CRIMSON AND WHITE
Volume III, Number 3
Milne High School, Albany, N. Y.,
Friday, October 14, 1932
JUNIOR NEWS
BaRBaRs BIRCHENOUGH IS NEW
PRESIDENT OF JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL
Barbara Birchenough will be pre-
sident cf Milne Junior High schcol
for this year us q result of « cam
poign and electicns which were con#
ducted Wednesduye
The campaign teck place in ase
sembly ot 8:00 Wednesday morning,
Mr. Sayles made a speech on student
government und Dr. Fredericks intor-
duced e..ch cundidate und his min. ger.
William Nortents cump:.ign muna~
ger, Doris Shultes, was the first
specker.: Carolyn Hollenbeck wis the
mani.ger for Miss Birchencugh «nd Leo
Minkin, for William Ferd.
The elections were conducted
during the homercom pericd.
SOMEROOMS .ND ENGLISH CL..SSES
ELECT TWELVE REPORTERS FOR P..PER
Twelve reperters for-the junicr
high schocl newspeper were elected
from each hemercom ind English cless
this week.
The hemerocm reporters are;
Leis Hayner, Wilscn Hume, und alfred
Wheeler. The reperters from the
English classes are Virginia Soper,
John Winnie, Nell McCoy, Jane Weir,
Fred Carr, Danica Winshurst, Seldon
Knudson, Spencer Kimbell, nd Billy
Scuncers.
These students will give any
news items, incidents, cr compcsitions
suituble for the paper te the news-
pauper club,
EIGHTH GR.DE SOCIaL SCIENCE CLass
VISITS COUNTY PENETENTL.RY
The cighth grede soticl science
cluss visited the 4lbiny County Pen-
itentiary in cennection with the
crime unit lust Siturday.
Fourteen members cf the class
tcught by Miss White end two repre-
Sentatives from Miss urmstr
seventh grade class went to the jail.
The tour included yisits to the cells,
visiters' rooms, the prison yard, and
the hespitel. The group alse saw
the laundry where the priscuners ure
employed and the finger-prirting recom
where phetegraphs cf finger=prints
cre mde.
ngts
MISS HALTER aNNOUNCES CHANGES
IN uSSEMBLY PROGRAM FOR Yi..R
The assembly progrems for both
the junior and senior high schocl have
teen changed this year, Miss Halter
seid.
« jcint meeting cf both schocls
will be cunducted at least once & month.
The junior high school will have one
a@ssembly each month also and the sep-
arate grodes will conduct assemblies
atcut every four weeks. The junior
high school asseniblies will be at
11:30 on Thursdays. ‘The club and home
room stunts will be presented at this
times hr. Sroka will lesd the singing.
The next joint assembly will be
Wednesday at 9;00 o'clock when the
installition of the new officers will
be ccnducted. The next gride assembly
will be Thursday, November 3, at 11,30,
TWO JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL HOMEROOMS
ELECT OFFICERS «ND COMMITTENS
Two junicr high schoul homerocms
have ulrendy elected their officers
end committees. They are rocms 121
ond 155.
The officers in 181 ure; presi-
dent, Robert Gilson; vice-president,
Frances Bremer; secretiry, Robert Im-
erich; and treasurer, William Hotaling.
The president in 135 will be Vir~
8inic Tripp. Other officers are;
vice-president, Hlizabeth Warner; sec-
retury ond treasurer, arthur Perkins;
triffic officers, Gordon Robinson and
Marjcric Stanton; monitors, Robert
Wilke and urncld Rosenstein; and re-
porter alfred Wheeler. Mary Wins-
hurst, Franklin Steinhardt, and Bliz-
abeth Simmons ere on the bulletin
board committee. KEarbsare Soper and
Sorothy Sherman cre on the program
committee ¢nd Lois Smith, the flower
committee.
MISS MaRPIN .NNOUNCES aRT CLaSSES
The art classes will meet every
dey at eight, nine, and ten o'clock,
Miss Martin said, sanycne wishing to
join a class should sign up immedic-
tely, she said, No one will be
accepted cfter Monday.
THE JUNIOR WEEKLY STAFF
Editorial Staff Barbera Birchenough
Margaret Charles
Walter Simmons
Schocl News Ruth Mann
Helen anthony
Douglas McHarg
Gordon Wendell
Ronald Kneller
Circulation Carolyn Hallenbeck
Betty Nichols
Publication Milla Hell
Bill Rernes
Leland Beil
Grover Fales
John skullian
Reporters
7th grade John sakullian
6th grade Mille Hall
9th grade Betty Nichols
LET'S SUPPORT THE NEWSPAPER
This year the Milne Junior Week-
ly is trying out a new system. The
purpose is to interest more people in
the paper and make cleser the connec-
tion between the two. You are asked
to report any news of importance to
the reporter of your homeroom or of
your English class. We urge all of
the students tc cooperate with us in
this plan. If this is done, we are
sure the system will be a success
end make the peper more interesting
to you. W, Se
PAY YOUR STUDENT Tax
All of you who have school spirit
should pay your student tex. Is it
basketball games or is something else
the reason? The basketball and base-
Lell teams thet represent us have to
be finenced. We have parties and they
must be peid for. When you pay your
tex, you cre helping to enlurge the
baseball teams. You are helping to
buy things for the Gymncsium. fo you
realize that in poying your tox, \you
are nct only helping yourself, but the
whole school? So all of you pey it us
soon es possible so that we will get
cur equipment that much sooner. WM. OC.
EXCH.NGE NEWS
Our old friend, the "Estee Echo"
from Gloversville, is bieck again. This
six pege newspeper, published monthly,
was our first exchinge.e The items of
interest include sports, humor, liter-
éture, and news from the dép.rtments.
The cdvertising is well done. The
poetry and liter.ry sections show
telent at Gloversville.
C. HR. = Exchange Editor
nan iam Gi ie nan a TH pWumber 3
INIOR HIGH SCHOOL 1S .Hiu.D
aN PsaYMENT OF STUDENT Tk
The junior high school is in the
lecd, in the payment of the student tax,
144 of the junior high students have
paid the tax while, only 119 peyments
have been made in the senior high.
Homeroom 130 leads the junior high
school with 23 who have paid, Homeroom
129, another ninth grade reom, reports
16; and 224, 12. In the eighth grade
rooms, the reports is; in 1él, eigh-
teen; 127, sixteen, ond 123, eighteen.
In the seventh gride homeroom 233,
fourteer. have paid while in 124, there
are seventeen, and in 155, ten.
EIGHT CLUBS PRESENT PETITIONS
TO STUDENT COUNCIL FOR sPPROVAL
The petitions for eight junior
high schools will be presented to the
Student Council at its meeting next
week.
These petitions were obtainec from
the council by any person who was inter-
ested in a club. This person had to
get a certain number of signctures of
students ‘who would join the club and
also suy what the purpose of the club
would be.
The following petiticns were
signed in the homerooms; shor, debating,
drametics, typewriting, social dancing,
chemistry, and art clubs.
SHOR? NEWS NOTES
The art club which meets on Wed-
nesdays will make their own Christmas
eords this yeer.
Dr. Fredericks requests that the
junior high school students be more
quiet in passing through the corridors
sc thi.t the senior high school classes
will not be disturbed,
Miss Keene expects to return to
schocl soon. She is suffering from
neutritis.
WaNTEDt Old or new magazines such
as the House Beautiful, the Home Jour-
nal, the Vogue, for reference and illus-
trations in the art classes. Do not
bring the Saturday Evening Post. Bring
the magazines to Miss Mcartin in the art
roome