u r y Dining
Room.
-• 'iii'i,
rrmtitil.i
i
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ihf
P'-'ifiUtn
I'aniJt
Hi,
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i. ' . . . s r
wi
lit,
'•!) *k
idfitit\
hits
' (•( 'i
! \ , ' I i-n
Lit!
/r'....
th,
tht
ulth
U) ^K 1 W !.
M Y ' i / m uiil
I't- . . M , M , -
cij .if hull-tone
1his
year's
parade includes a
n u m b e r of l u s t s - a new route
which will s t a r t at Thurlow Ter
r a c e and move down Western Avenue to P a r t r i d g e S t r e e t ; a Q u e e n ' s
float; p r i z e s for t h r e e float c a t e g o r i e s , the m o s t beautiful, the most
h u m o r o u s , and a special j u d g e ' s
a w a r d for the most o r i g i n a l .
Judge*
J u d g e s a r e M i s s Alice H a s t i n g s ,
Head L i b r a r i a n of the college lib r a r y , Mr. William Wilson and
Mr. E d w a r d Cowley of the Art Dep a r t m e n t , Mr. Knowse of the B u s i n e s s D e p a r t m e n t , and Dr. Daniel
Udell of the English D e p a r t m e n t .
Soccer Gum*
'The s c h e d u l e d kick-oft time for
,>t the
M V . ?r
Committoe
The H o m e c o m i n g C o m m i t t e e is
h e a d e d by M a r l e e
S o r e n s o n and Bob
Fairbanks,
Juniors,
A s s i s t i n g them
arc;
Mary Pat
Donovan and Dick
P i e r c e , J u n i o r s , R e g i s t r a t i o n and
C o m m u n i c a t i o n ; Helen Mandeville
and Donna Skinner, J u n i o r s , A l u m ni-Faculty L u n c h e o n ;
Monica
C a u l l i e l d and T e r r y Hyland, J u n i o r s , P a r a d e ; Pat C e r r a ' 6 4 , ( l a m e
Arrangements.
Also, P i r e t Kutt '64, P u n c h
P a r t y ; B a r b Waite and t i a r y Leoni s , J u n i o r s , Dance; Lenny L a p i n ski, J a z z C o n c e r t ; Ed Budnikas
'64 and Hon Riehley ' 6 3 , Publicity;
Dick S t e n a r d '65 and Tim W i s n i cwski ' 6 4 , Alumni C o n t a c t s , and
Scotty Mangini ' 6 4 , P r o g r a m s .
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