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q STATE-ly as the elms shading Draper . . . as an Ideal at the Boul . . . as dancing in the Commons
q .. . too integral a part of STATE to be forgotten . . . too human to be a president . . . but he is
4 ... our amiable Dr. John M. Sayles... G.I.’s will tell you that he’s one part of STATE that didn’t
| change . . . unceasing efforts to make ours a better college . . . advocate of high academic standards
. .. no detail too small for his personal attention . .. from troubles with beds for vets that arrived
before the dorm... to an enthusiastic boost for Student Union... well miss that ready “bit of
. wit” in the rotunda . . . that sudden grin during one of his dignified appearances in assembly . . .
q yes, we'll miss you, Dr. Sayles . . . for to us you have come to symbolize State College.
DEAN NELSON
**Jack of all trades, master of some”’.. . his is
the hand that rocks the cradle of STATE’s
world . . . Wielder of wit, molder of minds,
architect of our futures, he’s our casual and
celebrated dean . . . Equally friendly and for-
midable he welcomes all to his inner sanctum
... For some a summons to the dean’s office is
the death sentence of a doomed man... for
others it’s a helpful offer of aid and advice...
for all it’s an interesting highlight in a college
career . .. Lord of the Dean’s Lists (praise-
worthy and precarious) . . . his keenness, bril-
liance and humor combine in the kind of dis-
tinguished man we prefer...
"How my heart beat as I opened the door.”
** *I’ve come for advice, I said.”
**4 voice came from behind the door bidding me come in.”
DEAN STOKES
A hand extended in warm greeting from a
possessor of the rare quality of unaffected
charm . . . it seems quite impossible that one
woman could be master of all those attributes
necessary for efficient leadership . . . but Dean
Stokes deals in impossibilities . . . turning the
blackest obstacles into stepping stones across
the proverbial bridge of late hours “‘campuses’”’
and disorganized personalities to the sea of
truer understanding ... STATE COLLEGE is
a complex network of minds and heartstrings
... and it is our Dean Stokes who keeps the
» 2
minds from tiring and the “strings” from
tangling ... Smiling... Tolerant . . . Open-
hearted ... Kind... Efficient... Sincere...
the personification of our Dean of Women.
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DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH
Harry WorTHINGTON Hastincs, A.B., A.M,,
Pu.D.
Professor of English
‘SureLtps McItwatne, A.B., A.M., Pu.D.
Professor of English
AGNES ELEANOR FUTTERER, A.B., A.M.
Assistant Professor of English
HELEN Marie Puiwuirps, A.B., A.M., Pu.D.
Assistant Professor of English
JEANNE CHRISLER Cook, A.B., A.M.
Instructor in English
Vivian C. Hopkins, A.B., A.M., Pa.D.
Instructor in English
VARLEY Howe Lane, Pxu.D.
Instructor in English
Mary ExvizABetH Monur, B.A., M.A.
Instructor in English
CATHARINE WALSH PeEttz, A.B., A.M., Pa.D.
Instructor in English
RutuH EvorsE Rosperts, A.B., A.M.
Instructor in English
James WILLIAM SKELTON, B.S., M.A.
Instructor in English
Perry Dickie WeEstTsrRooK, A.B., A.M.
Instructor in English
a
—
DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL STUDIES
Harvey Rice, A.B., A.M., Pu.D.
Professor of History
THEODORE GEORGE STANDING, A.B., A.M.,
Pu.D.
Professor of Economics and Sociology
ELAINE Forsytn, B.E., M.A., Pu.D.
Assistant Professor of Social Studies
CLARENCE ALBERT Hip ey, A.B., A.M.
Assistant Professor of History
Nei, Apams McNatt, A.M., Pu.D.
Assistant Professor of Social Studies
ROBERT RriENow, A.B., A.M.. Pu.D.
Assistant Professor of Social Studies
Ravpu Hiriis Baker, A.B., A.M.. Pu.D.
Instructor in Social Studies
FRANCES CumMInNGs, A.B., M.A., Ep.D.
Instructor in Social Studies
MARTHA ALBRIGHT EGELSTON, A.B., A.M.
Instructor in History
ALFRED GARRETT Harris, A.B., A.M., Pu.D.
Instructor in Social Studies
CATHERINE NEWBOLD, A.B., M.S.
Instructor in Social Studies
JostsH THOMPSON PHINNEY, A.B., M.A., Pu.D.
Instructor in Economics
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
GEORGE MORRELL York, A.B.
Professor of Commerce
REno S. Knovus, B.S., M.Epb.
Professor of Distributive Education
EpWwARD LYLE Cooper, B.Ep., A.M., Pa.D.
Assistant Professor of Commerce
CHESTER JOSEPH TERRILL, A.B., A.M.
Assistant Professor of Commerce
Harrison Morton TERWILLIGER, B.S.; M.S.
Assistant Professor of Commerce
BLANCHE Morrison Avery, B.S., M.S.
Instructor in Commerce
DEPARTMENT OF MODERN
LANGUAGES
FRENCH
JoHNn Atoystus Mawar, Pu.B., Pp.B.
Professor of French
13
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Marion Extmina Situ, A.B., A.M., Doctor
Assistant Professor of French
M. ANNETTE Dossin, A.B., A.M., D.M.L.
Instructor in French
ARLINE FEARON Preston, A.B., A.M.
Instructor in French
GERMAN
WILLIAM MEYER
Instructor in German
SPANISH
James WESLEY CuiLpers, A.B., A.M., Pu.D.
Assistant Professor of Spanish
FLORENCE CUTHBERT
Instructor in Spanish
LABOR GOMEZ
Instructor in Spanish
Sara HANSELLMACGONAGLE,A.B.,A.M.,PxH.D.
Instructor in Spanish
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DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICS
Harry BrrcHenoucn, A.B., Pp.B., A.M.
Professor of Mathematics
RALPH ALEXANDER BEAVER, A.B., A.M., Pu.D.
Professor of Mathematics
E.ton A. But er, A.B., A.M.
Instructor in Mathematics
CaROLinE A. Lester, A.B., A.M., Pu.D.
Instructor in Mathematics
Nura DorotTHEA TuRNER, A.B., M.S.
Instructor in Mathematics
DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC
CHARLES FRANK STOKES, B.Mus., M.Mus.,
B.S.Ep., M.Epb., Ep.D.
Professor of Music
BE.
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DEPARTMENT OF LIBRARIANSHIP
ESTHER LAVERNE STALLMANN, A.B.,A.M.,
B.S. S., Pad.
Professor of Librarianship
H. Caro_tyn Howarp, Pu.B., B.S., M.S.
Assistant Professor of Librarianship
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DEPARTMENT OF ART
Ruts Evetyn Hutcnarins, Pu.B., A.M., M.F.A.
Assistant Professor of Fine Arts
DEPARTMENT OF ANCIENT
LANGUAGES
EpirH Owen Wa .ace, A.B., A.M., Pa.D.
Assistant Professor of Latin
Mary GERALDINE Gocein, A.B., Pu.D.
Instructor in Latin
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DEPARTMENT OF HYGIENE AND
PHYSICAL EDUCATION
MATIE ELAINE GREEN, A.B., M.D.
Assistant Professor of Hygiene
Tuomas R. Grsson, B.S., A.M.
Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education
Earyt Joun Dorwa pt, B.S., M.D.
Instructor in Hygiene
Meruin W. Hatuaway, B.S.1n Ep.
Instructor in Physical Education
ISABELLE JoHNSTON, A.B., A.M.
Instructor in Physical Education
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
RoBERT WENDELL FREDERICK, Pu.B., A.M.,
Pu.D.
Director of Training
ARTHUR KENNEDY BEIK, Pu.B., Pp.M., Pu.D.
Professor of Education
James ALLAN Hicks, A.B., A.M., Px.D.
Professor of Guidance
CHARLES CURRIEN SmitTH, A.B., A.M., Pu.D.
Professor of Education
MARGARET LoutsE Hayes, A.B., A.M., Pa.D.
Assistant Professor of Education DEPARTMENT OF SCIENCE
BIOLOGY
FLroyp Epwarp Henrickson, B.S., A.M.,
Ep.D. Ravtpyu Greorce Ciausen, A.B., A.M., Pu.D
Assistant Professor of Education Professor of Biology
Racpu Burcu KENNEY, A.B., A.M., Pu.D. ‘ a ‘
Assistant Professor of Guidance gree DE ELIZABETH Douc.as, A.B., A.!
SHIRLEY Merritt, B.A., M.A. Assistant Professor of Biology
Instructor in Education
MInnig Brink ScoTLanp, B.S., A.M., Px.D. Crayton Hotoway, B.S., M.S.
Assistant Professor of Biology Instructor in Chemistry
Naomi TiMMERMAN, B.A., M.A.
BERNARD R. Exuison, B.A., M.A. Visteuckor in Chemistry
Instructor in Biology
CHEMISTRY
PHYSICS
SU: ASMU AN ° ewe .N °
ona Lanrorp, JRr., B.S., A.M., CHARLES LUTHER ANDREWS, A.B., Pu.D.
ee Professor of Physics
Professor of Chemistry
Marvin J. Pryor, B.S. in Ep., A.B., A.M.
Wi_LtiAm GEORGE KENNEDY, Pu.B., A.M. i : c
‘ Instructor in Physics
Assistant Professor of Chemistry
ARTHUR P. Jones, A.B., M.A.
MARGARET DoroTHEA Betz, B.5S., A.M., Pa.D. “ae
Instructor in Physics
Instructor in Chemistry
Joun JosePH Sturm, A.B., A.M.
Instructor in Chemistry
DerK VIVIEN TieEszEN, A.B., A.M., Pu.D.
Instructor in Chemistry
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Bee Sa SN a TERS
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Well, here we are—Seniors . . . 47 seemed
a long way to go that September . . . but
now it seems to have been only a month
... We were first in many things . . . we
were the largest class with the fewest
number of men . . . we were the first class
without fraternities . . . the first class in
twenty years to win the Campus Day
Cup ... the first Green class in twenty
years to win Rivalry .. . the first class to
have the new Myskania . .. the first class
to see Sayles Hall become a women’s
“J feel sure that all of vou . . . will join the alumni
association and pay your dues promptly.”
* *Hyzzah!’ I shouted. ‘Huzzah!’ ”
dorm ... And, we’ve done what other classes have done . . . only we think better . . . we've lost
and then won Rivalry . . . we’ve had our president painted blue . . . we've made up a thousand
songs and we’ve cheered the Gremlins until our voices stopped .. . we’ve eaten Moving-Up Day
breakfast and a million Ideals and studied for finals at the Boul . . . we’ve had all-night bridge
games and bull sessions . . . We've married off some of our girls (like Treasurer Al Knapp Randall
and Ex-President B. J. Bittner Vaughan), and our men . . . We’ve studied a lot (47 made up the
largest percentage of Dean’s List . . . and remember Carlson's 2.89 average?) ... we've drunk a lot
of beer (remember the night at the 119 when we won Rivalry?) . . . we wouldn’t say the Class
of °47 discovered Ockie’s, but there are green plaques with names like George Hess under all the
tables . .. We've had people like Fred (I object) Fancher and Gerhardt (Robert’s Rules) Weinberg,
and we've got people like President Woody, V P Zumbo, Secretary Honeycomb, Phil (I just want
your blood) Lashinsky, Bentley of the paint brush and gavel, and Campus Queen Sally ... And
now we’ve seen the men come back .. . we’ve had our Senior Banquet . . . we’ve sweated out Milne
days, and we’ve had our last Ped picture taken . . . we've had a wonderful time . . . we'll be back
now and then... don’t forget us.
OR S$
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ABRAMS, HARRIET
B.S.
Cairo
Ainsworth, ARTHUR D.
A.B.
Pulteney
AsHwortH, Haro.p G.
A.B.
Albany
24.
Acker, RAYMOND HENRY
B.S.
Albany
ALVERSON, JOAN HELEN
A.B.
New Paltz
AXELROD, CELENA
A.B.
Gloversville
ANDERSON, MariLyn J.
A.B.
Jamestown
Baker, GiortA May
A.B.
Pleasantville
ARMSTRONG, BoupDINA E.
A.B.
Central Square
Beckers, ALICE CAROLYN
B.S.
Stone Ridge
Berc, CAROLINE
A.B.
Gloversville
BopacH, JUNE WHEELER
A.B.
Valley Stream
Binn, ELEANOR
A.B.
Haverstraw
Bove, HELEN ELIZABETH
A.B.
Albany
BENTLEY, RutH W.
A.B.
Glens Falls
BLACKBURN, GEorGE M.
A.B.
Geneseo
Bo.it, LORRAINE
A.B.
Poughkeepsie
BERBARY, ALBERT
A.B.
Fultonham
BLYTHE, Marvin RUSSELL
A.B.
Walton
BootuH, KATHRYN C.
A.B.
Marathon
29
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Bopp, AupREY Mir1AM
A.B.
Albany
BRECKLIN, GLORIA
A.B.
Cohoes
Burnup, MARILYN JANE
A.B.
Black River
Braun, LILLIAN
A.B.
Syracuse
BRENNAN, Betty L.
A.B.
Deer Park
Busu, Doris A.
A.B.
Binghamton
BrENNI, Vito J.
A.B.
Highland
ByruM, CATHERINE H.
A.B.
Schenectady
Broperick, BEVERLY
B.S.
Binghamton
CALLAHAN, GERALDINE
A.B.
Saratoga Springs
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CapeL, CHARLES E. Cape.Less, Patricia ANNE
A.B. A.B.
Schenectady Schenectady
Capron, Cormac G. Carey, Mary ELizABETH CARLSON, THELMA A. CAUGHRAN, HELEN D.
A.B. B.S. A.B. A.B.
Rochester Floral Park Freehold Schaghticoke
CAVANAGH, JEANNE T. CEELEY, MARION THEO CHAMBERLAIN, Avis M. CoueEN, Bernice M.
A.B. A.B. A.B. A.B.
Troy Troy Watertown Kingston
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See
Couuier, JULIA
A.B.
Pawling
ComsBs, THEODORE ROBERT
A.B.
Freeport
CORNWELL, ARTHUR J. JR.
A.B.
Schenectady
Cook, CLiypeE KEITH
A.B.
Painted Post
Con.ey, JAMES THOMAS
A.B.
Wappingers Falls
Cox, AupreyY E.
A.B.
Whitesboro
Crump, CrLarre ADELINE
B.S.
Ilion
CROSSLEY, BEVERLY
B.S.
Mayfield
Cross, IRENE A.
B.S.
Medusa
CuLLINAN, Mary ANN
A.B.
Oswego
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Da Brescia, Mary Davipson, JEAN E.
A.B. A.B.
Cadosia Valley Cottage
Davipson, MARTHA Day, VircintA ANNE De1pLE, DOROTHEA DeLecce, ANITA
A.B. A.B. A.B. A.B.
Northville Hudson Mongaup Valley Utica
DELORRAINE, MARJORIE pEROUVILLE, Patricia J. Devus.er, Marion D. DiENER, MARYELLEN
A.B. A.B. A.B. A.B.
Painted Post Albany Vestal Binghamton
DIKEMAN, Doris ANNE
B.S.
Wilson
Dopce, Loutse JEANETTE
A.B.
Ilion -
Doucnury, JEAN E.
A.B.
Oneonta
tenga Rabe iste te Fee
Dines, Mary ALIcE
A.B.
Brattleboro
Do.iarp, Joan Mary
A.B.
Albany
Drivas, JENNIE
A.B.
Mineola
Doran, Doris M.
A.B.
Corning
DrUSCHEL, Henry R.
A.B.
Canandaigua
Dorr, EVELYN
A.B.
Binghamton
Duse, JupITH
BS.
Amenia
Dunn, SALLY DurBECK, ELEANORE E.
A.B. A.B.
Rome Poughkeepsie
Evans, MALCOLM FitLMAN, Lots
A.B. A.B.
Yorktown Heights Rochester
DunNcAN, GRAHAM DuUNLAY, MARTHA
A.B. A.B.
Poughkeepsie Watertown
ELTING, JEAN ERBSTEIN, GEORGE B.
A.B. A.B.
New Paltz Beacon
FRANCELLO, E_vira A. FRASER, Roperick D.
A.B. A.B.
Glasco : Oyster Bay
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FRIEDMAN. Harriet L.
B:S.
Schenectady
Frost. MARION
B.S.
Hudson Falls
GirRVIN, GERTRUDE KASPER
A.B.
Albany
FRIEDMAN, LUCILLE
A.B.
Poughkeepsie
GALLAGHER, NATALIE
A.B.
Kerhonkson
GLAVIN. CATHERINE
B.S.
Poughkeepsie
GANSLOW. DOLORES
B.S.
Dunkirk
GoopricH, JANICE ELAINE
A.B.
Troy
Gipp, STANLEY WARREN
A.B.
Tonawanda
GouLp, HArRoLD VERNON
A.B.
Albany
er RN gE TERRE
HANNON. VIRGINIA MARY
B.S.
Watervliet
HEERMANCE, LAURA
A.B.
Hudson
Harpinc,. BETTE
A.B.
Vestal
Hemesury. JEAN
A.B.
Marietta
GRADONI, ETTORE
B.S.
Cohoes
Harvey. Mary E.
B.S.
Auburn
Henry, JEAN CHARILLE
A.B.
Copenhagen
Guino, CATHERINE
Ain:
Clinton
Hawes. JOAN MARGARET
A.B.
Ilion
Hiccins, Joseru B. Jr.
A.B.
Troy
a eg ae
MI
Hitt, Betty Rose
A.B.
Corning
Ho.uts, Marcia JEAN
A.B.
Pulaski
Hoskins, HELEN ELOISE
A.B.
Fort Edward
Hiapik, DorotHy ANN
A.B.
Binghamton
Ho tsteE1n, Lois E.
A.B.
Utica
HucuHes, ALMA
B.S.
Amsterdam
HoncHARIK., MARY
B.S.
Yonkers
HutcuHinson, Lois IRENE
A.B.
Troy
HoneYCcCOMBE, HELEN E.
A.B.
Johnstown
JEDEIKIN. SYLVIA
A.B.
Mt. Vernon
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JENNINGS, HELEN M. JENSEN, GLORIA
B.S. A.B.
Mayville Hicksville
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JOHNSON, SARAH JANE Jones, ANNA L. Jones, Betty JANE KEARNEY, PatriciA ANNE
A.B. A.B. A.B. B.S.
Endicott Kingston BREWSTER Delmar
Kemesties. ANNA KILBORNE. HELEN R. Knapp, DorotHy EpwIna KNIGHTS, SHIRLEY J.
A.B. A.B. A.B A.B.
Sayville Taberg Cornwall-on-Hudson Galway
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KosBLENz, AVROM ABBA
B.S.
Albany
KRAMER, MOLLY
A.B.
Niagara Falls
Kunz, Georce J.
A.B.
Troy
36
KoeEHN, ANNETTE ROSE
A.B.
Hempstead
KRONBERG. VIVIAN
A.B.
Oneida
Kunz. Lorna JoYce
A.B.
Westmoreland
KULLMAN, WARREN D.
A.B.
Albany
Kupock. PAULINE E.
A.B.
Yonkers
KunickaA, LILLIAN A.
A.B.
Albany
LAFFERTY, JANE
A.B.
Niagara Falls
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B.S. A.B.
Albany Chittenango
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LASHINSKY, PHILLIP Lawson. Do.ores P. Lewis. JUSTINE S. LILIENFIELD, RUTH
A.B. A.B. A.B. A.B.
Monticello Maspeth Albany Stephentown Center
LINKER. CHARLOTTE Lucsok, ANN McCartnuy. Eucene J. McCartuy, RutH L.
A.B. B.S. A.B. B.S.
Albany North Tonawanda Westbury North Tonawanda
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McConneELL, SHIRLEY J.
A.B.
Constableville
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McDoweE LL, OLIvE G.
A.B.
Watervliet
Mane, OLIvE BARBARA
A.B.
Fulton
McDoweE Lt, Exizasetu M.
B.S.
Amsterdam
McGratTH, EvizaBetuH I.
A.B.
Ellenville
Marcort, EL1izABETH ANN
A.B.
Beth Page
McManus, GLoria
A.B.
Orangebury
MARKLEY, MARGARET P.
A.B.
Macrew, Joan Do.Lores
B.S.
Albany
MARSLAND, WILLIAM D. Jr.
A.B.
Amityville
38
MatycHAk, ROSE MELESK Y, FLORENCE
A.B. A.B.
Beacon Albany
MINSBERG. SOLOMON JAY Monty, DorotHy Mary
A.B. | A.B.
Poughkeepsie Plattsburg
Martin, Apa JANE
A.B.
Clarence
MICHEL, CAROLINE
A.B.
Baldwin
MorpaAuNT, DoroTHY
AB.
Oswego
MASTRANGELO, ANN C.
A.B.
Pelham
ee
MILLER, WILLIAM G. Jr.
A.B.
New Kingston
Mu.son, HELEN AGNES
A.B.
Ripley
. acant
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Nasozny. JOHN P. NayLor, Mary ADAMS
A.B. A.B.
Hudson Port Jervis
NIELSON, VIVIAN R. Nosat, PAULA IRENE
A.B. B.S.
Highland Cohoes
O’Leary, Paut J. Oxivet, ArTHUR J. Jr.
B.S. A.B.
Albany Kingston
40
Oarr, CLARENCE
A.B.
Delmar
Partow, ARLENE VETTER
A.B.
Valley Stream
O’GrRADY, MARJORIE ANN
A.B.
Sayville
PALMER, JOYCE
A.B.
Scio
Pastore, IRENE A.
A.B.
Ballston Spa
PENDER, MARGERY
B.S.
Binghamton
PENROSE, ROBERT PAUL
A.B.
Endicott
Poo Ler. ROSALIE
A.B.
Syracuse
PETERSON, PAULINE L.
A.B.
Elnora
PRENDERGAST. ELEANOR A.
A.B.
Fredonia
Pickett, VINCENT P.
A.B.
Mechanicville
PuncHAK. NorMA ETHEL
A.B.
Schenectady
Prrowski, Gioria J.
A.B.
Hicksville
Quinn. CATHERINE M.
BS.
Albany
Quinn, Doris M.
B.S.
Loudonville
RANDALL, ALICE KNAPP
A.B.
Homer
Reep, Laura C.
A.B.
Cooperstown
RABINEAU, LOUIS
A.B.
Albany
Reap, ALBert J.
A.B.
~ Glenmont
Reynotps, Mary E.
A.B.
Troy
Rector, JEAN E.
A.B.
Binghamton
REYNOLDs, RutTH ELEANOR
A.B.
Binghamton
Reep, BENJAMIN ROBERT
B.S.
Albany
Ro.LiLeMA, Louise ANN
A.B.
Windham
Rosen, InMA Muriev
A.B.
East Nassau
RussE.i, Patricia JANE
A.B.
Glens Falls
Rusack, Henry W.
A.B.
Amsterdam
SALLUCE, MARIE
B.S.
Catskill
Romp, Mary ELizABETH
A.B.
North Troy
Rusin, MurieEt RHODA
A.B.
Poughkeepsie
Sau, RuTH
A.B.
Albany
Roscoe, CHARLOTTE
A.B.
Howe’s Cave
Russe i, JEAN E.
A.B.
Harrisville
Serci, SANTINA C.,
A.B.
Endicott
43
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i B.S. A.B.
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{ | A.B. A.B. A.B. A.B.
y Millerton Albany Albany Albany
in || SmitH, Lucy HELEN SmitTH, Ricwarp C, SmitH, Rosa MAE SMITH, SALLY ANN
ab A.B. B.S. A.B. A.B.
| Mt. Vernon Rochester Geneva Albany
Snow, EARLE ROGERS Jr. Snow, JEAN CHAPMAN
A.B. A.B.
Port Jefferson Port Jefferson
Snow, FaitnH A. SorpcHAK, NICHOLAS STANDISH, HARRIET A. STEWART, MArTIN DOLAN
A.B. A.B. B.S. A.B.
Delmar Auburn Naples Glens Falls
SriecLitz, Mary ANN Sro_re, Mary LOuISE Stone, ALAN LEONARD STURZENBERGER, DorotHuy B.
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Arkville
TAYLOor, SHIRLEY EpITH
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Fort Plain
TERHO, ALLAN P.
A.B.
Freeport
46
TANENBAUN, EDITH
BS.
Saratoga Springs
TEETER, Ropert JOHN
B.S.
Albany
Tessier, Mary
A.B.
Schenectady
TELIAN, Mary EL_en
A.B.
Corning
THompson, GLoria ANN
A.B.
Winthrop
Ten Eyck, Rosert C.
A.B.
New York City
TRACHTENBERG, RUTH
A.B.
Mt. Vernon
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A.B. A.B.
West Branch Cortland
Tucker, WILLIAM FRANCIS TuTHILL, Vircinia G. Van AKEN, Marcaret D. Van VRANKEN, VIRGINIA
A.B. A.B. A.B. A.B.
Kingston Barryville Interlaken Stillwater
VERREY, RAYMOND WALTER Vimmerstept, Nona Rag ViITULLo, Marion VY. Voc ier, MERCEDES
A.B. B.S. A.B. A.B.
Albany Jamestown Niagara Falls Garnerville
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A.B.
Brooklyn
48
WALKER, WARREN 5.
A.B.
Albany
WATKINS, SHEILA
A.B.
Newburgh
WELLs, JOHANNA
A.B.
Albany
Weser. Haroip M.
A.B.
Waterford
WHIPPLE, SHIRLEY M.
B.S.
Ossining
WEINER, HERBERT
B.S.
Albany
Wuitrt, THomas RosBerr
B.S.
Albany
fhtrenesnatemeen
Witson, ROBERTA
A.B.
South Fallsburg
Yates, JOHN M.
A.B.
Albany
Winters, LOUISE
A.B.
Johnson City
ZIEMBIEC, HELEN C.
B.S.
Angola
WILLARD, KLEANOR K.
BS.
Ogdensburg
Wooparp, RutH
A.B.
Haines Falls
Z1pPIN., CALVIN
A.B.
Albany
WILSON, FLORENCE G.
A.B.
Albany
WoopworthH, Francis C.
A.B.
Brownville
ZuUMBO, CONCEPTA
A.B.
Canastota
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ADDITIONAL
Arnold. Jeanne Gosselin
Barselou, Paul E.
Carey, Mary Ann
Chase, Charles Gardner
Cohen, Edward J.
Cunningham, Anna Katherine
Dromgoole, Jeanne Marie
Droms, Virginia D.
Feeney, Thomas
Fernan, Mary Ann
Fisk, Patricia M.
Freedman, Leonard
Gordon, Walter
Hall, Robert
Hansen, Franklin James
GRADUATES
Hyatt, Evelyn Steinbach
Miller, Werner Otamar
Pohl, George R.
Randolph, Robert Emory
Robertson, Betty A.
Skerritt, Paul A.
Sparks, Elma S.
Spellman, Mary
Teverin, Dorothy
Van Gelder, Mary Elizabeth .
Warner, John Ellsworth
Weinstein, Jack
Williams, Elizabeth Ann
Zilles, Luke Escala
Accelerated Juniors )
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| f . EyYGABROAT, SHIR A.B.
| i D1 GREGORIO, VirGINIA BS.L5S. Halcottsville |
A.B. Painted Post f
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Doris Hancock, MARION a |
py aes aes
HaitHWAITE,
Gurka, ELIZABETH AB.
A.B. Amsterdam
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CLASS OF 1947
a MILLMAN; MiriAM AB. :
MAIZE; MarJor A.B. Saugertt
| A.B. Albany
| Rye
NOR :
Wink er, ELEA ;
_— SopERLIND, ARTHUR BS. ,
' ScHNEIDER, ELEANO AB. Utica |
RuSsSELL, ARTHUR AB. Margaretville |
Ravena
atone ease
Moore, BeverLty BERGEN, DONALD
Not Photographed Not Photographed
Campus Night . . . “Who's the Queen gonna be? . . . the
Pages appear .. . cries of “It’s Sally!” ring through the audi-
torium . . . runners-up Alverson, Sweeney, Bentley and
Randall in their loveliest smiles . . . ’48-a study in light and
dark ... the gay young sophomores of the lengthy locks .. .
°50-tall and terrific . . . the first court boasting of two married
women ... all eyes on Queen Sally in traditional white, satin
and roses, reigning supreme over her State subjects .. .
oe
iO R$
J U N
“You have a special obligation to the world.”
“She was incredibly lovely.”
CLASS OF 48
Out of rivalry . . . into every other activity with even greater gusto . . . the inimitable daffodils of
"48... vitality plus! . . . 8:10 methods classes . . . Oh, how I hate to get up in the morning... post
ED 10 sessions at Ockie’s lest we forget the return of Junior weekend . . . chalk one up for “48...
the old STATE .. . Queen Rita, lovelier than ever .. . Worth, Kisiel and Hildreth . . . our girls with
the kind of harmony we like ... harmony typical of °48 . . . some bunch, the Juniors . . . synonym
for cooperation . . . finger in every pie . . . erstwhile politicians . . . also thespians . . . “48 really sets
a worthy example . . . spurring the Frosh on... . their reception with memories of last year’s smash
hit “Big 8”... bustling president Alice Williams keeping the class right on top . . . Lovey (we
hate to see you leave) .. . Givie with the sultry voice . . . never-a-free-moment Baldwin . . . officers
doing °48 proud . . . “Minnie” with a new coat of paint, almost made the Dean’s list this year...
this year’s banquet rivaled the Roman feasts . . . another daffy (daffodil that is) milestone . . . eve
of Moving Up ... last minutes with that well-earned Rivalry Cup . . . “to white and yellow we will
ere be true”... welcome mat out to the returning men of war ...it won’t be long now . . . breathless
Moving Up day ... “they've moved up to their practice teaching.”
‘Since long ago when we first mat,
Our swell bunch is together yat.”
CLASS OF ‘49
. a friendly upper classman who
sold mea... freshman cap.”
ee
-
“Vive la °49” .. . Off with a bang last year...
Right in the thick of it this year . . . The
“Rush of °49” here at State... Soph “Shindig”’
started the red ball rolling . . . Memories of
Red Hook, Frosh Camp. A French cafe—of
their frosh days revived . . . Sopbs on best
behavior at reception . . . They decided blue
really becomes frosh . . . New assembly seats
... Activities Day ... Verdant frosh smile into
blank camera and pay for Campus Queen’s
flowers ... They still signed up for Myskania
and dates ... Pushball rivalry came back .. .
Sophs on the ball! . . . Cheerleading terrific . . .
Campus Day, a hard battle . . . °49 “dood it” a
again ... Their class numerals twice on that
coveted cup... W.I.B. and Montmorency |
invaded “Treadmill Tech” in winning skit . . .
Banner rivalry problems started . . . ‘Where, :
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“What will it be, gentlemen?”
ere
PED. SEIT PE
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~
"Yes, he did well at his work.”
‘They stoned me in an amiable fashion.”
og
oh where, are the banners hidden?” . . . Talent displayed as °49 lifts victorious voice to its Alma
Mater... “Tin Pan Alley” Pinky composes a new State College Fight Song... February 15th—
Soph Banquet at the Circle,” February 16th—that well fed and amused Soph look . .. Frosh
dumbfounded by “49ers dramatic abilities . . . Bob Wilcox directed that extra—“Big Eight” a la
Broadway production, in a circus theme . . . "49 backed Bob Baker again! . . . Initiation of “Baker's
Dozen” cabinet system . .. Post of Vice-President to Bob Kittredge, of Secretary to Lee Fmmerling,
and of Treasurer to Bob Kaiser... A good and just administration ... A golden quota of men was
given to fraternities and many participants to extra-curricular activities, by “49 . . . Flaming red
devils invaded State’s halls . . . Historian Cocky recording their fame . . . Find them anywhere—
Commons, Boul, Ockies, even in the Library ... “The Red and the White . . . Emblem of Fighting
749!”
ee
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FROSH
CLASS OF ‘50
“For it’s °50, °50, °50” . . . charge of the blue brigade . . . quick to get into the swing of STATE...
frosh camp .. . “little frogs” in a big puddle . . . ‘‘Where’s your beanie?” . . . “Don’t go through
that door first”... “I wish to apologize to Student Association—” . . . few weeks of hell for 50. . .
every organization felt °50’s impetus . . . all-rounders, every one . . . those invigorating orientation
classes . . . they fell harder, laughed harder at Activities Day gags .. . (beware class of 51) ...
friendly rivalry with no holds barred . . . showed their prowess in the football game... broken limbs
and battered bodies . . . badges of fighting pride ... Myskania felt ’50’s strength in the tug of war...
“You are facing the future with the confidence of youth.”
"I would prove worthy of the consideration that
my new Alma Mater had lavished upon me.”
**. .« We don’t even caunt their ballots.”’
hid their heads in shame . . . these frosh aren’t
so little . . . “49 won’t forget ‘the assembly
effigies ... the rivalry sing .. . drown out those
Sophs .. . loss of the Campus Cup didn’t dis-
courage 50... officers capable of handling any
situation ... Pres. Dick Feathers . . . one for
the cap ... Vice-Pres. Doris Price . . . blond
and active as they come ... wide-eyed
McCracken and red-headed Willsey . . . both
live wires ... the Campus Day skit... abound-
ing talent... (50 has a trio, too... ask Key-
ton, Basset and Morgan . . . Remember the
“Big-8” snowmen? ... good thing AD and ED
are back... nifty fifty went all out for dramat-
ics . .. budding Bernhardts and Barrymore’s
... five men on the varsity basketball squad...
some claim to fame! ... Fersh piling up that
score .. . dependable, steady George . . . Mar-
zello, O’Brien, Karpiak . . . they rhyme with
basketball .. . forecast of the bluejays’ immor-
tality at STATE.
SSRIS AO IT Te
CO UN. Cit
“The meeting will now come to order.”
‘‘Now kids, this is a new Council, we’ve got a new constitution, and some new resolutions, so let’s
make it a big year!”.. . Bentley pep-talks her squad of twenty-two legislators ... So what happened?
... So it was a big year! .. . A new and bigger year as she said . . . Every argument included, “But
under the new constitution—we don’t! ... Worth demanded, “How can the books balance when the
government doesn't send us the vets’ fees?” . . . and ““Kocky” took down the furious proceedings in
new and original shorthand . . . Revitalized rivalry by “47°’s Woodworth . . . While Lashinsky ...
injected hilarity into the assembly schedule—with a magician! . . . Council’s new duties in Student-
Faculty relations shared by Bentley and Axelrod . . . “Mingle, kids, mingle! ... Something new. ..
a
OO. pance e0 te. n eA
ee eg
Se ee ee
Council’s press agent—Pulver . . . and Mcln-
tyre’s version of Robert’s Rules (double talk, of
course) .. . The “long and shorts of it” were
new members Maloney, Sturzenberger, and
Mieras . . . And the newest of all were Frosh
Feathers, Cooperman, Webber, Jones, and
Rice ... . Not all credit to newness . . . some of
the lettermen and girls were back . . . appoint-
ment-man Conley and constitution-wise Prindle
and Berg... Nor was the friendly-enemy situa-
tion with Williams and Gilbert vs Baker and
Zanchelli new . . . Fine teamwork resulted in
Campus Day and Student Union Day .. -
Beautifully made final touchdown . . . Moving-
Up Day .. . Training rules requiring ability,
ambition, and the Handbook ... Our Laughing
Legislators...
“They re... swell kids.”
. . ‘ r >
‘Is there any discussion? You outa order.’
“I would like to change places with Bill Jones, the welder.”
‘
;
“Oh, sure, they’re pretty to look at.’
Eg RE om a
;
r €:.2 A GS: OULU. CE
PEDAGOGUE . .. that’s sweat and tears spelled any way you look at it .. . that’s $1,000 extra from
the Student Association surplus ... PEDAGOGUE . . . that’s being hysterical with joy when we decided
on the new theme in October .. . that’s the letter from Max (“Barefoot Boy With Cheek”’) Shulman,
framed in 14 carat gold plate that hangs over Elting’s bed . . . PEpAGOGUE .. . that’s Jean Elting,
the editor, who stayed up all night before deadlines, and photography editor Johnson, who cropped
pictures in her sleep, and literary editor Berg, who sent Ped stories to her mother by mistake, and
business manager Cavanaugh’s “and the cost of printing has gone up 18%,” and advertising manager
( Sturzenbergers “they’ve got to give us a $40 ad this year”. . . and Paul Meadows, who took the
informal shots (he had classes, too) ... PEDAGOGUE... that’s frantic letters to George, the publisher
... that’s important staff meetings in the quiet of Ockie’s ... ah yes, it was a great year... we
changed our minds a hundred times . . . we’ve been excited and discouraged . . . we’ve talked about
the Ped until we’ve seen it in our dreams. . . there were times when mining coal seemed like child’s
play, but, they tell us that bringing children into the world is never easy, and the Ped’s our baby
... and we love her.
MCOHOOPYoMVe |
**Name, address, age, height . . . on the back.”
SS eee ee
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‘Nobody spoke below a shriek.”
y **Hold the presses!”
The P.O.... hub of State... of crushed cigarette butts... latest jokes... weirdest philosophies . . .
crossroads of our campus .. . our contacts ... our conversations . . . our college life ... In this
madhouse of mirth and mastery, the elite meet . . . Hippick of “Common-Stater” fame pitches
pennies with onions and orchids Zilles . . . Tichy’s feet trample sports department Sheehan and Day
... Big Chief “Ink-in-her-veins” Tessier pays hush money to Shapiro and Quinn, Blackmailers Inc.,
who made her lithesomely lighter in the Myskania Tug-O-War story . . . Mindy tempts the intel-
lectual appetite with “Soup to Nuts”... Co-Associates Hagerty and Skolsky, toujours-la . . . the
Junior Big Three, Clark, May and Clark crack the whips . .. Sophs bow low .. . “Beauty and Brains”
Dunlay and “pay or perish” Pender angle for ads . . . Luscok balances on the brink of bankruptcy
t
.
| “Tear ouf the front page! I just got the results . . Pa q
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|
| |
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| I
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|
... Kunz and Breclin “cover the earth” with
NEWSes for noses . . . Cokes are raised to
Cupid ... the Skolsky’s smile . . . Mrs. Clark ‘Let's get down to business.” |
shines her golden band . . . “lives alone and |
doesn’t like it . .. Woodworth taps out Lohen- |
| grin on his portable . . . “Tomatoes are cheaper |
... The NEWS is a hard taskmaster . . . for
| the eager and aspiring . . . cub classes... |
headlines to count .. . endless errands .. . late |
hours . . . coke and cigarette diets . . . curses |
and kisses ... dismay and delight ... But life on |
the staff is its own reward ... Friday morning 69 |
... the NEWS is in the Rotunda”... they
also serve...
mene :
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“I could use a good robust short story.”
“Too intelligible. Everyone will know what we're saying.”
Poor Mindy ... She’s the editor, you know...
The first married one at that! .. . So many
problems . . . Primer’s Locker in the Commons
won't open .. . Ads are hard to find .. . All on
the look-out . . . Literary Editor, Kemesies . . .
Business Manager, Winters . . . Art Editor,
Binn, and company . . . Printer trouble, too
. . . Staff laboriously assembles assorted pages
for Primer at the printer’s . . . That’s to save
money! . . . Enlarged magazine results . .
Literary talent at STATE—well represented
in our Primer...
**Simba marimba,
Richard himba.”
Do you have any claim to fame? .. . Been
elected president? . . . Made dean’s list? .. .
Spirited away that class banner single handed?
... Read all about it... Where? ... The
hometown paper, of course! ... Press Bureau
on the job. . . Its fingers in every pie . . . Dick
Smith at the tip... Top, that is... Roving
reporters get all the dirt... Kisiel, Fleming,
and Farrell, Common’s bound . . . Can't keep
it from ‘em... Typewriters banging away ...
Hot news off the Press . . . Spread the word,
that’s the motto .. . Basketball victories,
Dramatic and Arts, or Music Council presenta-
tions . . . All make Albany papers . . . More
Press Bureau work ... Be first on that cafe-
teria line . . . Avoid the rush—slide down
Richardson’s banister... You doit... They ll
get it into print ... I love my mother's child
best ... Hurray Press Bureau . . . Keepers of
the Fame...
P RES S$
"One fellow, apparently some one of authority.”
BUREA VU
SS ee
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"CARRERE
Leth kee
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Sel ti
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Achievement is well rewarded.”
‘Four . ... were lined up against a wall,”
The Page Hall habitués . .. addicted to O'Neil
and surrealism . . . disciples of the Misses
Futterer and Hutchins . . . living out of make-
up boxes and paint bottles . . . Dramatics and
Arts Council . . . President Clyde Cook and his
cohorts determined to bring culture to STATE
via the arts. ;.. and make us like it... they
gave us sculptress Suzanne Silvercruys .. .-
Tuesday evenings again came to mean Ad-
vanced Dramatics . . . Bill Baldwin struggles
with the budget . .. two can't live as cheaply as
one!... A.D. broadening D and A’s scope .. -
almost but not quite swamping Jaffer, Diffen,
Schoonmaker and Co. under scripts, rehearsals,
and sets... Also-returned Art Soderlind lend-
ing experienced advice .. . Bobby Houck keeps
the records straight . . . Mass production of
posters, supervised by Alverson, Collier, and
Dube . . . Frenzied try-outs strive to beat
deadlines . . . and yet appear as unruffled
ushers on opening nights . . . Mary Harvey
President of College Playhouse, but indispensa-
ble to Council . . . her production of “St.
Joan”... one of the finest .. . STATE’s own
Damned Active Council . . .worthy of a long
run in Page Theater...
ie eee ———— prope ey ot
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“Hers was an uncomplicated world.”
Most organizations begin activities in November . . . but not Music Council . . . they started the
'46-'47 season off on a high note . . . an early October date saw a favorite ... Dr. Stokes and spouse
were featured in a fall concert . . . another note in their scale of success ... Paul Matthen . . . baritone
soloist and Vivian Harvey, Pianist ... they outdid themselves that night . . . an outstanding singer
... and an outstanding pianist ... what do you do Tuesday noons? ... you can get relaxation and
good music, too . . . Music Council sponsors a noon hour of recordings each Tuesday . . . and they
have quite a collection . . . all you have to do is request . . . each meeting is a social event . . . they’ve
“We were just having a serious discussion.”
There is the social life too.”
MUSIC
COUNCIL
got two men this year, Kirby and Snow...
It Snow fun without the Mrs., Jean’s there, too
... they sing, you know . . . Dines, Dikeman,
Berg, Rollema, Watkins, Pres. Naylor and
Treasurer Armstrong complete the Senior sec-
tion ... Bistoff, Maloney of the Golden Voice,
Mace, St. Priest, Marsher and Monroe, and
Coleman the Secretary, complete this Council
par excellence ... Music Councillors do have
some human failings ... we can’t forget that on
Activities’ Day everyone of them forget his key
to the cabinet . .. one smashed lock in the music
department . . . one smash hit—the operetta,
‘Erminie” ... and the Spring Concert... a
new and grand finale to an outstanding year. . .
te, ts
nn errr
a
Cc O Mm Mm § 3 S$.) Gs
On strike... we're not janitors .. . we re not
monitors ... Hey, Joe, that’s not fair... we re
Beautifiers of State,”’ ejaculates Grand Marsh-
al Dube . . . an exemplification of her own
statement .. . Posters at college level or else,
warn Vitullo and Kiesel . . . Carver on bended
knee, pleading for abolition from confetti-sized
notes... if your wallet’s lost containing $20,
Pless gets it back... the wallet, that is...
What if Zanchelli has a new suit ... . there isn't
that much money in the coke machine . . . those
noises in Lower Draper shouldn’t disturb you;
that’s Lengyel beating her brains out over her
protectorate, the Commons . . . and note
Shapiro’s super-“vic’’-sion . .. round and round
it rolls, what it prints, only Sittig knows (you
know, Joe, the mimeo) . . . what if Appleby
looks like he’s been through hel-lo . . . what’s
this? He’s responsible for P.O., lockers, halls,
lounge, campus . . . Mmmmm, he probably
doesn’t even belong to the Union . . . Landau’s
domain is the annex .. . where the Elite meet
to etcetera (unquote) ... P.S. Of course, Joe,
Seniors go first in assembly (it says here in
small print) .. . put “em all together it spells
Campus Commission . ... ours for a better
(cleaner, that is) State of being!
‘One doesn’t ‘turn the record OUT. .s
One ‘flips . .
. the platter—mate.””
rh
i
¥
i
eae RES eee
yds erage
Ft PI
DEBAT E
“If a girl is extremely pretty, it is correct to drool.”
“Silver Tongued Oratory” ... their call and
their avocation . . . whatever the question . . .
cultural advantage of the P. O. vs. the Com-
mons . .. or the price of whiskey in Winnona
- +. No peace nor compromise were to be found
in Debate Council’s chambers . . . Under the
fiery example of president Diener . . ..members
Hilt, Sheehan, Rabineau, Shapiro, Thompson
and Worth agreed to disagree on all scores . . .
Only on the success of the Inter-Collegiate
Spring conference was there a common con-
census of opinion . . . With great gusto they
waged verbal warfare . . . with no detail too
small, no topic too mighty to escape the on-
slaught of their oration ...
“*A decision must be reached.’
, ae
\
Ce
iNT ER GRO U P
State’s baby, Inter Group Council, has joined
the great... “Hutch” took over the chairman’s
reins . .. Chuck ran herself ragged, ably assist-
ing ... Striving for better group relations is the
object .. . Plans became realities . . . Speaker
panels invaded local P.T.A.’s . . . Qur own open
meeting featured movies and speakers
COUNCIL
Remember Pearl Primus, the dancer? .. . Folk
Festival, in April, climaxed events... Seminar,
ever enlivening interests .. . Never a dull
moment on Inter Group’s jammed calendar . . .
Faculty en masse, willing to lend a hand .. . It’s
the spirit .. . Now it’s a real part of STATE.
“He paused for emphasis.”
UNION BOARD |
A dream will become a reality . . . commuters
and alums will have a real place to stay...
student activities will be held here . . . real
offices . . . the property around Ontario and
Partridge . . . guess what it is yet? ... youre
right—the Student Union . . . until the realiza-
tion of that dream, Student Union Board will
manage... handle the money .. . accept dona-
tions .. . anything from proms to “Big Eights”
will help that dream . . . even schemes to de-
fraud the frosh on Activities Day .. . even
pledges from the Seniors . . . their president?
. . . an enthusiastic and capable one—to be
sure... “Scoop” Gilbert . . . is it successful?
... 80 far, so good . . . will it take long? ...
well, we can dream, can’t we?...
“Do they collect funds . . . ?”
Se LER TEAR Beco meg taser" ft te
_fobv ea cht Me tanh ee DOM AR GOS ees RRS ei es ae if BRN
:
‘Enough of this pecuniary chitchat.”
Take it away, take it away, take it away”... State’s great fiscal
minds... holders of the purse strings . . . a little matter of a thousand
dollar appropriation . . . Dr. York’s invaluable aid from Draper’s
heights . . . Tuesdays’ sans lunch . . . the trials and tribulations of a
legible ledger . . . defaults unknown . .. Bert Wakin and Cal Zippin
punctuating ping pong tournaments with Board meetings . . . Dot
Sturzenberger tactfully tossing the figures . . . 48’s Walsh and Nielson
—she recording those hectic sessions—he giving of his time amidst all
that poetical pondering . . . Dick Smith’s well-remembered dashes
down Page’s aisle testify to his physical and mental labors . . . off to
Dr. Cooper’s office for that checkbook . . . “We'd be lost without
you”... Willing work and balanced books keep State’s finances in the
black and’ give us the most for the least . . . Here’s to the budget
brigade! ...
STUDENT
BOARD O
"FINANCE
ee
ens
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— —
COMMUTER’'S
CLUB
“There is no greater satisfaction in the world than working hard.”
Who's the fellow frequenting lower Draper? . .. None other than Transfer Tommie, he of bow-tie
fame ... guardian and mascot of State’s Commuters Audrey Bopp and co-workers keeping State’s
traveling hordes in the know and making sure they have a part in the alma-mater’s activities
legitimate excuse—““my bus was late”. . . Being a commuter certainly has advantages! Ah,
ye fortunates with cars . . . dashing from suburbs and surrounding cities and being an indispensable
part of Minerva’s domain . . . they look to the future and to the long-awaited Student Union Building
pies place to roost and rest
“‘The good satisfying work of learning.”
=
‘
Si
FORUM
Forum reminds YOU ... Reception for Frosh q
and vets... Election Eve with gala party in |
Commons, plus provoking campaign talks o%. |
Debates . . . Panel discussions . . . Speakers
from foreign countries ... All this. and more
too... Interested in vital political and national
problems? ... Those Wednesday meetings will
solve (?) them... Strikes ... The world situa-
tion ... Politics . . . Their petite “Soap Box”
speaker is Irma Rosen... Drs. McNall and
Rienow enliven activities as advisors... A
heated discussion, an illuminating afternoon
... Forum provides it for you...
"I'd like to say something.” ;
}
PAN
AMIGOS
RT
Como esta usted? . . . you mean Senor Gomez?
... oh, muy bien... he goes over big with the
Pan Amigos members . . . they drooled over the
21 porticos of the University of Puerto Rico,
wishing they could be there . . . South America,
v
take them away ... Dr. Childers doing the
Mexican Square Dance with head amiga Wakin
... yes, Bertha made that holiday in Mexico
eee aE LN LA
a reality ... joining with the Latin and French
| aspirants in their annual fiesta . . . even the
| Spanish have a Santa Claus, no es verdad?...
ee
| ... She was as the expression goes, very muy usted.”
f
‘
i
“Qui est dans le corridor—SAINT SAENN.”
If you can’t parlez French as bien as you'd like to . . . or if you want to faire your accent mieux
le Cercle Frangais extends a hand of greeting . . . it meets dans the Lounge at trois-thirty . . . the
meetings are tout a fait enlightening . . . Gracious Muriel Griffin is le président . . . leading the
group as seulement she can . . . under the pleasant guidance of petite Mademoiselle Preston, char-
mante Mademoiselle Smith, and amiable Mademoiselle Dobbin, one can voir pourquoi you can’t
“keep ‘em down on the farm!” .. .
Banquets and movies . . . informal discussions . . . formal lectures . . . and all about Romans and
Greeks . . . really interesting and entertaining for those so inclined . . . sturdy students of the classics
combined with the knowledge of ancient history ... that is the Classical Club . . . their favorite song
is the “Tiniat” . . . need a hint? . . . just “Jingle Bells” in Latin... Drs. Goggin and Wallace assist
President Marion Lee Watkins to make it tops... .
“Oh, have you read . . . ‘The Case of the.Gelded Gnu’?”’
CLASSICAL
CLUB
CHEMISTRY
CLUB
ea a ae as ata abe bras pasar vena
Chemistry Club has everything . . . yes, not
only do they work hard in the lab, but the
treat of the year is the picnic at Dr. Lanford’s
farm ... they also have fun initiating the
novice ... meet the fish who substitute for Dr.
Lanford’s favorite right hand . . . Chem Club
isn’t all Dr. Lanford . . . even though they
would like it to be . . . outside speakers report
the value of chemical research in industry .. .
they can even be quite intellectual at times: Sf
... and Louise (Gesty) Winters presides over
the spasmodic meetings . . .
‘The work of the chemist is to extract
gold from the baser metals.”
Math rushes in where language fears to tread . .. membership after only one semester of analyt...
completed semester, that is . . . famous last words, “struggle through analyt and you can struggle
through anything, the atom bomb is a cinch after this” . . . President Seelbach, the statesman’s
Einstein, wields the slide rule to keep order. . . Birchenough, Beaver and Bulter are their three
B’s ... they all claim Math is a cinch . . . they take it for mental relaxation ... they love it...
Math club, take it away... |
‘Pll confess that I was nervous at my first . . . meeting . .7?
=
Ase
e
=
(ir ay
om
CS
aa i
1 EE Se *
fet AE
woOoM E N'S
St wee Ee PES
ASSOCIATION
“Her blue eyes were pools of innocence.”
** Seize the power
at this hour.”
‘I felt no need for words . . .”
‘Maybe we can find something.”
‘Have you seen W.A.A.’s bulletin board this month?” . . . favorite saying . . . sport set . . . Once all
roads led to Rome . . . now the beaten track is to lower Draper . - . Don’t put the blame on Mame
_.. Binn’s the gal responsible for the clever publicity ... Frosh Week-end . .. opening shot in the
long-range athletic program . .. Freshmen homesick? . : . didn’t have time to be . . . up at the crack
of dawn... icy cold dips .. . boating. . . softball... reviving water-logged Roch... “timber”...
the call of the wood gatherers ... Come into my parlor, sport... invited WAA at the Frosh reception
_. . Freshmen enthusiasts lured into the athletic web . . . apples, peanuts and coke used as bait...
Diffen and Moberg painted glamorous pictures of hockey camp... verbal that is... °50 initiated to
Plight of Little Nell” . . . Hockey practice ... rivalry game... cuts and bruises . . . run and grow
rugged ... (or is it ragged?) ... Camp Johnson . . . “call of the wild”... roughing it . . . loving
it... ‘Hay going on the Ride?” . . . The wagons overflowed . . . laughter and song vied for popu-
larity ... Miss Johnson opened her farmhouse . . . The hungry horde descended . . . fun and food . . .
Basketball season rushed in . . . on rubber soled sneakers . . . Shooting ability rose .. . balls fell...
through hoops and waiting arms... Rivalry interest scored high ... Tea for two... or two hundred
87
ey ers
Teh hy
Se Se aL SO Oe aN
=
#
*
-~
o
Cal
»
~
-
=
ae
**Collectivism
Is the thing for you and you."
** hereas and whereas and whereas.”
ee
.. . done with a certain amount
au 0 i
A. $5
Wi,
... when WAA poured the steaming brew . . . entertainment deluxe ... song fest ... a fencing
match ...ivory and ebony solo. . . “88 keyes” Henkel. . . Bowling ... the other belle of the winter
season made its debut in December . . . Strikes... spares... sore thumbs . . . gutter balls... “I
should have kept out of the alleys” . . . Twenty-one gun salute ... WAA’s Winter Carnival...
sleigh-riding . . . artistic snow figures . . . ice show at Washington Park ... glittering Snow Ball..
King Winter ... Touche . . . Saturday mornings ... Women in the Iron Masks .. . Fencing was the
fad .. . “Careful or you'll go home . . . with your head in your Bans. |.°5-4 Everybody got in the
swim... Kragh promised miracles . . . “you, too, can look like Esther Williams”... We dove in...
learned to save lives... but not curly hair... Casey at the bat... Or was it Randy? ... Everybody
wanted to get into the act .. . hopes high . . . balls low... the wind-up... the pitch... Take me
away from the Ball Game . . . High powered staff... Tilden... Diehl... Day... Callahan...
Tichy ... Quinn... Seaman... Owens... Mattison... Adams... all one slogan... We Adore
Athletics . . . Pres. Sweeney ... petite... redhead .. . terrific... right hand man .. . efficient
_.. enthusiastic Margot . . . close of WAA’s shooting season . . . key and numeral awards... cup
presentations . . . gleaming white jackets .. . The Du Barry Success Course . . . no soap. . . have
fun... grow thin in WAA...
89
J have been lying awake nights trying
to think of another way to do it.”
"Let's take off our costumes and go get some air.”
stevency ree naeeer on
per et earners sang er ret ae hal
See lS Te
Seer gg
ee
ee
>S.NAIW
“Excellent, my
THLETIC ASSOCIATION
“We got everything.”
M-ens A-thletics A-gain... A new, a bigger
and a “we hope to prove ourselves” better
MAA has returned to our long-awaiting Camp-
us... [he expanded program denotes progress
. .. this year’s leader, able president ‘“‘Bolo”
Marsland, the basic step in the right direction
... Lhe executive committee and representa-
tive council earnestly working on the “where
there’s a will there’s a way” theme... It all
started with the election of capable men inthe
key positions ... to start the hall rolling, there
was Pres. “Bolo” and his four chief side kicks
as vice-presidents—Evans, Stone, Weber and
"I blushed becomingly.”
&
”
é 772
McLaren . . . The secretaries’ roster included
Dooley and McNamara... Each class supplied
four men for the other half of the bi-cameral
system... to mention only a few of the names
which have and will mean athletics with a
capital “A” at State—O Brien, George, Train-
or, Jackson, Zanchelli, Merritt, Kirby, Corn-
well, Mullin, Ruback, Fersh . . . Cap’n Red's
“Ramblers” came out on top in the fall’s touch-
football bout . . . varsity basketball brought
packed stands to Page on a Friday and Satur-
day night . . . we were proud of the team’s
fighting spirit . . . discouragement was a word
you come in smelling of sweat.”
‘Even our most fundamental reactions
are often not instinctive, but learned.”
‘It will make a good impression if
i
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i
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j
cat SP: | aha Oa ine
b3
:
‘
r
<
4
“Hubba, gubba,
Goodrich rubba.”’
they didn’t know .. . The two leagues, frat and
non-frat, in the intra-mural class were not
outdone with EEP and the “Finks” carrying
off the laurels . . . Winter brought the newly
formed clubs into play . : . swimming, skiing,
tumbling, and rifle and boxing clubs . . . Spring
came and brought a banquet, varsity baseball,
tennis, golf, intra-mural softball and even a
track meet ... We can chalk this one up as a
year of progressive memories . . . the team
remembers the ferryboat ride from Burlington
to Plattsburg when the deck was the scene of a
last-minute drill that brought victory .. . the
other passengers thought they were crazy ...
Next year is always better when this year
leaves no regrets . .
“Then began a rigorous training period.”
... So busy with training.”
eee eae See ee eet eee oe
‘Fight with all your mights and mains.”
Se ee
a re
aoe
it nectar nn
ere tee
yt ty TSR ES Pen ae
_anecrereae
aE OE aS em
a
a Ia EE ee
Tes
I ae
aren em
ee wee vo Sr aR eae
SS = == =
Sear eae = EAPC SENT REE
Ta =
4 eS
>] t+ Dg. 2
SCA... Sociability ... Companionship... Action... Service... Cooperation . . . Accomplishment
... by-words of State’s Protestant organization ... In the flickering flame of Frosh Weekend Torch-
lights they saw inspiration .. . in the steady glow they perceived purpose and strength . . . These
visions were verified in weekly, Wednesday noon chapel bell services . . . Sunday morning sermons
... monthly Ingle room meetings . . . Sociability . .. Companionship . . . in an outdoor November:
campfire meeting... picnics... dances...talks...sings... all friendship forming ... all fun...
Action ... Service ... with faith and fervor, SCA members joined Albany church activities, where
deeds spoke louder than words . . . sang in the choirs . . . conducted State College Sunday at First
Church . . . they practiced what they preached . . . Cooperation . . . Accomplishments . . . with
Hillel in the special Thanksgiving Chapel . . . with other colleges in state and area conferences . . . in
presenting the religious clubs’ Christmas “Big 8”... in being a State highlight ... Nor could SCA
be a success without its gallery of “honored ones”... T.N.T., President Telian . .. “‘one and only”
Owens... dependable de Lorraine .. . magnetic Mieras ... to each of them a star for service “beyond
the call of duty”...
** Active in the greater fraternity of mankind.”
A at
9
95
know how to enjoy tt.
ASSOCIATION
Zz
s oe
%9
you,
~
guide
> 4
-
Be]
"Then vou must let me
The facilities to partake of the wisdom of the ages.
*. . . for time is but a picaune . . . in our world.”
‘Aw, gee, time to move tables” . . . Newman Hall frosh are quite aware of the existence of our
Catholic Club ... every other Thursday you'll hear “lift them chairs, tote them tables” . . . discus-
sions . . . conscience and confession . . . “the umbrella girl”... entertainment . . . songs ... the
operation ... tairy fales .. . retreats ... Communion breakfasts . . . kenediction in our own chapel
. dancing .. . Harp’s Riot and musical chairs . . . refreshments, the best by far . . . appropriate
green punch .. . frosh clean-up committee with the endless dishes . . . smokers .. . Holy Hour...
Father Cahill’s theme—‘‘Somebody Else Is Taking My Place”... Father Smith ... friendly ...
filling his shoes and white socks . . . getting into things . . . “46 brings back fellows . . _ ex-Pres.
Tucker and cronies ... Present president Cully demands attention... keen... concise... clever .
Vice-Pres. Lovey directs things social . . . Goldie writes the notes ... McIntyre gets the money, but
not for long .. . all the various and “Sunday” activities consume the capital . . . necessary
o . o
neighborly ... natural... national... this, Newman...
96
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:
RN SAB a SPOON NO a to oda ea pemaccemenae
a ae
**How clever, I mean how utterly.”
pea at
eae
ec ° °
-- » Quietly, quietly.”
‘Her crisp brown hair was worn
in a jaunty feather bob.”
eos penne - =) re
———
a
ee
Sen ee : Fase
Ziel cedleniaEneE taba od san le Ree
2
ONT Sag Pe ayaa cee tee Be
Sve
ler
a
wes - o< = ee te ~— Se ee ee ee ae ee Be mse ar 7 Sait STE SS, Tce a - =
eee eres Sous = —— ae es oy ° a ST ie a WS or Bie sc EE cai Skis. isis oe sian
: San : soe een em a nae, - _ $$ —-~-
SLL ae eee tes . = = ToT —— —_—_---- =z - -
TST SES se ese nnn - Nees conn ames ee eee ee oe sos eet a m eapegees = :
SO ee eee eee
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98
“I can tell you this much.”
ee
..@ group .. . working together for the good of all.”
Hillel tuned up to a high pitch this season, with Sol
Minsberg wielding the baton . . . capable Lou Rabineau
playing the second fiddle . . . Joyce Simon writing the
score... Marvin Wayne keeping the measures straight . . .
Beating ahead at full speed, the year began with a stac-
catto note at the Frosh Reception . . . keeping in rhythm
with their prelude of success, Hillel presented speakers,
picnics, exchange meetings, radio programs, dances and
§
*
|. . a big story .. . and with pictures.”
even a splash party. . . business meetings interspersed by
the lilting voices of Jean Hoffman and Muriel Rubin who
transposed the commonplace into a charming medley...
State will never forget the impressive Seder and other
services which helped rid us of dischords and brought
truer harmony ... With the kind, untiring Rabbi Moseson
as advisory conductor, Hillel has soared octaves higher
than ever before...
The traditions that lie behind you.”
Mies she cern CASTE, Mas REAPER CARI NS TA NN MN ra RL AT
Seatet ae Te = aaa
ae eee Sa
INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
"Our work met with considerable success.’
Have anything special to do noontimes? . . . Spend them wisely
and attend one of 1VCF’s daily meetings . . . close cooperation
with SCA in Wednesday Chapels, come hail or Washington
Avenue buses . . . advice and fellowship from Mr. Pryor...
Muriel Owens, engaged, lovely, and president, leads student
discussions on Tuesdays and Fridays . . . those sessions with
R.P.I. and Union aren’t hard to take either . .. Mary Van
Voorhis helping prexy Owens . . . Ruth Price taking down
=
“active” notes ... with Doris Hoenninger reading and writing
letters to the missionaries . . . funds, and there are plenty, kept
safe from harm by Jean Lasher . . . an organization apart from
SCA yet working along with it... IVCF may stand for Inter-
Varsity Christian Fellowship but at State those letters mean
even more . . . I—for Interest . . . V—for Vitality . . . C—for
“A pretty girl is described . . . as a smooth operator.” Christianity . . . F—for Friendliness...
100
ee ee
CANTERBURY
CLUB
Nast AA ai aL aah Se Nae NRE TEE A Ph ee a A SR a Nass MOC NEE
“T> each his own”... so to State’s Episcopalians Canterbury
Club .. . spiritual social service for church and school . . . busi-
ness meetings under capable Jean Henry with Shirley Williams
lending a helping hand .. . Secretary-Treasurer Grace Naylor
on the job with vital statistics ... Isabelle Cooper keeps Student
Association aware of the Canterbury crowd's activities with her |
assembly announcements . . . they remember fondly the solemn :
communion gatherings topped by the fun of beifg together and
a feeling of oneness with religion.
SMCs, ek
APPR MCT!
‘|. . constantly progressing...”
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
ORGANIZATION
State” has opened her arms in welcome... always willing to 2
, Se .. . we college people . . . know
widen the scope of interest . . . Yes, something new has been scat enatve tuthtng well
added” —The Christian Science Organization . . . under the gavel
of Marjorie Maize . . . in the infant stage, but it has built a strong
foundation on the basis of bi-monthly meetings . .- . Bill Corn-
wall and Shirley Van Popering cap top honors as Readers...
eager-beaver Charlie Miller as Clerk-Treasurer . . . make an
aim a lofty one... a link between the church and the student
body ... an opportunity for those of the same beliefs to “get-
to-know” each other... a handshake for good luck . . . progress
and success...
101
i
An ET OR te
a
> TT A T E S M E N
in = =
Lit, jae oe 2 *S
WAP dP
“It is up to us, da yoot of America, to build da future.”
Did somebody say, “The Vanishing Statesmen?” .. . “The Last of the Hellraisers?” ... Ha! .
. *
Even through the haze of the Smoker, those figures didn’t look very ghostly ... and those T shirts
don't in the least resemble shrouds . . . One war-time measure that turned out to be a peace-time
necessity ... this gang (“Why be dignified?” —their motto) of State’s men . .. Marsland as President
... although out of this world as far as the females are concerned ... very much alive and active . . ;
V.P. Weber . . . as “solid” an apparition as ever seen . .. And the Christmas formal . . . that was
no seance .. . just ask the crowds who enjoyed the “ghosts” ” host-ability . . . F’r instance—does
anyone doubt that Secretary-Treasurer Lashinsky is human? .. . no haunt ever moved or talked
102
‘First of all, I want you to know that I’m your friend.”
Dara ABR TES Oa
Pea
SH RRO SS
that fast! . . . The date parties held in the
Lounge . . . not in haunted houses . . - The
Moving-Up Day formal and the picnic at
oe
Indian Ladder—no medium” affairs ... but
A EDA REE CAPRA Li BE aa ROR NES FER
real evidence that these Ghastly (printer’s
error!) Statesmen know how to amuse us
Bara sas aa ea
humans! ... If these be ghosts . . - they can
sro ON
yay er
haunt us any old time!
inemaerdeanseceed
ec Oe
A. een noe mmcenynes:
Every single bid was significant.”
Alverson, Joan
Hilt, Betty Rose
“Off with the old, on with the new” ... Myskania shed
robes and donned popularity ... not an unlucky number
in the triumphant thirteen .. . no misses in the Myskania
sans mystery ... they tackled tradition and made a touch-
down ... the baker’s dozen . . . Vive La-Shinsky, every-
Hutchinson, Lois Lashinsky, Philip
something’s always “Cook”-ing—be it D and A or “name
it—he does it”... versatile Randall, kept busy by many
costumes, many posters and one husband . . . Debate
Council’s Hilt, Myskania chairman ...a moment of rever-
ence for Bentley—Signum Laudis, President of Student
Margot, Elizabeth
body's best friend ... symbol of enthusiasm .. . “Hutch” Association ... Let feminine hearts flutter . .. Combs, bas-
... with charity for all... Miss IGC ... athletic prowess ketball and Tiny Tim at Christmas ... Alverson, finger in
and queenliness ... Sweeney... Conley ... 47 class con- every pie and a ring on that same finger . . . nose for news
scious .. . she’s engaged, she uses diplomacy .. . Telian. Tessier, meets every deadline . . . smiling Soph advisor
mastermind of SCA, accompanies work with music... Margot... all big wheels on °47’s wagon.
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Bentley. Ruth Carlson, Thelma Caughran, Helen Dorothy Girvin, Gertrude
rete
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Pooler. Rosalie Quinn, Doris Reynolds, Ruth Roscoe, Charlotte Stone, Alan
Nee ST ee ee erate erica
Each year, Dr. Sayles mounts the platform for his “those who have attained outstanding scholastic
records at State College—please rise” speech, and those of us who remain seated turn admiring
Cohen, Edward faces to that erudite ten percent... Signum Laudis ... STATE’s Phi Beta Kappa ... This year’s
crop is sufficient proof that extra-curricular and excellent curriculum do mix ... Myskania-ites Alverson,
Bentley, Margot, Tessier . . . sportsmen Al Stone and “Butch” Walker . . . ex-queen Trudy Kasper
Gervin ... brains and beauty ... President Thelma Carlson . . . 2.89 average .. . The consensus of
student opinion... we’re proud of you for keeping STATE’s scholastic standing on top of the pile.
Gradoni, Ettore Dorothy
Knights, Shirley Lewis, Justine Margot, Elizabeth McDowell, Elizabeth Pirowski, Gloria
anetag>.
Tessier, Mary Walker. Warren Weiner. Herbert Ziembic, Helen Zippin, Calvin
>
A U OD
pe RED SNE FEET IS LENE OOP
— SS ee pes a Naas
en ee ee eee oe
a ne ee RS Sls : row” Sy wane —
sé —
Ainsworth. Arthur
Alverson, Joan
Carlson, Thelma
Conley. James
Cook. Clyde
DaBrescia. Mary
Davison. Martha
108
DeLegge., Anita
Diener. Maryellen
Durbeck, Eleanor
Friedman, Harriet
Girvin. Gertrude Kasper
Gradoni, Ettore
Hancock, Marion
Hermance. Laura
Higgins, Joseph
Janecek. Jarmila
Jedeikin. Sylvia
Kunz, George
Martin, Ada Jane
McDowell, Elizabeth
Minsberg. Solomon
Monty. Dorothy
Nielsen. Vivian
Pirowski. Gloria
Pooler. Rosalie
Reed. Benjamin
Reed. Laura
Carey. Mary Ann
Cook. Helen
Feeney. Thomas
Freedman, Leonard
Moore. Beverly
Ross. William
Pi GAMMA M VU
The thinkers of the social studies gang ... They have a new accomplishment .. . The largest mem-
bership ever . . . forty-seven strong, they are... at Delta chapter here at State ... And those gold
keys are not easily earned .. . They never flunked freshman history, but gave quizzes for Mr. Hidley
... weekly topics, on time, for Mrs. Eggelston . . . and still managed all those B’s . . . This is the
scholastic and intellectual aristocracy of State College’s history department .. . Besides Milne, they
take over history classes in the college when profs are snowed-in .. . They have fun, too... A
“coffee” for the social studies faculty, who are well represented in the organization, by the way .. -
In December, the Christmas party ... and an initiation banquet, for the newly-elected lucky ones, in
May to end the year’s activities . . . Presiding is Ellie Durbeck (she’s engaged!) ... Jim Conley 1s
V. P. (he is, too) ... Chris Truman is keeper of the minutes, and Elizabeth McDowell is Treasurer
_. . Wearers of the blue and white ribbons ... They have more than historical dates on their hands.
Reynolds, Ruth
Roscoe, Charlotte
Schneider. Eleanor
Sheehan. Patricia
Skolsky. Bernard
Smith. Richard
Standish, Harriet
Tanenbaum, Edith
Truman, Christine
Van Aken, Margaret
Whipple, Shirley
Ziembic, Helen
Pi OMEGA PI
One and two-thirds dozen of brilliant, brainy, and “better we know ’em, better we like “em” com-
merce students ... They’re the brave souls who have withstood the storm of accounting sheets and
hit the commercial jackpot . . . Dottie Sturzenberger, the head calculator . . . with a staff of sharp-
shooters ... versatile Bert Wakin as VP .. . Dick Smith balancing the books ... Ruth Lape copying
it all down in shorthand that’s beautiful enough to be framed ... Oh, this Beta Eta chapter is a busy
one and Helen Ziembec is sure that all events are systematically recorded for posterity ... It was
December 25th, when Bert Wakin and Harriet Standish went to Chicago for a national convention of
Pi Omega Pi, at the stately Hotel Sherman. . . our delegates grinned with pleasure at the unexpected
presence of Mr. Gemmell . . . Mr. Gibson—faculty speaker addressed an attentive group of commerce
addicts . . . All this and Dr. Cooper, too—and whether they’re tapping out a typing assignment,
swamped in accounting homework, or involved in the intricacies of Business Law, we tip our hats
to them, their talents and faculties . . . A toast to Pi Omega Pi, symbol of high commercial caliber.
Binn, Eleanor
Cohen, Bernice
Dikeman, Doris
Dube, Judith
Ganslow. Delores
Gradoni, Ettore
Honcharik, Mary
Hughes. Alma
Lape, Ruth
Luscok, Ann
Smith, Richard
Shaw, Madeleine
Standish, Harriet
Sturzenberger, Dorothy
Wakin, Bertha
Weiner. Herbert
Willard, Eleanor
Ziembic, Helen
al
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KAPPA PHI
KAPPA
Ashworth. Harold
Baden. Harry
Beach, Richard
Blythe, Russell
Bull, Stephen
Erbstein, George
Gould, Harold
Koblenz, Avrom Abba
Kunz, George
Merritt, Paul
Minsberg, Solomon
O’Leary, Paul
Olivet, Arthur
Pfaff, Curtis
Rabineau, Louis
Reed. Benjamin
Skolsky. Bernard
Tucker, William
White. Robert
Woodworth, Frank
Bombard. Owen
Bortnick, Martin
Feeney, Thomas
Freedman. Leonard
Germand. Henry
Holstein, Edwin
Levin. Joseph
Lynch, Howard
Roulier, Joseph
Evidence that good marks and good guys do go together
... They don’t want to seem too impressive, but these gen-
tlemen politely let us know that they are members of the
Chi chapter of the national professional fraternity for men
in the field of education ... that they are a part of an
organization which has over thirty chapters and ten
thousand members ... STATE’S sponsor is Dr. Beik, ably
assisted by president Joe Levin and also-married Owen
Bombard ... The bachelor officer slate consisted of George
“Dutchy” Erbstein and Bill “that’s all right who's treas-
urer” Tucker ... To receive a bid for membership, the
men, Juniors, Seniors and Grads, must have completed one
and a half years of work in the education department...
After receiving the right to wear the green and white
ribbon (it looks like Signum Laudis . . .K@K tells us the
only difference is the color) the men took part in the panel
discussions, debates and talks on topics of educational
importance ... It all sounds very pedagogish but K®K
finds that good talk is enjoyable when good fellows get
together.
PES PVA «
?
Piee£ ec fF
HALL
Wales, Baker, Reynolds, Maginess, Davidson, Price.
Pierce Hall—home of beautiful women . . . just
ask us—we live there .. . there’s a little of
everything, from Seniors who love it still to
Frosh who are still impressed . . . It’s quite a
place . . . no more alarm clock blues at 7:12
with Goodie on the buzzer . . . prune juice and
toadstool blues ... “I don’t know what we had
for breakfast—my eyes were closed” ...
“Gentle Anna,” the maid, who never saw a
dust mop . . . Homework? . . . hellnno...
“gotta practice for the bridge tournament until
my date comes”... no lollygagging on the
front porch until 12:50... (try the Wells)...
or perhaps a bull session... Wednesday night
faculty guests ... guests from VanDerzee for
See page 126.
4
Sunday dinner . . . the Hallowe’en party ...a q
t wedding in November and the formal dinner at 4
Christmas .. . formal days when flowers arrive q
in crates ... cries of horror when the flowers i
' don’t match ... “but I told him purple... ‘
purple flowers!” . . . the difficult job of being.
| house president was Baker’s . . . Maginnes, the :
vice-president struggling with the social calen- /
dar, Price, Ruth, that is ... the treasurer, who :
was, still collecting dorm dues on Moving-Up |
Day ... Wales, the secretary who had to learn |
special shorthand .. . Gracious Mrs. Rand, |
housemother to the brood . . . she insists the /
clock must be fast . . . ready for a chat or a |
bridge game at any time . . . and there are the
cottages ... New Hall and Western “foremost
in fame” . . . Syddum—Miss Pierce’s residence
... North and South . .. the lucky ones with
the shortest dash to breakfast . . . altogether
we're almost 200 strong . . . and we have a
wonderful time.
"Look kids, I’ve only got twelve cards.” 1
‘tl ran blindly to my room.”
Carver, Durbeck, Hildreth, Margot, Rochford.
“They listen to records and play bridge . . .”
“Can't we get something to eat?”
118
It’s not just a “shanty” in old shanty town... but it’s just as much fun .. . it’s that brick mansion
across from the housing project . . . things are crowded even out there on the frontier . . . “green
grass grows all around”—with morning glories over the much admired fence . . . and the fir trees in
front . . . perhaps the class of “99 will have shade . . . The “Queen waiting there with the silvery
crown?” ... Mrs. Mac, of course . . . 142 of State’s glamour gals dwell therein .. . and the question
about the song... is that the word “noble” or “no bull?” .. . No doubt about Margot’s noble efforts
ene
as president... and, what’s more, her notable success . . . Excitement on second ... Riber’s room
became home nest for 50’s blue jays . . . directly opposite, Gib’s room became you-know-what for
49’s red devils .. . third floor ain’t what it used to be... since the old Stokes Hall gang moved in...
‘Hey Les, that man is downstairs again” ... as were “Woody” and “Sully”... terrific strain on
) the lounge furniture . . . conflicting ideas of decor, that’s all... don’t think that the Hall didn’t live
up to its name. . . three Myskania-ites plus six members of Signum Laudis are quite a record...
well, those modern dancing elasses developed something . . .
even the gym developed a culture . ..
The Hallowe’en party and the merry-go-round . .. the shining tree at Christmas . . . the SRO paper
house ... Sayles Hall, like that millionaire’s mansion, “is calling us back.”
SAYLES HALL
4 bowl of lard drippings and twenty slices of bread on the table.”
hie
?
Bait
; Aisa 4 -
To comet nantes
**7°ll change it later.”
Caraher, Capeless, Tronsor, Seaman, Guido, daBrama, Hladick
se
‘no time,”’
“It don't take them hardly
-
“We sat silent for a time.”
Newman Hall. . . one of the first dorms on campus . . . located conveniently close to Washington
Park tennis courts (especially nice this year, since there are twenty-two Frosh at Newman), the
119 (for celebrations), and the college .. . and they’re always on time for Newman Club meetings .. .
Kit Guido presides over the fifty-odd Newmanites, assisted by Tronser and Seaman . . . rooms a la
House Beautiful by the sisters Kozlowsky . . . sumptuous meals all the time . . . formal dinner at
Christmas . . . date parties with R.P.I. and the Statesmen .. . religious services on Wednesday
nights .. . discussions about the world, the faith, with Father Smith, the new chaplain . . . a frequent
guest at Newman . . . Gracious Miss Dalton, the housemother, waiting up for Senior hours and
Tessier on NEWS nights .. . Seniors are in the minority here . . . Goldie, Mickie, Furlong, Aggie,
and the rest of the roaring “49ers supervising the initiation of the frosh ... Newman Hall... firm
believer in the open door policy—hospitality and friendliness, that is . . . and notice the size of
the front porch!
“Every night at midnight .. .’
?
ott AERAR
~*~ *
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em |
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2
Smith, Waite, Boynton, Olin.
Fascinating Farrell femmes ... all of them... execs Bayntan, Olen, and Waite did a bang up job...
not to forget ’50’s athletic Smith as the treasurer . . . the fall open house . . . seventy-five of R.P.I.
and Union’s best . . . what a hazin’ the Blue Jays went through . . . the talk of the house? . . . Jini’s
and Peckham’s room . .. What pictures! . . . Ken going to bed in a bathing suit, bed socks and ear
muffs handy . . . “can’t tell where the temperature will go tonight!” . . . favorite dessert . . . chocolate
pudding ... but not by popular choice . . . not to mention Friday’s feast of fish .. . second semester’s
house party .. . another beaming success . . . Kilroy was the only one absent . . . along with Stokes
and Gamma Kap, only houses where leaving for an 8:10 at 8:05 isn’t impossible. . . fun . . . foolishness
. .. femininity . . . all this and a sound-proof music room at Farrell!
“You don’t see any of us studying, do you?”
FARRELL
Most of these little ditties that accompany the
pictures call for a snappy original phrase, but
since originality is the essence of St. Thomas
More, why should we “ham” up a perfectly
good paper .. . “Speaking of ham . . . that re-
minds me, right about now is the time for a
snack in the kitchen, Frosh . . . but be good,
DiCarlo ‘cause Soph Jody is watching you.
Hey, MecGueness whatcha gabbing about—
have a sandwich ... “The gals fall into bed;
happy, tired . . . glad that Tommie’s their
paternal guardian.
én is
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~ or
“Knit two, purl two”... “I’m crushed ... my partner trumped my ace”... “What’s the bid?” .. .
“Cable the stitch, don’t drop it!” ... Hectic days at Wren Hall. . . everyone in the throes of knitting
...+ bridge . . . there’s a finger in every pie . . . President Marcella MacNamara ruling this South
Lake society . . . saved by helpful intervention of V.P. Fabian ... Epicurean philosophy... eat...
drink ... be happy . . . the food’s delicious . . . the company gay . .. the fun unequalled . . . 8:10
classes? ... no trouble ... just a short walk from school .. . eight or ten miles . . . no problem with
snow .. . comes up to their necks . . . Cupid takes a bow . . . wedding bells at Wren . . . surprise
shower for Flo . . . Group singing in the evening . . . Sorcinelli or Schatzle at the keyboard . . . Boogie
or Brahms... Vie parties ... Life at Wren is a song.
"Fifteen or twenty young . . . women
sitting cross-legged on the floor.”
Fobian, Schatzle, MacNamara, Sorcinelli.
WREN
HALL
4 sea of smiling faces.”
The only place where Frosh live unimpeded by “Suffer-mores” . . . sixteen gals who like any color
as long as it’s blue . . . perfect harmony? at 126 Western... The living room at Stokes announces.
president Webber, is second only in importance to the Commons for the B.T.O.’s of °50.. . so with
. . ee . : & 9
their chapeaux bleus as an irreparable enigma, they “are the girls from Stokes Hall, demure and pure
Hutton, Lee, Webber, Kaplan.
a
. ee , : , ™ .
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P
“Jt's much more important to
be relaxed than to study.”
“I could see gay . . . young men lounging casually . . .”
“Johnson grass and brala
suet. Just for me.’
See page 117.
i
VAN DERZEE HALL
Vital, vibrant, vigorous—Van Derzee . . . home of the veterans . . . where “get a freshman on that
phone!” rings through the night . . . take your choice, Curt or Ed, but the boys in third floor front
always end up answering it . .. The library-lounge famous for its parties . . . an air of sophistication
for STATE ... punch, when it finally cooled . . . girls learning pool the pleasant way . .. the two
Toms making with frequent fisticuffs . .. Mrs. Brimmer treating her “baby” to new carpets, lamps
_.. Pfaff, President and sole possessor of the dish-washing concession . . . Osborne ready to take over
_.. Dale balancing books and trays .. . Nolie keeping VanDerzee socially in the spotlight . . . “blood
be-spattered” floor, reminder of Kappa Phi Kappa’s initiation . . . what other dorm re-echoes to a
baby’s cry? ... three married couples living midst a bevy of bachelors . . . Gentlemen in the dark,
the night the fuse blew, catching many en el agua . . . huge closets that any. girl would give her
longest fingernail to possess . . . their famous record collection . . . yes, the men are back and reign
supreme in their million dollar mansion.
**How about that, fellows?”
127
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Where else would you find the prexies
of two classes under one roof? ...
Mrs. C’s meals served on Fenny Coo’s
_ - - aaa ——o —— _ — a a
en eens —e nee nee . " mame ———
te
table . . . Dick Smith is president...
Baker’s standing in line in case the
ee ee ee
j
i work gets too heavy ... Feather’s
j - y “A fellow can have a good time here.”
Ht totin that secretary’s notebook .. .
| while Ben Jackson checks on the coins
... bridge games, water-fights, parties
j | ... But they like it fine at 203 Ontario.
|
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. And would you believe it, our kitchen “Reading slim yellow French novels and eating bonbons.”’
| shows a profit year after year.”
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**Are we late?” ‘It’s like I told you.”
stemeen amend
DSRS ge
ges carte
el A ren
SoA MLN
OOP ie See Oe ie tor ane a
re
RESIDENCE
COUNCIL
FiO GE SMO RINE
PA SAA RAP OT VRC SOR EE | UE LTP ON
‘*l mean I think I’m intelligent enough not to have my conduct
governed by what people did hundreds of years ago.”
‘‘Cive me five minutes more . . . only five minutes more . . .” so goes the plea... and the answer is
usually the same—no ... Wary of all the tricks of the fashionably late trade .. . Residence Council
lays down the law . . . and rules with an iron hand ... This year was no exception to their “charity
toward none” motto... Kisiel and Kunz quoted “stone walls do a prison make” .. . while State
Co-eds vied for the title of “Campused Queen” of 1947 . . . Ask President Jeff Harvey about the
Christmas Eve incident . . . they even campused Santa Claus because he tried to come in after one
9
_.. I'm “warning” you... “if I had the wings of an angel . . :
LLP SL Reel A AL TL TO ne
en ee ee ee oe
Fae
yt ES
8 PRE et apes
Pe te
ee
eer"
Take dues, for instance.
9°
ee °
In our mi
And dont
dst you'll find no ra
let anyone tell you
.
that.”
Take your time and think it over. We'll give you ninety seconds.”
The capitals of the Greek letter societies . . . issuing permissions for Mary Jones *49, to ride home to
Podunk with Jane Doe 50. Planning the Inter-Sorority tea to introduce the pledges . . . deciding on
a two page spread in the Ped . . . laboring over the revision of those wicked rush rules . . . in the
‘nterest of fairness Kramer and her six colleagues supporting the Frosh panel discussion on the pros
and cons of sororities . . . All is not business when the seven presidents meet . . . fun and food follow
more serious things ... AEPhi played host the night before Hallowe'en, only to have the refreshments
donated to weird looking little beggars, while hungry Dunlay and Bently spoke loudly in favor...
No rivalry here . . . just proof that seven can live as co-operatively as one. . . for after rushing’s said
and done, there’s only one Inter-Sorority Council . .. AEPhi’s Molly Kramer is president, Gamma
Kap’s Gesty is second in command, B.Z.’s ever-busy Bently takes the minutes, and Phi Delt’s
Haithewaite is treasurer, while Dunlay, Diener and Carey make the attractive sideline.
133
if
j
———
ee
K A PP A
134
Alverson, Joan
Anderson, Sue
Armer, Florence Cave
Child, Frances
Clute, Elaine
Day. Virginia
Deubler, Marion
Diener. Maryellen
Dunker, Barbara
Franks, Betsy
Girvin. Gertrude
Harvey, Mary
Hervey, Leslie
Hildreth, Sue
Hillier, Vivian
Honeycombe, Helen
Jones, Anna
Jones, Grace
Joslin, JoAnn
Kronberg, Vivian
Lewis, Bonnie Jeanne
O’Grady, Marjorie
Podmajersky, Olga
Prindle, Alice
Rivenburgh, Hilda
Russell, Patricia
Schatzle, Shirley
Scutt, Mary Carol
Whitney, Wilma
Wilcox, Jean
Williams, Marjorie
Young, Virginia
Brady, Janet
Cooper, Mary
Midgeley. Dorothy
Standing, Marianne
“Oh the sun shone bright on 380 Western Ave.”... all year long ... not one frozen radiator...
no high water lines . . . final repairs of last year’s damage . . . Jeff and Joslin joined the wallpaperers’
union .. . they can paper even without paste . . . could be some of the brightness here was the reflec-
tion of those sparkling rings .. . as O'Grady and Alverson gained a corner on the diamond market
...and Feeney and Baden adopted 380 as extracurricular headquarters ... Honey Ring (Nee Honey-
combe) and Flo Armer (Née Cave) took the plunge ahead of the rest . . . Sunny, south-of-the-border
motif to entertain rushees ... and gay, Holiday Inn party complete with bright flash bulbs .. . only
darkness in the cellar . . . after President Billie took up the sadistic hobby of locking the door...
Ginny, Patsy, and Vivian ... Sunday night suppers at the DeWitt . . . the gods smiled on 380 this
year ... the earthly as well as the celestial species.
Anderson, Jean
Bode, Helen
Carey, Mary
Chamberlain, Avis
Collier, Julia
Cullinan, Ann
Daly, Margaret
Diehl, Wilma
Donato, Gloria
Dunning, Mary Sue
Emmet, Mary
Free, Beverly
Genovesi, Julia
Guzzetta, Joan
Hamman, Patricia
Hembury, Jean
Jerue, Audrey
Johnston. Janet
Kisiel, Helen
Kloster, Delores
Kopec, Rita
Kragh, Marion
Lengyl, Helen
Lotz. Marjorie
Lucsok, Ann
Magrew, Joan
Malo, Lorraine
May. Ann
McCarthy, Ruth
Pastore, Irene
Pilato, Raimonda
Regan, Mary
Simmons, Irma Jean
Skavina, Jeanette
Sowa, Francis
Sweeney, Edna
Totman, Jean
Tronsor, Katherine
Truman, Christine
Van Popering, Shirley
Vimmerstedt, Nona
Williams, Alice
Dowd, Virginia
Dromgoole, Jeanne
Hoflin, Rita
Sulich, Ann
113 South Lake .. . Psi Gam, that is... Carey, perfect president . . . Sculptress’ model Jean Hembury
—is the sweet songbird of the house . . . Kopeck, Genovesi and Lucsock in charge of entertainment
... But don’t forget that combination of Cully and 48’s Dowd ei . Always a new joke ... or a song
...Jan Dromgoole balances the budget .. . What a budget! ... Just kidding, of course ... We just
can’t forget McCarthy and that terrific black negligee . . . Chris Truman, an unusual combination of
beauty and brains ... Prom candidate Malo... Yessir, Psi Gam’s the name...
Cavanagh, Jeanne Hansen, Jean Pender, Margery
Coleman, Rita Hayes, Eileen Pulver, Jean
Cox. Audrey Hilt, Betty Rose Rochford, Ellen
DiGregorio, Virginia Holbig, Eleanor Rourke, Joan
Dollard, Joan Holstein, Lois Skelton. Dorothy
Donnelly, Catherine Johnson, Sarah Jane Spencer, Jean
Donovan, Anne McGrath, Elizabeth I. Sylvestri, Claire
Dunlay, Martha McGuinness, Jane Vaughn, Betty J. Bittne:
Dunn, Sally McIntyre, Agnes Walejsio, Dorothy
Emmerling, Lee McNamara, Marcella Walsh, Frances
Furlong, Marion Nosal, Paula Rowe, Rita
Halloran, Cathal O’Brien, Jane
CHI SIGMA THETA
Appropriately red and white .. . the ever rose-bedecked mantel of 678 . . . Yes, Harvey’s picture
played second fiddle this year to Queens’ bouquets . . . Veteran McGrath sedate in red flannels .. .
Johnson, Cavanagh, O’Brien and Coleman holding the corner on the beauty market ... Additions to
the house this year, the four front-room 48’ers . . .““Diamonded” damsels Dunn, Hansen and Skelton
... President Dunlay assisted by V. P. Walsh... House and Myskania president Hiltie also of A. D.
| fame ... Journalists Lois and Spence ... Margery Ann managing ... Newly knitted socks gracing
the feet of State’s men and the mantel at Christmas... Boxes and boxes of candy from the “engaged
men”... White-coated singing waiters ... Nightly safaris for tea and toast ... All go to make up
Chi Sig .. . but still no piano-playing pledges...
fi: i re ae
aes
138
4
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ALPHA EPSILON PHI
Enter the portals of ALPHA, EPSILON PHI... A quick
glance into the charmin’ Charm Room... A taste of Mrs.
Bain’s delicious food ... A bridge game, a bull session...
Mobbed open houses, faculty teas .. . Dean Molly teaches
math . . . House President Jed laughs too hard to give
warnings . . . 840 Washington, the pretty house with the
pine trees...
Bernstein, Laura
Bessel, Ruth
Binn, Eleanor
Bolit, Lorraine
Braun, Lee
Coplan, Beverly
Dell, Edith
Dube, Judith
Fisher, Alice
Fisher, Sylvia
Friedman, Harriet
Frost, Marion
Goldstein, Charlotte
Hellman, Nancy
Hoffman, Jean
Holtz, Marie
Hyman, Barbara
Jedeikin, Sylvia
Kramer, Molly
Lavender, Arlene
Levine, Annalie
Lillienfeld, Ruth
Maistleman, Gloria
Pless, Pearl
Riber, Arlene
Robinson, Leatrice
Rosen, Irma
Rosen. Rose
Rosenberg, Ethel
Rosenberg, Myra
Rubin, Muriel
Schwedock, Yvette
Shapiro, Bernice
Shapiro, Rita
Shindleman, Delores
Tanenbaum, Edith
Tischler, Helen
Trachtenberg, Ruth
Weinstein, Priscilla
Weiss, Frances
Weiss, Ray
Neuhaus, Ursula
GAMMA KAPPA PHI
Brennan, Charlene
Brecklin. Gloria
Callahan, Geraldine
Chudiak, Vera
Cooper, Mary
Flanagan, Frances
Fusmer, Marjorie
Gibson, Elizabeth
Gilbert, Gloria
Giovannone, Mary Jane
Glavin. Catherine
Goodrich, Janice
Harding, Bette
Houghton, Marjorie
Kozlowski, Alexandra
Kozlowski, Anne
Lafferty. Jean
Lally, Charlotte
Melesky, Florence
Mulson, Helen
Nielson, Doris
Nielson, Vivien
Otto, Barbara
Peris, Mary Jane
Phillips, Wilma
Quinn, Mary
Ricer, Anne
Rourke, Patricia
Russo, Agnes
Schoen, Evelyn
Sturzenberger, Dorothy
Tichy, Paula
Valochovic, Jeanne
Vitullo, Marion
Winters, Louise
Wojtal, Florence
Wood, Carolyn
Worth, Eloise
Zumbo, Concepta
Keaveney, Dorothy
Burns, Erna
Memelo, Marjorie
Olson, Anita
Pascuzzi, Anna
Smith, Margaret
Three stumbles, a trip, a twenty yard dash . .. to the back door of Draper . . . quiet hours? ...
Spacious front porch? ... Hell no! . . . Kemtone blues... Louise, jack-of-all-trades, Winters with
a gavel on her pin... paradoxical Callahan, house president . . . vivacious Vitullo . . . mid-year
mourning for obsolete “Minnie” . . . wonder-girl Worth . .. queen of the “Four Roses” room...
Scoop, the homemaker . . . Cooper, the beautiful . .. Fusmer paints . . . Mary Jane writes (to Charlie,
that is) . . . Otto and Ricer, the sophisticated tall and short of it ... Tichy and Quinn... mock
battles . . . Unforgettable days of getting the house into shape . . . Gamma Kap’s “all this and
y 7 - Pp Pp
39
Heaven, too.
ORR TERR OF I 0
ementia OT eel
It may have been gremlins who painted the whole house .. . but it wasn’t! . . . Dodge might have
blown them all to bits with her transplanted science department... but she didn’t! ... Pickles might
have learned a new song... it remained “McNamara’s Band!” . . . Bentley, Mordaunt, and Watkins
may have used Ponds... at any rate, they’re engaged! ... Palmatier might have gotten married...
she did! ... it must have been quite a year for the BZ’s ... It was!
BETA ZETA
Ashcraft, Jeanne
Baker, Gloria
Bentley, Ruth
Brennan, Betty
Bush, Doris
Coleman, Cecilia
Cook, Helen
Cooper, Isabel
Crabtree, Evelyn
DeRouville, Patricia
Diffin, Dorothy
Dimon, Betty Jane
Dodge, Louise
Doughty, Jean
Douglas, Barbara
Feigin, Corinne
Fiedler, Hilda
Forman, Shirley
Hawkins, Marion
Hedges, Muriel
Hutchinson, Lois
Jennings, Helen
Knapp, Dorothy
Maginess, Shelia
Mandell, Jodie
Rand. Gloria
Reed, Laura
Schoonmaker, Bea Jay
Markley, Margaret Palmatier Sittig, Beverly
McCabe, Jean
Merritt, Eleanor
Mills, Carrie
Mordaunt, Dorothy
Mowbray, Nancy
O’Neil, Mary Lou
Parker, Joyce
Sorcenilli, Lena
Watkins, Sheila
Wester, Doris
LaRue, Janet
Peckham, Jane
Waite, Virginia
ia AAA Kien aR AD ATA
PH I
DELTA
There’ve been some changes made . . . masculine footsteps
detouring from Myrtle to Western Avenue where the Phi
Delts have resided since January . . . doll-like Haithwaite,
prexy ... house president Beckers getting nightly calls
from Kenny ... many new frat pins ...do stop in...
we re so close to the campus.
Anderson, Marilyn
Balfoort, Marie
Barnum, Jean
Beckers, Alice
Bollenback, Regina
Breish, Madelyn
Drivas, Jennie
Durbeck, Eleanor
Eggert, Margaret
Elting, Jean
Evans, Juanita
Eygabroat, Shirley
Farrell, Jacqueline
Fernandes, Marie
Gardiner, Annette
Haithwaite, Doris
Harland, Marjorie
Hawk, Gladys
Hoefner, Margaret
Houck, Barbara
Ineson, Jean
Jamison, Evelyn
Koehn, Annette
Kunz, Lorna
Lofthouse, Elizabeth
Mace, Florence
Maloney, Justine
McArdle. Louise
Mieras. Marion
Moberg, Elsa
Morris, Geraldine
Parr, Dorothy
Petri, June
Seelbach, Ruth
Silvernail, Dorothea
Sittner, Joan
Smallin, Mary Jane
Steigerwald, Audrey
Stocker, Dolores
Tilden, Patricia
VanAken, Margaret
VanScoy, Sheila
Ward, Francis Jean
Whipple, Shirley
Whitney, Elizabeth
Youngren, Margaret
Wurzler, Joan
al Sidi
FN i
“Founded in ancient Greece by three fellows
named Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides.”
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“Ay am happy to call you my brudder.”
Peace came to the world and with it, late though it was, the reorganization of fraternities on campus
. . . Inter-Fraternity Council, headed by K.D.R.’s Dick Beach and understudied by K.B.’s Speed
Koblenz . . . Potter Club’s Bill Cornwall taking down the minutes . . . §.L.S.’s Sam Dickieson hand-
ling the money ... That night in Room 101, Draper with Kunz, Miller, Koblenz, and Pfaff getting
out the 100 odd bids . . . Merritt, Kullman, Lubey, Rabineau and Abrams mulling over the Consti-
tution . . . Sections suspended for this year to take care of vets—frosh and upperclassmen alike . ..
Big plans ... frat houses . . . formals again, perhaps . . . Potter’s Baby Party . . . S.L.S.’s Fireman’s
Ball... K.B.’s Shindig . . . K.D.R.’s Boilermaker’s Brawl . . . Other memories that are ’46’s and may
be ours... Welcome home...
YASLNI
FRATERNITY COUNCIL
f
i
:
Erbstein, George
Gould, Harold
On campus after three and one-half years’ absence .. . Kappa
Beta’s back in full force . . . “Speed” Koblenz holds the chair
living up to his name as president . . . Lou vice-president Rabi-
neau ... Stan Abrams as secretary searching ancient archives
. .. Len Freedman treasurer ... others too numerous to men-
tion... “every man an officer”... Gould still a giddy genius...
Erbstein hiding underneath a wool buddy from Alaska .. .
Wagner still walking on wings . . . Levin-KB’s only grad . . . the
novices ... bigger and harder to hit than ever . . . according to
KB’s-a needed shot in the arm... Wayne looks good in a beard
... Scott, small but loquaciously so . . . spirited ghosts from the
past .. . KB’s tenth birthday this year . . . the old house big
and full... the old gang, full, too . . . two score and ten at the
annual reunion... the job of getting that furniture from storage
in Sayles ... they’ve even got a vacuum cleaner... What'd you
say that address was?
Abrams, Stanley Freedman, Leonard Levin, Joseph Wagner, Paul
Rabineau. Louis
149
MT taint eee eee eeratetcomeiteme ene eccceacnecensansamampacrenieats bad peececineeiain
K A Pp Pp A D E L T A R LJ O KDR kept up its tradition of being first once again ... first (old-
est, that is) fraternity on campus... first fraternity to reor-
ganize in a post-war STATE ... first in sports . . . Marsland,
president of MAA ... first in Inter-Fraternity affairs ... Beach,
Baden, Harry Pfaff, Curtis president of Inter-Fraternity Council, as well as vice-president
Beach, Richard Privitt, Zolie and pledge master . . . first in 49... class president Baker...
Blythe, Russell Stone, Alan “|. . we lay our garlands at thy feet...” ... Curt Pfaff, first
Bull, Stephen Verry, Raymond peacetime president in seven years .. . Mac and DeLong Keeping
DeLong, Glenn Walker, Warren notes—written and bank, respectively . . . more than twenty
Hudson, George Wood, Dale 7 pledges this year . . . Druschel leading ’em all in moustaches...
Marsland, William Bombard, Owen orange and blue shield-like pledge pins . . . finely-carved paddles
McNamara, Raymond Holstein, Edwin s\ ...all this and forty Actives, too...“ ... with gladness and with
Merritt, Paul McKean, Joseph joy we meet...” ... The Valentine’s Day party and the picnic
Merritt, Robert Zaccagnini, Dante | at Indian Ladder . . . memories of 12 South Lake . . . the Boiler-
makers’ Brawl ... eminent alumni... a distinguished past...
a rosy future.
Olivet, Arthur
Powell, Nolan
Reed, Benjamin
Skolsky, Bernard
Terho, Allan
Tucker, William
Woodworth, Frank
Thumb hastily through a pre-war “Ped” . . . Potter men taking honors . .-. for
a lucky few, 495 State Street recalls evenings of . . . oh, all sorts of things...
With our back-to-normaley movements came beloved EEP .. . as the old adage
gsoes—‘*You can’t keep good men down” (Besides, who wants to?) .. . Presi-
dent Miller and his staff handle 76 actives .. . 38 green pledges ... The board-
efficient VP Kullman; ever obliging secretary Kinn; Dooley, the man to whom
you pay initiation fees, pledge dues ... The lights dim ... Club 50... in the
mood ... EEP’S heavy welcome to the pledges . . . Potter men do things the
right way—as proved by feminine sighs of approval ... And as the days go by,
EEP takes its place among the athletes, class presidents, Myskania, managing
' editors—just A-1 JOES.
ett ta Ranh Aah a Ra
ne nt wie tn sneer aaa
Combs, T. Robert Dooley, John Gipp, Stanley Miller, William George |
Cornwall, Arthur Duncam, Graham Kinn, Everson Munroe, Austin j
Cornwall, William Evans, Malcolm Kullman, Warren O’Leary, Paul |
Amyot, Joseph Hansen. Frank McFaren. Eugene Pawluckie, William |
Biviano. Joseph Hermans. Grant Mueller, Werner Rand. Roy |
Brooks. Robert Howarth. James Mullen. Francis Sayles. John |
Feeney. Thomas Lynch. Howard Pape. Vincent Sumberg, Lewis )
Sullivan, Robert Woodin, Stanley |
EDWARD ELDRED POTTER CLUB
SIGMA LAMBDA SIGMA
.
The sons of Sigma Lambda are back from the wars... the fifty were ready under limerick-
singing president Kunz to come back to State with a bang . . . The “troops” rode in, in
Lowerre’s “green dragon” .. . clearing out the back seat storeroom for added transporta-
tion for the twenty-five new SLS men... The rush parties resounded with Hal Ashworth’s
tenor solo as “Bill Grogan’s Goat” walked away with Germania Hall ... The boys from Co-
hoes and North Troy—Roulier and Wilcox—honored as VP and secretary respectively . . .
State’s women heard the traditional SLS caroling at Christmas . . . further evidence that
the war is over and normalcy has returned ... The “spirits” and spirited sons of Sigma
y p P gm
Lambda have returned ... ready to show State what SLS has been and will be.
2 te renee
a ere es eee er Sen oe
Ashworth, Harold
Capel, Charles
Cappon, Cormac
Dickieson, Samuel
Higgins, Joseph
Hippick, J. Michael
Kunz, George
Lubey, John
Russell, Arthur
Snow, Earl
Soderlind, Arthur
White. Robert
Barselou. Paul
Caramia. John
Carr. Clarence
DeWeerdt. Leslie Albert
Germond, Henry
Howard, Raymond
Lowerre. Walter
Roulier. Joseph
Tompkins. Edgar
Trimm. Charles
Wilcox. Robert
Zeller. Richard
Zilles, Luke
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THE 1947 PEDAGOGUE THANKS YOU...
Max SHULMAN ... for your kind permission to use your book,
BAREFOOT BOY WITH CHEEK, as our theme. May we
say that we enjoyed reading it the twenty-first time as much
as we did the very first time. We lick your hand gratefully.
Dous_Epay & CompANY ... for your permission to use sketches
by William Crawford and quotes from BAREFOOT BOY
WITH CHEEK.
Pau. Mreapows and staff... for your hard work and the good
photography in all the informal shots in the PEDAGOGUE.
Me. G. I. HEFFERNAN and Miss VircintA Coon of Baker, Jones
and Hausauer, who. next to God, shaped the destiny of the
1947 PEDAGOGUE.
Miss Janice Goopricu ... she gave of herself and her time,
above and beyond the call of duty.
All captions, section page quotations and caricatures in the 1947
PEDAGOGUE are from BAREFOOT BOY WITH CHEEK by
Max Shulman. Copyright 1943 by Max Shulman, drawings by
William Craw ford—Caricatures on pages 9 and 121 slightly mod-
ified by permission.
Fi, SEALE STREET
a
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=
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PHOTOGRAPHER
FOR
1947 PEDAGOGUE
NEW YORK
STATE COLLEGE FOR TEACHERS
164
=
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Telephone 3-5411
9] State Street
ALBANY, New YORK
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CHIC HATS |i | CENTRAL FLORIST
167
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Compliments of
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Compliments of
H. F. HONIKEL & SON
Compliments of
MADISON SHOE SHOP
Compliments of
CORONET CAMERA SHOP
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JUNIOR MISS SHOP
Compliments of |
R. J. GEURTZE
Compliments of
DUTCH OVEN
Compliments: of
FLOYD J. COLE
168
Compliments of
“BUENAN’S”
Compliments of
HERBERTS
Compliments of
DAVID’S
Compliments of
BOULEVARD CAFETERIA
Compliments of
SPECTOR’S CLOTHES SHOP
Compliments of
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Compliments of
CAPE COD GIFT SHOP
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JAKE’S FOOD STORE
Designed and printed by
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