CRIMSON AND WHITE
Volume IV, Number 19
Milne High School, Albany, N. Y.,
Friday, March 16. 1934
JUNIOR NEWS
MILNE JUNIORS WIN LAST
GAME OF SEASON FROM PUBLIC
SCHOOL 16 WITH SCORE OF 30-17.
Last Saturday night at 7:30 otcl
in the Page hall gymnasium, the Milne
iMTLy IKEGH PUPILS
SAPS CHOOL AGN IGT
The annual "Parents’' Night" of
Hlne High School will be held tonight
at 8:00 o'clock. The program will be
Juniors won their last game of the basket- opened by speeches to the parents in
ball season. Their opponents were from
Public School 16. The final score was
30-17; at the end of the first half the
score was 18-8. The whole team was in
very good form. Creesy was high scorer
with eight points.
Lineup for Milne
pos. BR. P. F. Be DT. Pe
L. F. Creesy 0 4 8
Re FP. Hawkins 4 Al 6
Re G.- Rosenstein 10) 0 0
Le Ge McCoy AL a 5
L. F. Harding 0 (0) (0)
R. Ge Davis (0) @ 4
Re. G. Ford (0) 0 10)
ery Sipperly 2 3 7
™% iF 30
School 16
pos. F. Pe. Fe. Be T. Pe
Le Fe Fisher, Re 5 ie} 5
Re. Fe. Fisher, G. 7 1 9
C. Redder 0 te) (0)
L. G. Neugent il 0 ul
R. G. Ramsey 0 te} 10)
Re Ge Silver 0 1 2
L. Ge Cooper 0) 0 9)
2 Ss
TRAFFIC CLUB ANNOUNCES RULES
Betty Reudemann, president of the
Traffic Club, announces the following
rules; everyone should put his chair
back under the table when he finishes
lunch in the Cafeteria. Also, all food
and papers should be thrown in the bas-
ket provided for them.
BIOLOGY PUPILS FINISH PROJECT
The pupils in the ninth year
biology class have just finished a
project on fish.
This project consisted paper class,
the Page Hall auditorium.
After the speeches the parents
will have an opportunity to inspect the
pupils’! work, which will be on ex-
hibition in the open class rooms.
Punch and cookies made by the
cooking classes will be served in the
Home Economics rooms. The table will
be set for a St. Patrick's Day luncheon.
Notebooks, posters, and many clever
tricks and articles of sewing will also
be shown.
Motion pictures of various subjects
studied by Junior High students will be
shown in the Biology room (320),
Experiments and soap carvings are a few
of the many exhibits which will be found
in the General Science room.
Exhibits of every subject will be
found in the proper rooms. Although
this night has been set aside for the
parents, the students are invited to
conduct their parents through the
school.
"JUNIOR HIGH PAPERS TO CONSIST e
OF 60% FEATURE STORIES AND 40%
NEWS", MISS MOORE REPORTS
'We were told at the Columbia
Scholastic Press Association Convention
that AteAste:go9d:poligy-sonkave saxty
Buricentiet shes Juitor Highopaoercmedes
np of tenure, Storics..nd thot. tertys
paragand: should. cousigt:etrnewss: Theli.
reverse is true of the good Senior High
School ppper,"" Miss Moore told a
JUNIOR Crimson and White representative
today.
Mr. Stefansson, world traveler and
authority on Alaska, and Sir Willmott
Lewis were some of the speakers who
addressed the convention.
The Crimson and White was awarded
second place In the mimeographed school
The Milne High represen-
of life histories, spawning habits, food, tatives brought back some samples of
conservation, and respiration of
fifferent species of fish. On the day
before the project ended, motion pic-
tures of a New England Cod Fishery were
shown. The pupils had the use of live
fish which they paid for themselves.
Original soap carvings pertaining
to biology may be seen in room 320.
other school papers.
NOTICE
A Student member of the Student
Council has lost his pin, which is gold
plated and hes the insdiption "Junior
Student Council of Milne High School."
Will the person who finds this pin pleas
return it to Miss Halter in Room 2297
STAFF FOR JUNIOR WEEKLY
Editor-in-chief Janet Bremer
Managing Editor Richard Andrews
Associate Editors
Christina Bayreuther Bernie Swartz
Jane Weir
Sports Editor
Circulation Editor
Publication Editor
Assistant
Martin Creesy
Billy Burgess
John Aku} lian
Seldon Knudson
Composing Staff
George Farrington Arnold Rosenstein
Gordon Robinson Billy Saunders
Reporters
Benjamin Douglas Virginia Mitchell
Betty Leitch Virginia Mason
Betty Schultz
LITERARY STAFF
Ethel Fasoldt
Milla Hall
Sylvia Rypins
Billy Saunders
Frances Seymour
Elizabeth Simmons
Virginia Tripp
Jane Weir
JUNIOR LIGH s»GSMUBLIWS
In honerooms we hive been dise
cussing pro:osed chi.nyes it. the future
junior ailh ussemblies. In the first
Dlace, vhe question: of veeulty vertici-
Petion was brou,ht upe je do not be=
lieve that the fuculty shovld tuke sort
in our eemblies becuuse their program
would = ours se poor in comparison.
shen, too, vie do nol believe vaue the
Taculty has enoulh tie vo preoure a
Juestion of singing popular
song in ussembly hus been bro t up.
Je thins this is a very wood ides for
ny of us ure better scquainted with
3@ songs and do not enjoy sivieing
Th
Songs that ere not povulir. iiwmy of
the ctudents will have
to le
2 Opportunivy
“nh recent .usic in ussembly.
SPT WLP. CLUB LE wi'Tth BO«
mection; Chould « bo
for eo dance?
answer; Yes, ilvwayse
chums a girl
smesvion; hould « girl thank a boy
for 2 dence?
answer: Wo, but she may express her
upprociution by saying thai she
enjoyed the dance.
vesvioxs: Is it proper yor o girl who
is acconpirted to the er by @
boy to sit in the aisle seat?
No, the vo, should sit 1: the
le seci when vhey h to sit
at uhe end of a row.
Volume ty »wumbe 19
CLUB NEWS
The Beginners’ Dancing Club un-
der the direction of Miss Mlecayk,
Miss Halliday, and Miss Crously, is
learning different steps. The club
plans to put on an assembly pro-
gram and to have an Faster party.
The Eighth Grade Dramatics’
Club is planning to have an ex-
change meeting, according to Janet
Cole, president of the club. At
the last meeting the various com-
mittees gave reports, and the club
members played games and solved
riddles.
Each week the president of the
Math Fun Club, John Gulnac, ehooses
a committee to supply the enter-
tainment for the next week. ‘The
entertainment consists of joxes,
working on codes, and puzzles per-
taining to mathematics.
The Boys' Cooking Club is learn-
ing to cook "rumting dinny'. The
members of the club are planning to
learn to cook dinners and to mix
soft drinks.
The members of the Girlst Shop
Club are now making figures of
people to put in the gardens which
they have previously made.
HOMEROOM NEWS
Homeroom 12] has decided to buy
roses and carnations to decorate
the windows for Parents’ Night. To-
day members of the homeroom will de~
bate on the subject; "Resolved,
that Sports Chould Be Continued in
School". Frances Bremer and Bob
Gilson will take the affirmative,
while Christina Bayreuther and Shel-
don Bond will argue on the negative
side.
Homeroom £48 is working on an
assembly program which will be gi-
ven in the junior assembly on Thure-
day.
Honieroom 145 is working on a future
assembly program which will be di-
rected by Elizabeth Simmons. ‘The
committee wnich will essist her in-
cludes Alfred Wheeler, Billy Séus-
ders, and Virginia Tripp.
Homeroom le? is planhing to
have another checker tournament th?
week.
On one day of every week, us-
ually Monday, homeroom 1<8 meets to
sing the latest song hits. The
homeroom is .lanning to have a
Checker tournament sohn.
CE ie
THE MYSTERIES OF ENGLAND
(conclusion)
The dog looked at the man intel-
ligently, then at the house and then
he began to sniff. In a second he
would have been off had not the man held
on to him. The man called an officer
and together they were led by the dog
across lawns and streets to the lot
behind Greystokes' mansion. They were
led over to a clump of bushes, where,
to their surprise, they found the en-
trance to a secret underground tun-
nel. This discovery was reported to
Scotland Yard. That night Inspec-
tor Malone and Saunders went to this
tunnel. Down a small, winding flight
of stone stairs they went and along
an underground tunnel. It was a
dark, dank place with a musty odor.
Soon they came to the end of it and
Saw, With the aid of a flashlight, a
amall button. They pushed it and a
sliding panel opened quickly but sil-
ently, admitting them to Greystoke's
PaNileiALLED laboratory! Over in the
middle of the room was an easy-chair,
back toward them.
In it Lord Greystoke was sitting.
"Put up your hands, Greystoke. We
have you now!" yelled Malone. Grey-
stoke stood up quickly and reeled 4-
round with a wild look in his eyes!
atched a revolver from the pocket
of his robe and screamed madly, "You
haven't got me yet." Before he
could use the gun, Saunders shot him
in the shoulder. Greystoke was rush-
ed to the hospital as he was dying fast.
‘Greystoke confessed to the mur-
ders and when they asked him how he
got to sleep so quickly, he said,
"Sleeping powders."
‘Thy did you commit these murders,
Greystoke?! they asked him.
{ifectamecmesctt
Niell", he answered,
@t this point Lord Greystoke died, and
so the reader will have to figure the
rest out for himself.
THE END
ANSWER TO LAST WEEK'S PUZZLE
A vile old lady
Of evil intent
Put on her veil
And away she went.
"Levi", (her son's name)
She said,
"Give me, I pray,
The wherewith to
Live today."
Volume De Nun ber 19 tal
THIS WEEK'S PUZZLE
A sickly lady with tears in
her eyes,
Put ina
the dry's.
At the first of laughter
which followed her cries,
She jumped in a
a surprise.
for the cause of
‘twas such
There is a four letter word, which,
when you re-arrange the letters in it,
will fill all the spaces above.
Remember, only four letters arranged
in a gifferent way for each space. The
answer will be found in next week's
Crimson and White.
BOOK REVIEW
Have you read The Dove in the
Eagle's Nest by Charlotte M. Yonge?
This is a story of old German feuds.
The eagle's nest is the Castle of
Alderstein, and the dove is a little
maid brought up from a German town.
Christana is married secretly to the
lord of the house, who is suddenly
killed. She has twin sons, who are
responsible for many adnventuges.
book may be found in the Milne High
library.
This
OUR POETRY CORNER
THE WEST
by James Griffin
I'd like to live on 4 ranch in the West,
Because of all stories I like those
the best
That tell about cowboys and cattle
and riding
And a life that's all thrills, and
seems most exciting.
I'd like to go riding into the sundet
all red
And come back all weary and ready for
bed,
To climb a high mountain and view a
broad land
And see shining ribers where gold was
once panned.
If I got invited to visit a ranch,
I'd pack in a hurry. Oh boy! What a
chance!
“LIMERICK
There was once a school called Milne
High,
When I went there I felt very shy,
But I did all my work,
And tried not to shirk,
And now I like Milne High.