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The 1948 Senior Class
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Co-editors-in-chief
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Dorothy Skelton Pfaff
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Albany, New York
OOS LEI
NEW YORK STATE COLLEGE FOR TEACHERS
a eee
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32 thames
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Soest we forga...
Willingness will ever be synonomous with White. En-
j
thusiasm and capability are words we've said too. In 44
we said them and thankfully—for the soft-smiled figure
ever-present at the piano. In ‘46 we said them sorrowtully
for a part of the music was gone. The echoes were lett
ii
and tho’ were
and ‘48 still sings Don Whites song
“ — 5 : - a - oer “oe. Qua 1 , —— +... . 7
ee me os . Ker. re) ais 4 8 te eee $ : PS ea eh PgR pg : ’ hg
- ‘ Mae ani Va Dea =" e “<4
=< ~ a? ae - s
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sith Saati alias tin cattdenciinth nidemesinth wiaincaslbnine
Rowe asel ed hae Se
ad
8 ge) Yah SR ~ Se i
: ae | : . +i - Si wiie a a
a Senior
Seniors hail ‘their banner free”
How high is up, Mr. Sayles?
8:10!!!! Coleman, Breclin, Collins, Conklin
Senior Banquet at Jack's
We found our place on the waii
FRANCIS MULLIN
President
Secretary
Two times four is eight and four wondertul
years doubled is ‘48. Pardon us while we
brush aside a tear (shades of M. Shulman
again) but Seniors have a right to be senti-
mental. Our four years have the quality ol
sameness when viewed against the back-
ground of State, but to us they've been difter-
ent years, better years—our years. With our
growth we've watched State grow. The
changes in us have been reflected in the
changes at State. We like to think we've
become thinking adults in a thinking college.
We've watched the process of Democracy in
our change of Myskania, the constitution re-
vision. We've even voted for Campus Night
beauties.
The women of ‘48 remember too well the
feminine State of ‘44-45. We remember too,
the cheers and tears of that day of our
Freshman year when we heard the V-E
proclamation.
We've always been a big campaign class.
MARY JANE GIOVANNONE
Remember “Big Jim’ and Kaufman's car at=:
11
SHEILA MAGINESS
Vice-President
the front door of Pierce—part of our younger
days when we fought it out in rivalry—and
won —once. And celebrated — ‘oft. Weve
seen Minnie’s yellow sides painted and re-
painted. We've seen our faces gracing My-
skania—our weary footsteps trudging that
long, long walk to Milne (or those observ-
ing safaris for social studies majors). We've
seen each other through four years of the
Boul, the Club, Ockie’s, and even the library.
New ‘48 faces have come and old ‘48 faces
have left. We've seen it all and loved it all.
We're the same people who began together
at Frosh Camp—only now we're ending to-
gether at graduation. Fran Mullin sang to
us, pounded the gavel, carried the yellow
banner—and did them all well.
Life has a way of dividing itself into
phases. The college phase is over for us—
but not finished, because something that is
such a good part of so many good people
can't ever be forgotten. We'll come back.
May we?
WILLIAM CORNWELL
Treasurer
ABRAMS, STANLEY
294 Front Street
Hempstead
ABRAMS, V. EILEEN
40 Lakewood Boulevard
Lynbrook
ALDOUS, JOAN
155—6l1st Street
Niagara Falls
AMBROWSKI, IDA
Cutchogue
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
AMES, SHIRLEY
Richfield Springs
ANGLE, ETHEL
808 Elizabeth Street
Mechanicville
ARDITO, MARGARET
11 West End Avenue
Inwood
BADEN, HARRY
Montauk Avenue
East Moriches
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
BAILEY, RUSSELL
100 Church Avenue
Ballston Spa
BAKER, MARGARET
182 Dix Avenue
Glens Falls
BALDWIN, WILLIAM
1 Durland Plac
Watkins Glen
BALFOORT, MARIE
95 Chestnut Street
Oneonta
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
BARANOWSKL EUGENIA
1417 Conkling Avenue
Utica
BARBER, HENRY
Middleburgh
BARTON, ANNE
319 First Street
Newburgh
BELL, KATHLEEN
Loon Lake
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
B.S.
BESSEL, RUTH
114 McLoughlin Street
fy} cn
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BIERWISCH, PAUL
7 Sterling Street
v7
Kingston
BIGGS, JEANNETTE
40 Hemstreet Avenue
Mechanicville
BISTOFF, BEVERLY
13 Osborne Road
Loudonville
‘Minerva at noon
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
B.S.
BOETCHER, EVELYN B.S.
53 Hartshorn Street
Hornell
BORTNICK, MARTIN B.S.
1709 Jenkins Street
Endicott
BOULIA, YVONNE B.S.
Lake George
BOYNTON, LYDIA A.B.
18 Virginia Street
Saranac Lake
‘ows 2 a eer aBE — .
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BREBECK, BETTY A.B. BRUSIE, MARDELL B.S. j
300 Marion Street Rural Delivery 7
Herkimer Claverack [ :
BREISH, MADELYN A.B. BUCHANAN, JANE A.B. !
Jordanville Lookout Farm is
Trout Creek
BRIGNULL, ELIZABETH A.B. BURNS, ERNA A.B.
Valatie 18 McBride Avenue |
White Plains
BRIZEL, RITA B.S. BYRNE, ELEANOR A.B.
South Fallsburg Clinton Corners
ereges FF SEGUE AT SE OE OEE CL Pw RMS eg Bee
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CAMPBELL, J. STUART
1205 Hutton Street
Troy
CARVER, MARY JEAN
51 Moeller Street
Binghamton
CASE, THERESA
2150 Greenpoint Avenue
Schenectady
CAUSSE, DOROTHY
20 Newman Street
Gloversville
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
16
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Who'd write you a note?
CHILD, FRANCES A.B.
18 Mountain Road
Ravena
CHOUINARD, MARGUERITE A.B.
26 Garner Street
Cohoes
CHUDIAK, VERA A.B.
Mattituck
CLARK, ADREE B.S.
1120 Neilson Street
Utica
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CLARK, CAROL
126 North 5th Street
Olean
CLARK, MARJORY ELMORE
Georgetown
CLUTE, ELAINE
Loudon Road
Cohoes
COLEMAN, CECELIA
Allen Terrace
Netcong, New Jersey
A.B.
A.B.
B.S.
A.B.
COLEMAN, RITA
55 Whaley Street
Freeport
COLLINS, ARTHUR
R.F.D. No. 1
Hawes Cave
COMBS, VALETTA
Thurma
CONNOR, JEAN
2 Park Place
c
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713 Cherry Street Bridgehampton
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COOPER, ISABEL A.B. CRABTREE, EVELYN B.S.
Viola Road 604 Highland Street
Suffern Fulton
COOPER, MARY A.B. CREEDEN, CLARE A.B.
Downsville Round Lake
CORNWELL, WILLIAM A.B. CROCKER, BARBARA-CLAIRE A.B.
8 Brevator Street Wanakena
Albany
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CURTIN, MARGARET A.B. DAVIS, MARY B.S. ee
1309 Main Street ;
207 Congress Street
Port Jefferson ey
Cohoes
DALY, MARGARET A.B. DELIGANIS, GARI A.B. low .
61 Hollywood Avenue Ke
Albany
Rural Delivery
Hudson Falls
DANDO, MURIEL A.B. DeLISIO, CARMELLA A.B. ag 3
Rural Delivery No. 2 39 Orchard Street ;
Skaneateles Clyde (i
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DAVENPORT, RUTH A.B. DELL, EDITH A.B. | =
4 Hudson Avenue , S
Green Island
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R.F.D. No. 1
Sandy Creek
DICKIESON, SAMUEL
228 Sixth Street
Greenport
DICKINSON, ROBERT
R.F.D. No. 1
Watervliet
DIEHL, WILMA
Central Avenue
Massapequa
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
DIFFIN, DOROTHY
40 South Main Avenue
Albany
DONOVAN, ANNE
Richmond Parkway
Kingston
DOOLEY, JOHN
616 State Street
Clayton
DORAN, RUTH
58 East Genessee Street
Baldwinsville
“98 ee ta SASS ORES
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A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
B.S.
DOWD, VIRGINIA
14 Washington Avenue
Kingston
DUNKER, BARBARA
28 Wilson Place
Freeport
EGGERT, PEGGY
Prospect Street
Arcade
EMMETT, MARY
Johnsonville
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
ENGDAHL, HAZEL
Sinclairville
FAIRCHILD, NORMA
Salisbury Center
FARLEY, HENRY
55 Mitchell Street
Norwich
FARRELL, E. JOAN
R.F.D. No. 1
Troy
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FENTON, FLORENCE WOJTAL
284 South Allen Street
Albany
FISCHER, ADELINE
Westphalia Road
Mattituck
FISHER, ALICE
1162 Sheridan Avenue
The Bronx
FISHER, SYLVIA
1162 Sheridan Avenue
The Bronx
B.5.
B.S.
FLEMING, MARY
283 Palmer Road
Yonkers
FOBIAN, NORMA
R.D. No. |
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Ballston Lcke
FORMAN, SHIRLEY
17 Elm Street
26 j nose OT AA t7ToOYyY
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A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
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GENOVESI, JULIE A.B. GIOVANNONE, MARY JANE B.S.
1832 Van Vranken Avenue 1186 Wendell Avenue
Schenectady Schenectady
GILBERT, GLORIA A.B. GMINSKI, VIRGINIA A.B.
12 Coolidge Avenue 119 Linwall Avenue
Troy Albion
GILLEO, ANNE A.B. GOLDSTEIN, CHARLOTTE A.B.
R. D. No. 4 135 Helen Street
Newburgh Binghamton
GIOVANNIELLO, MAY A.B. GRAHAM, SHIRLEY A.B.
13 Bartlett Street 1021 Delamont Avenue
Ellenville Schenectady
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GREEN, JOAN
116 South Second Street
Mechanicville
GREEN, VIRGINIA
Minnewaska Trail
Kerhonkson
GROESBECK, MARGARET
265 Fourth Avenue
Troy
HAMMOND, JOHN
34 Pearsall Avenue
Glen Cove
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
HANSEN, JEAN
Madison Street
Sag Harbor
HARLAND MARJORIE
45 South Main Street
Port Henry
HAWK, GLADYS
129 North Street
Caledonia
HAWKS, DORIS
Myers Corners Road
Wappinger Falls
A.B.
A.B
A.B.
A.B.
43 Ash Street
HEROLD, DONALD
7 Myrtle Avenue
HILDRETH, SUZANNE
Franklin Avenue
HILLIER, VIVIAN
fr)
Johnstown
303 West Montgomery Avenus
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
B.S.
HIPPICK, J. MICHAEL
667 East 34th Street
Brooklyn
HOLBIG, ELEANOR
17 East Wright Avenue
Waterloo
HOLLIDAY, GILBERT
316 West Second Street
Fulton
HOUGHTON, MARJORIE
18 Valley View Avenue
Troy
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
B.S.
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HOWARD, RAYMOND
143 Fourth Avenue
Albany
HURR, RUTH
R.D. No. |]
Port Jervis
HYMAN, BARBARA
258 Morris Street
Alban
ne
IORIO, ADRIENNE
5 Beekman Street
Saratoga Springs
5S TO RENE T TP TLE LETTE IO ETE EE: TS
AL MOR Oa a ito rior Mp Rien te ESO 7. eee
B.S.
A.B.
B.S.
A.B.
JAFFER, GLORIA
290 Hasbrouck Avenue
Kingston
JAMISCN, EVELYN
330 Saratoga Street
Cohoes
JOHNSTON, JANET
1664 Western Avenue
Albany
JONES, BETTE JAYNE
548 Albany Street
Albany
. coffee with this
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Lake Katrine R.D. No. 2
KEENE, WALLACE A.B. KIRKPATRICK, EDNA A.B.
Box 732 R.F.D. No. 2
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KENDALL, KATHRYN A.B. KISIEL, HELEN B.S.
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KING, SHIRLEY A.B. KOENIG, DOLORES AB. eo
1803 East Main Street Box 139
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KOPEC, RITA
13 Prospect Street
Lackawanna
LALLY, CHARLOTTE
White Street
Waterville
LARSON, MARY
47 Forest Heights
Jamestown
LaRUE, JANET
21 Welling Avenue
Warwick
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
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Count your change, Mahoney
LAVENDER, ARLENE
31 Webster Place
Port Chester
LAWLER, JOHN
44 Maple Street
Oneonta
LEVINE, ANNALEE
83 Division Street
Schenectady
LONG, EDNA
Surprise
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A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
LOTZ, MARJORIE A.B. LYLE, MARGARET
Seneca Falls 436 Albany Avenue
Kingston
LUBEY, JOHN A.B. LYNCH, ROBERT
R.F.D. No. 2, Morris Circle 1606 Hutton Street
New Hartford Troy
LUCKE, EDWINA A.B. McCLINTOCK, MERVYN
398 Quail Street Box 12
Albany Old Westbury
LUDLUM, JESSIE A.B. McGIVNEY, ROSEMARY
54 Parkwood Street 119 East Genesee Street
Albany Baldwinsville
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
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McGUINNESS, JANE
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137 East Market Street
Rhinebeck
McLAREN, EUGENE
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McNAMARA, RAYMOND
39 Melrose Avenue
McTAVEY, KATHLEEN
450 Fourth Street
af hy
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A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
MacLAREN, STELLA
18 Short Avenue
MACE, FLORENCE
98 Margaret Street
aranac Lake
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MAGINESS, SHEILA
68 Emerson Avenue
Harrison
MAHONEY, THERESA
Friends Lake
Chestertown
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MALO, LORRAINE
30 Kelton Avenue
Schenectady
MALONEY, JUSTINE
Newburgh
MATTISON, EVELYN
Altmar
MAY, ANN
48 Davenport Street
Hornell
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
31
MEADOWS, PAUL
Walton
MERHIGE, GLORIA
953 President Street
Brooklyn
MERRITT, ELEANOR
17 Temple Street
Williston Park
MIERAS, MARIAN
165 Fayette Street
Palmyra
A.B.
B.S.
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MILLS, CARRIE A.B. NIELSEN, C. ROGERS A.B.
Port Byron 960 South Street
Newburgh
MOSELLE, ANN A.B. O’BRIEN, JANE A.B.
5 Prospect Street 1629 Becker Street
Lowville Schenectady
MOTT, WILLIAM A.B. OLMSTED, ZANA A.B.
Locust Avenue R.D. No. 1
Bayville Unadilla
MULLIN, FRANCIS A.B. OTTO, BARBARA A.B.
12 Huron Court 95 West Van Ness Street
Schenectady Newburgh
32
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R.D. No. 3
Middletown
PASCUZZI ANNA
4] West 4th Street
Huntington Station
PETRI, JUNE
31 South Main Street
Wellsville
PFAFF, CURTIS
33 Northern Boulevard
Albany
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
PFAFF, DOROTHY SKELTON
33 Northern Boulevard
Albany
PHILLIPS, WILMA
81 Pearl Street
Schuylerville
PODMAJERSKY, OLGA
Fultonville
POULOS, GEORGE
55 Traverse Avenue
Port Chester
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
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PRIVETT, ZOLLIE
Senix Avenue
Center Moriches
QUINN, MARY
Union Street
Sherburne
RAND, GLORIA
17 Ziegler Avenue
Poughkeepsie
REGAN, MARY
Camden
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55 Broadwa
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RICCI ANGELA
78 East Lakeview Avenue
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RICER, ANNE
1236 Glenwood Boulevard
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ROBERTSON, BETTY ~ A.B.
Youngsville
ROCHFORD, ELLEN A.B.
rasher Falls
ROSEN, IRMA A.B.
211 Mansion Street
Poughkeepsie
ROSENBERG, MYRA B.S.
570 Westminster Road
Brooklyn
eons ere ®
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ROWE, RITA B.S.
Kingston
RUSSELL, ARTHUR A.B.
1 Griffin Street
Ravena
RYAN, ROSEMARY A.B.
6 Parkwood Boulevard
oughkeepsie
2
ST. PRIEST, LUCILLE A.B.
85 Emmett Street
Schenectady
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SALANI, LILLIAN B.S. SCUDERI, MARY A.B.
1708 Watt Street RED: No.4
Schenectady Rome
SANTUCCI, LAURA A.B. SEELBACH, RUTH A.B.
Croton Dam Road 94-16—214 Place
Ossining Queens Village
SCHICK, WALTER A.B. SHANNON, FLORENCE A.B.
29 Park Avenue Theresa
Bayshore
SCHOONMAKER, BARBARA-JEAN A.B. SHAPIRO, BERNICE A.B.
39 Hamilton Avenue 55 Sheridan Avenue
Ossining Mt. Vernon
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19 Wickman Avenue
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Middletown
SHINDELMAN, DOLORES
1A Rombout Avenu
4 Rompout Avenue
peacon
SITTNER, JOAN
111 Jay Street
SMALLIN, MARY JANE
15 Otsego Street
Oneonta
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SMITH, MARGARET
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Freor Avenue
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SOTTILE, ZINA
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SOWA, FRANCES
Box 360
Florida
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A.B.
A.B.
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STAMMEL, ELVA
29 Nelson Avenue
Rensselaer
STAPLETON, JEAN
156 Fremont Street
Peekskill
STENARD, JOSEPH
1879 Highland Avenue
Troy
SULLIVAN, DALE
26 Court Street
Auburn
A.B.
A.B.
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A.B.
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SUMBERG, LEWIS
20 Grosvenor Square
SUNDICK, SEYMOUR
143 Rockaway Parkway
Brooklyn
SYLVESTRI, CLAIRE
4 Maple Place
Ossining
SZAREK, IRENE
492 Main Street
New York Mills
Fe eR eh Saad Ry ee
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Sy A ee BS
Srenexr Execorment Bassay
A.B.
A.B.
B.S.
A.B.
Ce eae ee
TAYLOR, JAMES
42 Spring Street
Albany
THOMSON, MARILYN
211 South Second Street
Mechanicville
TICHY, PAULA
Tuxedo Park
TILDEN, PATRICIA
an 7
Montauk
B.S.
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
Fried singles, they sati
TILLEY, PHILA
Mount Vision
TODT, JANICE
20 Sunnyside Avenue
Middletown
TOMASIK, WANDA
2261 Niacara Street
VAN DETTA, JAMES
= 147.24 Cy ee:
West otreel
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51 Saxton Avenue 13 Oak Street 7
Sayville Geneseo
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VAN SCOY, SHEILA A.B. WALEJSIO, DOROTHY A.B. :
Squiretown Road 184 Lester Avenue
Hampton Bays Johnson City
VAN VOORHIS, MARY A.B. WALSH, ALICE PRINDLE A.B.
Worcester 334 Hudson Avenue
| Albany
|
: VAUGHN, B. J. BITTNER A.B. WALSH, FRANCES ANN B.S.
| 36-A Chestnut Ridge Road 245 Eighth Street :
Rochester Troy
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| WARD, FRANCES JEAN A.B. WEINBERG, GERHARD A.B. e
: 37 Washington Avenu 52 South Main Avenue \
Ossining Albany <3
: WASSERMAN, FLORENCE SIMON A.B. WEISS, FRANCES A.B.
| 1922 Jerome Avenue 129 Phillip Street
Schenectady Albany
WATKINS, MARIONLEE A.B. WELIKES, GERTRUDE B.S.
; 255 Sprague Avenue 976 Avenue D
: Liberty Rochester ,
é WEBB, SHIRLEY A.B. WESTER, DORIS A.B.
: DeRuyter! 77 Clinton Street
New York Mills
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WHITNEY, MARY ELIZABETH
‘
30 Main Street
Genesec
WILCOX, JEAN
84 Ontario Street
Corning
WILLIAMS, ALICE
1222 Conkling Avenue
Utica
WILLIAMS, ELIZABETH
31 Academy Road
Albany
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
WILLIAMS, MARJORIE
159 Berkshire Avenue
Buffalo
WILLIAMS, SHIRLEY
44 Wyandotte Avenue
Buffalo
WOLF, ORIETTA
Dutch Village
Menands
WOLF, SELENE
41-42 Forty-Second Street
Long Island City
A.B.
B.S.
A.B.
A.B.
WOODS, ELAINE
78 Main Street
Phoenix
WORTH, ELOISE
Howard Street
Sag Harbor
YOUNG, VIRGINIA
Greene
ZINNI, FRANCES
4 Highland Park
Batavia
ZMUD, ROSE
322 Saratoga Street
Cohoes
43
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
B.S.
A.B.
ven
CAMERA SHI
Brandon, Marion Kragh
*
Acker, Raymona
Beach, Richard
Breclin, Gloria
Ceely, Marion Theo Sturges
Collard, Elizabeth Faerber
Cook, Helen
Dwyer, Genevieve
Hancock, Marion
Henry, Jean
Hutchinson, Wilma
Jones, Anna
Koehn, Annett
[ee PO PRES eS rE Se
ROO DPT SL DP fe tg:
Lowerre, Walte1
Pangburn, Cart
Ross, William
Roulier, Joseph
Savage, Gretchen
Sayles, Donald
Stephan, Evelyn
Trim, Charles
Wong, Helen
Wood, Elizabeth
Zaccagnini, Dant:
Zilles, Luke
More Soc-Hoppers
‘51, Fite, Fite!
Slivers!!!
——sS
— ~ oe
B
ENNETT, MARIE
Van Hornesville
DRUSCHEL, BARBARA PARRY
Py
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9 Second Street
7eneseo
IATAURO, MARY
5
VA
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1 Fourth Avenue
Vestbury
| / / ;
ee ae lec “UnLOVS
A.B. HENNIG, HELEN
110 North 5th Street
Hudson
A.B. SIEGEL, ESTELLE
118 First Street
Troy
A.B. ULINE, BETTY
10 Chelton Avenue
Troy
BERGIN, DONALD
A.B.
A.B.
A.B.
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‘A9 becomes the Jolly Juniors
Memories of the circle, Soph banquet
—the red and the white, symbol of
fighting “49
ee ee a eee Le ae
President Bob Wilcox
The almighty Lucifer, laying aside his
spear, spoke thus to Bob Wilcox, the Chief
Devil: ‘No longer will you and your band
abduct Presidents of Student Association.
No longer will you ruffle the feathers of the
Blue Jays or pluck the Daffodils. You must
settle down and grow up to be good devils.
Advise your cohorts, Aggie McIntyre, Marie
Grieco, and Bob Kaiser that they must plan
the Junior Weekend and a sumptuous feast
for your crew.
“Though you cannot be permitted to win
the Campus Cup again, two of your num-
ber will have the privilege of attending the
lovely Campus Queen. Out of the many
beautiful devils, Furlong, Pilato, Hoefner,
Pulver, Donato, Rourke, and Gibson, I have
chosen Donato and Rourke as attendants.”
Three years have seen many active Red
Raiders, Seaman in Campus Commission,
Sitting in WAA, Simon and McCabe in al-
most everything. Lansky, the Insurance
man, is a famous devil, along with Harry
Mills, Dick Zeller, the traveling salesman,
49
Secretary Marie Grieco, Treasurer Bob Kaiser,
Vice-president Agnes McIntyre
and Charlie Miller.”
To represent you in the Furnace Room,
known to outsiders as Student Council, |
have chosen four hot characters. There are
two ex-presidenits, Bob Baker and Jim
Brophy, and two third termers, Joe Zanchelli
and Kocky Donnelly. Performing their duties,
they will have to work like—heaven.”
"You must give counsel to the ‘Green
Ones’ for they know not what to do. Lieu-
tenants Kay Grant and Bob Kittredge have
initiated the Gremlins into the realms of fire
and brimstone and now they follow your
example. You must be sedate and contem-
plate the teaching of the other little devils.
They need no training in deviltry for they
are masters of the art. They are called the
Milne High Hellers and maximum punish-
ment for bad devils will be more than one
semester in this Practice Room. To test your
stamina, patience, and endurance you will
first suffer one semester of 8:10 Methods
classes and two semesters of a 3:30 Ed. 10
class. You are terrific devils, you ‘49 ers.”
oe
abdaee 3 Bets
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oti hS
We're proud of the crowd of girls and
fellows we're a part of...
Way back when at Thatcher Park—
Fifty’s femmes—DeSeve, Hutton, Lynch,
Wales
tn
a)
We worked and we played and each
did his part...
he
—_—
~~"
President Tony Prochilo
“We're all pals together,
Birds of a feather...”
And on sang the Blue Jay Class with a
“spirit that you can't deny’’. Tony Prochilo
led us into Rivalry and got us excused from
assembly. On the sidelines sat Bob ‘’Kilroy”’
Freyer who wouldn't let you get a word in
edgewise unless it was “fifty”. Dee Webber
took care of those precious pages of words
that nobody ever reads. The bank account
was handled by Rhoda Riber. Another per-
son to keep an eye on was “Candy” Koch,
our songleader—and for the fellows, it was
an easy job. Of course Joan Keyton’'s ‘’‘Saxon
Charm” did much to enhance the cheers of
the class, as did the Ruths—Smith and Matte-
son, plus Elly Adams, prodding on the girls
to come out for sports evenis. Thanks too,
to Ben Jackson from the male Blue Jays.
If you saw Jones and Cooperman confer-
ring, then rivalry doings were certainly brew-
ing. Even if we have “'Sskits’’ophrania, we
Secretary Rhoda Riber, Vice-president Bob Freyer,
Treasurer Dee Webber
showed plenty of fighting spirit. Didn't My-
skania get writer's cramp—sooo many warn-
ings for Frosh!
In the shuffle of the summer of ‘47 we
gained and lost classmates. Vaughn re-
turned to become a sparkplug in ‘50. And
don't forget John Morley and Bea Peters, for
they ll be back, wearing blue and white, in
no time.
,What a sensation it was to hear someone
say, sophomore’, and to use the front
doors—to sit in the rotunda—to have those
assembly seats downstairs! It was hard to
believe that Orientation days were over, but
Ed. 10 replaced them, and soon we, too, shall
be dashing to 8:10's.
It was a good year for the ‘gay young
Soph'mores”, all the way. Those numerals
"1950" are naturals on the Campus Day Cup.
Don't you forget it, “we're all pals together”,
that's synonymous with the Blue Jay Class.
wi Sal ot ie
Psa Nea Sys,
oe tly diese 3g rR TT yt BRA Sa
ifferent!!!
ice
Cottage cavalcade
Life sure is very d
Big sisterly adv
ua
4 =e me
= a= SSS Io a
t=
ESOS os) gate ee) Pee ie ete > oe
N
ity
President Jerry Dunn
Green sprouts shot up all over campus and
immediately shipped off to Frosh
Camp. There, nourished by the vitality of
the upperclassmen, they thrived heartily.
At Warners Lake and Burden Lake, talent
budded out profusely. The weather proved
ideal for a bumper crop.
The Class of ‘51 took root! The Period of
Numerous recep-
Activities Day
proved a means to spread our fragrance.
were
confusion did not wilt us.
tions acted as cultivators.
(It also pointed out that we werent parasites
but contributed $24
NYSCT).
Just when we felt our stems had grown
sturdy the Sophs decided to trample us. But
such devices as beanies failed to stunt our
to the promotion of
growth, for the college agreed they added
to the beauty of our foliage.
There wasn't enough sunshine Campus
Day but that night we really were flowering
with beautiful blossoms on the Queen's court
and a skit that showed we were headed for
a bountiful harvest.
We even survived freezing weather for it
was then that we almost beat “the enemy”
in football. It was also in such weather that
tr
oe)
Treasurer Alice Gersh, Secretary Jane Cook,
Vice-president Dick Thorne
we conquered ‘the unmentionables’ in vol-
leyball.
November | the skies darkened and at 2
T'was then “the
insects’ made us flap our leaves to the tunes
A.M. the invasion came.
of ‘the traditional songs’. Many of us fell
victim to ‘the enemy's’ most potent weapon
the warning.
But we conquered ‘‘them” at Assembly
sing. Throwing a few DDT bombs in the form
of an Alma Mater and a Big Four we proved
“survival of the fittest.”
Meanwhile, not only was ‘that certain
class” pruning us but sororities raked us with
rushing. They plowed us under too during
Hell week’’. Our male members were un-
usual in their ‘brush cuts’ and mustaches.
-the
faculty, thinning us out with term papers,
mid-sems, orientation and hikes to the Dorm
Field for Gym. Math proved helpful in count-
Then there was the other “element -
ing the days till vacation.
Well, we were transplanted from “green
sprouts. to ‘collegiate stalks’ by the.com-
dancing, bridge games, collegiate
air’’, those rare two o'clock hours, and long
gab sessions far into the night.
mons
if
Now our green is in Full Bloom!
aa
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i eet
at
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at see toner, SR petevegat |! son tem aie tah
Peer TR AE He eres
Phy alee
Fc eae apa a a
Mian oh i
YYYYYYY
H
}
Dr. Milton G. Nelson
One never knows just what to expect from the pro-tem. In the silence
which lies in the interim between the deed and the word one comes to
know that see-thru-you regard. Blessed relief marks the eventual
chuckle, the ‘thought I meant that, didn't you’ grin. The question of
the year has become, ‘In which office IS he?” No matter where he may
be,scheduling in the dean's office or administering in the president's
Busy he is, but State is his
| business. He likes it and we like him. Affable, sincere, a friend—The
= Great White Father.
/
Zl office, the answer is the same ‘’He’s busy’.
Talking it over with Twink Application of Orientation
os
ee nee TROL tot ely al pnalelahceaheelpyon aon Ran she ae 7
a . t 2 < > 7 » ’ - -
ad te Ty + — ge, et f° oa ee, ee ee “es s > a. ee .. Sisaret . WS sit ye mo ee ee EN en ae - $4 Les
Dean of Women
Pale green walls, rhododendron,
deep-sinking chairs, stateliness, and a
gracious woman — component parts
of that last office to Minerva’'s left. Into
the quiet atmosphere many feet daily
pass over that dull-toned carpet-
confused freshmen, organization heads
with timing problems, and the inevi-
table ‘“campused” queens, many types,
many worries, much _ confusion—all
troubles to be laid on her spacious
desk, to be assimilated as her vicarious
own. Grave when the situation calls
for gravity, smiling when a smile is
the answer—We proudly present our
“Dean Ellen”’.
Dr. Ellen C. Stokes
Scoop checks the calendar with Mrs. Malseed Who'd think they’d ever give a warning? Dean
Stokes and Viv Hillier
Dee ae ee ~
pra: iE ile eS © a ee
DEPARTMENT HEADS
Dr. Harry W. Hastings
English
Dr. Edith O. Wallace
Classical Languages
Dr. James W. Childers
Modern Languages
Dr. Ellen C. Stokes
Dean of Women
Dr. Charles L. Andrews
Physics
Dr. Robert W. Frederick
Education
Dr. Watt Stewart
Social Studies
—
58
Dr. Oscar E. Lanford, Jr.
Chemistry
Dr. Ralph G. Clausen
Biology
Dr. Edward L. Cooper
Commerce
Dr. Esther L. Stallman
Librarianship
Dr. Harry Birchenough
Mathematics
Dr. Shields McIlwaine
English
Dr. James A. Hicks
Education
CLASSICAL LANGUAGES
Dr. Mary G. Goggin
MODERN LANGUAGES
Dr. Marion E. Smith, Dr. M. Annette
Dobbin,
Miss Dolores Di Rubbo, Dr. Edward P.
Shaw
Absent—Miss Arline F. Preston
Miss Mildred Kirshenblum, Mr. William
Meyer
Mr. Stewart Denslow, Dr. Sara H. Mac-
Gonagle
Me peer bese ee ent ie bel esa, hl Ria sateen se Pe
Dr. Helen M. Phillipps, Mr. Perry D.
Westbrook, Dr. Catherine W. Peltz. Miss
Agnes E. Futterer
Absent—Dr. Vivian C. Hopkins. Dr.
Varley H. Lang
Mr. Graham Duncan, Mrs. Rebecca J.
Lukens, Miss Ruth E. Roberts, Mrs.
Jeanne C. Cook, Miss Mary E. Mohr,
Mr. Paul B. Pettit
Aaa are
q COLLEGE LIBRARIANS
Mrs. Laura Campaigne, Miss Margaret
Wagner, Miss Mary E. Cobb, Miss
Helen James, Miss Marion Souley, Miss
Eleanor Streun
Se ee ee Le
EDUCATION
Dr. Ralph B. Kenney, Dr. Margaret L.
Hayes, Mr. Robert E. Mason, Dr. Floyd
E. Henrickson, Mr. Harper E. Beaty, Dr.
Elizabeth Morris—Absent—Dr. C. Cur- i
rien Smith te
Dr. Ralph H. Baker, Mr. Clarence A. Ki.
Hidley, Dr. Elaine Forsyth Cook, Dr. {
Robert Rienow, Dr. Theodore G. Stand- ke
ing br ;
.
3
Fe :
Fe
Mr. Harry S. Price, Dr. Josiah T. Phin- |
ney, Miss Catherine Newbold, Mr. ;
Murray Seidler, Dr. Frances Cummings,
Mr. Matthew Elbow
a 4
ee:
. agboe “tp METER te ate oe ke So eee a
Dr. Minnie B. Scotland, Miss Ruth Card
Absent—Dr. Gertrude E. Douglas, Mr.
Bernard R. Ellison
CHEMISTRY
Mrs. Naomi Timmerman, Dr. Derk V.
Tieszen, Mrs. Rebecca Elbinger
Absent—Dr. Margaret D. Betz, Mr. John
J. Sturm, Mr. William G. Kennedy
PHYSICS
Mr. Marvin J. Pryor, Absent—Mr.
Arthur P. Jones
x . J . -— . . 2 ——--
a Bee eee “ mes 5 BORON SU ate ti OM 0 GE eB Ny Rie meon eee tara mtr! — Dt oh a EON 26 ATR CT PR a IO:
Mrs. Anna E. Love, Mr. Thomas R.
Gibson
Miss Isabelle Johnston, Mr. Merlin W.
Hathaway, Mrs. Louise M. Tone
COLLEGE PHYSICIANS
Dr. Earl Dorwaldt, Dr. Matie E. Greene
Sip i iy EN Op Se gE My Sele Tet i ERR, ee no —nF: . $ a
a
—
Miss Ruth E. Hutchins
MATHEMATICS
Caroline A.
Mr.
Dr. Ralph A. Beaver, Dr.
Elton A.
Lester, Miss Nura Turner,
Butler
64
~
a eh le ee ee oe el ee tee a ee
Mr. Karl A. Peterson, Dr. Charles F.
Stokes
COMMERCE
Mr. Chester J. Terrill, Miss Blanche M.
Avery, Mr. Reno Knouse, Miss Dorothy
E. Lee, Mr. Harrison M. Terwilliger
65
2 fae a ed wn
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scene
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STUDENT COUNCIL
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pala te Sata ST
Calling Milton Caniff and any other car-
toonists looking for good material! Student
Council should have national syndication
like the “Silly Symphonies’. Wednes-
day night in the Lounge for the gathering of
the funnymen and girls of State—it's funny
that they accomplish so much amid such
hilarity!
These good natured characters worked
willingly under the gavel of “Blondie”
Prindle Walsh. “Smilin’ Jack Kittredge bore
up well under the bookkeeping, and ‘'Little
Iodine’ Willsey took minutes between pops
of her bubble gum.
scuffling from the far couch — ‘’Katzen-
jammer Kids’ Lyons and Engel giving the
business to “Flash Gordon” Schultz and
“Skeezix’ Moriarity. ‘Little Orphan Annie”
Gilbert confused about the order of business
while “Dick Tracy” Brophy consults his port-
folios. As ‘Terry’ Dunn introduces more
‘48—Williams, Mieras, Gilbert, Mullin
‘50—Engel, Lyons, Prochillo, Cooperman, Feathers
SDnewey sae
‘ Tn i ee eee ee
Rivalry business, “Prince Valiant’ Mullin
looks handsome and very much in command
of the whole situation.
“Hotshot Charlie’ Abrams pleads an-
other cause —bringing tears to the eyes
of “Maggie” Donnelly and ."Little Annie
Roonie’ Mieras. ‘Mandrake’ Wilcox holds
“Daisy Mae” Cushing and “‘Smitty’’ Feathers
spellbound over near the bookcase. And
“Downwind” Dooley uses the old charm with
“Toots” Williams and ‘’Tillie’’ Cooperman.
Way over in the easy chairs — ‘Harold
Teen” Baker is round-eyed at the prowess
of “Tarzan” Zanchelli and “Jungle Jim” Pro-
chillo!
Out of all this hilarity—the Insurance
Plan, the renovation of the Commons, the
arbitration section of the Constitution, and
the big Spring Conference of State Colleges.
They did it and they're glad!
‘49—Baker, Zanchelli, Donnelly, Brophy, Wilcox
‘5l1—Schultz, Dunn, Cushing, Dooley, Moriarty
ia Gilbert
itors-in-Chief
Glor
Co-Ed
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Wee etc esge scam nail pore ee. oo ait lake ee ee ee ee | et Rn EN AIT Cite Ts ST a
Junior Staff
PED ‘48—that's ‘‘Curt’s other wife’’— it's
publisher John with his “lets talk it over,
Over dinner’ smile — it's long-suffering
Dick, that face behind the camera who
swears he has snapped every nail and every
smile in SCT —it's that treasured dummy
whose red cover has felt the tears and life's
blood of Dottie '‘n Scoop, Nancy, Adrienne,
Randy, and Jane. PED '48—a thousand and
one nights, two hundred and one days—of
work!
The PED—Dottie took it on her honeymoon
—maid-ofhonor Scoop carried it instead of
flowers. We put it to rest on Gamma Kap’s
dining room table—over it we said epithets
of “no! no more petite presidents pounding
the gavel” and “no Scoop! This time no allit-
eration!”
But don't let us kid you—it wasn't easy,
but it’s been real!
Oy
a
Business Manager Walsh
Photography Editor Iorio
Advertising Manager Rand
—~
~
Literary Editor O’Brien
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oxy? been twisted, so
=" 3n angie. Next day
Saas hag of a nurse, and
4 as a cloth-and-collar
#€,"> deal. Everything is
© juliet becomes Ro-
mand chai.
s returning home after his
Mae aisle, sce, when he has
in with a character by i ;
ait. who is one of 4 ae poe
balt. has it in % aos Junior Prose
his fat nose th ations ics
poms ee
But Romeo poser wilh be
finally :
bat Pte *6ltud ger inn
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A Thora i
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Then
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start to ge
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with Julie
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Junior Editors—Jean Spencer, Elsie
Landau, Jean Pulver
Sports Staff—Brophy, Tichy, Seaman, Webber
The rest of the world goes by with a seven
day week, but the NEWS Staff lives only
from Tuesday to Friday. In a newly smoke-
less but still smoky atmosphere, these news-
hounds write “copy”, count “heads”, and
measure “make-up”. The uninitiated student
may be mystified by the shop talk, but he
knows that the NEWS he receives deserves
its All-American rating.
In their own little world, the P.O., bounded
by the blackboard, the assignment sheets,
Editor Ann May's desk, and piles of news-
print—the Staff spends every odd hour per
Soph Desk Editors—Durkee, Cookingham, Wiltse,
Thompson, Freel, Stoddard
week geiting out a complete coverage of
State events ond personalities. Clark and
Rochford occupy Managing Editors’ desks
while Tichy holds a stopwatch over her
Sports Staff. Junior Editors Landau, Pulver,
and Spencer have their heads and pencils
together over stacks of “‘copy”’ which ‘must
go to Hudson tonight.’’ The Soph reporters
return from last-minute interviews—then are
diligently at the blackboard with dozens of
“heads”, and half an hour to go. Accord-
ing to the latest State Poll, the NEWS is the
only worthwhile paper on Western Avenue.
Dramatic and Artistic Dif
Dramatics and Art Council—one imag-
ines the intelligencia meeting in a Grecian
temple sitting to discuss the comparative
influences of Norman Bel Geddes and Degas.
If one does, he is mistaken! D & A discussed
ED Rehearsal
DRAMATICS AND
ART COUNCIL
the two influences but met informally, sitting
on the floor of Miss Futterer’s office or
perched on the art desks in Miss Hutchins
quarters.
Not in the shadow of the Parthenon, but
in the gloom of back stage Page and in the
haphazard atmosphere of the Annex, Presi-
dent Dot (nee Diffin) Merritt called the meet-
ings to a semblance of order. Out of the
combined ideas and enthusiasms came the
presentations of artist Richard Leahy and
actor Eddie Dowling, Council's major social
requirement of visiting artists being an
ability to dance well. Not content with dis-
pensing “culture” at State, the tireless crews
Lubey, Jaffer, Russell, Schoonmaker—Senior
Council
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WE SE >>
Annex Antics
Leahy paints the “Most Interesting
Face’’—Dell’s
decided to mingle in local circles. At the
Albany Institute, the Art League, and the
Russell Sage Drama Festival, they mingled
with an impressive variety of tea cups. Re-
warded? Certainly. Invitations to member-
ship and encouragement come from the Play-
house.
As intellectuals, they should have pro-
ceeded sedately about their activities breath-
ing fervent prayers to the Muses, but they
dashed madly about, murmuring fervent
prayers to anyone who could help them
make that 8:30 curtain! The AD plays, the
ED one-night stand, the Art Open House, all
played dual roles. Treasurer Kocky Don-
nelly beat a well-worn path to Dr. Cooper's
office to obtain the wherewithal ($) for all
these projects. Secretary Dick Feathers kept
BS §h, Pitan,
tabs on the energetic tryouts wailing ‘they're
doing so much that they've exhausted me!”
When the rush of the Arts became too much,
they did amuse themselves at a typical
banquet of the Gods, entertaining the past
president with champagne!
Out of piles of ballots, again on the
ground, they drew the ‘Most Inieresting
Face”. At Lubey’s and Russell's apartment
they heard Mr. Pettit expound on contempor-
ary American theater movements. Thanks
to Miss Fut's efforts, Mr. Atterbury of the
Playhouse discussed current’ Broadway pro-
ductions. They dragged flats and kitchen
sinks from the Annex to Page, and filled the
halls with unique posters. For satisfaction,
D & A advises: not Mount Olumpus but the
light box and the drawing board.
. 2 a oe
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W. S. GILBERT ARTHUR SULLIVAN
“Music Council of New York State College
for Teachers Presents” . . . and present they
did! In October Serge Jaroff brought his
Don Cossack Chorus to Page Hall. The
capacity audience was well pleased, calling
encore after encore. Dr. and Mrs. Stokes,
violinist and pianist, plus bass-baritone
Peterson, a new and valuable addition to
State, offered excellent musical entertain-
ment in their annual November concert.
Noses naturally came out of Newses on Jan-
vary sixteenth when Student Association
listened as the College Ensembles sang.
Gilbert and Sullivan's “Pinafore” proved to
be this year’s operatic treat. Romantic leads
Clarence ‘‘Rackstraw” Olsen and Jean “Jo-
Music Council’s High Note—Coleman sephine” Snow, plus a large supporting cast
J
made the successful operetta something to
be long remembered. The recording hour
found many masticating to fine music at
noontime on Tuesdays. The climax of this
superior musical season was reached with
the May concert.
Prexy ’Cissy’’ Coleman, supported by sec- :
secretary Mary Marscher and ever-efficient
financier Jean Munro, “‘councilled” was an
impressive list of fourteen hard working mu-
sic lovers. If you were on the “in” with Bis-
toff, you received a complimentary ticket,
so do. his sis-ters and his co
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Officers Monroe and Marscher harmonize with St. Priest
while Mace nad Stapleton took care of the
rest. Campbell and Kirby, the masculine ele-
ments in Council, were in charge of publicity
and stage managing, respectively. Song-
stress Maloney cracked the Try-Out whip
and “Star-Spangled” St. Priest presided over
Page's piano. Webb of flute fame and Wil-
liams, plus Schryver, Hockridge, Gourley,
Erlandson, Wales and Witt Penn completed
1947-48's active Council. _M.C.—that's Music
Council, Master of Ceremonies for programs
par excellence.
s r + oof Senior Council—Campbell, Kirby, Bistoff, Mace, Williams
From Frosh Camp to Moving Up Day there
was no rest for WAA. Diehly presided over
State’s athletic femininity with ‘‘Basketball”
Quinnie’s aid. Scribbling notes and noita-
tions was Smitty, while Evans, although not
a math major, kept the budget straight.
"Clean-up the mess” Seaman was office
manager. Representing their classes were
48's Boynton, ‘Woman of all work” Sittig,
Long Island's own Matteson and “Sports is
my life’’ Jai. Tilden and Sulich manage the
seniors and juniors, and “I'll save your life”
Adams and “Shorter than Fitzie’’ Weller do
the same for the Blue Jays and Gremlins, as
well as managing to keep rivalry red hot.
A good Diehl
WOMEN'S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION
Managers and Representatives—Boynton, Matteson, Adams, Sulich, Sittig, Jai, Weller
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At the Reception in October memories of
Frosh Camp's early morning dips (brrr) and
good times were revived. The gals con-
quered hunger with cokes, apples and pea-
nuts on the dorm field that Saturday atfter-
noon. Batter up’ was the call to baseball
for some, while others rotated in volleyball
and most still “declahr” that ‘Daniel Boone”
is a noteworthy new game at State.
To show their athletic prowess many
femmes ran along side of the wagon on the
hayride to Miss Johnsion’s farm. There,
ravenous appetites were satisfied with food
aplenty and “shorty” Audrey and “‘goaly”
Jai were initiated into Council's ranks. Im-
promptu entertainment was the order of the
Honor Council—Tilden and
Quinn
Officiating—Evans, Seaman,
Smith
Winter Sports—Eveleigh,
Thompson, McCuen
day. Evans gave forth with her inimitable
imitations and Sittig, Tichy and Diehl came
through with the apropos ‘Come to the Hay-
ride!”’.
WAA versus St. Mary’s—a really ““hokay™’
hockey fracas left us wondering who was
rougher and tougher. The fellows squad in
short skirts almost threatened Ineson’s su-
premacy as State's chief cheerleader!
Judging by Fusmer’s artistic bulletin board
in Lower Draper, the sports program was
heavily billed. The strenuous activities of
the ensuing months fulfilled the earlier
promise. Captains Sittig and Matteson
(straight from Hockey Camp in August)
supervised hockey, a favorite autumn sport.
A muddy field was no hindrance, as the
rivalry game well proved. Volleyball was
the game for some, while others voiced ap-
proval as co-ed gym classes were organized
for square dancing. ‘’Clem”’ Hathaway was
caller. “How much of a hick can you be?”
Basketball competition was as keen as ever
as sororities and group house teams vied for
supremacy on the court. Bowling, too, de-
veloped muscles for some. For the aquat-
ically inclined, or those wishing to serve
humanity in the capacity of ‘life saver of
seniors or instructor’s rank, the Jewish Com-
munity Center provided the pool. All that
was needed was the will to brave the chlor-
inized waters, one night each week and
naturally curly hair. ‘Touché,’ say those
who acquired fencing skill captained by
Mickey Seaman. The hardy outdoor type
skied, tobaggoned and skated in the park
until Springtime rolled around and once
more the unimproved courts were available
for a tennis dame or two. Softball had its
turn, as exams already loomed on the col-
legiate horizon. Then came the time for just
awards. Numerals, shirts, keys, or sports
charms were given to the deserving ones.
Action!
Set ‘em up Joe
Ethal and Koch—diving in
Nome things new were added, too. Out
ing Club was formed for those whose fancy
turned toward hiking or skiing in the appro-
priate season. Tumbling, for other co-ed
enthusiasts furnished a good way to get rid
of excess energy on Thursday nighis. - Pro-
gress was rapidly made, as the Coach's
charts indicate.
Life in the raw is spelled C-a-m-p J-o-h-n-
s-t-o-n. Breaking the ice socially and actually,
2 - : —. ;
im tee eee oe Lae =o Ci mxite. in, ae poe td et em eh * 0 ea ety Teli PONE eae 9 MRE ee SES 3
among those who braved the cold water
clean-ups and the midnight ghost stories.
Chief cook and bottle washer, Tichy, will be
missed by many who have sampled her
savory dishes in the great outdoors.
If you want a white jacket and member-
ship in Honor Council, then work three years
for WAA and qualify in Sportsmanship,
Athletic Ability and Work! Ask Diehl, Quinn
or Tilden—they know how it's done.
A man's world they say? Ask W.A.A|!
a true spirit of comradeship was formed
Tumbling Trio—Kisiel, Maginess, Adams
Touche! Sulich and Thompson
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Dooley—'n all he’s got to do is
whistle
For MAA it was a good year. ‘“Quarter-
son, John Morley, Ray Noppa, Joe Zann-
chelli and Pat Dooley. Charley Frail sub-
stituted for Morley when the latter withdrew
due to illness. The new awards system was
inaugurated and the Varsity Club went
through its Freshman stages.
Many turned out for the fall program,
especially in football where there were
enough teams for two six-team leagues.
Potter Club took top honors in the A loop,
while the Beavers were victorious in the B
league. In the play-offs Potter took an 18-12
MEN'S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION
M A A Council—Schick, Jackson, Zanchelli, Frail, Dooley, Noppa
thriller and the championship, its team in-
cluding Amyot, Barber, Bortnick, Dooley,
Gipp (Capt.), Kittredge, Miller, Ruback,
Schick, and Zanchelli. Other teams in the
A loop were KDR, SLS, Ham and Eggers,
Finks, and Angels; the remaining B league
teams were Ramblers, Athletes, Huskies,
Gents, and VanDerzee. Two all star teams
were chosen, one by the team captains and
another by the State College NEWS. Bob
Sorenson handled the manager's duties.
Soccer returned to the MAA program
last fall, three teams playing on Saturday
afternoon: the Frosh, Potter, and VanDerzee.
A tennis tournament was planned for Oc-
tober but died a slow death as only a tew
first round matches were played. Two new
sports were started in fall, the Tumbling Club
and the Rifle Club; both got a good follow-
Intramurals
ing. The St. Mary’s Amazons downed the
WAA team in hockey. “Flash” Poulos be-
came State’s first cross country champ.
The ‘Big Bonanza” came when basketball
season rolled around. Seven men returned
from last year’s Varsity to hold down the key
spots this year; Sy Fersh, Kenny George,
Basil Karpiak, Jack Kirby, ‘Link’ Marzello,
Tom O’Brien, and Walt Schick were the re-
turnees. There was plenty of material to
choose from as forty first year men greeted
Coach Hathaway's first call at the end of
October, all with plenty of experience. Jim
Coles, Marv Lansky and Dick Wheeler were
assigned to the Varsity while many other
promising players were assigned to the
JV’s. The season was a good one, with State
victorious in four out of their five first games,
downing the Alumni, Mass. State (North
Wheeler, Fersh
Varsity—(b to t): George, Lansky, Schick, Kar-
piak, Marzello, O’Brien, Kirby, Hathaway,
iin ah rans et ee SR OG BO IEE LR AT NOLES NE BREE SIRS
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Adams), Plattsburgh, and Middlebury, while
losing to St. Michael's. The Varsity renewed
relations with the Alumni, Plattsburgh, Os-
wego, St. Michael's, and Hartwick and faced
Mass. State (North Adams), Middlebury,
Hamilton, Maritime Academy, St. Lawrence,
Utica, and Mass. State (Fitchburg) for the
first time. Eight of the seventeen scheduled
games were played at Page Hall with good
crowds attending. MAA was able to furnish
the team with new uniforms and warm-up
suits. JV opponents were Potter Club, Lip-
man Pharmacy, Skidmore, Delhi, Siena
Frosh, Albany Business College, Utica Frosh,
Union Frosh, and Albany Pharmacy JV’s.
“Bolo” Marsland, coach of the JV team,
came up with some players to make the
Varsity hustle next year.
State entered a team in the Inter-Collegiate
Bowling League on Wednesday night at the
Playdium. Other teams in the league were
Albany Business College, Albany Law
school, Pharmacy, RPI and Siena. State’s
team consisted of Marty Bortnick, Joe Cara-
sella, Bob Dickinson, Hank Farley, and Fran
Mullin.
Basketball and bowling topped the winter
Intra-Mural program. Basketball was played
on Monday and Thursday nights with three
games nightly. Fourteen teams were entered
so two seven-team leagues were formed. In
the A League Potter, Finks, Gent's, KDR, SLS.
KB, and the Angels fought for supremacy
while the B League found the Ramblers, Pills,
Sceeps, Beavers, Carpetbaggers, Shamrocks,
and VanDerzee fighting it out.
Lyle Walsh headed the Intra-Mural Bowl-
ing League which met Wednesday afternoon
at Rice's. All four fraternities entered ieams
and also in the league were the Jerks, Beav-
ers, Angels and VanDerzee.
Some of the averages were high, others
Farley—a sure strike
Rifle Club
Hathaway at ease
Junior Varsity
Scores ranged from the eighties into
low.
the “200” bracket. Skiing and volleyball
were offered to round out the winter program.
Spring came along and with it baseball,
tennis, and golf. Also came the annual MAA
Banquet. Most of Coach Hathaway's ‘47
Squad returned to play ball. Also plenty of
talent was uncovered among the freshmen
and new students. The Varsity Tennis Team
) OE Meh a i i ae li i ek ee oo
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Kittredge Flying High
was bolstered by Fran Mullin, last year’s top
man, Sy Fersh, Bob Merritt and Fred Root,
all with Varsity experience. Returning golf-
ers were Joe Biviano, Marty Bortnick, Al Ben-
inati, Bill Bowen and Joe Carasella. April
saw the start of Intra-Mural baseball and the
crowds at Page Field. Jim Brophy was the
head man. With that came the end of the
year and the new MAA "“ieam” took over.
ie
“Smoke, smoke, smoke that cigaretie’’—but
not in the halls. “You can't smoke opium
and you can't shoot pool, you can't do noth-
ing cause Campus Commission's in school.”
Grand Marshall Helen Kisiel knows all,
hears all, sees all and instructs her aides in
this art.
The committees are numerous and their
heads are willing slaves to their duties.
Perry Pless will never forget the Campus
Chest drive and some of the posters that
were submitted. To approve or not to ap-
prove—that was the question. The mailbox
system underwent a change this year when
a strict enforcement of regulation note size
was adopted.
Kline Appleby, Carver
on 7
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CAMPUS
COMMISSION
Record-breaker Kisiel
The Commons is still the pet peeve of the
whole commission but the private worry of
Ruth Matteson and Mickey Seaman. Unre-
turned cards and ping pong balls make life
a nightmare for them! But now they're sing-
ing “The Wearin'’ of the Green” for that
something new has been added appearance
of the rejuvenated Commons is their pride
and joy. Sherwin Williams may cover the
earth but the administration has done a good
job on the walls of our campus “One
World”. Mary Jane Carver measured and
cut drapery with the artistry of Omar Kha-
yam.
Dave Jack and Joe Zanchelli take care of
the coke machine to the tune of “Nickle
Matteson and Seaman
hay SRA Soe 7 = cong : >
besa > a
Pless and Zanchelli
Senerade” but still their own pockets stay
bare. “Two Loves Have I” but only one vic
moaned Dick Feathers the night he lent it
to two organizations having separate parties.
Remember the advertising for the Christ-
mas Formal? Campus Commission lent their
P.A. system and the strains of ‘Snowfall’
filled the auditorium. That Friday, Student
Association waltzed out of assembly rather
than in the usual mad rush to beat C.C. to
the door. Postassembly chaos, always a
standing joke, proved less humorous when
Kisiel refused to permit a visiting faculty
member to pass through the closed doors be-
fore the final bell.
Florice Kline and Larry Appleby were kept
busy putting up instructive posters. Larry’s
still looking for the key to the glass case in
Huested to remove a three year old Mys-
kania announcement concerning V-Day
. Ee ee pee hat ae on
bal m4 Po erin aT ¢ MO. t thes Me Ht a
—_ |
Jack and Feathers
services. Sue Miller dabbles in oils, or is it
ink, by grinding the gears that turn out the
mimeograph work for all campus organiza-
tions. Renee Harris must always be present,
never missing, tor the head of “Lost and
Found” is State's most sought after person.
Frosh tryouts really got a workout and dis-
covered that in this case it was the “survival
of the fittest’’.
Campus Commission's work is never done.
Their theory of “It's your school—Keep it as
you want it’ is really effective. There's
plenty of thankless work involved but they
“Keep Smiling” and accomplishing wonders.
Whether it’s keeping order in Page, run-
ning the vic in the Commons or giving no
smoking warnings, you'll find that Campus
Commission's behind it. State’s double “C”
organization with an A plus rating!
Felder, Walsh, Root, Thorne, Dr. Phinney, Kirby, Poulos, Dr. Cooper
“Get thee behind us, Midas’’—Student
Board of Finance's motto. Our monetary-
minded sextet spends the first month collect-
ing wandering student tax payments and the
rest of the year sparingly doling out the
funds. Treasurer Dr. Cooper and chairman
Dr. Phinney with his dry wit, make business-
like fun of the meetings. Secretary Nancy
Walsh is surrounded by men, she, Fred Rooi,
George Poulos and Jack Kirby of ’48, Juniors
Cliff Thorne and Rod Felder cast the decid-
ing votes as to whether to grant that extra
appropriation. The new insurance plan
lightened the minds of many, but put the
weight of refunding the funds on the Board.
Fiscal fury and pecuniary problems burden
the lives of the members of Student Board
liz
ot Finance who bear Siate’s ‘cross of gold
1G. OC.
IGC—the symbol of its own goal of co-
operation—a group of determined workers
with the brotherhood of man as its pot of
gold. A shout of ‘push lethargic belief into
action” and we have a two-day inter-collegi-
ate conference, the literal talk of the nation.
The word sociodrama is considered as new
vocabulary material, as the mystery of plac-
ards was unravelled. One hundred and
titty workers who did a job well—refusing
to rest on laurels—shining in an extensive
community service program—a nomadic
speakers’ panel, the deluxe addition of the
“Intercollegiate Newsletter’’—a week-end in
Quebec—entertainment "a la working toget-
her’ mirror a new tradition, The Mardi Gras.
For State’s infant organization has passed
through its developmental stage and
emerged into the adulthood of progress and
accomplishment.
R9
Re A RY ht res tg, (EY egy perp, «
Chairman Jennings
Dr. Moreno’s Sociodrama
IGC conference
SS
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9 . BA A Rit a Gide PE kg eR ete ng eae ee ae
PRESS BUREAU
They painted PB—Pretty Busy—on the cup-
board, dove in the files for your family his-
tory, and disappeared behind the typewriters
in clouds of superlatives. They syndicated
your exploits at the ping-pong table, and
ignored the fact when you made the wrong
Dean's List. They got your name and fame
into the home town paper— if they had to
send threatening letters to the Editor!
At the Director's Desk, Bistoff kept a cool
head, and assistant McCabe assigned
“beats’’ to sixty tryouts. Secretaries Farrell
and Da Garmo emerged triumphantly from
Director Bistoft
McCabe and De Garmo
reorganized files and called for more stamps,
more envelopes, more time.
The presses stopped rolling while confused
applicants to State were ushered through
their interviews. Because of a schedule be-
yond her control, Miss Hopkins gave her
advisor’s press pass to Mr. Bulger who car-
ried on the Bureau's motto—'’get there first-
est with the mostest—publicity, that is!”
They know the mailing address of every
Gazette and Clarion in New York—if the mail
doesn't get there, their carrier pigeons will.
Publicity at its Best—Press Bureau.
Pas. a St “ A te BRE OS: ee 2 : 4 :
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a
PRIMER
Editors—Fairchild, Poulos, Bogdanski
PRIMER, the literary nucleus of State, has
civen us their two issues, and all for the
price of one! Editor Rog Nielsen, instigator
of the heightened quality and quantity move-
ment, promises next year a quarterly, four
urpass in binding, format, and ma-
nd critical evaluation of submitted
si tw ww NW LLAMAS,
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Leading literate—Nielsen
istry and stimulation of literary and intellec-
tual activity—these are their criterioc.
So the typewriter of ‘48 was covered, we
turned the pages of the PRIMERS, we re-read
LULLL1> Wie VWUYOCoS Yi UL i iViios F Vo. Te-feqaa
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DEBATE COUNCIL
Daniel Webster may have relied on throat
spray and lemons, but not our Debate Coun-
cil! These teams with the persuasive tongues
and leather lungs are wont to rely upon a
collective sense of humor. Witnesses to the
Assembly Debate over skirt lengths were as
impressed by the ridiculous antics of Worth,
Abrams, and Trop, as they were by the de-
bating technique exhibited by the trio.
The various teams pooled their ideas on
Wednesday nights when President Shapiro
attempted to keep the business on a classic
level. Ideas became action when Jones and
Odak spread the good humor in a television
broadcast at Union when Skidmore, R. P. L.,
and New Rochelle came to know debating at
its best. Just to prove that they could if they
wanted to, they expounded Socialized Medi-
cine and visited Brooklyn and Utica. Other
teams gave up, but they went on and on for-
ever—and brought home the Yeas!
Odak, Root, Regan, Jones, Christy
Poulos, Worth, Joslin, Abrams
Debate leader Shapiro
Get a Soapbox! That's a good idea, the
easy way of finding out what's going on in
Forum. If you want to know anything from
poetry to Universal Military Training, just
query Stan Abrams, master of ceremonies
and interlocutor at Forum pow-wows held
the first and third Thursday of each month.
Simon, Riber, Sundick, Rosen, Smallin, Cooperman
Fay, Mulligan, Sundick
Speaker Abrams
The red-headed bombshell Archie Riber
shares top billing with Stan as editor of the
Forum publication, the Soapbox. If you're
“for or ‘against’, merely write it up and
“Soapbox” will put it in print.
Forum meetings resemble Chancellor's
Hall on a busy night. The activities of the
group extend from bull sessions to lectures
by such prominent people as Mr. James Ald-
rich of the American Association for the
United Nations.
Dr. Rienow has been accused of “high-
waying’ Poly Sci 12 students Loungewise on
Wednesday, but so much the better, ‘cause
once they're in the political fold, honest in-
terest shuts the door. Choose your topic—
third-party, religious descrimination—the
field is clear—but take a stand!
«
- AE SRO Os RO Ribera er te a 2 ee ae ie eg EE PY
. 7
=k
Mieras follows the gleam
fellowship for its members. The RPI choir
concert, and interesting speakers highlighted
An inspiring frosh camp impression—a
little red brick church, a moving candle light
service, faith and fun—this is Student Chris-
tian Association. Active not only in State
functions but also busy with community serv-
ices, S C A provides another memory ol
Frosh Chapel
the year’s events.
Monthy meetings in the lounge served as
the main course with “gab-fests’’, parties and
dances as garnishings to add fun. The
Officers—Balfoort, Grant, Lee
SCA choir
state-wide Cornell Bible Study Conference,
work in Albany welfare agencies, and the
Christmas Big Four, each added a block to
S C A's lofty pyramid of accomplishments.
The religious clubs’ picnic and the reception,
"Frosh Frolic’’, showed all of State the friend-
liness and cooperation which characterize
SCA. Joint confabs with Sage and RPI on
their home ground and a leap year pancake
supper were this year’s innovations.
Wednesday noon found § C A’ers in the
Unitarian chapel—alert minds open to ideas
on anything from marriage to world peace.
The fellowship, spiritual and social, more
than compensated for having to hurry to a
12:30 class. Frosh soon lost their traditional
bewilderment at Frosh Club. Nothing like
work to make each gremlin feel as if he be-
longed. And who says making posters isn't
work? Christmas chapel was an all-frosh
production and one to be proud of.
Christmas pageant
S C A’s monthly newspaper, ‘The Search-
light”, under the competent editorship of
Bobby Houck kept everyone informed.
Chapel director Dottie Parr, chief scribe. Lila
Lee, Treasurer Kay Grant and Vice President
Marie Balfoort attended efficient president
Mickey Mieras in holding high S C A's torch
—qa light shining on every State activity.
Proud of its close linking bonds based on
mutual interests and understanding—S C A
—Service, Cooperation, Action—sSociability,
Companionship, Accomplishment.
BE 5 nee any sll
te te De REND MORITA ne 2 Ate a aaa 2 ei a a i 8 eee pA
Ty
Ring the bell! It's 7:30. It's Thursday and
benediction is over. President Eleanor Hol-
big calls Newman Club meeting to order.
Secretary Reilley reveals from the minutes
that the combined religious clubs’ picnic was
a huge success. “Broph, as V. P., will you
Holbig—a Newman natural
supervise the Halloween party?” ‘Miss Cal-
andra, it's time for the age-old question, ‘Has
everyone paid his dues?’ “And now Father
Smith will introduce an old friend of the up-
perclassmen, Father Collins who will speak
on the history of Newman Club.” “Miss Goa-
Inspirationists Reilley, Father Smith, Brophy, Calandra
gin, will you pour once more? The faculty
tea is Sunday.” “Any new business?” ‘Let's
put our bid in for the Toy Shop in the Xmas
Big 4 this year.” ‘‘The meeting is adjourned.
Well go to the recreation room for dancing
and refreshments. Frosh, don't forget to move
the tables back.”
And so went the meetings, and so went
Newman Club. Doorbells on Madison Ave-
nue buzzed with scavengers looking for any-
thing from goldfish to loose bath tubs.
Every Newmanite found a valuable friend
in the new Chaplain, Father Dinneen. Mem-
bers found Hudson's loss was State’s gain as
Newman wound up another successful year.
Come Dasher, come Dancer
Attentive meeting
LE NRE PIO BS Pik erie ti ea ae Orr + a oe
end
—
Monthly meetings in the Lounge brought
varied and valuable programs within their
scope, as Hillel to bring about a
clearer understanding of current Jewish prob-
Buftet-supper dances at Hillel Hall
provided relaxation and fun. Hot dogs and
pop were featured at religious clubs’ picnic
and red wine at the traditional model Seder.
sirove
lems.
Officers—Rosenberg, Goldstein, Simon
—————
98
HILLEL
Rosen looks back on a good year
Thanksgiving Chapel and the Chanukah
Pageant in the Christmas Big 4 deserve an
honorable mention.
Irma Rosen, always busy and bustling
president, Joy ‘Jack-of-All-Trades” Simon,
V.P., Charlotte Goldstein, secretary, and Sy
Fersh, treasurer, compose a laudable group
of officers, aided by a wise councilor, Rabbi
Moseson.
Hillel Board—Riber, Hyman, Tishler
LTA
The Campus Arm of the Zionist Movement
is the slogan for 1 ZF A, the newest religious
group at State. Rae Gluckstadt is president
of this chapter, branch of a national organ-
ization. Social activities such as folk danc-
ing and singing, and speakers augment its
educational purpose for Zionism.
SMILES
Intercollegiate Zionist Federation of America
Charlie Miller smiled and the idea caught
on. Now all the kids at the Albany Home
are smiling and why not? They have an
annual Christmas party, presents, entertain-
ment n everything. They see all the AD
plays, and the Frosh and Soph classes give
their rivalry musicals to a saucer-eyed, ap-
preciative audience of kids.
Smiles that bring cheer
Se Nai yr ee Oe tiie pyle tt Oc tte bee eee
—
4
a
e-
GPF ht Me NR Mem Areca an at A Pg RA aa a a Ra
Cornwell, VanPopering, Miller, Cornwell, President, Palmer, Maize
CHRISTIAN SCTENCE
The “Miracle On 34th Street” isnt any-
thing like the way the Christian Science Or-
ganization has taken roots at State. Under
the gavel of Bill Cornwell, the group meets
alternate Tuesdays. Activities open with a
reading by Shirley Van Popering, while
Wayne Palmer scribes.
President Williams
St. Andrew's church—scene of meetings
and corporate communions of Canterbury
Ciub. In the swim of National Episcopalian
activities, State’s members visit other young
people’s groups for discussions and social
events. Shirley Williams with the advice of
Reverend Hackwell leads the group in learn-
ing and living their religion.
100
CANTERBURY CLUB
Eaton
Boetcher,
Otficers—Bender, Price,
President Boetcher
Sleigh rides, caroling, bowling parties,
weekend retreats in the Heldebergs for fel-
lowship and inspiration. All are a part of
State’s chapter of Inter-Varsity Christian Fel-
lowship. There is more than fun and good
times to bring them together for daily discus-
sions, weekly Bible studies and worship serv-
ices.
An exchange of student speakers with
near-by colleges, monthly Tri-City meetings
to hear Christians who are specialists in the
fields of science and philosophy, as well as
winter-weekends, help promote an inter-col-
legiate viewpoint on vital religious questions.
It's a year-round organization with summer
camps in Canada for students of 27 different
countries. World wide interest in world-wide
needs is shown through study of missions
and in contributions to a program of evan-
gelism and relief. Closer to home, co-op-
eration in the community was shown ex-
emplified by the formation of Sunday School
at the Albany Home for Children.
Devotion meetings, discussions of contem-
porary philosophies, talks about life, ‘‘sing-
spirations,” these are parts of their curricu-
lum. Planning is done by Evelyn Boetcher,
Pres., V.P. Ruth Price, Sec. Doris Bender,
Treas. Bob Eaton, with the guidance of Miss
Avery and Mr. Prior of the faculty.
An international organization, with per-
sonal faith as a main objective.
eee et eli Se et ee ee oe a oe ele. Cen
og ee . Lee oe Ee
*
x° -+- y” or the tan of x — the key to the
realms of the slide rule and the logarithm.
President Eleanor Merritt would take any
mind off an equation. Whether bisecting an
angle or dividing a hot dog at the spring
picnic, there's no minus quantity in Math
Club.
President Merritt
“Pardon me for speaking in your faces
senores y senoritas but se declara abierta
la sesion!”’ commands president Ardito at
SPANISH CLUB the bi-monthly meetings of Pan-Amigos.
Then members may anticipate “algo” from a
lecture to breaking the “pinata” at the Christ-
mas fiesta.
| President Ardito
| 102
‘ 7p.
TRENCH CLUB
Suivez-moi to the lounge for the semi-
monthly meeting of the French Club. ‘’Bon-
jour, Mademoiselle Dokbin, will you tell us
about your ‘bon voyage’ to the patrie?’’
dit May Giovaniello before the combined
Christmas ‘fetes’. You learn “le francais
and vous vous amuzez bien ici.”
President Giovaniello
“Alea iacta est’, quoth Julius Caesar cross-
ing the Rubicon, and Gladys Hawk presiding
over Classical Club. They held their “con-
ventiones the ‘‘tertia hora’ to discuss togas
and tunics with “sapientes’” pedagogues
Wallace and Goggin. The results were
“multi good times for those who ‘venie-
bant’’.
a ee ee ae
CLASSICAL CLUB '
President Hawk
gp OIE PS Te Sd Soh aa wi
pine nd ote as as
CHEMISTRY CLUB
a
Chemistry Club experimented for a new
corn picking method at Dr. Lanford’s, made
new discoveries on the Spring expedition,
and found the solution to problems in photo-
graphy or minerology. Chief Maginess and
the chemical element of State’s students
unite in a good fomula for fun.
COMMERCE CLUB
There’s no accounting for the fun had by
Commerce Club members at their annual
picnic at Dr. Cooper's. Mardell Brusie, as-
sisted by Bill Bahn, was chief clerk over their
Tuesday meetings. Bookkeeper Lynn White
and Stenographer Pete Talarico kept the
concern on the black side of the ledger.
Officers—White, Brusie, Bahn, Talarico
COMMUTERS CLUB
President Creeden
1947-1948, ‘The Best Year of Its (Com-
muter’s Club's) Life’, in which officers Clare
Creeden, Helen Califano, Florence Albright
and Dorothy Arnold ‘''Whistled While They
Worked”.
"The House They (want to) Live In’—
that’s a place to stay overnight in cases of
necessity or emergency. Hoping that those
rooms reserved in the prospective Student
Union will soon materialize—That's Their
Desire .
"Welcome Stranger” (and friend) was the
keynote at the annual Frosh _ reception.
“Danced With the Dolly With the Hole in
Her Stocking” at the now traditional Soc Hop
which packed 500 people into Page Hall
Gym.
“Going My Way” queries were answered
by car pools and many a ‘Man (or woman)
Who ‘Stayed’ for Dinner” before we2k-night
affairs saw how Commuters’ Club helps the
“day-hops’ participate in college activities.
They're a great bunch, those Commuters.
“Now Voyager’, now student, but “Always”
a vital part of State.
105
Soc-Hop sportsters
A second helping? Califano, Oliver, Tunkel
Bak ee ee Se ee sg = toe Pre to TES re Sas er ed, SM}. Seer ee? cep tae
es ES ee eer
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106
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1940
Marian Cornelia Mieras
ice Prindle Walsh
Al
Helen Mary Kisiel
Ann May
%
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Gloria
Eloise Constance Worth
President
Stanley Abrams
108
MYSKANTA
John Francis Dooley
The court is in order, another Tuesday
meeting is in session and the solemnity of
State’s judiciary disappears with the first
clever quip.
In September, the thirteen returned and in
step wih fashion donned the “new look”
when they moved into their new quarters, a
luxurious, and palatial lavatory.
Tradition, rivalry, Campus Day, Orphan's
Party, elections, and Moving-Up-Day were
the well run orders of the day under the whip
of “livewire’’ Worth and everybody's friend,
Baldwin.
Argumentative Abrams was the bane of
Scoop’s “there'll always be a Pedagogue”
lite, while peace loving Mickey interceded
and Seelbach disagreed with the decision.
“Gibson Girl’ Maysie used printer's ink in
the salad, Kisiel cheered “HooRAY,” and
smiling Diehly fried delicious steak. Betty
Crocker’s advisor Twink served vile coffee
with Shapiro's scintillating wit. The talka-
tive twosome, lovely Alice and “I speak for
myself” John completed the family of wheels.
So “Life Faced Conky Collywasser” and
this is our Myskania.
Wilma Frances Diehl
Ruth Vivien Seelbach
Alice Jean Williams
Rita Shapiro
William Dundas Baldwin
SIGNUM LAUDIS
President, Paul Meadows
pean as aie ape mae aaa
Ethel Angle
Eileen Abrams
r
/
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A
Vera Chudiak
Kathleen Bell
Eleanor Byrne
110
Left to right:
Arthur Collins
Muriel Dando
John Dooley
Anne Gilleo
Eleanor Holbig
Annalee Levine
Sheila Maginess
Theresa Mahoney
11]
Eleanor Merritt
Evelyn Mattison
Marionlee Watkins
Gerhard Weinberg
Doris Wester
Alice Williams
Shirley Williams
Orietta Wolfe
KAPPA PHI KAPPA
NATIONAL HONORARY EDUCATIONAL FRATERNITY
ena,”
oat ee
President Vice President Secretary Treasurer
| Alan Stone Stanley Abrams Curtis Pfaft Raymond Howard i
FACULTY
Dr. Ralph Baker Dr. Robert Frederick Dr. Carlton Moose |
Mr. Harper Beaty Dr. Alan Hicks Dr. Milton G. Nelson
Mr. Paul Bulger Mr. Clarence Hidley Dr. Josiah Phinney
Dr. Robert Fisk Mr. Elmer Mathews Mr. John Tibbetts
GRADS
Raymond Verrey
1948
Harry Baden Robert Dickinson Roger Nielsen
William Baldwin Glenn DeLong Walter Schick
Martin Bortnick Mervyn McClintock Joseph Stenard
Samuel Dickieson Raymond McNamara James Taylor
Francis Mullin
1949
Robertson Baker Joseph Francello Harry O'Meara
Joseph Biviano John Jennings Emory Osborne
James Brophy Thomas Lisker Clifton Thorne
John Brophy Robert Merritt Marvin Wayne
Al Feldman Dale Wood
NO PICTURES
Richard Beach Joseph Higgins Paul Wagner
Henry Druschel William Marsland Warren Walker
Leonard Friedman Al Millen Robert White
- Morris Gerber Fred Root Robert Wilcox
Ettore Gradoni Jacob Schuhle Gifford Wingate
» : ‘ ‘ a _
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113
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Pl GAMMA MU
National Honorary Social
Studies Fraternity
Vice-president
Russel Bailey
President
Marion Hancock
Stanley Abrams
Eugenia Baranowski
Kathleen Bell
Ruth Bessel
Martin Bortnick
Theresa Case
Carol Clark
Elaine Clute
Joan Farrell
Alice Fisher
Secretary
Frances Sowa
1948
Julia Genovesi
Gilbert Holliday
Raymond Howard
Wallace Keene
Dolores Koenig
Janet La Rue
Arlene Lavendar
Annalee Levine
Evelyn Mattison
Paul Meadows
Curtis Ptaft
Fred Baron
John Fay
Marion Kragh Brandon
1949
Margaret Franks
NO PICTURES
Robert Hardt
114
Treasurer
Marionlee Watkins
George Poulos
Arliene Riber
Ellen Rochford
Laura Santucci
Irene Szarek
James VanDetia
Gerhard Weinberg
Doris Wester
Mary E. Whitney
Selene Wolf
William Pawluckie
Marvin Wayne
Norma Swinyer
~
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PL OMEGA PI
National Honorary
Commerce Society
i
President Vice President Secretay Treasurer
Pe Martin Bortnick Myra Rosenberg Kathleen Bell Barbara Hyman
Evelyn Boetcher Alice Fisher Raymond Howard Helen Kisiel
Theresa Mahoney Gloria Merlige Shirley Williams Frances Zinni
116
A Pawn My Word Hark! The Herald Angels
The Boul was never like this. Major Net-work
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118
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‘TODAS FRIAR
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a
INTER-SORORTTY COUNCIL
this
year, as Intersorority Council went on to
The Greeks have that “New Look”
bigger and better things. The start was from
scratch, with revised rush rules the order of
the day. Not only were Frosh puzzled by
the quantities of “meet me by Minerva, so
that we can have lunch at the Boul” notes
—but upper classmen registered bewilder-
ment in an attempt to follow the new system.
At last, that “hush-hush” quality was some-
what eliminated from rushing.
Someone set the example, and the ‘’Kem-
fad spread—covering worn wall paper
‘7
tone
120
President Barbara Otto rules the
Greeks
Officers Seelbach, Schoonmaker and
Dunker
from Chi Sig to Phi Delt in its sweep. Ship-
shape for the occasion, the houses were
“opened” to the Frosh, who trudged many
a mile, in those fifteen minutes, from one
sorority to the next—inspecting, admiring,
getting acquainted. The mad “rush” con-
tinued into November, when the iron curtain
was dropped by almighty Council and
“Thou shalt not speak" became the law for
sorority women. However, buffet suppers
and formal dinners managed to reinstate the
gift of gab to the Greek letter maidens. Bids
and pledging followed quickly, and Inter-
aca
sorority Council sighed with relief as one of
the biggest jobs was completed—and all
was still intact.
The newest addition to the already busy
calendar was State's first big post-war prom.
Cooperation with Inter-Fraternity Council re-
sulted in the biggest event of the year.
Claude Thornhill's orchestra made music at
the Armory for the pre-Christmas affair.
They may say Council's meetings aren't for-
mal—but The Formal! Long may that tradi-
tion reign!
On Tuesday afternoons the “Big Seven”
méet to formulate sorority procedure —
headed by Gamma Kap’s Otto, assisted by
BZ’s Bea-Jay, while Phi Delt’'s Seelbach
taes ten minutes and Dunker of KD keeps the
cash. Shapiro, Kisiel, and Coleman com-
plete the inner circle.
Making the long trek up Washington
Avenue, AE Phi's can be seen irying their
hand at the culinary art, since necessity de-
manded it. A prospective fiend is learning
the intricacies of bridge at Phi Delta, be it
three A.M. or P.M. Gamma Kap boasts
Scoop’s and Eloise’s purple and gold bed-
spreads, and those extraordinary Thursday
night sessions. No, not three men in a tub,
but three femmes sleeping on the back porch
of Psi Gam. ‘‘Winter es acummen in!” At
KD they're still attempting to get water above
second floor, and trying to recover from
Twink’s announcement, ‘The name is Mrs.
Walsh, girls.” Bernie’s sharp sayings add
even more zest to Chi Sig, proud of their
beauty, Queen Janie, who possesses the
coveted Campus Day Crown. BZ proudly
displays different colored floors and, thanks
to Pickle’s papa, a new and much-used vic.
All this, and heavenly maidens too make
up sorority row where a Greek God would
gladly dwell.
Sorority sophisticates—Coleman, Kisiel and Shapiro
121
ae tee Ne
President—Barbara Dunker
Frances Child
Elaine Clute
Barbara Dunker
Suzanne Hildreth
Susanne Anderson
Mary Cooper
Margaret Franks
Ann Gourley
Jeanne Bowen
Marjorie Child
Virginia Crants
KAPPA DELTA
Margaret Vonada
Vice President—Suzanne Hildreth
Secretary—Susanne Anderson
1948
Vivian Hillier
Grace Jones
Olga Podmajersky
Alice Prindle Walsh
1949
Jo Ann Joslin
Bonnie Jean Lewis
Jean Moshier
Hilda Rivenburgh
1950
Joan Erlandson
Jean Hotaling
Mary Lucas
No Pictures
Barbara Smith
Treasurer—Jo Ann Joslin
Jean Wilcox
Marjorie Williams
Virginia Young
Mary Carol Scutt
Alice Smith
Leslie Hervey Weber
Wilma Whitney
Marjorie Southwick
Shirley Wiltse
ni ct cert el a a
Pst
President-
UA
Helen Kisiel
Vice President-—
Margaret Daly
Wilma Diehl
Virginia Dowd
Mary Emmet
Beverly Free
Julie Genovesi
Jean Anderson
Gloria Donato
Mary Sue Dunning
Gloria Enea
Mary Calandra
Sarah Caruso
Marion Kragh Brandon
Mary Bates
Jean Anderson
Secretary—Lorraine Malo
1948
Adrienne lorio
Janet Johnston
Kathryn Kendall
Helen Kisiel
Rita Kopec
Margaret Lotz
Lorraine Malo
1949
Coletta Fitzmorris
Patricia Hammann
Audrey Jerue
1950
Alice Casey
Dorothy Conaway
Gloria Sottile
No Pictur2s
Joan Guzzetta
Janice Seward
Treasurer—Julie Genovesi
Ann May
Mary Regan
Angie Ricci
Frances Sowa
Shirley Van Popering
Alice Williams
Raimonda Pilato
Jeannette Skavina
Ann Sulich
Jean Totman
Rosemary Stoddard
Laura Varga
Mary Sulich
Janet Whitman
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CHI SIGMA THETA
President—Rita Coleman
Vice President—Jane O’Brien
Rita Coleman
Anne Donovan
Virginia Gminski
Jean Hansen
Catherine Donnelly
Marion Furlong
Arlene Golden
Bernadette Freel
Joan French
Sally Giaconia
Secretary—Bernadette
1948
Eleanor Holbig
Jane McGuinness
Jane O’Brien
Dorothy Skelton Pfaff
Ellen Rochford
1949
Cathal Halloran
Eileen Hayes
Agnes McIntyre
Jean Pulver
1950
Ann Green
Sandra Heslin
No Pictures
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Sanry Dietoercnli
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WM
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Treasurer—Jean Pulver
Rita Rowe
Claire Sylvestri
Dorothy Walejsio
Frances Ann Walsh
Joan Rourke
Jean Spencer
Margaret Seaman
Joan Keyton
Margaret McMahon
Alice Reilley
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Ruth Bessel
Edith Dell
Alice Fisher
Sylvia Fisher
Charlotte Goldstein
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Nancy Hellman
Jean Hoffman
Marie Holz
Geraldine Cooperma
Leila Drezner
Doris Freedman
Grace Friedman
Arlene Lavender
Annalee Levine
Arlene Riber
Irma Rosen
1949
Gloria Maistelman
Pearl Pless
Rose Rosen
Ethel Rosenberg
Yvette Schwedock
1950
Goldie Goldfarb
Renee Harris
Charlotte Kaplan
Frances Kessler
Selma Nadel
Myra Rosenberg
Bernice Shapiro
Rita Shapiro
Dolores Shindelman
Frances Weiss
Shirley Shapiro
Helen Tischler
Arlene Zeilengold
Hortense Zeilengold
Irma Rheingold
Rhoda Riber
Helma Rosenberg
Judy Serebnick
Ethel Trop
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Erna Burns
Vera Chudiak
Mary Cooper
Ruth Davenport
Florence Wojtal Fenton
Gloria Gilbert
Stella Bogdanski
Marjorie Fusmer
Elizabeth Ann Gibson
Alice Kozlowski
Florence Blasco
Ellen Brown
Marie DeCarlo
Mary Quinn
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1948
Mary Jane Giovannone
Marjorie Houghton
Dorothy Keaveney
Charlotte Lally
Barbara Otto
Anne Pascuzzi
1949
Marjorie Memelo
Frances Mitsch
Anita Olson
Mary Jane Peris
1950
Edith Kelleher
Louise Klingman =
Shirley McCuen
Edith Minch
No Pictures
Frances Flanagan
Anna Natoli
Treasurer—Mary Jane
Wilma Phillip
Margaret Smith
Paula Tichy
Eloise Worth
Patricia Rourke
Agnes Russo
Jeanne Valachovic
Carolyn Wood
atherine Noonan
Shirley Tillotson
Diane Webber
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President—Barbara jean scnoonmakel
Cecilia Coleman
Isabel Cooper
Evelyn Crabtree
Dorothy Diffin
Hilda Fiedler
Jean Ashcraft
Helen Cook
Betty Jane Dimon
Shirley Barber
Elise deSeve
Joan Farrell
Audrey Hartman
President—
Shirley Forman
1948
Shirley Forman
Sheila Maginess
Eleanor Merritt
Edwina Lucke
1949
Muriel Hedges
Nancy Mowbray
Mary Odak
Mary Lou O'Neil
1950
Romaine Johnson
Mary Lynch
Marjorie Lyons
Ruth Mattison
No Pictures
Eleanor Adams
Treasurer—Dorothy
Janet LaRue
Carrie Mills
Gloria Rand
Barbara Jean Schoonmcker
Doris Wester
Beverly Sittig
Lena Sorcinelli
Virginia Waite
Susan Miller
Shirley Sheets
Ruth Wales
Jane Walters
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Marie Balfoort
Madelyn Breish
Gladys Hawk
Evelyn Jamison
Helen Caldes
Juanita Evans
Tacqueline Farrell
Marie Fernandez
Annette Gardiner
Lois Bassett
Joyce Dodge
Wanda Hare
Peggy Eggert
Marjorie Harland
Margaret Hosking
Wilma Hutchinson
ry
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1948
Florence Mace
Justine Maloney
Marian Mieras
June Petri
Ruth Seelbach
1949
Margaret Hoefner
Barbara Houck
Elsa Moberg
Geraldine Morris
Betty Hutton
1950
Audrey Koch
Anne Morgan
No Pictures
Anneite Koehn
Treasurer—Dolores Stocker a
Joan Sittner
Mary Jane Smallin
Patricia Tilden
Sheila Van Scoy
Frances-Jean Ward
Mary Elizabeth Whitney
Dorothy Parr
Audrey Steigerwald
Dolores Stocker
Joan Wurzler
Margaret Youngren
Vivian Steele
Hilda Wainio
Geraldine Wands
Margaret Whitmore
Regina Bollenbach
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‘Twas the night before bidding...
COUNCIL
Inter-Fraternity Council rules where wo-
men fear to tread in the world of our four
post-war reconstructed fraternities.
Functions of the council this year included
co-sponsorship of the All-State Christmas
Formal, directing of the fraternity activities
and priority as a clearing house for informa-
tion to and from the Greeks.
Under the leadership of Stan Abrams, as-
sisted by Buck Hippick, Bob Merritt and Ev
Kinn, rushing progressed in a SIMPLE and
STRAIGHTFORWARD manner. No holds
barred—gentlemen at all times.
Traditional rush parties returned with
K DR’s Carnival and Manor House, Potter's
Baby Party and Club 51, S L S's ‘Le Rat
Mort’ and the “Hillbilly Hoedown” and K
B’s Cabaret and dance party.
Rushing culminated with the sending of
bids and a hundred men joined the fraternity
ranks. Crew cuts, mustaches, bow ties and
pins became fashionable, as did the battle
cry “Pledge.”
Bound together by mutual ties of respect,
cooperation and common fraternal fellow-
ship, Inter-Fraternity Council rules these, our
State men of distinction.
Zeller, Mullin, Kinn, treasurer, Feldman, Wayne, Piatt,
DeLong, Merritt, secretary, Abrams, president.
eS oe ee eS, ee .
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Abraham Trop
Stanley Abrams Abr m Troy
Arnold Rice
Marvin Wayne Irwin Baume!
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Paul Wagoner, Irwin Waxman.
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Alan Stone Raymond Verrey
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Harry Baden Robert Dickinson Raymond Mc!
William Baldwin Mervyn McClintock Curtis Pfaff
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Robertson Baker Donald Dickinson
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William Blasberg Robert Kaiser C
James Brophy Robert Merritt P
John Brophy Emory Osborne Dale Wood
James Baumgarten Robert Eaton Basil Karpiak
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William Dumbleton Carrol Gallivan John Morris
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| Henry Druschel Richard Beach Donald Hoyt
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Joseph Biviano John Jennings Donald Lansky
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Rodney Felder Everson Kinn William Pawluckie
pet ane A
ruce Hansen Robert Kittredge Nolan Powell
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Robert Horsman Joseph Zanchelli
1950
Lindley DeGarmo Benjamin Jackson Anthony Prochilo
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Anthony Capuano Clifford Crooks John Moore
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Presider J. Michael Hippick
Vice Presider Robert Wilcox
Secretary—Heinz Engel
Treasurer—Lloyd Taylor
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. J. Michael Hippick Joseph Stenard
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‘ . Robert Hardt Frank Dembrosky Warren Noble
Harold Mills Henry Dombrowski John O’Connor
Jacob Schuhle Richard Watson
144
SOUT TD i i gee a ge nr es SLI EP ee .
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Frasso on trial—judges
(bottom row) ess, (top row) Donato, Fobian, Kopec,
Coleman, Walsh, Hillier, Mace, Magin- Williams, Lyle, Ricer, Fisher
Too much yearning,
Got a warning,
Came the dawning,
No more yawning.
“Lost my compass
Follow your proboscis!”
Made a rumpus,
Got a campus.
Had a date,
Came back late,
Met your fate—
That's all, mate!
RESIDENCE COUNCIL
“Have I Stayed Away Too Long?” Time and tide
and Residence Council wait for no woman—Judges
Viv Hillier, president, Nancy Walsh, vice president,
Taffey Ricer, and Alice Fisher hear the case. Preced-
ing the fateful decision comes the usual series of why,
when, and where went those tardy minutes. Finally
it comes—a whole week and a weekend.
secretary-treasurer Flo Mace records the evil deed
and another victim walks the last mile to solitary con-
finement.
Sitting—Mrs. DeRouville, A E Phi; Mrs. More. Standing—Mrs. Swinnerton, Chi
Reynolds, Wren;
Mrs.
Pappas, Psi Sig: Mrs. Rand, Pierce: Mrs. Diffin, B
Gam; Miss Dalton, Newman; Mrs. Nye. Z; Mrs. Carmen, K D;: Mrs. MacLaugh-
Gamma _ Kap;
Mrs.
Jacobs,
Tommy lin, Sayles: Mrs. Davenport, Phi Delt
¢
=
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A
. ed
cA vs
Mealtime Melee— (b to t) Hedges,
Gminski, Barton, Wagner, Allen, Hunter,
Rennie, Todt, Mowbray
Wren Hall—one imagines sweetness, femi-
ninty, and peace. One may also have his
illusions shattered! For here the femininity
is sweet—but the peace is nonexistent. The
telephone rings constantly—the men know
where to find those cute Frosh—"’Ginny, it's
for you!"’ The Wren sign disappears regu-
larly—some R.P.I. man has another trophy!
And South Lake is ripped up annually—ithe
plumbing is neurotic!
’ in ae Fie onetentiotua:s ee er? Par bi
WREN HALL
Officers—(b to t) Fobian, President;
Dunning, Hurr, Seward, Sorcinelli
Tireless President Fobian is a reception
comittee of one at one. Sorcinelli isn't really
that short—she’s developed a complex from
begging for dues on bended knee! The
girls love Mrs. Reynolds—but on meatless
Tuesdays they can’t resist—'’not carrots and
spaghetti again!’’— Barton in her toga—
Downey coping with red bears and cigars—
all add to the general hilarity. It's hectic but
they're happy—those pigeons at Wren.
Pierce personified by officers Whitney, Wales and Maginess
PIERCE HALL
The Green Room, the Pine Room, soft-car-
peted halls, and a-staircase right out of a
story-book, what else but Pierce Hall with
its stately columns and beckoning doors?
Take notice: this building remains on view,
it's private apartment and bedroom too.” It's
the home of myriads of upperclassmen and
a handful of frosh. Like a mother hen watch-
ing over her brood, Pierce Hall gathers in the
co-eds from the coitages at breakfast and
dinner time.
There’s Western Hall with its unbeatable
spirit, New Hall with only two sophs among
so many freshmen. The “New Hall Worm”
was the “piece de resistance’ of the memor-
able Halloween party. Syddum and North
also boast of their wide-eyed frosh and South
deserves a medal for standing up under the
debris in the attic. If you can't find some-
thing, take a gander in ‘the garrett.
No smoking in the halls, get permission to
wear your hair up to dinner, speak early for
a weekend signout, make your bed by noon,
upperclassmen first into the dining room
(funny how the frosh always seem to tear
in before the grads, though), there’s a rule to
fit every occasion.
150
The mad scramble early Saturday morn-
ing to get the washing and ironing done (oh
for a Bendix from Sayles!) and the midnight
treks to the kitchenette make Pierce the won-
dérful place it is. There’s no such thing as
Thursday night any more—it’s “hair-wash-
ing night!’" Who'll forget the emergency
measure of locking up the mail and the
police patrolling the block after a prowler
broke into Myra’'s piggy bank?
"T have mixed with a crowd and heard
much talk’’—Hen sessions into the wee hours
—counselors trying to do their jobs. A box
from home is just another excuse for a get-
together and an all-night confab. They hate
themselves in the morning, but maybe those
conventions are just as educational as and
Poli Sci or Ed. class! A big dorm certainly
has its advantages—there’s always bound to
be someone who has her homework done
and there’s always a fourth for bridge.
The Ingle Room is the scene of another
President's Reception and another Jonquil
Jump, the Pierce Hall formal, turns out to
be the dorm event of the year. Couldn't help
but be with V. P. Whitney in charge of social
All the refrigerators filled with
activities.
“ Wap * he ice ct EP ee
corsages—gotta wear it Monday!!
Phone duty, the buzzer system, singles con-
verted to doubles, dancing or a ping-pong
game in the Ingle, Evans and her unceasing
banter, eerie screams in the middle of the
night (“not a creature was stirring except
for that mouse’’), all these and the romantic
well, too, make Pierce Hall where strawberry
blonde Sheila Maginess officiates as presi-
dent and Ruth Wales of the ‘Blue-jays”
serves as treasurer.
“But at night I would wander away, away
Mama Rand—the First Lady of 221
The spiral staircase
+t Ste eater AM nen D” tealight ay th
‘7
everybody signing out at once and the
bothersome Ingle Room bell at 10:55. This
and the weird flashes of light at five of one
are only reminders that there are ‘five
minutes more. How many people can fit
on a tront porch? (Even the night watch-
man, “Hawkeyes,’ has his place.) Pierce
Hall's a pretty desolate place on weekends!
Mama Rand still trying to get used to her
hundred and some children—the multitude
of trifles which add up to one grand itotal—
Life ‘on Ontario Street.
Western Hall colleens at the Hallowe'en party
Open season at Open House
om
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hah S LEER, AS SE ee ts
PRR ILL, BERLE LOLA SOLS NLL NASR ARLEN AO
Officers—Minch, Gibson, Casey, Williams—President, Valachovic, Free, Braasch
Their grandmothers treasured faded roses
and locks of hair, their mothers kept scrap-
books stuffed with game tickets and cor-
sages.—The girls at Sayles spent the year
bedecking bulletin boards, sharing their
tacked dance programs, notes, matchbooks,
snapshots, and corsages, to assorted bulletin
boards strung precariously above their beds.
And the memories of Sayles for this past
year have been worth sharing—for it
has been a round of fun, spirit, and esca-
pades shared by 140 ‘good kids.” Good
kids? Well, they must be pardoned for hav-
ing developed slight tendencies to klepto-
mania—for how else could they have
returned with mementos of every big event
at State? ‘Mrs. Mac and her 140 thieves”!
Trained from an early age—the 56 Frosh
arrived with the approved boards—and tons
of material. High school souvenirs were
gsradually replaced by those from State—
and the second floor became one of the
strongholds of ‘51. Besides, they all went
political and Weller, Jai, Cook, Hatch, and
cyt
Gersch returned with the spoils of office to
add to their collections!
Operating on the grand scale were Tilden
and Smith. Biggest bulletins in six states
and covered with mementos of at least six
—their secrets of success must be seven
league boots! This combo came in with the
migration from Farrell. A nice quiet group,
—quietly maddening! In keeping with the
souvenir idea, Sayles took in all the old
relics from Farrell—Waite, Topper, McNeil,
and company.
The Sophs collected their trophies up on
third—after midnight forays down on second.
Minch and Kelleher kept score of tradition
warnings—and Riber, Caruso, and Sottile
returned “bloody but unbowed” with dozens
of beanies. Among the peacemaking up-
perclassmen—Vi Herbst’s board flew the
cherry-and-white” from R.P.J.—Alice Smith
refused to nail that diamond on her bulletin
—as did Marcher. Hoeffner and Youngren
saved many glamorous fish from the formal,
while Fusmer’s furry friends ran all over the
walls! And running all over Greico’s bulle-
tin were many warnings for lateness—she
saves em instead of box tops, yet!
Although most of the boards were highly
individual, there were a few items to be
found on everyone’s—pieces of Sittig’s scalp
because she would hold fire drills at 2 A.M.
—copies of the reincarnated scandal sheet,
The Saylesman,
chovic to “pay your dorm dues or else!”
‘7
-dire warnings from Val-
orange candles from the Halloween party
when Belva became “Beanie” and Rhoda
nearly froze in that bath towel—millions of
leaves (cut by hand) from the Open House
—Sprigs of green and Carol books revived
memories of the Christmas festivities in the
firelit Lounge—Warnings from peace-loving
President “Al’’ Williams—always, ‘this hurts
me more than it does you'!—One huge,
laden bulletin of one hugely successful year!
Sunday A. M.—Grieco, Kessler, Cook, Kimberg, Hatch
and Donnelly
First Class—Kelleher, Scism, Zeilengold, and Farrell
“Good food, good meat,
Good God, let’s eat.”
Fusmer, Sottile, Youngren, Kern and Pascuzzi—Meetin’
for eatin’
“Keep those bony hands above the table . .
NEWMAN HALL
7
is for the nice girls that you find
there. In fact, 54 of them. Dot Causse
who commutes from Gloyersvilie, Marie ‘I'm
from Highland Falls” O'Neill, Ann Lou who
knits, Mary Fleming who captivates Sigma
Chi with her Irish smile, Dotty Mann of
7
Drape Lindy fame, Betty “Goldilocks’’ Cush-
Olficers confer with Miss Dalton—Ran-
dall, Secretary; Cerro, Alumni Secre-
tary: Driscoll, Historian; Miss Dalton;
af
ing, Agnes “I cant count the number oi
times’ Russo, ‘Brush Cut’ Reilley, and the
Kozlowskis still keeping up their reputation
for multi-clothes and beautiful rooms.
"'™ Gs for their evenings spent alone.
"E is also for—except weekends.” Week-
ends certainly aren't any solitary aftfairs—
just take a look-see at the sign out sheet.
Newman is like a morgue Fridays and Satur-
days!
Lyle, President; Komendarek, Treasurer;
DaBramo, Vice President
154
(ae ne ae me ae en en ae nee er ems aan EL TT
Mail or male call? Cushing, Mann
“Our Father .
Paris, Frasso, Zinni, Merhige, Larson,
Mullansy
“'W' is for the work they spend their
nights at.’’ As for work, they've got work
they ain't even used yet. Governing the ac-
tivities of the 54 takes much time. Petite
president is Peggy Lyle, Aida DaBramo
takes care of the social aspect, Evelyn Ko-
mendarek holds the keys to the treasury and
Mary Randall keeps the minutes and sends
the Christmas cards. Can ducking from
June Ann's flash-camera be classified as
work? If so, there’s plenty of that around
good ol Newman.
'"M’ is for the men they ve never known.”
A joke son, a joke that is! Did you hear 38
ring? Just Joe for Laura again. And the
date parties! Yawn, yawn! Very success-
ful are the fiestas in the ‘rec’ for the men
of R. P. I. Much fun and many introductions
—sometimes many dates follow. Sally Gia-
conia and Jim, Peggy Lyle and Mac, Alice
Reilley and Bob can testify to the truth of
that. As long as Newman has a “rec” with
that shrewd upholstery there will be fun and
frivolity.
‘A’ is for the awful things they do there.”
Poor Frosh, they have to undergo an initia-
tion. And after that’s over, they have to
cater to the whims of the Sophs (and upper-
classmen) by taking the mail out and buying
sundry things. Of course, before the initia-
tion, the Frosh must be properly satiated with
respect (or is it fear?) of the Sophs: ‘‘Kurlers”
Komendarek and “I’m really a fiend of
yours’ Giaconia led the meetings. Lowly
Frosh—Impersonator Fannie Longo and
“How exotic can college be?’ Cahill had to
be shut in a closet and pushed under a table
for disturbing the tranquility.
'"N’ is for the noiselessness of all.” Just
ask Fran ‘‘Quiet Hours” Zinni who tries so
hard to keep all peaceful on the lower end of
ihird. Of course, it's not much trouble to
keep the Three Musketeers, Goldie, Furlong
and McIntyre quiet—or is it, Fran?
Supervised by genial Father Smiih and
sympaiheiic Miss Dalton, Newman Hall will
always be one of our most pleasant me-
mories. The more serious side of Newman
is shown by attendance at Mass on Wednes-
day and Rosary after dinner in Newman's
own chapel.
“Put them all togeiher you spell Newman,
the best dorm of them all!”
Who's “Miss Hush’?—What was your
first clue?
Otficers—Donato, McGivney, Pilato.
Varga
ST. THOMAS
MORE HOUSE
“Houses are built to live in’’—and there
is Life at Tommy More, life which reveals
itself rather picturesquely in candid shots.
The genial old pride of South Lake Avenue,
with the perfect back yard for a weinie roast
and a gracious front lawn, is the home of a
score and two State maidens. What other
dorm can boast of innerspring mattresses
and a tiled “john’’ for every room? Nightly
pilgrimages to New Scotland Avenue, that
drafty second floor, and warnings to the
frosh for using the front stairway are the
perennial traditions. Weekly dinners with
156
Father Smith and Hallowe’en parties in the
barn. That's Tommy More!
Vice-President Rosemary McGivney has a
third-finger-left-hand trophy and Marie De-
Carlo can't decide between iwo R. P. I. men.
Campus-queen attendant Gloria Donato pre-
sides over the house-meetings, Rae Pilato
keeps the archives, and Laura Varga holds
the funds. Mad early morning races for the
toasters and midnight chats by a lively fire.
Good fun, good friends, good gosh—That's
Tommy More!
eT
rr,
2
- ;
The girls want it, the men have it—
Van Derzee, of course, the perfect place to
live, so they say and so they know. Those
castle like walls in that romatic setting make
one take note when passing 465 State Street.
Penetrating the glamorous exterior on a
Tuesday night, we find a house meeting in
progress. Fred Root tries to keep order while
the Constitution Committee makes a hulla-
ballo about forming one, while a cutthroat
pinochle game catches most of the interest in
the back of the room. Ray Verrey isn't just
house father, but a father on his own time.
Fy
465 STATE
Officers—Lisker, Wayne, Cooley, Root
—President, Kinn, Dumbleton, Powell
VAN DERZEE HALL
Here and there Art Cornwell submits his
fatherly advice and “Poppa” Berlin—wait-
ing for the phone to ring. Verne Cooley is
manager of social affairs, and what affairs
they are! Open house causes much uproar,
as Varga calendars are zipped down and
more demure art replaces them. Cause of
much preparation was the formal, now a
tradition, not only at Van Derzee, but at
state. In short, it's the place where a swell
bunch hang their hais and gladly call it
home.
ee
jae Se
4
ie
7
FEATURES
osy
be
October 25, 1947
EAT Diary,
To-night was the » supreme moment” of my life! You'll NEVET
know how wonderful i} felt when Scvop broke the news to me. Stand-
ing outside the door, i} knew how happy Sally wits last year. And
that final moment when J entered and all 9 could hear were shouts of
“t's Jane” and the strains of “Pomp and Circumstance.” Jt
seemed like ages till 0 reached the stage and that unbelievable throne.
4 don't think a Queen ever had a lovelier court. Rita and Kisiel
dazzled my cute little page, Gloria and Joan, wearing the pink
of "49, WETE Q striking contrast, as. WEE sophs Ellie and Peg. The
freshmen, Cjeorgie and Elinor, looked a trifle scared, Lut, oh, 40
lovely. Sitting on the throne, J felt like Cinderella, Lut 9 knew
my dream a wouldn’ t end at midnight.
Rita Coleman
Helen Kisiel
A Pretty Girl is Like a Melody
A comely court—Kisiel, Coleman,
Donato, Rourke. Hoskins, Maginess,
Butler, Adams
Johnson crowns ‘not plain” Jane-
Freel, Seelbach. Walsh, Wands
Usher in Beauty—Daly,. Piati, Lewis.
Pulver, Cushing. Norton
- => :. . ~ . © 2 ar SS ai . ; ~ ie . OS was _ . 2 >» ete
iphag wert? 2 " WES depen 5 hp eee * ,
Vou
tre cordially invited to attend
The
State Calle
ge Christmas Formal
Sponsored by
inter Sorority
Inte
r Fraternity Counce!
on
Suturday, December 13, 1947
9 1:30
by
rrnbill
hestra
State Armory
Bashington Ave.
Albany, NN. Uv.
——
a canned
te dita’ Sod
ue
‘s
3
|
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ae
ae
STD
=.
AE PATE
s
Chiff didn't want me to vote for Brophy Phil Lashinsky's Freshman Fan Club
and win a trophy ) — the Ryskania skit
The petals are still falling—Friskic, That morning we marched. That
M:(ormick, Lovey, Coop, Izzy,Bunny + Al
hight Panetta’s swam in our 37-13 Score
So what if T wasnt crowned! Rita There was no time for mirth and laugter,
made a beautiful Queen Taste coll gray down of the morning ait
=
ett AO ing” poo fh wees
we ~ geen to
ee ee ee ee
~ n= areas
:
4
:
4
:
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q
4
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Susie and Moonyean didnt
Leeve nothin’ to Grant
4
i
a
:
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:
Their souls may be white, but their faces
Sho was black that night
» ie
The Rices dined at Jacks with Mery
and all of us jolly Juniors
o
¥ Now we're the BTOS ond we re getting old “Like golden sunlight” yellow was twink$
ate and were sorry, But were glad we came hue and mine too
sre Sadi
ee .
Bt a ~~
EON ~~
°* at.
—<
Qunion Weekend
February 6—/
Ladies-in-waiting — Donato, Hoefner, Morris.
O'Neill
Queen Marion Furlong
Regan, McIntyre, Week-end Chairman, Dunker, Fran crooned and the Juniors swooned to
Wood, Prom Chairman Larry Audette’s music
“Devil” was the password and the music was
RED hot. Gib’s big deal—the banquet at
Herbert's
“Thanks a mulwon,
a million thanks to you... ”
We had friends . . . we needed them. . . we asked
. and they said “sure”... now we're saying thank
ca.) eae
To John and the Campus crew—for publishing plus... .
We were stiff puppets in the fall, but you showed
us the “ropes” and this is our spring production .. .
To Sylvia and Dick—for telling us the truth about the
Hague ... but better than truth is proof... and
we thought the proof superior...
j To our “models’’—for suffering stiffness in the joints
while we pulled the strings . . . It helped when you
smiled from under the faces...
To our staffs—for your blood, work, sweat and tears. . .
At deadline times you heard and answered the
call to duty:. . .
To Joy Simon, Bob VanDam, and Rog Nielsen—you
helped the Literary Editor out of a jam... You wrote
‘em and they're your three stories. .
To Curt—for just being around and for making sug-
gestions we apparently ignored, but actually adopted
| Dick Dickstein, The Hague John Jackson, Campus
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167
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THE HAGUE STUDIO
Congratulations and Best Wishes
from
DICK AND SYLVIA
Remember to Stop in to See Us
THE HAGUE STUDIO
811 Madison Avenue
Telephone 4-0017 Albany 3, New York
168
Compliments of
L. C. FORMAN & SONS INC.
“If You Pick Forman’s, You Pic-ca-lilli”
ALBANY HARDWARE «&
IRON Cx. Compliments of
Sports Goods CAMPUS RESTAURANT
39-43 STATE STREET
Phone 2-2556
McCLURE & DORWALDT, Inc.
EMIL MEISTER
Pianos Sheet Music
Dealer in
Meats and Groceries Band and Orchestra Instruments
and Supplies
329 Ontario Street Albany, N. Y. | 64 N. Pearl Street Albany, N. Y.
Compliments of Compliments of
A FRIEND CO-OP
169
——
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Where All the Students Meet
PAUL L. DORAN MADISON SWEET SHOP
785 MADISON AVENUE
ALBANY, N. Y.
Madison Avenue Pharmacy
DRUGS AND TOILETRIES
Home Made Ice Cream
Sodas - Candy - Sandwiches
O Daily At 8 A.M.
845 Madison Avenue Cor. Ontario Street aati S
Telephone 4-3651
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TEXTILE
PETER H. BUENAU 69 NORTH PEARL STREET
Optician
Largest Collection of Fabrics By the Yard
in the State
; 71 Central Avenue Albany 6, N. Y.
: Phone 5-9611 Open Evenings | Telephones 5-1913, 5-9212
Meet and Eat At the
QUALITY CORSET SHOP
Central Avenue’s Only Corset Shop BOULEVARD CAFETERIA
198 Central Avenue, Cor. Robin
ALBANY 6, N. Y.
205 Central Avenue Albany, New York
Telephone 4-5425
9
SPECTOR'S
North Pearl Street
ROCHESTER TAILORED
Suits and Sportswear Apparel oy gees... s1cts
COLLEGIATE STYLES Jewelry ... Accessories
A Fine Women’s Shop
233 Central Avenue Charge Accounts Available
—————— EE
170
Telephone 3-5411
PERRIN DINAPOLI
Guild Prescription Opticians
91 State Street Albany, New York
Tel. 5-6495
Compliments of
THE COLONIAL THEATRE
The Finest in Foreign and Domestic
Film Fare
For Your Pleasure and Approval
310 Central Avenue Albany, New York
CAMERON HARDWARE, Inc.
A Hardware Institution
Hardware - Paint - Glass
284 Central Avenue Albany 5, N. Y.
CLOVER STORES
Quality Clothes
Central Avenue Albany, New York
THE RELIGIOUS ART SHOP
Wilfred J. LaPoint
Religious Articles Greeting Cards
115 Central Avenue Albany 6, New York
PINE HILLS PLAYDIUM
Completely Air Conditioned
ONTARIO STREET AT PARK AVENUE
ALBANY, NEW YORK
28 Alleys
Cocktail Lounge :: :: Restaurant
Soda Fountain
Tel. 4-9210 Open Evenings
CENTRAL SHOP
Quality Hand Knitting Yarns
87 Central Avenue Albany, N. Y.
(]
Buy Where the Flowers Grow
171
Compliments of Compliments of
DUTCH OVEN A FRIEND
|
Compliments of Compliments of
CENTRAL BARBER SHOP MARJORIE’S
Compliments of Compliments of
JAKE’S FOOD STORE CORONET
Compliments of Compliments of
PETER’S RESTAURANT JUNIOR MISS SHOP
Compliments of Compliments of
ALBANY CONSERVATORY HARRY F. HONIKEL & SON |
Compliments of Compliments of |
PINE HILL DRY CLEANING CO. “GREETINGS” STATIONERY STORE
Compliments of Compliments of
|
MADISON SHOE SHOP PETER’S SANDWICH BAR
|
PRE ee a tad aia ee al ep Se
Compliments of
K. RESTAURANT
cama
i es MASTERPRINT
CAMPUS PUBLISHING
1420 WALNUT ST., PHILA.
——
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