Pedagogue, 1921

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“Donated by :

uline Cseavant
Sail 1978

1921
Pedagogue

Volume XI

PUBLISHED BY THE SENIOR CLASS OF
THE NEW YORK STATE COLLEGE
FOREWORD

To picture in brave pageantry our college life,
To build high memories for future years,

To quicken abiding affection for Alma Mater—
These have been the purposes of the 192] Pedagogue.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

PAG
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Seniors. 26 seikeaters Miesesee ages Siw sage acne ate wate ge iepmre ro ee aon eieoaee dpsientaite) «is 32
POOR, ok ons cp ben EE Oe Bi Ee oe se i ee San emoans Bo 85
Sophomores: sos. os caaan cs ce xvas a pee NS TE el case ates aS as 90
Feat | eon aro eee in ee nis oe Oe aT Clee ACS ane sie SAS OS 96
Alama Associlion: cus os 0S5 as aes wanes aateraceigts siesta Fa Wien ee 102
OPRARIZAUOTRS ocak oa rest wie tes ete eee eee ee sie lie nis stakes oueicipvennieie Min ieiae Oe 103
Secret Societies: st. sscecaw eos Geene aps eezarare evoiiel aveiarer apa ime earls acti: wines vee 133
Pre ethics ey. 5." sit. abs! dyacovansnenesaseitipucaces eae dene nee eee e Slewe ior aoe se ie sane lelmeners 157
SBA ONO 6s divs ee oe ie Mie en ees Spine W ae aieceane scx Blame 169
JOM EG. e; austen take vis im alien aumapeeneue Gepaegaareus arererecrianeseelaimua SeeclNma ane acy 189
Acdvertisoments)<..c) aie ctnici susie 3 Saefoe Gee Sain Serato aie weit Whe ene avarmistie ate: wie 223

To
DEAN HARLAN HOYT HORNER

whose sincere enthusiasm
and friendly sympathy as a brother Freshman

first endeared him to us

we dedicate our book in appreciation of his many kind-

nesses and as an expression of esteem and affection in
which he is held by the

CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED and TWENTY ONE

February 19, 1921.
My dear Editor-in-Chief :

I have advised you that what the editor-in-chief most needs from her adviser is to
be let alone, and so far as you permitted I have taken my own advice. In doing this I
have given the lie to one Goethe, who remarked that the best thing about giving advice is
that you know it won't be taken. Yet though my part in this greatest of Pedagogues
has been inconsequential, I have been quietly biding my time, vain waiter, for an occasion
which never came.

Two years ago a certain H. W. T. sat profoundly in the chair of the official
adviser, with Munin, bird of the night, perched upon his shoulder. I was not surprised
that he took advantage of occasion to vent scurrilous remarks about humble myself, but I
was surprised that he should advise the editor to accept and to print in the Pedagogue
of that year an amount of blank verse in rhyme submitted by a certain Be WwWe ke. A
have waited expectantly, thinking that this poet might subject us to an offer of his ware.
I have guarded the native energy of my voice that if the offer were made I might roar like
the bulls of Bashan. The opportunity did not come; but I bid you farewell as we go to

press with a sense of duty done. ‘There is no blot in our scutcheon.

Truly yours,
H. W. Hastincs.

Alina Mater beloved. dear collene, —=s
Mother dear of the promise ot youth, ~——
Jet thelreedom which cometh thrutnowledee,
Come to us from thy fountains of truth.
We bring here to these halls true endeavor,
Here bring strenrth whichis yet to be tried.
Were resolved that thru life poe will ever

Pponor thee,¢ State Collene. aur pride.

we
Ps

Sy

“Thou wert my guide |f
philosopher, and friend”.
Pope

AsBRAM Royer BRUBACHER, Ph.D., BK

President of State College for Teachers

A.B., Yale, 1897; Ph.D., Yale, 1902; Head of De-
partment of Greek, Williston Seminary, Easthampton,
Mass.; Instructor in Greek, Yale College; Principal of
High School, Gloversville, N. Y.; Principal of High
School, Schenectady, N. Y.; Superintendent of Schools,
Schenectady, N. Y.; President of State College since 1915.

Publications: High School English, 2 vols.; English,
Oral and Written; articles in the English Journal, E
tion, and School and Society.

Hartan Hoyt Horner, A.M., Pd.D.,
SAE, PBK

Dean of State College for Teachers

A.B., University of Illinois, 1901; A.M., New York
State. College for Teachers, 1915, Pd.D., 1918; In
structor in Rhetoric, University of Illinois, 1901-1902; Sec-
retary to the President, University of Illinois, 1902-1904;
Secretary to the New York State Commissioner of Educa-
tion, 1904-1907; Chief of Administration, New York State
Education Department, 1907-1910; Chief of Examinations
Division, 1910-1915; Director of Examinations and In-
spections, 1915-1917; Dean of State College since 1917.

Publications: The American Flag, The Lincoln Cen-
tenary, The Hudson-Fulton Celebration, The Lake Cham-
plain Tercentenary; Arbor Day annuals and other State
bulletins; short biographies of Alfred Tennyson, Oliver
Goldsmith, and Benjamin Franklin for use in elementary
schools; articles in School and Society, School News, School
and Home Education, School Administration, and other
educational journals.

ANNA ELolse Pierce, Pd.M.

Dean of Women and Instructor in Elementary
Education

Graduate of New York State Normal School; Pd.M.,
New York State College for Teachers, 1920; Member of
State College Faculty since 1886.

Compiler of Catalogue of Literature for Advisers of
Young Women.
Leonarp Woops RicHarpson, A.M., LL.D.,
®BK

Professor of Greek and Latin

AB., Trinity College, 1873; A.M., Trinity College,
1874; LL.D., Griswold College; Tutor in Trinity College,
1873-1876; Professor in Trinity College, 1876-1883;
Member of State College Faculty since 1895.

Publications: Plato and Platonism, The Greek Drama,
Tennyson, Homer and the Homeric Influence.

RicHMonD Henry KirTLanp, A.B., A.M.
Professor of English

A.B., University of Michigan, 1900; A.M., University
of Chicago, 1909; Superintendent of Schools, Houghton,
Flint, and Menominee, Mich.; Member of State College
Faculty since 1909.

a

Harry WorTHINGTON Hastincs, A.B., A.M.,
Ph.D.

Professor of English

A.B., Brown University, 1904; A.M., Harvard, 1906;
Ph.D., Harvard, 1916; Teacher of English, Williamsport
High School, Penn., 1904-1905; Instructor in English,
Brown University, 1906-1907; Instructor in English, Sim-
mons’ College, 1907-1911; Instructor in English in Brown
and Radcliffe, 1912-1913; Instructor in English, Dartmouth,
1913-1914; Member of State College Faculty since 1914.

Thirteen

BaRNARD SAWYER Bronson, A.B., A.M.

Professor of Chemistry

A.B., Columbia, 1908; A.M., Columbia, 1912; In-
structor in Geneseo Normal School, 1900-1905; Member
of State College Faculty since 1908.

WiLtiaM GeorGE KENNEDY, Ph.B.
Instructor in Chemistry

Ph.B., Syracuse University, 1911; Member of State Col-
lege Faculty since 1911.

CLARENCE FREDERICK HALE, M.S., Ph.D.,
PBK

Professor of Physics

B.S., Wesleyan University, 1903; M.S., Wesleyan Uni-
versity, 1908; Ph.D., Cornell University, 1909; Instructor
in Physical Science at Peddie Institute, 1903-1905; As-
sistant and Instructor, Wesleyan University, 1905-1908;
Research Associate, Research Laboratory, General Electric
Company, Schenectady, N. Y., 1909-1911; Member of
State College Faculty since 1911.

Publications: Scientific articles.

Fourteen
EY rece or

GUE _ |

Harry BircHENouGH, A.B., Pd.B., A.M.
Professor of Mathematics

A.B., Cornell, 1905; Pd.B., 1906; A.M., Columbia,
1914; Member of State College Faculty since 1908.

JoseEPpH VirAL DePorte, A.B., M.A., Ph.D.

Instructor in Mathematics

A.B., University of Oklahoma, 1912; A.M., Princeton,
1914; Ph.D., Cornell, 1915-1916; Member of State College
Faculty since 1916.

Georce Moret York, A.B.
Professor of Commercial Education

A.B., Colgate University, 1907; Head of Commercial
Department, Waterloo, 1900-1909; Ithaca, 1911-1914;
White Plains, 1914-1916; Special Commercial Report for
Ginn & Co., 1909-1911; Member of State College Faculty
since 1916.

Fifteen

Eunice AMANDA Perrine, A.B., Pd.B.
Professor of Fine Arts
A.B., Teachers’ College, Columbia, 1910; Pd.B., State

Normal College, 1900; Member of State College Faculty
since 1900.

JoHNn Manvitte Sayces, A.B., Pd.B.

Principal of the High School and Director of
Practice Teaching

AB., Colgate, 1900; Pd.B., State Normal College,
1901; Member of State College Faculty since 1905.

CuirFForp AmBrosE Wooparp, A.B., Pd.B.

Professor of Biology and Physiography

A.B., Columbia University, 1904; Pd.B., State Normal
College; Member of State College Faculty since 1907.

Sixteen
rr

etre ‘ta

PE

aun mela

WINFRED CorNWALL Decker, A.M., Pd.B.,
®BK

Professor of German

AB., Columbia, 1905; A.M., Columbia, 1910; Post-
Graduate Student at Columbia, 1905-1906; Universities of
Marburg and Berlin, 1911-1912; Austauschlehrer at Pots-
dam, Germany, 1911-1912; University of Berlin, 1914;
Member of State College Faculty since 1907.

Publications: Joint author of Markisch-Decker, Eng-
lisches Lesebuch fur die Hoheren Schulen; Joint author of
Deutschland und die Deutschen; occasional articles for
Monograph.

Davio Hutcuison, A.B., D.B., A.M.

Professor of Government
AB., McGill University, 1893; D.B., Montreal Presby-
terian College, 1898; A.M., McGill University, 1899;

A.M., Harvard, 1901; Instructor in Union College, 1906-
1908; Member of State College Faculty since 1908.

ApamM ALEXANDER WALKER, A.B., A.M.

Professor of Economics and Sociology
A.B., University of Michigan, 1906; A. M., University

of Wisconsin, 1912; Member of State College Faculty
since 1908.

Seventeen

Eighteen

Apna Woop RisLey, A.B., ®BK

Professor of History

A.B., Colgate, 1894; Studied at University of Chicago,
1897-1900; Fellow in History, 1897-1899; Instructor at
Chautauqua Summer School, 1900; Professor of History
and Politics, Colgate University, 1905-1909; Professor of
History at the University of Colorado, Summer Session,
Boulder, Colorado, 1910; Member of State College Faculty
since 1909.

ELIZABETH FRANCES SHAVER, A.B., Pd.B.

Supervisor of Practice Teaching

A.B., State Normal College, 1908; Pd.B., State Normal
College, 1904; Member of State College Faculty since 1908.

GrorGE ALEXANDER PAINTER, A.B., Ph.D.
Professor of Philosophy

A.B., Harvard, 1892; Ph.D., University of Jena, 1896;
Graduate Student, Boston University, 1892-1894; Student
at Universities of Jena, Berlin, Leipsic, 1894-1896; In-
structor in Tufts College, 1897-1898; Instructor in Bryn
Mawr College, 1903-1904; Acting Professor in George
Washington University, 1904-1906; Professor of Philosophy
in Mount Union College, 1907-1911; Professor of
Philosophy in Clark University, 1911-1912; Member of
State College Faculty since 1912.
ANNE Louise Cusuine, Pd.B.
Supervisor of Practice Teaching

Pd.B., State Normal College, 1899; Instructor in
Geneseo Normal School, 1902-1908; Member of State
College Faculty since 1908.

Cuar.ottTe Loes, A.B., Pd.B., A.M.

Professor of French, Supervisor of Practice
Teaching

A.M., State College, 1915; Institute Tilly, Berlin, 1912;
Post-Graduate Work, Columbia, 1915, 1917, 1918; Uni-

versity of Paris, 1920.

Lypia ANTOINETTE JOHNSON, A.B.

Supervisor of Practice Teaching

AB., State Normal College, 1911; Member of State
College Faculty since 1912.

Nineteen

JoHN A oysius Manar, Ph.B., Pd.B.

Instructor in French

Ph. B., Union College, 1904; Pd.B., State Normal Col-
lege, 1906; Student at Johns Hopkins University and at the

University of Chicago; Member of State College Faculty
since 1912.

Jess—E FLloyp Stinarp, A.B., A.M.

Assistant Professor of Spanish

A.B., Brown University, 1900; A.M., Pennsylvania State
College, 1910; Institute Tilly, Berlin, 1908; Fellow in
German, University of Chicago, 1911-1912; Member of
State College Faculty since 1913.

GeorGE MacFELLy ConwELL, A.B., A.M.,
Ph.D., ®BK {

Instructor in Mathematics

A.B., Princeton University, 1905; A.M., Princeton
University, 1906; Ph.D., Princeton University, 1908; In-
structor in Mathematics, Yale University, 1908-1915;
Member of State College Faculty since 1915.
Haro_tp WILLIAM THompson, Ph.B., A.M.,
Ph.D., ®BK

Assistant Professor in English, Director of Music
Department

Ph.B., Hamilton, 1912; A. M., Harvard, 1913; Ph.D.,

Harvard, 1915; Member of State College Faculty since
1915.

BLANCHE Morrison Avery, B.S.
Instructor in Business Administration

B.S., New York State College, 1916; Member of State
College Faculty since 1916.

CARLETON ELDERKIN Power, B.S., Ph.D.,
®BK, =X

Assistant Professor of Physics
B.S., University of Rochester, 1908; Ph.D., Cornell

University, 1915; Instructor in Science, Montclair Academy
(N. J.), 1908-1910; Instructor in Physics, Cornell Uni-
HT i 1910-1915; Member of State College Faculty since
1 %

Twenty-one

Minnie Brink ScoT.anp, B.S., A.M.

Instructor in Biology

B.S., New York State College, 1913; A.M., Columbia,
1920; Member of State College Faculty since 1918.

CLARENCE ALBERT Hipcey, A.B., A.M.
Instructor in History

AB., State College, 1915; A.M., Columbia University,
1918; Member of State College Faculty since 1915.

Epwarp LeRoy Lone, B.S. }
Instructor in Physics

B.S., New York State College, 1917; Member of State
College Faculty since 1918.

Twenty-two
LeF a Wert
Sd

Lo

GERTRUDE ELIZABETH Douc as, A.B., A.M.,
PhD3,.3X

Instructor in Biology

A.B., Smith College; A.M., Ph.D., Cornell University ;
Instructor in Randolph-Macon Woman's College for four
years; Instructor in Botany in Lake Erie College; In-
structor in Botany in Agricultural College, Cornell Uni-
versity; Member of State College Faculty since 1919.

Publications: Botanical articles in Torreva, 6:157-165,
August, 1906; Botanical Gazette, 43 :233-250, April, 1907;
American Journal of Botany, 3:319-335, 1916; American
Journal of Botany 5:36-54, 1918.

AcneEs ELIZABETH FUTTERER, A.B.
Instructor in English

A.B., New York State College for Teachers, 1916;
Graduate Work, Columbia University, 1916-1917; Ameri-
can Academy of Dramatic Arts, 1916-1917; Member of
State College Faculty since 1917.

CAROLINE CROASDALE, M.D.

Director of Department of Hygiene

M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1914;
University of Pennsylvania, School of Biology, 1906-1909;
Assistant Instructor in Clinical Medicine and Physiological
Chemistry, Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania;
Physician to Philadelphia Normal School and Instructor in
Hygiene; Lecturer in Hygiene and Physician to Temple
University; Staff Physician and Lecturer for the National
Board of the Y. W. C. A. in Women’s Colleges of Texas,
Oklahoma, Arkansas, Washington, and California, 1917-
1919; Member of State College Faculty since 1919.

Twenty-three

FLORENCE DopcE FREAR
Instructor in Dressmaking

Teacher's College, Columbia University, 1910; Member
of State College Faculty since 1911.

CLARENCE JosEPH Deyo

Secretary-Treasurer

Graduate of Albany Business College, 1904; Ste- \

nographer and Assistant Accountant with Beaver River
Lumber Company, Croghan, N. Y., 1904-1905; Assistant
Accountant, General Electric Co., Schenectady, 1906-
1908; Chief Accountant, Superintendent's Office, New
York Central R. R., Albany, N. Y., 1908-1917; Secretary
to late Dr. Samuel B. Ward, 1908-1916, and to Dr.
Erastus Corning, 1916-1917; Financial Secretary of State
College since 1917.

FRANciscA Martinez, A.B.

Supervisor of Practice Teaching

A.B., Syracuse, 1916; Instructor, Dunkirk, 1916-1918;
Instructor, West High School, Rochester, 1918-1919; In-
structor, Middlebury College, Summer Session, 1919-1920;
Member of State College Faculty since 1919.

Twenty-four
HELENE Marie BENNETT
Director of Physical Education
Sargent School for Physical Education, 1915; Super-

visor of Physical Training in Glen Ridge, New Jersey,
1915-1918; Member of State College Faculty since 1918.

Francis Boccs SNAVELY, A.B.
Instructor, Physical Education, Athletics Coach
A.B., Lebanon Valley, 1919; Physical Director, Lebanon

Valley, 1917-1918; Athletic Director, Philipsburg Athletic
Club, 1919; Member of State College Faculty since 1920.

Marion CARD

Instructor in Physical Education

Sargent School for Physical Edacation, 1916; Instructor
in Boston Y. W. C. A., 1916-1917; Instructor in Public
Athletic League, Baltimore, Maryland, 1917-1918; Mem-
ber of State College Faculty since 1918.

Twenty-fve

ANN Frances TEMPANY
Instructor in Dressmaking

Graduate of Spencer's Business College, 1917; Madame
Josefa Osborn’s, 1917; State College, 1918; Columbia
University, 1919; Member of State College Faculty since
1918.

ANNA RANDOLPH Keim, A.B., B.S.

Instructor in Clothing

A.B., Fredericksburg College, 1912; University of
Virginia, Summer Session, 1913-1914; B.S., Teachers’
College, Columbia University, 1917; Teacher in Fredericks-
burg Public Schools, Va., 1912-1916; Instructor at Temple
University, Philadelphia, 1917-1918; at Southwestern
Louisiana Normal, Lafayette, La., 1918-1920; at Buffalo
State Normal, 1920; Member of State College Faculty
since 1920.

Cora ANN STEELE
Instructor in Domestic Science
University of Michigan, 1908; Teachers’ College,

Columbia, 1909; Member of State College Faculty since
1910.

Twenty-six
SE leer

GUE HEHE

Grace Patron GILLETT
Professor of Home Economics

Simmons College, 1904-1906; Instructor, Summer Ses-
sion, 1919; Teachers’ College, Columbia University, 1913-
1914, Summer Session, 1911; Chautauqua School of Arts
and Crafts, 1912; Supervisor of Industrial and Household
Arts, Public Schools, Auburn, N. Y., 1906-1908, 1909-
1913: Teacher of Homemaking, Boston Trade School for
Girls, 1908-1909, Summer Session, 1908; Instructor and
Supervisor of Practice Teaching, University of Minnesota,
1914-1915, Summer Session, 1914-1915; Instructor and
Supervisor of Practice Teachin», Oregon Agricultural Col-
lege, 1915-1917, Summer Session, 1916; Supervisor of
Household Arts, Elementary and High Schools, Portland,
Oregon, 1917-1920, Summer Session, 1917; Member of
State College Faculty since 1920.

Bessig Maup Harris
Supervisor of Practice Teaching

Graduate of Connecticut State Normal School at New
Britain; Pratt Institute, 1915; Member of State College
Faculty since 1919.

Eva Wizson, B.S.

Instructor in Domestic Science

Teachers’ College, Columbia University, 1912; Winona
Normal School; Member of State College Faculty since
1912.

Twenty-seven

ANDREW WILSON Brown, A.B., A.M.
Instructor in Education and Philosophy

A.B., Acadia University, 1912; A.M., Acadia, 1913;
A.M., Yale University, 1920; Member of State College
Faculty since 1920.

ARTHUR KENNEDY BEIk, Pd.M., Ph.D.

Instructor in Education

Ph.B., Grinnell College, 1908; Pd.M., School of
Pedagogy, New York University, 1909; Ph.D., Clark Uni-
versity, 1913-1914; Assistant Professor of Psychology and
Pedagogy, Olivet College, 1914-1915; Instructor in Edu-
cation and Psychology, Central State Normal, Mt.
Pleasant, Michigan, 1915-1916; Member of State College
Faculty since 1916.

T. Freperick H. CANDLYN, Mus.B.

Instructor in Music

Mus.B., University of Durham, England, 1911; Graduate
Course at State College, 1916-1917, 1919-1920; Member
of State College Faculty since 1920.

Publications: Vocal and Instrumental Compositions, pub-

lished by H. W. Gray and G. Schirmer.

Twenty-eight
HELEN A. Kexso, A.B.
Supervisor of Practice Teaching

A.B., State College, 1917; Member of State College
Faculty since 1920.

GERALDINE Howe_t Murray, A.B., A.M.

Instructor in English

A.B., New York State College, 1916; A. M., Columbia,
1917; Knickerbocker Press, 1917-1919; Special Corre-
spondent, N. Y. Tribune; Member of State College Faculty
since 1919,

HELEN Marie Puituips, A.B., A.M.

Instructor in German and English

A.B., Ohio University, 1915; A.M., Northwestern Uni-
versity, 1916; National German-American Teachers Sem-
inary, Summer Session of 1916; Columbia University,
Summer Session of 1917; Instructor in Lawrence College,
Appleton, Wisconsin, 1916-1918; Member of State Col-
lege Faculty since 1918.

Twenty-nine

Mary EvizaBeTH Copp, A.B., B.L.S., BK

Librarian, Instructor in Library Management

A.B., Syracuse University, 1912; B.L.S.. New York
State Library School, 1915; Assistant in New York State
Library, 1913-1915; Assistant in Children’s Department,
Brooklyn Public Library, 1915-1916; Temporary Assistant
in New York Public Library, Summer of 1919; Librarian
and Instructor in State College since 1916.

MartuHa Scott Stuart, A.B.
Assistant Librarian
University of Chicago, 1915-1916; A.B., New York
State College for Teachers, 1919; Instructor of English,

Rome High School, 1919-1920; Member of State College
Faculty since 1920.

EpirH Owen WAL- ace, A.B., A.M.
Instructor in Latin
A.B., New York State College for Teachers, 1917;

A.M., Wellesley, 1920; Member of State College Faculty
since 1918.
Ui!

|
Or
Q
lh
rae

io Nr al;

ELIzABETH VAN DENBURGH, A.B., ®BK

Registrar

A.B., Cornell University, 1910; Teacher of Latin, Clyde
High School, 1910-1912; Cataloguer, Cornell University
Library, 1913-1917; Clerk U. S. War Department and
U. S. Treasury Department, 1917-1920; Registrar State
College since 1920.

Mary Louise Evans, M.D.
Assistant Physician, Department of Hygiene

M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1906;
Interne, Philadelphia General Hospital, 1906-1907; Mem-
ber of Staff, State Hospital at Norristown, Pa., and New
Jersey State Hospital at Trenton, 1907-1912; Practice of
Psychiatry, Portland, Oregon, 1913-1916; Staff, Connecticut
State Hospital at Middletown, 1917-1918; Served in France
with American Women’s Hospitals, Unit No. 1, 1918-1919;
Member of State College Faculty since 1920.

EpirH M. Noweti
Manager of Cafeteria

Graduate of Simmons I. M., 1916; Dietitian at Private
Hospital, Boston; Dietitian at Lawrence Hospital; Hotel
Manager at Nahant, Mass.; Manager Cafeteria, Forbes-
Lithograph, Boston; Cafeteria Manager, Tufts College;
Manager Stuart Club, Tenway, Boston; Member of State
College Faculty since 1920.

Thirty-one

HONORARY MEMBERS

Cha

\y }
Dur class began Y
its proud career
Daith the erp of Maar
ringing loud and elear
Bind ever and ever our

|. motto shull be

First in the ranks for The
flay of the free .

Maurice

Hathorne

Raiph Baker

JENIOR OFFICERS

Ernestine Owen

Marjorie Potter

President

Honorary President
Vice-President__~ ~~
Secretary

7 reasurer

Reporter

President___- s

Vice-President__-

Secretary ates
Treasurer --
Reporter__--
President__~~-- s

V ice-President__-~~-

Secretary

Treasurer_ a one sae

Reporter__ ~~

President_==-====—=

Vice-President__----
Secrelary: 2s
Treasurer

Reporter__-----

CLASS OFFICERS

FRESHMAN YEAR

AIDA BALLAGH

_. JOHN SCHULTE
WILLIAM STRAIN
_____ MARTIN BARRY

EATRICE BUCHANAN

HELEN TAAFE

SoPHOMORE YEAR

aes F. REGINALD BRUCE

res BEATRICE BUCHANAN

_~ Mary GRAHN
Mary WuHisH

_._FLORENCE STANBRO

KATHERYN BALL

ee Maurice HATHORN

Bees NELLIE PARKHURST
RousE

Joos EVCILE
__.... James Bucc!

— Maurice HaTHoRN
— MarcarRET CRANE
_. ERNESTINE OWEN

__ RALPH BAKER

__._._ MarjoriE PoTTer

Thirty-fve

F r FoF
GUE |

0

SENIOR CLASS HISTORY

JOUR years ago (for what is history without dates) we arrived. We did not
realize then just how much our arrival meant to the College, but we see it all

now. Landladies still remark, looking with relief upon the nice quiet girls
upstairs, about that year when “they had such a lively lot of Freshmen over
there." We did have a lively time. How we loved to howl out our defiant dirge at

the Sophomores:
“Oh, ye Sophomores, where is your class spirit?
Why do you leave us — so long un-mo-lest-ed?
We are the Fresh-esh-men!
Hear us, oh, ye So-oph-mores, :
We challenge you to-day.”

The Sophomores were not slow to respond, that we acknowledge, but the question
is, how far would they have gone if we had not dared them on?

We were treated to the usual social round, but to us it was not usual and we were
excited. Friday night soon became a synonym for reception and no preparation for
Saturday morning math. We liked the receptions. It was fun to go around looking
for people with blue eyes and hair parted on the side, and get them to write their names
with a green pencil in a little red book. And it was comforting to find that President
Brubacher or Dean Pierce either knew your father or had gone to school with a family
cousin. It was at these receptions, or else at gym frolics, that we first heard how Sockery
set his blue hen, and he has set it once or twice a year ever since.

Soon billets-doux time came with the subsequent introduction to faculty advisers
and Dean Horner. It was a strange thing the impression billets-doux made on faculty
advisers and surprising to find how many smile wrinkles Dean Horner had in the corners
of his mouth.

Moving-Up Day was the climax. We carried off all the honors. | We won the
banner rush and gloated over the Sophomores the next day, singing:

“Tell us what you saw last night
And what you did not get.”

We took first prize for step-singing and first prize in athletics. We were not
allowed to have a chapel speaker because of some impropriety in stealing the Sophomore
banner, but we insisted on being heard by standing and delivering in a body a speech
beginning: “* Ladies and Gentlemen And Sophomores.”

It was a great year.

The next year was interrupted by a long vacation when we went home and got
flu-sick or stayed in the city and got home-sick; the S. A. T. C. disturbed us, too, by
setting men loose all about the College. The new Freshman Class was small, and
rather failed to arouse us except when they embarrassed our party by adding cheese to
the program and by tearing off a piece of our banner. We made up for that, though,

Thirty-six

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on penalty days. The brass knobs about College have never since shone so bright, nor
the corridors looked so clean, nor the front steps been so free from snow.

This was the year when the hot dog craze swept College. Since then it has been
all day suckers, June-bugs, and doughnuts and cider — all in quick succession.

Our Junior year we worked. Four or five break-downs were recorded by spring.
That was because we had suddenly to acquire maturity and look after Freshmen sisters;
we had to take method courses and be continually frightened by, “‘ You as prospective
teachers . . . etc.’’ Then there were debates to labor over, a basketball champion-
ship to win and hold, the League of Nations to argue and settle. There was our Prom
to get a dress and a man for. Whether or not the first should have sleeves and the second
bring flowers were matters of weight. So, too, were speculations as to whether her red
dress would clash with his red hair.

Then our Senior year, shadowed by the empty feeling of doing things for the last
time — last reception, last tea, last Prom. We have found we have been much like
other Seniors. We have babbled over P. T., our favorite talk being about how we
squelched “‘ them”; we have worried and ennuied through various education courses, all
flavored by H.S and CS,, or haunted by fresh cake and doughnut smells from the
cafeteria kitchen; and we have pursued dignity with hair nets, rubber heels, and bone-
rimmed glasses. We have found that a Senior is expected to be a kind of sign post,
that he must not swing gaily about with the wind but must be still and point true.

So we leave, more responsible than when we came, more mature perhaps, with a
steadier purpose and aim and (for what is history without quotations) “‘nothing is
now left but a majestic memory *’— memory of work well done, of play time well
spent, and of friends well made.

Thir'y seven

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DOROTHEA DUANE ADAMS, AQ
1538 Second St. Rensselaer, N. Y.

Rensselaer High School.

Pedagogue Board, Moving-Up Day Committee (3),
Ring Committee, Y. W. C. A., Consumers’ League,
G. A. A.

Dot walks slowly with careful dignity lest she derange
her one well-trained curl. We like her quick smile and
delicious gurgle. Poise, beauty, strength, and a sense of
humor — she's our joke editor — must suffice, for adjectives
have a way of becoming scarce, and Dot is at the beginning
of the list.

ERNA MARGARET JOHANNA BAER
41 Myrtle Ave. Albany, N. Y.
Albany High School.

Junior Reception Committee.

Erna Margaret Johanna Baer! Doesn't that sound like
the name fond parents would give their only child? Per-
haps the weight of it accounts for Erna’s position in gym
class after the command, “Column left.” She says her
name is responsible for her never having grown very tall.
Anyway, her classmates agree that “ Teddy" is a name
that just suits her.

RALPH J. BAKER, KAP
307 Morgan St. Tonawanda, N. Y.

Tonawanda High School.

Class Treasurer (4), Pedagogue Board, Assistant Col-
lege Cheer Leader (2), Football (1) (2) (3) (4), Varsity
Basketball (2) (4), Class Basketball (1) (2) (3) (4),

Physical Education Society.

We all like Bake tremendously. He has done much for
his class and the college. And he has an infectious laugh
that keeps us cheerful. When it shatters the atmosphere
the uninitiated glance apprehensively about for the auto
truck, but the old timers look at Bake and laugh, too. How
could they help it with his sturdy health and jolly good
humor written large on his informal face?

Thirty-nine

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KATHERYN MAILLER BALL
wr, Myskania

Chester, N. Y.

Chester High School.

Pedagogue Board, Class President (3), Y. W. C. A.
(Vice-President (4)), Silver Bay (2), Moving-Up Day
Committee (1), College Orchestra, Music Club (Vice-
President (4)), Spanish Club, Physical Education Society,
Class Basketball (2) (3), G. A. A.

K says she has never read Pollyanna, but we do not
believe it, for a more earnest player of the glad game we
have never met. And the nicest part of it all is that the
flash of the smile and the friendly words are for everyene
alike. So, too, is her ready service. We know no one who
ever asked her to do anything and found her unwilling.
The founding of the college orchestra stands as one of the
results of her work as Junior President.

ALIDA P, BALLAGH
AQ, Myskania

285 Ontario St. Albany, N. Y.

Albany High School.

Pedagogue Board, Quarterly Board (2) (3), Manager
of Debating Team (3), Junior Reception Committee, Chair-
man Sophomore Soiree, Summer School Commitee (2),
Class Cheer Leader (2) (3), Y. W. C. A. (Cabinet (3)
(4)), Des Moines Conference (3), Silver Bay (1) (2),
G. A.A,

‘21 will never forget the night of its first Moving-Up Day
when, perched high upon victorious shoulders, our class
president responded to a call for a speech. We need not
have trembled as we did, for Alida said just the right
thing. Alida is like that. Then, too, she is most efficient
with a way of tending to small details systematically. We
cannot remember when Alida has not been busy working
either for her class or her college.

AGNES BARRET
155 Division St. Saratoga Spa, N. Y.

Saratoga High School.
Y. W. C. A, G. A. A., Spanish Club.

Said Agnes Barret to Kathryn Ball, “ We may bawl
but we'll have to bear it.” We quo‘e the pun as typical of
Agnes and the way she throws back her red head and faces
things.

PE

ELL.

ELIZABETH ANN BECKWITH
217 Liberty St. Newburgh, N. Y.

Newburg Academy.

Pedagogue Board, Debating Committee (3), Y. W.
C.A., G. A. A.

Betty Beckwith came to college with questioning eyes.
Some of her questions are answered, many are not. Betty
is a see-saw, a girl of surprising failures and remarkable
successes. She either rides the crest of things with banners
flying, or else creeps droopingly through dark spaces.

CHARLOTTE GERTRUDE BENEDICT
Fonda, N. Y.

Fonda High School.
Y. W. C. A., Chemistry Club, Canterbury Club.

She is Miss Benedict when she competently bosses her
class up above on the third floor, but she’s just Carl when
she jazzes the piano or sits down to sew with you. And as
proof that she is very human, her friends offer the informa-
tion that she adores Buffalo Sundaes.

FRANK RICHARD BLISS, KAP
44 Rumsey St. Bath, N. Y.

Oxford Academy.

Quarterly Board (Business Manager (4)), Student
Board of Finance (3), Y. M. C. A. (President (4)).
Des Moines Conference (3), Summer School Committee
(3), Class Baseball (1) (2) (3) (4), Class Basketball
(1) (2) () (Captain (4)), Class Football (1) (2) (4),
Varsity Basketball (Assistant Manager (3)), (Manager
(4)), Prete ‘Club:

Bliss is one of State's business representatives, a man
who is destined to take either Schwab's place in the steel
industry or Ford's place in the automobile world. Look
over his record. He began as a member of the Finance
Board, and has become successful as Business Manager of
the Quarterly and Varsity Basketball Manager. But
Shanks was not cut out for a hard-headed boss. He has
reserved time for other pursuits, which shows his responsive-
ness to gentler influences.

Forty-one

Forty-two

PAULINE ROSEMARY BRADY
21 Prospect St. Utica, N. Y.

Utica Free Academy.

hag Club, Class Basketball (2), G. A. A., Music
Club.

One generally finds Pauline curved patiently over a
dozen or more history books in the library, or perhaps she
is gliding unostentatiously down the hall toward Room 200.
Whatever she’s doing she is not making any noise, and is
keeping her thoughts to herself.

ALICE EMILY BRIGGS, wr
45 Haight Ave. Arlington, N. Y.

Poughkeepsie High School.

Pedagogue Board, French Club (Secretary-Treasurer
(4)), Spanish Club (Reporter (4)), Moving-Up Day
Committee (3), Summer School Committee (3), Y. W.
C. A., G. A. A., Music Club, Physical Education Society.

Here is one fixture in the main hall that is almost as well
known as the bulletin board or Minerva. Al is always
there — collecting Ped subscriptions, extracting class dues,
or making out lesson plans. In spite of all her extra-cur-
riculum activity, Alice has been a mighty successful student.
Witness her leaving in January and starting to teach six
months before the rest of us.

FRANK REGINALD BRUCE.
KAP, Myskania

105 Central Ave. Albany, N. Y.

Milne High School.

Editor-in-Chief of the News (4), Class Football (4),
Manager of Athletics (3), Junior Reception Committee,
Athletic Council (3) (2), Class President (2), Dramatic
and Art Council (2), Class Basketball (1) (2) (3),
Chemistry Club, Spanish Club, Press Club.

You cannot expect us to do full justice to Reg in a mere
write-up. Something in the nature of an epic poem would
be more fitting. We refer you to his pedigree, but that
does not tell of his ability to cross the chapel platform in
two strides or of the way he rouses a class basketball team
when he lets loose his low small voice. One other thing
must be added when speaking of Reginald’s accomplish-
ments. He went to the Sophomore Soiree and danced
every dance.
BEATRICE CATHERINE BUCHANAN
AQ

9 Manning Square Albany, N. Y.

Albany High School.

Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (4), Prom Committee (3), Chair-
man of Moving-Up Day Committee (2) (3), Summer
School Committee (3), Class Vice-President (2), Class
Treasurer (1), Freshman Party Committee (1), Silver Bay
Conference (1), G. A. A., Mathematics Club.

One of the littlest of 1921's little people — winsome and
dainty. An extra portion of good humor and wit, together
with a depth of understanding, make Bee a sincere friend
and a jolly playmate. We will always remember her as a
most effective leader.

MARION GERTRUDE BURNAP, KA
Old Forge, N. Y.

Old Forge High School.
Class Treasurer-elect 1920, Y. W. C. A. G. A. A.

Turning with the same chaste and gentle dignity to the
sparkle of a strolling sun-beam or the frown of a low-
bending cloud, she suggests a tranquil pool in a classically
formal garden.

GERTRUDE MARIE BURNS, xx@
2 Barringer Road Ilion, N. Y.
Ilion High School.

Newman Club, Mathematics Club.

You ask us to give a word picture of Gertrude. Do you
realize what a task that is? If there were but a few
things to talk about, we shouldn't hesitate, but when she is
endowed with all the attributes that attend a “ best-looking-
girl-in-college,” how can we confine ourselves to the space
allotted? The easiest way to picture Gertrude as we best
know her is to think of a long sentence, say it over as fast
as our poor tongues can travel, multiply the speed by a
hundred, and there you have — “ G’r B'rns.”

Forty-three

Forty-four

CHARLOTTE LEWIS BUSH, wr
Boonville, N. Y.

Boonville High School.

The worst thing we can say about Carl is that she
belongs to that class of people who do everything they
attempt well — whether it is decorating the gym for parties,
swallowing history with ease — not E’s,— or dancine. And

when it comes to being a good friend, we'll give Carl an
A+ every time.

GERTRUDE M. BUSSEY, ao
Margaretville, N. Y.

Margaretville High School.
Y. W.C. A. G. A. A., Chemistry Club.

“ What do you mean? I didn’t say that, did 1? Really?
Well, you see it was like this—— and on Gertie goes
until the poor man doesn't know whether he said what he
said or said what he didn't say. We defy you to try to
get very far past Gertie. It's her smile that does it — and
the discovery of the bewildering number of ways one girl
can do her hair becomingly.

RUTH CALLISON
15 Trent St. Woonsocket, R. I.

Utica Free Academy.
Y. W. C. A., French Club, G. A. A.

One knows instinctively after the first glance at her satin
skin and blue eyes that she is the sort of girl who must have
jokes explained to her, and long words repeated twice and
distinctly — which all goes to show how very wrong instinct
can be. “ Superesophageal ganglia is merely an example
of the terms she throws about promiscuously.
—-

“ll

THEODORE WALLACE CASSAVANT
SNK, Myskania
518 Hudson Ave. Albany, N. Y.

Albany High School.

Pedagogue Board, Physical Education Society (Presi-
dent (4)), Varsity Basketball (4) (3) (2), Varsity
Hockey (Captain (3) (2)), Varsity Baseball (Captain
(3)), Class Basketball (3) (2), Canterbury Club (Treas-
urer (4)), Des Moines Student Volunteer Conference G),
Chemistry Club, Spanish Club, Mathematics Club.

Ted always looks horribly worried about something or
other. Maybe he’s trying to decide whether he belongs to
Helen or Madalyn. We've often wondered about that, too,
because Ted's bashfulness is notable. His chief interest
about college seems to be hockey, and for it he will argue
until he is exhausted. He sings with a sad countenance, is
very neat, and made a strong run for “ best-looking.” We
recommend him for an ideal husband; he neither drinks,
swears, smokes, or chews.

1 a:

HELEN BEACH CHASE
156 Fremont St. Peekskill, N. Y.

Drum Hill High School, Peekskill.

Pedagogue Board, Finance Board (4), Prom Committee,
Moving-Up Day Committee (2) (3), Y. W. C. A,
Student Volunteer Conference at Wells and at Syracuse
(4), G. A. A.

She has such a deliberate, fascinating drawl that we
cannot help laughing at her, even if she is always sensible.
In fact, although we do not seem to take Helen seriously,
we respect her immensely. Her conscientiousness and
loyalty have given her a reputation as a reliable worker,
while her sympathy and goodness have endeared her to us
as a friend.

LINNIE CLARK, KA
154 Western Ave. Albany, N. Y.

Beacon High School.
Y. W.C. A., G. A. A., Music Club, Mathematics Club.

Linnie’s manner is quiet and gentle, and she has an
unobtrusive and apologetic way of doing exceptionally
efficient work. She draws, paints, embroiders, and plays
the piano beautifully. Once in a while, though, she dis-
cards her nature, and stuns us by making a fiery remark or
indulging in a bold adventure.

Forty-five

Forty-six

AMY SHERWOOD CLUBLEY, wr
3 Ogden St. Binghamton, N. Y.
Binghamton Central High School.

Chairman Intersorority Ball Committee (3), Junior Prom
Committee, Chairman Senior Stunt, Canterbury Club,
G. A. A., French Club, Spanish Club, Music Club.

Any is an all-round good sport as well as the personi-
fication of efficiency. It is impossible to say whether she
excels in the teaching profession or in the culinary and
domestic arts. There is one queer thing about Amy, how-
ever. She is always trying to convince people how eco-
nomical she is, and yet a Chi Psi pin indicates that she
accepted one “Bill without any feeling of compunction.

KATHERINE FRANCES COLLIER, rK®

Middleburgh, N. Y.

Middleburg High School.

Spanish Club (Treasurer (3)), French Club, Music
Club, Y. W. C. A., G. A. A.

We take this opportunity to make public the fact, in
case you have never before realized it, that Katherine is a
minister's daughter. Perhaps because of her parsonage
background she is so capable in managing kid sisters and
French verbs.

MARY DOROTHY COLLINS
Vernon, N. Y.

Vernon High School.

Newman Club (Councillor (1) (2)), G. A. A., Music
Club.

“Life isn’t a serious business, it’s all a good joke,”
sayeth Dorothy. The cynic among you answers, “ Why,
how peculiar!’ Nothing daunted, our heroine replies,
“Most people are peculiar and they don’t know it. I'm
peculiar and I know it and I'm just as happy as if I were
in my right mind.” We challenge anyone to dampen a
spirit like that. Besides a superabundance of true Irish wit,
this lucky individual has a most charming disposition.
a5

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DORIS ALLEN COON
Ballston Spa, N. Y.

Round Lake High School.

Pedagogue Board, Y. W. C. A., G. A. A., Political
Science Club.

“The pen is mightier than the sword.” We excuse the
triteness on the ground of truth, for we are all aware that
this descendant of Josh Giddings has an ability to write
pleasantly. We will hear from her again, of that we are
sure.

VIVIAN ESTHER CORBIN, KA

39 Robinson St. Schenectady, N. Y.

Schenectady High School.
Y. W.C. A, G. A. A,

She answers to either Vivian or Esther, but Vivian
better suits her marcelled hair and correct clothes. Although
usually found in the H-E Department, it was not there she
gained her extensive knowledge of either dentistry or
dancing.

EDNA BELLE CRAIG
Delhi, N. Y.

Delaware Academy.
Y. W.C. A. G. A.A.

Here is a bonnie Scotch lassie with a permanent supply
of good cheer, a sincere spirit of service, and a valiant
determination worthy of great honor.

Forty-seven

Forty-eight

ESTHER LOU CRAMER, H®
34 Cortland Place Albany, N. Y.

Milne High School.

Pedagogue Board (4), Senior Stunt Committee, Chair-
man of Junior-Freshman Party, Moving-Up Day Com-
mittee (3), Handbook (3), Dramatics and Fine Arts
Council (Secretary (2) (3)), Y. W. C. A. G. A. A,,
Spanish Club, Music Club.

A lady is always ready to give sympathy. In graceful
dignity she works and plays with restrained enjoyment.
But there are rare times when: one doubts — doubts whether
a lady always carries her dignity-cloak.

MARGARET McCLELLAND CRANE, KA
Albany, N. Y.

Ogdensburg Free Academy.

Class Vice-President (4), Class Basketball (3) (4),
Y. W. C. A. (Cabinet (3)), Silver Bay (2), Mathe-
matics Club (President (4)), Physics Club (Vice-Presi-
dent (4)), Physical Education Society, G. A. A.

To meet Margaret is to remember her— a girl of rare
ability, sincerity, and beauty of character, with a charm we

cannot resist.

BEULAH BERNICE CUNNINGHAM
Malone, N. Y.

Franklin Academy.

Class Basketball (1) (2) (3) (4) Neen (4)),
(Captain (2)), G. A. A. (Secretary (4)), Y. W. C. A,
Physical Education Society, French Club.

Has anyone seen Beu? Why, yes, she’s over in the gym.
Like a flash you realize that Beu is one of those “ gym-
persons.” She's the personification of pep, a willing doer
of odd jobs, a good sport, and a first-rate athlete.

LLL IN LILO AS SOLE IE LAS CELLET, \ LL OGLE AGS LL rp aI
eee

GRACE MARIE DALTON
132 So. Third Ave. Mechanicville, N. Y.
Mechanicville High School.

Newman Club, Physical Education Society, G. A. A.

Grace is one of those quiet girls whose exterior is a
deceitful index. She may be small in appearance, but in
class spirit and loyalty to her friends she is big. We're
sorry she didn't disclose to us sooner her ability to shoot
sensational baskets: we think she would have made a clever

basketballist.

JESSIE LUCILE DARLING
13 Cattaraugus St. Springville, N. Y.

Griffith Institute.

Manager of Women’s Athletics (3), Class Basketball
(1) (2) G) (4) (Manager (2)), G. A. A., Physical
Education Society.

Full of life, full of pep —with a reputation for being
one of the best all-round athletes in college. She won her
numerals on the Freshman basketball squad and before
recovering from this triumph, went ahead and got more of
them. This sticktuitiveness is characteristic of the Darling
combination — Jess ‘n Win.

WINIFRED MARGUERITE DARLING
13 Cattaraugus St. Springville, N. Y.

Griffith Institute.

Manager Girls’ Athletics (4), Class Basketball (1) (2)
G) (4), G. A. A. (Council (4)), Physical Education

Society.

And here's Win. ‘21 considers itself lucky in having
had this other Darling for four years. We have depended
on her to win class honors in track and basketball, and she
has never disappointed us.

Foriy-nine

|

GUE, iP

DORIS HARRIET DAVEY
Wr, Omicron Nu

7 Eagle St. Cooperstown, N. Y.

Cooperstown High School.

Canterbury Club, G. A. A., Chemistry Club, Music
Club.

Doris is clever. Notice her hats — she makes them. She
is capable. Ask the critics at the Practice House. She has
many friends. See her photograph album or watch the
mail man.

GEORGE JOSEPH DAVIDSON, KN
295 Ninth Ave. Astoria, L. I.

De Witt Clinton High School.
Chemistry Club.

You all know “ Professor.” Daily he promenades the
halls carrying with him experimental apparatus with which
he imparts to Milne High Frosh a knowledge of Mother
Nature. In the State College S. A. T. C. George was
unanimously elected General. But even greater fame is to

be expected of this embryo scientist.

FRANCIS HENRY DONAHUE, Kap
141 Avenue B Rocheste-, N. Y.

Spencerport High School, Brockport State Normal

School.
Summer School Committee (3), Newman Club.

Blondy says, “ Wine, women and song!” But he can't
get the wine, the women keep away from him, and he hasn't
any voice. He's a jolly good fellow, though, and with his
departure State will lose one of its best fussers. And then
what will become of that passionate-pink jersey ?

ete

ROSE SYLVIA DONNELLAN
200 Avenue A Schenectady, N. Y.

Schenectady High School.

Newman Club, Press Club, Music Club, French Club

You like the friendly way she meets you, and the way her
eyes light up as she peers out at you from behind her
glasses. Sometimes you wish she would forget herself and
her work, and come out to play.

CARRIE FANNY C. DREES
416 Brandywine Ave. Schenectady, N. Y.

Schenectady High School.
Y. W. C. A., G. A. A., Mathematics Club.

Carrie is so conscientious. You have a mean desire to |
catch her just once in an unprepared lesson, but you never
do. She is quite generous and cheerful with it all, though,
and you like her.

HELENA MARY DUERSCHNER \}
Grace Court Troy, N. Y.

Lansingburg High School.
Y. W.C. A. G. A. A.

A little girl who answers promptly and accurately when
called upon. It must be that she likes to play store,
because she is usually found selling pencils in the Co-op. |

Fifty-one
Fifiv-iwo

ALICE LUCILE ELWOOD
Fort Plain, N. Y.

Fort Plain High School.

Silver Bay (3), Y. W. C. A. (Social Service Com-
mittee (4)), G. A. A., Music Club.

Lucile is always sauntering amiably down the halls or
sitting with placid good nature while the rest of us hurry
into class. She recites in slow and well-considered phrases,
which cover all the ground eventually. The only speedy
thing Lucile does is to upset books when she gets up to talk.

PAULINE MILLER FEENEY, wr
39 McMaster St. Ballston Springs, N. Y.
Ballston High School.

Pete's humor, poise, and ability to get good marks without
studying astonishes Freshmen and Seniors alike. She can
discuss political economy or up-to-date vamping with equal
ease. Pete has three ruling passions —home, railroads, and
a good time.

MARGUERITE MARY FISHER
721 Spruce Ave. Niagara Falls, N. Y.

Niagara Falls High School.
Y. W. C. A., G. A. A., Mathematics Club.

We all know that Marguerite is quiet, but her friends
tell us that underneath this quietness is a rare combination
of pep and originality. We cannot really say, for she has
never given us the chance to know her well. But we do
know that in her quiet way she has always been a reliable
supporter of college and class interests.
FLORENCE FITCH, rk, Omicron Nu

Oxford, N. Y.
Oxford Academy.

Prom Committee, Cap and Gown Committee, Y. W.
C. A. (Cabinet (2)), Canterbury Club, Chemistry Club,

Delegate to National Conference of Consumers’ League (3).

Any plan that needs careful attention will be successfully
carried out when Fitchie is in charge. She is so capable, so
altogether willing and thoroughly dependable that one is
fortunate to be associated with her.

IRENE WILHELMINA FOSS
Greenwich, N. Y.
Greenwich High School.

Y. W. C. A. Spanish Club (Vice-President (4))
(Treasurer (3)).

Irene likes facts and if she dribbles in fiction she does it
half-scornfully. She works with hard energy, and gets
things done and out of the way in half time.

MABEL GAGE, KA

Johnsonville, N. Y.
Hoosick Falls High School.

Cap and Gown Committee, Ring Committee, Junior
Reception Committee, Moving-Up Day Committee (2),
Mathematics Club, Y. W.C. A., G. A. A.

Steady and reliable, with an unvarying interest in college
affairs. And lest our mathematician seems to lack balance,
we must record her love of music and literature.

Fifty-three

Fifty-four

BERTHA FLORITA GALLUP, Ar@
34 Cherry St. Albany, N. Y.

Albany High School.
G. A.A.

After subduing the disposition to pun, we'll proceed to
the next in line, Bertha. Her personality is — like
Fatima’s — distinctly individual. One minute she is en-
grossed in the deepest kind of thought and the next in dis-
playing notorious dimples that are reputed to have wrecked
many male hearts. We're sorry we've forgotten the exact 2
number of wrecks, but if the story is authentic, Bert must
be a knockout.

RUTH GIFFORD
145 No. School St. Gloversville, N. Y.

Gloversville High School.
YoWsC. A. GA. A.

Ruth is usually divided between an impulse to laugh or
weep, but she always laughs. Her most heinous vice is
taking distractingly minute history notes, and trying to
learn them. But she never does, and that redeems her.

HELEN EDYTHE GOLDSMITH, Ar®
86 Trinity Place Albany, N. Y.

Albany High School.

Junior Prom Committee (3), Student Christmas Fund
Committee (4), Basketball (1), G. A. A., French Club,
Spanish Club.

She slips easily into the place of entertainer and leader.
Her eyes challenge you to truthfulness and sincerity.
me

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GUE + ERE |

GLADYS MAE GORHAM
212 Delaware Ave. Albany, N. Y.

Albany High School.

Junior Reception Committee, Y. W. C. A., G. A. A,,
French Club, Spanish Club.

This statuesque lady with the perfect coiffure was made
for more than ornamental purposes. Her calmness and
serenity are the outward expression of depth and strength.
Gladys doesn’t bubble noisy enthusiasm; she achieves
quietly in a French translation, a swimming feat, or a
modest bit of hand work.

MARY CATHARINE GRAHN
KA, Myskania

150 Western Ave.

Albany High School.

Editor-in-Chief of Pedagogue, Quarterly Board (4),
Post Exam Jubilee Committee (4), Editor of Freshman
Hand-Book, Class Secretary (2), Manager Class Basket-
ball Team (1), Y. W. C. A., G. A. A., Music Club.

Originality is the keyword to this situation. You expect
something different and you always get it. Mary has two
ambitions: to be taken seriously and to be thought business-
like. She will never be either, for Mary's tragedies are
always comedies, and although man has evolved from an
amoeba, neither time nor evolution could produce a stiffly

laundered Mary.

Albany, N. Y.

RUTH G. GREENBLATH, AgE®
116 First St. Troy, N. Y.

Troy High School.
Junior Prom Committee, G. A. A.

Troy stirred up a few ounces of weight, a few pounds of
brains, and a pair of big spectacles, and produced this little
mathematical wonder. But though she is little in length,
breadth, and thickness, you'll never find her little in other
respects.

Fifty-five

Fifty-six

"Hila

HELEN AMELIA GULDI, ka

Southampton, L. I.

Sayville High School.
Y. W. C. A., Music Club, G. A. A., Canterbury Club.

The course of Helen's life runs smoothly. With swift
decision she chooses and rejects, and having ordered her
life, permits no deviations. “Good” seems to be an
effective adjective in describing her. She is good looking,
a good worker, and a good sport. Her sincerity is rivalled
only by her directness of attack.

ELTON HAKES, Kap
Berlin, N. Y.

Berlin High School.

Pedagogue Board, Joseph Henry Society (President (4)),
Finance Board (4), Class Basketball (2) (3) (4), Varsity
Baseball (3), Chemistry Club, Mathematics Club.

Here is our philosopher. He studies psychology for
pleasure and talks intelligently about it. There's only one
subject which he likes more, and that is girls. He can tell
the underclassmen more about this genus than they would
otherwise gather in four years at State.

MARIAN GRACE HALL
Gouverneur, N. Y.

Gouverneur High School, University of Rochester 1916-
1918, Syracuse University 1918-1919.

Marion has been in college only this year, so we can't
tell you very much about her. We do know, however, that
she is very quiet and is marked by two things always
resented in quiet girls — an aptitude for continuous studying
and an ability to become engaged.
fr

LS ae

PE

psy

GUE

MAURICE CHAUNCEY HATHORN
KAP, Myskania
212 Fon Claire St. Johnstown, N. Y.

Johnstown High School.

Class President (4), Vice-President (3), Chairman of
Prom Committee (3), Penalty Committee (2), Athletic
Council (2) (3) (Secretary (4)), Varsity Basketball (3)
(Captain (4)), Varsity Baseball (3), Class Basketball
(Captain (1) (2) (3)), Class Track (1) (2) (3) (4),
Chemistry Club (Treasurer (2) (3)), Mathematics Club,
Joseph Henry Society, Physical Education Society.

Shorty surprised us this year by his diffidence in having
his picture taken. The whole Ped Board and high officials
among his brethren united in persuading him to undergo the
ordeal. Yet Shorty need not have hesitated. His com-
plexion is quite pleasing and the droop of his hair charming.
The features indicate an ability to grasp a situation and
reach a quick conclusion. And then the girls, especially
very young girls, find Shorty captivating.

CLARA C. HAZELTON

Rensselaer, N. Y.

Albany High School.
French Club, Spanish Club, Y. W. C. A., G. A. A.

Clara has so well persisted in attending to her own affairs
that we have found it hard to get acquainted with her. But
we know that she is a reliable information bureau on things
French. If it were not for the belying twinkle in her eyes
she would be classed as s. s. and g.

BLANCHE E. HILL, H®

Cambridge, N. Y.

Cambridge High School.
Y. W.C. A., G. A. A., Mathematics Club, Press Club.

Blanche is quiet and “true-friendly."” Sometimes she
startles you by a righteous anger at the wrongs of the
world, but you are dumbfounded by an outburst of well-
accented ragtime.

Fifty-seven

Fifty-eight

THEODORE WILLIAM HILL
Fair Haven, N. Y.

Fair Haven High “School.

Assistant Manager Baseball (3), Manager Baseball (4),
Mathematics Club, Joseph Henry Society.

As he declines to be interviewed, let his name tell the
tale. Although born a Hill he is really a mountain, a
mountain of ideas. We wish we knew why his glance is
always averted. Ted has three attributes which enable
him to get by —his scholastic record, his unobtrusiveness,
and his failure to succumb to the wiles of woman.

HAROLD WEST HOLMES, =NK
Ancram, N. Y.

Pine Plains High School.

Mathematics Club (Vice-President (4)), Joseph Henry
Society (Secretary (4)), Manager Debating Team (4),
Chemistry Club.

This exhibit first became famous when it was discovered
to be a miniature edition of the famous Sherlock. Like its
prototype it is always peering about in search of the
scientific “how, when, why, and where.” But lately it
appears to be deserting its nobul calling to join the squadron
of fussers. And it seems accomplished.

HARRIET PHILCOX HOLMES, Ka
Warwick, N. Y.

Warwick High School.

President of Y. W. C. A. (4), Secretary of Y. W.
C. A. (3), Vice-President of Mathematics Club (3),
Des Moines Conference (3), Silver Bay Conference (2),
Rutland Conference (2).

Hattie Pillbox walks stiffly and with deacon-like pro-
priety. That is because she has a conscience and the
Y. W. C. A. presidency to live up to. The student body
regards Hattie as the most dignified person in college.
Those who know her well cannot account for this: for two
inches beneath her austere sincerity lies a continuous giggle,
a huge sense of fun, and anything but tremendous dignity.
LILLIAN MAY HOPPER, ag
675 Central Ave. Albany, N. Y.

Albany High School.

Class Basketball (1) (2) (3) (4), Summer School Com-
mittee (3), Y. W. C. A. Physical Education Society,
G.A. A.

You just can’t help liking Hoppey, she is such a good
sport and so spontaneous and wholesome. She is much like
a child, — and assumes that role with easy charm. Her
special hobby is gym, which with characteristic enthusiasm
she just loves.

DOROTHY CHURCH HOWE, Omicron Nu
Hoosick, N. Y.

Hoosick Falls High School.
Y. W.C. A, G. A. A.

Dot reminds one of an owl, she is so elusive in acquaint-
ance and so very wise. Her middle name gives us an
inkling to the dignity and solemnity of her character. If
persistent effort always receives adequate reward, Dot's
share will be a large one.

DOROTHY HOAG HOWELL, wr
Highland Falls, N. Y.

Highland Falls High School.
Pedagogue Board, Spanish Club, Music Club, G. A. A.

Dot manages her affairs as she manages her words —
deliberately, and with a cultured poise. Her ability to
make frequent trips to West Point and to get through State
without the slightest disturbance to that poise is amazing.
And she doesn’t merely get through, she gets through well.

Fifty-nine

ANNE KATHRYN HYLAND
_ 64 McCrea St. Fort Edward, N. Y.

Fort Edward High School.
Newman Club, Chemistry Club, French Club, G. A. A.

She says little but accomplishes a great deal, doing more
than her share in the scientific researches of our laboratory.

MARGARET FRANCES HYLAND
64 McCrea St. Fort Edward, N. Y.

Fort Edward High School.
Newman Club, Chemistry Club, French Club, G. A. A.

Peggy is able, too. She always carries some evidence
of chem lab about her — they make a great deal of dye
over there. The science building would be a sorry place
without Peg's rough-on-the-blues laugh.

ALICE ELISABETH KEESOR, KA
North Main St. Woodsfeld, O.

Woodsfield High School.
Chemistry Club, Y. W. C. A., G. A. A.

Independent, able, with a superior smile for those who
have to have pictures taken to send to school supes.
=

ALICE KATHERN KILTS
Sharon, N. Y.

Cobleskill High School.

Y. W. C. A., Mathematics Club, Joseph Henry Society,
G. A. A.

A math hound, a language shark, a science bug — surely
a strange being.

FREIDA MARGUERITE KROM
R: DB: 3 Schenectady, N. Y.
Mechanicville High School.
Y. W. C. A., G. A. A., Mathematics Club.

Did you ever see a person who was there when she said
she'd be there, who did what she said she'd do, and in
everv other way was just as exact and precise? You say
you never saw such a person? Well, look to the left.

MINA LOVINA LARMON
872 Lancaster St. Albany, N. Y.
Schuylerville High School.
Y. W. C. A., G. A. A., Mathematics Club.
Mina is one of the girls who make up the substantial
framework upon which the superstructure of college life

rests; a girl who gives to the society in which she moves
stability and worth.

Sixty-one

Sixty-two

FRANCES BUTTERS LAWRENCE

Cross River, N. Y.

Katonah High School.

Class Basketball (2) (3) (4), Spanish Club, Physical
Education Society, G. A. A.

Her noble cognomen was corrupted into “ Howdy.”
Under this handicap she has borne herself well, and even
succeeded in ensnaring the men. Howdy is noted among

our athletes for her speed in shooting baskets and running
50-yard dashes,

GRACE HARDY LAZARUS

5 North St. Ticonderoga, N. Y.

Ticonderoga High School.
Y. W.C. A, G. A.A.

Grace reminds one of an elm tree —tall and slender,
with a quiet trimness. But a sudden gust may decompose
the trim outlines and prove her a very young elm tree —
not so poised, but more invitingly mischievous.

HAZEL JESSIE LEE
455 Washington Ave. Albany, N. Y.

Granville High School.
Y. W. C. A. G. A. A., French Club, Music Club.

Has anybody ever seen Hazel loafing around, just
loafing? Nobody ever has, because she never does. She
proceeds with great velocity from the chemistry lab to the
history department, from the history department to the libe,
from the libe to the basement, and back again. She is quiet
and unassuming, and is known about college as “ You-know-
the-girl-with-the-pretty- red - hair - that's - always - just-so-and-
you-wish-it-wasn't.”
WILHELMINA LEWIN
156 Westchester Ave. Port Chester, N. Y.
Port Chester High School.

Y. W. C. A., Spanish Club, G. A. A.

Her friends have come to know a certain mischievous
twinkle in her eyes, a pleasing high light to her inborn
refinement and reserve.

EDNA MARIETTE LOWERREE |
Nassau, N. Y.
Milne High School. |

Business Manager of Pedagogue, News Board (Assistant
Business Manager (3)) (Business Manager (4)), Ring |
Committee, Press Club, Mathematics Club, Y. W. C. A., |
G. A. A. |
|

Did you notice the several business offices listed above?
Where Edna is, there is business. Her ability in that line
has been shown throughout her school and college career.
We cannot help wondering what manifestations of it the
future holds. Will she be the greatest banker in Wall
Street or just keep faultless books under her own super- |
vision of home economics? |

LAURA JOSEPHINE McCARTHY, X20
39 Main St. So. Glens Falls, N. Y.

St. Mary's Academy, Glens Falls.

Newman Club (Councillor (1) (2)) (Secretary (3)),
Spanish Club, G. A. A.

{
|
Had Glens Falls done nothing else to justify its existence, |
(but of course it has, positively) its mission would have |
been accomplished the day it sent Laura to State College.
Were you ever frightened by a seemingly pugilistic
motion of Laura's hands? Well, fear not; a philosopher |
might call it an “involuntary motion,” but, terminology |
waived, it is one of those characteristics so “ Laura-like’
that without it she wouldn't be Laura, and by it she is
known in a million.

Sixty-three
Sixty-four

MARGARET ELIZABETH McCARTHY
429 Loder St. Waverly, N. Y.

Waverly High School.
Newman Club, G. A. A.

Energetic, conscientious, enthusiastic, all the adjectives
found in company with success, may be applied to
Margaret. She's a girl ever able to talk, always ready to
listen, and eternally posted about other people's romances.

KATHERINE FRANCES McGARRAHAN
Xo

68 Garner St. Cohoes, N. Y.

Egberts High School.

Pedagogue Board, College Orchestra (President (4)),
Physical Education Society (Vice-President (4)), Junior

Prom Committee, Newman Club (Entertainment Committee

(3) (A)), G. A. A., Music Club.

She is one of those rare persons who actually likes to
work. Her directness of aim and keenness of vision is
supplemented by swift attack and thorough accomplishment.
And with it all, she is pleasantly unostentatious.

CATHARINE McGINN
Indian Lake, N. Y.
Indian Lake High School.
Newman Club, French Club, G. A. A.

For weeks we thougkt Krazy Kat was that annoying
anomaly — an Irishman without a sense of humor. She
would read Life with a face as long as a_ professional
mourner’s. At the end she would close the book with a
“TI don’t see anything funny in that!” Eventually we
discovered she had been fooling all along and was secretly
enjoying our stupidity.
HELEN ELIZABETH McGINN
Indian Lake, N. Y.

Indian Lake High School.
G. A. A., Newman Club, French Club, Spanish Club.

From September to Thanksgiving, from Thanksgiving to
Christmas, from Christmas to Easter, from Easter to June,
this one lament—“ You are so flat here in Albany, you
don’t know what cold means. Why, at home now it is
fifty below and the mountains, and the snow, snow, 4
and so forth unto the end.

IRENE FAITH McINTYRE
Salem, N. Y.

West Hebron Union School.
Y. W. C. A.

Irene “ Faith” they called her, and she lives up to it.
Somehow we see rather less of her this year than we used
to. Once it was impossible to go through the upper halls
without meeting Irene walking in secluded places, with her
interest centered upon Art. Do you suppose continued
application in that direction has given her eyes that Mona

Lisa look ?

EDNA REGINA MANETH, X30
Johnstown, N. Y.
Gloversville High School.

Junior Prom Committee, Cap and Gown Committee,
Summer School Committee, Newman Club, G. A. A.

Of course you've heard the old saying which runs, “ As
ye sow, so shall ye reap.” Have you ever heard the
paraphrase, “ As ye sew, so shall ye rip”? If there be
any truth in it, Edna is destined for a real ripping time in
years to come. But not even she will ever be able to
remove the memories of loveliness which she has sewed
upon our hearts.

Sixty-five

MARGARET MARY MARKHAM

157 Eagle St. Albany, N. Y.

St. John’s Academy, Albany.
Newman Club, French Club, Spanish Club, Music Club.

Margaret has a pleasing voice, rich and full. She has
been conscientious in her college work and we are sure her
diligence will be rewarded.

HELEN A. METZ

32 Best St. Buffalo, N. Y.
Williamsville High School.

Chemistry Club (Vice-President (4)), Music Club,
TOW A, Goal;

Did you say you had. a dose of the “blues”?
And wanted a remedy? Hunt up Metzie and in five
minutes—or ten at the most—you'll forget what the
word means.

Her one great failing is her willingness to allow the
P. O. Department to become congested with her cor-
respondence. The Western Union also has difficulty in
receiving her telegrams and night letters. But we can't
blame Meizie for this.

EUNICE EVELYN MEYERS, wr
971 Maple Ave. Schenectady, N. Y.

Schenectady High School.

Junior Reception Committee, Y. W. C. A., Dramatics
and Arts Council.

We have never known Eunice to become so engrossed
that she forgot to appear correctly gowned, shod, and
powdered. After our own hurried scramblings back and
forth, we stop and look at her enviously, wondering how
it is done.

PAULINE MOORE, KA
Madalin, N. Y.

Tivoli High School.
Canterbury Club (Secretary (4)), Mathematics Club.

Pauline has a quiet manner which her friends admire.
She is conscientious in her work, a shining light in scholar-
ship, and yet always ready for a good time. To a casual
observer, Pauline seems greatly interested in expounding
mathematics to the younger generation, but judging from
certain indications, we doubt whether the field of education
will appeal to her long.

MARIE KATHRYN MORIARTY
97 Jefferson St. Troy, N. Y.

Troy High School.

Summer School Committee (3), Newman Club, G. A. A.,
Press Club, Music Club.

This fair Trojan lives to sleep but never can, because
7:10 A. M. Troy-Albany trolleys have an annoying habit
of going at 7:10. Marie has a determination that com-
mands respect and a lovableness that wins.

JOHN JOSEPH WILLIAM NEUNER
Merritt St. Port Chester, N. Y.

Port Chester High School.

Spanish Club, Canterbury Club, Music Club, Varsity
Hockey (3) (4), Varsity Baseball (3), Track (3), Class
Basketball (2) (3) (4), Class Football (1) (4).

If you are suddenly startled by a flash in which a black
derby and a yellow streak are dimly perceived — know
that Johnny Neuner has rushed past.

The streak— a kinetic representation of Johnny's
luxuriant blonde mustache. The derby — because Johnny
is one of those fearless creatures who dares to wear out-
landish headgear. The flash—because Johnny is the
champion cross-country runner of State College and always
flashes by, whether it is to a party or to the accomplishment
of a stiff piece of work.

Sixty-seven

Sixty-eight

MARGUERITE LUCILE NODINE
Grand-View-on-Hudson, N. Y.

Tappan Zee High School.
Y. W. C. A., Class Basketball (4), G. A. A., Mathe-

matics Club, Physical Education Society.

She towers above the crowd literally, figuratively. Her
scientific air, brooding calm, and self-possession are carried
over into her play. She swings an Indian club with dignity,
and throws a ball with deliberation.

HELEN M. O'BRIEN, xxo
371 East Main St.

Gouverneur High School.

Gouverneur, N. » a

Newman Club, Class Basketball (1), G. A. A., Spanish
Club.

It's only because we so hate to displease that we resist
the temptation to label this beautifully coiffed demoiselle
“ Efficiency”! However, when there are few in college
her equal in phrasing clever come-backs and turning out a
witty line; when her grace in dancing makes us doubt
whether she knows “ Terpsichore” beyond its first six
letters; when she is a never failing example of remarkable
ingenuity in finding solutions; when her capabilities in busi-
ness lines are no less than her social attainments — and all
this despite the fact that she admits Gouverneur as her
birthplace — you can’t blame us for wanting to call her
* efficient,” can you?

ERNESTINE DOROTHY OWEN

213 Regent St. Saratoga Springs, N. Y.

Saratoga Springs High School.

Class Secretary (4), Canterbury, Y. W. C. A., Physical
Education Society, G. A. A.

Though Ernie is small, there is nothing too high for her.
Whether it is a mark or a Swedish box, she is sure to clear
it. She is one of the gamest little sports we have.

FRED B. PARKER, Kav
Albion, N. Y.
Albion High School.

Geneseo Normal School.

One of those students who puts in only one year at
State — but oh, what a summer school hound! Park is
not at all delicate, but for some reason he caters to the
feminine grill room. We look to him for big things, even
though he is full of that small-town stuff.

NELLIE CORNELIA PARKHURST, Ao
510 Washington Ave. Albany, N. Y.

Albany High School.

Pedagogue Board, Cap and Gown Committee, Class
Secretary (3), Physical Education Society, Class Basket-
ball (1) (2) (3) (4) (Captain (2) (3)), Y. W. C. A.
(Cabinet (3)), Political Science Club, Silver Bay (2),
G. A. A.

Nellie bubbles zest and multitudinous enterprises. There
is usually some good reason why she cannot stop long. It
is basketball practice, a committee meeting, a music lesson,
history at the Education Building, recreation at School 21,
a Y. W. program — or Leland — and all well-attended to.

DOROTHY PATTERSON
Central Valley, N. Y.
Goshen High School.
Canterbury Club, Y. W. C. A., G. A. A.
We had almost lost this lady once, but with characteristic
sense she returned to State in time to be graduated with ‘21.

Since she has come back, she diffuses a Washingtonian
atmosphere which distinguishes her.

Sixty-nine

ALINE B. PERRAULT
388 Morris St. Albany, N. Y.

Albany High School.

Newman Club (Councillor (3) (4)), G. A. A., French
Club.

It’s a great thing to have brown eyes, but when in addi-
tion you know how to use them, the result is quite satisfying.
“Better late than never,” is a slogan Aline believes in
wholeheartedly, and she has applied it all through college.
She can enjoy a joke on herself as well as on the next
fellow, and that is the supreme test of humor.

DORA PIERSMA
Oriskany, N. Y. :
Oriskany High School.
Y. W. C. A. G. A. A., Spanish Club.
We like to believe that Dora stepped from a Dutch f

landscape, with her golden hair, blue eyes, and a comfort-
able sincerity.

EMIL POLT, Kap
103 Morgan St. Tonawanda, N. Y.

Concordia Teachers College, River Forest, Ill.

Class Basketball (3), Class Football, Tennis Team,
Cross Country (3), Track (3).

A secret, girls!) This apparent woman-hater has bluffed
you for two whole years.

Seventy
fF

rr pet T

SGUE + WEE

HUGO KARL POLT, KAP, Myskania
103 Morgan St. Tonawanda, N. Y.

Tonawanda High School.

Manager Class Athletics (4), Varsity Basketball (2)
() (4) Captain (3)), Class Basketball (1), Summer
School Committee (3).

“It was that all my Goyman class but one passed.”
“And how many were there in the class?“ “Two.” And
Hugo wonders where the laugh comes in. His duties as
custodian of the Lost and Found Box give him that be-
wildered look. But when it comes to managing basketball
or fair co-eds, all bewilderment disappears and he becomes
alert and efficient.

MARJORIE FINCH POTTER
KA, Myskania

Granville, N. Y.

Granville High School.

Editor-in-Chief of Quarterly (4) (Advertising Manager
(2)), Pedagogue Board, Class Reporter (4), News Board
(Assistant Editor (3) (Reporter (2)), Assistant Editor of
Freshman Handbook (3), Y. W. C. A. (Cabinet (3)),
Debating Team (3), Press Club, Music Club, G. A. A.

Marjorie’s personality is elusive and hard to define. She
is quite feminine, easily thoughtless, intuitively sympathetic,
and despairingly hard-working. Her chin has pushed her
to achievement in two majors, and is responsible for the
thorough editing of Quarterly contributions. In “ Will o°
the Wisp” we discovered the beauty of her hair and the
charm of her dancing.

E. HARRIET RISING, KA
36 River St. Hoosick Falls, N. Y.

Hoosick Falls High School.
President of Junior Class, 1920, Y. W.C. A., G. A. A.

“Versatile describes Harriet. She plays well, she
talks well, she dances well, she sews well, she cooks well,
—and interior decorating is one of her hobbies. Socially
effective, domestically efficient, intellectually powerful —
yet if you have not seen her, you cannot know what she is
really like.

Seventy-one

33 H ba . é r FF r fe
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LUCILE SHERMAN ROUSE, ao
421 Clinton Ave. Albany, N. Y.

Albany High School.

Class Song Leader (4), Class Treasurer G3), Summer
School Committee (3), Basketball (2) () (4) (Captain
(4)), Physical Education Society (Secretary-Reporter (3)),
Y. W. C. A. (Vice-President (3)), Student Volunteer
(2), Silver Bay (1) (2) (3), G. A. A.

If you want a girl on your team who will play the game
with all that is in her, if you want an actress who can
portray to your liking a rollicking comedian or a stately f
and regal princess, if you want a sincere friend, then allow
us to present — Lucile, and her lovable hyterical laugh.

EDNA MAY SCHWAB
124 Broad St. Lyons, N. Y.

Lyons High School.
Y. W. C.A., Silver Bay (2), G. A. A.

Is Edna alive? She certainly is. Anyway, a certain
lawyer thinks so. Will she teach long? 1 guess not. Not
after all those A's she used to get in biology? No. Home
life will be more appetizing to Edna than bisecting frogs in
some city high school.

DORA SCHWADELSON, AE@
Nassau, N. Y.

Rensselaer High School.

She has “Anne of Green Gables hair,” but that is as
far as the likeness goes; for Anne never worried over

“fitting the child to its environment,” and Dora continually
does.

Seventy-two
PE

GUE EAE

HARRY SCHWADELSON, KN

Nassau, N. Y.

Albany High School.
Political Science Club (Vice-President (3)).

In R. H. K.'s modery poetry class a wit dedicated her
note-book to the “incorrigible eclectic.” We wonder if
we couldn't call Harry Schwadelson another eclectic
philosopher. He is always sorting out problems and reasons,
and dealing with big psychological and sociological prob-
lems that are beyond us. Schwadelson will undoubtedly
reform the world and even this write-up.

HELEN IRENE SHANNAHAN
415 Second St. Troy, N. Y.
Troy High School.
Newman Club, G. A. A., French Club.

We wonder if there is a speedometer made that could
record the number of words, French or English, that Helen
can throw out per minute. Even if there were such a thing,
she would only twinkle her eyes and talk a little faster just
to fool us. For in spite of enjoying poor health continu-
ally, she has a quick mischievousness.

ELIZABETH HARRISON SHERLEY, Hu
724 Morris St. Albany, N. Y.

Albany High School.

Pedagogue Board, Y. W. C. A. (Cabinet (4)),
G. A. A., Mathematics Club.

Some folks call her Betty. We think Elizabeth is more
suited to her gentle dignity, and her quiet efficiency and
resourcefulness. Yet she has a jolly funny-bone that is
quite Betty-like, mingled with a comfortable Elizabethan
dependability.

Seventy-three

Seventy-four

JOSEPH EDWARD SHERLOCK, NK
1114 Eighth Ave. Watervliet, N. Y.

Watervliet Academy.

Varsity Basketball (3) (4), Class Basketball (2) (3),
Newman Club (Councillor (3) (4)), Moving-Up Day
Committee (3).

An expert camouflager and card player. The two go
together, you notice. These and his four years of business
training at State ought to qualify Joseph Edward for a seat
in the Stock Exchange. We hope so, for we feel he
would be a good sport and contribute generously to the
fund for broken-down school teachers.

ALBERTA BOICE SILKWORTH, wr
11 Kent St. Albany, N. Y.

Kingston High School.
Chemistry Club, Music Club, G. A. A.

Alberta's apparent haughtiness and extreme self-posses-
sion keep us aloof. Once you have passed this barrier you
find her anything but haughty, and, though always self-
possessed, never without sympathy.

GLADYS SMITH
Holley, N. Y.
Holley High School.
Brockport Normal School.
Y. W.C. A.

We nominate her to the Hall of Fame because she is
one person we know who can keep still when silence is
needed.
a AUAMEC A PEDAGOGUE © |

GERTRUDE DEYOE SOUTHARD, vr

147 Western Ave. Albany, N. Y.
Milne High School.
Y. W. C. A., Spanish Club, Music Club.

Trude seems to soar high above us in realms of her own.
But talk to her a few minutes, and you will find a warmth
beneath that cold and distant exterior, and an ingenious
power to straighten out tangles and cure blues.

FLORENCE ESTHER STANBRO
Ho, Myskania, Omicron Nu

Schuylerville, N. Y.

The Misses Metcalf’s School, Tarrytown; Unadilla High
School.

Omicron Nu (President (4)) (Delegate (3)), News
Board (Managing Editor (4)) (Associate Editor (3))
(Reporter (2)), Prom Committee, Class Reporter (2),
G. A. A., Y. W.C. A,, Press Club.

Florence, blase lady of the world, reminds one of color-
ful minuets. Brilliant and graceful in manner, she has a
winning fascination in friendship.

MARJORIE JULIA STIDWORTHY
Edenville, N. Y.

Y. W. C. A. (Cabinet (4)), Student Volunteer Confer-
ence, Wells, Vt., G. A. A., Mathematics Club, Music Club.

Marjorie can care for a furnace and preside over a Y
House meeting with equal tranquillity. Beneath her melan-
choly ennui she lives deep.

Seventy-five

Seventy-six

ELLA MAE STONE
22 Chestnut St. Schenectady, N. Y.

Schenectady High Schovl.
Y. W.C. A., G. A. A., Music Club.

Ella Mae's insouciant attitude toward things pedantic
makes us wonder how she gets there. We will let her tell.
Whatever her philosophy, it has produced a sunny dispo-
sition with a liking for relaxation and fun.

WILLIAM H. STRAIN, Jr., SNK, Myskania
210 Yates St. Albany, N. Y.

Rensselaer High School.

Chemistry Club (President (4)), Y. M. C. A. (Treas-
urer (4)), Class Football (4), Summer School Committee
(3), Class Vice-President (1), Athletic Council, Joseph

Henry Society.

Billy Strain is naively young and harebrained. He pops
the most absurd ideas so that when he does think seriously
we are almost overcome. He specializes in the chem de-
partment and inquiring for Gertrude. We remember, once
in a while, to call him Bill, because he’s a big man now
and wants us to appreciate it.

GLADYS ELSIE TEETSELL
474 Morris St. Albany, N. Y.

Albany High School.

Y. W. C. A. (Treasurer (4)), Handbook Committee,
Silver Bay (2), Music Club, G. A. A.

Gladys is diminutive, and yet she has a largeness of
sympathy big enough to include everybody. She is saucy,
but there is a kindliness about her that makes you forgive
her sauciness. Did you ever see her when she wasn't ready
to giggle about something? Or to cheer for someone? She
lost her voice Freshman Moving-Up Day rooting, and she
has lost it on frequent occasions since. Talk about college
spirit! She's it!
RUTH BEULAH THOMAS

Vernon, N. Y.
Vernon High School.

Always hurrying, hurrying — masses of light hair piled
carelessly, glasses slipping about excitedly — always hurry-
ing to catch up with time and history.

GRACE HELEN TORRENCE
East Greenwich, N. Y.

Greenwich High School; Muskengum College, Ohio.
Y. W.C. A, G. ALA.

Grace is small, with finely chiseled features. She speaks
slowly, each word deliberate and sharply-cut.

MAY TRUMAN, H® |
Unadilla, N. Y. i}
Unadilla High School. |

Cap anu Gown Committee.

May holds her own with gentle firmness. With motherly
energy she loves to do things and finish doing them. May
will probably over-rule old Saint Peter's objections and
walk through the golden gate with insistent determination.

Seventy-seven
CATHERINE CECELIA ULRICH
1303 Brinkerhoff Ave. Utica, N. Y.

Utica Free Academy.
Newman Club, G. A. A., Mathematics Club.

There are certain requirements to be met by those seek-
ing a place in the college constellations. Catherine's pro-
pensity for facts and figures meets them all so successfully
that it places her among math and history stars of the first
magnitude.

NINA MAY URQUHART
36 Colby St. Albany, N. Y.

Albany High School.
Y. W.C. A., G. A. A., French Club, Spanish Club.

Nina is like a wren. She stays close at home and makes
friends shyly.

MARGARET CATHARINE VANGURA
XO

Clinton, N. Y.

Clinton High School.
Junior Reception Committee, Newman Club, G. A. A.

We count it as one of our greatest good fortunes to have
known Margaret. A gentleness of manner born of innate
kindness, a great faith in human nature, a charming naivete,
an aptitude for helping others, a brilliant intellect — all are
hers. Withal, there is a certain air of reserve which piques
us to know what she is concealing behind those thoughtful
eyes.

Seventy-eight
DOROTHY ADELE VIBBARD
225 Lark St. Albany, N. Y.

Milne High School.
Y. W..C. A, G. AWA,

Dorothy is a lady, innately refined. If we could only
work our way in and out of the English language with the
ease and serenity with which Dot led her Milne High class,
we would surprise you as much as she surprised us.

KATHARINE STEPHEN WANSBORO
AQ, Myskania
226 Lark St. Albany, N. Y.

Academy of the Holy Names.

Newman Club (President (4)) (Treasurer (3)) (Re-
porter (2)), Cliff Haven Conference (3), Finance Board

(3), Junior Reception Committee, Summer School Com-
mittee (2) (3), French Club, G. A. A.

Fuzz's hair was added as an afterthought. It doesn't
match her a bit. It is wayward, it is frivolous, and full of
wiry kinks. Now Katharine is very proper — almost
worriedly so, and never thinks of doing anything worse than
to beg for and use your crams just before exam time.

EDITH COOPER WEATHERWAX
Melrose, N. Y.

Lansingburg High School.

Pedagogue Board, Dramatics and Art Council (Treas-
urer (4)), Y. W. C. A. G. A. A., Mathematics Club.

Edith is like a three-in-one combination —a devotee of
mathematics, English, and fine arts. Milne High can bear
evidence to the first, State College to the second, and the
Pedagogue to the third.

Seventy-nine

LILLIAN A. WELLS
Oxford, N. Y.

Greene High School.
G. A. A., Political Science Club, Y. W. C. A.

She serves the gods of locution and execution at the same
time, and succeeds in pleasing both— and this without
apparent effort. Wherefore we recommend her.

DOROTHY LILLIAN WEMPLE
15 Snowden Ave. Schenectady, N. Y.

Schenectady High School.

Cap and Gown Committee (Chairman), Summer School
Committee (3), Junior Reception Committee, G. A. A.

So this is Schenectady! Dot came to State with a
complete assortment of bons mots, innumerable styles of hair
dressing, and a stunning appearance. She has made a brave
run for the vamping championship. But lately she seems
to have lost interest in the art, and with this decline has
come a reduction of samples of masculine pulchritude that
adorned her dresser. Et tu, Dot?

ISABEL WHALEY, wr

690 Madison Ave. Albany, N. Y.

Poughkeepsie High School.

Y. W. C. A., Canterbury Club, Music Club, Consumers’
League, G. A. A.

Even our A in Biology 6 does not enable us to decide
positively to what genus Isabel belongs. After reaching
Griniferous, the trail ends. Of one thing, however, we
are sure —she is cheerful and friendly to the nth degree.
Her grin lights up the whole locker room vicinity.

——

—

—

i entree ee
See ey eye

a

7 —oans 5. wen ———

MARY EMELIA WHISH, Ao, Myskania
714 Central Ave. Albany, N. Y.

Albany High School.

News Board (Subscription Manager (4)) (Associate
Editor (3)) (Reporter (2)), Canterbury Club (President
(4)), Class Treasurer (3), Class Song Leader (3) (1),
Penalty Committee, Y. W. C. A.

Mary is a grown up little girl now. You hated to see
her grow up, too, But she has kept her contagious
sense of humor and her simplicity, so maybe it is all right.
Mary has a lovely soft voice and is always willing to sing
or do anything else for ‘21. She leads us by her enthusi-
asm, her gentleness, and her faith in people.

MYFANWY WILLIAMS, H®
74 So. Mead St. Wilkes Barre, Pa.

Granville High School.

Dramatic and Art Council, Quarterly Board, G. A. A.,
Yi WGA.

Here is a child with such sundry faults as cutting her
hair, losing the faculty's choice books, and lying abed too
late to go to chapel. But we forget all her sins when she
is Pierrot or Punchinello or any one of a dozen other stage
folk whose manner she puts on at will. And when she
goes to the piano, we listen mindful of Orpheus and the
olden days of music. Truly a child to be loved.

MAX HARRY ZUCKERMAN
Albany, N. Y.

Albany High School.
Joseph Henry Society.

Max spent many days once explaining how to freeze a
flame. That was because Zuke is almost a physicist and
such problems fascinate him. But he does not confine him-
self to natural science. Problems in politics, economics,
and sociology he settles forever after long and truculent
arguing.

Eighty-one

c

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PE

Allen, Emma
Allen, Leland
Ames, Jane S.
Austin, Mary
Barbiers, Florence
Barnes, Alice
Barry, Martin
Barrows, Marion
Borden, Ruth
Bradley, Marion
Bromley, Celia
Brooksby, Mildred
Bucci, James
Clark, Luella
Coffey, Marcella
Darling, Esmarie
DeMase, Julia
Edwards, Leona
Foster, Bertha
Fox, Margaret
Gilmore, Janet
Gorman, Dorothy
Guernsey, Dorothy
Hayner, Ivan
Hees, Castella S.
Henry, Josephine
Hilliard, Harold
Hodgkins, Hilda
Houghton, Lorenna
Hurst, Walter
Howland, Clayton

Eighty-two

EX-MEMBERS OF 1921

Jackson, Gladys
Jackson, Marion

Johnson, Emily

Jureller, Elizabeth Marie

Kelly, Sylvanus
Krentz, Edna
Krouner, Jacob
Lane, Dorothy
Leitzell, Madalyn
Linck, John

Luff, Elizabeth
McCann, Florence
McCleary, Martha
McClure, John

McDonough, Marjorie

McHugh, Elizabeth
Mayhew, Dorothy
Merchant, William
Meade, Theresa
Meehan, Anna
Miller, Eleanor
Miller, Grace
Millivard, Annie
Moon, Elizabeth
Monas, Alex
Mullins, Anna
Neville, Isabelle
O'Brien, Edith
Parrot, Edith
Payette, Flora

Perry, Louise

Purdy, Marguerite
Rabiner, Irving
Rider, Mildred
Roche, Susan
Rogers, Elois:
Schulte, John
Scott, Mary
Selkirk, Helen
Shepard, Emma
Sinclair, Isabella
Smith, Lillian
Sprague, Mary
Stark, Clara
Stinbach, Harriette
Storey, Frank
Taaffe, Helen
Turner, Eloise
Upright, Myrtle
Vrooman, Mildred
Webster, Philander
Weeber, Gladys
Wellworth, John
White, Mabel
Williams, Mildred
Williams, Ruth
Willis, Mary
Wood, Helen
Wood, Mona
Wood, Nina
Wren, Edward

&

=r

TiN

f

PEDAGOGUE | iN

TWO-YEAR STUDENTS

ELIZABETH MAY HADLEY
Albany, N. Y.

She came late, but immediatel; attracted attention by her
ability to find life amusing in psych lectures

DOROTHY ANNA HERMAN
Albany, N. Y.

Dot works hard and gets high marks, but still finds time
for jolly frolickings.

MINNIE HORWITZ
Albany, N. Y.

Hospitable, unselfish, friendly, good-natured — her friends |
say, and we cannot dispute them.

Eighty-three
GRADUATE STUDENTS
1920-1921

CAVANAUGH, EMILyY- a ee Se Se ee Troy
(A.B., New Y ork: State College far Tencheuss

CO6K, JOHN HAWLEY 2-5—- 22 ee ee _....-East Berne
(A.B., Union College; Pd. B., New York State College for Teachers)

Cooper, HAzeL ELIZABETH -------~--- ah by epee eae __.Troy
(A.B., Vassar College)

PAYA: Sige se Sse ee eee Port Washington
(A. B., Hew Y =a ‘State College for Teachers)

GUICEOYLE; ANNE FRANCES 22 225 2 Eee __Albany
(BS) Colles of New Roches

HAGEL, CATHERINE M:....-=-=---2 2 Ls eee carne _-Utica
(B.S., New York State College for Teaches)

Hacey, HENRIETTA GRACE ~__---- 2 katt Bs i ___ Albany
(A.B., New Y ok State College fer Teachers

Hupsarb, LEsTER THOMAS = iors es baby,
(A.B., Union College)

KapeEscH, J. STEVENS ___--- eae : Albany
(Clark Aaweisay)

MARRON; MARGARET J. 22=--22-2-=--=_ == £22. Albany
(B.S., New Y ork State College for Teaches)

PRATT: TARRY SUMERY [ocean : a ___ Albany
(AB., Colby College)

SisteER Mary AuGusta KEARNEY---- _____Albany
(A.B., New York State iC allege in Teachers)

SISTERCOMARY EUSTOLIA, == eee! “Albany

WADTERS DLOYD: Je .cccueceooeeee eo eee = Se =. Delinar
(A.B., St. Lawrence Lines)

Eighty-four
-Aurter

6.

Ss

lope Persons

‘ ny mn

Frances

Edward Link

Catherine Drury

although we numbered the least, even then our ability was recognized. Having

passed through the verdant stage, with both its difficulties and dear memories, we
gaily became Sophomores. It was then that we became more a part of our College
and loyally strove to uphold her traditions and customs. . And now we are Juniors.

le two short years ago we came to State College as small green Freshmen, and

nusually exciting were the first few weeks of our Junior year when Freshman

U sisters were being assigned. We started to plan the very best times for them and

even practised saying, “ Now this is Minerva and over there is the bulletin board

which you must read.”’ But even that interest was as nothing compared to actually
sistering little ’24’s.

ot so very much later in the year "22 displayed her more than usual originality

and pep. Good stunts have always been a feature at State College, but those

given by the Junior Class showed extraordinary ability and cleverness. Was it

not from the Junior Day stunt that the College basketball song came? In spite of the

rush of examinations, the mock trial given at the Post Exam Jubilee was without question

as successful as ever. Seniors, Sophomores, and Freshmen may excel in many things,
but in the field of new ideas and novel songs for stunts, the Juniors lead.

n the lull between semesters came Junior week-end. Instead of holding the usual
| reception as an opening event of the week, we set a precedent by giving a class
banquet at the Hampton. It was for honorary faculty guests and Juniors only, and
everyone agreed that there could be a no more delightful way to promote friendly class
spirit and loyalty.

f course anyone who attended Junior Prom the next night could devote pages
recounting its superior features. The orders alone would have made °22’s Prom
distinctive, even without the decorations and music. We set a standard which

will be hard to surpass.

member of the class of 1922 to be forgotten. Represented in every college
activity, Juniors lead in many. They can be depended upon to plan a good
program or an enjoyable party. Moreover, in scholarship they maintain excellent

Rie class achievements must not cause the individual ability of every

standards.

uch is our record for three happy, successful years. We still keep high ideals
before us and approach the future confident always of being the “* Victory Class.””

Eighty-seven

= rriff EY ear r
He ! a —) GUE /
JUNIORS
NAME Home Address

Anthony, Janet May__------Gloversville Linck, John Edward___~~~- Constableville
Baker, Pauline Elizabeth____- ___Albany Lodge, Gladys ------------- Albany
Baldwin, Harold Campbell______--Salem Long, Minnie Agnes__--~~--~- Albany
Balme, Sybil Rosina___----~~ Clark Mills McEniry, Anna May__------~--Albany
Baxter, Mary Annunziata___~-- Peekskill Meserve, Cora Iva____------- Johnstown
Benedict, Marion Miller_.__Schenectady Meyer, Margaret Rae_- ___Albany
Betz, Margaret Dorothea___-__~~- Albany Moore-Smith, Robina Paton____- Blauvelt
Boboy, Mary Angela__------- Utica Munson, Martha —-_---~- Windham
Breslaw, Isadore _------------- Albany Newell, Marion Magdalene__Fort Edward
Cackener, Lela Virginia._._Hudson Falls Nichols, Belle Lillian__—- White Plains
Carey, Elizabeth Brennock____---Albany O'Connor, Alice ~-~~-~~- __Albany
Clear, -Alice: Edith. .._---=-=- Albany O’Donnell, Margaret Alice-_Schenectady
Coulter, Eleanor Laura_ ___Cambridge O'Neill, Anna Marie__-~- Little Falls
Grill; Hazel Qillians === — Herkimer Osborne, Edmund Cole__~ Albany
Currey, Alida Gale__-_-------- Peekskill O’Shaughnessy, Dora C__--- Middleport
Deutl, Emma Josephine_.____Middleburg Otis, Frances E___-- Cornwall-on-Hudsoi,
Dix, Mary Ethelyn__----------- Deposit Parry, Martha Rees__-----~- Little Falls
Donnellan, Rose Sylvia_____-Schenectady Peltz, Catharine Walsh_--~~~_- Albany
Drury, Catharine Maxwell_ ___Gloversville Persons, Hope Dora__---~-~-~- Schenectady
Foster, Leland Elbert_____------ Albany Persons, Louise Deane_----- Slingerlands
Frazer, Ismena Jane___--~~ Poughkeepsie Petith, Alice Priscilla_______~~- Hillsdale
Garbose, Dora ~-------- Gardner, Mass. Proper, Eldyth May__------Schenectady
Guiltinan, Eleanor Frances.__Ballston Spa Reeks, Emily Frances__----~- Newburgh
Halstead; ‘Daved.=.2 =.= Albany Rice, Eunice: .=-.-—--=-==-- Schenectady
Hayes, Helen Frances___-- East Chatham Rigouard, Elisa L. C__---- Poughkeepsie
Hayes, Hilda Ennis___------Hensonville Schoenberg, Benjamin ---~~~--- Albany
Hayes, Mary Elizabeth_____- _Albany Shulman, Fannie Patricia____Schenectady
Heminover, Ruth Blanche-___Garnerville Shuster, Florence Edna___~----- Kingston
Hillman, George Carl____--- North Troy . Smith, Margaret Elizabeth___Middletown
Himmelstein, Jacob Nathaniel___-Albany  Stilson, Frances Adelaide____- Franklin
Hunter, Marion __------------- Albany Strisower, Helen —-__--- Sa Albany
Huyck, Ethel Lucy_____------- Deposit ‘raver, Carol Janice _East Greenbush
Johnson, Lillian Rexford___.__Watervliet Tuthill, Dorothy lene === Albany
Kilton, Gladys M_.------------ Arcade Underwood, Agnes Ruth__-_---Edmeston
Kirtland, Margaret Isabel___-_- Albany Van Aken, He'en Elizabeth. _. Amsterdam
Knapp, Augusta deGroff___—- __Beacon Voelcker, Helen Ottilie_____ -__- Mineola
Koch, Georgia Ella__------- Schenectady Walker, Helen Charlotte_____-__ Troy
Ladu, Anna Frances=—----~-~- Schenectady Walsh, Helen Grace-____------- Albany
Lavell, Lorine Ellen__------ Schenectady Werth, Arline ___---------- Tonawanda
Lemmle, Malwina Theresia___-- Albany

Eighty-nine

GDhe moonlight and the glistening snow
efleet the beauty of our year of [Bence

Che Yohispering pines are brenthing low

Ghat war and strife shall ever cease.

4 4
Elizabeth Renner

Robert— facFarlane t \
(4 JOPIAOMORE a

Benes Smith Charles Weilly

4]
iy
Or
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texr/

CHRONICLES OF THE WARS OF THE PEACE CLASS

(Editor's Preface)

While excavating in the ancient city of Albany, the workmen discovered an old
volume lying near a broken statue of Minerva. Most of the book was destroyed, but

the date shows that it was written nearly 800 years ago. May 25, 2713.

A. D. 1920-March 5 — This day the Class of ’23, being then Freshmen, met the

Juniors in a momentous debate, and they were gloriously acclaimed the victors.

A. D. 1920-October 6 — This day a most fierce battle took place on the great
steps leading to the shrine of Minerva. The terrible barbarians? swept down in hordes
upon the little band of Sophomores. But so pluckily and determinedly did the little

band fight that victory followed wheresoever their men came.

October 23-— This day being Campus Day all the people gathered to see the
mighty tug-of-war between the Sophomores and the barbarians. The Sophomores pulled
with such stoutness that they had no difficulty in dragging the barbaric horde about the
field whithersoever they willed.

October 29-— This day the great judges of the nation® summoned to their
presence all those barbarians' who had so wickedly transgressed their laws. As the

names were called, each culprit was branded on the cheek and led away to grievous

labor.

A. D. 1920 — This year the Sophomores, who truly are a noble tribe, have come
to be considered great in our noble land. They have many brave men and famous in
games and clubs. It is they who have saved us from terrible annihilation at the hands
of the newcomers,! because they believe, not in peace at any price, but in war to secure

a glorious peace.

? Freshmen. 2 Penalty Committee.

Ninety-three

SOPHOMORES

Allen, Mary Emma_ _-Petersburg Gray, Warren James_________ Watervliet

Appleton, Isabel Garton ____ -Albany Grubel, Charles Leonard_______Castleton

Aronowitz, S, Grace____________ Albany Hadley, Elizabeth May_________ Albany

Baker, Dorothy _________ __.Albany Hadsell, Delia Ada__________ Worcester

Bayley, Martha Dunbar________Massena_ Hall, Fannie Belle... Unadilla

Berberick, Caroline M__________Albany Haswell, Myra Beatrice__ _Petersburg

Betz, Katherine Emma_______ -Albany Hayner, Gladys Lena______ Cooperstown

Blythe, Marjorie_- _...-Oyster Bay Haynes, Hildred Edna_____- __.Walton

| Boyce, Dora _____ s2a2>--—-Nassau  ‘Hershberg, Rose .-...-______. Albany
Brennan, Marian Elizabeth _Albany Holmes, Viola R_.._-_______ Waterville
| Budd, Elizabeth ___________Hyde Park Homan, Queene Marion _______ Unadilla
} Buell, Elinor Conkey________ Goshen Horwitz, Minnie ______________ Albany
| Burhans, Millicent Elsa_________Elsmere Ingalls, Gladys Athalie_______ Lee Center
Butler, Doris Harriet______ Madison Jochumson, Mabelle Ione_____ Haverstraw

Cleary, Ora Harriet..______ Schenectady Johnson, Helen Frances_______Newburgh
Cline, Marion Lewis Amsterdam Johnson, Mildred Jeanette_____ Varysburg

Collier, Susan Gray_____ Middleburg Kavenius, Ida Alena________ Middleville

Conaro, Virginia Louise_______Cobleskill Kelly, Edith Frances_______Old Chatham

Congdon, Mary Grace-______Rensselaer Kenny, Elsie Bowen_____Bennington, Vt.

Coon, Dorothy Irene_______ Ghent Kilb, Helena Marie________ Schenectady

Cummings, Ethel May________ Highland Koncelik, Mary Margaret-___Great Neck

Currie, Elmina Catherine_____Amsterdam Leach, G. Helene._________ Gloversville

Dangremond, Dorothy Irene___High Falls Leary, Helen Brooks__________ Hamilton

Deyoe, Emma Marion___________Ghent Lester, Leila Vivian_______ _Warsaw

Dorsey, Florence Elizabeth_____ Peekskill Littell, Erva Eleanor__________ Bradford

Doyle, Mary Katherine____Mechanicville Lynch, Charlotte May________Newburgh

Driscoll, Katherine _______- __Albany McAllister, Elizabeth M__-Mechanicville

Duerschner, Bertha Hedwig________Troy McCormick, Marian Delia_______ Albany

Dunn, Winifred _______________Albany MacFarlane, Robert Collin Ross__Albany

Easman, Glennon Lucy_____ Margaretville Maderer, Mary Eleanor____Hoosick Falls

Ebell, Laura Gray___________Patchogue Maguire, Grace Vaughn_________Albany

Farlow, Lillian Hamilton.__.____Albany Mathewson, M. H_ _Hastings, Oswego Co.
Fieldman, Nellie ____________Red Hook Mead, Ethel Lee__________ Delmar

Fish, Marjorie Alida________ Gansevoort Merchant, Katheryn Vera_______ Albany

Flannery, Agnes Frances___Campbell Hall Miller, Mary Margaret__ _Kinderhook

Flint, Agnes Frances_________ Little Falls Nachman, Anna ______________ Albany

Flynn, Howard Joseph____________ Troy Nolan, Vera __________North Tarrytown

Fox, Grace Elnora______.____.___Albany Parsons, Claire, Lavenia________ Monroe

George, Pauline Lillian_____ Germantown Peck, Isabel Maxwell_________Menands

Giffen, Eleanor Fraser__________ Albany Peterson, Albertina Victoria___ Jamestown

Gordineer, Helen Margaret_____ Peekskill Potter, Sylvia Belle...--.______ Prospect

Ninety-four

ae Wl: = a Bu 23 ee 1h aaa

a MUU Re 9 GUE + Hea bye ao

Purdy, Twybill Hotchkiss. _--~-- Oxford Stetson, Mildred Crandall__..New Russia
Reeback, Anna Doris___--~-- Newburgh Stratton, Katherine Grace___ Poughkeepsie
Renner, Elizabeth Louise______~ ~~~ Utica Sweeney, Alice Winifred____Ballston Spa
Robertson, Florence Kyle____- Cambridge Tefft, Hilda Belle-____- __Gloversville
Rose, Marion Hazel___-_------ Hudson Tefft, Ruth Elizabeth____-~_- Greenwich
Rusk, Ethel Fowler____- __-Marlboro Tenny, Ethel ________-_-Rock City Falls
Sanders, Edith ____-~- _=.=-sAlbany: Tepper, Fannie. _-_..-_=- Albany
Sauter, Katherine Laura_____Schenectady Thompson, Gladys Eula___ Albany
Shaw, Myra Baxter___ __Gilbertsville Truax, Agnes Esther___ __Delmar
Shepardson, Helen Mae___-_-Little Falls Wan Buren, Marion Augusta__ _Chatham
Shipman, Kathryn ___------- Saratoga Vines, Marion Elizabeth___.__-Saratoga
Sibley, Marjorie Louise._______Kingston Waugh, Evelyn M____- ____Rensselaer
Sinnot, Marjorie __New Hartford Williams, Eira Morgan_----~-- Granville
Smith, Agnes Scott__.-_------- Kingston Wolinsky, Lea ----~~_- __._Albany
Smith, Marjorie Carolyn ______-__-Troy Wood, May Burt_- __.__Chester
Smith, Mary Grace_-_-_------_-- Mexico Yaguda, Rose —-- __._--Albany
Smith, Mildred Nora_- ____Franklin Zimbar, Genevieve Catherine___Salamanca

Ninety-five

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EREJAMAN OFFICERS »)

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Dorothy Jones Ellen Shechaty

ror aiepe rrr 2 r
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THE PROGRESS OF THE PILGRIMS

Chapter 1, — Landing of the Pilgrims.

Anchor at State College in the early autumn of 1920. Compact drawn up and
the following officers elected:

(Presidentssnn ees See oe ae eee OLIVER PUTNAM
Vice-President. 22 eee SELES Mary MAHER
Secretary____- Be ee Se —— Epwarp SHERLEY
UD eGguy fame eee ELLEN SHEEHAN
Peper 221 Le ee ees _.... DorotHy JONES

Settlements made about forbidden vicinity of Minerva. Exploring parties sent
forth in search of knowledge.

Chapter I], — Character of the Pilgrims.

Well adapted for the rugged road o’er which they must journey. They are a
zealous, yet vivacious band — always ready and willing to fight their enemies in order
to maintain their lofty standards.

Chapter [1]. — Sufferings of the Pilgrims.

The pestilence, homesickness, ravages the colony during the first days. All are
afflicted. After a long search, dwelling places are finally found.

The Pilgrims are forced to work. Soon they are swamped in tests and billets-doux.
But by extraordinary perserverance and energy they triumph.

Chapter 1V. — Contests with Enemies.

Colonies disturbed by a band who in 1919 had landed on some grant of land. It
is a petty tribe. Makes first attack on the Pilgrims in an attempt to gain much desired
plunder in shape of jewelry. Overwhelming defeat at the hands of the Pilgrims, who
then invade the territory of the conquered. The defeated are still persistent, but finally
yield after a weak attempt to subdue the bold insurgents.

Chapter V.— The Colony Flourishes.
The inhabitants are very active. They cultivate the athletic field, they bring forth

numerous literary lights, and keep a strong military force ever watchful. They are, in
all ways, a most noted and celebrated band.

Ninety-nine

abrams, eleanor loretta-__________ albany
alderson, alene elizabeth__________sidney
allen, florence _ te any
amos, esther louise_____ ___gloversville
annette, victoria may_________tupper lake
applebee, margaret bery! __---albany
bach, elizabeth ______________waterville
balch, janet .......... cee
barnes, ethelene louise __ ___ossining
bayless, margery lillian_____ Poughkeepsie
belding, emily sherman___________ albany
bell, mary elizabeth___________ ___utica
bennit, dorothy virginia_______- albany
benbiger, martha __ ___.canandaigua
bertsch, lucy d __.-schenectady
blake, mary grace___________ __albany
blenis, mildred enders_________sloansville
boldt, mildred hulda______ ___ schenectady
borsick, helena i. ______- schenectady
bosley, irene marguerite_______ _chazy
bradt, florence elizabeth __schenectady
bromley, mary e. _____________watervliet
broughton, elizabeth mae_________albany
brown, katherine alida________ ___ pulaski
busse, ada helen_____ gloversville
butcher, mary alice._____________elmira
butts, serena hamilton chenango forks
carey, margaret dorothy cohoes
carrolan, james francis 208 salem
cassavant, john howe____________ albany
cleveland, margaret harriett__- albany
cohen, sophia molly_______ __ _olean
conklin, helen lockwood________ greenville
conley, emma augusta______east greenwich
coons, josephine ___middleburg
cornell, mildred caroline______gloversville
courtney, thompson BS ee ..__troy
craig, helen blanche_________ ___delhi
cuddeback, zillah grace lyons
cushman, margaret lucy__- bainbridge
davidson, dorothy __ _______roxbury
dobris, meyer _______- locust valley
doody, martha helen_________- norwich
dulgarian, rose mary__ = __albany
dutcher, evelyn theresa_______ _gloversville
dwyer, joyce irene_______________ oxford
eaton, margaret elizabeth__ _norwich

One Hundred

FRESHMEN

elliott, catherine elizabeth______ _westdale
elligorith = -- ee shortsville
ellmaker, evelyn may__ round lake
enzien, martha sabina_______ mechanicville
érshler) Uillisite. 2 eee saugerties
fahnestock, clara belle_.._________ cohoes
farrell, marion elizabeth______ schenectady
finley, helen baxter_______washingtonville
fitzgerald, mary eva_________schenectady
forbes, helen louise__ ____schenectady
fraser, eleanor ames_____________ albany
friend, zalia sarah__________ schenectady
gaingell, irene marie__________ gloversville
gardner, mary minerva____pittsheld, mass.
geary, catherine frances__________ albany
gibbons, elizabeth mary_______ binghamton
gill, Hewellyna jane____________kingston
gonyo, marjorie aline_____.___hudson falls
gorse, margaret ruby____north germantown
green, stella mary__________ mechanicville
greene, jane edith... _________ fultonville
Grozine: ‘rote. oe eee white plains
haddon, helen lucile._________ _peekskill
hall, catherine margaret____________ utica
hall, harriet dean____________ amsterdam
hanley, catherine breen_____ ____Albany
heinemann, wilhelmina _______ binghamton
helmer, marion e. ____-_________ mohawk
herman, dorothy anna___________ albany
hines, agnes margaret____________ albany
hohl, madeline carolyn___________albany
holden, irene rose mary___________ dalton
holland, helen frances__ =e moira
howell, leah emmeline __._pine bush
hunter, ethel elizabeth____________ albany
hurd, madeline evelyn____________albany
hutchins, margaret lucile.________massena
ingraham, violet emily albany

jencks, ella marie mexico
jensen, edith camilla__________ __-attica
johnson, adrian allen__________ delmar
jchnson, doris eleanor________ spragueville
johnston, helene leber_________ port henry
jones, dorothy louise_____________ clinton
jones, ina margaret______ remsen
jones, priscella sanders___________ remsen
keeler, dorothy mary_____________ albany

Keep; Gores... ee rensselaer
keller, lucy wilson.___________ haverstraw
kelly, louise cecelia.___________ little falls
kilmer, elizabeth blanche_________ bolivar

kimmey, ruth marian__

kling, joy elora__________north brookfield
knipe, pearl elizabeth_______
kuhn, mildred elizabeth. __

___albany
gloversville

lawson, margaret __________ new york city
lewis, gladys ellen__________ schenectady
liebich, hildegard esther elsmere
lindt, madge ________________ montice!lo
lyons, mildred rita._________ norwich
mecarthy, dorothy edna________ watervliet

medougall, alene burns_______ gloversville

macgowan, dorothy _____________walden
macgregor, john haberlin _saratoga
mckennan, jessie jane__________ frankfort
maher, mary louise_______ ___mamaroneck
manwaring, louise elizabeth_______ Sidney
marshall, marian frances______ fort edward
martin, beatrice marguerite____schenectady
maxim, nellie goodman_____ bolton landing
miller, marion goodridge.________ ossining
millet, marie frances_________ schuylerville
minckoff, fannie beatrice______ schenectady
monk, kathryn helen_____________ albany
moore, helen gladys______________ albany
moritzen, anna fuller________ kearney, n. j.
morris, helen elizabeth___________ yonkers
mosley, winifred ann_______________ troy
mulhuron, margaret k, _____ north chatham
MUNTEY; GENES cn pee en amagansett
nagel, elizabeth downing _________ beacon
nolan, agnes elizabeth________schenectady
noonan, helen elizabeth___________ cohoes
o'brien, veronica alice_____ midd!e granville
olson, annie hortense__________ jamestown
o'malley, ruth _-.=-=----.-.- __albany
orr, helen margaret_____________ bouquet
ostrander, esther adelia_____ __pine bush
ostrander, grace elizabeth__________ghent
page, genevieve elnora______ westbrookville
palkosky, ethel amelia________schenectady
peck, katherine blanche_________ whitehall
plum, eleanor mary____________ saratoga
preihs, florence sophia_____ __schenectady
putnam, oliver osmond_ saratoga
reed, mary evelyn_______________ mexico

reilly, charles aloysius.___________ albany
rheingold, meyer___________ east schodack
richards, marion gene_______west winfield
ritzer, harriet johanna_____________ scotia
robinson, alsa elizabeth_______chittenango
rogers, gertrude alice_______________ troy
russell, catherine elizabeth________buskirk
st. lawrence, enid russell_______- saugerties
sanchirico, angeline marie_________ albany
saunders, margaret kathryn__________ troy
scott, frederic allen_______ middle granville
seymour, ethel may____________ rochester
schafer, edna belle-_________ schenectady
sheehan, ellen j. _-___ ___mechanicville
shefheld, janet dalzell..._________ athens
sherley, edward earl_____________ albany
schoenberg, sarah i. _____________ batavia
shufelt, laura’ martha-......___-_. ghent
silvernail, jessie g. —_________ schenectady

sisson, alice cornelia_________schaghticoke

smith, ellen doherty________ __coxsackie
stanyon, gladys adelle__.._________ wells
stevens, mabel elizabeth_________ altamont
stoddard, mary grace___________ Ossining
stratton, anita naomi___________ mt. upton
stroup, k. elizabeth__________ niagara falls
tanzer, blanche sarah___________ croghan
ticle; ‘anitaveecelia. troy
trumbull, edna _____________ schenectady
underwood, gladys irene______ schenectady
utley, hilda cummins___________ forestport
van gelder, marilla blanche__________ bath
van vranken, gladys_________ schenectady
wallace, aileen agnes_________ middletown
wallace, virginia cameron__-_central bridge
ward, catherine elizabeth___________utica
weaver; gladyssls. 2220 albany
weiss, mary lucile.______________ batavia
westerman, dorothy green________ walden
whitcombe, clara b. f. _..___ oriskany falls

wilcox, pauline pattison________ waterford

willard, gladys ...._____- __albany
williams, marion frances_______ whitesboro
wilson, florence maude________ guilderland
wilson sicie cee ee delhi
wright, mary van benthuysen_____ wayville
young, helen beth____________ clark mills
young, marguerite lillian_________ shushan

One Hundred One

ALUMNI ASSOCIATION

In June, 1920, our Alma Mater completed her 75th year of service to education.
During this long period she has sent forth 6,000 young men and women to teach in the
schools of our State and in those of other States. Last June nearly 1,500 of these loyal
children returned to share with her the celebration of seventy-five years’ work well done.

These sons and daughters of State College, in an association now numbering over
4,000 living, active members, are bound together by ties much stronger than those which
hold most Alumni Associations to their Alma Mater — ties of unity of aim, ideals, and
profession.

The almost instant success of the Alumni Quarterly, a magazine which is not yet
two years old and which has over 1,000 subscribers, is sufficient proof of the interest of
the Association in the College and its activities.

Within the past year the Association has raised a fund of $600 for the erection
of a Tablet to the memory of the soldier dead of State College in the World War. It
has inaugurated at Rochester a western branch of the Association, which together with
the Albany, Utica, and New York branches will meet at different intervals throughout
the year to renew old friendships and assist in whatever way possible in the development
and interests of their Alma Mater.

It was largely through the deluge of letters by interested Alumni members to their
assemblymen at the late session of the New York Legislature that State College obtained
first option on the land adjoining the College buildings, on which land, it is hoped, in
the near future and with the material help of the Alumni Association the much needed
dormitories and other buildings will be erected.

The Alumni has also established three funds to further the work of the College :
the Albert N. Husted Fellowship Fund, the income from which will some day be
available for graduate work in education; the Mrs. Elizabeth McClelland Student Loan
Fund, recently started by the faculty and Alumni in honor of Miss Mary A. McClelland’s
retirement from the faculty after nearly fifty years of active service; and a second Student
Loan Fund contributed by Mrs. Ada Craig Walker, ’71, both to be used as loans to
worthy students needing financial assistance during their course in State College.

A new club, called the Half-Century Club, whose membership consists of graduates
from the classes which have completed fifty years since graduation, has recently been
founded and plans are already under way by the members to open new avenues of service
to the College.

The president of the General Alumni Association is Mrs. Mary E. Sloan Cameron,
*90, and those of the four local branches are: Justus C. Hyde, '02, New York branch;
S. Alice Smith, °92, Utica branch; Mrs. Esther K. Rafferty Woodard, *11, Albany

branch; and Francis H. Conners, °17, pro tem. Western branch.

One Hundred Two

PEDAGOGUE BOARD

‘Editoran-Chiel 2-5. SS ee Mary GRAHN
Bisiness :Moanagéerico22sssoss5225-56--—= Epna LowERREE
Subscription Manager ------------------ AipA BALLAGH

KATHERINE McGaRRAHAN
DorotHy HoweELL
MarjoriE Potter

Doris Coon

Tijlesary editors 2 eee

{ EsTHER CRAMER

diols —— a ee ee
An EA | EpirH WEATHERWAX

ELIZABETH SHERLEY

Photograph Editors ~ ee __{ HELEN CHASE
THEODORE CASSAVANT

{DoroTHEA ADAMS

ke Editors ~---- : abe.
Joke sah ) EvizageTH BECKWITH

Athletics Editor ~----~- a 2 NELLIE PARKHURST

KaTHRYN BALL
ALIcE Briccs
ELTon HakeEs
RaLtpH BAKER

Advertising Managers _~--

Faculty Adviser ---------- eae Dr. Hastincs

One Hundred Five

STATE COLLEGE
QVARTERLY

BOARD OF EDITORS

Editor-in-Chief 2 Ses eee Marjori£E PoTTER

Mary GRAHN
Assistant Editors e E MarcGaRET KIRTLAND

Marion HuNTER

MarJjoriE SIBLEY

| Myranwy WILLIAMS

Business: Manager .-------~-----~===--= FRANK BLIss
7 CATHERINE DRURY
Advertising Managers ------------------ ) i :
|IsarorE BRESLAW
Faculty Adviser 25-2 Dr. THOMPSON

One Hundred Seven

BOARD OF EDITORS

Editor-in-Chief

F. REGINALD Bruce, ’21

Business Manager

Epna LowerreEE, 21

Managing Editor

FLorENCE E. STANsRO, '21

Subscription Manager
Mary E. Wuisn, ’21

Assistant Business Managers

ETHEL Huyck, °22

AticeE O'Connor, °22

Associate Editors

Hope Persons, '22

Reporters

VerA No.an, °23

Louise Persons, '22

E1rra WILLIiaAMs, ’23

Warren Gray, °23

The State College News was organized in 1916 by the Class of 1918.

weekly paper devoted to the publication of announcements, the record of current College

events, and a discussion of college interests.

The News is supported by an appropriation from the Student Tax Fund.

outside subscription rate is $3.00 per year.

It is a

The

One Hundred Nine

ar ae reatish Oe er, a
ze PURE ne GUE _ | : Dey

ea“.
Y.W.C.A.
Officers
Presider oo Ree ae ee es _-Harriet P. Homes
Vice-Presidentas ee ee KaTHEeRYN M. BALL
Dfeasurer 2 ee es -=-.=..sGEADYS E; TEETSELL
Secelary ss. 2 ea ea _-.. ELIzABETH RENNER
Undergraduate Field Representative._________-__-.__EuNicE RIcE
Committee Chairmen
Biblé Std as ee, res ap a ed RutH HEMINOVER
Conferences and Conventions____.._._-._...._ELIZABETH SHERLEY
} 5 hii.) Sea OEE, irs I oor eee, MARJoRIE STIDWORTHY
Missionary —- 22 ee HELEN VAN AKEN
Pablictty= 2322 2s ee _..--ALIDA P, BALLAGH
Religious: Meetingts =... ose BEATRICE BUCHANAN
DS orf | A tas aera ew ee CATHERINE DRURY
OCG Servite a ene es i RutTH KIMMEY
Advisory Board
Term Expires 1923
Miss Anna E. Pierce, Chairman
Mrs. Catvin H. FRENCH Mrs. ApAM A. WALKER
Mrs. JoHN H. FINLEY Miss Mary ExLizABETH CoBB
Term Expires 1922
Mrs. Jessic F. STINARD Mrs. Epwarp M. CAMERON
Miss EpirH O. WALLACE
Term Expires 1921
Mrs. A. R. BRUBACHER Miss Cara B. SPRINGSTEED

Our purpose is fourfold:

1. To lead students to belief in God.

2. To lead students to faith in Jesus Christ, especially through a study of the
Bible.

3. To lead them into membership and service in the Christian church.

4. To influence them to devote themselves in united effort with all Christians toward
making the will of God effective in human society and establishing His
kingdom throughout the world.

The total membership of Y.W.C.A. for the year 1920-1921 is two hundred and
fifty.

Five delegates — Helen Chase, ‘21; Helena Duerschner, ’21; Marjorie Stid-
worthy, ‘21; Augusta Knapp, '22; and Frances Stilson, "22 — were sent to the Student
Volunteer Conference held at Wells College.

According to custom, Y.W.C.A. held an annual bazaar, which proved most

successful.

One Hundred Eleven

FT es

i.

Bi

Aida4e cade

=.
>A S95

Pe elar ey,

NEWMAN CLUB

‘The Newman Club has for its object the promotion of the principles of Catholicity,
and, in choosing Cardinal Newman for its patron, it aims to keep before the students
the highest ideals in religion and education. To assist the Club in accomplishing this
purpose, the spiritual director, Reverend Joseph A. Dunney, gives a series of lectures
each year on subjects of interest to college students. This year the course was in
“ Apologetics.”

The Club also endeavors to develop and strengthen a spirit of friendly cooperation
among its members by frequent social meetings. Plans are well under way for the
opening of a Newman House.

The State College branch is affiliated with the Federation of College Catholic Clubs.
In cooperation with the Federation the Club is promoting the organization of Catholic
clubs in the colleges of the New York province. Miss Katharine S. Wansboro, ’21,
and Miss Elizabeth B. Carey, ’22, attended the 1920 conference of the Federation at
Cliff Haven.

Officers
President___~~- : KATHARINE S. WANSBORO
Vice-President__- __--ELIZABETH B. CAREY
Secret pee = 2 ae ig he MARTOK PARRY
_. HELEN WALSH
JosEPH KaaG

Treasurer aameieee SS er -

Reporter__-- ie te ee ee eee
Quarterly Representative_—-------------------- AticeE O'CONNOR
Council
Senior Jumor
ALINE PERRAULT ALICE CLEAR
JosEPH SHERLOCK Mary Hayes
MarGARET VANGURA HELEN Hayes
ANNA O'NEILL
Sophomores

CAROLINE BERBERICK LoulsE KELLEY
CATHERINE HANLEY CHARLES REILLY

One Hundred Thirteen
CANTERBURY CLUB

HE Canterbury Club of State College was organized in 1917-1918. Canter-
bury offers to all Episcopalians in State College and those not identified with
any other church an opportunity to unite for the threefold purpose of Spirituality,
Service, and Sociability. Meetings are held the third Monday night of each

month in the guild hall of St. Andrew’s Church, of which Dr. Creighton, our adviser,

is rector.
Key members, representatives from each of the four college classes and from every

Episcopal parish in Albany, stimulate interest in Club matters and bring to our attention
the vital interests of the church at large. Practically all of our members this year are
assisting in the work being carried on at Trinity settlement.

Our spiritual ideal is kept foremost by corporate communions observed monthly at
our Albany churches. We have been most fortunate at our meetings in having noted
speakers from both the clergy and the laity. We were also honored by addresses from
two of our national officers.

Officers
Presideite 22 ea en Se eee Mary E. Wuisu, ‘21
a eed dee fr teh Sa aE Tee Ae eee ONO eee ee Sysit BALME, '22
CSR CRETE eee Se See ee ere ee PauLineE Moore, ‘21
Treasurer _. THEODORE CASSAVANT, ‘21
PRepor leh so taps i ee oe TwysiLL Purpy, '22
AUVs ep es Sense ued Rev. FRANK CREIGHTON

One Hundred Fourteen

STUDENT VOLUNTEERS

Officers

Lgides Sos oa. Sin, 1 Frances STILSON, ‘22
Secretaryicn Se <5 = eee ee ee eh RutH M. Kinney, °23

State College would give of her life more fully than she receives. Although not
forgetful of the opportunity for service awaiting her students here at home, she would
not have them blind to the work to be done in broader fields. We whose purpose it is
to fulfil this sacred duty are organized under the name of Student Volunteers.

The following are members of the Student Volunteer Band at State College:

HELEN Fay, "19 Mary Concpon, '23

FRANCES STILSON, '22 HELEN WALLNER, '23
Rutu M. Kimmey, '23

One Hundred Fifteen

DRAMATIC & FING ARTS)
ASSOCIATION

THE DRAMATIC AND ART ASSOCIATION

HE Dramatic and Fine Art Association was organized in 1919 and has proved
an eminently successful experiment. Through its efforts students who have
paid their blanket tax have been able to hear notable speakers on art and drama.
The Association presented Mr. John Drinkwater, the English poet, in a lecture

on “ An English Dramatist’s View of Lincoln.”

The Dramatics and Art Association annually presents three one-act plays the first
semester and one long play the second semester. This year four one-act plays, ‘* Joint
Owners in Spain,” “The Minuet,”’ “* The Dear Departed,” and ‘‘ Will O° The
Wisp,”’ were presented.

In February an exhibition of four hundred photographic and color prints, reproduc-
tions of some of the world’s greatest painters, was held for two weeks at college.

Other programs arranged by the Association were: a lecture by Dr. Clark, of the
Historic and Art Society; a reading by Miss Agnes Futterer of J. M. Barrie’s ** Quality
Street,”” and a lecture by Miss Perine on “* Magazine Illustrators.””

The governing council of the Association consists of two members from each upper

class and three faculty members. The members for 1921-1922 are:

Faculty Members

Miss AcNEs E.. FUTTERER Miss GERALDINE MurRAY
Miss Eunice A. PERINE

Student Members

President__-_---------------------------GLapys E. THoMPson
SOCrENING sa oe oe bps Te DAR Marion HuNTER
A FOOSE oe ee tae ee ee EpirH WEATHERWAX
MyFanwy WILLIAMS AGNEs SMITH
Grace Fox

One Hundred Seventeen

: | BoARD \N

THE STUDENT BOARD OF FINANCE

The Student Board of Finance was founded in 1919 to meet the need for a com-
mittee to arrange the financing of student activities. Its duties include the organization
of a budget of expense, the recommendation of the amount of annual tax to the students,
the collection of the tax, the authorization of the disbursement of money in accordance
with the budget, and the holding and investing of all moneys received from the tax and
from all student activities governed by the Board.

Officers
Chatrmatta oa Sok Ses _....-Pror. A. W. RIsLey
Treasurel 5 a Sane Mr. C. A. HipLey
1921 1922
ELTON HAKES Eunice Rice, Secretary
HELEN CHASE Gtiapys LopcE
1923

CHARLES REILLY

One Hundred Eighteen
CHEMISTRY CLUB

Officers
President___--- __-. WILLIAM STRAIN
Vice-President 22 en ne ee _. HELEN METz
Seerelaryn 32 a ee _ GERTRUDE Bussy
T easarey pe ee ee Smee EDMUND OsBorRNE
Counsellor

CHARLOTTE BENEDICT
MARGARET BETZ
REGINALD BRUCE
GERTRUDE Bussy
BaRNARD BRONSON
THEODORE CASSAVANT
Doris DAavEY

GEorGE DAVIDSON
Emma DEUTL
FLORENCE FITCH
CATHARINE HAGEL
ELton HakeEs

Members

Maurice HATHORN
HitprRep Haynes
Haro_p HoLmeEs
KaTHRYN HyLaNnpD
Marcaret HyLanp
QUEENE HoMAN
ALICE KEESOR
WILLIAM KENNEDY
Mary KONCELIK
Macvina LEMMLE
Grapys LopcE
HELEN METz

JoHN MacGrecor
EDMUND OsBoRNE
FLoRENCE ROBERTSON
FANNIE SCHULMAN
FLORENCE SCHUSTER
ALBERTA SILKWORTH
FRANCES STILSON
WituiaM H. Strain, Jr.
ELEANOR GUILTINAU
MILDRED SMITH

ALIcE PETITH

ETHEL TENNEY

One Hundred Nineteen

SPANISH CLUB

The Spanish Club was organized in 1915 for the purpose of promoting interest
in and a knowledge of the Spanish people, their language and customs.

The meetings are held on alternate Fridays, at which much enjoyment and beneht
are derived. Musical, literary, and social programs are enjoyed.

The Club is open to anyone who is interested in Spanish. Membership this year
has been extended to about fifty students.

Faculty Members
Asst. Pror. J. F. Stinarp Miss F. MARTINEZ

Officers
Presidents so oe SRE a KATHARINE F. CoLLieR
Piceshreadents 2 fee rk eT ee IRENE W. Foss
bere tare eee ott ene ew Sane ete Susan G. COoLLier

Y Pai 111g pe ne es eee _._._ GLENNON EasMAN
RED OSE i ae are a a Atice E. Briccs

One Hundred Twenty
MUSIC CLUB

HE Music Club was organized in 1916 in an English class taught by Professor
Kirtland.

It has been particularly successful this year, as is shown by the large

membership and the increased activities into which the Club has entered. The

Music Club has done much to create the new enthusiasm in the Music Department, which
was reorganized this fall.

Membership in the Club is open to everyone interested in music, literature, and
dramatics. It meets on alternate Fridays at 4 o'clock in Room 111, when a program
is given by members of the organization. The development of appreciation and ability

Is our aim.
The officers of Music Club are:
Presidents scones eee DorotHy DANGREMOND, '23
PicevIresidentl: 2 KaTHRYN BALL, °21
Secretary-and ‘Treastiret = 22 aca Hope Persons, '22

One Hundred Twenty-one

its interest in journalistic writing.
trips are made to local newspaper plants.

One Hundred Twenty-two

PRESS CLUB

Press Club is an organization which aims to influence College publications through
Speakers address the Club on journalistic topics, and
The Club also endeavors to keep in touch
with similar organizations in other colleges.

Membership is open to students interested in journalism.

Officers
President = 322 es ee ee ee ee ee EtHet Huycxk
Pace forest ents ses ee, LouisE PERSONS
Secrelary and I yeasurerpis = oS os VeRA NOLAN
rg i fae ee ee A ea ae ae eee Se gee ALICE E. CLEAR
Faculty Adviser. = Miss GERALDINE Murray

JOSEPH HENRY SOCIETY

MESJHE Joseph Henry Society, named for the well-known Albany physicist, was

at the meetings of the Society.

organized in 1916 to promote a broader knowledge and appreciation of cur-
rent development in the physical sciences. Papers on this subject are presented

The requirements for membership may be met by anyone who has completed

Course I or its equivalent, as defined in the college calatogue.

Officers
Predentint 2. Se) es ee A ee at Bar) Eton J. HAKEs
Vice President. ee MARGARET CRANE
Secretary: ooo ee ee Harotp W. HoLMeEs
Wi eGs repo eo ee ra eee eae PAULINE GEORGE
Reporte === 52a So ce Marcaret HutcHINns
Honorary Critics i ees ee Pror. C. F. HALE
Members
GERTRUDE Bussy Aice PETITH Mary G. SMITH
MARGARET CRANE Wiuiam H. Strain, Jr. Grapys F. HAYNER
Maurice HATHORN Max ZUCKERMAN MarTHA BAYLEY
ELTon J. HAKEs Francis OTis MarcGarRET HutcHINs
THEopoRE W. HILL PAULINE GEORGE E.izABETH Bupp
Harotp W. Hotmes — HitpRETH Haynes MILDRED JOHNSON
ALIcE KiLts EDMUND OsBORNE Rosert C. R. MACFARLANE

Faculty Members

ProFessor C. F. HALE
Mr. E. L. Lone

Dr. C. E. Power

One Hundred Twenty-three

MATHEMATICS CLUB

MES ]HE Mathematics Club is now entering upon its third year as an organization of
State College. Its aim is to further the interests and to widen the perspective
of students majoring or minoring in mathematics.

All students who have proved their ability by the successful completion
of the first semester’s work in analytic geometry are eligible for membership.

Meetings are held every four weeks. Papers on important phases of mathematics
are read. Informal discussion follows. Besides these regular meetings there are a
number of social events during the year.

Officers 1920-1921

Presidente ses eee MarGarReEt CRANE
Vice doresidentsc eee oe Harotp HoLMeEs
‘Secrelary_- 1 eee ee Se LL Epwarp Linck

roaster a Se Lo) eee ee ee ee SA i. ARLINE WorTH
Faculty Adviser. ProFEssor BIRCHENOUGH

One Hundred Twenty-four
PHYSICAL EDUCATION SOCIETY

E Physical Education Society was organized in May, 1919. The aim of the
organization is to promote all phases of physical education. Only those who

are particularly interested in this field may become members.
Meetings, consisting of lectures, practical work, and a social program,

are held each month in the gymnasium. The Club directs the annual fall Campus Day
and holds several gym frolics during the year.

Officers for 1920-1921

Presidents = oo oe THEODORE CASSAVANT
RicePiesident.- =e eee KATHERINE McGarraHAN
CEFCU IT OTC a So eva tae ono cies oe Sea LELA CACKENER
Tréasuverprotem__—- 5 3-5 se e_ SADA CURRY

One Hundred Twenty-fve

COLLEGE ORCHESTRA
SES}HROUGH the efforts of the Class of 1921 the College Orchestra was evolved

in 1919 from a college mandolin club.
Under the direction and supervision of Dr. Thompson and Mr. Candlyn
the orchestra has become a reputable College organization, appearing frequently

Hl | before the student body. It increases the opportunities for the enjoyment and production
}| of good music.

©)
S
8

] Director 28 ee ee ee Mr. T. C. CaNnDLYN
i] PP yesidepthas  ee ayk KATHERINE McGarraHAN
| Vite-Pirestd entree Grace Aronowitz
| Secretary-Treasurer_-—-..___.-___-_________ AGNEs UNDERWooD
Members
i| Violins Guitars
| Grace ARONONOWITZ Eunice Rice
iil LouisE MANWARRING AGNEs UNDERWoopD

KaTHERINE McGarraHAN

| Mandolins
| Marion BENEDICT ALIDA CURREY
i] Leta CACKENER RutH EL tis

Marion Van BuREN

Piano Traps
I} DorotHy DANGREMOND KaTHERYN BALL

One Hundred Twenty-six
iif ) <a
a a
“ihr, PU oe
Mi oo

oa). f
EF!
:

THE CO-OP

The Co-op was established in the fall of 1920 under the supervision of Miss Helen
Fay. Through it the faculty and students are able to order books from the publishers
at a considerable saving of time and expense. The second-hand book exchange depart-
ment is of great convenience to students as well as to alumni. In addition, the Co-op

offers for sale College supplies and souvenirs.

One Hundred Twenty-seven

The 9 ies Dial

ao 4

Stid &Tlolmes ;

The “ Y ” House of State College is located at 747 Madison Avenue.

THE = Yo HOUSE

As only

eighteen girls, out of the many who apply, can be accommodated, it is hoped that the
Y.W.C.A. will soon be able to open another dormitory.

foie hig: eee iee eae ES or Ones oS eee eee

i xeasuver =o
Assistant Treasurer
Crhe = te es See ee oo!) Oe ae

Name
Charlotte G. Benedict, '21
Harriet P. Holmes, ‘21
Wilhelmina Lewin, 21
Dora Piersma, ‘21
Marjorie Stidworthy, ‘21
Augusta Knapp, ‘22
Eunice Rice, ‘22
Elisa Rigouard, '22
Mary E. Allen, ‘23
Virginia L. Conaro, ‘23
Dorothy I. Dangremond, ‘23
Laura G. Ebell, ‘23
M. Beatrice Haswell, ‘23
Ethel Lee Mead, ‘23
May B. Wood, '23

Nellie G. Maxim, ‘24
Esther Ostrander, '24

Nick Name
Carlota
Hattie
Billy
Dorie
Marge
Gustie
Jiva

Lees
Mary Al
Jean
Diddie
Laurie
Beets
Ethel Lee
May B.

Nell
Postie

Members

Favorite Expression
Do you want to live?
Now girruls!
O, boys!
Ho Horatio!
How much do we owe?
Where does the money go?
O, joy!
When I get to France—
You tell ‘em.
Ye guides!
Say, do you know—?
I'll say she does.
I do, you know.
I'm always doing that.
Great day in the morning.

Heavens, no!
Heavens to Betsy!

MarjoriE Stipwortny, ‘21
Dora Piersma, °21
Eunice RIce,
AuGusTA KNapPP,
Eisa Ricouarp,
May B. Woop,
Dorothy I. DANGREMOND,

22
ae
22
‘23
23

Favorite Occupation
Chasing the postman.
Tutoring.

Giggling at the table.
Stringing the frosh.
Shoveling coal.

Paying bills.

Writing verse.

Making work schedules.
Singing and jazzing.
Answering the telephone.
Sleeping on wedding cake.
Reading Aulard.
Jazzing the furnace.
Making cake.

Keeping peace between
and 10.30.

Writing themes.
Selling stamps.

730

One Hundred Twenty-nine

SYDDUM AND HALL-EY CIRCUS

my EST all round circus ever introduced into State College. Brought here through
2 the influence of Director Marion S. Van Liew, and now under the training of
yA] Ring Leader Mrs. Henderson. Performers hail from Shimmy Angle County,
Put County, Cattyraugus County, and from two of the most beautiful spots
along the Squawkee River, namely: Wampville and Hickville. Coming September 24,
1920. Will stay at least until February 14, 1921.

I. The Bearded Lady. Her first appearance in State College for two years, after
a four-year engagement in Washington, D. C. — Dorothy Patterson, °21.

II. The Funniest Laughing Hyena Living Under Normal Conditions. | When
laughing, she open her mouth so wide a clamp especially made for her must be used. —
Margaret Smith, °22.

III. Midget Doll-Baby. Has real blonde, curly hair, talks and walks like any
human being with almost human intelligence. Her beauty excels any of Waldman’'s
Best. — Myra Shaw, ’22.

IV. Imported Wala-Wala Dancer. Comes from Hawaiian Isles. Real
Hawaiian anatomy with black hair and dark skin. As a part of her act she tries to
rid the Bearcat of some of its most “catty ’’ qualities. She was caught when a kitten
but has not lost those qualities yet. — Marion Marshall and Aileen Wallace, °24.

V. Right here — for the Greatest Startler in Your Life — the Fattest Siamese
Twins in existence. We dare you to tell them apart. — Margaret Eaton and Marion
Williams.

VI. The Greatest Red-Headed Beauty in the Country. Ten years ago her
hair was black, but through the efforts of Mr. O. K. Henna it has become a wonderful
bronze. — Jessie Jane McKennan.

VII. The Marvel College Girl. The only one known to keep her room from
going dirty day after day. — Irene Graingle.

VIII. The Strong Woman. She can pick up any Normal Person and twirl

z

him around in the air. Escaped from Sing-Sing where she had been confined for 17
years. Merely a matter of breaking the bars. — Louise Barnes.

IX. The Second Cleopatra. Who is the next Mark Antony? Will vamp any
man within 15 minutes. Old age or bad looks no detriment. — Marie Butcher.

X. Marvellous Fortune Teller. Comes from the wilds of Massachusetts. Tells
fortunes from her own experiences. Better than your own. — Margaret Mulhuron.

XI. World-Known Animal Trainer — Specialist in Gamma’s. Admission by
ticket. An evening’s entertainment is worth a lifetime. All State College animals barred.
Watch carefully and note the hypnotism employed. — Mary Maher.

XII. Clown Act. Best imitation of any animal. Does not use a make-up. —

Dorothy MacGowan.

One Hundred Thirty-one

=
qtr or By rriff Mes rr | cre
ae Se ARE A GUE _ | :

ea.

XIII. Star Tight-Rope Walker. No aid given by balancing a parasol. She
walks steadily and unswervingly across the top of the tent. Only known to fall once,
and then she killed one man and knocked four unconscious. Come and see our feather-
bed weight. — Anne Moritzen.

XIV. Thinnest Woman Alive. Weight, 87\% lbs. Height, 5 feet, 6 inches.
She lives on love, air, and grape juice. Watch her carefully or she will disappear. —
Evelyn Reed.

XV. Famous Quaker Twins. Never speak when not spoken to. Models of
innocence and goodness-knows-what-not! — Minerva Gardner and Joyce Dwyer.

XVI. Princely Prevaricator. Lays claim to no wit or application. See an
A-Hound who goes out every night. — Florence Dorsey.

FRENCH CLUB

JHE French Club was organized by students of the College interested in French.
It aims to develop a deeper interest in the French people, their language and
their customs. _ Its president, Elisa Rigouard, is now a student at the University
of Paris, and through her the Club comes in very close touch with student life
in France.

The meetings are held every two weeks and membership is open to students who

are either taking a French course in College or who have had at least two years of high
school French.

Many of the members are corresponding with French students in France and this
interchange of letters proves of much pleasure and benefit.

The officers for the year 1920-1921 are:

-.--. Extsa Ricouarp, ’22
-.. RutH Heminover, '22
SE eS a a A tice Briccs, °21

reeeoureer ELIZABETH RENNER, '23

One Hundred Thirty-iwo

L_MYSKANIA

anes

r.

Myskania, organized in 1917, is an honorary body composed of Seniors who have
led in scholarship, literary effort, debate, dramatics, athletics, and in undergraduate
affairs generally.

This organization leads in formulating and giving expression to sentiment on all

matters relating to student activities. | These activities include:

Induction of Freshmen into college customs.

1.

2. Organization of the Freshman class.

3. Guardianship of college traditions and innovations.

4. Guardianship of class rivalry against abuse.

5. Direction of Moving-Up Day program.

6. Preservation of student morale.

The members are elected to the Council in the spring, and the elections are
announced with proper ceremony on Moving-Up Day. The 1921 Council was elected
as follows:

1. The student body elected two qualified Juniors.

2. The faculty appointed four qualified Juniors.

3. The 1920 Council appointed six qualified Juniors.

4. The president of the Senior Class was a member ex-officio.

The members of the 1921 Council are as follows:

KaTHERYN M. BALL
A.ipA P. BALLAGH
FRANK R. BRUCE
THEODORE W. CassavANT
Mary C. GRAHN
Maurice C. HATHORN

Harriet P. HoLMes
Huco K. PoLt
Maryjoriz F. Potter
FLoRENCE E. STANBRO
Wixuiam H. Strain
KATHERINE S. WANSBORO

Mary E. WuisH

One Hundred Thirty-fve

|
OMICRON NU ‘
> )ETA Chapter of the national honorary society, Omicron Nu, was organized to
Fy} stimulate scholarship and to promote leadership among students of Home
Sy Economics. Juniors and Seniors who have attained high scholarship and
whose personal qualities indicate future achievement in this field of work are

eligible for membership.

The national presidency of Omicron Nu is held by Miss Marion S. Van Liew

ti

of Beta. Officers
Pitsid tls eo sh en Florence E. STANBRO
Vice-President. a : _Mrs. FLORENCE FREAR
Secretary) soa eee eee Doris Davey
U hecsarenne ee ee __.___ DorotHy Howe
Associate Members
Marion S. Van Liew Cora A. STEELE
Mrs. FLoreNcE D. FREAR Eva Wi Lson
Members—1921
Doris Davey Dorotuy Howe FLORENCE FITCH

JEAN HUNGERFORD FLORENCE E. STANBRO

One Hundred Thirty-six

Members —1921

GerorGE DavipDsoN Harry SCHWADELSON Euias BRopy
1922
IsaDORE BRESLAU
CHAPTERS
Alphas st -------------------~ University of Rochester
Rho ‘SigmevA inne = ho es New York University
Rio sonia em ee A ee Columbia University
Upsilon RhotAlpha 2 Union University
Beta Wpnlon hh idss2 oes hee eee ee Boston University
Bata FRO ara) acess ores ee ee Buffalo University
FRR se eh Bee ees Se pees Harvard University
8 2 nn a eS re aS ee ry eee State College
Wpeilon: Rho} Beta... Union College
Kappa <2csesse ee cae eee Re Pd
Lambda a2: Se ccewc sce eeeeaee _. Western Reserve University
Mic se Be pee eee on phe ee University of Michigan
Niaiscees ine scoose eS ee eee University of Pennsylvania

One Hundred Thirty-seven

RALPH J. BAKER
FRANK R. BLiss
F. REGINALD BRUCE
Francis J. DONAHUE
E.LTon J. HAKEs

LELAND J. FosTeER
Georce HILLMAN

Howarp J. FLInN
Warren J. GRay
AprRIAN A. JOHNSON

JaMEs F. CARROLAN

Pres. A. R. BRUBACHER

Pror. D. HutTCHIsoN

KAPPA DELTA RHO
Founded 1905

GaMMA CHAPTER

Members
1921

Maurice C. HATHORN
THEoporE W. HILi
Frep B. PARKER

RosBert C. MAcFaRLANE

CHarcLes A. REILLY

Emit Pott

Huco Pot
1922

J. Epwarp Linck

Joun J. McCLuerR
1923

JoHN MacGREGor
1924

OLIVER PUTNAM

EpWARD SHERLEY

Faculty Members

Dean H. H. Horner

Dr. H. W. Hastincs

Pror. J. M. SayLes

CHAPTERS
[o'er 28ee SNe Ser Se a ieee Se ee Middlebury
a fe Re tear tA SES BE vier art heey fer veered = Cornell University
a oe i eer ee ee New York State College
Delta 22.2 e5 oS ees Colgate University
Bellon ste ke ee ee Franklin University
Testaccio ee ee Pennsylvania State University
Eta eso eer ie University of Illinois
Whe88 she oa eee een eee eae eee Purdue University

One Hundred Thirty-nine

,

. <. | we

THEODORE W. CAsSAVANT

Haro_p W. Homes

Harotp C. BALDWIN

Cuarces L. GRUBEL

Pror. A. W. RIsLey
Mr. C. A. HIDLEY
Mr. W. G. KENNEDY

SIGMA NU KAPPA

Founded 1913

Members

1921
JosEPH E. SHERLOCK

WicuiaM H. Strain, Jr.

1922
EpMUND C. OsBoRNE

1923
Guy M. HaskIN
JosEPH C. Kaac

1924
Joun H. CassavANT

Faculty Members
Mr. E. L. Lone

Dr. A. K. BEIK
Mr. T. F. H. CANDLYN

One Hundred Forty-one

ELTA OMGGA /

One

ror rare 22 DE eenr r

UGCR ARE 9 SGUE _ |

DELTA OMEGA
Founded 1890

Sponsor — Dr. LEoNARD Woops RICHARDSON

Officers
POTOSI PTE oo eee ee Beatrice C. BUCHANAN
V ieesl resident: 2202-5 Bo) ee ee Mary E, WuisH
Recordmg: Secretarys2-- oo MarjoriE MATHEWSON
Corresponding Secretary_ =o. -2-5— = Marion HuNTER

Treasurer LucitE Rouse
Reporter- Marjory SMITH
Crilicvss = ee ee ee CaroL TRAVER
Members
1921
DoroTHEA ADAMS Lictian Hopper
ALIDA BALLAGH NELLIE PARKHURST
ALMEDA BECKER LuciLE Rouse
BEATRICE BUCHANAN KATHERINE WANSBORO
GERTRUDE Bussy Mary WHIsH
1922
KATHERINE DRURY CATHARINE PELTZ
Marion HunTER Frances REEKS
CHARLOTTE LYNCH CaROL TRAVER
1923
MILLICENT BURHANS ELIZABETH RENNER
HELEN JOHNSON Marjori£ SMITH
Marjori—E MATHEWSON AGNES TRUAX

JANET BALCH

1924
EmiLy BELDING WILHELMINA HEINEMANN
MARGARET CLEVELAND MabELEINE HoHL
Marion FARRELL Harriet RITZER

Grapys WEAVER

Faculty Members

Anna L. CusHine, ’99 CHARLETTE Logs, '04
Eunice PerineE, ’00 AGNES FUTTERER, '16
ELIZABETH SHAVER, '08 EpitH WALLACE, "17

One Hundred Forty-three

|
|
|

ETA PHI

Founded 1896

Officers
Ded oe 1b (| Se een ee es ee es EstTHER Lou CRAMER
Vice-President os ----------. ELIZABETH SHERLEY
Corresponding Secretary_______ _-------FLorRENcE E. STANBRO
Recording Secretary-_________________ Marcaret R. MEYER
Uveastinet as cne eo ee Sonne GEORGIA FE. Koc
Chnblawthcwae et ee st be ee .---ETHEL L. Huyck
Mar shale a Sore ae eee VIOLA R:, FIGEMES
RReporlersee ae nee ae neee PT HEL. F.. RUSK
Clic. Sal eee a ee May TRUMAN
Members
1921
EsTHER CRAMER FLORENCE STANBRO
BLANCHE HILL May TRUMAN
ELIZABETH SHERLEY Myranwy WILLIAMS
1922

ErHet Huyckx
MarGaret KIRTLAND

Gerorcia Kocu
Marcaret MEYER

HELEN VAN AKEN

1923

Griapys HEYNER
VioLa HoLmeEs

ETHEL Rusk
Marjorie SIBLEY

Eira M. WILLIAMS

Faculty Members

Mrs. Harry BirCHENOUGH
Mrs. Harry W. Hastincs
Mrs. Haran H. Horner
Miss HELEN KELSO

Miss GERALDINE MurRAY
Mrs. Apna W. RISLEY

Mrs. Joun M. SayLes

Mrs. Haro_p W. THOMPSON

One Hundred Forty-five

a 66
“0 ' y

\

2
|
(LKAPPA DELTA ))
on Cy
ye iS

Prendent. s
Vice-President______~-

Recording Secretary__——-

Corresponding Secretary
Treasurer-

Marshals

Chaplain__

Alumnae Secretary__—-~-

Marion BurNAP
Linnie CLARK
VIVIEN CORBIN
MarGarRET CRANE

WINIFRED DUNN
PAULINE GEORGE
Hope Persons

TsaBEL APPLETON
DorotHy BAKER
MarTHA BayLey

ELEANOR ABRAMS

KAPPA DELTA
Founded 1897

Members
1921
MaBeEL GaGE
Mary GRAHN
HELEN GULDI
Harriet HoL_mMes
Harriet RIsiNG

1922
Louise PERSONS
Sytvia PoTTER
TwysBiL_t Purpy

1923
Devia HaADsELL
HELEN LEARY
Erva LitTELL

MarGARET CRANE
_. HELEN GULDI
Maset Gace
-- Erva Litre

~. PAULINE GEORGE
DorotHy BAKER
ace. Harriet RIsING
{Devia HapseLe

~~ )Twysitt Purpy
KATHERINE SAUTER

_ Louise PERSONS

Jean HUNGERFORD
ALICE KEESOR
PauLinE Moore
Marjorie Potter

FRANCES STILSON
HELEN VOELCKER
Mase. WHITE

KATHERINE SAUTER
MILpRED SMITH
EpNA TRUMBULL

VictTorIA PETERSON

1924

MariAN MILLER

Marcery BAYLEss
LLEWELLYNA GILL

CATHERINE RUSSELL
MariLita VAN GELDER

Faculty Members

Pror. AND Mrs. R. H. KirTLAND
Dr. AND Mrs. C. F. HALE

Dr. AND Mrs. C. E. Power
Pror. AND Mrs. G. M. YorK

Miss ANNa E. PIERCE
Miss HELENE M. BENNETT
Miss M. EvizaBpeETH CoBB
Miss Martua S. STUART

One Hundred Forty-seven

ae rf Wi } Core AUS
x al Been pe GUE
PSI GAMMA

Founded 1898

Officers
President--+ KATHERYN BALL
Vice-President__.--_--- q eee eee eae AMY CLUBLEY
IAG 7 2511 po SRM Pree pol sae anion A.iceE Briccs
Recording Secretary__-___----_-- __.. RutH HEMINOVER
Corresponding Secretary__~--~-----~--~-~-- GLENNON EASMAN
Onit. 2 ae eee ee ee ee _. GERTRUDE SOUTHARD
Literary Editor__-------- oe ere ae _._._. AcNes UNDERWOOD
chaplains =< fe 2 CATHERINE SHIPMAN
Grace Macuire

Marshals dos sat gai Na br ab sb kota ——— ne aa sw ere ~

|GLENNON EasMAN

Members

1921

KATHERYN BALL
A Ice Briccs
CHARLOTTE BusH

GERTRUDE SOUTHARD

Marion BENEDICT
LELA CACKENER

Marion Deyo
GLENNON EASMAN
QUEENE HoMAN

DorotHy BENNIT
DorotHy JONES

Mrs. FLORENCE D. FREAR

Mrs. W. C. DECKER
Mrs. A. A. WALKER

DorotHy HowELi
Eunice Myers
ALBERTA SILKWORTH
IsABEL WHALEY

Amy CLUBLEY
Doris DAVEY
PAULINE FEENEY

1922
ALiIDA CURRY
RutH HEMINOVER
AGNEs UNDERWOOD

Grapys LopcE
IsABELLE PECK

1923
MABELLE JOCKUMSEN
Grace Macuire
KATHRYN SHIPMAN
RutH TEFFT

1924
Lucy KELLER
ELIZABETH NAGLE

Faculty Members
Miss Eva WILSON
Miss MINNIE SCOTLAND
Miss HELEN PHILLIPS

Dr. CAROLINE CROASDALE

One Hundred Forty-nine

rr

rr ret

Ehiercr r
GUE |

CHI SIGMA THETA
Founded 1908

Presidents. 8 aoe

Vice-President

Secvelay ia ce eae eee =
Pisdtivets 2 ee

Corresponding Secretary_-

Reporilet u-. sack o eae a ee cee eee eee
Stewardest oe eee

GERTRUDE BURNS
Laura McCarTHY
KATHERINE McGarRAHAN

Mary BAXTER
Marion BRENNAN
ELIZABETH CAREY
ALICE CLEAR
HELEN Hayes
Mary Hayes

Members
1921

1922

HELEN M. O'BRIEN
HELEN G. WALSH
ELIZABETH CAREY
MarjoriE SINNOTT
ALicE CLEAR
Mary Hayes

Epna MANETH
MARGARET VANGURA
HELEN O'BRIEN

Marion NEWELL
A.ice O’CoNNoR
ANNA O'NEILL

Dora O'SHAUGHNESSY
MarTHA PARRY
HELEN WALSH

GENEVIEVE ZIMBAR

CAROLINE BERBERICK
Marjori£E SINNOTT

HELENA Borsick
Apa Busse
DoroTHy KEELER

1923

1924

FRANCES FLANNERY
CATHERINE HANLEY

Mary MAHER
AcNEs NOLAN
VERONICA O'BRIEN

Faculty Members

Mr. AND Mrs. C. J. Deyo
Miss ANN F. TEMPANY

Mr. AND Mrs. J. A. MAHAR
Mr. AND Mrs. ALMEDEE SIMONIN

One Hundred Fifty-one

o 7
ALPAA EPSILON PAI
S oe)
\ ir ies i

tro rrjrf ie er a

HUMBER Pe SGUE + HEH

ALPHA EPSILON PHI

Era CHAPTER
Founded 1917

Officers
Denis Soe ee, See en _---HELEN E. GoLpsmitH
Scribe Sr ae ee = _. Dora GarBosE
Chancellogtn se FLoreENcE E. SCHUSTER

Reporter fe I ea a Re . HELEN STRISOWER

Marshal... -_ 8 pes, HELEN BERNHEIMER
Members
1921
HELEN BERNHEIMER HELEN E. Go.tpsmirH
Rose BrESLAW RutH G. GREENBLATH
Bertua F, GaL_up Dora SCHWADELSON
Rose. WoLINsky
1922
Dora GarBosE FaNNniE P. SCHULMAN
ANNE D,. REEBACK FLorENCE E. SCHUSTER
HELEN STRISOWER
1923
NELLIE FIELDMAN EpirH SANDERS
Rose HERSHBERG FANNIE TEPPER
ANNA NACHMAN Lea WOoLINSKY
Rose YAGUDA
1924
SopHie M. CoHEN
CHAPTERS
Alpha Be oe anes. Balnard: Golere
Beta) so AS ee ei eS... unter Collese
Ganinia) 22 oe a to _... Teacher’s College, N. Y.
Delia, <5 5 | Ade lphy Callece
Epsilon diese oa _...__. Newcomb College, La.
7 dks | een ne Rane SOs : aoe _-....-... New York University
Eta _-________________.____. New York State College for Teachers
Theta —_.- SoS eee a ae University of Pennsylvania
Nota c25< 3 oe =o Se ee eer Syracuse University
Kappa ak has eee laa Cornell University
leambda 2 2 ee  , Universiiyof Denver
i, |) eae se ler tem. fn! ie ty University of Illinois
Nass. fe ek Cees iti era University of Pittsburgh

One Hundred Fifty-three

FLORENCE FItcH

PAULINE BAKER
Sypit BALME

KATHERINE BROWN
MarIoNn CLINE
SusAN COLLIER
ETHEL CUMMINGS
ELEANOR GIFFEN

MILDRED CoRNELL
HELEN ForBES
MILDRED KUHN

Pror. BARNARD S. BRONSON
Mr. AND Mrs. CLARENCE HIDLEY

& fF ii r F F F r | aE
a } a he PE GUE _ x
GAMMA KAPPA PHI
Founded 1920
Officers
Pretident’—... 55002 eee ae FLORENCE FITCH
ical rexidend 2 oo es Sypit BALME
Recording Secretary---------------------------- Marion CLINE
Corresponding Secretary__--_--------------- _-. ELMINA CURRIE
TF COBURG oes oo Se ee eee Cora MESERVE
POOROTEY 2s ee ree rene ETHEL CUMMINGS
Chie: £5 2e as Se ee KATHERINE COLLIER
Members
1921

KATHERINE COLLIER
JANE SCULLEN

1922
Evsit KENNEY
Cora MESERVE

1923
ELMINA CuRRIE
Marion Rose
Mary SMITH
Hitpa TEFFT
Mary KoNceELIK
ELEANOR MADERER

1924
KATHARINE MoNK
GracE OsTRANDER
DorotHy WESTERMAN

Faculty Members

Miss BLANCHE AVERY
Miss FRANCESCA MARTINEZ
Miss DorotHy BANNER

One Hundred Fifty-fve

Edward Link

Maurice Hathorn

Adrian dohneon

Doctor Power

TALETIC COURCIL

©:

Mr. dnavely

0

Mr. Deevey

William Strain Frank Bruce

Leland Foster

Doctor blastingy

arr rr Wi Foret J ea lel 6 PRES
4 i Ul & A Pp GUE | | F ANN Ve

fie.

BASKETBALL

Seldom in its history has State College been as successful on the basketball court
as it was this season. In spite of the scarcity of men from which to make a selection, and
other handicaps, such as late practice, improper conditions for training, and weak opposi-
tion from the scrubs, the team through the efforts of Coach Snavely has matured into as
efficient an aggregation as State has ever had. In view of our victories over such colleges
as St. Michael’s, Manhattan, and St. Lawrence, and our showing against Union and
Colgate, State feels justified in claiming her team as the equal of that of any college of
its size in the country.

The success of the team is attributed to Coach Snavely, who came to State in the
fall of 1920. His untiring efforts, enterprise, and ability proclaim him the type of man
for whom we have been looking.

One of the most interesting games of the season was with our Alumni during Prom
week-end. The Alumni line-up consisted of our old stars: Big Fitz, Little Fitz,
Hohaus, Lobdell, Springman, and Curtin. But consistent team work prevailed over
experience and individual skill, and the old grads went down in defeat.

We are looking expectantly to Linck, '22, to make a worthy successor to Manager
Bliss. A tentative schedule for 1921-1922 includes: St. Michael’s, Clarkson, Union,
Colgate, Manhattan, St. Stephen's, Norwich, Pratt, University of Vermont, Middlebury.
Possibly Williams, Trinity, Dartmouth, and several other will be added.

1920-1921 ScHEDULE

Opponents State
Dec... ? 45 (St. Michaels 2.225 11 28
lis Water eee om JN aaa ee 27 24
Jen: 1A: 2 @Golatte .o 56 22,
22; Woantieltin 2 2c222- ee 11 25
fe accu ay 2 1) 1711] Aaepate epee oR we Ont el eee 22 34
Vey Steawrencet ss 28 22
18; St: Steiien's 22S 14 35
24.. Connecticut Aggies ..=..-...=-=.-==== 29 20
25. Pratt = A et ee 28 31
26; ‘Manhattan 22-622 SS = 31 23
Wats 4s" Clavksoi soe ee es 18 21
5..~ St: LLawittncele2 2 eee she ois 34 27
12. Hobart (cancelled).
19): Sk Stephens ee ee ee 24 35
333 347

One Hundred Fifty-nine

One Hundred Sixty

MAURICE HATHORN

“ Shorty" will be remembered as one of the best captains State's basket-
ball team has had. He guided the team well and by his quick moves kept
the other side guessing. He outplayed every opponent he met with the
possible exception of Moser of Colgate, who had a stronger team behind
him. “Shorty” was good on either the offensive or defensive. Under the

basket he was dangerous, for he could jump high enough to drop the ball in
easily.

FRANK BLISS

Frank no doubt has learned that a basketball manager deserves whatever

praise he gets, as his work is usually taken for granted. Great credit should
be given him for his arrangement and carrying out of a well-balanced
schedule. He was popular with the men and worked hand in hand with
the coach. The finances are left in good condition with a surplus for next

year. Bliss should be highly commended for his conduct of a most success-
ful year.

THEODORE CASSAVANT

As a right forward, Tice played an extraordinarily aggress.ve game. His
ability to shoot from the foul line as well as from the field was marked. He
was a good floor man and an excellent dribbler

The team was well sup-
ported by his quick and accurate passwork.

ADRIAN JOHNSON

“Jack” is an inheritance from Milne High School. As Prof. Sayles
would say, he was “ born long,” and that in more ways than one. He is one
of our stellar athletes. There is nothing he cannot do well. He can
handle a ball on the basketball court as well as on the baseball diamond.
We wonder where he puts all the eats. “ Shorty” and “ Bill” are his
only peers when it comes to stoking up the engine after a gruelling evening's
practice. Jack will be here for a couple of years so we won't say more
about him now.

HUGO POLT

Hugo captained the 1919-1920 team, so much was expected of him this
year by the coach and the team. He fulfilled all expectations. He was
dependable in the back court, his very presence on the floor having a steady-
ing influence on the whole team. The opposing players never opened their
defense without Hugo taking the opportunity for adding a counter to the score.

RALPH BAKER

Baker came out strongly this year and showed up so well under Coach
Snavely’s training that he has been holding down one of the guard positions.
“Bake” is right there when it comes to breaking up the opponents’ passwork
and has made a record as a fast man on the floor, holding his man down
to very few baskets.

One Hundred Sixty-one

¢ Hundred Sixty-two

JOSEPH SHERLOCK

All-round Joe — without a question of doubt we could not find a more
outstanding characteristic for this old basketball man. Joe plays well at
either forward, center, or guard, and makes them all travel a bit. His two

years with the United States Navy rather interrupted his basketball career,
but he is back finishing up in great style.

MEYER DOBRIS

Dobris left Mudville last September and paraded into Albany determined
to make State College Varsity or bust. From the beginning the coach con-
sidered Dobe a fast man and promised him a try-out just as soon as Spalding
Bros. received a shipment of large gym shoes. Practice began with Dobris
playing guard, and it took but a short time to convince us that the coach
had really dug up something worth while in the cage game. Dobe had only
one handicap — he was a little too heavy.
of pork at a separate training table. In two weeks he lost fifty pounds.
On the floor Dobris is a good man. He plays a heady game at all times,

and works just as hard for a basket when the team is in the lead as he does
when the score piles up againt us.

The coach recommended a diet

COACH SNAVELY

Coach Francis B. Snavely is a graduate of Lebanon Valley College, and
has been an instructor in Physical Education in the National Army. His
year at State College has his possibilities, and the quality cf each man's work
has been improved through individual coaching. In every sport, and
especially in basketball and baseball, his thoroughness has produced excel-
lent results. He is very popular with he men because of his good fellow-
ship and energetic personality. State hopes that he will continue to put out
strong and efficient teams which will boost her record in athletics.

RAAT
Npcalae alatad
SAAT tld

Because of the mildness of the winter State was forced to cancel all but one contest.
Then she met R. P. I. in Troy and after a well fought game went down in defeat to a
score of 5-0.

TENNIS

With the Cassavant brothers as a nucleus, our tennis team for this year should be
strong. No schedule has yet been made, but State is hoping to meet neighboring colleges.

TRACK

Track’s popularity was somewhat obscured by baseball this year. One of the chief
events of Campus Day, however, was the annual cross country run. Neuner, '21,
carried off the honors easily.

One Hundred Sixty-three

: eT por
Al) ‘| — GUE-

BASEBALL

Ever since its introduction baseball has been a minor sport at State College, but
by next season we hope it will be among the major sports.

The prospects for this year are bright.

Five varsity men from last season will
form the background for the 1921 team.

The pitching staff will include Bliss, Hathorn,
and Johnson, and Hathorn and Johnson will alternate at first and in the box. Hakes

and Bliss will bear the brunt of action in the catching department, while Dooley, a
Lansingburg High School man, will be given a chance to show his ability. T. Cassavant,
Sherlock, Hathorn, McCluer, Bliss, and J. Cassavant will take care of the infield. Of

these, the first three are last year’s letter men, and the rest have shown up well in practice.
Pp F

The outfield trio will be picked from Dobris, Sherley, Baker, Hill, and Polt.
All of these men have had experience, and are expected to furnis
a defensive attack.

The tentative schedule approved by the Athletic Council reads:

h an offensive as well as

April 29 — St. Stephen's at Albany.
May 7 —State at St. Stephen’s.
May 14—St. Michael’s at Albany.
June 3 — State at Middlebury.

June 4— State at St. Michael's.

Games are pending for May 21 and May

30, and a game with the Alumni is
being arranged for Class Day.

One Hundred Sixty-four

1921 BASKETBALL

MEN’s

1921 recognized the fact that many really worth while things start from small
beginnings, and she planned her interclass basketball policy accordingly. Bowing down
in truly humble style, as becoming to a Freshman, she absolutely refused to take a
game away from the other classes during her first year’s stay at State College. When
the 1917-1918 series ended she was the strongest contestant for the booby prize, having
a record of six games played and six games lost. Yet it speaks well for the fighting
courage of the Red and White that but few of these games were lost by more than four
points. The team for this year was made up of Baker, Bliss, Bruce, Bucci, Hathorn,
Holmes, Johnson, Rabiner, and Storey.

In the Sophomore year 1921 began to show her real power. She trimmed the
Freshmen in fine style, Lut fell kefore the Seniors at 14 to 16, and was defeated by the
Juniors with a score of 17 to 20. She was represented on the court this year by Hathorn,
Baker, Bliss, Brody, Bruce, and Bucci.

As Juniors the Red and White tied the Seniors for first place by winning an over-
time game. The extra game, however, went to the Seniors by the close score of 18 to 16.
The squad for 1919-1920 included H. Polt, Cassavant, McCluer, Hathorn, Baker,
Bliss, Bucci, Sherlock, Hakes, Bentley, E. Polt, Strain, and Bruce.

Her last year, however, has revealed the results of 1921's steady and persistent
growth in basketball ability. Her quintet was by far the strongest in the interclass
league. She won every game played by overwhelming scores and went to the head of
the list, leaving the others far behind. Her representatives on the court were Hathorn,
Cassavant, Baker, H. Polt, Sherlock, Bliss, Strain, and Holmes. Of these men Hathorn,
Cassavant, Baker, H. Polt, Sherlock, and Strain made the Varsity for the 1920-1921

season.
One Hundred Sixty-five

GIRLZ ATHLETIC ALOCIATION

GIRLS’ ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION

The Girls’ Athletic Association Council, led by Miss Bennett and Miss Card, has
been especially successful this year in creating and furthering interest in athletics. This
was accomplished by the institution of a new point system for the winning of S. C. T.
letters. For attendance at each practice period in basketball, soccer, volley ball, field
hockey, skating, swimming, tennis, and hiking one point is awarded. Forty points are
necessary to win a letter.

Basketball kept its usual place as the most popular major sport. The strongest
contestants for this seasons championship have been the Seniors and Juniors.

Hockey, soccer, and volley ball, in spite of their recent introduction at State as
sports for girls, have gained strong popular favor, and interest in tennis has been increased
by the laying out of tennis courts on the College campus.

Most popular and enjoyable of G. A. A.’s activities are the gym frolics. The
small number of frolics this year has been widely regretted, for no other College affairs
give quite so much diversion.

Officers
President ek ee ee LeELA CACKENER
Vice-President 22. So WINIFRED DaRLING
Setrelary 22 eee BEULAH CUNNINGHAM
TPC GSUT CR aw ne ee ALLIDA CURREY
Cheer Leeadefsss oe eee PauLineE GEORGE

One Hundred Sixty-seven

1921 BASKETBALL

Gircs’

During the fall and winter of 1917 the Freshman team worked hard to establish
a reputation in the basketball court which would add to the glory 1921 was early winning

for itself. But in spite of its efforts, the team played through the entire schedule without
scoring a single victory.

In the second year, careful training and faithful practice began to bring results.
Passwork and guarding improved greatly. In an interesting series with 1920, '21 tied
the score, but the greater amount of practice and the longer period of training of the

older class made °20 the ultimate victor by a narrow margin.

But Junior year neither ’20’s greater experience nor ‘22's determination to ‘ show
them” could keep °21 down. Accurate shooting and good team work resulted in a
successful season, at the end of which ’21 carried off the championship.

Spectacular playing characterizes the team’s work this season. The swift, sure
pass work of Winnie Darling and Beulah Cunningham, the accurate shooting of Frances

Lawrence and Jessie Darling, and the clever work of Lucille Rouse at center, point to

success for the year 1920-1921.

One Hundred Sixty-eight

Or Forever AFter
Hold Your Tongue

Hy 4

2 Darlings

fi ‘ :
ve call |

Aesthet

Quarterly Editor

a soos:
“DR ORUBACHER, DR: RICHARNJON :
“in Commemoration of Our oe ‘

MOVING-UP DAY 1920

Faculty

History 2

Bus Hunters

MARIOME POTTER
IN Will 0° theWiep ay

The Tenor Prunerig = &
TTol-

ED;
“ PRUNELIA”

Dramatics

ae

1921 stunt

Moving Up Day
-- Morning. -

SMe A

Le
q ety!
. ree
*. é

ated *

-

f ee

?
~ “a

Old &ENew Myskania ho

——

1923 Stunt

1921 Stunt —

Spee ata

CaS OV OANE

Girly Interclous Racey

Moving Up Day
- Af ternoon - -

Bee Junior

! dai oa. *.

GOING TO CIHVRCH OH, BROTHER DIETY, WHICH SHALL IT BE
“ONWARD CHRIJTIAN SOLDIERS OR
ABIDE WITH ME” 7

SOPHOMORE -~/ENIOR PARTY

WRE/TLING BOVT

MENT /MOKER

v

. A BEJIGN ON EFFICIENCY

—

YKATING TODAY"

——

CHRISTMAS “AT HOME”

HOME ECONOMICyY DEPARTMENT

Obstacle Race ~

492° 192; ‘

~ 3S Le§fSea Race
i

Grace Lazsrue
Snior Chopel Stunt

{

U4

, Hugoe De A
Before the Fall ~

Munior~Frovh Jing 1920

U1) Le Bays
The Rack ence

The Child of Ease

iar,
= ! =

st ae Ot he
At RidgeFieid

hi Afamni ~

tr Eenee and Us

The louse

Marion Burthap

Rub and Seri Day

Rn ae A)

Pct Howell

a 26 oo. eee

| ——_

Eunice Myers:

Ready For a Hike
To Menande

amen nee nit an

xX LO

A Ter Parts iF

The tioade

Dark Horien

Tiny ae

RE BE. KF,
Shorty Masquerades

Hugo, Ref, & Eddie

Pe

7 Progressin§

Kappa Nu
By the Union Idol~

=

George Davidson

—

=.
RSS, nls ‘Ne 268

— AGollege doke

|

to cure the dumps:
Jonathan Swift

\4
|
|

J UKES

DEDICATED

| FOREWORD

|| To Make Fools Laugh More Loudly,

| To Make Cynics Look More Bitter,

To Estrange the Faculty and Wrench Us From Our Friends,
And Incidentally to Reform the College—

| These Have Been the Piloting Principles of Those Who
Gathered the Stuff Which Follows.

One Hundred Ninety

Peggy Underwood — Make it peppy, now!

air rf Fore tT icvor rr.
rig } : ee — | GUE S ;

CRIMINOLOGY STATISTCS

CRIMINAL. CRIME. PUNISHMENT.
Dived Halstead - --~----| Peremptory terming of Moving-Up | Divorcement from brief case.
Day as a frivolity unworthy of
a college.
Dot Wiesner-- -----~ Existing in a civilized world. Amputation of the top-knot.
Gladys Teetzel-- --- | Too much pep. Court plaster her mouth.
Reggie Bruce otectiaes Good-nature. =
Rose Donellan ---..-------_ | Request to teach a second time. | Shaving of head.
Kathryn Collier co Existing without a license. Extracting the squeak from her
shoes.
Myfanwy Williams ---------| Mental itineracy. Acquaintance with a lively alarm
clock.
Mabel Gage-- ~~ Public discussion of P. T. Rope skipping in the rotunda.
Betty Beckwith--..--.-----. | Writing for the Quarterly. Memorization of forty irregular
French verbs with their spelling.
Martha Parry------~---- Lack of visible means of support. | Complete alienation from the mail
(Arrested in the gym.) service.
Pauline Brady --------~| Freshness. Marcel on her coiffure.
Scrubwomen ~~--~-~-----~----~ | Quaint tea-table vocabularies. Injurious injection of Funk &

‘Wagnall’s at regular intervals.

*The Board judges Mr. Bruce to have been adequately punished by our usurpation of his office
and traitorous travesty on his publication.

Baldwin — Will you go to the movies with me to-night?
Marion Burnap — No, I don’t believe I will.
Baldwin — Say, what's the matter with everybody ?

WHAT WOULD YOU GIVE FOR A CHANCE TO SEE ——

Miss Martinez doing the camel walk with Prof. Hastings?
Dean Pierce in a pink ruffled organdy frock?

Birchy in a hula-hula skirt?

Kirtland doing the toddle>

Snavely with a bushy beard?

Miss Card with straight red hair?

Charles in a dress suit?

Mary Callahan teaching aesthetic dancing?

Hutchy in doublet and hose?

Beik doing the sailor’s hornpipe?

Miss Loeb with bobbed hair?

Tommy in the hobble skirt of 1913?

Painter with Bolshevik hair?

De Porte in hoopskirts >

Miss Scotland six feet tall?

Dean Horner in an Elizabethan ruff and quilted skirt?
Prexy in a clown suit?

Miss Futterer doing the prone fall?

One Hundred Ninety-one

Prof. Woodard — I’ve done all I could with a frog's brain.

=
Qtr rr yg : refs rr 3S Cmca r
Pic Pal) ma hapa! A PE GUE _-

LETTERS TO THE EDITORS
Dear Editer:

When a author sends a child of their brain to a editer it seems to me as if it might
be took or left as it is without being gone and hacked up until no one would recognize it
as the one which was originelly sent to the editer by the author. I don’t very often put
my pen to paper and when I do I would like you to understand that I am the real mother
of what I write and I don’t want it hacked up no more than the mother who was
threatened by Soloman to have her child hacked up. It seems to me that hacking aint
no business of a editer to do who really only has to hand things over to the printer.

The joke I wrote, now —

“ Prof. Woodard — Where did the jelly fish get his jelly?

Stude — From the ocean.”

Now you went and changed it so that the stude had to say from the curants in the
ocean which aint no sensible thing to say because as everybody with any sense knows
that curants grow on dry land and not in the ocean so why say from the curants in the
ocean.

Maybe though if you don’t hack them up any more I will perhaps send you another
of my brain children.

Yrs. truley,
MicuHaeEv Hicoony.

P. S. I knew it was a joke that I sent you because every body laughed when some-
body said it once in class but if you dont promise I wont send you no more.

M. H.

My dear Mr. Hicoony:

Your letter recalls the incident connected with the reception of your joke. I hap-
pened into the News office one day and found the other Editor growling and swearing.
Upon my persuading her to desist, she flung me your contribution and hissed, “‘ This was
a joke!’ An apology is necessary for trying to revive the dead. We hope that this
error will not deprive us of your contributions in the future. Our motto is, “* Offense
to none.”

THE Epirors.

My dear Editor:

Realizing the weighty importance of a publication such as you are compiling, I
have, upon thoughtful consideration, resolved to communicate with you about a certain
matter, hoping that its place here will have greatest influence. The matter which I am
agitating is the renouncement of hair nets by females. You have probably noticed the
prevalence of these delicate restraints in keeping the hair “to home,” if I may be par-
doned for transgressing upon the realm of slang. I admit that they make for smoothness.
rotundity, and reflection of light, but my objection is, after having been acclimated to

One Hundred Ninety-two

P. T. — Arms rotating outward, breathing inward.
ip ocr rape ft rrr rs
a __| ‘| GUE! y

such perfection, how shall we endure the inevitable falling away from that perfection,
the unavoidable return to the ordinary, and even to the low and mean? Moreover, and
secondly, it accustoms the gentle ones to artificial means of securing neatness. Have
you ever beheld a female the day following the abandonment of her last hair net> She
is a lugubrious and pitiable sight indeed. Use your influence, I pray you, by dear
editor, to draw off the women from these crutches.

Your brother in reform,

Pror. EPHRAIM MuMPER.

My dear Mr. MuUMPER:

I have borne your worthy appeal upon my heart, and after consultation with my
board, it was decided to place your letter in our joke department, through which we are
endeavoring to disseminate vast ideas of reform. Hoping we each shall succeed.

THE Eprror.

Dear Madam:

I wish to call your attention to the condition of my picture in last year's
PEDAGOGUE. It was absurd and impertinent. If it is repeated in this year’s copy you
are to print underneath, “* This is a man of the Caucasian race.” Bear this in mind.

INDIGNANT FACULTY.
Dear Sir:

We have referred this important matter to the printer and he tel!s me your com-
plexion will be appropriately brightened. Our motto is, “* Offense to none.”

THE Epirors.

Grad — What do you call your boat?
Another Grad — Johnny Sails.

One Hundred Ninety-three

Another P. T. — Snop stickering!

CAFETERIA MENU FOR ONE WEEK

(No coffee allowed unless over 30 years of age)

Vegetable salad (with red peppers)

a

BS. ize

GUE | |

Vegetable soup (with peppers)

Turkish pilfufa
Red peppers stuffed

Egplantine

Beveridges

Cocoa

Split pea soup (with peppers)

Chili con carne
Rice, with pepper sauce

Beveridges

Cocoa

(Coffee issued to faculty)

Tomato bisque (with peppers)

Stuffed peppers
Fried cheese on toast (pepper sauce)

Dates stuffed with grape fruit

Beveridges

Cocoa

(Coffee issued to faculty)

Split pea soup
Mexican frijoles

Green peppers (pickled)
Limburger cheese and crackers

Beveridges

Same as usual

Tomato soup (with peppers)

Tootillas with bullheads

¢ Ff | . sara A
e MUSE pe,
Monpbay
Tea Milk
TUESDAY
Tea Milk
WEDNESDAY
Tea Milk
‘THURSDAY
FRIDAY
Tea Milk

One Hundred Ninety-four

Salmon wiggle
Fruit shimmy

Beveridges

Water

(Coffee issued to faculty)

Dr. Thompson in Caf. — Give me two helpings, please.

Water

Water

Water

Coffee

= Ls
err ne es ae Fryer (| I
a int Ses Secs mel

SATURDAY (clean-up day)
Vegetable soup (with peppers)
Browned hash
Spanish rice with red peppers
Walddrof Salade
Beveridges
Milk Tea Coffee Waler
(Coffee issued to faculty)

WHAT MADE THEM FAMOUS
Zuckerman’s speech for the Quarterly.
Warren Gray’s letter S curve.
Myffy’s hands.
Lorinne La Valle’s fur collar.
Katherine Merchant’s plaid coat.
Alida Currey’s slanted puffs.
Harriet Holmes’ bouncing of the Y.W. housekeeper.
Prof. Riz’s hair.
Miss Futterer’s red beads.
Prexy’s peripatetic mustache.
Painter’s hair.
Fi »wsy Cassavant’s impersonation of Riz.
Brown’s forty flunks.
Schwadelson’s s’s.
Carl Bush’s hair — its rise and fall.
Doris Coon’s specs.
Pauline Feeney’s finger nails.
Gertrude Southard’s excessive mind.
Marion Burnap’s bob.

Dear Miss Pierce:

Previous to my graduation from State College I never experienced the divine passion,
but I have now fallen good and plenty.

Last summer I was so thoughtless as to unite in one sublime osculation with the
grocer, and he demanded that I hop the conjugal twig with him. However, I now love the
milk man fervidly. I pour out my heart in notes in the milk bottles, but my enamoratum,
realizing his inferior social position, dares not reciprocate.

What shall I do — which shall I marry? PuzzLepD PRISCILLA.

Dear P. P.:

In these days of H. C. of L. it is indeed a difficult position in which you find
yourself. One must not be mercenary, and yet, though one can live a good while on
milk, a grocery offers more variety in diet. I am afraid you yourself must decide.

Whichever you choose, send me the address of the other.

Miss PIERCE.

One Hundred Ninety-fwe

Betty Beckwith — Gash!

‘SHE LEFT AN HOUR AGO"

a .
SHE 15 InvEaVIEWING SAYLES!

PROF SAYLES

a

BE LIEVE SHES IN THE-SCIENCE. BUILD, Ne

%

LEAVE THE GUL DING

THE CRITICGSUDDENLY apPraRiNG) DID YOU WANT TOSEE ME

A FILM
A

IN SEARCH

One Hundred Ninety-six

OF

PATHOS

nA

OF

HER CRITIC

English P. T.’s (any one of them) — Have you seen Miss Kelso 2

Qtr or Coa ew fe Ses Wt fre rr
5 ed 1212): a =) GUE _ iy

STATE COLLEGE CALENDAR

Sept. 20. Gertie Bussy appears at College 20 lbs fatter, and with a new hair comb.
21. Shorty Hathorn shoots a taxi driver for overcharging.
22. Thirteen Freshman, sixteen Sophs, six Juniors and one Senior report the loss
of their trunk checks.
23. Martha Parry begins looking for a Prom man.
24. Seven Freshmen loose the use of their ears trying to hear Prexy’s speech.
27. Annual meeting of Ancient Order of Landladies to Raise Rent.
1. Three Freshmen faint upon seeing the notice of their physical exams.
2. Plans for = N K frat house are drawn up.
3. Katie Drury decides to become a man-hater.
4. Professor Walker in Sociology discusses the policy of weeding out unfortunate
specimens of society. Uneasiness on part of Donahue.
11. Dr. Croasdale lectures the Freshmen. Ruth Ellis is moved to buy a pair of
common-sense shoes.
12. Riz revels in football reminiscences, and reveals many secrets.

Oct.

13. Riz revels in football reminiscences, and reveals more secrets.
14. Riz revels in football reminiscences, and swears the class to silence.

THREE FRESHMEN

DISCOVER THAT THEIR
PHYSICAL EXAMS ARE POSTED!

(To be continued)

One Hundred Ninety-seven

Myfanwy Williams —Is my hair coming down?

Mother:

Measles! Am shut up for a week in this house. We're suspected of circulating
them. I’m that mad I could croak. See that you get the family to send me mail every
day of the week, and say, cookies would come in handy, too.

Been reading things I write in my Ed. | notes margins. ‘* Bob coming tonight?”
“ Awfully good music at the Hampton.” ‘* Look at her hair today — isn’t it a mess? ”
“The Itty Bitties are rushing like mad." ‘* Yes, who was that Freshman you were
with?’ ‘* Tommy said in class to day ——.” “Gosh, it’s stuffy in here.
Wish was at the windows.” “* Get onto George Alexander’s new necktie.”

I'm bored to a teardrop and I hope we have cheese dreams for supper.

Languidly,
PAULINE.
P.S. Write.

May 16.
My dear parent:

The girls are getting catty and cattier. For heaven's sakes, write. 1 had nothing
to do all day so I got out all my old letters to reread in hopes of saving some. I burned
‘em all. ‘* Had such a good time at the lake. We went out walking and in swimming
and lots of things. I’m so lazy I’m getting fat.” “‘ Had a great time. Went walking,
swimming, rowing, etc. Getting fat.’’ “* The Browns have a new baby. It’s an
awfully cute little thing.” “‘ Did you hear about Marianne’s engagement? ’’ — and so
on and soon. Any wit is stale and all events in crumbs.

Viciously,
PAULINE.

P.S. Let Billy write to me. He always sends such cunning letters.

May 17.
Mom:
Been reading the Freshman Handbook. ‘* The purpose of this organization is to
further the interest in i

““Membership open to those who ** Stealing
banners is a custom at State College.” “* Grin at the faculty when you see them. They
want you to.”’ ‘* Bring a pencil to class the first day so you'll have something to put
in your mouth.” “Don’t stay out too late. Don’t eat in your rooms. Don't hiss
the landlady if she scolds you. She takes your mother’s place."” “‘ Bring three petticoats
to college.”

PAULINE.

P. S. Cookies were good, only they're all gone. The girls are getting positively
rude to each other. Don’t worry about me getting the measles, but since you want me
to, I'll write every day to let you know how husky I am.

One Hundred Ninety-eight

Scotty — at Co-op —I want a pack of paper with lines going both wavs.
Tt ao at fir
OSes ko eue mall

May 18.
family —
Am sending a copy of what I was inspired with from reading the Quarterly all
day today.
“ Setting — A college hall bedroom. The bed is brownish, the ceiling blackish.
Ambrosine Olp
(Crashing into the room and tossing her scarf over the chandelier) Hold me,
hold me —
Claudia Bump
(Protruding from the clothes which she is endeavoring to sort according to herself
and Ambrosine) Don’t offer any of that chapel music to me.
Ambrosine
(Resting her right toe on the table) Huh?
Claudia
(Fighting her way out from the midst of the clothes, with a rubber in one hand, a
dancing pump in the other, and a jersey skirt clinging to her nose) I cut chapel today
because a sing was scheduled. ‘Their sings are an offense to my auricles. Don't, I
command, present yourself before me with one of the filthy rags in your mouth.
Georgia Pell
(Entering with the composure of a Greele God, and seating herself on the radiator,
after circling three shoes, a tongue, a rug in a ball, a cup and saucer, and a box of
apples) May I offer you a tooth-pick, Ambrosine?
Ambrosine
(Flaring out her nostrils and flourishing the bolster) Shut up! Get out! What
you always in here for anyway? Get out, I say. (Advancing with the mattress.)

Claudia
(Endeavoring to interpose) Peace —— (and stepping into the saucer) Ambrosine,
pick this room up.
Ambrosine

(Flinging down the mattress and bouncing herself upon it) I’m going to move.
I’m goin’ where I won't have any room-mate with a bean for a beezer, where I can tal——
Claudia
Go then. (Retiring with Georgia under the bed while Ambrosine pries the rugs
from her clothes and secretes them in her trunk.)
Ambrosine
(Pitching her trunk out of the window and giving evidences of following) Good-
bye. This is the end.
Claudia
(Crawling out from the bed) This is the end.
Georgia
(Lifting up the bed and stepping out) This is the end.

The Quarterly is the most literary magazine in college.
Affectionately, PAULINE.

P. S, I haven’t one measle yet.

One Hundred Ninety-nine

Hazel Lee — at Co-op — Do vou keep vanilla covers for physics experiments ?

Dear Pauline,
Why haven't you written?

Will come immediately in case you have them.

Dear Mother,

TELEGRAM

Write tonight.
MorTHER.

May 21.

Sorry I scared you, but the Ped came out and I’ve been reading it. Quarantine

lifted tomorrow, darn it.

Your daughter,

P. S. You were real nice while I was blue.

tions much longer.

PAULINE.

I couldn’t have stood those publica-

STATE COLLEGE

There is the girl

Who went to a big city
High School,

And danced and painted,
And spoke familiarly

Of cigs and drinks

At thirteen.

She goes to Proms

As a matter of course,

And never hunts wildly
For Men

The night before.

She gets thirty-year old blonds
With shredded wheat mustachios
For tender-yeared
Underclassmen.

Then there is the man
Who never had a girl
Until he came to State,
When ten

Immediately

Swarmed around him.
By Senior year

Two Hundred

Frosh — at Co-op —Can I have a package of plain ruled paper?

He has become Sultanic,
And bosses girls

With rude assurance.

And then there are the men
Who shy away, and stand

In corners,

Talking philosophy, while girls
Ogle by,

Wishing to Pete

They'd dance.

Then we have

The small-town girl

Who never danced with a man
In her life,

And wants to know

Just how it’s done.

She trembles off to Prom
Without powder on her nose,
And talks for weeks

Of the wild time she had;
Or mourns sourly a day
And swears off forever.

ar oF F al) mar VE frre tr re
be AUaREBT © Pe: GUE + Iie

CALENDAR—Continued

Oct. 18. Hank Van Aken discovers three dropped stitches in her blue sweater.

19. Margaret Kirtland informs her mother that Ed. | will keep her too busy to
darn stockings or dry dishes.

22. Epidemic of hair-roberting sweeps College. Cerena Butts and Margaret
Gorse, Freshmen, succumb.

25. Harold Holmes calls on a girl.

26. Marjorie Potter is assaulted for hacking up a Quarterly contribution.

27. Ethel Rusk is bowled over by the spurting of a drinking fountain.

28. Dot Howell and Pete Feeney snap off two inches of finger nail playing
tiddly-winks.

29. Dr. Hastings plucks a black hair from his goatee.

Nov. 1. Allie Becker cuts classes because all her hair-nets are torn.

5. First episode of the Potter-Cobb fracas.

13. Three boards and seventeen nails added to the = N K frat house.

19. Soul-kissers organize.

22. Baldwin gets really angry and says “‘ Gosh darn”’ out loud.

25. Four Freshmen stay in Albany for the dance and weep all day Thanks-
giving.

26. 376 doctors in 342 different towns are called into service on indigestion cases.

29. Helen Guldi postpones sitting for her Ped picture because of a Thanksgiving
pimple.

Harry Schwadelson
—Oh, my, no. I

Helen Goldsmith —

Don’t you object to

. 3 is wouldn't wast my flu-
such a large class?

ency on less.

(To be continued)

Two Hundred One

Marion McCormick — at Co-op — Do vou keep stamped envelopes with stamps on?

TURP SICK ERY

Cling to him, my lady,
And undulate,

Point your toe, my lady,
Backward,

With your chin upon

His wishbone.

Slowly undulate,

Over the crest of the wave.
Point your toe, my lady,
Bend Forward.

Like a rocking Tower of Ejffel,

That is the Camel Walk.

4

Cultivate your ankle bone

And your ankle muscle —
Toddle!
Springs on your heels,
Hinges in your knees —
= Learn the vertical rhythm,
ae Learn to jounce a wicked toddle
On a square half-inch.

Knees as stiff as the German army’s
Marching with the goose step.

Advance as ruthless as the German army’s
Through the enemy land.

Stalk down the floor!

Promenade!

Scandal walk!

And let nobody stop you.

Knock ’em down!

Two Hundred Two

Coleman (night while the Ped was in embryo) — Well, ladies, isn’t it time vou
went to bed?
Watch the wind in a rye field
Smoothly waving up and down,
Up and down,

Slowly,

Evenly.

Watch the motion.

Emulate its grace,

And do the cat paw,

If you have a figure like

A stalk of rye.

Otherwise —

Don't.

Marjorie Smith —I feel like a date.
Bee Buchanan — You look like a prune.

CAN YOU IMAGINE THAT ONCE ——

Blondy Donahue was led docilely off to Sunday School in a Buster Brown collar?
Pauline Feeney had the mumps?

Elton Hakes wore curls and a hair ribbon?

Harriet Holmes played tag and turned summersaults?
Gertrude Southard had to be taken to school?

Frank Bliss was spanked for using a bad word?

Alida Ballagh had no front teeth for months?

Winifred Darling was considered a delicate baby?
Harriet Rising went to bed at seven-thirty ?

Ted Cassavant sucked his thumb?

Katherine McGarrahan’s mother used to comb her hair?
Gladys Teetsell could only say “Da Da’?

Kathryn Ball bawled?

Ted Hill wrote notes to a little girl?

Helen O’Brien’s hair was straight?

Shorty Hathorn curled up in a corner to read?

Helen Chase was considered big for her age?

Mina Larmon made mud pies?

Hugo Polt waved a rattle and threw silverware around?
Gertrude Burns was without hair or eyebrows?

Two Hundred Three

Helen Metz — Large fat thrills!

Jan.

Dean Pierce —I don’t suppose you remember it, but when I was a little girl —

GIRLS MUST DO A MANS WORK HERE

CALENDAR—Continued

Billets doux come out. Thirty faint in crush around mail box.
Schwadelson gets his hair cut.

Schwadelson excused from teaching because of a severe cold.

Soul kissers do a rushing business.

Second episode in Potter-Cobb fracas.

K. McGarrahan receives a poem for the Ped and is vicious for three hours.

Was Wednesday.

Roof started on S N K frat house.

Peggy Underwood and Carol Traver are not seen together for three hours.

R. P. I. wins in hockey game. State College finishes a strong last.

An article on State College athletics appears in the Knickerbocker Press.

Isabel Appleton’s doctor refuses to allow her to eat at the Cafeteria any
longer.

The Cafeteria manager institutes a suit against I. A.’s doctor for taking away
its most satisfactory patron.

Breslaw gets an ad for the Quarterly.

Mary Stoddard comes in through the transom at 27 So. Lake Ave.

Exame 1? 3:51 * 7 9°74

Rumor that ninety Freshmen are flunked out.

Pauline George announces her immediate departure due to a nervous break-
down.

Rumor that the majority of the Frosh, half the Sophs, three Juniors and
seventeen Seniors are to be busted out.

(To be continued)

Two Hundred Four

PROM

THE NEw DRESS
THE REFUSAL OF THE THIRD

MAN {NVITEO

THE LOST ORDERS
A MAN _AT LAST!

THE MORNING AFTER

Two Hundred Five

Prof. Walker — Belgium is such a small country that if you're not careful you
step oul of it.

Us Sas

=e

IGUE |

—
staat
ain"
Mm

THE GREAT LOVER

(Due acknowledgment to the watery source)
I have been so great a lover; filled my days
With all the joys this institution has to offer.
Now, e’er graduation takes me to oblivion,
I would put down for all the world to read
The blessings I have here received ——
These:
The juicy walks before the college steps,
Where only stilts or a canoe avail
To get one dry shod into class. The noble dial
So accurate and true. The classroom atmosphere
Smothering relentlessly with hot and oft-breathed air,
Or chilling to the bone as chance decrees.
The smiting odor of the locker rooms,
The decorated mirror to the right
Where one may see the “* losts and founds,”
But not his face. The bells that ring
Upon the inspiration of a whim. Or perhaps
Ring not at all. The library,
Heated at least, where one may sit
Upon the window sill or on the floor
But rarely on a chair, because the chairs
Count one to every twenty-five who long to sit.

The slivers picked up in aesthet, and extricated with great pain.

The baths provided hot, revivifying.

The drowsy chapel where one rests in peace,

Or might, but that the seats sag down at times,

And leave one doubtful of support.

The papers far and wide

Reeking of old lunches. Dear memories!

And those and thousand others throng to me!
But they shall pass

With graduation. Oh, I suppose

That somewhere I shall find another set of loves

To howl about. But the best I’ve known

Stay here, and change not.

Generations come and go

But these stay on forever.

Scotty —Is this Billy Strain so popular?

Flynn —I should say!

the fellows.

Two Hundred Six

I saw him take five hair nets out of his pocket to show

Ped Board (in a chorus from the News office) — Get out!
PBEaN

“x ‘ wea, J. Cs For got

||_ _§—Fx em and stood ‘up!
es ae — a) a

te a SDS ——

€. BECKWITH

CALENDAR—Continued

Feb.

I. Last window casing added to X N K frat house. It is now ready for use.

2. Rumor that State College is to close down.

4. Scrubs play Varsity. Scrubs win.

7. Bruce appears with a part in his hair.

8. Frances Stelson kisses a man publicly in the halls. Great scandal, until
brotherly relationship is exposed.

9. Marks come out. Pauline George announces that she will stay.

10. Thirty nervous breakdowns reported.

12. Twenty-three Freshmen resolve to change their majors.

13. Dean Horner applys for an appropriation for new office furniture.

16. Alida Ballagh walks home with the Western Avenue Saint Bernard and
$230.00 of Ped money.

17. Doris Butler gets up at three o'clock in the morning to write down seven
jokes for the Ped.

18. The joke editors retire into seclusion for two weeks until they shall regain
their usual joviality.

19. Dot Bennit chases up Dived Halstead to detect her in a pose for the Ped.

20. Dot Bennit is almost arrested for shadowing. M. Grahn speaks a good
word for her.

21. 1921 Pedagogue Board, after doing personals all day, wills Crabbe’s
Svnomyms to the 1922 Board.

23. Reg. Bruce sprinkles mange cure in Government class. Dot Adams, with
handkerchief to nose, leaves the room.

24. Exhibition of famous pictures placed in main hall.

25. Charles and Mary Callahan are the only persons in College without stiff
necks.

(To be continued)
Two Hundred Seven

K. McGarrahan (after reading and punctuating 200 manuscripts) — Put these in
an envelope, comma, and leave them on the desk, period.

rif an ae Sd ee BAO tr TH
LSPEeE GUE | : te?

Fae

FACULTY PHONE CALLS

Hello Gene? Hello! —— This is Harold. Where’s my necktie?
Well, how could / know? Why didn’t you look at me before I came out?
That’s because you had breakfast so late. Well, never mind about that. Can you
bring one over? ——I can’t go around looking like this, and I refuse to dismiss my
classes Never mind, just a minute — It’s all right. I’m borrowing one of Charles.
Don't let it happen again.

Mrs. Hastings? Yes I wonder if you realize how much I am suffering
today I have managed to mislay my pipe. Maud Yes, the cob
Oh, to be sure! I remember now Yes, I recall you said you were going to air it.
I forgot to make a note of it here at the office so I wouldn't miss it today Yes,
well, I'm sorry to have bothered you Bring it in if it should rain. I cherish that
pipe. Good bye.

Is this you, Miss Rafferty? This is Ambrose. My skeleton has disappeared
— No, I am sure it isn’t in my office No, it isn’t in the laboratory. —— No, I
am certain it couldn’t have been thrown out. Mary is too afraid of it. Yes, dear,
I wish you would look. It may be in the garret —— All right, I'll hold the wire ——
It isn’t! But I need it. I must have a skeleton somewhere I am positive
I had one In the car? Oh, I guess I did. Yes, I remember I did hear a
rattle as I drove down this morning. ——I thought it was the muffler off, though.
Yes, I am sure it is there. Good bye, dear.

Mrs. K? ——R. H. ——I'm sending the boy home for my 4A Kodak. ——I
need it at once. Don’t know — guess it’s in the packing box under the desk in my
den See here, that gun’s loaded. Take care! Yes, the anastigmat lens ——
That Pedagogue editor wants me to take a picture of the bulletin board ——— Yes, right
away. Just the connotative light I want will be there in half an hour. Yes

Thanks.

Hello, this is Joseph ——- Yes —— I’m at the business office I just happened
to think I left David down in the cellar Yes, we were playing down there
this morning —— Yes, he'll be all right ——- Oh, no, wait 'till the cake is out of the
oven, of course. ——I didn’t want to bother you but I just happened to remember
about it, and I thought you might wonder where he was —— Yes, I guess I did lock
the door You're welcome —— Good bye.

Hello
that apple sauce, and another egg, and some bacon and a couple more rolls, and a glass
of milk —— He said he had only had two dishes of cereal, an egg and three rolls this
That’s not enough for a growing lad. Can’t work a whole morning on
And say! Give him that bag of doughnuts to eat on the way down!

I’m sending Charles home for more breakfast. —— Give him some of

morning
that
Ali right!

Two Hundred Eight

Dr. Richardson — There will be no bunnets worn in this class.

{ES cS RE oe ee eS Se ee ee ee eS EE

ae
= rr
¥ CF az ed ; ee saa r
ei ral ELS = GUE _ |

A P. T. INTERVIEWS A PRINCIPAL

Do you have a wife?

How long have you been married?

How many men are teaching under you?

What are their respective ages, complexion, tastes, and shoe sizes?

Are the teachers expected to scrub the blackboards?

Do you pay by the day or the hour?

Would the local bank take my endorsement?

Is there any chance of my being assaulted by wild animals or tramps on my way
to school over a lonely country road?

Does the only landlady in town give a varied diet?

How do the complexions of those living under her appear?

How many movie shows are in your town?

How many garages?

Where is the nearest dance hall?

Do I have the minister’s son or the superintendent's daughter in any of my classes?

What do I teach?
STUNT GETTER UP

I sing a song of stunts. Freshman stunt in chapel,
Sophomore, Junior, Senior stunt in chapel, Post exam jubilee,
G. A. A. party, Stunts to amuse the faculty.

Hallowe'en and Thanksgiving stunts, Moving-Up Day stunts,
And all the rest. I sing of those who see them

And of those who perform.

But most of all I sing of the heroic martyr who got them up;
Who thought them out in the sweat of her brow

Toiling many weary nights while her room mate glowered from the bed;
Who asked and asked and asked to get someone to perform;
Who came to rehearsals in the echoing gym

With one other girl who could not sing or dance or act

But wanted to help;

Who settled fights;

Who kept people at dragging practices by main force

When they wanted to go home and read the Cosmopolitan;
Who asked the last impossible sticks

To fill in places

After the first to promise had backed out;

Who walked miles of street

Looking for additional touches for someone's costume;

Who furnished the pins and twine. and rouge

And got her cast together

And prompted from behind the scenes —

And collapsed into a wreck next day.

Two Hundred Nine

Miss Keim — If you think you'll stretch your neck before your dress is completed,
run a shir string through it.

re ice
_PE GOGUE / WEEE

ain

EEE

CALENDAR — Continued

Mar. 7. ‘Ted Cassavant sprains his voice.
10. Mail box cluttered with appeals from teacher's agencies.
11. Martha Parry hears from the man she asked to Prom in September.
14. Seventeen Freshmen attend a smoker.
15. Seventeen Freshmen cut classes.
16. Katie Drury stumbles over the bulletin board.
18. Lucile Rouse wears her red tie.
21. Lucile Rouse wears her red tie.
22. Lucile Rouse wears her red tie.
23. Lucile Rouse wears her red tie.
24. Miss Pierce speaks seriously to Dot Bennit about her carrying around Max
Zuckerman’s picture.
Helen Chase gives Mr. Hidley a constructive criticism.
25. Gertrude Southard sends a man home at 9:30 so she can prepare for a
class next day.
29. Ruth Gifford collapses in a desperate attempt to get her locker open.
30. Flynn arrives at College at 8:15, and is insulted by the class standing to
receive him.
31. Mary Callahan fights in the corridors about carrying chairs. Miss Pierce
speaks to her about corrupting her girls’ vocabularies.

i THE
FRESHMAN

AT THE
SMOKER
(To be continued)

Two Hundred Ten

Ruth Tegfft —I didn’t go to church last Sunday and I broke my shoe lace.

Two Hundred Eleven

Heard at St. Stephen's Game — Baldy must be the school jester, and the coach
put him in for a joke.

a rr rr . :
Gir 6° i : ert + | aca a- Hat Thee
a al To OGUE il l Da

THASSMY LUCK
Katherine Stratton — Say, I hear Leland’s deserted

The door opens — Nellie.

The critic! Helen Metz — Oh, no. He came back to her.
Miss So-and-So wanted — Katherine Stratton — She turn’ ’im out?

A principal ! Helen Metz — She did not. She hugged and
Horrors! kissed him.

And I have on Katherine Stratton — Served him right.

The Sweater

Father calls,

“That horrible thing,”
And mother says,

“Tf J knit so

I wouldn't wear it.”

The Kid remarks:

“ And she defends it yet.”
Thassmy luck.

A telephone call!
“* Miss So-and-So,
Can you come
To my office?

A principal.”
Delirium tremens!
And I have on

A middy blouse

To celebrate ux
A day off from teaching. = ral at
Thassmy luck. = — v oF ¥

The door opens — cB iS a Se w Ls % Zz 35 *
A principal!
Oblivion.

For I have on

A week-old set

Of cuffs and collars,
A riddled hair-net, :
Aprd unpolished shoes. Must be my sister.
Theassmy luck.

Frosh — Who is that girl?
Eira Williams — Lessee! That's my
hat, and Hank's coat, and Flo’s scarf.

Two Hundred Twelve

P. T. — Please sit down as far as possible.
AN i

CALENDAR — Continued

April Reggie Bruce bets 50c that the Ped won't be out by Moving-Up Day.

Joe Kaag is announced at Root’s as the Barrel.

Joe Kaag starts a movement to further correct pronunciation of his name.

Beulah Thomas abstains one whole day from pushing back her spectacles.

Mr. Kirtland loses MS. page 967 on “The Verb In Its Adjectival

Function” from his book called ‘* Grammar In a Flash.”

8. Prof. Mahar detects Linnie Clark in a sight translation and winks at her.

Il. Dr. Painter addresses a group of Boy Scouts on tying knots. He gives a
delightfully humorous interpretation of the subject.

14. Amy Clubley has a new hat and frat pin.

15. Thompson, addressing class, ‘‘ Sing, you spotted snakes.”

27. Dean Pierce, to Freshmen, ‘‘ There are three kinds of dancing: graceful,
ungraceful and disgraceful. For example: Miss Card, Baldwin, and
SP ae) |

29. Gym exhibition in armory. Kaag’s aesthetic dance well received.

May 3. ‘Telephone call rouses the K A house at 1:00 A. M. ‘‘ Does Harriet
Rising live here?’’ After being informed that she does, the person
remarks, “Oh, yes, I thought so, but I wanted to make sure. Thank
you.”

State College swimming party at Y. W. C. A. pool.
Plumbers called to Y. W. C. A. to clear clogged pipes.

4

Bs

6. 400 Pedagogues arrive at College and are stored in a secret place.
0

2

ee

Gladys Teetsell and Margaret McCarthy spread rumors that the Ped is out.
M. McCarthy holds grievance meeting about detention of Pedagogues.
Petition is started.

13. Pedagogue Board laughs in its sleeve.

16. Reg Bruce begins to be worried about his bet.

17. Three strong men try to steal the secreted Pedagogues.

18. Edna Lowerree swears out a warrant for their arrest.
Moving-Up Day — Pedagogue comes out. Reg Bruce loses fifty cents and cusses.
The Pedagogue Board retires underground for several weeks.

Billy Strain to B. B. — How many dances you going to give me for Senior Ball?
B. B. —lI've given away all I could possibly spare.

B. S.— How many d’ you give away?

B. B. — Four.

B. S.— Four out of twenty! Gee, why don’t you two stay home and play the

Victrola >

Two Hundred Thirteen

Edna Lowerree — We've been overcharged two cents.

: ga
Bigger © grind

“Pan hater

BASS

Mel - Takeative Bet Aiete

Nomp! timed,

Two Hundred Fourteen

Doc. Painter — No excuse unless for death or marriage.

Most Popular Faculty
ProFessor RISLEY
Dean Horner
ProFEssoR WALKER

Most Popular Student
KATHERINE BALL
Mary GRAHN
SHorty HATHORNE

Prettiest
GERTRUDE BURNS
BEATRICE BUCHANAN
Amy CLUBLEY

Most Dignified
Harriet HoLMEs
PAULINE FEENEY
AIDA BALLAGH
DorotHy HowELi

Most Eccentric
Divep HatsTEAD

W ittiest
Mary GRAHN
Katy Drury
Harriet HoLmMEs

Biggest Vamp
JANE GREEN
(Amy CLUBLEY
) Katuryn MERCHANT
JANE McKENNA

<=>
es fr F F r fF r
f PE GUE _
STATISTICS

Most College Spirit
KATHERINE BALL
Peccy UNDERWoopD
Eunice Rice

Biggest Bluff
BLtonpy DoNAHUE
Mary GRAHN
Howarpb FLYNN

Nerviest
Mary GRAHN
Haro_p BALDWIN
KATHERINE MERCHANT

Laziest
Howarpb FLYNN
Francis DONAHUE
RALPH BAKER

Most Talkative
Max ZUCKERMAN
HELEN CHASE
Mary GRAHN

Least Talkative
Tep Hitt
Grace TORRENCE
Dora PiERSMA

Best Dancer
HELEN WALSH
JAMES CARROLAN
MarTHA Parry
Haroip BALDWIN

Best Athlete
Tep CassAvANT
ADRIAN JOHNSON
LELA CACKENER

Biggest Woman Hater
Haroip HoLmes
Tep Hitt
HowarbD FLYNN

Biggest Man Hater
Divep HALsTEAD
Doris Davey
Myrry WILLIAMS

Class Doll
BEATRICE BUCHANAN
KATHERINE McGarRRAHAN
Francis DONAHUE

Biggest Grind
Divep HatstTEap
GERTRUDE SOUTHARD
Mar joriE PoTTER

Biggest Social Hit
(JANE GREEN
) Francis DoNAHUE

JoHN M

cCGREGOR

RuTtH Ettis

Two Hundred Fifteen

Professor Sayles — Upon this apple tree which I planted large juicy pears soon

ripened.

kest Spot”, en!

Two Hundred Sixteen

MONOLOGUE AT A TEA

Yes, it’s getting warmer out.

Oh — an A without a doubt.

I don’t care — one lump or two.
(Let’s go home — oh, gee, please do!)
Have you spoken to Miss Pierce?
Say — Marie looks simply fierce!
Cream or lemon? I don’t know!
(Oh, my heavens, can’t we go?)

I hoped I'd get a bite to eat —

Oh, golly gee! My poor tired feet!
I don’t drink tea unless I must.
(Say, if I don’t get out I'll bust.)
Come on down the line with me —
Glad it’s short (—o—o—h gee!
Can't we sneak out home some way?

This has been a fearful day!)

Dot Collins —I must flutter along to class.

State Scolleg Snews

Vou. I. No.1

Montly Chelloe? May 15th

ANOTHER POTTER-
COBB FRACUS IN
IN THE liBRARY

“The Last Straw” Says Miss
Cobb

Three Freshmen were carryed
out of the State College library in
a dead faint last Friday after wit-
nessing a heated fight between Miss
Cobb and Miss Potter, ‘21. The
last named has for the seventh
time been denied the use of the
library forever. Miss Cobb ac-
cusses the ‘21 girl of an accumu-
lation of offences. She had made
notes in the margins of the Ameri- |
can Journal of Education. she
had found a chair to low and
elected to sitton a set of hyper-ex-
pensive books to make it higher.
She had failed to bring back a
copy of the A. H. R., thus, incon- |
veniencing dozens of students, be- |
sides reporting the loss of a valuble |
clipping and Shakespeeres Vari- |
orums editions. For four years
Miss Potter has been a continual
snource of trouble,” states the
librarian, “ losing, ruining and for-
geting books. I can’t endure it
any longer.” Miss Potter claims |
one of her students took the Vari-
orums, but can concoct no excuses
for the other offences.

MARY CALLAHAN AD-
VICES DEEN PIERCE

“Beware of Men” says Mary

A rude cabman occasioned many
palpitations of our fair Mary's
heart during the late carstrike
when he attempted to lure her
away. Mary entered the cab at
the corner of Pearl and State.
The driver suggested a ride — be-
fore depositing his fare (fair?) at
her destination whereupon: Mary
promptly desended and defended
herself with snowballs and vitupera-
tion. Next day she warned Dean
Pierce. “ Men are jus’ lookin’ fer
girls like us!" she said.

— we welcome criticism —

13 Per

AHT FOR AHT’S SAKE

The aesthetic soul of State Col-
lege was thrilled to the backbone
(Ed. note:—Do souls have back-
bones?) by the glorious Art Ex-
hibit in February. students stood
awestruck before the marvelous
wonders of the brush. In fact:
they cut classes right and left to
feast their senses on the fairy
palace setting of the halls. Back
and forth they paced, avoiding un-
apprecative professors; whose mun-
dane minds could not comprehend

their higher plane! And barking

their shins on hall benches while
their eyes never left the riot of
color and form on the walls; and
their mouths never shut. Miss
Cramer showed her customary un-
erring taste by exhibiting various
of Maxfield Parish’s masterpiec’es
among the lesser lights. There
was one fairy wonder sort of thing
in the rotunda depikting a man in
the clutch of the fell Circe’s net.
The background oozes the famous
Parish blue, an eerie shade which
still haunts my dreams.

SCANDULOUS RIOT IN
COLLEGE — FITH PRE-
CINCT CALLED IN FOR
AID

Wardle Woman Arrested —
Ellwood, Bellow, Bliss and
Holstead injured

In room 202 today Miss Ethelyn
Wardle was violently accussed of
gambling. She had just offered
her class blind numbers by which
to draw questions: when a plain
clothes man burst in the window,
aving shinnied up one of our
noble Corinthian columns. He
grasped Miss Wardle's back hair,
stating in an unnecceserily stentorian
tone: that she was arrested for
gambling. Miss Wardle halled off
and batted him one in the beezer
where at the hitherto petrified class
sprang to life and rushed loyally to |
the rescue. The detected blew al
whistle and immediately 10 men |
appeared from their camooflage on |
the limbs of the elm tree outside
the window. A free-for-all en-
sued in which Lucile Elwood was
tripped up and badly bruised,
Alida Prune Bellow lost consider-
ble hair, Frank Bliss’s eye teeth
were sprained, and Dived Halstead
suffered a dislocation of her spec-
tacles. It was not until the fifth
precinct was called on that the riot
was quelled—

Dont fail to come out for the
game. We cant play without you.

FIVE FACE CRUCIAL
DATE

Purple and Gold loses to Mol-
gate Maggies

Thousands of spectators saw the
knights of the Purple and Gold
crushed to earth last Friday in the
A. H. S. arena only like Truth to
rise again. more than one “ faire
ladye ” wept to see her painted
warrior totter bravely to defeat;
while the blood thirsty maroons
pressed relentlessly at his heels.
The scrimmage in this annul tilt
with the Molgate five started off
speedily by the enemy tipping the
pill, thus causing the score board
to read 2-0. In the next five min-
utes the maroon warreors netted
24 counts by caging twelve balls.
At the end of the game the little
black numbers bore the hideous
message: that we were defeated
132-12.

The coach has had our old
timers out every-night since the
game and has been doing some
rough work! The next time we
meet the brave collegians, we shall
leave ‘em cold.

Notice of Y. W. C. A.

The weakly meeting of the
Y. M. C. A. was held this Wed-
nesday. Miss Informed spoke in-
spiringly on the subject “ Supply-
ing the Heathen of Africa with
Powder Puffs” The audience,
consisting of H. Holmes, listened

attentively.
Page 2

STATE SCOLLEGE SNEWS |

Vol. I May 15 No. I,

Published by the profoundess
menttality this college can produce:
as often as they thinku p some-
thing momentuss

Advertizing rates easy!

Articles due on eday be-fore
apperance as we do no prof-
reeding;

EDITER IN CHIEF
I. M. Trite
Maniging Editer
Suchuh Gumpe

ASSOCIATE EDITORS
1. B. Vague
Idy Ott
Luyvtta Gush
REPORTERS
Lilla Lie
C. Crookidd

GIVE US AIR!

If anyone was ever present
downstairs when the dore of the
News Office was opened, they
would remember the bad air rush-
ing out as they went in. Rather, it

didn’t rush out but remained within, |

stagnent and stuffy. Can't you
realize the bad effect of this at-
mosphere on those using this office ?
Can't you realize the inevitable bad
disposition resulting in the mind of
the editor? Can't you realize how
this lack of ventilation will cause a
lack or ratiosination in your pub-
lications. It is for you to take this
matter in hand. We are your
servents, doing our best to put out
your publications. we suggest ven-
tilators in the stairs which form
the roof of the office, and a Ven-
tilating System which will rotate
the air in there. A small sum of
money is needed it is true; but
with proper and enthusiastic Col-
lege Spirit on the part of all —It
May Be DONE.

Dear Editor

Under the crassly ignorant
regime now in vogue at State, the
situation of a girl whose watch has
stopped is pitiable indeed. She
dashes to the door of her class
room and, there is balked by the
vital question — has the bell rung
or has it not?" She looks help- |
lessly up and down the deserted |
hall and they echo back her querry.
She presses her dispairing eye

| against the maddenly limited key
hole and receives no aid. She sees
but unidentifiable portions _ of
people. It might be her class in
there, and it might not? If she
walks in, and classes have not
passed she is confrunted by the
embarasing necesity of walking out
again, While rude eyes follow her
and rude snickers trip her. Is her
dilemma not truly heartrending.

Yet the situation is so simple!
If the college would only have a
heart and put windows on the
doors!

Hopefully
Tardy Often.

Wanted
Girl frosh to scrub Minerva’'s
face.

Dear Editor:

Having been in college 4 years; |

and having sat in the chairs in the
Class Rooms all that time;— it
seems to me the attenshun should
be called to the fact that they

make people Round-Shouldered. |

Freshmen are strait and upright
when they come here, but after
several years there shoulders grad-
ually round foreward, due to the
curve of the chairs to which they
must fit them. I think the Faculty
should consider the matter & bring
it before the trustees or the legis-
lature. The chairs are besides in-
convenient on account the little
flap at the side, noisy, easily broken,
& for making round shoulders, as
I have brot out. Let us hope that
this letter will have the desired
| affect.
Senior.

Dear Editor

The impression which a person
receives upon entering this our col-
lege for the first time is awful. To
the right looms the ever untidy bul-
letin board with month old-notices
cluttered with pictures and an-
nouncements. Straight in front is
minerva trailing a snake weirdedly

| while she faces the world with a

dirty face. Why, oh why, in the
name f our College Prep can't we |
have a Clear-Up-Day and hoe off
the bulletin board, scrub minnie’s
face, and pick up lunch papers? ? |
Also, and above this, let us ask
the scrub women to confine their
laudable efforts to a proper time
and not suffocate innocent studes |
with the dust f their sweepings. |

Indig. yours,
A Son of Alma Mater

STATE SCOLLEG SNEWS

Your presence is imperious at the
| music Club next Monday. At a
great expense, we have arranged a
| truly thrilling programm and we
wish you would come out and
| listen. Bring a book if you must,
but come! Please, please come.

Have you signed the “ Make the
| Faculty keep Still in the LiBrary ”
| petition? Have some pep. Do it
now.

Why does a chicken cross the
road?

To get to the other side.

I wish I was a little rock
A’ sittin’ on a hill
A’ doin’ nothin’ all day long

* % * * * *
* * * * * *
Etc. * % * * *

D'you hear the latest?
Noo.

There isn’t any Santa Claus!

Use the Hackem Razor

And your friends
Won't know you

SLOW & FATT
Confectioners

| You get sicker on less money here

Antonio Gryzyewakski
&
Leonardo Kapilliewstroski

“ Say it with flowers”

WAC’S RESTAURANT
Half-fried chicken Leather pies
Card-board cake

Grease chops

Buy your hosiery of
RIPP AND RUNNE

You'll not get tired of them

Buy your school supplies
at

The CUT PRICE PHARMACY
Prices Cut & added to the original

SORORITY NOTES

AQ

Ollie Becker ‘21 lost 2 frat pins
last night.

Catharine Drury ‘22 went to
bed at 8 o'clock one evening last
week.

Frances Reeks ‘22 has had sev-
eral telephone calls this week.

H ®

Florence Stanbro ‘21 spent the
weekend at her home.

Madalyn Leitzell called at the
house Sunday evening after church.

Margaret Kirtland ‘22 spent Fri-

day night at the house.
Myf. Williams lost her English |

notebook last week.

5 ay

Lela Cackner ‘22
week-end at her home.

Informal birthday party Tues.
evening in honor of Peg. Under-
wood.

William Strain ‘21 was a dinner
guest Sunday, Tuesday Wednesday |
and Saturday.

Dorothy Howell ‘21 spent the |
week-end in Highland Falls. |

the

spent

KA

Helen Guldi '21 nearly drowned
in the Normanskill Wed. after-
noon. Fortunately the water was
only two inches deep.

Mrs. Crane called at the house
this week-end to administer a dose |
of hypophosphites to her daughter,
Margaret.

Harriet Rising ‘21 spent the
week-end at her home in Hoosick
Falls.

Mary Grahn spent the week-end
at the house with a basket f pears.

x = 0

Marjory Sinnott ‘23 spent the
week-end at her home in Hartford.

Helen O'Brien ‘21 spent the
week-end in New York City get-
ting her teeth.

An informal birthday party was
held at the Lodge Thursday eve-
ning in honor of Anna O'Neils
brother.

Elizabeth Cary called at the
House Sunday between 2:15 and
2:30.

AE®

Anna Reeback '22 was a dinner
guest Sunday evening. We didn’t
have much to eat.

Rose Breslau ‘21 spent the week
end in Glens Falls.

STATE SCOLLEG SNEWS
ot Lee

TA

Page 3

& BROS.

ONLY BRIDGE

BUILDERS

\F You ARE THINKING oF
BUILDING ANY BRIDEES

CONSULT

An informal birthday dinner was
given Saturday in honor of Helen
Goldsmith.

rK®

Dorothy Banner ‘20, was a
guest at the house Saturday from
4:00 to 4:10 P. M.

Informal birthday dinner Mon-
day evening was given in honor of
Catharine Collier ‘21.

Marion Rose '23, Ethel Cum-
mings "23 Florence Fitch, Catha-
rine and Susan Collier ‘21 and ‘23
spent the week end at their homes.

ZINK
Gus Crable ‘20, has obtained a

situation tutoring two boys en route
‘o California. Once there, Gus
expects to settle in California.

KAP
Ralph Baker ‘21 lost 6 Ibs last

week.

WS!

SONGS OF §. C. T.

Love Nest — Lower corridor.

My Litle Margie—Stid &
Potter.

Japanese Sand Man — Beik.

Young Man's Fancy — Gertrude
Burns.

Whispering — Library gossip.

Darling — Win ‘n J

ess.

We are proud of our dear Alma
Mater, arnt we?

We have lots of college spirit
here, haven't we?

Then by all means let us all get
together and vow not to use
naughty words in the corridors.

Buy a Ped.

If you answer an advertizement
mention the Snews.

Root for your teem

ih iF r
re 4 ERE PE GUE | |

REJECTION PAGE
Some of the Write-Ups That Didn’t Go In

Romina RasH

She is a quiet demure lassie but if you give her half a chance you'd be surprised!
She is a true blue friend indeed — always ready with a cheery smile and word! We
predict a great future for her.

ANASTASIA DooLiTTLE

We love her cheery smile and the twinkle in her eye. Some think her quiet, but

she is full of pep, really! She is the kind of friend to last. We predict a great future
for her.

CERENA CLAPSADDLE

Cheerful, generous, helpful — that’s Cerena! She isn’t as shy as she looks and
she is a true blue friend and a good pal to all. We predict a great future for her.

WEaTINA Morey

Wheatina has pensive eyes you would not dare to look in and lie. If you need a
friend ask her. She is never too busy to give you a cheery word of sympathy. We

predict a great future for her.
Aurora BENSON

Aurora is a winsome lassie whose happy smile will be missed when she goes. Is
she a peach? We'll say so! We predict a great future for her.

O. MarcarinE NaGAHAMA

Margarine is a lovable miss. We adore seeing her smile. She is a wonderful
friend and we predict a great future for her.

[We long for a girl who frowns and is not a friend and whose oblivion is imminent. ]

Peppy, Reppy, Rah, Rah, Rah!

Full of life and here we are!

Why is a class room like a Ford?
A lot of nuts with a crank in front.

Did you ever see a porch swing?
Did you ever see a board walk?
Did you ever see a house fly >

And so on ad nauseum.

Two Hundred Twenty

Miss Stuart — No talking in the library.

as

FINIS

At this place it is incumbent upon the editor to make his final speech before a

hurried withdrawal from the railings of mankind.

In editing the 1921 Pedagogue we have constantly striven for originality and
good nature. If we have in any way missed our ideal, we ask for leniency in your
judgment of us. Cruelty we have earnestly avoided, and should anything in this book

seem to offend, we apologize for our blindness.

To our adviser, Dr. Hastings, we owe many thinks for wise suggestions and much
needed help. As for the members of the Board, no acknowledgment here could give

adequate praise to their place in making the book a success.

We omit the historic boast — “* the best Pedagogue ever ” — as a hasty generaliza-
tion. Moreover, we shall not say the work was difficult and obstacles insurmountable.
We drifted along easily and steadily. There were, nevertheless, some flurried moments
when write-ups were lost or groaned about or trembled over, or glued on paper with
paste that gushed out of a tube and looked like garden grubs. Once we almost engaged
a girl to a married man with one child, a mistake only rivalled by ours in attempting to

publish a Pedagogue at all.

We have tried to give a record of this year’s life that will be remembered and
loved, that will serve in the future as a link between our older selves and our college
days. And in the final closing, we shall wish that the coming days may be even brighter

and more glorious.
Tue Epiror.

Two Hundred Twenty-one

WY AW el Yj

AVETION
ALE

vs EFRTH

ii

So eer TMU

THE PARK BRANCH OF
OUR INSTITUTION IS VERY
ACCESSABLE TO THE
COLLEGE AND INVITES
THE ACCOUNTS OF THE
PROFESSORS, STUDENTS
AND SOCIETIES.

THE NATIONAL COMMERCIAL BANK

AND TRUST COMPANY
OF ALBANY

MAIN OFFICE PARK BRANCH
66 STATE STREET 200 WASHINGTON AVe.

No ee LLL

50 State Street, Albany

Phone Main 3062

New York STATE TEACHERS’ BUREAU

JOHN L. WARNER, Manager
Headquarters for School and College Positions in New York and Other Eastern States

STATIONERY RUBBER STAMPS SEALS
SHAW-WALKER FILING EQUIPMENT

GREEN’S on GREEN NEAR STATE STREET

PHONE MAIN 1414 10-12 GREEN STREET

We love you
For your trust
In our sense of humor,

Dear fool.
»

Helen Sheperdson — at Myers — I'd like to see a suit to fit me.
Clerk — So would I.

The Encyclopedia Americana

COMPLETE IN THIRTY VOLUMES

A million dollar Encyclopedia built by Americans to be the
leading reference work in the English speaking language
The Americana is the only work of its kind published after the
World War. It deals with 80,000 subjects, comprising 24,000,000

words and contains 1,200 half-tone illustrations, 200 color plates
and new and up to date maps of all cities, states and countries.

Built in Albany at the plant of the

J. B. LYON COMPANY

For information address

ENCYCLOPEDIA AMERICANA CORPORATION
ALBANY NEW YORK CHICAGO

iii

Paupil’s Savings Accounts

can be opened at this bank in either
of two ways: in the name of the
pupil, or in the parent’s name in
trust.

41% % INTEREST

Assets over $16,500,000.00

ALBANY City SAVINGS
INSTITUTION

Wm. S. Hackert, Pres. Frank H. Williams, Treas.

Special Price

to members of Fac-
ulty and Students of
State College for
Teachers.

Save your eyes

C. J. BERNHARDT

51 Maiden Lane Albany, N. Y.

PHONE MAIN 2663

INSPIRATIONS FOR FAMOUS BOOKS RECENTLY DISCLOSED.
Dr. Jekyle and Mr. Hyde — Prof. Decker, out of class and in.

Little Minister — Osborne.

All Sorts and Conditions of Men — Junior Prom.

The Crisis — Midyears.

Day’s Work — One Milne High Class for a P. T.

Innocents Abroad — 1924.

Promised Land — Chapel stage on Commencement Day.

52 NO. PEARL STREET

COMPLIMENTS OF

BAKER MUSIC HOUSE

PIANOS, PLAYERS, COLUMBIA GRAFANOLAS,
ROLLS AND RECORDS

ALBANY. N. Y

Albany Art Union

Studio, 48 No. Pearl Street

LL

“Distinctive Photography’’

F

Quality — our first consideration
Workmanship—the most skilled

Results—assured satisfaction

SPECIAL COLLEGE RATES

Phone Main 991

2 LLL LLL LLL MT =

ite

Electrotypers Direct by Mail Advertising

Producers of the Better Class of

Books, Catalogs, Publications

and
Commercial Printing

PRINTERS OF THE 1921 PEDAGOGUE

VUAUEAUOEANAANODOANAHLO TAU EAAAUONAOUEA UU UEAUO HAAN TANTO ce TTI LLC TT

The Hamilton Printing Company

240 Hamilton Street Albany, N. Y,

STUNTS AHANUOUOEONOEEONUUUV OE EEEUEOAA AAA UU OETA zznnnnenetouonoUonnaeesnengte

SLL LL

vi

SAY IT WITH FLOWERS”

Give Your Pen A
Drink

he
That means drop into “The
Pen Corner” and fill up at ]
the Ink Fountain which is
DANKER part of our service. We have

the tools to make repairs
right here.

The PEN CORNER, g

ESTABLISHED - 1887
CORNER~HUDSON AVE.awo SO.PEARL.

40 AND 42 MAIDEN LANE

Our BUSINESS IS GROWING”

A

vist THE LINING STORE %,Msidetane
For Dressmaking Supplies Buttons Made From Your Own Material
ALBANY'S BUTTON CENTER

COTRELL & LEONARD

ALBANY, N. Y.

Makers of

CAPS GOWNS HOODS

to the

State College for Teachers, as well as hundreds
of other Colleges and Universities

Class Contracts a Specialty

We also make Robes for the Pulpit, Choir
and Bench

BULLETIN, SAMPLES, ETC. ON REQUEST

vii

GUS TA VE ie ORE VY Portrait Photographer

130 State Street 360 Broadway
Albany, N. Y. Saratoga Springs, N. Y.

Great Expectations — Grinds before marks appear.

Prisoner of Hope — Waiting for a phone call from the man invited to Prom.
To Have and to Hold — Diplomas.

The Light that Failed — Latin trot.

Put Yourself in His Place — The kid you sent to Sayles.

SILKS
THE LATEST — BEST —AND VERY REASONABLE

PERKINS SILK SHOP. i28 state sTREET

A Touch of the Unusual
for Your Bathroom

This white porcelain ONLIWON cabinet
for toilet paper harmonizes perfectly with
tiled walls and porcelain fittings.

HYGIENE

is the service of protected toilet paper from an attractive
§ cabinet which may be easily adjusted to the space formerly
Courtesy of Thomas Maddock’s Sons occupied by the roll fixture.

Ss ial Off ONLIWON PAPER is a fine, soft tissue interfolded in a
pecia er thousand sheet package that is easily slipped into the protect-
One nickel or porcelain cabinet ing cabinet. It is served consecutively just two sheets at
and eight-package carton of 4 time.

paper -East of the Mississippi -

$5.00. Delivery prepaid. A, P, W. PAPER CO, _— Albany, N. Y.

-PMPIRE PNGRAVING COMPANY

Designers, Illustrators,
-Photo-Engravers.

ALBANY, N.Y.

7. THORPE--ENGRAVER

INCORPORATED

27% STEUBEN STREET ALBANY, N. Y.

Phone Main 5632

From the Bottom Up — Mid-semesters to June.
Up From Slavery — From Frosh to Soph years.
Fuzzy Wuzzy — K. Wansboro’s hair.

She Stoops to Conquer — Ruth Ellis and Shorty.
Passing of the Third Floor Back — Milne at 12:35.
The Betrothed — Edna Schwab.

Land of Hearts’ Desire — Home.

Young Visitors — Freshmen flunkers.

Melting Pot — History 2. ;

On the Heights — When an A appears.

The Crossing — The peristyle.

Iron Woman — Miss Cobb.

FULL EQUIPMENT FOR THE
ATHLETE

A stock that is comprised of only the best makes. Every article
backed by the manufacturer's guarantee and by our own

QUALITY REPRESENTED IN EVERY LINE
Basket Ball, Foot Ball, Gymnasium and Athletic Supplies

GENUINE ANGORA SWEATERS

with scarf and Tam O’Shanty to match—
big variety of colors. Also a very
beautiful line of other sweaters.

We invite Inspection

ALBANY HARDWARE & IRON CO.
39-43 State Street, Albany, N. Y.

TiC tis Sve Keon |
John H. Hausen, Jr. sy a |
MEN'S FURNISHINGS

177 CENTRAL AVENUE OPEN EVENINGS

ALBANY KIDS

There are the Albany Kids
Blasé and self-assured

In neat shirtwaists,

And middy blouses
Without creases

Down the middle.

They go home at noon
And consume a hot dinner.
They get cake

Three times a week.

I hate

The Albany Kids.

STEEFEL BROS.

PRESENTS

New Creations for the Smart Girl

Hats Serge Dresses Lingerie Dresses Middies

Coats Silk Dresses Wash Dresses Raincoats

We would like you to inspect our new shoe section for growing girls

xi

Che Cen Eyck

ENTERTAINMENT, FEA-

Albany, R. y.

CUISINE, SERVICE AND

TURES INCLUDING APPOINTMENT OF EX-

DANCING THROUGHOUT CEPTIONALLY HIGH

THE YEAR a ate “i STANDARD .-.  -: “i
Human Machine — Ted Cassavant.

Sizing Up Uncle Sam — History 5.

First Inaugural Address — Shorty’s first speech in chapel.
When a Man Comes to Himself — Billy Strain.

Studies in Contemporary Biography — Freshman themes.

Tremendous Trifles — Zeros.
Chanticleer — McCluer.
Will ’o the Wisp — Miss Kelso.

Adventures in Friendship — Miss Phillips.

WHEN YOU WANT THE
‘REAL THING’ IN
SPORT EQUIPMENT YOU
INSTINCTIVELY THINK
OF

“SPALDING”

“Just as Good’ is never just the same

A. G. SPALDING & BROS.

52 State Street

Albany, N. Y.

Schermerhorn Teachers’
Agency
366 Fifth Avenue, New York
Charles W. Mulford, Prop.

Our orders, direct from school officials
for all classes of work, far exceed our
supply of candidates. Register immed-
iately thereby getting the best oppor-
tunities. Deferred registration to 1921
New York State College graduates,

“A Superior Agency for Superior People”’

ESTABLISHED 1855

AUTOGRAPHS

AUTOGRAPHS

AUTOGRAPHS

AUTOGRAPHS

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We can now also complete remote digitization requests for yearbooks in-house. Typically, most yearbooks take about 90-120 minutes to scan and process, but since yearbooks are often requested, we will charge a reduced rate of $60.00 to digitize a yearbook and make it available online. Please Make a Remote Request or contact us if you are interested in funding yearbook digitization.
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This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. In addition, no permission is required from the rights-holder(s) for educational uses. For other uses, you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).

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Archival materials can be viewed in-person in our reading room. We recommend making an appointment to ensure materials are available when you arrive.