Pedagogue, 1932

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Nem York

State College for Teachers

The College Library

PLDAGUGUE
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PUBLISHED « BY » THE _
SENIORS + OF » THE
NEW - NORK - STATE
COLLEGE * TEACHERS
ALBANY , NEW-VORK,

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LIBRARY
STATE COLLEGE FOR TEACHER

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CONTENTS

FOREWORD
DEDICATION
VIEWS
FACULTY
CLASSES
ACTIVITIES
FEATURES
ADVERTISEMENTS

39579

DEDICATION

This Book
is dedicated to
PROFESSOR CLARENCE A. HIDLEY,

Whose sincere devotion to truth, unremitting and opea-
minded, has given us a glimpse of true scholarship and
the spirit of learning. For that we shall continue to be
grateful, as we are appreciative today of his sympathetic

teaching and of his great service to our undergraduate

community.

———

—_

ome

FOREWORD

Down the steps, away from the bright and guiding light

of our Alma Mater, into the dark uncertainty of life. We
have our memories of the past, our present joys and
sorrows, and our dreams for the future. As we plan for
this future, may we realize with Carlyle, “It is great, and
there is no other greatness—to make one nook of God's
creation more fruitful, better, more worthy of God; to
make some human heart a little wiser, manlier, happier—

more blessed, less accursed.’

IN MEMORY
OF
DUANE F. BAKER, *32

VERA B. BuRNS MICHAEL FROHLICH

Editor-in-Chief Business Manager

ACKNOWLEDGMERNT

The 1932 PEDAGOGUE wishes to express sincere appre-

ciation for their generous support to Miss Edith O.
Wallace, Mr. A. J. Fowers of the Brandow Printing Com-
pany, Mr. P. S. Gurwit of the Jahn and Ollier Engraving
Company, the Arthur Studio, the Sophomore and Junior
Cubs and all who have co-operated so helpfully.

AWE
—— PEDAGOGUE

ABRAM ROYER BRUBACHER, Ph.D., ®BK, IIP'M,
AoLD

President.

A.B., Yale, 1897; Ph.D., Yale, 1902; Head of Department
of Greek, Williston Seminary, Easthampton, Mass.; In-
structor in Greek, Yale College; Principal of High School,
Gloversville, N. Y.; Principal of High School, Schenectady
N. Y.; Superintendent of Schools, Schenectady, N. Y
Publications: "High School Englis 2 vol.; “ Englis
Oral, and Written rticles in the “English Jou
“Education Scribners,” “School and Society,’ and the
lantic Monthly"; “Teaching: Profession and Practice
"Composition and Grammar” (1930).

WiILtiAM HENRY MeEtzcer, Ph.D., Sc.D., F.R.S.C.,
F.R.S.E., ®BK, SEZ, ®K&, TIM

Dean.

A.B., University of Toronto, 1888; Ph.D., Clark University,
1892; Professor and Head of Department of Mathematics,
Syracuse University, 1895-1923; Dean of Graduate School,
Syracuse University, 1911-1918; Dean of College of Liberal
Arts, Syracuse University, 1921-1923.

Publications: Joint author of “College Algebra” and
" Theory of Determinants"; research art in the " Mathe-
matical Journals of America and Europe.”

ANNA ELOISE PIERCE, Pd.M.
Dean of Women.

Graduate of New York State Normal School; Pd.M., New
York State College for Teachers, 1920; Preceptress, Lisle
Academy, Lisle, N. Y.; Member Faculty, State College for
Teachers, 188

Publications: atalog of Literature for Advisors of Young
Women and Girls,” 1923, and supplement, 1930; “C

of Student Health” ; Director of "Survey of Student Healt
1925; “Deans and Advisers of Women and Girls,’ 1923.

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ANN
PEDAGOGUE———

ELIZABETH VAN DENBURGH, A.B., BK

Registrar.

A.B., Cornell University, 1910; Teacher of Latin, Clyde

zh School, 1910-1912; Cataloguer, Cornell University
» 1913-1917; Clerk U. S. War Department and
. Treasury Department, 1917-1920.

CLARENCE JOSEPH Deyo

Secret Treasurer.

Albany Business College, 1904; Stenographer and Assist-
ant Accountant with Beaver River Lumber Company,
Croghan, N. Y., 1904-1905; Assistant Accountant, General
Electric Company, Schenectady, 1906-1908; Chief Account-
ant, Superintendents’ Office, New York Central R. R.,
Albany, N. Y., 1908-1917; Secretary to Dr. Samuel B.
Ward, 1908-1916, and to Dr. Erastus Corning, 1916-1917.

JOHN MANVILLE Say_es, A.B., Pd.B., AY, ®BK,
K&K

Principal of Milne High School and Director of Practice
Teaching.

A.B., Colgate, 1900; Pd.B., State Normal College, 1901:
Principal of High School, Richmondville, N. Y.; Principal
of High School, Glens Falls, N. Y.; Principal of Model
School, State College, Albany.

Publications: Articles in various Educational Magazines.

\XW
PEDAGOGUE

Harry BIRCHENOUGH, A.B., Pd.B., A.M.

Professor of Mathematics.

A.B., Cornell, 1905; Pd.B., 1906; A.M., Columbia, 1914.

BARNARD SAWYER BRONSON, A.B., A.M.

Professor of Chemistry.

AB., Columbia, 1908; A.M., Columbia, 1912; Instructor
in Geneseo Normal School, 1900-1905.

Publication: ‘Nutrition and Food Chemistry.”

T. FREDERICK H. CANDLYN, Mus.B., Pd.D.

Head of Music Department.

Mus.B., University of Durham, England, 1911; Graduate
Course, State College, 1916-1917, 1919-1920; Organist and
Master of Choir, St. Paul’s Church; Pd.D., State College,
1927.

Publications: ‘Vocal and Instrumental Compositions pub-
lished by H. W. Gray, Schirmer, Ditson, Schmidt, Presser
and the Boston Music Company.

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——— PEDAGOOUT

ae ee

CAROLINE CROASDALE, M.D.

College Physician and Professor of Hygiene.

M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1914; |
University of Pennsylvania, School of Biology, 1906-1909;
Assistant Instructor in Clinical Medicine and Physiologi-
cal Chemistry, Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania;
Physician to Philadelphia Normal School and Instructor in

Hygiene; Lecturer in Hygiene and Physician to Temple
Univer: Staff Physician and Lecturer for National Board
of Y. C. A. in Women’s Colleges of Texas, Oklahoma,

Arkansas, Washington, and California, 1917-1919.

WINFRED CORNWALL DECKER, A.B., A.M., Pd.B.,

PBK

Professor of German.

A.B., Columbia, 1905; A.M., Columbia, 1910;  Post-
Graduate Student at Columbia, 1905-1906; Universities of

Marburg and Berlin, 1911-1912; Austauschlehrer at Pots-

dam, Germany, 1911-1912; University of Berlin, 1914.

Publications: Joint author of Markisch-Decker, Englisches

Lesebuch fur die Hoheren Schulen; joint author of Deutsch-

nd die Deutchen; occasional articles for the Mono- ;
Modern Language Journal, publications of the 5
» Langs

> Association of America; “ Semper der

Se J \
Associate Editor, German Quarterly. {
s
f
Howarb ADAMS Do BELL, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., ®BK
Professor of Mathematics.
A.B., Syracuse, 1919; A.M., Syracuse University, 1923;
Ph.D., Cornell, 1928; Instructor in Mathematics, Colgate
University, 1922-1927; Summer Session, University of Penn-
sylvania, 1926.
Eighteen
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PEDAGOGUE

CLARENCE FREDERICK HALE, M.S., Ph.D., ®BK

Professor of Phy

B.S., Wesleyan University, 1903; M
versity, 1908; Ph.D., Cornell Universi 1909; Instructor
in Physical Science at Peddie Institu 1903-1905: As-
sistant and Instructor, Wesleyan University, 1905-1908; Re-
search Associate, Research Laboratory, General Electric
Company, Schenectady, N. Y., 1909-1911.

Publications: Scientific Articles.

Wesleyan Uni-

HARRY WORTHINGTON HastTINGs, A.B., A.M.,
Ph.D., A®&T

Professor of English.

A.B., Brown Univer: 1904; A.M., Harvard, 1906; Ph.D.,
Harvard, 1916; Teacher of English, Williamsport High
School, Pa., 1904-1905; Instructor in English, Brown Uni-
versity, 1906-1907; Instructor in English, Simmons College,
1907-1911; Instructor in English, Brown and Radtliffe,
1912-1913; Instructor in English, Dartmouth, 1913-1914.

Publications: " Selections from Speeches of Abraham Lin-

4. 95
coln.

David Hutcuison, A.B., B.D., A.M., Ph.D.

ssor of Government.

A.B., McGill University, 1893; B.D., Montreal Presby-
terian College, 1898; A.M., McGill University, 1899; A.M.,
Harvard, 1901; Instructor in Union College, 1906-1908.
Publications: Foundation of the Constitution” ; e
tion of the Government of the State of New

Introduction to the Law of American Citizenship.”

York

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1952

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DAGOGUE

RICHMOND HENRY KirTLAND, A.B., A.M.

Professor of Education.
A.B., University of Michigan, 1900; A.M., University of

Chicago, 1909; Superintendent of Schools, Houghton, Flint,
and Menominee, Mich.

CHARLOTTE Logs, A.B., Pd.B., A.M.

Professor of French.

1918; University of Paris, 1920, 1922, 1923, 1924, 1926,
1928, 1930; Summer School, State College, 1929, 1931.

JOHN ALoysius MAuHar, Ph.B., Pd.B.

Professor of French.

University of Chicago; Student. at Columbia University.

Bw //1//

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

Ph.B., Union College, 1904; Pd.B., State Normal College,
1906; Student at Johns Hopkins University; Student at The

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a rere rs
AMMA
PEDAGOGUE-————

MILTON G. NELSON, B.S., M.S., Ph.D., PK®, SAK,
KdK

Professor of Education.

Oneonta Normal, 1907; Principal, West Hartford, Conn.,
1908-12; District Superintendent of Schools, Delaware
County, 1912-23; B.S., State College, 1924; M.S., Cornell
Univ., 1925; Ph.D., Cornell Univ., 1926.

GEORGE ALEXANDER STEPHEN PAINTER, A.B.,
Ph.D.

Professor of Philosophy.

A.B., Harvard, 1892; Ph.D., University of Jena, 1896;
Graduate Student, Boston University, 1892-1894; Student
of Universities in Jena, Berlin, Leipsic, 1894-1896; In-
structor in Tufts College, 1897-1898; Acting Professor in
Bryn Mawr College, 1903-1904; Instructor in George Wash-
ington University, 1904-1906; Professor of Philosophy in
Mount Union College, 1907-1911; Professor of Philosophy
in Clark University, 1911-1912; Professcr in Staite Col-
lege, 1912-.

Publications: Spencer's Evolutionary Theory, The Phil-
osophy of Christ's Temptations, The Philosophy of Primi-
tive Ma, The Future of the American Negro, The Phil-
osophy of lture, The Idea of Progress, Fundamental Psy-
chology, The Philosophy of Evolution, and various other
articles.

MARTHA CAROLINE PRITCHARD, B.S., KAII

Director of Library School.

Librarian, White Plains High School, 1913-1916; Diploma
of the Library School of New York Public Library, 1914:
Assistant Librarian, Geneseo Normal School, 1916-1917
Librarian, Bridgewater Normal School, 1917-1919; B.S.,
Teachers’ College, Columbia, 1920; Supervising Instructor,
Detroit Teachers’ College Library, 1920-1926; Graduate
study, University of Chicago, four quarters during the years
1926-1929; Instructor in charge, summer session, Carnegie
Library School, Pittsburgh, Pa., 1929-1930

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ANH
PEDAGOGUL

ApNnA Woop Ristey, A.B., Pd.D., ®BK, ITM

Professor of History.

A.B., Colgate, 1894; University of Chicago, 1897-1900;
Fellow in History, 1897-1899; Instructor at Chautauqua
Summer School, 1900; Professor of History and Politics,
Colgate University, 1905-1909; Professor of History at
the University of Colorado, Summer Session, Boulder,
Colorado, 1910; Travel and Study in Europe, 1923-1924;
Pd.D., Colgate, 1926.

Publication: ‘Problem Sheets for Medieval and Modern
History.”

JessE FLoyp STINARD, A.B., A.M.

Professor of Spanish.

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

HAROLD WILLIAM THOMPSON, Ph.B., A.M., Ph.D.,
D.Litt., F.S.A. Scot., ®BK, A®T

Professor of English.

Ph.B., Hamilton, 1912; A.M., Harvard, 1913; Ph.D., Har-
vard, 1915; D.Litt., Edinburgh University, 1929; Research
Fellow of the Guggenheim Foundation and Research Stu-
dent of Edinburgh University, 1925-1927; Life Fellow of
the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, 1926; Member of
Scottish History Society

Publications: ‘A Choirmaster's Guide,” 1924; “A Scottish
Man of Feeling,” 1931; editions of Lincoln and Mackenzie;
articles and books on ecclesiastical music; libzettos, verses,
and essays.

ee
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AMM |
PEDAGOGUE

ADAM ALEXANDER WALKER, A.B., A.M.

Professor of Economics and Sociology.

A.B., University of Michigan, 1906; A.M., University of
Wisconsin, 1912.

CLIFFORD AMBROSE WooparD, A.B., Pd.B.

Professor of Biology and Physiography.

A.B., Columbia University, 1904; Pd.B., State Normal
College. J sat

GEORGE MoRELL York, A.B.

Professor of Commerce.

A.B., Colgate University, 1907; Head of Commercial De-
partment, Waterloo, 1900-1909; Ithaca, 1911-1914; White
Plains, 1914-1916; Special Commercial Representative for
Ginn and Co., 1909-1911.

Publications: Co-author: “Elementary Training for Busi-
ness”; co-author: “Commercial Education in Continua
Schools”; co-author: “ Factors in Commercial Geography.”

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PEDAGOGUE

CHARLES L. ANDREWS, A.B.
Assistant Professor of Physics.

A.B., Cornell, 1930.

ELiNor LEE BEEBE, A.B., A.M.

Associate Director of Child Development and Parent Edu-

A.B., Fairmount College, 1914; A.M., Columbia Uni-
versity, 1928; National Scholar in Child Development, Johns
Hopkins University, 1928-1930; Director of Child Devel-
opment and Parent Education, Albany City Department of
Education, 1931.

ARTHUR KENNEDY BEIK, Pd.M., Ph.D., K®K

Assistant Professor of Education.

Ph.B., Grinnell College, 1908; Pd.M., School of Pedagogy,
New York University, 1909; Ph.D., Clark University, 1913;
Honorary Fellow, Clark University, 1913-1914; Assistant
Professor of Psychology and Pedagogy, Olivet College,
1914-1915; Instructor in Education and Psychology, Cen-
tral State Normal, Mt. Pleasant, Michigan, 1915-1916.

a

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AMMA
DAGOGUE

PE

Mary ELIZABETH Coss, A.B., B.L.S., A.M., PBK

Librarian and Assistant Professor of Library Management.

A.B., Syracuse University, 1912; B.L.S., New Ye rk {tate
Library School, 1915; A.M., University of Chicago, 1930;
Assistant in New York State Library, 1913-1915; Assistant
in Children’s Department, Brooklyn Public Library, 1915-
1916; Temporary Assistant, New York Public Library, Sum-
mer of 1919.

ANNE LoulsE CUSHING, Pd.B.

Assistant Professor of Mathematics.

Pd.B., State Normal College, 1899; Instructor in Genesev
Normal School, 1902-1908; Study at Columbia University,
1928-1929.

GERTRUDE ELIZABETH Douctas, A.B., A.M..
Ph.D., 3=, ®BK

Assistant Professor of Biology.

AB., Smith College, 1904; A.M., Smith College, 1907;
Ph.D., Cornell University, 1917; Instructor in Randolph-
Macon Woman's College, 1908-1912; Instructor in Botany,
Lake Erie College, 1915-1916; Instructor in Botany, Agri-
cultural College, Cornell University, 1917-1919.

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ANN
PEDAGOGUE

ROBERT WENDELL FREDERICK, Ph.B., A.M., Ph.D.,
rirM

Assistant Professor of Education.

Ph.B., Denison University, 1921; A.M., Yale, 1924; Ph.D.,
New York University, 1926; Professor of Education, Wil-
liam Jewel College, Liberty, Mo., 1926; University of
Georgia, Summer Session, 1923; University of Buffalo,
Summer Session 1928-1929-1930.

AGNES ELEANOR FUTTERER, A.B., A.M.

Assistant Professor of English.

1916; Graduate work, Columbia Uni-
versity, 1916-1917; American Academy of Dramatic Arts,
1916-1917; Middlebury Summer Session, 1922; Director of
Dramatics, Lake Placid Club, 1923; A.M., Columbia, 1927.

A.B., State College

Matic ELAINE GREEN, A.B., M.D.

Assistant Professor of Hygiene.

A.B., Syracuse University; M.D., University of Indiana.

AW
PEDAGOGUE

HELEN Hatter, A.B., A.M., ®BK, KAI, 1PM

Assistant Professor of Social

A.B., Washington University; A.M., Washington University,

St. Louis, Mo.; Instructor in Junior High School I ion
Departme Washington University; Social Science Teacher,

Venice High School, Venice, Ill.

MARGARET Louise Hayes, A.B., A.M.

Assistant Professor of Educational Guidance.

AB., North Carolina College for Women, 1919; A.M.,
George Peabody College, 1928; Supervisor of Craven County
Schools, N. C., 1924-1930; Post-graduate work at Teachers’
College, Columbia.

J. ALLEN Hicks, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., AK, ==
Director of Child Development and Parent Education.

Grinnell College; A.M., Ph.D., University of Iowa; Sum-
mer work, Columbia University; National Research Scholar {
in Child Development; Superintendent of Public Schools
in Iowa: Executive Secretary of the Committee on Child
Development of National Research Council, Washington,
D. C.: Lecturer in Education, George Washington Uni-
versity.

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— PEDAGOGUE

CLARENCE ALBERT HipLey, A.B., A.M., K®K,
irM

Assistant Professor of History.

A.B., State College, 1915; A.M., Columbia University, 1918.

LypIA ANTOINETTE JOHNSON, A.B., A.M.

Assistant Professor of Latin.

AB., State Normal College, 1911; A.M., Columbia Uni-
versity, 1924.

WILLIAM GEORGE KENNEDY, Ph.B., A.M.

Assistant Professor of Chemistry.

Ph.B., Syracuse University, 1911; A.M., New York State
College for Teachers, 1930.

AMM

PEDAGOGUE

ELIZABETH HUNT Morris, A.B., A.M., Ph.D.

Assistant Professor of Psychology Zd Education.

Study at Earlham College, Summer Sessions, 1908, 1909,
1910; Dartmouth College, Summer Session, 1911; A.B.,
Wellesley College, 1913; A.M., Wellesley Colleg ‘
Study at Teachers’ College, Columbia Universit Gradu-
ate Assistant in Philosophy and Psychology, Wellesley Col-
lege, 1917-1918; Instructor in Psychology and Education,
State Normal School, Upper Monat N. J., 1918-1923;
study at Columbia, 1925-1926, h.D., Columbia University,

1929.

HELEN Marte Puivuips, A.B., A.M.

Assistant Professor of English.

AB., Ohio University, 1915; A.M., Northwestern Uni-
ity, 1916; National German-American Teachers Semi-
nary.

Summer Session, 1916; Columbia University, Summer
Session, 1918; Instructor in Lawrence College, Appleton,
Wisconsin, 1916-1918; Cornell University, Summer Session,
1927: Harvard, Summer Session, 1930.

EUNICE AMANDA PERINE, A.M., Pd.M.

Assistant Professor of Fine Arts.

Houghton Seminary, Clinton, N. Y.; Pd.B., State Normal
College, 1900; B.S., New York Uni ity an :
1911: Columbia University; term of
spent in travel and study in France, Italy,
holder of Carnegie scholarship; summer 1929 spent in trave!
in Alaska and western states.

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DAGOGUL

oe

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

SE

Assistant Professor of Physics.

B.S., University of Rochester, 1908; Ph.D., Cornell Uni-
versity, 1915; Instructor in Science, Montclair Academy,
N. J., 1908-1910; Instructor in Physics, Cornell University,
1910-1915.

MINNIE BRINK SCOTLAND, B.S., A.M.

Assistant Professor of Biology.

State College, 1913; A.M., Columbia, 1920; Stat:
Summer Session, 1921, 1922, 1923, 1925; Graduate
Study, Cornell University, 1926, 1927, 1931; Gradaate
Study, Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Mass.,
1930.

DOoNNAL V. SmitH, B.S. in Ed., A.M., Ph.D., 1PM,
K®K

Assistant Professor of History.

B.S. in Ed., Bowling Green College, Ohio, 1924; A.M.,
University of Chicago, 1927; Ph.D., University of Chicago,
1929; Instructor, University of Texas, 1926-1927.
Publications: "Use of Illustrative Material for Junior and
Senior High School ature,” 1924; revised, 1930; “Com-
position and Grammar,” 1930.

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PEDAGOGUE———

Marion E. Smiru, A.B., A.M., D.U.P.

Assistant Professor of French.

AB.. Smith, 1915; A.M., Smith, 1925; D.U.P., University

of Paris, 1927.

EARL BENNETT SouTH, B.S. in Ed., A.M., Ph.D.,
K@K, AWA.

Assistant Professor of Psychology d Education.

B.S. in Ed., Ohio University, Athens, Ohio, 1921; A.M.,
Ohio State University, 1923; Ph.D., Ohio State University,
1927; Post-graduate work, University of Chicago; Senior
Instructor in Paidology and Psychology, Ohio Univers'ty,
1920-1921; Instructor in Paidology and Psychology, Ohio
University, 1921-1923; Assistant Professor of Psycholegy,
Ohio University, 1923-1925; Instructor in Psychology, Ohio
State University, 1925-19 Member of American Asso-
ciation of University Professors; Member of American P3y-
chological Association.

Publications: s of Com ee
Work’, 1. Ameri
II. Dec., 1927
Schools of Nursi
1929.

Psychological Aspect
Journal of Psychology, Oct., 1927—
Some Uses of Psychological Tests in
* American Journal of Nursing, Dec.,

CHESTER J. TERRILL, Pd.B., A.B., A.M.

Assistant Professor of Commerce.

Pd.B., Millersville, 1907; A.B., Bucknell, 1910; A.M., State
College, 1927; Head of Department of Commerce in State

q Normal School, Millersville, 1906-1907; Taught in Willi
port, 1910-1911; Head of Con Departme
wood High School, 1911-1913; } 1 of Commerce De-
partment, Albany High School, 1913-1930.

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—————— PEDAGOGUE

HARRISON TERWILLIGER, B.S. in C

Assistant Professor of Commercial Education.

in C., State College, 1924; First Assistant in

cial Department, Albany High School, 1920-192
structor, Plattsburg Normal, 1925-1928; Associate Head of
Commercial Department, Plattsburg, 1929.

EpiIrH OWEN WALLACE, A.B., A.M.

Assistant Professor of Latin.

A.B., State College, 1917; A.M., Wellesley, 1920; Instruc-
tor in Middlebury College, Summer Session, 1921; State
College, Summer Session, 1924; American Academy, Rome,
Summer Session, 1926; Graduate Study, Columbia, 1927-
1928-1929.

KATHERINE ELEANOR WHEELING, A.B., A.M.,
BK

Professor of Enj Supervisor of Practice

nt
Teachi

A.B., Allegheny College, 1912; A.M. and Certificate as
Supervisor in English, Teachers’ College, Columbia Uni-
i

versity, 1922; Summer School work at Chautauqua, 1915;
Graduate study in University of Pittsburgh, 1920-1921;
Summer examiner with New York State Department ot
Education, 1918-1925; Summer Session, St. Hilda's College
Oxford University, England, 1928. q
Publications: "Use of Illustrative Material for Junior and t
Senior High School Literature,” 1924; revised, 1930:
position and Grammar,” 1930.

‘OMe

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AMM
PEDAGOGUE

MARTHA JANE ALBRIGHT, A.B., A.M., ITM

Instructor in History.

A.B., State College, 1926; A.M., State College, 1928; Study
at Geneva School of International Studies, Switzerland, Sum-
mer 1927; Travel on Continent of Europe, Summer 1927;
Study at Columbia, Summer 1926; Study at University of
Wisconsin, 1928; Instructor of History, February-June 1929,
at Callicoon; Columbia University, Summer School, 1931

BLANCHE AVERY, B.S. in C.

Instructor in Commerce.

B.S. in C., State College, 1916.

ELIZABETH DIVINE ANDERSON, B.S., A.M.

Supervisor of Practice Teaching and Instructor in Com-

merce.

Graduate, Skidmore College, 1921; B.S., State College,
1922; Graduate Work, Simmons College, Summer, 1923;
Substitute Instructor at State College, 1923-24; Instructor
at Summer Session, State College, 1924; Graduate Work,
Columbia University, Summer ssions, 1925-1928; A.M.,
Teachers’ College, Columbia University, 1928.

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— PEDAGOGUE

RUTHERFORD BAKER, B.S.

Athletic Coach.

Temple University Dept. of Physical Education, 1922;
Coach Morristown Preparatory School.

RALPH ALEXANDER BEAVER, B.S., A.M.

Instructor in Mathematics.

B.S., State College, 1924; A.M., Columbia, 1928; Summer
Session, University of Chicago, 1929-1930.

MarGareET D. Betz, A.M.

Instructor in Chemistry.

B.S., State College, 1922; Summer Session, Columbia Uni-
versity, (1923-1924-1925).

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AMMA
PEDAGOGUE

GoLpENA Bits, A.B.

Assistant Instructor in Mathematics.

AB., State College, 1928; Teacher of Mathematics, Ten
Broeck Academy, 1928-1930.

LILuiaN S. BLromstrom, B.S., A.M.

Instructor in Mathematics.

B.S., Boston University, 1929; A.M., Clark University, 1930.

DONALD BrYANT, A.B., A.M., ®BK, @K®, ASP

Instructor in English.

A.B., Cornell University, 1927; Instructor of History, Pub-
lic Speaking, and Mathematics, Ardsley, 1927-1929; A.M.,
Cornell University, 1930.

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PEDAGOGUL

MARION CHESEBROUGH, A.B., A.M.

Instructor in Latin,

A.B., State College, 1926; A.M., Columbia, 1927.

Mary ELizABETH CONKLIN, A.B., A.M.

Supervisor of Practice Teaching.

A.B., Wellesley, 1918; Instructor at Hudson; A.M., Colum-
bia, 1931.

Epwarp L. Cooper, Ed.B., A.M.

Instructor in Commerce.

Three-year graduate Whitewater State Teachers’ College,
1927; Ed.B., Whitewater, Summer Session, 1930; A.M.,
University of Iowa, 1931; Instructor in Commerce, Senior
high school, Eau Claire, Wisconsin, 1927-30; part-time
commercial supervisor, University of Iowa Experimental
High School, 1930-31.

er

— spe

AMM
PEDAGOGUE

HELENE M. Crooks, A.B., A.M.

Instructor in French.

Baccalaureate, Sorbonne, Paris; A.B., Vassar; A.M., Co

lumbia,

M. ANNETTE Dossin, A.B., A.M.

Instructor in French.

A.B., Washington State; A.M., Teachers’ College, Colum
bia; Study at Sorbonne, Paris, 1928; Instructor in Lan-
guages, Roy, Washington; Enterprise, Oregon; Summer
School, Université de Dijon, 1931.

Eart Dorwa.pT, A.B., M.D.

Instructor in Hygiene.
AB., State College, 1920; M.D., Albany Medical College.

Thirty-seven

ee 1952
WR

r

Thirty-eight

1952
Mw/////

PEDAGOGUE

HELEN T. Fay, A.B., A.M., TM

Manager of Co-op.

A.B., State College, 1919; Cornell, Summer Session, 1918;
Graduate Work and Assistantship in History, State College,
1919-21; University of Toulouse, France, 1923-24; A.M.,
State College, 1927; Founder, State College Co-op., 1920;
Instructor in History, State College, 1925-1929.

A. May FILLINGHAM, B.S., O.N.

Instructor in Home Economics.

B.S., State College, 1918; Summer Session, Oneonta State
Normal School, 1918; University of Pittsburgh, 1918-1921.

FLORENCE DopGeE FREar, B.S., A.M.

Instructor in Home Economics.

:

» Teachers’ College, Columbia University, 1918; A.M.,
eachers’ College, Columbia University, 1923; Study in
Europe, 1926-1927. ;

0 a

\KY
PEDAGOGUE

MADELINE F. Gitmour, A.B., B.S. in L.S., PBK

Instructor in Library Science.

AB., Cornell, 1920; B.S. in Library Science, Syracuse Uni-
versity; Summer Session at Chicago University, 1926; In-
Structor in English, Warrensburg, 1920-1921; Head of
English Department, Northside High School, Corning, N.
Y., 1921-1924; Reference Librarian and Instructor in Li-
y School, Syracuse University, 1925-1927; Instructor in
Library School, State Coll Summer Session, 1927; As-
sistant in College Library School, Summer Session, 1928;
Librarian in Elmira Free Academy, 1927-1930.

MARGARET ELIZABETH Hitcucock, A.B., A.M.

Instructor in Physical Educa

AB.. Oberlin College, 1925; A.M., Teachers’ College, Co-
lumbia, 1929.

HELEN C. James, A.B., B.LS.

ant Librarian.

As

AB., Vassar, 1912; B.LS., New York State Library School,
1926; Assistant Librarian, U. S. Debarkation Hospital, Fox
Hills, Staten Islar 1919; Library Assistant, New York
State Library, 1915-1929.

Thirty-nine

Wt

OO eOOOOOeeeeE_E_O_OOO
AH!
PEDAGOGUL

J. ISABELLE JOHNSTON, A.B., P.D., A.M.

Instructor in Physical Education.

A.B., State Colle;
Absence, 1929-1930;

, 1920; P.D., Sargent, 1922; Leave of
A.M., Columbia, 1930. ;

BetsEYy T. KEENE, A.B., B.S.

Librarian of Milne High School.

A.B., Brown University; B.S., Columbia, 1927; Librarian
Oswego High School, 1927-1931.

RUTH KELLEY, A.B.
Assistant Instructor in English.

A.B., State College, 1928.

1a
Bw!/////
AM
PEDAGOGUE

E. MARION KILPATRICK, A.B., A.M., ®BK
Instructor in English.

A.B., Vassar, 1924; A.M., Radcliffe, 1928.

ALICE May KirKPATRICK, B.S., ®BK
Assistant Librarian.

B.S., Middlebury College, 1922; Certificate, New York State
Library School, 1924; Librarian, Massachusetts School for
Feeble-Minded, Waverly, Mass., Summer, 1924; General
Assistant, Library of New Britain Institute, New Britain,
Conn., 1924-26; New York State Traveling Libraries, 1926;
Instructor in Summer Session, 1927; Instructor in Library
School, State College, 1926-27.

CAROLINE Lester, A.B., A.M.

Instructor in Mathematics.

A.B., A.M., Cornell University; Summer Session, Har-
vard University, 1925; Summer Session, Cornell University,
1927; Oxford University Summer School, 1931.

Forty-one

WW,

BN
PEDAGOGUL

1932
M!/////

GRACE MARTIN
Instructor in Fine Arts.

Art Institute of Chicago, 1921, 1925-27; Academy of Fine
Arts, Chicago, 1923-24; University of Chicago, 1927-28;
The Art Institute of Chicago Junior School; Instructor of
Art at State Normal School, Cheney, Washington, 1928-
1929; University of Vienna, Summer, 1930.

EUNICE RIcE MEssENT, A.B.

Instructor in Engl.

A.B., State College, 1922; English critic, Milne High School,
1922-25; Instructor, Los Angeles Americanization School,

1929-30.

CARLETON Moose, B.S., M.S.
Supervisor of Practice Teaching.

B.S., State College, 1926;
Cornell University, 1931.

Instructor, Cobleskill; M.S.

?

OO
AMM
PEDAGOGUL

SaraH A. MosHEr, A.B.
Instructor in Chemistry.

AB., Mt. Holyoke College, 1928; Hollius College, 1928-
29, Assistant Instructor in Chemistry; Russell Sage, 1929-30,
Assistant Instructor in Chemistry; University of Rochester,
1930-31, graduate assistant.

Mary Ossporne, A.B., A.M.
Instructor in English.

A.B., Indiana University, 1924; A.M., University of Penn.,
1930.

CATHARINE WALSH PELTZ, A.B., A.M.
Instructor in English.

AB., State College, 1922; Leave of Absence, 1926-1927;
A.M., Columbia, 1927.

Forty-three

1932
AY \_¥

Dae
AM /H//

Forty-four

— PEDAGOGUE

ARLENE FEARON PRESTON, A.B., A.M.
Instructor in French.

A.B., Bryn Mawr, 1920; A.M., Bryn Mawr, 1921; Gradu-
ate Scholar in Philosophy, Bryn Mawr, 1922: Hopkins
Scholar in Philosophy, 1922-1923: Hopkins Scholar in
French, 1925-1926; Study at Sorbonne, Paris, 1923; Study
at Sorbonne, Paris, 1928; Instructor in Romance Languages,
Beloit College, Wisconsin, 1926-1928.

HARLAN RAYMOND
Instructor Boys’ Shop, Milne High School.
Oswego Normal; Training School for Teachers of Mechan-

ical Arts, Boston, 1922; Instructor of Shop 1922-1929; In-
termediate School, Lockport, N. Y.

RuTH Raynor, A.B., A.M.
Assistant Instructor in Biology.

A.B., Delphi College, 1930; A.M., Columbia University,
19372

1932

BY ////

A \

PEDAGOGUL

ELIZABETH FRANCES SHAVER, Pd.B., A.B., 10M
Supervisor of Practice Teaching.

Pd.B., State Normal College, 1904; A.B., State Normal
College, 1908.

Publications: ' Helpful Hints for History Teachers.”

Paut H. SHeats, A.B., A.M.
Assistant Instructor in Government.
A.B., Heidelberg College, Tiffin, Ohio; A.M., Columbia

University; Assistant in Speech Department, Heidelberg
College, 1929.

VirGINia B. SMITH, A.B., A.M., ®BK
Instructor in French and Latin.

AB., Randolph-Macon Woman's College, 1925; A.M
Teachers’ College, Columbia University, Feb. 1930.

Forty-five

WW

——————————————EEEEE Eee ==

Forty-six

Bw//////

MYNH//
PEDAGOGUE

ELLEN C. Stokes, A.B., A.M., 3=, ®BK

Instructor in Mathematics.
A.B., Brown University; A.M., Brown University; Instruc-

tor, Coker College, 1924-1925; Summer Session, Cornell,
1928; Summer Session, University of Chicago, 1929.

JOHN J. SturM, A.B.
Instructor in Chemistry.

A.B., State College, 1929.

Laura F, THompson, B.S.
Instructor and Cafeteria Manager.
B.S., Simmons College; Instructor, Elmira College, 1915-

1916; Dietitian, Albany Hospital, 1919-1921; Summer Ses-
sion, Cornell, 1930; Summer Session, Columbia, 1931.

AMM
PEDAGOGUE

DerK V. TIESZEN, A.B., A.M.
Instructor in Chemistry.

AB., Yankton College, 1924; Summer Session, University
of Chicago, 1924; Instructor in Science, Holdrege, Ne-
braska, 1924-27; Assistant Instructor, University of Colo-
rado, 1927-28; Instructor, Goshen College, 1928-30; Assist-
ant Instructor, University of Colorado, 1930-31; A.M., Uni-
versity of Colorado, 1931.

KENNETH O. Davis, A.B., A.M.

Assistant Instructor in Biology and General Science.

AB., Drake University, 1929; A.M., Teachers’ College, Co-
lumbia University, 1931.

Forty-seven

es 1952
WR

AM 1//

PEDAGOGUE

The teacher's “chief reward will always be the
knowledge of good accomplished for the child,
service rendered to the community, state and
nation, more beauty, truth, and honor made

known and knowable.”

195 2 —mw
Mw//////

(Canssxs

\XY
PEDAGOGUL

SENIORS

AYR

ite yA————_ 7
Bel! /////

ANI

PEDAGOGUE———_

—

5

——_—s— —_

——

\WE
PEDAGOGUE

SENIOR HISTORY

Freshman, Sophomore, Junior, Senior: the years follow one another in orderly
succession, and bring with them the same events that every year has brought to

every class.

Tradition is strong, and the class of ’32 has followed it. We were tradi-
tional Freshmen, traditional not in following where other classes led, but in
accepting the challenge offered by the Sophomores and by our own sense of small-
ness, and in bending all our efforts to meet the challenge. We met it. We were
the first Freshman class in several years to hold a debate as part of rivalry; we were
so vehement in inter-class fights that Myskania saw fit to abolish the pole rush;
needless to say, we won rivalry.

Traditional Freshmen became traditional Sophomores. We knew, as only
Sophs can know, the futility of rivalry. So we abolished the Get-Wise party, held
another inter-class debate, and lost inter-class contests with magnificent disdain.
It wasn’t that the grapes were sour, but that we no longer cared for grapes, sweet
or sour.

And in the regular course of events we became Juniors. Who wouldn't after
being Sophs for a year? As Juniors we held prom week-end, to the accompani-
ment of new rushing rules; we took methods courses and psychology; Moving-Up
day came, and the twigs that were bent in our Freshman year became trees, as
eleven of our number were made members of Myskania.

We are Seniors. We have come up through the years doing what all classes
have done. We will not say that we have done our best, for no one who has any
humility or any hope for the future will ever say that he has done his best. We
can say, however, that we have come through these years with thoughtfulness,
with busy-ness, and with joy, and that these three culminate in the best we can
have: growth. And in this culmination we cease to be traditional, for behind the
class history, behind our composite actions, we stand, individual, and to each of us
the class history is a different one. There are as many histories in the class of 1932
as there are people. Yet as we leave State College the history of the individuals
merges into the history of the class. We are not sorry, because we know, with
William Blake, that

“He who would do good to another, must do it in minute particulars.
General good is the plea of the scoundrel, hypocrite and flatterer;

For art and science cannot exist but in minutely organized particulars,
And not in generalizing demonstrations of the rational power:

The infinite alone resides in definite and determinate identity.”

Fifty-one

YR,
r /
PEDAGOGUL

te YsA———F

Bw /////

AM

PEDAGOGUL

SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS

CATHERINE TRAVER
ERNEST BooTH
MArJorigE Lockwoop
Curtis RUTENBER
MILDRED SMITH
SAMUEL DORRANCE

GEORGE RIcI
DorotHy HALL
E_tvA NEALON
Curtis RUTENBER
MILDRED SMITH
SAMUEL DOoRRANCE

Curtis RUTENBER
JOSEPHINE HOLT
HELEN BURGHER
ANDREW Hnritz
ELEANOR GAGE
FRANCES KELLER

DorotHy HALL
ROBERT RANKINS
LEAH DORGAN
HAROLD HASWELL .
ELEANOR GAGE
HELEN ROHEL

1928-1929
President
Vice-President
Secretar)
Treasurer
Song Leader

Reporter

1929-1930

President
Vice-President
Secretar)
Treasurer
Song Leade

Reporter

1930-1931

President
Vice-President
Secretar)
Treasurey
Song Leader

Re porter

1931-1932

President
Vice-President
Secretar)
Treasurer
Song Leader
Reporter

Fifty-three

WR,

SL

MARION KATHERINE ABRAMS, A.B.

Marnie”
Hod
Northville New York

“The immortal freshness of that grace carved for
all ages on some Attic frieze.”

CHARLOTTE LORRAINE ADAMS, A.B.
**Chot”’
249 Hamilton St. Albany

Mathematics Club (2, 3, 4).

s there is truth, and often she

ELMA MARY ALBERT, B.S. in Ed.
Elma”
18 Clay St. Dansville

Transfer from Geneseo Normal School.

as made for playful thoughts, for happy wit

aughter.

Fifty-four

1)
Bw //////

PEDAGOGUE———_
AMM
PEDAGOGUE

MARY H. ALEXANDER, B.S. in L.S.
“Mary”
Signum Laudis, EB
522 Madison Ave. Albany

Y. W. C. A. (1, 2, 3); Latin Club (1,.2); Vice
Consul (2); Chairman Freshman Banner Committee
Chairman Junior Guide Committee mi
Lounge Committee (4); Vice President Library
School (3); Pedagogue (3, 4)

DOROTHY ELEANOR ALLEN, A.B.

Dottie”
SA
541 Coventry Ave. Utica
Y. W. C. A. (1, 2); Campus Commission (2);
Junior-Frosh Stunt (1); Y. W. Bazaar Decorations
(2).
Fair, golden thougl nd e wor

ALBERT ALMSTEAD, A.B.
Bert”
South New Berlin New York

Transfer from Hartwick College; Troubadours (4)
Lounge Committee (4).

1 thing is to conquer it.

WR

tJ
— PEDAGOGUL

FREDERICK S. APPLETON, A.B.
Fred”
1635 Sixth St. Rensselaer
Chemistry Club.

A keen mind, a dash of wit, and a passion for
chemistry.

SALLY A. ATKINSON, A.B.
“Sally”
A®YT, DA
166 Masten Ave. Cohoes

Moving-Up Day Stunt (1); Y. W. C. A. (1, 2);
Publicity for Y. A. Conference (2); Adver-
tising committee for G. A. A. Vaudeville (3); Cam-
pus Day Stunt (3); Junior Ring Committee (3);
Junior Guide Committee (3); Treasury Committee
(3); Business Staff of Lion (3); Business Staff of
Pedagogue (4); Advertising Manager of Lion (4).

Ambition and cheerfulness—these two attributes
Sally has in large measures.

ELIZABETH BARITEAU, BS. in Ed.
“Betty”
Antwerp New York

Transferred from Potsdam Normal School (4).

Our acquaintance has been short, but we hope it
has been as pleasant to you as it has been to us.

Fifty-six

1
Bw

——————————aaa———oVvVOV3OnNONEN a
AM
PLDAGOGUL

ROSE BAXTER, A.B.
“Rose”
West Covington New York

Newman Club (1, 2, 3, 4); French Club (2, 3, 4);
Spanish Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Vice-President (3); Pres-
ident (4).

Romance like that of old Spain hidden under a calm
exterior.

KATHRYN F. BELKNAP, A.B.
“Ray”
A®D, HD
Philmont New York

Y. W.C. A. (1, 2, 3); Chemistry Club (2, 3, 4);
Secretary (4); Y. W. Chairman of Music (2); Y.
W. Undergraduate Representative (3); Delegate to
State Y. M. and Y. W. Conventions: at Schenectady
(1), Syracuse (2), Rochester (3); Moving-Up Day
Stunt (1, 2, 3); Music Council (2, 3, 4); President
(4); Chairman Music for Soiree (2); Junior
Guide Committee (2); Class Marshal (3); Cam-
pus Day Stunt (3); G. A. A. Vaudeville (3, 4);
Chairman of Music Y. M. and Y. W. Conference at
State College (3); Chairman of Favors Senior Hop
(4); Literary Editor Pedagogue (4).

Denying tradition, Kay believes that vivacity is the
spice of life and her delicious sparkle projects itself
into the hearts of her friends.

WINIFRED BENEDICT, A.B.
“Winnie”
Georgetown Station New York
Y. W.C. A. (2, 4); Biology Club (3, 4) ; Mathe-
matics Club (3, 4); Treasurer (4).

"It's good to be busy and ambitious, but it’s better
still to smile at your work.”

Fifty-seven

1932
WR,
ANN
DAGOGUE

ROSE LAURA BERGSTEIN, B.S. in C.
“Rose”
Sag Harbor Long Island
Commerce Club (1, 2); German Club (1, 2, 3);

Secretary (3); Biology Club (1, 2); Reporter (2);
GiB, As (1, 2).4 4):

Merry eyes denotes a happy life.

FLORA A. BESSEE, B.S. in C.
Flora”
AP
408 Expense St. Rome

Commerce Club (2, 3, 4).

Looking at life coolly, but with unmistakable sin-

cerity.

MARGARET DELONG BETTS, A.B.
‘Margie’
H®
18 Marion Ave. Glens Falls
Y. W. C. A. (1, 2, 3); Chairman of Tickets for

Y. W.C. A. Bazaar (1); Music Committee for Y. W’.
C. A. (1); G. A. A. Musical Comedy (4); ‘Mi-

kado” (4).

Margaret is modesty itself about her wonderful
voice. We wish she'd be more immodest about it,
and turn her back on the life of a Latin teacher for-

ever.

Ba/////

\WW
——— PEDAGOGUE

LUCILLE BLACKWELL, A.B.
“Lucille”

Watervliet Arsenal Watervliet

RUTH PIERSON BLACKWELL, A.B.
Ruthie’

Watervliet Arsenal Watervliet

EARL ROY BLOOMINGDALE, A.B.
Earl”

Basom New York

Chemistry Club;
YOMOGA, (3):

Troubadours (3, 4); Secretary

'To seek truth through science shall be my creed.’

cee 19 52
A\\ \_¥
ANH
——— PEDAGOGUE

Bw! //////

FAY ALFRED BLUM, A. B.
666"

Constableville New York

Varsity Baseball (1, 2, 3, 4); Intramural Basket-
ball (2, 3, 4); Men’s Athletic Council (3, 4); Y. M.
C. A. (1, 2, 3, 4); Cabinet (2, 3); Treasurer (3);
Class Stunt (1, 2); Milne High Gymnasium Instruc-
tor; Member of Board of Advisors, College House.

the game of life

We hope your batting average in

will be high—at least .666.

LEAH BRADT, B.S. in Ed.
Leah”
Tilson Ave Highland

Charm, poise, versat.
but we admire her most

RUTH CHRISTIAN BREZEE, A.B.

“Breezy”
BZ
260 Delaware Ave. Albany

News Reporter (2); Junior Associate Editor (3);

Senior Associate Editor (4); French Club (1, 2);

Y. W. C. A. (1, 2, 4); Fencing Club (1, 2, 3);
Campus Day Stunt (1, 3).

Downhearted? Look up Breezy.

\

MM
PEDAGOGUE

SARAH EVELYN BRIERLEY, B.S. in L.S.
“Sue”
H®

Cushman St. New Berlin

“Sweet Sue’ is she. Need anyone say more?

MILDRED COOKE BUCHANAN, A.B.

“Mil”

57 Boulevard Hudson Falls

Mildred has a profo knowledge of nature, and
a true appreciation of th paces.”
HELEN BURGHER, B.S. in H.E.
“Bur ghie”
2
316 W. Columbia St. Cohoes

Delegate to State Home Economics Convention
(1); Delegate to State Y. M. and Y. W. Cc. A. Con-
ference at Rochester (3); Social Chairman, Y. W.
C. A. (3); Vice-President Y. W. C, A. (4); Class
Secretary (3); General Chairman of Junior Lunch-
eon (3); Junior Humor Editor of Pedagogue (3)
Committee Chairman for Soiree (2); Committee
Chairman for Hop (4); Campus Day Stunt (4):
ish Carnival Stunt (3).

umor, kindly tact, and graciou

our Burghie.

Sixty-one

1952
AY YY

ANH

Sixty-two

1952
Bw //i//

—— PEDAGOGUL

GRACE AGNES BURKE, A.B.
“Grace”
331 Third St. Troy

"Generous to others, to herself severe.”

DOROTHY ISABELLE BURLEIGH, A.B.
Dot”
AP
527 W. Thomas St. Rome

Classical Club (3
bury Club (1,

4); French Club (3, 4) ; Canter-
ie 3 Bl

Always busy, but always ready to lend a helping
hand.

VERA BEAMAN BURNS, A.B.
“Bunsey”’
DA
Shelter Island New York

Pedagogue, Cub (3, 4) ; Editor-in-Chief (4) ; G. A.
As (45 3); Wands (1); Hockey (2, 3); Baseball
(2) ; Hiking (3) ; Volley Ball (2, 3) ; Basketball (3);
Hiking Captain (3); Refreshment Committee for
Frolic (1); Food Committee Week End (2) ; Chair-
man Decorations for Frolic (2); Banquet Committee
(3); Alumnae Week End Committee (4); State
College News, Cub (2); Reporter (3) ; Senior Asso-
ciate Editor (4); Y. W. C. A. (2, 3, 4); Bazaar
Ticket Committee (1); Ticket Committee for Con-
ference (2, 3, 4); Moving-Up Day Breakfast (2);
Membership Committee (3) ; Bun Table (3); Sopho-
more Enforcement Committee (2); Decoration Com-
mittee for Soiree (2); Junior Prom Committee (3);
Classical Club (3, 4); Chairman Pin Commttee (3) ;
Campus Commission Aide (3); Residence Hall Fund
Commitee (4); Points Revision Committee (4);
Senior Dinner Committee (4).

BURNS, old girl, you're a regal kid,
Uncommen smart, and toujours gay,
Revealing smile—a happy bid;

Not loud, not quiet, not bushel-hid—
Swell girl, this Burns, I doff my lid!

AMM
PEDAGOGUE

DOROTHY HARRIET BUSE, A.B.
Dottie”
241 Saratoga St. Cohoe3

Y. W. C. A.; Mathematics Club.

"Whose high endeavors are an inward light

That make the path before ber always bright.”

MARTHA RAY CANDEEFE, A. B.
Mart”
=A

Phoenix New York

Y. W.C. A. (1); Mathematics Club (3, 4) ; Com-
merce Club (3, 4).

“Mix reason with pleasure and wisdom with

SARAH CAPLAN, A.B.
“Cap pie”
242 S. Second Ave. Mechanicville

Classical Club.

Sixty-three

es 19 52
WR

errr eee
LL

1952
wwii)

PEDAGOGUL

LOUISE BOOTH CARLOW, B.S. in C.
“Louise”
wr
36 Notre Dame St. Hudson Falls

An A-+- personality.

ELIZABETH L. CARUSO, B.S. in Ed.
“Betty”
121 Zebra St. Dunkirk

Transferred from Fredonia Normal School (4);
Newman Club.

"Experience is by industry achieved.’

LULU WINIFRED CHARLES, A.B.

id Fah
Signum Laudis
160 Quail St. Albany
In Us qi a sweet sturdine SS and
depth

ER: Ee

We
DAGOGUE

PE

HELEN FRANCES CHARTRES, A.B.
“Helen”
80 South Allen St. Albany

Underneath her usual nonchalant, almos
manner is an eager nature, one loving friends

adventure, life.

HELENE HEDWIG CHMIELINSKA
A.B.
“Helen”
279 Northern Boulevard Albany
French Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Commerce Club (1, 2,
3, 4); French Fete Committee (4).

"Come and trip it as you go.”

EDITH ELIZABETH CINCEBOX
BS. in LS:
Edie”

EBD
Prattsburg New York
| rman Club (2).
: h she the well of

WW

a

r

Sixty-six

1952
BwII////

— PEDAGOGUE

FRANKLIN BOWYER CLARK, A.B.
“Frank”
K®K
Athens New York
Chemistry Club; Moving-Up Day Stunt (3).

A scientist in whom we recognize a pleasing com-
pound of humor and efficiency.

NILE CECILE CLEMENS, A.B.
“Nile”
Signum Laudis, &A
144-35 Northern Boulevard Flushing
French Club; Biology Club; Y. W. C. A. (1);
Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (4); Elementary Dramatics

Class Plays (3); Advanced Dramatics Class Plays
(4).

Our finest example of charming sophistication.

HELEN MARGUERITE COLLIER
B.S. in HE.
“Collie”
Earlville New York
VW. C. A. -G1,.253, 4)3 Yow: GC Al Cabinet
(3); Home Economics Club (1, 2, 3, 4); G. A. A.

(1); Senior Dinner Committee; Chairman Dinner
G. A. A. Alumnae Week-end (4).

Graceful and useful in all she does.

| WE
rn

MARION ELIZABETH COMISKY, A.B.
Marion”
Crd>

175 W. Main St. Port Jervis
Chemistry Club (2, 3, 4).

tendencies, Marion

mysteries of the scie

tendencies, science is more

RUDOLPH COONS, A.B.
"*Rudie’
Germantown New York
A personality whose richness is not immedi
apparent.
+

MARY GERTRUDE CORA, A.B.
Gert’
152 Woodlawn Ave. Auburn

Newman Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Newman Club Coun-
Rules Committee (2); Chairman Sophomore Rivalry
cillor (3, 4); Music Club (1); Chemistry Club (2,
3, 4); Chairman Junior Dinner (3); Sophomore
Committee (2); Class Cheer Leader (4).

labs Gert never
; and State

done jor them.

Sixty-seven

WW

AN
PEDAGOGUE

5
HELEN L. CRAIG, B.S. in C.
“Helen”
Knoxboro New York
Commerce Club (3) i
A refreshing combination of common sense and
unselfish interest. q

MILDRED ANNA CROWLEY, A.B.
Mil”
XO t
534 West End Ave. Carthage
G. A. A. (1, 2, 3, 4); Track Team (1); Basket-
ball (2, 3); Basketball (3, 4); Swimming (3, 4);

Newman Club (1, 2, 3,4); Council (3); Photograph
Editor of Pedagogue (4).

ency of her speech, her delight in music,

ty, good temper, and open-mindedness— i
composite make.”
’
JEAN FRANCES CREDLE, BS. in H.E.
“Jean”
A )

{ Library Place Chatham

Music Council (3, 4); Secretary (4); Business
Staff of Echo (3, 4); Home Economics Club (1, 2,
3, 4); Marshall (3); Treasurer (4); Junior Tea
Dance Committee.

A true lover of music; a keen enjoyer of life.

Sixty-eight

1
Mw/////
AM
DAGOGU

PE c ;

THERESA H. DARFLER, A.B.
“Teddy”
Salem New York

"Though you're not the

We're mighty sure ‘tis tra

| That the world is a whole lo
Just because of you.”

: FRANCES KINGSLEY DAVIS,
B.S. in L.S.

“Lou”
Hb
Camden New York
Strange that a harp of a thousand strings should

keep in tune so long.

: ;
'

; MARTHA E. DAVIS, A.B. |
Martha” |

|

rR
West Winfield New York

1 her movements, an elusive

charm from within—daintiness personified.

An elfin grace in

wn 1952
WW

eee
BY {H//
PEDAGOGUE

MARJORIE IRENE DE HEUS,
B.S. in H.E.
Marge”
TK®
East Greenbush New York
Home Economics Club; Sophomore Soiree Com-

mittee; Junior Tea Dance Committee; Moving-Up
Day Stunt (2); Page at Campus Night (4).

Demure, petite, and friendly.

ELLEN M. DINNEEN, B.S. in C.
“Ellen”
Signum Laudis, H®
920 Churchill Ave. Utica

Y. W.C. A. (1); Newman Club; Commerce Club.

Ellen will probably never change her mind about
aspiring to be a successful business woman, but she
may change it about preferring the life of a bachelor-
girl,

KATHERINE M. DOOLEY, A. B.
“Kay”
EB®
82-69 160th St. Jamaica

Transferred from Wilson Normal School, Wash-
ington. French Club (2, 3, 4); Secretary (3); Pres-
ident (4); French Fete (2, 3); Residence Hall Fund
Committee (4).

We shall always remember Mademoiselle as a
leader in many fields, especially French Club. Look
to her. for inttiative—if you ask Kay to do it, it’s
done.

Seventy

Mw //1//

AMM
PEDAGOGUE

LEAH M. DORGAN, A.B.
“Leah”
x so
411 Third Ave. Watervliet

Newman Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Councillor (2) ; Soph-
omore Soiree Committee; Lion Staff (2, 3); Lion
Board (4); Chairman of Publicity Junior Prom;
Chairman Junior Ring Committee; Chairman Publicity
Health Week (3); Campus Day Stunt; (2, 3); Mov-
ing-Up Day Stunt (2, 3, 4); French Club (3, 4);
French Fete Committee (3, 4); Class Secretary (4);
Chairman Decorations Senior Hop (4); Pedagogue
Staff (4).

“Earth to her is as young as the slip of the neu
moon.’

SAMUEL STANLEY DORRANCE, A.B.
“Sam”
Myskania, Abr, 110M, Edward Eldred
Potter Club
19 Alexander St. Albany

Class Reporter (1, 2); News Reporter (2); Desk
Editor (3) ; Feature Editor (4) ; Class Moving-Up Day
Speaker (2); Class Basketball (1, 2); Class Stunts
3, 4); Associate Editor Echo (3); Editor-in-
Chief of Echo (4); Delegate to Yorktown Sesqui-
centennial (4); Varsity Debate (3, 4); President of
Alpha Phi Gamma (4); Junior Prom Committee
(3); Athletic Council (4); Freshman Camp Director
(4).

His mind sweeps with startling suddenness
Across the plains of common thought

To the lofty top where now he stands

By so few reached, so many sought.

GENEVIEVE PAULI DOWNEY, A.B.

G.G
=A

Union Center New York

Math Club (3, 4); Y. W. C. A. (1, 2, 3, 4).

Unassuming in manner, but striving for nothing

short of perfection in her work.

Seventy-one

YR,

tL
PEDAGOGUL

ANNE LUCILLE DUNNIGAN, A.B.
“Lucille”
104 Third St. Waterford

Newman Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Elementary and Ad-
vanced Dramatics Class Plays (3, 4).

"The best condition'd and unwearied spirit in
doing courtesies.”

DORIS MARIE DUNNING, B.S. in L.S.
Doris”
PA
1550 California Ave. Schenectady

Pedagogue Cub (3); Junior Guide Committee (3).

Her high ideals and her courage to apply them
merit our admiration.

FRANCIS LOUISE DURKIN, B.S. in C.

“Louise”

8 Church St. Waterloo

Commerce Club (2, 3, 4) ; Mathematics Club (2);
Newman Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Councilor Newman Club
(3); Secretary Newman Club (4); President New-
man House (4).

"Love, hope, fear, faith—these make humanity.”

Seventy-two

1a ——
BI

AMM
DAGOGUE

PE

FLORENCE MAE EISENBERG, A. B.
“Flo”
31 Glen St. Glen Cove

Menorah (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Commerce Club (1, 2, 3, 4).

words.

The actions of a friend speak |
Give Florence a chance and she will prove it.

HAZEL MAY ENGLISH, B.S. in C.
“Tmy”
A
102 Griffith St. Corning
Commerce Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Canterbury Club (1,

2, 3,.4)<

They call her “Tin

wever, atones for an

ROBERTA MAY EVERITT, A.B.
** Bobbie’
Catskill New York

Gy Ae AY. CAA.

Seventy-three

we 1952
WW

r /
PEDAGOGUE

SARAH ELIZABETH FASOLDT, A.B.
“Sally”
Signum Laudis, EB
1584 First St. Rensselaer
Mathematics Club.
"Courage and perseverance have 4 magical talis-

man, hefore which difficulties disappear and ob-
stacles vanish into air.”

CORINNE ANNA FAULK, A.B.
“Corinne”
75 Fairmount Ave. Jamestown
German Club (2); Biology Club (2, 3, 4);
Historian (3); ‘Vice-President (4); Mathematics

Club (2, 3, 4); Vice-President (4); Lounge Com-
mittee (4).

She finds pleasure in everything, even Calculus.

BESSIE FELSON, B.S. in C.
“Betty”
1522 Eastern Parkway Schenectady
Graduate of New Jersey State Normal School.

In spite of everything Betty always manages to
smile. It's a great life when Betty is around.

Seventy-four

1a lh ——
Bw //1//

I
PLDAGOGUE

GAETANA PAULINE FERLENDA, A.B.
*T annie”

19 East Genesee St. Auburn

Newman Club (3, 4); French Club (3, 4); Trans-

ferred from Nazareth College.

Tannie's friendly interest in the joys and sorrows
of others have helped those of us who have come in
contact with her.

ELIZABETH MARIE FISCHER, B.S. in C.
“Betty”
EB®
30 Austin Place Portchester

Commerce Club; Canterbury Club.

“Joy is not in things. It is in us.”

RUTH LILLIAN FISHER, A.B.
“Ruth”
Fosterdale New York

German Club; Biology Club.

"Book love, my friends, is your pass to the greatest
di P &

pleasure.”

Seventy-five

WW

r /
— PEDAGOGUE

JULIA ARABELLE FISTER, B.S. in L.S.
Judy”
AQ
Athens New York

Soiree Committee (2); Junior Prom Committee
Chairman (3); Senior Hop Committee Chairman
(4); Fencing (1, 2); Captain (3); G. A. A. (2)5
G. A. A. Play Day (4); Moving-Up Day Stunt (2);
Campus Day Stunt (4); Business Staff of Pedagogue
(4); Dormitory Fund Committee (4); Senior Mar-
shall (4); Chairman Campus Commission (4).

Judy ever delights us with

J sparkling eyes and
vivacious manner.

CAROLYN FITZGERALD, A.B.

“Carolyn”
AP
Newburgh New York
) p i
pmanly in so many ways, she runs away !
ind rejects the feminine privileges
ber mind,

ALICE ELIZABETH FLEMING,
BS; in ELE;
Alice”
36 Cuyler Ave. Albany

E

Home Economics Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Secretary (4).

eather friend, but an all-weather friend

Scventy-six

12 |
BUI |

AMM
PEDAGOGUE

ROBERT JOHN FLOODY, A.B.
“Bob”
393 Livingston Ave. Albany

Senior Hop Committee (4); Freshman Debate
Committee (1); Y. M. C. A. (1, 2, 4); Orchestra
(2, 3); Chemistry Club (3, 4); Pin Committee (4);
Troubadours (1, , 4) ; Reporter, News (2) ; Chair-
man Noon Dance Committee (4); Troubadour Show
(3); Biology Club (4); Photography Staff of Peda-
gogue (4); Campus Day Committee (4).

Bob attacks all his tasks with such a whole-hea
ness that success is insured from the start.

AUDREY DU BOIS FLOWERS, A.B.
“Duby”
A@r
9 Greenridge Ave. White Plains

News Board, Advertising Manager (3, 4); Assist-
ant Advertising Manager (2); Business Staff (1);
Advertising Manager of 1932 Pedagogue (4) ; Senior
Hop Committee (4); Vice-President of Alpha Phi
Gamma (4); National Vice-President of Alpha Phi
Gamma (4); Delegate to National Convention of
Alpha Phi Gamma (3); Columbia Scholastic Press
Convention in New York (3, 4); G. A. A. Vaude-
ville Committee (3); Chairman of Programs, “Mi-
kado” (4); French Club (2, 3, 4); Reporter (3);
French Fete Committee (3); Summer News Staff
(3); Sophomore Enforcement Committee (2) ; Resi-
dence Hall Fund Committee (4).

Ads are my ch
Despondency's s

ialty,
dity,
fy.

spe
f spec

Fun's a real neces

EVELYN HENRIETTA FORTMILLER,
A.B.
“Evelyn”
Signum Laudis

t.

109 Williams S Newark

Math Club; Biology Club.

We admire greatly both you and your «
Evelyn.

A \_Y

ELLE nnn
MN

Seventy-eight

19352
Bw /////

:
—
*
— »
%

—— PEDAGOGUE

MARGARET ELEANOR FORTMILLER,
B.S. ii LS.
“Margaret”
Signum Laudis
109 Williams St. Newark
Biology Club; G. A. A. (1); Secretary-Treasurer
Library School (4).

Noble thoughts seated in the heart of courtesy.

MARY ALICE FORTUNE, A.B.
“Mary Alice’
143 St. Mary St. Watertown

"The less people speak of their greatness, the more
we think of it.”

HELEN MARIE FREDERICK, B.S. in L.S.
“Helen”
45 Sloan St. Albany

"Self-confidence is the first requisite of great un-
dertakings.”

AMM
PEDAGOGUE

FLORENCE FRIEDMAN, A.B.
Florence”
Signum Laudis, H®
967 Washington Ave. Albany

Wells College (1); Campus Queen (4) ; President
of German Club (4); Director of G. A. A. Operetta
(4); G. A. A. Musical Comedy (3) ; Campus Queen
Attendant (2); Advanced Dramatics Class Plays
(3); Elementary Dramatics Class Plays (2); Direc-
tor of Spanish Carnival (3).

Florence’s fairy godmother was so generous in her
golden gifts of beauty, charm, and talent, that we
less favored might feel resentment if it were any
other but Florence.

MICHAEL RICHARD FROHLICH, A.B.
**Mike’’
AP, K®K, Edward Eldred Potter Club
Jefferson New York

Business Manager of Pedagogue (4); Co-Editor of
Lion (4); Campus Day Stunt (4); Troubadours;
Interclass Basketball (3, 4); Assistant Business Man-
ager of Lion (3); Y. M. C. A. Assistant Basketball
Manager (3); Spanish Club (3); Lion Staff (3);
Residence Hall Fund Committee (4).

The man of ent

ang

erprise, whose “words of honey
d employment in any business
eedling subscriptions or sell-

eyes of steel”
h

venture, whether it be

ing books.

FLORENCE ELECTRA GABAUER, A.B.
Florence”
34 Kinback Ave. Troy

ing pretense, she does with cheerful will

“Le

What others talk of while their hands are still.”

Seventy-nine

wn 1952,

| WW

r

Eighty

—_

tZ

1932.
Mw!/1/

——— PEDAGOGUE

ELEANOR MONROE GAGE, A.B.
“Eleanor”
CK®
Delmar New York

Campus Day Stunt (1); G. A. A. Vaudeville (1,
; Moving-Up Day Stunt , 3); Junior Guide
Committee (3); Junior Prom Committee (3); Class
Song Leader (3, 4); Y. W. C. A. Bazaar Stunt (3);
Spanish C ival Stunt (3); French Fete (2); Lady-
in-Waiting to Campus Queen (4); Senior Dinner

Committee (4).

m of accus-
and

as she is, no one would «

Her mt

As sm

ing her
social a d ber we e€ of
MARGARITA L. GALUSHA, A.B.
“Grita”’
Signum Laudis, 11fM, EB&
108 Church St. Newark

Classical Club; Canterbury Club; Y. W. C. A.

Secretary- Signum Laudis.

elude her not

Even Greek verl

FRANCES R. GAYNOR, A.B.
Francie”
Signum Laudis, X30
180 Fourth St. Troy

Mount Saint Vincent-on-Hudsor
re Debate (2); News Report
ing-Up Day Stunt (2. 3); Varsity De
Team (2, 3, 4); G. A. A. Play (2 3c
of Handbook (2, 4) ; Campus Day it (3, 4); Art
Editor of Ec (4); Advanced Dramatics Play (4);
Humor Staff of Pedagogue (4); Newman Club (2,
3, 4).

on
AMM -'
PEDAGOGUE

MARGARET LINCOLN GAZLAY, A.B.
“Marg

47 Payne St. Hamilton

Y. W. C. A. (2); Spanish Club (3); Biology
Club (2, 3, 4) ; Senior Representative to Biology (4).

Always busy, she balances real work with romance.

ALICE EDNA GIBLIN, A.B.
Ay!
Xo
401 S. Hamilton St. Watertown

Basketball (1, 2, 3); Hockey (1, 2, 3); Volley
Ball (3); Captain of Swimming (2, 3, 4); Chem-
istry Club (2, 3, 4); Varsity Basketball (3) ; College
Cheer Leader (4) ; Newman Ciub; Junior Tea Dance
Committee (3); Student Council (4); G. A. A.
Council (4); Class Cheer Leader (3).

These things has Al loved:

Basketball,

And hockey and baseball,

And all healthy, outdoor things;

Over all these, swimming,

And even chem lab and cheer-leading,

And best of all, her friends,

And a good joke over which she could ponder long
And laugh heartily.

HELEN LOUISE GILLIGAN, A.B.
“Helen”
Shortsville New York
Transfer from Cornell University; Newman Club;

Vice-President Newman Hall (4).

Helen's philosophy: “It hain't no use to grumble
or complain; it's jest as cheap and easy to rejoice.”

Eighty-one

1932
| WY,

BNI

Eighty-two

1952
Mii)

PEDAGOGUE

WEALTHA FRANCES GODFREY, A.B.
“W ealtha”’
Waterford New York

“Success is bis who says little, hears much, and

thinks deeply.”

ANNA GOLDMAN, B.S. in C.
“Peggy Anne”
Signum Laudis
10 Clinton St. Albany

Elementary Dramatics Class Plays (2); Advanced
Dramatics Class Plays (3); Commerce Club (2
4): Menorah (2, 3, 4); Treasury and Party Com-
mittee (3); Menorah Food Sale Committee (2);
G. A. A. Tennis Tournament (1, 3).

"Come, follow me, and leave the world to its bab-

RUTH ELIZABETH GOLDSMITH,

B.S. in H.E.
‘Goldie’
AP
Ellenville New York

Home Economics Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Soiree Com-
mittee (2); Junior Luncheon Committee (3); Y- Ww.
C. A. (3, 4); Cabinet (4) ; Campus Day Committee
(3); Exchange Manager of Echo (3, 4); Representa-
tive to Home Economics Convention in Syracuse (3).

She gives a sparkle to life, and feels its joy herself.

AMS

PEDAGOGUE a

MARGARET CATHERINE
GOTTSCHALK, A.B.
“Peggy”
oA
147 Chestnut St. Albany
Y. W.C. A. (1); Basketball (1); Publicity Com-

mittee of Sophomore Soiree (2); Campus Day Stunt
(3); Pedagogue Cub (3); Pedagogue Staff (4).

"A truer, nobler, trustier heart, more loving, or
more loyal, never beat within a human breast

DOROTHY GRAY, A.B.
*Dot”
38 East Ave. Middletown

Chemistry Club (2, 3, 4).

So friendly a disposition cannot but conquer all.

MADELINE BARET GREEN, A.B.
“Madge”
9 McCarthy Ave. Kenwood
Freshman Stunt (1); Spanish Carnival (2); G. A.
A. Musical Comedy (1).

Madge chatters like a jay, but with infinite charm
and a depth of meaning.

1932
WW

Eighty-three

ANIM
PEDAGOGUE

MARIE JOAN GREENE, B.S. in C.
“Marie”
CK®
Fleischmann New York
Campus Day Stunt (1); Y. W. C. A. Bazaar (1,
2, 3); Commerce Club (2); Lounge Committee (3) ;

Sophomore Soiree Committee (2); Intersorority Ball
Committee (2); Spanish Queen Attendant (3, 4).

Blonde beauty, a lovely smile, a care-free nature:
the student's idea of a perfect teacher.

SARAH VAN LIEW GULICK, A.B.
Sarah”
16 Elm St. Newburgh

Math Club; French Club.

It takes a great soul to go along facing rough and
smooth alike as it comes.

ROSE MARIE GUSTOWT, B.S. in C.
Rose”
11 Downs Ave. Binghamton

Commerce Club; Biology Club.

Acquiring the art of real conversation is a real con-
quest. Rose has been victorious.

Exghty-four

1a —
Mii)

| A
ProfoseuL

i]
4
HELEN B. HAAKE, A.B.
“Helen”
i TK®
2627 Albany St. Schenectady
‘ "Not on the clamour of the crowded street,

Nor in the shouts and plaudits of the throne,
But in ourselves are triumphs and defeat.”

j DOROTHY JEAN HALL, A.B.
“Dee”
Myskania, H®
142 Mulberry St. Rochester
Campus Commission (1); Freshman Banquet (1) ;
Class Vice-President (2); General Chairman of
Sophomore Soiree (2); Campus Day Stunt (2);
Lounge Committee (3); Secretary N. S. F. A. Com-
mittee (3); Finance Board (3); Junior-Freshman
Party Committee (3); Prom Committee (3); Mov-
j ing-Up Day Stunt Chairman (3); Class President
(4); Campus Day Chairman (4); Chairman Dormi-

tory Drive (4) ; Student Council (4) ; Chemistry Club
J (2, 3, 4).

Here is a serenity of spirit and a warmth of per-
sonality totally disarming.

HELEN ELIZABETH HANDY, A.B.
“Helen”
i Sharon Springs New York
Math Club (2, 3, 4) ; Commerce Club (2, 3, 4).

Those who do not know Helen describe her as
“quiet” ; those who do, pronounce her “jolly.”

Eighty-five

ee 1952,
WW
r JU
PEDAGOGUL

RUTH ELIZABETH HARTIN, A.B.
“Ruth”
2
54 Spring St. Gloversville
Hockey (2); Basketball (3); Junior Tea Dance

Committee (3); Finance Board (4); Women’s Var-
sity Debate Team (4) ; Pedagogue Staff (4). §

Ruth's lovely smile is an outward indication of
those inner qualities which make her a lovable and
understanding friend.

ROSEMARY HARVEY, B.S. in C.
Rose”
H®
West Main St. West Winfield

The blush of health is in her cheek.

FRANCIS HARWOOD, A.B.
“Francis”
KOK
42 Gardeau St. Perry
YeNG Ci:A. iG) 2535:4)-

A heart resolute;
A will inflexible.

Eighty-six

1a —
Bwi///
i\\

\W
PEDAGOGUE—

HAROLD M. HASWELL, A.B.
“Hoby”’
KAP, K®K
Hoosick Falls New York

Manager of Varsity Basketball (3); Class Treas-
urer (2); Athletic Council (3); Chairman of Fresh-
man Banquet (2); Treasurer Y. M. C. A. (2); As-
sistant Manager of Varsity Basketball (2); Freshman
Camp Committee (3) iC. A. De = to Syra-
cuse Convention (4); nior Hop Committee (4);
Council Representative of Y. M. C. A.; Sophomore
Debate Committee (2); Y. M. C. A. Delegate to
Buck Hills Falls, Pennsylvania (2); Y. M. C. A.
Cabinet; Class Cheer Leader (2 Class Basketball
(1, 2, 3, 4), Troubadours (1, 2, 3, 4+; Residence
Hall Fund Committee (4).

An airplane wheels in lofty flight;
A freshman stares in sheer delight,
And shouts at this—his maiden sight.
Soar on, my son, and scale the height!

VIRGINIA IRENE HAWKINS. B.S. in C.
“Hawkie”’
A
Corinth New York

Basketball (1, 2, 3, 4); Basketball Captain (3, 4);
Varsity Basketball (1, 2); Hockey (1, 2, 3, 4);
Hockey Captain (3); Sophomore Manager of Girls’
Athletics; Junior Manager of Girls’ Athletics; Del-
egate to Hockey Camp; G. A. A. (1, 2, 3, 4); G. A.
A. Council (2, 3, 4); Vice-President (4); Directory
Board (2, 3); Editor-in-Chief of Directory (4);
Pedagogue Staff (4); G. A. A. Operetta (4).

When the one great Scorer comes
To write against her name

He'll write not that she won or lost,
But that she played the game.

MARGARET HARRIET HENRY, A.B.
“"Margie”’
Signum Laudis, ITM, EB
1447 Broadway Rensselaer
Math Club (2, 3); Treasurer (3); French Club
(3, 4); Member of Executive Council of French

Club (3, 4); Treasurer of Pi Gamma Mu (3);
President (4); President of Signum Laudis (4).

And with unwearied finger drawing out
The lines of life from living knowledge hid.

Eighty-seven

1932
A

r /
— PEDAGOGUE

MARGARET MARION HERR, A.B.
“Peg”
res

97 Washington Ave. Beacon

French Club; Commerce Club.

A searcher after knowledge; yet withal Peg finds
time to engage in other activities,

FRANCES PIERSON HEYDT, B.S. in L.S.
“Fran”
vr
998 Amsterdam Ave. New York City
Basketball (1); Home Economics Club (1); Hik
ing’ (1)3 YoWaG.A.. Cy, 3).

"Wit is the lodestar of each human thought,
Wit is the tool by which all things ave wrought.

ESTHER CAROLINE HIGBY, A.B.
“Eddie”
AP
Snowden Ave. Elsmere
Campus Day Stunt (1); French Club; Math Club;
Lion Staff (3); Managing Editor of Lion (4).

Most of us know her humor; a chosen few have
realized that it is only secondary.

Eighty-eight

1 ——
TT

A
PEDAGOGUE—

ELSIE FRANCES HOLMES, A.B.
“Elsie”
=A

63 Lindstoen St. Cazenovia

Biology Club; Math Club; Y. W. C. A.

"Sweet sounds, oh, beautiful music, do not cease!

With you alone is excellence and peace.”

JOSEPHINE HOLT, A.B.
To”

Myskania, AQ
Palisades New York

Y. W. C. A. (1, 2, 3, 4); Secretary (2); Chair-
man Music Committee (3); Chairman of Bazaar
Committee (4) ; Campus Day Stunt (2, 3); Moving-
Up Day Stunt (1, 2); Moving-Up Day Speaker (3) ;
Class Vice-President (3); General Chairman Junior
Week End (3); G. A. A. Musical Comedy (1, 3);
Pedagogue Board (4); Chairman of Mascot Hunt
(1); Spanish Queen (4).

And wherever she went, she carried with her the
fragrance of cool, deep forests, and an echo of pixie
leughter.

LYLLIAN FRANCES HONEYCOMBE,
A.B.
Lillian”
203 Seventh Ave. Watervliet

"Giving wisdom with each studious year.”

Eighty-nine

1932
WR

YU

1942,
Bw/I//

—— PEDAGOGUL

ALICE CAROLYN HOUSMAN, A.B.
Alice”
10 Hanscom Ave. Poughkeepsie

Biology Club.

In the noise and bustle of our twentieth cen
we admire one who can retain such beauty and calm.

ANDREW ANTHONY HRITZ, B.S. in C.
“Andy”
Myskania, KK, TPM, APP, Edward Eldred
Potter Club
Signum Laudis
325 Nepperhan Ave. Yonkers

News Board (3, 4); Finance Manager (3); Man-
aging Editor (4) ; Associate editor of Handbook (3) ;
President of Y. M. C. A. (4); President of Kappa
Phi Kappa (4); Vice-President of Alpha Phi Gamma
(4) ; Committee on Foundation of Signum Laudis (2) ;
N. S. F. A. Committee (2); Class Debate (2) ; Class
Basketball (2, 3, 4); Captain Class Basketball (3);
Finance Board (2, 3, 4); Secretary (2); Class Treas-
urer (3); Circulation Manager of Pedagogue (4);
Delegate to National Collegiate Press Convention
(3); Yorktown Sesquicentennial (4); Columbia
Scholastic Press Convention (4); Chairman of All
State Dances (3).

Known as the skeleton in the Finance Board's
closet only because he has been in such a large part
responsible for the quality of its vertebrae.

RUTH MILDRED HUBBELL, A. B.
“Ruth”
66 Campbell Ave. Troy
Ruth has succeeded in climbing the mountains and

securing from them their good tidings of freshness,
joy. and friendliness.

AMM
PEDAGOGUL

ELIZABETH HARRIET HUMPHREY,
A.B,
“Billy”
PA
58 Phila St. Saratoga Springs

Transferred from Lake Erie College, Painesville,
Ohio; Humor Staff of Pedagogue.

"Blessed are the Joymakers.”

RUTH MARGARET ISHERWOOD,

B.S. in C.
I shie”’
AQ
Connelly New York

Attendant Spanish Queen (1); Moving-Up Day
Stunt (1, 2); G. A. A. Vaudeville (2, 3); Hockey
(3); Campus Day Stunt (1, 3); Lounge Committee
(4).

Blessed are they who have the gift
friends.

of making

ELIZABETH JACKSON, A.B.
“Jackie”
Myskania, AQ
Burnt Hills New York

Captain Class Basketball (1, 2, 3); Varsity (1, 2,
3); Assistant Sport Captain Basketball (1, 4) ; Speed-
ball Captain (3); G. A. A. Council (2, 3, 4); Sec-
retary G. A. A. (2); Treasurer (3); President (4);
Delegate to A. C. A. C. W. Convention, Syracuse;
Honor Council (4); Prom Committee, Junior Guide
Committee, Music Council (2, 3, 4); Treasurer (3);
Co-Director G. A. A. Musical Comedy (3).

Jackie symbolizes to us all the comradeship and
idealism of G. A. A.

Ninety-one

1932
WW

MMH
—— PEDAGOGUL

JEANNETTE ADELE JONES, B.S. in LS:
“Tay”
13 Maple Ave. Williamson

A keen intelligence colored with a friendly disposi-
tion.

MARY ELIZABETH KAUT, A.B.
*Kautie”’
XO
New Hartford New York

G. A. A.; G. A. A. Council (2, 3); Class Repre-
sentative on G. A. A.; Track (1); Basketball (1, 2,
3, 4); Newman Club (1, 2, 3, 4).

Fun in sports, in work, in life,
Learning hows and whys of living,
Easy hours and hours of strife,
Kautie gives and joys in giving.

FRANCES WINIFRED KELLER, A.B.
"VY, Inc.”
20 Avon Place Amityville

Math Club (2, 3, 4); Commerce Club (2, 3, 4);
Canterbury Club (2, 3, 4); Reporter (4) ; News Club
(1); News Reporter (2); Junior Associate Editor
(3); Senior Associate Editor (4); Senior Hop Com-
mittee (4); Mascot Team Hunt Captain (1); Mov-
ing-Up Day Stunt Committee (2); Pedagogue Photo-
graph Staff (4); G. A. A. (1, 2); Hiking (1);
Bowling (2); Indian Ladder Hike Committee (3, 4) ;
Residence Hall Fund Committee (4).

Fran is representative of our class spirit, sportsman-
ship, and endeavor.

Ninety-two

Bw /////

Se See

AMMA
PEDAGOGUE

INEZ ALETHEA KELLEY, A.B.
Inez”
Signum Laudis, ®
Route 1 Seneca Falls
Y. W. C. A.; Math Club (2, 3, 4); Secretary (3);
President (4); Chemistry Club.

il certainties and nat-

A combination of m

ural charm.

ANNIS M. KELLOGG, B.S. in C.
Annis”
H®
Adams Center New York
Chairman of Costumes, Moving-Up Day (1); G.
A. A. Council (2); Chairman of House, Junior

Prom: Humor Editor Pedagogue (4) ; Captain Dorm-
itory Drive (4); Lion Staff (4).

d of opposit

“ eceived or reconciled.

EDWARD JAMES KELLY, B.S. in C.
“Kelly”
1074 Baker Ave. Schenectady
Transferred from University of Alabama. French
Fete (2, 3); Commerce Club.

We are p 1 to have been favored with his pres-

ence at State.

Ninety-three

WW
ee SS

BYI/H//
— PEDAGOGULE————

KATHRYN KENTFIELD, A.B.
“Kay”
Bainbridge New York

"God gives all things to industry.”

SYLVIA J. KLINE, A.B.
Syl”
Signum Laudis
96 Hone St. Kingston

never alone that are accompanied with

“They a
ble thon

LOUISE KOORY, B.S. in C.
“Louise”
EB®
i Elbon St. Malone

Canterbury Club; Commerce Club.

132 —
Ba /////

AMM
PLDAGOGUE

MARY FRANCES KOSEGARTEN, A.B.

“Mary”

Nassau New York

Transfer from Hope College. Biology Club (3,

4): Y. W.C. A. (3); Field Secretary Biology Club
(4).

Although we must be quite different from Mary's
ound it in her

first Alma Mater, we are glad she has

heart to love us too.

RUTH YSABEL KRONMAN, A.B.
“Rath”
AE®, Signum Laudis
1227 Van Cortlandt St. Schenectady

Freshman-Sophomore Debate (1, 2) ; Debate Coun-
cil Manager; Debate Council President (4) ; Women's
Varsity Debate; Echo Board; Chairman Senior Stunt
for Campus Day.

She took a quill from an eagle's wing,

d dipped the quill in clay,

1 the words she wrote were made to sing
p the Happy Way.

ANNE KROUNER, A.B.
“Anne”
30 Sycamore St. Albany
Commerce Club; French Club; Business Staff of
Pedagogue (4); Committee for French Fete (4);
Supervisor of Milne High French Club (4) ; Menorah
Club.

"To those who know thee not, no words can pat

And those who know thee, know all words are fe

Ninety-five

es 1952
WN

MMI!

Ninety-six

1932
Bw //i//

ies PEDAGOGUE

MARY ROSE KUBRAN, B.S. in C.
“Mary”
Main St. Piermont

Commerce Club; Y. W. C. A. (1).

er trouble in the bottom of her heart
lid and smiles.

WINIFRED LANSING, A.B.
“Winnie”
8 Stephen St. Albany
Hiking €1))s3Ge Av AL (1) WS CA. CIS 2:

3, 4): Fencing Club, Treasurer (3); Biology Club
(3, 4); President (4).

Enviable modesty. surprising ability, an agreeable
personality.

MARION H. LARBEY, B.S. in L.S.
Marion”
16 Dana Ave. Albany
G. A. A. (1); Y. W. C. A. (1, 2, 3, 4); Canter-

bury Club (1, 2, 3, 4), Vice-President (3); Delegate
to Conference (2).

"The noblest mind the best contentment has.”

f

OE TTT cr Ty LO LOOL A At LL: SOLO, TT ar ‘eee earn

WE

PEDAGOGUE

HILDA MATILDA LAUBENSTEIN, A.B.
“Hilda”
=A
58 Centre St. Little Falls
Lutheran Club (1
dent (3, 4) ; Delegat
of Women

umittee (4); Y. W. C.
tee for Y. W. Bazaar (4).

4), Secretary (2), Presi-

As

LENA JEAN LAZARONY, A.B.
“Lena”
130 Eagle St. Fredonia

BESSIE LEVINE, A.B.
Bess”
AdP, Signum Laudis
120 Renwick St. Newburgh

Edi (4);
ant Editor of

ee ee

BH
PEDAGOGUL

EDITH ADELAIDE LEVINE, B.S. in C.
“Edie”
WAT
28 Fairview Ave. Hudson |

"So well to know
Her own that what she wills to do or say i
Seems wisest, virtuousest, discreetest, best.” :

ANNETTE L. LEWIS, A.B.
“Teddy”
11 Glen St. Ossining |

Math Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Commerce Club (3, 4);
Publicity Committee for Dinner (3); Y. W. Gen }
3, 4); Cabinet (2); Book Table (2); Class |
: Team (1); Class Dinners, Decorations
(3); Dinner Committee (4); G. A. A. (1, 3, 4);
Basketball, Hiking, Hockey, Bowling, Outing Clubs; ‘
Business Manager Handbook (4); Council Member
(4); Captain Outing Club (4); Play Day Commit-
tee (3, 4); Play Day Publicity (2); Indian Ladder
Hike Committee (4); Decorations Spring Award
Dinner (1, 2); Fall Award Dinner (4); Alumni |
Week-end News Sheet (4); Chairman G. A. A.
Health Week (3) ; Poster Committee G. A. A. Health
Week (4). ‘

ke to the open road,

. the world before me.

FRANCIS BERNARD LIPPOLD, |
B.S. in Ed.
Frank”
Attica New York

Real living makes the man.

AMM
DAGOGUE

PE

MARJORIE ELEANOR LOCKWOOD,
A.B.
Marge”
BZ

285 West Lawrence St. Albany

Class Secretary (1); Spanish Carnival (1); Mov-
ing-Up Day Stunt (1); Campus Queen Attendant
(1); French Fete (3); President Intersc ty Coun-
cil (4); French Club (4); Y. W.C. A. (3, 4).

MARJORIE MARY LONGMUIR,
B.S. in C.
“Marge”
rK®
Ardsley New York

Campus Day Stunt (1, 2); G. A. A. Vaudeville
(1, 2); Moving-Up Day Stunt (1, 2); Spanish
Carnival Committee (1, 3); Prize Speaking Contest
or Guide Committee (3); Y. W. C. A
nt (3); Lady-in-Waiting to Campus Q
; Advanced Dramatics Class Plays (4) ; Co-C
Dormitory Fi (4)
lub (1, 2

id Committee
); Canterbury Club (1)
ior Party (3); Busir

MARY MARGARET McDONALD, A.B.
“Mary”
Lake Placid New York

A sweet little girl with an interest in everybody.

Ninety-nine

1932
WR,
BY

One Hundred

1952
Mw!/////

Se Sat caeee,

fecha Saha |

PEDAGOGUE

DOROTHY AGNES McGINNISS, A. B.
“Dot”
PA
710 South Ave. Schenectady
Freshman Banner Committee (1); Classical Club
(2, 3, 4); President (4).

"A countenance in which did meet

Sweet records

A creature n
For human

HELEN VIRGINIA MacGREGOR,
B.S. in C.

“Scotty”
Johnson City New York
Commerce Club.
Ti th '€ mind that make the t ody rie A i?

ELIZABETH ROSE McLAUGHLIN, A.B.
“Betty”
Signum Laudis, 1M
Madison St. Oriskany Falls
Newman Club President (4); Secretary Pi Gamma

Mu (4); Newman Club Councillor (3); Vice-Presi-
dent Newman Hall (3).

AWW
PEDAGOGUE————

JANE RANKIN McLAUGHLIN, A.B.
“Jane”

Port Washington New York
{ Y. W. C. A. (2, 3, 4); G. A. A. Outing Club
(4).
4 She | the winter's cold a elds, and

a fire- h a few chosen

i
MARY EMMA MCcNALLY, A.B.
** Mac”
59 Fowler Ave. Rensselaer
Math Club (2, 3, 4).
"T here’ i
And nothing se
i
;
MELVA THERESA MACE, A.B.
** Mel”
} res
9 St. Bernard St. Saranac Lake

Commerce Club (3); Newman Club Councillor;
Biology Club (1, 2); Track (1).

"A wome
And corn

e seems of cheerful yesterdays

dent tomorrows.

One Hundred One

WY,

i
tJ
PEDAGOGUL

FLORENCE T. MALLIN, B.S. in C.
Big”
1130 Forest Rd. Schenectady

Spanish Club (3, 4); Commerce Club (4)

"To look fearlessly upon

HOWARD D. MANN, A.B.
“Howard”

Breakabeen New York

“He who sings frightens his ills away.”

SHERIDAN DAVID MARK, A. B.
“Dave”
- 169 Ninth St. Troy

“a ,
:\
One Hundred Two

li ——
Ma!/////

r strence is like virtue, its own exceeding great
eward.

{A
PEDAGOGUE

FRANCES AGNES MAZAR, B.S. in C. oe
“Evan”?

70 Jarvis St.

nmerce Club (
Vice-Pre

(4); News Business

ager of News (3)

' She gets things done by doing, not by tatkin ut

HELEN BOURNE MEAD, A.B a ee \

** Bobbie’
Myskania, Signum Laudis, A®r, ITM, HP
436 Main St. East Aurora

4
; -
MARY ESTHER MEAD, A.B. | a
“Esther” ae @,t
Signum Laudis, A t °
19 Valley Road White Plains
Hockey (1, 2) hairman G
(4); ¢ ub (3, 4);

WU

tJ
———— PEDAGOGUE

VINCENT JOHN MELESKI, A.B.
“Vince”
43 Beverly Ave. Albany

Chemistry Club; Tennis Team; Spanish Club;
Troubadours.

Test tube in one hand, tennis racket in the other,
and nobility to wield both with consummate skill.

DOROTHY MARY MERSELIS,
BS. in LS,
“Dot”
Amsterdam New York

Canterbury Club (1, 4).

Our only regret is that her sunny smile and cheery
self expanded in the realm of books and not of
people.

MILDRED ELIZABETH MEYER,
B.S. in'C.
“Mickey”
BZ
152 Fourth Ave. Bay Shore, L. I.

Commerce Club; Spanish Club; Y. W. C. A.

She laughs her way through life, and we delight
to hear her laughter.

One Hundred Four

1a ——
Bw/////

AMM
PEDAGOGUE

KENNETH ANDREW MILLER, A.B.
“Ken"™
Myskania, 111M, K®K, Edward Eldred
Potter Club
Slingerlands New York

Vice-President Pi Gamma Mu (4); Vice-President
Kappa Phi Kappa (4) ; Manager Freshman Basketball
(1); Manager Varsity Baseball (2); Manager Intra-
mural Sports (3); Manager Varsity Basketball (4);
Manager Class Athletics (2, 3, 4); Sports Editor
News (4); Sports Editor Pedagogue (4); Y. M. C.
A. Cabinet (4); Debate Council (3, 4); Vice-
President (4) ; Varsity Debate Team (2, 3, 4); Class
Debate Team (2); Campus Commission (4); Dele-
gate League of Nations Model Convention (2, 3);
Delegate Yorktown Sesquicentennial (4).

ated wth the exu-

the Gladstone of State

"A sophistical rhetoric
berance of his own verbosity’—

College.
JANE MOORE, A.B.
“Jane”
=A
165 Second St. Albany

"What cannot art and industry perform,

When science plans the progress of their toil.

MAY LORRETTA MOORE, A.B.
May”
Milford New York

French Club (3,
Newman Club (1, 2,

; Commerce Club (2, 3, 4);
, 4).

let others light their can-

"lf you have knou

dles at it.”

One Ilundred Five

1932
WW,

BY

One Hundred Six

1932
Bw //i//

—— PEDAGOGUE

EDWARD LLOYD MORELAND, A.B.

“Eq”
K®K, KAP
11 North Shore Ave. Bay Shore, L. I.

Catholic University (1); State Letter Club, Presi-
dent (4); Varsity Baseball (2, 3, 4); Interclass Bas-
ketball (2, 3, 4); Manager I mural Sports (4);
Class Athletic Manager (4); Milne High School
Baseball Coach (3, 4); Y.M.C. A. (2, 3, 4); Stu-
dent Representative (3); Senior Hop Committee:
Newman Club.

A name

House—abi

LEOLA MORRISON, A.B.
**Lee”’
Lake Pleasant New York

HONOR ELIZABETH MULFORD,
B.S. in E.
ON
33 Denison Ave. Binghamton
Home Economics Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Junior Editor

(3); Canterbury Club (3, 4); Treasurer (4) ; Secre-
tary Omicron Nu (4).

ft doing 7d"

"I never did repent o

AMM
PLDAGOGUE

ELINOR MARGARET MULLEN, A.B

Elinor”

KA
1126 Seymour Ave. Utica
Campus I St (2); Moving-Up Day S$
Committee (2); Jur C e € nittee (2) F
re S c
eS
id €

LORETTA MURRAY, A.B.
“*Lorett”
res

20 Fourth St. Waterford

ELVA LORETTA NEALON, A.B.
Peter”
XO

Menands New York

Campus Day Stunt
tor (3); Spanish
Moving-Up Day Sr

1 Club

YW

 ————
ANN

One

Hundred Eight

19352
Bw) //i//

— PEDAGOGUL

MARION ELIZABETH NELSON, A.B.
Marion”
Signum Laudis
285 South Main Ave. Albany
Classical Club (3, 4); Y. W. C. A. (1); French
Club (2, 3).

"Strength of mind is exercise, not rest.”

ANNE ELIZABETH NESBITT, A.B.
“Anne”
Hb
11 Cuyler St. Palmyra
Page Campus Queen (1); Elementary Dramatics

Class Plays (2); Moving-Up Day (1); G. A. A.
Musical Comedy (2).

"But to see her was to love her,

Love but her, and love forever.”

HELEN MARIE NORGORD, A.B.
“Helen”
115 South Allen St. Albany
Transfer from Syracuse University (3).

A sare combination of charm, intelligence, and so-

phistication.

IW
DAGOGUL

PE

MARGUERITE ELVINA NORTHROP,
A.B.
“W eedie”’
25 Willow St. Beacon

G ALAS (12,3) 3 WS
at (1, 3); Moving-Up

A. Musical Comedy (1,

MARY LUCY O'SHEA, A.B.
“Mary”
Division Ave. East Islip

Newman Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Treasurer Newman
Club (4) ; French Club (3, 4); Classical Club (4).

"I live on the sunny side of the street.”

LUCY H. OSTROSKY, B.S. in C.
“Lucy”
1201 Green St. Endicott
State Normal Com-
merce Club (3, 4) n of Banquet (3) ; Presi-

dent (4); Newman Club (3, 4); Hockey (2); Bas-
ketball (2, 3); Swimming (4); Horseback Riding

(4).

Plat

Transfer from

One Hundred N

WN,

a
tL
——— PEDAGOGUE

ISABEL JANE PEARD, A.B.
“Isabel”
KA
Myskania, KA
29 Holland Ave. Batavia

President Student Association (4); Delegate to
Convention of National Student Federation Associa-
tion (3); Dramatic and Art Council (1, 2, 3, 4);
Secretary (3); Delegate Intercollegiate Dramatic
Convention in Maryland (3); Secretary Student
Association (2); Vice-President (3); N. S. F. A.
Committee (3); Chairman (4); Class Marshal (1); 5
Advanced Dramatics Class Play (4); Prize, Freshman
Speaking Contest (1) ; Moving-Up Day Stunts (1
3); Chairman (1); Campus Day Stunts (2, 3); G.
A. A. Musical Comedy (1, 2, 3); Chairman Point
System (2); Attendant Spanish Queen (3); G. A. A.
(L)s Ye WEG: A. (1,2; 35/4);

“There can be but one State College and one Isabel.
we not the favored of the gods who have loved

MARY ALMENA PERKINS, A.B.
“Mary”
PA
Schuyler Lake New York

"Vivactousness is a charming quality to possess.
We envy the abundant store of energy in so small a

ferson.”
ETHEL PITCHER, A.B.
“Ethel”
EB \
Altamont New York
"(As fair as e’er the sun shone on.”

One Hundred Ten

Bw/////

AWE
PEDAGOGUE

FRIEDA PODRISKY, A.B.
Frieda”
1 West 67th St. New York City

of New York

VIRGINIA A. PRATESI, A.B.
“Ginny”
Beltagle Ave. Bellmore, Long Island

Reporter (1, 2, 3)%
3); Y¥. W.C. A. (1, 2
G. A, A. (1).

FRANCES PRATT, B.S. in C.
Frances”

57 Jamestown St. Gowanda

Graduate of Fredonia Normal School; Graduate of

Rochester Business Ir

1952
WW,

r LU

1932,
Bw /////

—— PEDAGOGUE

LENA PRIVATEER, B.S. in Ed.
“Lena”
14 Gillis St. Fredonia

Attended Buffalo State Teachers’ College; Graduate
of Fredonia Normal School; Newman Club; French
Club.

It wasn't long before Lena won her way to our

STELLA PUTNAM, A.B.
“Stella”

33 Ferry St. Hudson Falls

French Club; Latin Club; Newman Club; Spanish
Club.

"The only way to have friends is to be one.”

MARY QUIRK, B.S. in Ed.
“Mary”
6 Second St. Geneseo

Transfer from Geneseo State Normal.

\W

PEDAGOGUE

JUANITA RAFTER, A.B.
“Juanie”’
49 South St. Warwick

Newman Club (1, 2, 3, 4).
As a casual acquaintance, poised and graciou

As a classmate, dependable and considerate;
As a friend, generous « loyal.

RAYMOND ROBERT RANKINS, A.B.
“Bob”
KAP
Mohawk New York

Finance Board (3); Ring Committee (3) ; Sopho-
more Soiree Committee (2); Vice-President Class
(4); Vice-President Troubadours (3); President
Troubadours (4); President Chemistry Club (4);
Senior Hop, Chairman (4); Dramatics (25 25:3, 4))s

Troubadour Minstrels (2, 3); Class Marshal (4).

Actor, seh We har

able to decide which of the three i

lar, gentlema

LOUISE RAY, A.B.
“Louise”
Phoenix New York
G. A. A. (1, 3, 4); Hiking Captain (2); Outing

Club (3, 4); Fencing Club (4); Commerce Club (3,
4); Literary Staff Ped:

Small, with sparkling
i new edition of Peter P

a whimsical smile;

One Hundred

1932
WVU

Thirteen
r UU

Hundred Fourteen

1952

Bw /////

PEDAGOGUE

GEORGE PHILIP RICE. Jr., B.Sc.
Gee”
Myskania, K®K, KAP, Aor
Signum Laudis
455 Elk St. Albany

Wheelock Scholarship (3); Editor-in-Chief, State
College News (4); Managing Editor, (3); Desk
Editor (2); Editor-in-Chief, 1934 Freshman Hand-
book; Captain Men’s Varsity Debate Team (3,
4); Speaker (1, 2, 3, 4); Captain Class Debate
Team (1, 2); Member Debate Council (1, 2, 3, 4);
Secretary (3); Coach, Freshman Debate Team (3) ;
President of Class (2); Student Council (2); Dele-
gate N. S. P. A. Convention at Columbia (3, 4);
Model League of Nations Assembly at Princeton (3) ;
Y. M. C. A. State Convention (4) ; Chairman of Com-
mittee for Revision of College Point System; Y. M.
C. A. Cabinet (3); Speaker Junior Luncheon (3);
N. F. A. Committee (2, 3); Legislative Commit-
tee (2).

“Great is journalism. Is not every able editor a
ruler of the world, being the persuader of it?”

DORIS RIBENNACHT, A.B.
Port Leyden New York

Biology Club (1, 2, 3, 4).

CATHERINE RIEGAL, B.S. in L.S.

Catherine’

Signum Laudis, 117M
#5 Arcadia Court, Stop 28 Albany

Latin Club (3); Y. W.C. A. (1, 2, 3, 4); Presi-
dent of Library School (4).

Imost awed by her evident inte

y before one learns to know her

incerity and friendliness.”

(fl

AMM
PLDAGOGUL

HELEN RIMKUS, BS. in Ed.
Helen”
Lima New York

Graduate of Geneseo Normal School.

1 "We understand her unconcern for the unimpor-

| HELEN MARGARET ROHEL, B.S. in L.S.
“Helen”
Xxo
756 East Washington Ave. Elmira
News (1, 2, 3, 4); Finance Manager (4); New-
man Club (1, 2, 4); Reporter 4); Councillor

(3); Campus Day Stunts (2, 3, 4); Moving-Up Day
Stunts (1, 2, 3); Class Reporter (4).

j "She

ALICE ADELAIDE ROJCEWICZ, A.B.
| “Alice.”
RoE Doi Hartford
Chorus; French Club.

In her is a tranquillity that come f perfect
‘ion.

wn 1952
WW
ORR ers a tae 7a to RS RRS eS SSS es ee}

YL
PEDAGOGUL

HERBERT ROSE, A. B.
“Herbert”
135-06 109th Ave. Jamaica {
Dramatics; Biology Club.
i

"The conscious utterance of thought by speech or
action, to any end is art.”

MARK CURTISS RUTENBER, A.B. !
“Curts”
K®K }
R.D.1 Albany

Class President (3); Class Treasurer (1, 2) ; Man-
ager of Tennis (2, 3); Freshman Camp Leader (4) ;

Delegate Kingston Y. M. C. A. Convention (4);
Lour Committee (2, 3); Advertising Staff of News

G3) y Stunt (1, 2); Chairman Fresh-
man Banquet; Student Council (3); Alternate Ham- j
ilton Debate (3); Troubadours (3); Biology Club

(3, 4).
There's blarney in his smile. \
JACK SAROFF, A.B.
“Jack”
K®K i
175 Elm St. Schenectady t

Interclass Basketball (1, 2, 3, 4); Moving-Up Day
Stunt (1, 2); Varsity Tennis (3, 4); Tennis Manager
(4); State Letter Club.

One Hundred Sixteen

1a —
Mw//1//

AMM
| PEDAGOGUE :

ELIZABETH SCANLAN, B.S. in Ed.
“Betty”
45 Mulberry St. Rochester
Graduate of Genesee State Normal School.

A pleasure to look upon, a true delight to know.

" SELMA FLORENCE SCHLACHTER,
B.S. in C.
} “Selma”
AE®
306 Mansion St. Poughkeepsie
Commerce Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Treasurer (3); Me-

norah Society (2, 3, 4); Treasurer (3); Vice-Presi-
dent (4); Fencing (1, 2).

r soft, gentle, and low; an ex-

ERMA SCOTT, A.B.
{ “Scotty”
Sidney New York

defense.

wn 19 52
WR,
AM /H//
PEDAGOGUL

KATHERINE SCOTT, A.B.
“Kay”
SA
Great Bend New York
An indomitable sense of humor and sparkling wit

make Kay @ most interesting person to know and

one extremely hard to forget.

JANE SHULMAN, A.B.
“Jane” f
ITAT
253 Mansion St. Poughkeepsie
Lion Business Staff (1, 2); Advertising Manager

(3); Business Manager (4) ; Campus Day Stunt (2).

A dear acquaintance whose “sufficient unto the

day’ philosophy is an inspiration to reap joy from

life.
HELEN SILVER, A.B.
“Helen”
AE®
450 Taylor Court Troy ,

Transfer from University of Utah, and University
of Southern California. Women’s Varsity Debate;
Senior Stunt-Campus Day; Elementary and Advanced
Dramatics Class Plays; Director Pageant, Milne
High School; G. A. A. Musical Comedy Committee

Self-possession is the backbone of authority.

One Hundred Eighteen

lia lh—
MwII///

AMM \
PEDAGOGUE

CLARICE INEZ SIMMONS, A.B.
“Yy Ine.”
PA
Pawling New York

Canterbury Club (3, 4); President (4); French
Club (3); Y. W. C. A. (3); G. A. A. (1, 2, 3, 4)5
Hiking (1, 2, 3); Hockey (3, 4); Hockey, Varsity
4); Basketball (1); Tug-o'-War (1, 2); Indian
tadder Hike Committee (3, 4) ; Senior Hop Arra
ment Committee (3); G. A. A. Banquet Com
(3).

Her good humor makes Clarice the delightful com-

panion and friend she is.

VIOLET HOPE SIMMONS, A.B.

i]
Sim”
Millerton New York
Biology Club; Y. W. C. A.
A deep real of her responsibilities, yet,
withal a keen € f life.
BERNARD SIMON, A.B.
“ Bernie”
| rmrM
165 Fourth St. Troy

Troubadours (1, 2, 3, 4); Ping-Pong (4)

One Hundred Nineteen

WUE

a
tJ
PEDAGOGUL

SELMA KATHERINE SIMS, B.S. in LS.
“Selma”
AE®

257 Park Avenue Rochester

Business Manager Echo (4); Class Marshal (2);
Chairman Sophomore Costumes (2); Advertising
Manager Echo (2, 3); Snapshot Editor Pedagogue
(3); G. A. A. Vaudeville (1, 2, 3); G. A. A. Gym
Frolic (1, 2); Chairman Decorations, Freshman Ban-
quet (1); Moving-Up Day Stunts (2, 3); Chairman
Decorations Sophomore Soiree (2); Chairman Enter-

tainment Junior-Frosh Party (3); Ticket Committee,
G. A. A. Vaudeville (2).

f the few practice teachers who has come
battle unscathed. There's still a lilt in

in her words, and a twinkle in those

step, a smil
dark eyes.

LEAH G. SKINNER, B.S. in Ed.
Leah”
74 Troy Rd. Menands

"Our whole life is like a play.”

VIRGINIA ROOSA SLOCUM, A.B.
“Ginnie”

56 West Main St. Cobleskill

We rejoice that her calm self-possession did not

the twinkie in her eye.

One Hundred Twenty

BW I///

AMM
PEDAGOGUE

MILDRED EDITH SMITH, A.B.
“Smitty”
Myskania, AE®
4 Cromwell Place White Plains

Chairman Activities Day (4); Advertising Man-
ager Echo (3, 4); Class Song Leader (1, 2); Chair-
man Campus Day Stunt (2); Favors Committee,
Soph Soiree (2); Chairman Entertainment “Y” Ba-
zaar (2); G. A. A. Musical Comedy (2) ; Director
G. A. A. Health Week Play (3); G. A. A. Gym

Frolic (1, 2); Chairman Decorations Junior-Frosh

(1); Business Staff Pedagogue (4); Moving
Day Stunt (3); G. A. A. Vaudeville, A r
Manager (2); Chairman Costumes Moving-Up Day
(3).

Resourceful, good-natured, and dimpled; in short,
just Smitty.

ANITA BARBARA SOBELESKI, A.B.
: Anita’
Niagara Falls New York

French Club (1); Newman Club (1, 2, 3, 4
Biology Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Editor Biology ‘Leave

es you the ch
nd to look up at

of life because it gi
to work and to play

the

MARGARET JOSEPHINE STARR
Peg”
XX
14 Main St. Saranac Lake

A sparkling-eyed colleen, with true Irish beauty

wit.

One Hundred Twenty-one

WR,

LL cc eee

AYH//
- PEDAGOGUE————

EVA STEINBERG, A.B.
Et e
1248 Glenwood Blvd. Schenectady

Freshman Prize-Speaking Contest.

ISABEL STEVENS, B.S. in Ed.
“Tsabel”’
Mexico New York

Graduate of Genesee State Normal School.

e victory of success 1s half won when one gain
the habit of work.”

MARGARET STEWART, A.B.
“Peg”
W illowemoc New York

195? amar
Bw //i//

AMM
PEDAGOGUE

MURIEL STEWART, B.S. in LS.
“Muriel”

14 River St. Hoosick Falls

‘costumes, Mov-

Library School (3, 4); Chairmar
ing-Up Day (1) ; Chairman of Entertainment, Literary
School Christmas Party (4).

est és E 1 pay cup ous
Still runs the water where the brook is deep.

MARIE STIEFVATER, B.S. in C.

** Marie”
vr
131 Pleasant St. Utica
Blessed with that charm, the certainty to please

MARION STREVELL, A.B.
“Marion”
15 Evelyn St. Johnson City

French Club (1).

ee 1952
WW

a
tL
——— PEDAGOGUE

ALBERT HUSTED STRONG, A.B.
Ay
K®K
76 Chester Place Yonkers

Transferred from Haverford 1930. Pedagogue
Staff; Interclass Basketball (3, 4)

"You don't know me?—I know you, and 1 like
you.”

AUDREY NORMA SULLIVAN, A.B.
“Audrey”
KA
939 Albany St. Schenectady

Campus Day Stunt (1, 2, 3); Y. W. C. A. Bazaar
(1); G, A. A. Musical Comedy (1) ; Chairman Soph-
omore Welcome Party; Gym Frolic (2); Sophomore
Soiree Decoration Committee; Elementary Dramatic
Class Plays (2); Spanish Carnival (2); Dormitory
Fund Committee (4); Chairman Publicity Senior
Dinner (4).

That smile of yours and th bubbling “joie de

vivre” are an irresis

ble combination.

BERNARD SULLIVAN, A.B.
“Bernie”
52 Fayette St. Camden

Life is like a game. The prize may not be within
our power but the playing is.

Hundred Twenty-four

Bw /////

One

ESE OOOO
AMMA
PEDAGOGUE

CHARLES LELAND SWICK, A.B.
“Charlie”
rM, K®K
Maple Vista Saratoga Springs

Men’s Varsity Debate (Union).

CARL TARBOX, A.B.
“Carl”

APP, KAP
875 Mercer St. Albany
; Editor-

Editor
Tennis

Art Staff
in-Chief (4) ;
Pedagogue
(1,

3); Art Editor (3

Pedagogue (3);

logy Club (1, 2); ¢
1 , 4); Elect
mittee (3)

EVELYN M. TARPLEE, A.B.
“Evelyn”

16 Spring St. Perry

Math Club (1, 4) ; Commerce Club (3, 4)

"Del

AY

rr
BNH//
PEDAGOGUL

One Hundred Twenty-six

Bw ////

GERTRUDE WARREN TERWILLIGER,
A.B.
“Gert”
EBD
146 Pine St. Kingston

Math Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Y. W. C. A. (1).

A confident attacking of life and its problems means
much,

MAGDELINE FRENCH THOMPSON,
A.B.
“Mad ge”’
AQ
Edmeston New York

Class Marshal (3); Y. W. C. A. (1, 2, 3, 4);
Silver Bay Conference (1); Y. W. C. A. Cabinet
(3); Y. W. C. A. Book Table (3); Junior Ring
Committee; Moving-Up Day Stunt (2); Chairman
Sophomore Stunt for Y. W. C. A. Bazaar (2) ; Chair-
man Bazaar Committee (3); Soiree Committee (2);
Chairman Prom Committee (3).

"Those who paint her truest, praise her most.”

KATHERINE TRAVER, A.B.
“Kay”
KA
207 Delaware Ave. Albany

Class President (1); Chairman Campus Day Stunt
(1); Campus Commission (1); Student Council (1);
Moving-Up Day Stunt (1); Prom Committee (3);
Speaker Junior Luncheon (3); Dormitory Fund Com-
mittee (4); Committee for G. A. A. Musical Com-
edy (4).

ays eager to use ber caim competency in

another's behalf.

13 2 —ar

IW

PEDAGOGUE

KATHRYN MARIE TUTHILL, A.B.
“Kay”
Maple Ave. Goshen

"Every man is a volume if you know bow to read

him.”

ASENATH VAN BUREN, B.S. in C.
“Seenie”
BZ
61 North Lake Ave. Albany

n of Conferences
President (4);
Masquerade Committee (2); irman of Bazaa
Entertainment (3); State Conference Delegate (1,
3 4): Briarcliff Conference (2); State Conference
Committee (4); Y. ce College (2);
Chairman (3); Chai avors for Prom (3);
Chairman of Car 1 (3); Representa-
tive on Music Council (3); Associate Editor of
» Handbook (3); Committee for G. A.
(1, 2); Chairman of Mo’ Jp Day
(2); Campus Day Stunt (1); Committee for Banner
Rivalry (1, 2); Major Letter in Athletics (1); N
Letter in Athletics (2); Vaudeville (2); Con

for Freshman Welcome (2); Chairr f
Committee for G. A. A. Musical Cc

Who ha

along the

4); Cha
easurer (3

Y. WiC. A. (1,

and Conventions (2)
C

Commissi

where

GERTRUDE WEBB, A.B.
“Gert”
Newark New York
Tug of War Team (1, 2); Chemistry Club (2, 3,

4); Biology Club (4);
licity Chairman (1, 3).

WW

tS
PEDAGOGUL

DOROTHY WEEKS, A.B.
Dot’
13 Ganson Ave, Batavia

Spanish Club (2, 3, 4); Secretary Spanish Club
(3); Vice-President (4); Volley Ball (2, 3); Bas-
ketball (3); Baseball (3); Tumbling (2); Newman
Club (2, 3); Y. W. GC. A..(2); G. A. A. Vaudeville
(2).

A delicately graceful personality

LILLIAN WEINBERG, B.S. in C.
“Lip
ITAT
3 St. James Place Albany

Vice-President Intersorority Council; French Club
Gs 2).

DONALD WHISTON, A.B. |

Don”
Signum Laudis, K®K
121 Linderman Ave. Kingston

Secretary K®K (4).

One Hundred Twenty-eight

13 2a
Bw/////

AW
PEDAGOGUE

MARY LORETTA WICKS, A.B
Mary”
Signum Laudis, AP
Sauquoit New York

MARY WIEDEMAN, A.B.
Mary”
Glenmont New York
“"Ilusion and wisdom c

life

THERESA WEINECKE, A.B
Ted"?
SA

15 Baker St Patchogue

4); German Club (3, 4);

we 1952
WW

em es I eg nt el

BIH
PEDAGOGUE

'
HERMINIE M. WILLIAMS, A.B.
“Herminie”’
AE®
354 Division St. Amsterdam |
Transferred from Barnard College—Fall 1930.
1

A character endowed with poise, a subtle tongue,
> of mind to give her the courage of ber

MARGUERITE BAKER WILSON,

B:S. in HE.
“Margie” I
vr
110 Elmer Ave. Schenectady

Omicron Nu (3, 4); President (4); Home Eco-
nomics Club (1, 2, 3, 4); President (4) ; Class Mar-
shal (2); Campus Day Attendant (2); Junior
Luncheon Committee; Delegate to Omicron Nu Con- >
clave (3).

An aristocrat with republican ideas. |

MARJORIE E. WILSON, A.B.
“Marge”
PA i
317 Kinsley St. Sherrill
Y. W. C. A. (1, 2, 3); G. A. A. (1); Basketball 4
(1); Hiking (1); Sophomore Soiree Committee (2) ;
Chairman of Tea Dance (3); Y. W. Bazaar Com-

mittee (2); Y. W. Breakfast—Moving-Up Day (2);
Y. W. Membership Committee (2).

perseverance have

Hundred Thirty

1a
BwI/i//

One

' AMMA
PEDAGOGUE

1

{ MILDRED WOODCOCK, B.S. in L.S.
Mid”

} 7 Cleveland Ave. Fredonia

Transferred from Fredonia State Normal School.
Committee Library School—Xmas Party (3); Com-
mittee Library School Tea (3); Chairman Library
School Fall Picnic (4).

A good pal
Whether you feel serious or gay.

| ANU

AH
PEDAGOGUL————

te YA ————F
Beal //////
AMM
PEDAGOGUE——

As shepherds lead their flocks t> warmth and home,

As raindrops call gray seeds to life in spring
So wisdom called to us that we should come,

And opened gates to us for entering.

-

Still dazed and blinded by her lavish store,

We, childlike, drop her guiding hand, and yearn

To search alone for what she offers more,

To pry among dead thoughts and those that burn

For we would learn to call the stars by name,

And we would know the force which planned the earth,

Why men have toiled for things that never came,

-—_—————

And know the why of grief, and love, and mirth.

Minerva, far-famed friend of age and youth,

Be with us in our search for life and truth!

ERMA BROWN

WW
r JU
PEDAGOGUE———

GREAT FIRES

Arrangement by Dr. T. F. Candlyn

~ 2 oR i ke I AE we 2 he
7 eer F
5 ae ees it = {2 ae
th hoe
eal ft 7 T a |

Great fires kindled for thy children
Warm us with thy flame,
Pilgrims we have sought thee ever,

We sang as we came.

Upward leapt the fire and brighter
With a steady light,
Wonder open wide and beauty

We forgot the night.

Now while the embers here before us
Hold a tiny gleam,
To the darkness turn our faces,

Cherishing a dream.

One Hundred Thirty-four

1937 mmc
Mw!/////

{A
PEDAGOGUE

JUNIORS

1932
WR

BNI

ia. Be a a
AAT ao
Mend oi

tae }
thi
Hy
" |

fee

tie ;
ia Hi

1 —
Bw/////

PEDAGOGUE——
AMM |
PEDAGOGU

JUNIOR CLASS HISTORY

VanDyke has written: “Be glad of life because it gives you the chance to
love and to work and to play and to look up at the stars.” Daring our freshmai
and sophomore years we loved and worked and played together; we stumbled
1

17s.

upon new discoveries with wondering eyes, and were content with our
It is in this, our junior year, that we have begun to look up at the stars, and to
see in them our chances for living. For two years we have danced merrily onward,
viewing the future, graduation, teaching, reminiscences, and life in a rosy haze
of unreality. Now the shadows have deepened; profiles have become sharper;
and we have learned to look up clearly until our eyes meet the star-lit challenge.

As freshmen we worked and played together for a glorious year, and no one
knew whither we were going, and no one tried to see, for it mattered to no one
then. We arrived at State a vague collection of individuals, but we soon grouped
our separate selves into a great whole. Campus day st nt, inter-class debate,
banner rush, basketball games, mascot hunt, Moving-Up day stunt and sing, our
first class banquet, our victory in inter-class rivalry—these were the high lights
of that year, and we raised our heads in the air and looked upward. But we did
not see the stars, for our eyes were not yet ready.

Events came quickly in our second year. Registraticn, freshman welcome
party, sophomore rules, enforcement committees, campus day, sorority and frater-
nity life,—and in between we found time to make new friends, to discover new
people, and to realize new possibilities, Some of us found time to stop and won-
der; others kept blithely on, secure in the knowledge that there was much we did
net know.

We danced at soiree and kept our brilliant red end white emblem safe; we
lost inter-class debate, pole-rush, and Moving-Up day stunt, but we found other
things which brought us to a tie in rivalry. We had to bid farewell to intzr-class
cortests, but it did not seem to matter, for we were all learning to look further and

were realizing that we had not begun to use our proffered chan<es.

This year has been one of discovery and exploration, of thought and decision.
We have been puzzled and bewildered but we have learned to see more clearly
the paths in our maze. More than half of college is gone—we look onward
to the future, but we also find ourselves snatching backward glimpses at what we
have done. Prom, luncheon, and tea-dance—these events of junior week-end
brought us close together and we discovered that we were all snatching glimpses
and we wondered what had happened

We have always been bound together in 33; we have fought for her, danced
with her, argued for her, and sung her praises. Nothing has happened—we are
still together in '33, but we are learning to stay together also as students at State, to
realize our part in er living.

And so for three years we have loved and worked and played and now we
have begun to look up at the stars and to see and to live. We go forward in the
knowledge of our past experiences, our defeats, our victories, and our friendships.
We seck that greater light of the future, and find it we shall.

A \

BM 1//
PEDAGOGUL

193 2. mmr
Ba!i/////

————— PEDAGOGUE

AW

JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS

Bruce FILBy President

JOHN DETLEFSON . Vice-President
ALVINA LEWIS Secretar)
Treasure)

RALPH HArRISs 4
. Song Leader

KATHERINE LONG .

RUTH REYNOLDS . Reporte

wee 19352
WW
BY /H//
— PEDAGOGUE

CLASS OF 1933

ALBRECHT, RUTH NAomI - : ; r ‘ ‘ . Delmar
ALLEN, CLARA VAN BUREN. ‘ ‘ : : : Schenectad)
ALVORD, MARGARET ERN : 3 Alban)
ANDERSON, ALICE May . F ; : ‘ P . Catskill
ARMSTRONG, EVELYN ; ‘ : - : : : . Albany
BAKER, CATHERINE MARY ‘ ; F ‘ E s Claverack
BAKER, RALPH HILLIs : 4 ; ’ ; P : . Ravena
BALL, JOSEPHINE ALMYRA 2 ; i ; : : Binghamton
BALL, MILDRED ALBERTA . R ; ; ‘ 5 : : Berne
BARNES, ELINOR AGNES. ‘ : ci ' ; Red Creek
BecCKER, EDNA ELIZABETH ; ; : ‘ ; Schenectad)
BERGEN, VERA SPONENBERG F : 3 : j ; j Fonda

BERGSTROM, HILMA LILLIAN é A , 7 ; 5 Sag Harbor

g
BirK, MARGARET LOUISE . 3 ‘ 3 5 “4 5 F Troy
BLACK, GERTRUDE C. f : 4 f : 3 A . Argyle
Boyp, RUTH ADELAIDE ; ; é : ‘ ‘ : : Utica
Brew, Mary ELIZABETH . ; i : ‘ 4 5 . Bergen
BROWN, ERMA LouIsE ; é : : . La Fargeville
BROWN, PHEBE CAROLINE . ‘ 4 : : ; : Greenwich
BUCHANAN, MARGUERITE S._. : ; : : Hagaman
Buck, ELLSWORTH GEORGE 7 P ‘ j Danneniora
BUECHE, RUTH ALICE ; i ; s A ‘

BUHL, BERTHA MARIE z : ; ; ; : ; . Utica
BuroporF, Lois E.

Burritt, ANNA ATWATER 5 ’ ; 3 ,

BUTLER, HELEN LORETTA : , ‘ : 7 ; 5 Troy
CaDIEUX, HELEN CATHERINE. , 2 : 3 : Schenectat)
CALOW, CHARLOTTE MARIE-HELENE . A , e : . Albany

CAMPBELL, JANET ANNA
CARR, ESTHER MARIE

Cary, ALICE EVELYN : ‘ 5 ; : 3 : ‘ Salem
CEDERQUIST, CAROL JOSEPHINE . ; : : : : Jamestown
CHRISTIANSEN, CAROLYN ANN . : ; : ; Kenmore
CLARK, ELIZABETH CELIA . A ; ‘ ‘ y Holland Patent
COLE, MARGARET HAZEL . : ; : ; . Poughkeepsie
CoLiins, WILLIAM HARVEY ; ‘ , ‘ Mechanicville
Cook, EVELYN MADGE . 2 ; : : . Ro'terdam Junction
CORNELL, ALICE E. . A 3 , j i : . Oneida
Costa, ANNUNCIATA F ; : . : : : Newburgh

One Hundred Forty

Bw/////

AMS
PEDAGOGUL

CowEN, HELEN MARIE
Coyne, EDwArD FRANCIS
Cromi£, HELEN MAE
CRONK, DorotTHy LOUISE
Crossy, NAOMI ALICE

CROWLEY, VERONICA MARGARET

DEGUZMAN, CONSTANCE MARIE
Deirz, DorotHy May

De Laura, GILBERT
DETLEFSON, JOHN CHARLES
DIMOND, RUTH GERTRUDE
DINNEEN, ABBIE FRANCES
Douerty, Mary C.
DomsER, MARJORIE CAROLYN
Dorn, FLORENCE LILYAN
DuNN, Harriet May
Durey, DorotHy MAE
DyCKMAN, ETHEL HARRIS
EpsTEAN, EDNA SALLY
EsMAY, EVELYN FRANCES
EuLer, ERNEST CARL
FEARY, MARION LUCILLE
FEINSTEIN, CLARA

Fitpy, J. BRUCE

FLETCHER, LAURA

FosTER, PERsIS EMILY

Fox, CECELIA EVELYN
FREDENBURG, ETHEL I.
FREEMAN, MARY FRANCES
Gapway, LEONARD SAMUEL
GADZIOLA, JULIA

GAINOR, MARY EULAILA
GARDINER, MARY HELEN
GASKILL, Dora .
GEEHIN, DoroTHy SARAH
GEWIRTZMAN, ANNE
GILEs, VERNA SEDGWICK
GILMorE, May L.

Gop, MARcIA MILDRED
GorDON, ELIZABETH MARY
Gorton, RUTH ESTHER

Troy

Alban)

Delmar
Schenectady
Albany

Hudson
Schenectady
Holle)

Albany

Utica

Utica

Saratoga Springs
; Booneville
Schodack Landing
Niagara Falls
Green Lake
Shrub Oak
Poughkeepsie
Utica

Schenectad;

Huntington
Niagara Falls
Albany
Dexter
Mechanicville
Nassau
Auburn
Morrisonville
Utica

Salem
Poughkeepsie
. Peekskill
Bedford Hills
Albany

Le Georg:
Schenectady
Troy
Schenectady
Oneida

e

One Hundred Forty-one

a 1952
WW

tL

GRATRICK, MARION FRANCES
GREENBURG, EVELYN é
GROSVENOR, JOHN HENRY -
GUYER, ORMOND LUCE
HAAS, MARJORIE ANNE . ‘
HAGEN, RUTH ELIZABETH . ‘
HALLENBECK, HARRIET

HaMM, Dorotuy ELIZABETH
Harris, RALPH JOHN

Harris, RAYMOND PAUL
HARTER, RUTH ELIZABETH *
HASBROUCK, SARAH ETHEL -
HEINEMANN, LAWRENCE ALBERT
HEINS, LILLIAN M. . a ,
HENDEE, HAROLD

HENRY, CHARLOTTE EVELIE
HERMAN, MARION EDNA . :
Hewitt, IsABEL DEBORAH .
Hicks, EDNA LORAINE . “
HILt, SARA BLANCHE
HINAMAN, JULIA :
HISERT, GEORGE ARTHUR .
HITCHCOCK, MARGARET . "
HopcGeEs, GEORGIA ALICE . .
Howe, LILtian RITA

HuGHEs, ROBERT GORDON
HUNT, GERALDINE CATHERINE
IGLESIAS, LUISA

INGRAHAM, BEN F.

IsRAEL, BETTY CRONKHITE
JANSEN, RUTH ERNESTINE
JOHNSON, EVELYN CORA

JONEs, CHARITY B.

Jones, LLoyp Warp : ;
JoRDAN, NoRENE ELIZABETH
JUCKETT, CHARLES O.

Jupp, Marit ELIZABETH
KANTOR, ROsE MARY

Kapps, ROSALIND MARTHA
KEITH, CHRISTINE . 5 ‘
KELLEHER, Mary A.

One Hundred Forty-two

103 2am
Bw/////

—— PEDAGOGUE

Medina

Bay Shore

Central Bridge

Marion

Coxsackie

. Palisades

Voorheesville

Herkimer

Lyons Falls

W hiteball

Brookview

: : ; Goshen
‘ ; 5 . Buffalo
. Elizaville

: : Stottville
F : : Schenectady
Rome

Ballston Spa

Elmira

Delmar

Port Jervis

. Mohawk

Delmar

Schenectady

‘ . Luzerne

. Albany

Schenectady

Albany

Binghamton

Schenectady

Albany

Mohawk

‘ 5 . Spencer

5 5 A Williamson
2 Rensselaer

: ; . Westport

x ‘ Albany
: A ‘ . Albany
i : * Troy

4 Schenectad)

4 . Yonkers

AW

PEDAGOGUE

KENT, Mary LOUISE

KERBEL, BERNARD STANLEY
KETCHAM, ELEANOR FROST
Kitts, Doris MABEL
KIMMERLE, DOROTHEA

KING, DoroTHy ADELAIDE
Kiomps, ALICE MARY ‘
KORNMEYER, FLORENCE MARY
KRAMERS, KATE CAROLYN
KRONK, ALFRED CARPENTER
KuRILECZ, MARGARET FLORENCE
Latiy, LILLIAN AGNES

LANGE, VIVIAN Lucy

LAWLER, EsTHER TERISE
LAWRENCE, ISABEL MARJORIE
LAZEROWITZ, RUTH GRACE
Leary, ELEANOR M.

LEIMAN, ADELLA . m
LEVINSTEIN, SANFORD JULIUS
Lewis, ALVINA RICH
LILIENTHAL, FRANCES RUTH
LINDSEY, MOLLIE FRANCES
LinpT, ADELAIDE MAGDALENE
LOHNAS, CHARLOTTE

LONG, KATHARINE JOANNA
LOWENBERG, EVELYN ETHEL
McCANN, HELEN VERONICA
MacComss, ELIZABETH MAY
McFARLAND, FRANK JOHN
McINTyYRE, JANET :
McKEON, MADELINE DoROTHY
McMAHON, FRANCES KATHRYN
MADIGAN, DorotHy HELEN
MAHsIG, ANNA SOPHIE ‘
MARTIN, MARGARET MERCEDES .
MATTHEWS, ALICE ELIZABETH
Mattice, Doris ELIZABETH
MAURIELLO, CARMELLA VIRGINIA
Mickritz, MICHAEL JOSEPH
MILLarD, EUGENIA Lucy .
MiLvcer, HELEN ADELINE .
MILLIs, KATHLEEN GRACE

Albany
Alban)
Poughkeepsie
Fort Plain
Schenectady
Schenectady
Schenectady

. Boonville

. Peekskill
Port Jervis
Yonkers
Little Falls
Port Chester
Buffalo
Smithtown Branch
. Liberty
Hoosick Falls
Albany

Troy
Ossining
Albany
North Creek
Kenza Lake
West Winfield
Keeseville
Albany
Schenectady
Frankfort
Buffalo
Ithaca
Hoosick Falls
Albany
Schenectady
Schenectady
Poughkeepsie
Troy

Eaton
Schenectady
Cohoes
Albany
Rochester
Rensselaer

One Hundred Forty-three

ems 19 52,
WR
tJ
——a 2 —- PEDAGOGUE

MONACELLI, LILLIAN MARIE ‘ P ‘ ‘: : , . Albion
Moore, AGNES ELIZABETH : : : : : Chatham
Moore, KATHERINE MARGARET : : : ‘ ; Millbrook
Morton, MARJoRIE JEAN 3 : : ‘ : : Blue Point
Mowsray, ANNA L. ” ; 5 z : : Newburgh
Murpuy, ELLEN MARTHA , . ; : " F Gloversville
NaGy, HELEN FRANCES . : : : : : . Camillus
NesBitT, LucILE OLIVE . : ; : é ; - Holley
NEWTON, INDIA A. . : ‘ ‘ ' : : 5 . Cortland
NICHOLS, CAROL LOUISE . : : : ; : : Bainbridge
Norpb, ALICE V.. ; ‘ : : é ‘ ; . Albany
Nye, HELEN ELIZABETH . 3 : 3 : : j Watertown
ODELL, MARGARET LOUISE : - 5 3 : - . Hartford
O'DONNELL, MARGUERITE E._ . E : : : 3 Port Jervis

Oscoop, Louise Lypia_ . ‘ : ; 3 z . Binghamton
PALMER, GRACE LORAINE ‘ ‘ ; : ‘ ‘ . Valatie
PECK, JOHN SCHUYLER . : 2 : : ; : Hampton
PEsKO, AMALIA VICTORIA . f ‘ . i : : Hamilton
PrrKin, Mary EL ise 2 : : ; : : 7 Schenectady
PUTNAM, RUTH , ‘ ; : : : ‘ é Gloversville
PUTNAM, VIOLET ANNA . : : : i : Saratoga Springs
Quick, MiLpreD L. . ; . : : : : . Poughkeepsie
RAUSCH, MARGARET LOUISE ‘ . : j ; . White Plains
REDMOND, Marie EUGENIA : 5 : é 3 é Troy
REINHART, RALPH RAYMOND . : 5 s ; i Chadwick
REYNOLDS, RUTH EDGARTON . : 3 : : . Albany
RIVENBURG, HENRY A J i , ‘ : <  ~w sAlbany
ROBERTS, GEORGIA MARIE . : ; ‘ j ; Granville
ROOHAN, MARGARET ALICE , . : : 3 . Saratoga Spa
Root, FRANCES ELMINA . : : 3 ; ? - . Albany
RUTESHOUSER, DoroTHy LOUISE : : i é ; . Roxbury
RYAN, JOSEPHINE ELIZABETH. - : : ; . Seneca Falls
RYAN, KATHERINE MARY . é : ; : : . Mechanicville
SAXxTON, MAE ELIZABETH . : : ‘ : : : Schenectady
ScCHLOOP, IRENE CECELIA . ; ? ‘ ‘ ; Indian Lake
SEELEY, ELMA RUTH ‘ s , ; ; ; ‘ Hensonville
SERVICE, MARGARET CANTINE . : ° : : . Stone Ridze
SHEEHAN, MARTHA ELIZABETH . 3 ; ‘ : : . Oneida
SHEFFIELD, HOMER MONROE. : : ‘ ‘ i . Albany
SimMONS, BEssIE . i 4 A : ; A : Hurleyville
SMITH, FLORENCE MARIE . : ; : ‘ . Albany
SmitH, HILDA YVETTE . ‘ - : : : : . Albany

One Hundred Forty

Mw/////

AN

PEDAGOGUE

SMITH, MAE VERONICA
SNYDER, HELEN ELIZABETH
SOLOMON, RE?
Spitz, BERTHA ; :
SPURBECK, GERTRUDE ELIZABETH
SROKA, ANTHONY

STEINBERG, MAURICE

STEWART, CLAYTON C.

Styn, LAURA HELEN

SuTTON, HAzEL OLIVIA
SzERSZEN, LEONORA J.
TANGNEY, MARION TERESA
TAYLOR, CLARICE MARGARET
TEMPLETON, ARTHUR

TEPPER, EpITH

TEssIER, MARIE RACHEL
TOMPKINS, BEATRICE ELIZABETH
TRELA, Mary ELIZABETH
TuTron, Marie ELIZABETH
VaIL, AUGUSTA ADAMS

VAN DuZEE, HELEN JOYCE

VAN VALKENBURG, KATHRYN M.

VAUGHN, ALICE Norris
VROOMAN, HELEN ELIZABETH
WADE, MARJORIE EMELIA
WAGNER, E. BEATRICE
WALD, MARY FRANCES
WAMSLEY, LUCILLE
WARREN, HELEN FRANCES
WATKINS, JEAN LIVINGSTON

WHITE, MARY HARRIET . ,
WICKHAM, BARBARA
WILSON, ELEANOR . . ,

Witson, Lina May > R
WunsHursT, DAMIA LowNsBURY
WoLF, ALINE EBEL . r
WoOopBURN, ESTHER COLLERIDGE
WURSTLIN, FLORA RADLER
YAWGER, JANE PRICE

YOUNG, FRANK O.

Zotz, ETHEL ELIZABETH
ZUCKMAN, FREDA

Bedford Hills
Albany

. Elmira
Sag Harbor
Fly Creek
Albany

East Schodack
Hoosick Falls
Eden Valle
Mamaroneck
Elmira
Tuxedo Park
Little Falls
Round Lake
Alban)
Cohoes
Ravena
Bedford Hills
Camillus
Unadilla
Gouverneur
W hitesboro
Dundee
Albany
Mechanicville
York Mills
Utica
Indian Lake
Albany
Albany
Oriskany Falls
Greenville
Amsterdam
Ovid
Rensselaer
Saugerties

. Walton
Stock port
Union Spa
Buffalo
Ardsley
Albany

One Ilundred Forty-five

1932
WYER,

YU
PEDAGOGUE

Co-op. “Haunted Bookshop”

ill
Mw////

AMM
PEDAGOGUL

SOBPROMOR

rs

1932
WR,
r

PEDAGOGUE———_
AW
PLDAGOGUE-—————

SOPHOMORE CLASS HISTORY

When we sophomores came to State for the first semester of our freshman
year, we were confronted with the grinning, leering faces of the members of the
class of 1933. Evil designs and mischievous pranks lurked about the corners of
their mouths and hid behind the demure droop of their eyelashes.

Soon after we had established ourselves as freshmen, we noticed that the

‘ facial expressions of "33 were changing. Their faces were being drawn out,
stretched, as though some external force had pushed in the cheeks and pulled out

i the chin. Their countenances were hideous with apprehension. That was due
to our utter disregard of their rules. Their well-laid plans for driving us into
submission were upset by our refusal to don outrageous costumes during fresh-
man week. We continued in this strongly independent manner for several months,
during which time the sophomores acquired hard, stoical looks.

Our failure to find the sophomore mascot revived their hopes and their faith

{ in themselves, softening their facial expressions. Our countenances were gradu-
ally undergoing a change. As the two classes fought incessantly and unflinchingl ;
} for superiority, we became hard, sharp.

The sophomores lost heart when we won the pole rush. The emotions we

had dammed up within ourselves, thus playing havoc with our looks, were released
\ in that fight. It was fierce—for the onlookers as well as the actual participants.
The sophomore girls retaliated a few minutes later by winning the tug-of-war.

By this time, since the year was so nearly ended, every member of each class

i was in a fever of excitement and suspense. We pulled through by capturing the
Moving-Up Day stunt, but the sophomores outsang us lustily the same night.

j So there we were—tied. Neither of us had gained real satisfaction, but,
strangely enough, we were all satisfied. Perhaps the bitterness of the struggle
burned out all the source of rancor or even friendly enmity we had had. At any
rate, we turned immediately from enemies into friends. And therein lay our
approval of inter-class rivalry.

We are a bit more serious this year, though not too much so, for which we

| thank Providence. We are just beginning to realize that perhaps there are better
things than play, but are still unwilling to give it up entirely. We know now

‘ that life will always have dizzy heights of unconfined joy and the equally strong
bogs of distress, but that their intensity is dimmed by the indifferent, discouraging
distance between.

We feel the attractive disorder of our life here, perhaps the best four years,
collectively, that we shall know. Just as there is a fascination in the grim gro-
tesqueness of gargoyles, so there is that in our weirdly-patterned existence here

j which binds us to State forever.

One Hundred Forty-nine

a 1952
WW

AW
PEDAGOGUE———

SOPHOMORE CLASS HISTORY

When we sophomores came to State for the first semester of our freshman
year, we were confronted with the grinning, leering faces of the members of the
class of 1933. Evil designs and mischievous pranks lurked about the corners of
their mouths and hid behind the demure droop of their eyelashes.

Soon after we had established ourselves as freshmen, we noticed that the
facial expressions of "33 were changing. Their faces were being drawn out,
stretched, as though some external force had pushed in the cheeks and pulled out
the chin. Their countenances were hideous with apprehension. That was due
to our utter disregard of their rules. Their well-laid plans for driving us into
submission were upset by our refusal to don outrageous costumes during fresh-
man week. We continued in this strongly independent manner for several months,
during which time the sophomores acquired hard, stoical looks.

Our failure to find the sophomore mascot revived their hopes and their faith
in themselves, softening their facial expressions. Our countenances were gradu-
ally undergoing a change. As the two classes fought incessantly and unflinching],
for superiority, we became hard, sharp.

The sophomores lost heart when we won the pole rush. The emotions we
had dammed up within ourselves, thus playing havoc with our looks, were released
in that fight. It was fierce—for the onlookers as well as the actual participants.
The sophomore girls retaliated a few minutes later by winning the tug-of-war.

By this time, since the year was so nearly ended, every member of each class
was in a fever of excitement and suspense. We pulled through by capturing the
Moving-Up Day stunt, but the sophomores outsang us lustily the same night.

So there we were—tied. Neither of us had gained real satisfaction, but,
strangely enough, we were all satisfied. Perhaps the bitterness of the struggle
burned out all the source of rancor or even friendly enmity we had had. At any
rate, we turned immediately from enemies into friends. And therein lay our
approval of inter-class rivalry.

We are a bit more serious this year, though not too much so, for which we
thank Providence. We are just beginning to realize that perhaps there are better
things than play, but are still unwilling to give it up entirely. We know now
that life will always have dizzy heights of unconfined joy and the equally strong
bogs of distress, but that their intensity is dimmed by the indifferent, discouraging
distance between.

We feel the attractive disorder of our life here, perhaps the best four years,
collectively, that we shall know. Just as there is a fascination in the grim gro-
tesqueness of gargoyles, so there is that in our weirdly-patterned existence here
which binds us to State forever.

One Hundred Forty-nine

WOR

ANN
PEDAGOGUL

ll
Bal! /////

————— PEDAGOGUE

AMM

SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS

WILLIAM NELSON . : ; ; : President
ROBERT ROBINSON . ; ; x Vice-President
SHIRLEY DIAMOND . : : : : : Secretary
ROBERT MEYERS . ; : ‘ ‘ ; Treasurer
MAYBELLE MATTHEWS . ; 4 . Song Leader

HANNAH PARKER . ; : : : : Reporter

we 1952
WR,

ABAJIAN, VIRGINIA
ABRAHAMSON, BERGLJOT
ABRAHAMSON, OSTA
AMIDON, HoRTON WALTER
ANDRE, ELINOR ELIZABETH
APPLEBY, HARRIET
ARMSTRONG, GLADYS MARIE
ARNOLD, ELIZABETH E.,
ARNOTT, RENWICK COE
ARTHUR, HESTELLA LEAH..
ASIKIs, Gus M.

AUERBACH, PHILIP %
BANCROFT, ROGER WILLIAMS
BarRKER, DorOTHY MAE
BARRETT, HELEN FRANCES
BARRON, MARJORIE BYGATE
BeEcK, AGNES MARIE
BEDELL, RUTH ALICE
BEIK, ALVERDA KATHLEEN
BELL, Doris E.

BeL_L_, HitpaA May

BELL, KATHERINE WILEY .
BENEDICT, DONALD ORVILLE
BENEDICT, MARIE CAROLINE
BENJAMIN, Lois. ‘
BIENICK, STELLA CATHERINE
BIGELOW, GLENDEEN ORRA
BisHop, CELIA ELEANOR
BLAKELY, MARION BESSIE
BocHNER, R. DIANE
BOOKHEIM, HILDA

Bower, IRENE MARGARET
BRADLEY, HiLpA A.
BRANDES, SARA

Bray, Davip . F .
BRENNAN, AGNES MARIE .
BRONK, HARRIET LOUISE
Brooks, OSMER JAMES

One Hundred Fifty-two

BY ////

PEDAGOGUE

CLASS OF 1934

ATWELL, DorotHy ELIZABETH

1h ———

YU

Troy
Cassayuna
Cassayuna

Gloversville
Frankfort
Voorheesville
Schenectady
Shrub Oak
Walden
Slingerlands
Port Jervis
Woodridge
Albany
Johnson Cit)
Broadalbin

Tro)
W aterviiet

Troy

Elsmere
Alban)
Peekskill
Massena
Albany

Perry
Georgetown Station
Albany
Amsterdam
Glens Falls
Saratoga Spa
Loudonville
Monticello
Albany
Sauquoit
Canandaigua
Schenectady
Albany
Albany

. New Baltimore
Ithaca

A
PLDAGOGUE

BROWN, CATHERINE ANN
Brown, DorotHy ALICE
Brown, HaAzeL RUTH
BROWNHARDT, RITA

BUCKLEY, HELEN JOSEPHINE
BuULLARD, Doris ELINOR
BYRNES, PAULINE ANNA
CANNON, CATHERINE MARIE
CANNON, MARGARET ASSANTA
CAREY, MARGARET JUNE
CARLSON, MARY ISABEL
CENTNER, MATILDA
CHIPPENDALE, GRACE V.
CHURCH, HAZEL IRENE
CipPpERLY, ETHEL IRENE
CLEVELAND, FLORENCE EMILY
CLICKNER, RUTH FLORENCE
CLuM, AUDNA TAYLOR

Cor, BEATRICE H.

CONNELLY, LetitiA LoWE
CORNELL, MARION JEAN
COUTANT, ELEANOR ELIZABETH
CRAIGMILE, JEAN

CroucH, AGNES May :
CRUTCHLEY, MARGUERITE ANN
CUNNEEN, KATHRYN HELEN
CUNNINGHAM, EDWARD MICHAEL
D’AINTO, OLYMPIA LAURETTE
DANAHY, HELEN RUTH
Davies, ESTHER JOSEPHINE
Davies, MARY ELEANOR
Davitt, HELEN MArRy

Day, Mary VILONA
DEECHER, HELEN MARIE
DEGENAAR, KATHERINE FASOLDT
DEGNAN, RICHARD EUGENE
DEHOLLANDER, EpiITH LUCILLE
DELANEY, ELIZABETH CLAIRE
DENISON-\WHEELER, HELEN
DENTON, ALICE ELIZABETH
DENTON, MURIEL FLORENCE

ws 1952,

Watervliet
Broadalbin
Sherburne
Cohoes
Dolgeville
Stormville
Waterville
Tarrytown

W hitehall
Schenectady
Jamestown
Gloversville
Troy
Fernwood
Hoosick Falls
Round Lake
Troy

Troy
Mechanicville
White Plains
Saratoga Spa
Schenectady
Port Byron
N. Granville
Southampton
Port Jer
Albany
Rome

Fort Edward
Menands
Rome
Plattsburg

Al plau s

Troy
Slingerlands
Niagara Fails
Vischer Ferry
Port Jervis
Rensselaer

Schenectady
Frankfort

One Hundred Fifty-three

AN \

BY /H//
PEDAGOGUL

DERMODY, GERTRUDE ALICE ; ; 5 : A . Hancock
DESANTIS, GRACE CELESTE ; ; : F : ‘ Utica
DIAMOND, SHIRLEY : és : ‘ A : Schenectady
DICKINSON, MADELYN , : : ; ; : Watervliet
Dickson, ELIZABETH MARION . : F ‘ 4 . Alplaus
DICKSON, MARGARET HELEN. : 5 A ‘ Schenectad)
DIEHL, KATHARINE ANTOINETTI ; : , 5 . Ravena
DOHERTY, MARGARET HELEN . ; A ; . Saratoga Spa
DOHERTY, MARIE GERTRUDE i 5 P i 5 . Beacon
DOLAN, JAMES WILLIAM . ‘ : ; “ : . Albany
Doocey, JANE PATRICIA . P : é , : : Troy
Dorsino, F. ANTHONY . i ‘ : A : = Rome
DuppEN, EVELYN ELIZABETH . , , i ; 5 Camillus
DuMAIN, SYLVIA $ ; " : ; ‘i 3 3 , Utica
DUNTON, DOROTHEA LUCILLE % . : : . Hornell
Dwyer, MADOLYN M. . ; : i 3 : Patterson
Dzikowicz, MATILDA FRANCES 2 5 : . Amsterdam
EATON, JESSIE ELIZABETH . : ; é : ‘ Schenectady

ECKERT, THEODORE : ‘ 3 : : .  LaFargeville
Eppy, DoNALD W. . ; 3 : 6 . . Saratoga Spa
ENGLISH, RUTH FRANCES . : ‘ : : : . Cambridge
ENNEST, TRESSA RUTH . ; ; F ” ‘ Stamford
Erp, AGNES LyDIA . ‘ : 5 : 5 ; Mayville
ERVIN, MARION FRANCIS . . ; ; : : : Schenectady
Estes, FRANCES MARIE. ‘ . F 5 ‘ . AuSable Forks
FAUCETT, HELEN RUTH . : : ‘ ‘ ‘ : : Bath
FINCH, Mary ELIZABETH . : ; : : ; , . Albany
| FITZPATRICK, ALICE MARGARET ; 3 . ‘ : ‘ Utica
FITZPATRICK, CATHERINE AGNES , : : : ' . Albany
FLANAGAN, HELENE PATRICIA . 3 . ‘ ‘ : Watertown
FoLry, Mary LORENA  . 7" : , . * Ballston Spa
FowLer, WiLtpuR EDWARD : A ; ‘ A ; Schenectad}
FRALICK, ANITA. : : : : : ; . Sterling Station
FRANCE, RUTH MARY. : ; ; , ‘ . Schenectady
FRANKEL, FLORENCE : Z : 5 ‘i . ‘ Monticello
FRAZER, DoroTHY . : : . : : : . Poughkeepsie
| FREDERIC, KATHERINE SYRENA . , 3 8. : : Troy
i FREED, DorotHy . : : ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ , Utica
Fussik, ANNA : é : ; : . : : Saugerties
GALLupP, EpirH HARRIET . : ‘ : ; , ‘ Chatham
GARDNER, HAROLD MANSFIELD . : : ‘ i . So. Bethlehem

One Hundred Fifty-j

Be!/////

A \

PEDAGOGUE

GARRETT, THOMAS RAYMOND
GARRISON, MILDRED DOROTHY
Gates, HELEN BARBARA
Gay, STEWART IRWIN
GeppeEs, E. LEORA

GEHLE, MARCELLE VERONICA
GEREN, JOHN F. :
GIZZARELLI, FERNANDA THERESE
GoppDARD, HELEN ELIZABETH
GopFreEY, LouIsE HARTLEY
GoopENoW, HARRIETTE LUELLA
GoopMAN, KATHRYN SHAW
GOTTSCHALK, HELEN ELIZABETH
GouLb, LENA A
GRAINER, DoroTHy GRACE
GRANNIS, ESTHER ELIZABETH
GreGory, WILLIAM HENRY
GRIFFIN, DorotHy May
Grow, M. LorraINt

HAIGHT, LAURA VIRGINIA
HALLADAY, MARGARET EMILY
HALLADAY, Mary ESTHER
HAMMERSLEY, FRANCES HUDSON
Hart, MARGARET ROGENE
HaAuG, KATHRYN FLORENCE
HEFFERN, CATHERINE MONICA
HERMANN, ANNA ELIZABETH
HickEY, ANNA MILDRED
HiGGins, FRANCES KATHARINE
HINDEN, EDWARD ;
HOCKENBERGER, CHRISTINE E.
HoFFMAN, OTTILIA ELIZABETH
Hoke, HELEN LOUISE
Horowitz, ETHEL

HowarD, MARION CLARE
HOWELL, MARTHA IRENE .
HoyLaNnbD, ALICE ELIZABETH
Hutt, Mary PAULINE
HUTZENLAUB, BABETTE MARIE
JAMISON, CATHERINE MARIA
JASPER, AARON

W ynants Rill
Red Hook
Coxsackie

Warsaw

ensselaer
Averill Park
Valley Falls
Port Henry
Coho
ra Fa
‘ Utica
Johnsburg
Monroe
Corinth
Rensselaer

G
Millbrook
Rome
Adams
Morrisville
Albany
Albany

N. Cohoes
Rome
Rhinebeck
Green Island
Poughkeepsie
; Troy
Schenectad)
Schenectady
W ebster

Constableville

k

inion

Cooperstown
Binghamton
Franklinville
Dundee
Clark Mills
Owego
Ossining
Newburgh
Alban)

One Hundred Fif

ANY
r

JEFFREYS, FRANCES MARIA
JERZYKIEWICZ, ANNA FRANCES
JOHNSON, ELIZABETH A.
JOHNSON, MILDRED BELLE
JONEs, PAULINE MARIE :
KAMMERER, M. ELIZABETH JOAN
KASANIK, MARGARET MAE
KastTic, MARY

KEILTY, JOSEPH JAMES
KELLER, ELSIE MARIE

Ketty, Louise Mary
KELLY, MARION CECELIA
KETCHAM, GEORGE EZRA
KissAM, CHARLES HENRY .
KJOLSETH, ELSA. :
KLOosE, DoROTHY FREDERICA
KLUGE, HELEN MARTHA
KOBLENZ, JOSEPH HENRY
KUFAHL, GERTRUDE DOROTHY
Lapp, ELIZABETH FRANCES
LAURENSKI, CASSIE

LeECARO, RUTH AMANDA
LEVINE, LipBY

Litta, Mary DoMiINIca
LLoyD, MARION FRANCES .
LOEBLE, ELEANOR CATHERINE
LoFTus, GERTRUDE MARJORIE
LOMBARDI, MILDRED MARY
Lorb, Lois CAROLYN
LUNDELL, FripA ANNA
LUQUER, VENONA ELIZABETH
LURIE, GUSTAVE

LusH, JENNIE

McAvoy, JESSIE

McCLuer, KATE ELECTA
MACCONNELL, JANE E.
McDonaLp, ROSELAND JANE
McEWAN, ALICE CORA
McKEE, ANNA JEANNETTE
McNary, BERTRAM CHAUNCEY
MCNICKLE, MINNIE ALICE

One Hundred Fifty-six

li ——
Mw/////

— PEDAGOGUE

W bitehall
Uti

Pleasantville

Jamestown
Scotia
Westhampton Beach

. Pleasant Va

Binghamton
Alban)
Coeymans
Hudson Falls
Beacon
Beacon
Greenlawn
Scotia
Westhampton Beach
Stony Point
Albany
Attica
Hudson
Duanesburg
Bainbridge
Hoosick Falls
Seneca Falls
Sauquoit
Troy
Norwich

W. Coxsackie
Schenectady
Schenectady

é 7 E . Oneonta
Tro)
Schenectady
Schenectad)
Farmersville
Albany
Canandaigua
. Mohawk
White Plains
Averill Part
Boonville

AMM
PLDAGOGUE

MACK, THERESA

MAHAR, HELEN MARY
MALONEY, SARA DOROTHY
Mark, EVA LILLIAN :
MarTIN, GERALDINE BECKSTEAI
MarTIN, MARGARET JANI
MATTHEWS, MAYBELLE VERONICA
MELLoR, RUTH

Meyers, RoBerT F.

MINKIN, RUTH

MITCHELL, KATHLEEN
MLECZEK, MARION i
Moat, MARGARET ELIZABETH
Moore, Mary GALLAWAY
Moore, Mary J.

Moore, RAYMOND FRANKLIN
MorGAN, RUTH EVANS
Morris, LouisE May :
MorrisON, KATHERINE CHRISTINE
Moses, JANE ALICE

MuNyYER, DoroTHY PAULINE
Murpny, GLAbDys CATHERINE
Murray, JEAN ROBINSON
NAROSKY, CLARA MAE
NELSON, MARION WHITE
NELSON, WILLIAM C.

Noon, ELLEN SHENON
Noonan, MARY TERESA
Norris, AZALIA AYLENE
O'Connor, Mary ELIZABETH
OFFNICK, PAULINA EDITH
O'NEILL, ELLEN ;
Osporn, LETTIE FLORENCE
OrTTOSON, FLORENCE NETTIE
OweEN, ALICE ELEANOR
PALAND, CHRISTINE MARIE
PALEDINO, SARA ZETA
PANTALONE, EMMA ANNE
Paris, HELEN MARGUERITE
PARKER, HANNAH

PARTRIDGE, DOROTHY FRANCES

Binghamton
Schenectady
Schenectady
Tro)
Lowville
Shortsville
Glen Cove
Utica
Hudson
Albany
Albany
Schenectady
Slingerlands
Albion
Millbrook
Mechanicville
Albany
Cazenovia

Albany
Corinth
Baldwin

Schenecte

Poughkee psie

E Schenectad)
- . . Albany
Peekskill

Utica

Cohoes

Syracuse

Mechanicville

: Hancock
Golden's Bridge

Rid gebury

Jamestown

Schenectady

Albany

Le Ro}

Amsterdam

Broadalbin

Hudso 7

Beaver River

One Hundred Fi

es 1952
YY

ANI

PATTERSON, Lois KATHERINE
PECK, MYRTLE ANNA

PERRY, HELEN VIOLA ‘
PETERS, GERALDINE AILEEN :
PETTIGREW, EMILY GAGE
PIERCE, HELEN MARIE

PESTER, MURIEL EVELYN

PIKE, MARION SYLVINA

PITKIN, LouiIsE ESTELLE
PLANTE, LEo A.

PODLEWSKA, JANE THEODORA
PRINDLE, GERTRUDE MARIE
Proper, HILDA ELAINE
PUTNAM, IDA E. : 5 ;
RAND, GRENFELL N. z
RASMUSSEN, ELIZABETH MELISSA
REAGAN, WILLIAM MATTHEW
RICCIARDI, PHILIP VINCENT
RIMKUs, ALMA ;
ROBINSON, ROBERT TOWNE
ROBSON, CHARLES HERBERT
ROCKWELL, DoroTHY JEANNETTE
Roppy, MARION ELIZABETH
RoGERS, WILLIAM ROYAL
ROSENBECK, ROSE MARION
ROSENBERG, GERTRUDE

Row ey, Lois E.

Roy, LEON PAUL

RUBIN, JULIET HARRIET

Russ, ALMIRA WINIFRED

RYAN, THOMAS JOSEPH
SALAMACK, ANNA

SALESE, ELIZABETH D.

SALLACK, EsTHER LUCILE

SAROFF, SYLVIA :
SAUNDERS, JACK WILLIAM
SAWYER, GERTRUDE ELIZABETH
SCHUSTER, TARSILLA MARY
SCHWORM, EDWARD KENNETH
Scott, MurigEL_ IRENE

SEIGLER, ZELMA BEATRICE

Hundred Fifty-eight

TL

—— PEDAGOGUE

Jamestown
Cooperstown
; Rome
Brownville
Saratoga Spa
Newburgh
Ancram

: Perry

Se hroon Lake
Mooers Forks
Amsterdam
Savannah
Mayfield
Schenectady
Albany
Narrowsburg
Rensselaes
Oyster Bay
Lima
Frankfort
Dansvi
Esper
Mecha

nicv
Berge ui
Thompson
Albany
Fulton
Albany
Albany
Schenectady
Alban;
Amsterdam
Newburgh
Salamanca
Schenectady
Athens

Mechanicville

y
y

Schenectady
Croton Fails
Watertown

Glent

|
AMMA
PEDAGOGUE

SHAPIRO, CELIA ; .
SHARON, Marie-Louise P.
SHAVER, Doris R.

SHEAR, BEULAH ETHELYN
SHERRILL, VIRGINIA STEWART
SHIELDS, JULIA OLIVE

SHIRKEY, MARY FRANCES
SHOREY, GENEVIEVE ALMEDA
SIMMERER, CATHERINE DOROTHY
SIMMONS, KATHERINE MARY
SIMONS, VIRGINIA GRACE
SISBOWER, EUNICE EUGENIA
SKAU, ELIZABETH LAURA
SMITH, THELMA HAVILAND
SNARE, CONSTANCE ELIZABETH
Somers, H. RITA

Sovik, ROsE FRANCES
SPORBORG, ANN

STEELE, ELIZABETH RAE
STEPHEN, AGNES ALEXANDER
STETKAR, BESSIE OLGA
Stewart, Rita J. ‘
STOWELL, MyrTLE ROSAMOND
TRENTELMAN, ALVINA VRIEDA
TRIVISENDOLI, GILDA FELICIA
Uuine, Dorotuy ELSIE
UNGER, MARTHA EMILY ‘
VAN BUREN, BLANCHE LUCILLE
VAN DEVENTER, ADELINE LORRAINE
VAN HOESEN, MARIE ANNE
VAN Scott, M. DoLorEs .
VAN WELY, Harriet LiEcTY
VAUGHN, LILLIAN THERESA
VROMAN, LAURA ELIZABETH
VROMAN, MARJORIE A.
VROOMAN, MELBURN CLARENCE
WAGNER, KATHERINE ANNE
Waite, LUELLA F.

WALLING, ALMA ALENE
WALTHER, Mary LOUISE
WATERBURY, ELEANOR

Albany
Herkimer
Rome
Schenectady
Beacon
arrowbush

henectady
Corinth

; Utica
Millbrook

Mexico

Rome

Tr oy

Peekskill
Schenectady
Liberty

Beacon

Albany

Schodack Landing

We sterlo
Orwell
Amsterdam
Albion

W ynantskill
Hudson
Scotia
Corning

Coxsackie
Macedon
Albany
Cohoes
Middleburgh
Schoharie
Harrisville
Hornell
Mexico

New Berlin
Wellsville
Dolgeville

One Hundred Fifty-nite

ws 19 52
WWW,

AYN
PEDAGOGUL

WEBER, FRANCES B ; ‘ & 5 5 : - Gloversville
WEBSTER, LEORA EVA : ; ; : > 4 5 . Homer
WEINER, IDA ELIZABETH . : ; 4 ; ; . Saranac Lake
WEITSMAN, ROSE. : : ; : : : : - Owego
WELCH, MARIAN ELIZABETH. : ZA y ; : A Union
WELLING, GRACE ELIZABETH . P ; : ; : Cambrid ze
WELLS, ELIZABETH LOUISE Centre
WELLS, EVELYN KATHARINE . : ‘ ; - : Es perancz
WHITE, FRANCES EVELINE 3 : ; ; , ; incinnatu
WHITE, MILDRED . : ‘ j : ; 4 ; . Cohoe
Wicks, MARJORIE BATSON ; : : : : . Cooperstown
WILKINS, ELEANOR DEPuy kee psie
WILKINS, KATHRYN STANDISH . : ; : J Ellenville
WILLIAMS, MARY BARBARA , ; 5 ; : . Cobhoes
Witson, Sy_viA Do.ipa . : : : : : ; . Alban)
WINTER, BARBARA . 3 Q : : i . Poughkeepsie
WINTER, ISABELLE AGNES : . - 5 : . So. Kortright
WISNESKE, MARY ROSE . ; , ; ; ‘ . Schenectad)
WiIzweEr, ROSE A ‘ ‘ c ; z z F Hurleyville
Woop, MIRIAM FostTER . ‘ ‘ ‘ ; ¢ . Malone
Woop, NELLIE FAYE ; A : : ; : Firthcli
WoRDEN, KATHARINE JANE : 3 2 : = . Hoosick Falls
WRIGHT, RUTH CHRISTINA : : : ‘ : ‘ Schenectady
YAFFEE, HARRY SAMUEL . : : : ‘ : Glens Fe
YAWKLER, CORINNE ARVILLA . ‘ : 5: : . Alba
ZELNICK, SOPHIA ANN. ; : i é ; Watervliet
ZUEND, ELIZABETH . . 4 = 5 ‘ ; ; ; Scotia

ca a a a STE ST SEL I STL Ta

One Hundred Si.

la >k—Ea=a= |
Bel! /////

AX

PEDAGOGUE

FRESHMEN

1932
WR
BIN

Be /1//

PEDAGOGUE———_
AMM
PEDAGOGUE

FRESHMAN CLASS HISTORY

Individuals—strangers—lost in a maelstrom of wonder, eagerness, and
expectancy. In this way we came to the portals that were to become so familiar
in a short time. Now we have emerged from this crazy-quilt pattern of personali-
ties to a tapestry of perfectly blended design. Bonds of friendship, happiness,
and loyalty have cemented us into one laughing, hard working, hard playing band.

For one year we have come and gone to and from classes, social gatherings,
and athletic contests—labors and joys. We have had our defeats; we have had
our triumphs. All of which has added to our knowledge and poise and has per-
pared us for our future life in State. We look forward with hope and joyful
expectancy to the time when we shall pass from our lowly position into the realm
of a Sophomore class.

When we first consider, it seems ages since we entered last September, afd
donned our oil cloth bibs, but on further thought, the time has passed all too
quickly, and we are sad that we have missed many opportunities which have been
offered to us. Nevertheless, our short stay here has been filled with wonderful
experiences. We have been greatly aided along our way by the helping hands of
our older brethren and of our instructors. Freshman camps, Freshman hand
books, Junior brothers and sisters, and a tolerant faculty have all helped to make
our path a little easier.

Our social life has been truly a wonderful one. Our sister class furnished
a most enjoyable informal party for us in the Fall. G. A. A. Play day at Camp
Cogswell saw many freshmen frolicking in the open. Campus day brought a
class of small boys and girls in rompers and socks to perform for the approval
of the Queen. Our basketball team turned in an enviable record of victories.
It has been rumored that it wasn’t as good as the previous Freshman team, but, if
this is true, we can’t have all the brains and brawn too. Election of officers almost
became a political war, but in the end order came, and a well organized class
rolled through the rest of the year.

We entered with one of the highest scholastic ratings of any other class,
and we have tried to work hard to become worthy of our standard. We only hope
that we may be able to pass through our remaining three years both scholastically
and socially great; to graduate and bring praise and glory to our dearly loved and

deeply respected Alma Mater.

WR,

AMI
PEDAGOGUL

1
Ma!///11/

———— PEDAGOGUE

AM

FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS

CLIFFORD RALL
ELIZABETH GREGORY
JOHN BILLs .
EVELYN STAEHLE .
GRACE PRITCHARD .

DANIEL VAN LEUVAN

President
Vice-President
Secretar)
Treasurer

. Song Leader

Repor ter

wee 1952
WW

allan, evelyn daun

allard, wilfred philip
anderson, dorothy helena
anderson, evelyn romaine
anys, anna arlene

aulisi, rose jane

axtell, helen marcia
bailey, esther may

ball, evelyn theresa
barber, anna florence
barrile, josephine michaeline
barrington, anna catherine
bayley, ethel charlotte
benischek, marion julia
bennet, elizabeth dolores
bernholz, edward anthony
biedekapp, carol chandler
biggi, rosemary frances
bills, john edgar
blowers, june virginia
blumberg, louis

boorn, neva elizabeth
brady, elizabeth frances
brazda, alice

broderick, margaret mary
brooks, ruth ann louise
brown, eleanor louise
brown, janet adelaide
brown, marguerite janet
bryson, daisy

bullock, dorothy marie
burns, beatrice mary
calkins, martha jane
campbell, thomas matthew
cafrara, zenobia jeannette
carrington, mildred jessie
christian, william kenneth
clairmont, florence emma
clark, mary frances

One Hundred Sixty-six

1932
Ma! //////

AY {H//
PEDAGOGUE

CLASS OF 1933

chittenango
cohoes

fort edward
jamestown
schenectad)
amsterdam
deposit
nassau
waterviiet
mechanicville
jamestown
granville
Stillwater
brightwaters
brewster
poughkeepsie
walton
albany

albany
gloversville
woodrid ge
seward
albany
elmira

troy

utica
youngsville
catskill
lisbon

central islip
n. cohoe s
OSWERZO
fulton
auburn
peekskill

. . COX. sack je
binghamton
schenectad}

rochester

W

WM
PLDAGOGUE

clarke, laura marie

clowe, charles w.

collins, celia louise

cooke, emma louise

coon, helen alice

coons, madaline frances
cooper, eloise margaret
cornwell, elizabeth arlene
coulter, carlton alexander
coulter, harriet evelyn
crandall, orville midkiff
crapser, katherine elsie
crary, mary elizabeth
cronin, elaine cronin
crough, madeline elizabeth
crounse, esther truax
crutchley, ruth elizabeth
dabrusin, rose

daniels, linnea marie
davidge, william martin, jr.
davies, florence margaret
davis, dorothy .

dawson, dorothy louise

de hond, eleanor frances
delaney, janet margaret
delaney, margaret elizabeth
de rossi, rose . ; %
dexter, aileen sarah elizabeth
downing, ellen belle
doyle, rosemary

drake, kenneth george
durr, jeannette rose

ellen, florence

ellithorpe, day

elwell, margaret stiles
enders, laura charlotte
esmond, maurie hazel
essom, laura alta
estabrooks, edith virginia
facer, mildred elizabeth
faerber, elizabeth melusena

rensselaer

hudson

johnson city

windham

fairport

tivoli

upper ja)

perr)

cambridge

malone

rensselaer

staatsburg

schenectad y

granville

seneca falls
voorheesville
southampton

newburgh

i : jamestown
‘ ‘ ballston spa
franklin spa

delmar

canandaigua
williamson

: : johnson city
saratoga spa
amsterdam
narrowsburg

hudson

saugerties

port fervis

rome

schenectad)

edinburg

Seneca falls

central bridge
waterford

lodi

75 falls
p hel ps
middletown

One Hun

WW

fassett, alice frances
fehmel, edna

finklestein, ruth

fisher, lydia ‘ :
fleming, margaret elizabeth
ford, rose emma

fox, catherine knights
freedman, sylvia

friend, irwin "
fuest, elnora kathryn
fullerton, julia frances
gahagan, dorothea margaret
galloway, sylvia madeline
gallucci, henry joseph
gansz, helena alice
garrison, edith mae

gehm, lazetta susanne
gerber, martha rose
gerston, esther sarah .
glair, lorraine gladys

gold, norton irving
goldberger, milton walter
gorski, leona leontyne
greene, maude eugenia
gregory, betty e.

gruber, mary é j
gtysikiewicz, stanley joseph
hall, harrison james
hamelin, pearl marion
hartman, bessie diana
hartman, elizabeth

hawes, john lyman

hayner, blanche elizabeth
hazard, orvis roderick
heinemann, marion esther
heines, hilda

helmer, mary elizabeth
hesson, grace elizabeth
hilkert, ruth margaret

hill, gladys eugenia

hirsh, lucile vivian

One Hundred Sixty-eight

BG /////

PEDAGOGUE

13 22am

YU

warrensburg
roosevelt
troy
schenectad)
salem
weeds port
gloversville
albany
schenectad)
attica
albany
schenectady
chester
albany

lock berlin
Saugerties
berkshire
dewittsville
utica
gowanda
troy
binghamton
herkimer
Cattaraugus
niagara falls
binghamton
albany

. newcomo
utica
albany
hamburg
altamont
albany
syracuse
binghamton
central islip
little fall

waterviliet

seneca falls
endicott
cedarhurst

AMM
PEDAGOGUE

hodges, justina anne .
hoffa, tessie elizabeth
horan, edna anna
hotchkiss, doris eleanor
howard, harriet

howe, doris m.

hoyt, evelyn louise
hummer, gizella josephine
hurlbut, emily

hyra, olga

irwin, helen grace

israel, frances

jacobs, margaret rose
jadick, alexander
jenkins, ruth kathryn
jensen, ruth mildred .
johnston, kenneth gilbert
jones, vivian alma

jones, william

katz, ruth ; é
kavanaugh, kathleen gabriel
kearney, catharine mary
kelly, helen jean

kenny, kathleen

kerr, margaret woolman
kinley, martha elizabeth
kohler, gladys mary
koren, anna evelyn
krawczyk, helen

kresy, laura

kroman, david

kuehn, dorothy elizabeth
la deaux, aradith marie
lamb, mary ernestine
lawrence, ruth caroline
lay, ruth eugenia

le roy, ruth

levene, lena

lillibridge, agnes elizabeth
link, lillian pearl
lischer, marguerite ada

One Hundred Six

schenectad)
schenectady
water
oak field
watkins glen
poughkee psie
middletown

schenectady
islip
yonkers
poland

neu burgh
utica
beacon

e. chatham
schenectad)
alban)

Sag harbor
walden
alban)

troy

newburgh

utica
utica
waterford
selkirk
great bend
gloversville
utica
cincinnatus

schenectad)
rome
schenectady
unadilla forks
oak field
Seneca falls
poughkee psie
binghamton
glens falls
albany
gardenville

1932
WW,

BN!

litts, inez louise

loder, loraine harnish
logan, sarah jane

loman, wanita ann

lowry, margaret jean .
lubking, kathlyn queeney
ludwig, martin

lyon, marion elizabeth

mc cann, kathryn constance
> cann, margaret ellen

> conville, charles joseph

: intyre, lois estelle
knight, dorothy edna

¢ lenithan, wilma elizabeth
naughton, tarisa mary

> tague, john joseph
mace, charity ida

madden, ruth elizabeth
maggiolino, fannie cecelia
mahdesian, zaven misak
mann, sylvia helen
manning, lucille dolores
march, mildred june
marclay, ruth betsy

mark, reva

marko, mary

maurice, rose marjorie
maxwell, frances carolyn
maynard, laura marie
mazar, mary harriet
meserve, dorothy eleanor
mickel, irene jennie

minst, dorothy jeanne
mohrman, frederick charles
mollicone, fannie .
montgomery, george william
morehouse, catherine elizabeth
morey, reba almira
morgan, catherine theresa
morgan, gertrude evelyn
mosher, mildred elizabeth

One Hun

li lh
Bw!/////

PEDAGOGUE

pulaskt

white plains
hyde park
hall

port jefferson
schenectad)

. kingston
kitchawan
bay shore
massena
alban)

perry

porter corners
cambridge
delhi

albany

: : . phoenix

A : : . elmira

utica
F 3 - troy
kingston
= *
johnson city

é F ‘ . albany

F 5 hyndsville

troy

endicott

frankfort

Saugerties

F . homer

binghamton

5 5 ‘ johnstown
carlisle

troy

hancock

scotia

oswego

; j z 3 rip Je)
utica
waterloo
troy

beacon

AW
PEDAGOGUE

mountain, iris agnes
muffson, arline harriet
nachimson, harold
nealand, gertrude may
nestorson, elma miriam
nielson, carla dorothea
nolan, mary augusta
noone, margaret janet
nord, elsie lillian
norris, janet donaldson
ochod, anne corrine
odwell, lois claire
orzel, anne dorothea
osterhout, lillian helen
overhulse, jesse william
parry, idwal
patashnick, esther
paul, thurston tyler, jr.
payne, lillian marie
peterson, june carman
petronis, frank j.
petruccione, mary
porter, marion elizabeth
pratt, george william
premer, edith elizabeth
pritchard, grace lucille
pugsley, elsie dora rhoda
quimby, alma ethel
rafferty, robert david .
rall, clifford lewis
ramson, beatrice althea
reil, julia margaret
reiley, frances cecelia
reiner, ruth

reissig, clara wilhelmina

reutowich, virginia valentine

rich, evelyn mae

rich, helen harriet
riley, mary patricia
ripley, harriet e.
robarge, gladys marion

One Hundred Seventy-one

geneva
alban)
alban)
cohoes
schenectae
renssela
newburgh

& reene
albany
alban)
herkimer
downsville
amsterdam
hyde pare
germantown
granville
woodridge
castleton-on-hudson
binghamton
oxford
mechanicville
amsterdam
amsterdam
kingston
poughkeepsie
binghamton
southampton
kingston
norwich

170}
middletown
medina
waterviiet
albany
albany
Massapequa
albany
albany
cambridge
sherman
utica

1932
A.
BN!

rockwell, marian hester
rowland, esther lucille
rugge, helen dorothy
sage, ruth lucile
salmon, agnes mary
samson, mary rose 5
schlieder, geraldine elizabeth
schreiner, marie anna
seymour, raymond eugene
shapiro, rachel

sharlet, carolyn florence
shea, marion theresa .
sheehan, helena mary
simon, dorothy
singleton, doris louise
slawson, mary elizabeth
smith, helen hahn

smith, martha ann

smith, susan seabury .
sohl, catherine helen
spallen, rosalie catherine
spear, florence may
spector, samuel olivant
sperling, helen johanna
spicer, janet flora
staehle, evelyn marie .
stanchuk, florence cecelia
stebner, clara

stebner, ruth

stein, ruth shirley

stern, robert lewis
stevens, dorothy blanche
stevens, evelyn edna .
stevens, katharine marie
stewart, john joseph
stickles, blanche winifred
stiehl, katherine winifred
stoddard, margaret elizabeth
stoothoff, inez elizabeth
story, george

strong, margaret rebecca

One Hundred Seve

Bw /////

13} 2—~

—— PEDAGOGUE

es perance
albany
albany
albany
schenectad)
smithtown branch
carthage
webster
frankfort
glens falls
troy

5 troy
glens falls
albany
sacandaga rd.
. peekskill
alban
albany
albany
cambridge
troy

port jefferson
binghamton
albany
binghamton
hicksville
watervliet
hudson
hudson

n. tarrytown
albany
central valley
fort edward
wappinger falls
tro)

hudson
schenectaa}
constableville
5) onkers

avon

seneca falls

PE

stuart, catherine margaret

supera, julius

swanson, catherine olive
taylor, george leo
tenblad, emma pearl .

(Wa
DAGOGUE

ten eyck, harriet ganesvoort

torpey, william george

torrens, mary mc cullough

tramontana, jennie
tripp, marian hazel
trombly, ruth elaine
truland, jessie charlotte
tyler, mildred mary
tymeson, marian jeannette
van alstine, hilda louise
van epps, e. arlene

van leuvan, daniel |. .
van steenburgh, dorothy
vaughan, rosamond ella
vdoviak, anne doris
walker, marion josephine
wallace, eileen anne
walsh, elizabeth agnes
walsworth, margaret ¢
waugh, ruth aimee
webb, rose clara
wetterau, margaret louise
whipple, margaret peryl
white, marian virginia
wilbert, gertrude amelia

marguerita

willenbrock, dorothy matilda

williams, ruth elinor
wing, lucy florence
wright, edna mae
yergin, ruth evelyn
zabriskie, mary elizabeth
zarch, sylvia

zimmer, helen alice

- west winfie

. callicoon
frewsburg
plattsbu g
middleburgh
alb.

albany
newburgh

-stown
town

€ george
CODLESRI

n. 5. cohoe

cochocton ctr.

Me

weeds

Bf SOE,
SCENECIAA)

-s fort It
; y
fultonvi

m1iN¢

. webster

4 gber
yOnke

Pry 2
schod.

schenectad y

ANY

BY /H//
—— PEDAGOGUE

FAMOUS VISITORS AT STATE

CHRISTOPHER MORLEY

“Morley is a wit, a man of letters, and a personal force.”

COUNTEE CULLEN

“His verse has an emotional depth which is extraordinary. He etches his

emotions and pictures with acid clearness. Countee Cullen is a real poet.”

BERNARD OCKO

“Bernard Ocko is very rapidly taking his place as one of the brilliant violinists
of the day. Since 1925 when he won the much coveted Stadium Competitive
Prize to appear as soloist with the New York Philharmonic Society and ia
1926 the Naumburg Musical Foundation debut recital, he has forged ahead
in the concert field, appearing from coast to coast with extraordinary success.”

THE ABBEY THEATER IRISH PLAYERS

“As literary and cultural ambassadors from a small country to a large one

comes this group of inspired players of inspired plays. Seventeen years have
elapsed since the Abbey Players last visited America. yet their wonderful
acting and the vivid realities presented by their unusual plays are still poign-
antly remembered by all who heard them,”

One Hundred Seventy-four

1935 2
Bw////

AMM
—— PEDAGOGUE

HONOR SOCIETIES

as 1952,
WW

WE
PLDAGOGUE

MYSKANITIA

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

This organization leads in formulating student sentiment in matters relating
to student activities. These activities include: induction of freshmen into col-
lege customs, organization of the freshman class, guardianship of college tradi-
tions, preservation of student morale, direction of Campus Day program, and
Moving-Up Day.

The members are elected in the spring of their Junior year, and they are
made known Moving-Up Day, when the outgoing Myskania taps the new
Myskania. The members are chosen as follows: the Student Association elects
three qualified juniors by a popularity vote, besides the Student Association presi-
dent, who becomes an ex-officio member. The other eight, nine, or ten members
are chosen by the outgoing Myskania at its discretion.

Members
1932

Samuel Stanley Dorrance Helen Bourne Mead
Dorothy Jean Hall Kenneth Andrew Miller
Josephine Holt Isabel Jane Peard
Andrew Anthony Hritz George Philip Rice
Elizabeth Winifred Jackson Mildred Edith Smith

Mary Asenath Van Buren

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SIENUM

Signum Laudis is an honor society organized at State College in 1930. Its
purpose is to promote scholarship. Each year the ten per cent of the senior class
which has achieved the highest scholastic standing is admitted to membership.

Faculty Members

Dr. A. R: BRUBACHER

MARGARET HENRY

O fficers

MARGARITA GALUSHA

Mary Alexander
Lulu Charles

Nile Clemens

Ellen Dinneen
Sarah Fasoldt
Evelyn Fortmiller
Margaret Fortmiller
Florence Friedman

Margarita Galusha

Members
Frances Gaynor
Anna Goldman
Margaret Henry
Andrew Hritz
Inez Kelly
Sylvia Kline
Ruth Kronman

Bessie Levine

LAUDIS

Dr. W. METZLER
Dr. HAROLD W. THOMPSON

President

Secretary-Treasurey

Elizabeth McLaughlin
Helen Mead
Mary Esther Mead
Marion Nelson
George Rice
Catherine Riegal
Bernard Simon
Donald Whiston
Mary Wicks

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Di GCAMMA MU

Pi Gamma Mu, a National Social Science Honor Society, has more than one
hundred chapters in American colleges and universities. The Delta chapter of
New York was established at State College as Herodotus, an honor organization
for students in history. In 1927, it became affiliated with the national
organization.

Pi Gamma Mu has for its purpose the encouragement of undergraduate
study of the social sciences. Two juniors and from nine to eleven seniors who

1 have distinguished themselves in social science studies are elected to membership
each year.
Faculty Members

Miss Martha J. Albright Miss Elizabeth Shaver
Prof. C. A. Hidley Prof. Adam A. Walker

i Dr. David Hutchinson Dr. Donnal V. Smith
Dean Wm. H. Metzler Dr. Robert W. Fredericks

Honorary Members
j Miss Helen T. Fay Miss Sophie Rosenwieg

Mr. Stanley Heason Miss Erma H. Baer

i Mr. Lester T. Hubbard Mr. Guernsey T. Cross

j O fficer 5

MARGARET HENRY - President
KENNETH MILLER F ; Vice-President

ELIZABETH MCLAUGHLIN Secretar)

MARGARET KUuRILECZ Treasurer
i
Members
( Samuel S. Dorrance Andrew A. Hritz
Margarita Galusha Elizabeth McLaughlin
Margaret Henry Kenneth Miller
Catherine Reigel Bernard Simon
Charles Swick Mary Wicks
| Margaret Kurilecz Margaret Roohan
1

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ALDHKA PHI GAMMA

Kappa Chapter of Alpha Phi Gamma came to State College in March, 1928.
Membership in Alpha Phi Gamma is considered the highest journalistic honor
offered to undergraduates at State College. Alpha Phi Gamma is the only national
co-educational journalistic fraternity. Members are elected for meritorious serv ice

on their publications.

Honorary Members

Dr. A. R. Brubacher Dr. Harold Thompson
Dr. Harry Hastings

O fice rs

SAMUEL DORRANCE . : 4 X : A . President
ANDREW Hritz é 3 ‘ : ; First Vice-President
AUDREY FLOWERS. , : : . Second Vice-President
HELEN MEAD . i : : A a ‘ . Secretary
MICHAEL FROHLICH . . : ‘ : 3 ; Bailiff

Members

Sally Atkinson Andrew Hritz
Kathryn Belknap Bessie Levine
Vera Burns Alvina Lewis
Samuel Dorrance Helen Mead
Audrey Flowers George Rice
Michael Frohlich Laura Styn

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KAPPA PHI KAPPA

The Chi Chapter of Kappa Phi Kappa, a professional education fraternity,
was installed at State College on April 4, 1927. Membership in the fraternity
is limited to those men who have completed a minimum amount of work in
the education department and who have the character and ideals likely to make
them succeed in the teaching profession. Kappa Phi Kappa brings men promi-
nent in education to State College at frequent intervals who speak to the fraternit,
and lead discussions on educational topics.

O fficers
ANDREW Hritz . . : ‘i : F President
KENNETH MILLER . i ; ¢ . . Vice-President
DONALD WHISTON ; : : ; : Secretar)
ROBERT RANKINS . f : : - ‘ Treasure)

Faculty
Pres. A. R. BRUBACHER Pror. R. H. KirntTLAND  Pror. C. A. HIDLEY

Dean W.H. METZLER Pror. M. G. NELSON Pror. E. B. SouTH
Pror. A. K. BEIK Pror. J. M. SAYLes Pror. D. V. SMITH

Members

1932

Walter Anderson Kenneth Miller
Earl Bloomingdale Lloyd Moreland
Franklin Clark Robert Rankins
Michael Frohlich George Rice
Francis Harwood Curtis Rutenber
Lawrence Harper Jack Saroff
Harold Haswell Albert Strong
Andrew Hritz Charles Swick

Donald Whiston

1933
William Collins John Grosvenor
Gilbert DeLaura Raymond Harris
John Detlefson George Hisert
Bruce Filby Frank Young
Graduates
Alfred Basch Frederick Gray

One Hundred Ei:

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OMICRON NU
Beta Chapter
Established at State College 1913

It is the purpose of Omicron Nu to stimulate scholarship and provide leader-
ship among the students of Home Economics. It is an honor society, and only
juniors and seniors who have attained high scholarship in this field of work
are eligible for membership.

Faculty Advisor

Miss May FILLINGHAM

O flicers
MARGUERITE WILSON. i. . President and Treasurer
Mrs. FLORENCE D. FREAR ; : . Vice-President
HONOR MULFORD . ‘ ; Secretary and Reporter

Members

Marguerite Wilson Honor Mulford

Hundred Eighty-six

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DELTA OMEGA

Founded 1890

Faculty Members

Miss Agnes Futterer Miss Elizabeth Shaver

Miss Katherine Peltz Miss Edith O. Wallace

Miss Eunice A. Perine Miss Anne Cushing
Miss Charlotte Loeb

Members
1932
Julia Fister Ruth Isherwood
Josephine Holt Elizabeth Jackson

Magdalena Thomson

1933
Naomi Albrecht Marjorie Morton
Dorothy Cronk Mary Pitkin
Elizabeth Gordon Esther Woodburn
Rosalind Kapps Ethel Zotz

1934
Elinor Andre Christine Paland
Elizabeth Kammerer Betty Rasmussen
Elsa Kjolseth Catherine Simmerer
Dorothy Klose Grace Welling

Louise Wells

wee 1952
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ETA PHI

Founded 1896

Honorary Members

Dr. and Mrs. Harry Birchenough Dr. and Mrs. Milton Nelson
Dr. and Mrs. Frederick Candlyn Dr. and Mrs. John Sayles

Miss Marion Chesebrough Dr. and Mrs. Adna Risley

Mr. Edward Cooper Prof. and Mrs. Jesse Stinard
Dr. and Mrs. Harry Hastings Dr. and Mrs. Harold Thompson

Members

1932
Marion Abrams Florence Friedman
Kathryn Belknap Dorothy Hall
Margaret Betts Rosemary Harvey
Sara Brierly Annis Kellogg
Frances Davis Helen Mead
Ellen Dineen Anne Nesbitt
1933
Abbie Dineen Madeline McKeon
Charlotte Lohnas Frances McMahon

Violet Putnam

1934
Betty Arnold Helen Dennison-Wheeler
Catherine Cannon Ruth France
Letitia Connelly Helen Mahar
Marguerite Crutchley Virginia Simons

Alvina Trentelman

One Hundred Ninety-one

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KAPPA DELIA

Founded 1897

Honorary Members

Miss Mary Cobb Prof. and Mrs. Richmond Kirtland
Dr. and Mrs. Howard Do Bell Miss Anna E. Pierce

Dr. and Mrs. Clarence Hale Dr. and Mrs. C. E. Powers

Miss E. Marion Kilpatrick Miss Virginia Smith

Prof. and Mrs. George York

Members

1932
Elinor Mullen Virginia Slocum
Marguerite Northrup Audrey Sullivan
Isabel Peard Catherine Traver
1933
Helen Cromie Ruth Reynolds
Marie Judd Frances Root
Dorothy King Clarice Taylor
Isabel Lawrence Aline Wolf
1934
Esther Davies Virginia Sherrill
Marion Lloyd Thelma Smith
Jane MacConnell Eleanor Waterbury
Ruth Meller Marian Welch

Mildred White

One Hundred Ninety-three

es 1952
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Psi GAMMA

Founded 1898

Honorary Members

Prof. and Mrs. Adam Walker Miss Helen Phillips

Prof. and Mrs. Winfred Decker Miss Minnie Scotland

Dr. Caroline Croasdale Miss Elizabeth Van Denburgh
Mrs. Florence Frear Miss Caroline Lester

Miss R=th Kelley Mrs. Eunice Messent

Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Terwilliger Mr. and Mrs. Chester Terrill

Members

1932
Helen Burgher Frances Heydt
Louise Carlow Marie Stiefvater
Ruth Hartin Marguerite Wilson
1933
Evelyn Armstrong Dorothy Durey
Bertha Buhl Evelyn Esmay
Florence Dorn Adelaide Lindt

Jean Watkins

1934
Marjorie Barron Helen Kluge
Ruth Bedell Margaret Jane Martin
Catherine Brown Hannah Parker
June Carey Hilda Proper
Eleanor Coutant Almira Russ
Leora Geddes Eunice Sisbower
Harriette Goodenow Harriet Van Wely
Dorothy Griffin Marjorie Wicks

we 19 52
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CHI SIEMA THETA

Founded 1908

Honorary Members
Mrs. Anna K. Barsam
Miss Mary Conklin
Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Deyo

Members
1932
Mildred Crowley
Leah Dorgan
Frances Gaynor
Margaret Starr

1933
Katherine Baker
Mary Doherty
Mary Freeman
Mary Gardiner
Margaret Roohan

1934
Helen Doherty
Jane Doocey
Alice Fitzpatrick
Katherine Heffern

Frances Higgins

wen 1952

Miss Margaret Hitchcock
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Mahar
Miss Katherine Wheeling

Alice Giblin
Mary Kaut
Helen Rohel

Katherine Long
Katherine Moore
Ellen Murphy
Mary Agnes Reilly

Maybelle Matthews
Mary Moore

Ellen Noon

Emma Pantalone
Katherine Simmons

One Hundred Ninety-seven

A
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1932

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CAMMA KAPPA PHI

H

Prof. and Mrs. C. A. Hidley

Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Beaver

Prof. and Mrs. Bronson

Founded 1913

onorary Members

Mrs. Ernest Spencer

Miss Goldena Bills

Miss Elizabeth

Miss Blanche Avery

Martha Davis

Marjorie de Heus

Eleanor Gage

Lois Burgdorf
Carolyn Christiansen

Mary Gainor

Rita Brownhardt
Kathryn Haug

Marion Mleczek

Anderson

Members

1932
Marie Greene
Helen Haake
Marjorie Longmuir

1933
Margaret Rausch
Marie Redmond
Margaret Service

1934

Jean Murray
Azalia Norris

Marie Prindle

Barbara Winter

One Hundred Ninety

1932
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BETA ZETA

Founded 1916

Honorary Members
Miss Helen Halter Miss Ellen Stokes
Dr. and Mrs. Donnal Smith Miss Laura Thompson

Members

1932
Ruth Brezee Mildred E. Meyer
Marjorie Lockwood M. Asenath Van Buren
1933
Ruth Bueche Ruth Harter
Carol Cederquist Ruth Putnam
Marjorie Domser Laura Styn
Persis Foster Alice Vaughn
1934
Lois Benjamin M. Lorraine Grow
Glendeen Bigelow Babette Hutzenlaub
Edith De Hollander Elizabeth Johnson
Dorothy Frazer Lois Paterson

Kathryn Wilkins

Two Hundred One

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Pi ALDHA TAU

Founded 1923
Honorary Members
Mrs Louis Mayersohn Mrs. A. Strauss
Members
1932

Edith Levine Jane Shulman

Lillian Weinberg

1933
Edna Epstean Betty Simmons

Rena Solomon

1934

Matilda Centner Lena Gould

Two Hundred Three

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PHI DELTA

Alpha Chapter

Founded 1924

Honorary Members

Dr. A. R. Brubacher
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Moose
Dr. and Mrs. C. A.

Members

1932
Sally Atkinson
Erma Brown
Vera Burns
Jean Credle
Doris Dunning

Marjorie Wilson

1933
Ruth Boyd
Marjorie Haas
Florence Smith

1934
Celia Bishop
Jean Craigmile
Ellen Downing
Gertrude Kufahl
Elizabeth Zuend

a 19 52

Woodard

Miss Mary Osborne
Miss Alice E. Ryder

Hazel English
Margaret Gottschalk
Virginia Hawkins
Elizabeth Humphrey
Clarice Simmons

India Newton
Grace Palmer

Elizabeth Lapp
Anna McKee
Minnie McNickle
Isabelle Winter

Two Hundred Five

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ALDBFA RHO

Founded 1926
Honorary Members

Mrs. Abram R. Brubacher Mrs. David Hutchison

Miss Alice Kirkpatrick Dr. and Mrs, Robert Frederick

Members

1932
Flora Bessee Ruth Goldsmith
Dorothy Burleigh Esther Higby
Claire Coventry Sara Hill
Carolyn Fitzgerald Julia Hinaman

Mary Wicks

1933
Dorothy Ruteshouser Mae Smith

Helen Van Duzee

1934
Geraldine Martin Rose Sovick
Elizabeth Moat Elizabeth Steele
Florence Ottoson Frances Weber
Doris Shaver Mary Williams

Two Hundred Seven

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EPSILON BETA PHI

Founded 1926

Honorary Members

Mr. Rutherford Baker Miss Margrid Hagelberg
Senator William T. Byrne Mr. William Vollbrecht
Members
1932
Mary Alexander Margaret Henry
Kay Dooley Ruth Hubbell
Sally Fasoldt Louise Koory
Betty Fischer Ethel Pitcher
Margarita Galusha Gertrude Terwilliger

Edith Cincebox

1933
May Gilmore Helen Snyder
Vivian Lange Helen Vrooman
Kay Millis Gertrude Spurbeck
Marion Roddy Helen Cowen
1934
Betty Finch Margaret Halladay
Dorothy Grainer Betty O’Connor
Mary Esther Halladay Stella Bienick

Marion Cornell

Two Hundred Nine

1932
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CAMMA PHI SIEMA

Founded 1927

Honorary Members
Miss Arlene Preston Mr. and Mrs. Tieszen

Members
Graduate Student

Suzanne Sroka

1932
Marion Cominsky Melva Mace
Margaret Herr Frances Mazar
Loretta Murray

1933
Margaret Cannon Mercedes Martin
Mary Kelleher Marguerite O'Donnel
Lillian Lally Marie Tessier
Eleanor Leary Marjorie Wade
Mollie Lindsey Mary Wald

1934
Hilda Bradley Marion Erwin
Katherine Cuneen Louise Kelley
Betty Delaney Jane McDonald

Emily Pettigrew

Two Hundred Eteven

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SIGMA ALPHA

Miss Margaret Betz
Miss Helen Crooks
Mr. Kenneth Davis

Dorothy Allen
Martha Candee
Genevieve Downey
Elsie Holmes

Alice Anderson
Hilma Bergstrom
Anne Burritt
Margaret Cole

Dorothy Brown
Marie Doherty
Madolyn Dwyer

Founded 1928

Honorary Members

Miss Madeline Gilmour
Dr. Matie Greene
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Prue

Members

1932
Hilda Laubenstein
Jane Moore
Katherine Scott
Therese Wienecke
1933

Harriet Dunn

Edna Hicks

Carolyn Kramers

Elizabeth MacCombs
Georgia Roberts

1934
Louise Godfrey
Mildred Johnson
Louise Morris

Two Hundred Thirteen

ws 19 52
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PHI LAMBDA

Honorary Members

Founded 1928

Mr. C. Luther Andrews

Miss Annette Dobbin

Nile Clemens
Inez Kelley

Gertrude Black
Alice Cornell
Ethel Dyckman
Dorothy Madigan
Hazel Sutton

Doris Bell
Agnes Erb
Elsie Keller

Members

1932

Almena Perkins

1933

1934

Miss Grace Martin
Dr. Marion E. Smith

Esther Mead
Dorothy McGinnis

Mary Trela
Beatrice Tompkins
E. Beatrice Wagner
Lucille Wamsley
Eleanor Wilson

Genevieve Shorey
Martha Smith
Luella Waite

Two Hundred Fifteen

es 1952
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KAPPA DELTA RHO

Founded 1905

Gamma Chapter established June, 1915

Honorary Members

Dr. David Hutchison
Professor R. H. Kirtland

Dr. A. R. Brubacher
Dr. Harry W. Hastings

Dr. Harlan Horner Professor John M. Sayles
Dr. Arthur Kennedy Beik
Alumni on Faculty
Dr. M. G. Nelson Mr. Ralph A. Beaver

1932
Robert Goodrich Robert Rankins
Harold Haswell George Rice
Lloyd Moreland Carl Tarbox

1933
William Collins Ben Ingraham
John Detlefson Charles Juckett
Bruce Filby Frank McFarland
John Grosvenor William Reagan
George Hisert Clayton Stewart

Ray Harris
1934

Roger Bancroft
George Ketcham
Charles Kissam
William Nelson
Phillip Ricciardi

Members

Jack Saunders
Renwick Arnott
Donald Benedict
Osmer Brooks
Robert Robinson

William Rogers

Two Hundred Seventeen

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ALPHA EPSILON PHI

Eta Chapter
Founded 1909

Honorary Member

Mrs. Saitee Baumann Mrs. Samuel Caplan
Mrs. E. A. Marx

Members

1932
Ruth Kronman Selma Sims
Selma Schlacter Mildred Smith
Helen Silver Hermanie Williams
1933
Clara Feinstein Evelyn Greenberg
Marcia Gold Evelyn Lowenberg

Edith Tepper

1934
Hilda Bookheim Shirley Diamond

Sara Brandes Ida Weiner

Two Hundred Eighteen

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INTERSORORITY COUNCIL

MaARJORIE LOCKWOOD

LILLIAN WEINBERG

VERA BURNS

JOSEPHINE HOLT

DELTA OMEGA
Era PHI

Kappa DELTA

Pst GAMMA

Cur SIGMA THETA

President

Vice-President

Secretar)

Treasures

Members

ALPHA RHO

. Beta Zeta

Pi Alpha Tau

Phi Delta

Delta Omega

ALPHA EPSILON PHI
GAMMA Kappa PHI
BETA ZETA

Pi ALPHA TAU

Pui DELTA

Two Hundred Nineteen

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ORGANIZATIONS

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EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
Organized 1921

The Executive Council, which consists of the Student Association officers,
and the Class Presidents, aims to consolidate non-academic interests of all college
activities into a unit, The Student Association. Educators and other speakers,
prominent in the fields in which the student body are most interested, are brought
by the council to address the Student Association.

O fficers
ISABEL PEARD, 32 . F ; ; ‘ n President
KATHERINE Moore, °33 . A ; j Vice-President
GRENFELL RAND, 34. 3 2 ‘ ; Secretar)
Members

Dorothy Hall, ° William Nelson, '34
Katherine Long, '33 Clifford Rall, °35

Robert Robinson, '34

Two Hundred Twenty-three

es 1952,
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STUDENT BOARD OF FINANCE

blished 1919

Student Board of Finance arranges the financing of student activities. Its
duties include the organization of a budget of expense, the recommendation of
the amount of the annual tax to the students, the collection of the tax. the
authorization of the disbursement of money in accordance with the budget, and
the holding and investing of all money received from the tax and from all student
activities governed by the board.

O fficers
Pror. GEORGE M. York j ; ‘ Chairman
PrRoF, CLARENCE A. HIDLEY . - ‘ ' Treasures

Members

1932

Andrew Hritz Ruth Hartin
1933

Edward Coyne Ellen Murphy
1934

Renwick Arnott

Two Hundred Twenty-five

1932
WYER

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DRAMATIC AND ART
ASSOCIATION

Founded 1919

State College Dramatic and Art Association is a charter member of the Inter-
collegiate Dramatic Association (1921) and of the American Federation of Arts

(1921).
Council Members
O fficers
HELEN MEAD . : ; ; : ; ; . President
FRANCES MCMAHON . ‘ ; : ; . Secretary
THELMA SMITH F : : ; A . Treasurer
Faculty Members
Miss AGNES FUTTERER Miss EUNICE PERINE
Honorary Member
Dr. BRUBACHER
Undergraduate Members
1932
Helen Mead Isabel Peard
1933
FRANCES MCMAHON FRANCES ROOT
1934
HELEN MAHAR THELMA SMITH
Association Program (1931-1932)
Exhibition of Mural Paintings from Roerich Museum . : : g October
Lecture by Christopher Morley. 3 : : : ‘ : . November
Elementary Dramatics Class Plays : : January
“Dreamy Kid” ; ; - A ‘ ‘ . . Eugene O’Neill
“The Dear Departed”. fe E . rf . Stanley Houghton
‘Fancy Free” . ; : : 3 : : . Stanley Houghton
Exhibition of Etchings . ; ; i i : i : ; ; February
Abbey Players ; : ; , § ; 5 ; j : April
‘The Playboy of the Western World”. i : : J. M. Synge
“Riders to the Sea”. : : é ‘ E - J. M. Synge
“The White-Headed Boy” ‘ 5 é ‘ : : L. Robinson
“Cathleen Ni Hoolihan” je F 4 ; : : W. B. Yeats
Advanced Dramatics Class Play ; ; ; : P : é Z May

Two Hundred Twenty-seve

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MUSIC ASSOCIATION

Founded 1921

Music Association aims to foster an appreciative interest in good music
among the members of the student body and in the community.

MUSIC COUNCIL
Faculty Members

Dr. T. Frederick H. Candlyn Prof. Adam Alexander Walker

O fficers

KATHERINE BELKNAP, '32 F : ; a President
JEAN CREDLE, '32 . # - ; ; 2 Secretar)
KATHERINE LONG, "33. ‘ “ : 4 Treasurer

Council Members
Elizabeth Jackson, '32 Asenath Van Buren, '32

Helen Cromie, "33

ASSOCIATION PROGRAM 1931-1932

The 'Westminstée Chote of 1itiaca’.. ...5-01..6.010 seers carewiteneied November 19,
The State College Women's Chorus, assisted by

Bernard: Ocko; Violinist. os. 6 sos icesis wise eee February 19, 1932
Alexandre Gretchaninoff and Albert Rappaport.............-. April 22, 1
The State College Women’s Chorus, assisted by

Phyllis Keaeuter, ‘Violincellist: 6. .<..25o%s 6am, alee aieis's ose MAY 1D;

Two Hundred Twenty-nine

1932
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DEBATE COUNCIL

The Debate Council, organized in 1927, has as its aim the promotion of
interclass and intercollegiate debates and the creation of interest in them. Two
members are chosen in the spring of their Sophomore year on the basis of interest
and ability in debating.

Faculty Member

Dr. Harold Thompson

O fficers
RuTH KRONMAN, °32 x e : : “ President
KENNETH MILLER, 32. . 5 “4 js Vice-President
Marcia GOLD, '33 . : : : : : Secretar)

VIOLET PUTNAM, °33

inager of Debate

Members

Margaret Rausch, '33 George Rice, '32

Two Hundred Thirty-one

1932
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yY. W. Cw A.

“To realize full and creative life through a growing knowledge of God,
and to have a part in making this life possible for others” is the purpose which
unites the members of State College’s Young Women’s Christian Association,
which welcomes into its fellowship all students in sympathy with this purpose.
Activities through which the Association strives to carry out this purpose include:
a candle-lighting service; Sunday afternoon Vespers; Morning Watch Meetings
at Christmas and Easter; discussion forums for student problems, and _ social
service enterprises ranging from the providing of Thanksgiving baskets for needy
families to the management of second-hand book sales for busy college students.
Through delegates to the various state and national conferences and, in co-opera-
tion with the Y. M. C. A., it brings outside speakers to the College. By means
of a Christmas bazaar or masquerade, breakfast hikes, teas, etc., Y. W. also helps

to supply some of the social needs of college life.

Cabinet 1931-1932

ASENATH VAN BUREN . ; = : ‘ President
HELEN BURGHER . ; , ; ‘: Vice-President
JEAN WATKINS. : : : : Secretary
Louise WELLS ; ; ‘ ; : Treasurer
Laura STYN : : i Under graduate-Re presentative

Committee Chairmen

HELEN BURGHER . : : : ‘ 2 Meetings
NILE CLEMENS é : é 3 Gi . Social Service
JOSEPHINE HOLT . ; : E ‘ : . Bazaar
ELIZABETH GORDON i : ; 5 ‘i . Masic
THELMA SMITH . ; : : : : Publicity
ALMIRA Russ ‘ ; .  Conference-Conventions
FRANCES MCMAHON : ; : ; . Membership

GENEVIEVE DOWNEY ; ; ; ; House President
RUTH GOLDSMITH . ; ; : , : . Social
KATHERINE SIMMERER . 3 j ; j Devotions
EsTHER WOODBURN ' : : 3 ; Booktable
DEAN ANNA E. PIERCE . 5 , . Honorary Advisor
KATHRYN WILKINS a ; ; % : Reporter

Two Hundred Thirty-three

wee 1952
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NEWMAN CLUB

Organized 1917

"Cor ad cor loquitor”—"Heart speaks to heart,’” is the motto of Newman
Club, a member of the Federation of College Catholic Clubs. It aims to unite
Catholic students spiritually, intellect ally, and socially.

Officer s
ELIZABETH MCLAUGHLIN ; : . President
FRANCES MAZAR ~-. ; ‘ : , . Vice-President
LouIsE DuRKIN . : J : - . Secretar)
Lucy O'SHEA . : : ‘ ; 5 Treasurer
HELEN ROHEI F : A 5 : ‘ Re porter

Advisory Board
REV. JOHN COLLINS Miss ELizABETH MCLAUGHLIN
Miss ELIZABETH CAREY Miss FRANCES MAZAR

Miss CATHERINE FARNAN Miss LoutsE DURKIN

Senior Councilors

GERTRUDE CORA Mary A. FORTUNE

> }
Junior Councilors

FLORENCE KORNMEYER MARION TANGNEY

Sophomore Councilors

HitpA BRADLEY ALICE FITZPATRICK

Junior Councilors to Freshmen

ANNUNCIATA COSTA MARTHA SHEEHAN
MARGUERITE O'DONNELL Mary TRELA
Chaplain 3 : Rev. HouNn J. Coins

Two Hundred Thir

WR

r /
— PEDAGOGUE

1a ——
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I
PEDAGOGUE

EDWARD ELDRED POTTER CLUB

The Edward Eldred Potter Club strives to weld a permanent bond between
undergraduates at State College and those men who have graduated. It aims
to promote the teaching profession, and undertakes to prove to all that State
College is an institution to be honored and respected. The members are pii-

marily interested in the college and its activities.

Members

1931
Alfred D. Basch Douglas Lincoln
C. Walter Driscoll Russell W. Ludlum
Arthur P. Jones Lawrence C. Newcomb

Edward Osborne

1932
Walter V. Anderson Michael Frohlich
Samuel S. Dorrance Andrew A. Hritz
Kenneth A. Miller

1933

Ralph Harris Bernard S. Kerbel

1934
Stewart Gay Grenfell N. Rand

Two Hundred Thirty-seven

as 19 52,
WW

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r U
——— PEDAGOGUE

MENORAH SOCIETY

Menorah Society, a member of the Inter-Collegiate Menorah Association,
aims, by means of culture, service, and sociability, to arouse and maintain a
Jewish consciousness and to stimulate an interest in Judaism.

Officers
DELLA LEIMAN, '33 . 5 : : ; : . President
SELMA SCHLACTER, °32 : 4 ; ; . Vice-President
EpiTH TEPPER, °33 P : ; ; 4 . Secretar)
Lippy LEvINE, '34 ‘ i a 4 ; i . Treasure

Faculty Advisoy

Miss CHARLOTTE LOEB

10 Hundred Thirty-eight

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PEDAGOGUE

CHEMISTRY CLUB

Chemistry Club aims to foster the spirit of chemical research. Trips to indus-
trial plants and student papers on new discoveries and inventions of interest along
chemical lines help to gain its aims.

Faculty
Pror. B. S. BRONSON Mr. J. STURM
Mr. W. G. KENNEDY Mr. D. V. TiEszEN
Miss M. Betz Miss S. MOSHER
Offi cers
ROBERT RANKINS : a ; ‘ : ; . President
GEORGE HISERT ; F - . Vice-President
KATHERINE BELKNAP F : ‘ ; : . Secretary
JANE Moore . : ‘ ‘ : : n . Treasurer

Two Hundred Thirty-nine

WW

MLN
en — PEDAGOGUE

COMMERCE CLUB

The Commerce Club aims to present problems of Commercial Education
and gives instruction in practical business situations, with a view of stimulating
active interest in the business world. Commerce Club also aims to promote
social activities among students in the Department of Commerce. It welcomes
into membership any student who elects Commerce as a major or a minor

interest.
Faculty Members
PROFESSOR GEORGE M. YorK Miss E. ANDERSON
Mr. J. M. TeRRILt Miss B. AVERY
Mr. H. M. TERWILLIGER Mr. E. L. Cooper
Officer f
Lucy H. Ostrosky : ‘ , . ; President
FRANCES E. DrINON z ‘ : Vice-President
ANNE Mowsray . ; : 3 : : Secretary
RUTH PUTNAM ‘ ‘ i k . ; Treasurer
Rost ROSENBECK . ‘ 5 : % 2 Reporter

Two Hundred Forty

1
Aw //i//

\\WE
PLDAGOGUE

BIOLOGY CLUB

Biology Club aims to bring students in closer touch with plants and animals,
to learn to understand them and to appreciate their value; also to preserve and
perpetuate the beauties of nature, and to teach others to appreciate and guard
nature's gifts. All who are interested in Biology are eligible to become mem-
bers of the club.

Faculty Members
PROFEssOR C. A. WOODARD Miss MINNIE B. SCOTLAND
Dr. GERTRUDE E. DouGLas Miss RuTH C. RAYNOR
Mr. KENNETH Davis

O ficers

WINIFRED LANSING : 3 é ‘ ; President
CorRINE FAULK . : j r Vice-President
LILLIAN HOWE : : : . Secretary-Treasurer
Mary KOSEGARTEN : : 5 3 Field Secretar)
CAROL CEDERQUIST i ‘ ; , Club Historian
ANITA SOBELESKI . : 5 ; . Editor of “Leaves”
MARGARET GAZLAY ; ; : Senior Representative
HitMA BERGSTROM ; ; 7 Junior Representative

Two Hundred Forty-one

1932
NWR

 /
PEDAGOGUE

HOME ECONOMICS CLUB

The Home Economics Club aims to promote a good fellowship among the
students of the Home Economics Department, to inspire loyalty to the depart-
ment and to the college, to offer an opportunity for developing initiative and
executive ability, and to develop a professional attitude through contact with the

Home Economics leaders brought to the club as speakers.

O fficers
MARGUERITE WILSON ; ‘ ; H ; . President
MARJORIE DE HEus . ; : : : . Vice-President
JEAN CREDLE . : : . : a; : . Treasurer
ALICE FLEMING é * ; A : . Secretary

Two Hundred Forty-two

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PLDAGOGUL :

ve

CLASSICAL CLUB

Founded 1923

Through meetings and social gatherings, Classical Club aims to stimulate
interest in the classics and to promote friendship among the students of classical

literature.
Faculty Members
Dr. A. R. BRUBACHER Miss L. A. JOHNSON
Miss E. O. WALLACE Miss M. H. CHESEBROUGH
O fhicers

DorotHy MCGINNIss_—. A F : . First Consul
ANNUNCIATA COSTA ‘ : 5 ; Second Consul
IsABEL LAWRENCE . ‘é : ; ; . Scriptor
MARION TANGNEY . 3 5 5 P $ Quaestor
CLARICE TAYLOR . , : : ‘ ; Nuntius

Two Hundred Forty-three

WR,

tL
PEDAGOOUE

SPANISH CLUB |

The aim of Spanish Club is to arouse an interest in Spanish speaking coun-
tries, their art, history, customs, and culture. Anyone who is interested may
become a member. Each year the club presents a Spanish carnival in which
are portrayed Spanish royalty, dances, songs, and arts.

Faculty Member

PROFESSOR J. STINARD

O ffice rs

Rose BAXTER j _ é * 2 ; President
Dorotuy WEEKS... ee Vice-President
EVELYN EsMAY : ; : : Secretar)
EUGENIE MILLARD . ; ‘ : : Treasurer

Two Hundred Forty-four

1)
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FRENCH CLUB

The French Club has for its aim fluency in French speech and appreciation
of the French people, their art, customs, government, history, and education.
It also tends through its monthly meetings and social gatherings to promote

friendship among the students of French.

Miss CHARLOTTE LOEB

KATHERINE DOOLEY
MariE TESSIER
MarIiE LOUISE SHARON
JOHN GROSVENOR .
CAROLYN KRAMERS

Faculty Advisor

O fficers

President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
Reporter

Two Hundred Forty-five

WY

YU
PEDAGOGUE-————

STATE COLLEGE TROUBADOURS

The only men’s social organization in the college strives to promote good
will, good fun, and good fellowship. The organization is self-supporting by
virtue of a minstrel and entertainment presented each spring.

Faculty Advisor

Mr. PAUL SHEATS

Officers
ROBERT R. RANKINS . 3 ; : : : . President
J. Bruce Finsy . : : : : : . Vice-President
GEORGE KETCHAM.. : ; ; : ; . Secretar)
JOHN GROSVENOR : : ‘ F : . Treasurer

Two Hundred Forty-six

tk ys———F

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PEDAGOGUE

MATHEMATICS CLUB

Mathematics Club is an organization sponsored by the students of mathe-
matics for the purpose of promoting an interest in the field and broadening the
background of prospective teachers. The aims of the club are attained by monthly
meetings at which interesting and unusual problems are presented.

The prerequisite for membership is the successful completion of one semester
of Analytical Geometry.

O fficers
INEZ A. KELLEY ‘ : : , 5 ; . President
CoRINNE FAULK i ; ; : ; . Vice-President
KATHERINE LONG : : ; é ; : . Secretar)
WIHINIFRED BENEDICT . : : Z : 3 . Treasures
Miss ELLEN C. STOKES : ‘ : : . Faculty Advisor

CANTERBURY CLUB

Canterbury Club, a unit of the National Student Council of the Protestant
Episcopalian Church, offers to Episcopalian students and all those interested an
opportunity to unite for spirituality, sociability and service.

Two of the annual events of the club are a fall meeting at the home of Mrs.
W. B. Van Rensselaer, and a Christmas party for the little girls of Trinity Institute.

O fficer 5
REV. CHARLES W. FINDLAY . ‘ F : : . Chaplain
Miss ELIZABETH VAN DENBURGH A : . Faculty Advisor
CLARICE SIMMONS. ‘ ‘ : 7 : . President
ETHEL ZOTZ . ‘ . : 5 : . Vice-President
MiriaAM Woop . ‘ y 2 j ; . Secretary
HONOR MULFORD ; i k : 2 : . Treasurer
FRANCES KELLER ; 4 A , 5 A . Reporter

Two Hundred Forty-seven

WR,

=~
<
1d

5
i)
s
5

1952
BwI///

AMM
PEDAGOGUE

SYDDUM FALL

225-7 Ontario Street
Founded 1917
Faculty

ANNA E. PIERCE

Officers

LucitLE E. WAMSLEY . : ‘ : President
HELEN BUCKLEY . : } : Vice-President
M. FRANCES PRATT : ; ; i : Secretar)
ALMA E. QUIMBY . : : : F i Treasurer

Members
1932
Helen Cragg Virginia Pratesi
Frances Pratt

1933
Margaret Odell Dora Gaskill
Lucille Wamsley
1934
Helen Buckley Martha Howell
Marie Doherty Eunice Sisbower
Madalyn Dwyer Rose Sovick

Lorraine Van Deventer

1935
Zenobia Carrara Lillian Payne
Aileen Dexter Grace Pritchard
Margaret Elwell Alma Quimby
Ruth English Valentine Reutowich
Edith Estabrooks Elizabeth Slawson
Lozetta Geehin Margaret Strong
Marion Heinemann Emma Tenblad
Lorraine Loder Mary Torrens
Dorothy Meserve Margaret Walsworth
Margaret J. Moore Ruth Williams
Lois Odwell Ruth Yergin

Two Hundred Foriy-

1932
YW

eat

1 ——
Bw!)

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PEDAGOGUE

NEWMAN HOUSE

741 Madison Avenue

Founded 1922

O fficers
Miss A. K. MAXWELL
Miss SARAH FITzPATRICK
LouisE DuRKIN
HELEN GILLIGAN
Mary McDOoNaLp
HELEN DOHERTY

Social Directress
Social Directress
President
Vice-President
Secretar)
Treasures

ALICE

Rose Baxter
Gertrude Cora
Louise Durkin
Gaetana Ferlanda
Mary Alice Fortune

Annunciata Costa
Marion Feary

Hilda Bradley
Doris Bullard
Katherine Cunneen
Olympia D’Anito
Helen Danahy

Elizabeth Bennett
Beatrice Burns
Helen Coon
Louise Dawson
Jeanette Durr
Rosemary Doyle

FITZPATRICK
Lucy O'SHEA

Members
1932
Helen Gilligan
Mary Kaut
Mary McDonald
Elizabeth McLaughlin
Esther Lawler

1933
Mary Freeman
Florence Kornmeyer

1934
Helen Doherty
Helen Davitt
Alice Fitzpatrick
Anne Hermann

1935
Margaret Delaney
Pearl Hamelin
Catherine Kearney
Helen Kelly
Kathleen Kenny
Margaret McCann
Katherine Morgan

Reporte ;
Alumni Representative

May Moore
Lucy O'Shea
Lucy Ostrosky
Stella Putnam
Mary Quick

Martha Sheehan
Marion Tangney

Louise Kelly
Jane McDonald
Emma Pantalone
Helen Perry
Helen Pierce

Mary Mazar
Julia Reil

Gladys Robarge
Marie Schreiner
Helena Sheehan
Gertrude Wilbert

Two Hundred Fifty-on

a 19352

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1932

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DAGOG

Named for the First President of State College, David Page
131 South Lake Avenue

MARGARET HERR
ANNE MCKEE .

ELIZABETH SALESE

LEAH BRADT

Leah Bradt

Josephine Ball
Dorothy Geehin
Ethel Hasbrouck

Helen Faucett
Alice Hoyland
Libby Levine
Anne McKee

Anna Alamillo
Ruth Brooks
Katherine Crapser
Ruth Crutchley
Rose Dabrusin
Mildred Facer
Rose Ford

PE UE

Founded 1924
O ffice rs

Members

Graduate Student

Lillian Hughes
1932
Margaret Herr
1955
Eleanor Ketcham

Carol Nichols
Mildred Quick
1934
Theresa Mach
Sara Paledino
Elizabeth Salese

1935
Catherine Fox
Mary Gruber
Doris Howe
Frances Israel
Gladys Kohler
Anna Koren
Margaret Lowry

Audrey Flowers

President
Vice-President
Secretar)

Treasurer

Dorothy Ruteshouser
Mae Smith
Bertha Spitz

Nancy Stephen
Katherine Wagner
Rose Weitsmann
Isabelle Winter

Mary Nolan
Betty Premer
Elsie Pugsley
Geraldine Schlieder
Catherine Sohl
Margaret Wetterau
Mary Zabriskie
Two Hundred Fifty-thr

WW

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PEDAGOGUE

y. W. C. Aw. HOUSE

219 Ontario Street

Founded 1918

O fficers
GENEVIEVE P. DOWNEY . A . ; President
GERTRUDE M. Lortus . : ‘ : Vice-President
DorotHy E. ATWELL . : = : Secretary
Harriet M. DUNN 5 5 ‘ ; é Treasurer
Betty E. GREGORY ‘ : : : Reporter

Members

1932
Genevieve P. Downey

1933
Harriet M. Dunn Isabel D. Hewitt

1934
Dorothy E. Atwell Gertrude M. Loftus
Agnes M. Crouch Alice C. McEwan
Babette M. Hutzenlaub Myrtle Stowell

1935
Celia Collins Vivian Jones
Janet Delaney Lucille Manning
Betty E. Gregory Dorothy B. Stevens

Two Hundred Fifty-fivz

a 19 52
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PEDAGOGUE

1932

Ba //////

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PEDAGOGUE ay

WRES® HALL

O fficers

MuRIEL STUART, '32 . : ; j ; i . President
Louise OsGoop, ‘33. : e : . Secretary and Treasurer

1932
Elma Albert Sarah Gulick
Ruth Jones Betty Scanlan
Evelyn Fortmiller Isabel Stevens
Margaret Fortmiller Muriel Stewart

Kathryn Tuthill

1933
Alice Cary Anne Mowbray
Marion Herman Louise Osgood

Eleanor Wilson

1934
Dorothy Barker Virginia Haight
Helen Gates Dorothy Munyer
Helen Gottschalk Hilda Proper
Miriam Wood Barbara Winter
1935
Harriett Coulter Marian Lyon
Sylvia Galloway Sylvia Mann
Hilda Heines Evelyn Staehle
Evelyn Hoyt Rosamond Vaughan

Two Hundred Fifty-seven

1932
WNW

BY

—- PEDAGOGUE

1942
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PEDAGOGUE :

COLLEGE HOUSE

Founded 1928

O fhicers
President
Vice-President

Secretary

ALBERT STRONG
ROBERT

EpWARD SCHWORM

ROBINSON
ANTHONY DorsINO Sergeant-at-Arms

G. Ltoyp MORELAND Manager

Alfred Basch

Fay Blum
Earl Bloomingdale
John Lyons

Ormond Guyer

Horton Amidon
Donald Benedict
Anthony Dorsino
Theodore Eckert
George Ketcham

Milton Goldberger
Harrison Hall
Alexander Jadick

Members

Graduate Students

1932

Bernard Sullivan

1933

1934

1935

Samuel Spector

Fredrick Gray

Lloyd Moreland
Rupert Smith
Albert Strong

Frank Young

Robert Meyers
Philip Riccardi
Robert Robinson
Charles Robson
Edward Schworm

William Jones
Idwal Parry
George Pratt

Two Hundred Fifty-nine

WW

BN /1//

Two

PEDAGOGUL

ALDES FALL

215 Western Avenue

Founded 1928

O ffic ers
CHRISTINE HOCKENBERGER .
JANET BROWN .
LouisE WELLS .

Members
1932

Eunice Updike

1933

Vera Bergen

1934
Christine Hockenberger
Louise Wells

1935
Alice Brazda
Eleanor Brown
Janet Brown
Arlene Cornwall
Elizabeth Faerber
Frances Maxwell

Hundred Sixty

lil
M!//////

President
Secretar)

Treasurer

Marion Pike

Leona Gorski
Harriet Howard
Ruth Lay
Marguerite Lischer
Lois Mcinty re
\WE
PEDAGOGUE———

PUBLICATIONS

ws 1952
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PEDAGOGUE

Editor-in-Chief

VERA BURNS

Business Manager

MICHAEL FROHLICH

Literary Editor Advertisi Manager
KATHRYN BELKNAP AUDREY FLOWERS
Photograph Editor Circulation Manage
MILDRED CROWLEY ANDREW Hritz

Art Editor

Cart TARBOX

Photograph Staff

ROBERT J. FLoopy RuTH HARTIN
MARGARET GOTTSCHALK VIRGINIA HAWKINS
FRANCES KELLER

Humor Staff

CARL TARBOX ELIZABETH HUMPHREY
FRANCES GAYNOR ANNIS KELLOGG
Snapshots
Mary ALEXANDER LEAH DORGAN
ERMA BROWN EsTHER MEAD
Athlet
ALICE GIBLIN KENNETH MILLER
Business

JosEPHINE Ho t, Publicity Director
SALLY ATKINSON ANNE KROUNER
JupITH FisTER FRANCES MAZAR
MiLDRED SMITH

1932
WU

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STATE COLLEGE NEWS STAFF

Editor-in-Chief

GEORGE P. RICE

Managing Editor
ANDREW A. HRiTz

Associate Managing Editors

ALVINA R. LEwis BERNARD S. KERBEL
Advertising Manager Finance Manager
AUDREY FLOWERS HELEN ROHEL

Sports Editor
KENNETH MILLER

Senior Associate Editors

RUTH BREZEE FRANCES KELLER

VERA BURNS BrssiE LEVINE
Desk Editors

MarRION HowarpD HANNAH PARKER

GRENFELL RAND

Junior Associate Editors

HARRIET DUNN MARGARET SERVICE
LaurA STYN

Reporters

Luisa IGLESIAS Mary Moore ELEANOR COUTANT
ROsE KANTOR MARILYN ROSENBECK KATHERINE CUNNEEN
CAROLYN KRAMERS ALMIRA Russ HELEN DOHERTY

RUTH PUTNAM Betty SALESE KATHERINE SIMMONS

BEssIE SIMMONS VIRGINIA ABAJIAN THELMA SMITH
HILDA SMITH CELIA BISHOP Bessie STETKAR
EpIrH TEPPER DIANE BOCHNER Mary Lou WALTHER
JANE Doocey HiLDA BOOKHEIM KATHERINE WILKINS
MARION MLECZEK Betty ZUEND

Circulation Manager
FRANCES MAZAR
Assistant Business Manag
WATKINS

Mary DOHERTY

Business Staff
JEAN CRAIGMILE KATHERINE HAUG

Two Hundred Sixty

we 1952
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meee 1/1
PEDAGOGUE

1905 2m
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PLDAGOGUE

STATE COLLEGE ECHO

Organized 1890

Editor-in-Chief

a

SAMUEL S. DorRANCE, "32

Assistant Editors

HELEN MeEap, '32 VIOLET PUTNAM, 33
Bessie LEVINE, °32 JUNE Carey, °34
RUTH KRONMAN, °32 ALVINA TRENTLEMAN, '34

Art Editor
FRANCES GAYNOR, °32

Exchange Editor

RutH GOLDSMITH, °32

Business Manager

SELMA Sims, °32

Business Staff

HitpA LAUBENSTEIN, °32 MILDRED SMITH, °32

wee 1952
WW
S
S
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:

1) 2

Mw///////

AMM
PEDAGOGUE

STATE LION

Editor-in-Chief

CarRL TARBOX

Managing Editor Business Manager
EsTHER HIGBY JANE SHULMAN

Associate Editors ‘ ;
Assistant Business Manager

EVELYN GREENBERG
RuTH Boyp

ELIZABETH ZUEND

Art Editor Advertising Manager
LEAH DORGAN SALLY ATKINSON

Subs criptio n Manager

BERTHA SPITZ

Two Hundred Sixty-nin

ws 1952,
WNW

GEORGE P. RICE
ANDREW A. Hritz
AUDREY FLOWERS
HELEN ROHEL .
ALVINA R. Lewis

BERNARD S. KERBEL .

193 2 mes
BG! /////

ciate Managi

MN!
PEDAGOGUL

STATE COLLEGE NEWS BOARD

The News Board forms the executive body of The State College News. It
consists of the Editor-in-Chief, the Ma anaging Editor, the Associate Managing
Editors, the Advertising Manager, and the Finance M anager.

Editor-in-Chief
. Managing Editor

Advertising Manager

. Finance Manager
Editor
29 Editor

AMM
PEDAGOGUE

ATHLETICS

WW
ANH
PEDAGOGUE————

MEN’S ATHLETIC COUNCIL

Chairman

Dr. DoNNAL V. SMITH

Faculty Members
Dr. DONNAL V. SMITH PROF. WINFRED DECKER
Pror. Harry BIRCHENOUGH

Student Members

Fay Blum, °32 Gilbert De Laura, '33
Samuel Dorrance, '32 Benjamin Ingraham, 33
Tom Ryan, '34

wo Hundred Seventy-two |

te YZ ———
Ba! /////

sss
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PEDAGOGUE

TENNIS

A veteran tennis team is assuming the offensive against its old rivals this
year, having the entire personnel of last year’s squad and re-enforced by some
newcomers, Carl Tarbox, backed by four years of experience on the varsity team,
will captain the netmen.

Last year, five out of six matches were played, the last match of the season
with Dana College of Newark, N. J., being rained out. State launched its offensive
against the Albany College of Pharmacy, whitewashing them to the tune of 6 to 0.
The match with Hamilton College ended in a 3 to 3 tie. The team then traveled
to Vermont, where it split even; beating the University of Vermont and bowing
to Middlebury College. In its fifth and last match, State lost to the R. P. I. net-
men.

Tarbox and Sanford Levinstein shared honors last year by winning seven
out of ten match games. These men again are playing tugether in the doubles
this year, besides playing numbers one and two in the singles.

Jack Saroff, who is managing this year's squad, Vince Melesky, Tony Sroka,
and Gordon Hughes comprise the rest of the men who saw action in last year’s
matches and are again playing this year.

In 1929 tennis suffered greatly because of unfortunate weather conditions.
Two matches were called off because of rain, two more were cut short with State
in the lead, for the same reason, and the fifth match was lost. The team then
playing was composed Joe Herney, captain; Leo Allen, Carl Tarbox, and Randolph
Sprague, according to playing order. Herney, Allen, Sprague, and Stanhope,
reserve man, were seniors.

In 1930, the manager left college in the middle of the season, and later
negotiations for matches were unsuccessful in completing the schedule. Although
the team held regular practice, only one match was played. Curtiss Rutenber
was appointed manager for the next season, and his efforts resulted in a fine
schedule. With favorable weather conditions, the 1931 squad, although com-
prised mostly of new men, ended the season much better than expected.

THE 1932 SQUAD Is:

Carl Tarbox, Captain Jack Saroft, Manager
Dr. H. W. Hastings, Coach

Sanford Levinstein Vincent Melesky

Anthony Sroka Gordon Hughes

The schedule for the season is:
May 4—Saint Stephens College—home
6—Ithaca College of Physical Education—home
13—University of Vermont—away
14—Saint Michael—away
21—Pending
28

Ithaca College of Physical Education—away

Two Hundred Seventy-three

ee 1952
YR

1952
BY

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PEDAGOGUE-——

BASKETBALL

The Purple and Gold quintet rolled up seven victories to but two defeats
in the 1931-32 season. The victories were captured from Lowell Textile, Brook-
lyn Polytechnic Institute, Montclair Teachers College, Cooper Union, Hartwick
College, the Alumni, and Jersey City Teachers. The two losses were dropped by
small margins to John Marshall Law School, and Oswego Normal School.

The State players amassed a total of 326 points while their opponents were
registering 246. Roger “Sparkie’’ Bancroft, fleet forward of the team, gathered
a total of 69 points in six games to lead in the race for scoring honors. Bancroft
also established a record for the year when he gained twenty-four points in the
Jersey City contest.

Ben Ingraham, lanky center of the five, was second in the struggle for the
individual record with forty-six points. ‘Ossie’ Brooks, Cliff Rall, and Gil
DeLaura were also high in the point contest.

“Bill” Allard, freshman forward, made a total of twenty-one points in the
two games that he participated in.

Gil DeLaura, co-captain and veteran guard of the State aggregation, and
Cliff Rall, frosh defense man, constituted one of the finest guard combinations
seen on a State court in many years.

The entire team will return next season, and the 1932-33 quintet will
undoubtedly have a fine season.

The team was strengthened in the second semester by the addition of Ban-
croft and Charlie Kissam, who grabbed a game for State by shooting a basket in
the final second of play of the Lowell Textile contest.

Every man on the team showed persistence and a fighting spirit throughout
the season.

The Squad

R. R. Baker, Coach. Gil DeLaura, Ben Ingraham, Captains
Kenneth A. Miller, Manager
Charles Kissam William Allard Robert Myers
Roger Bancroft Harry Yaftee Raymond Harris
Osmer Brooks Jack Saunders Thomas Garrett
William Nelson Clifford Rall Alexander Jadick

Two Hundred Seven

we 1952
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BASEBALL

The return of all the regulars of the 1931 nine will insure a strong baseball
team this season. ‘‘Ossy’’ Brooks, iron man hurler, who pitched both games of
a doubleheader against Hartwick last year, will share the pitching burden with
Don Benedict, sophomore portsider, who was the “Lou Gehrig’ of the “Purple
and Gold’’ last season with a batting average of .565. Robert Goodrich, a three-
year baseball letterman, and Fay Blum and Lloyd Moreland, two-year lettermen,
will play their last game for State this Spring, as all three will graduate in June.

Other veteran players who will return include “Johnnie” Detlefson, center-
fielder; Gil DeLaura, third sacker; Jack Saunders, shortstop; and “Hack” Young
outfielder. Several freshmen will also try out for places on the diamond outfit.

The 1932 team is coached by R. R. Baker and managed by George Ketcham,

i

BASEBALL SCHEDULE

April 30—Hartwick College at Oneonta

May 4—St. Stephens at Annandale on the Hudson
May 7—Drew at Ridgefield Park

May 14—Cooper Union at Ridgefield

May 21—Hartwick at Ridgefield

May 28—Clarkson Tech. at Ridgefield

Two Hundred Seventy-seven

ws 19 52
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PEDAGOGUL

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PEDAGOGUE

G. A. A. COUNCIL

The purpose of the Council is to organize and direct the activities of the

Girls’ Athletic Association.

J. ISABELLE JOHNSTON

ELIZABETH JACKSON
VIRGINIA HAWKINS
KATHERINE Moor
Mary J. Moore
ANNETTE LEWIS
ALICE GIBLIN
ELIZABETH GORDON
Mary TRELA
DorotHy KLosE
ELIZABETH KAMMERER
JANET Norris . :
ELIZABETH JACKSON
ALVINA R. Lewis

Sport
Hockey
Archery
Volley Ball

Tennis

Swimming

Outing Club

Basketball
Bowl

Baset

Soccer

Honorary Members

Honor Council

erer

Mary
Jean W

Alice Giblin

erine Haug
Albrecht

Elizabeth Kammerer

cers and Council

Dr. CAROLINE CROASDALE

President
Vice-President
Treasurer

Secretar)

Senior Representative
Senior Manage
Junior Representative

Junior Manager

4 > > ,
amore Re presente

Sophomore Ma

Freshman Re presentative

Re}

resentative

Re porter

Kammerer

Doris Kilts
Florence Estes
Mary Moore
Celia Bishog

Elizabeth Ka

Minnie McNickle
Hestella Arthur
Dorothy Klose
Mary Moore

Two Hundred Sez

1932
WNW

BY /H/
PEDAGOGUL

G. A. A.”*S PROGRAM

G. A. A. had a very successful Play Day this year. Approximately four
hundred were there, including nearly the entire class of freshman girls.

Archery is the new sport that we instituted this year. It promises to be quite
popular.

One particular feature of our alumnae week-end was the take-off on the
faculty. Everyone seemed to enjoy this.

Peck’s team from Cornwall-on-the-Hudson played an interesting game with
our Varsity team. Of course, the usual college spirit of the alumnae was mani-
fested in their game.

As a result of the G. A. A. convention in Syracuse, a G. A. A. handbook was
organized and published. This is another step forward in our progress and rating
with other colleges.

This year, instead of having a vaudeville or musical comedy, we are going to
have an operetta.

All in all, G. A. A. has had a very successful year.

G. A. A. CALENDAR

Sept. 23—G. A. A. Play Day
Oct. 24—Indian Ladder Hike
Nov. 13—Cogswell Week-end
Nov. 16-20—Health Week

Nov. 20—Fall Gym Frolic
Feb. 6—Sleigh Ride

Feb. 27—Alumnae Banquet
Mar. 18—Winter Gym Frolic
Apr. 29-30—G. A. A. Operetta
Apr. 30—Camp Cogswell Week-end
May 21—Deans Mills Hike

May 24—Spring Gym Frolic and installation of officers

Two Hundred Eighty

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PEDAGOGUE

VARSITY TEAMS

HONORARY BASKETBALL VARSITY

ELIZABETH JACKSON ELIZABETH KAMMERER
NAOMI ALBRECHT Mary Moore
KATHERINE MOORE RuTH Lay

Mary TRELA Lois MCINTYRE
KATHERINE VAN VALKENBURG JANET Norris
HESTELLA ARTHUR EVELYN STAEHLE
Doris BELL HARRIET TEN Eyck

HONORARY HOCKEY VARSITY

ELIZABETH JACKSON DoroTHY KLOSE
CLARICE SIMMONS Mary Moore
NAOMI ALBRECHT DorotHy MUNYER
KATHERINE MOORE Lois McINTYRE
MARION TANGNEY JANET Norris
Mary TRELA ELIZABETH PREMER
ELIZABETH KAMMERER EVELYN STAEHLE

ETARRIET TEN Eyck

Two Hundred Eighty-one

WY,

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ite ys— FF
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— PEDAGOGUE———
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PEDAGOGUL

was 19 52.
WR,

Most Beautiful Girl

Florence Friedman

Most Popular Girl

Isabel Peard

Most Popular Man

Samuel Dorrance

Girl Who Has Done Most for State
Helen Mead

Man Who Has Done Most for State

George Rice

Most Representative

Elizabeth Jackson

FLORENCE FRIEDMAN

SAMUEL DORRANCE

\WE
PLDAGOGUE

HUMOR

md YZ
WW

BUH
PEDAGOGULE-———

THE
UNKNOWN
SOLDIERS

ite YA— 7

Ba!/////
———— PEDAGOGUE =

AM

THIS SECTION
IS
DEDICATED TO
THE FIRST BLOKE WHAT GETS
A JOB

SALARY RANGE $500 TO $700

wee 1952
WW

MN /H//
PEDAGOGUE

dear editor
i was thinking maybe youd like to know how a returned alumna feels

you know its exactly thirty years now since i graduated from

good old state college

in the class of thirty two

those were the days

why I remember the things we did and the way we did them even now
and i bet there are a lot of other people who do too

we were the first freshman class to win rivalry in a long time but we did it

we
showed them

we did some other good work too most of it was very revolutionary
we didnt like to do things unless they were different the class of thirty two
hated standardization

but you must be interested or i hope you are in my impressions of the college
nowadays

i always think the old settlers are right when they look at the

younger generation

and shake their heads and say 0 tempora o mores

thats the way i feel i was shocked unquestionably shocked

when i saw the freshman gym class practicing natural dancing in those

wisps of garments i suppose next they will be doing the dance

of the seven veils

of course where i come from we dont see any of that sort of thing
you see when i graduated from state in thirty two i went to teach
in a little town up in the adirondack mountains

up there we get a newspaper every three months and none at all
in the winter

we re lucky if we get to town once a year usually the men go down
after the spring thaw to get their hair cut

Two Hundred Ninety-four

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this is the first time that ive been outside of polk center since

nineteen forty

its been so long since i could talk to a person who could read or write
that ive forgotten what conversation really intellectual conversation

is like.

i havent read a book since nineteen forty one you see we had

an awful cold winter that year and we used up all the books and old
papers when the firewood needed replenishing because we couldnt get
out to the woodpile so ive forgotten how to write i can remember
the spelling pretty well because miss peltz made me practice that

when i was a freshman but this capitalization and punctuation gets me
so i thought id just leave it out entirely and let you take your choice

things have changed since my day there are a few things im rather
surprised about

one of them is why is the college out in the country now

i suppose that they thought the modern youth needed the exercise of
walking nearly to colonie in the morning to get their brains clear
another thing how did carl tarboxs art school happen to be within
half a mile of the school is he trying to get state college trade

i notice he isnt charging any tuition

by the way the average intelligence of the school is not what it

used to be

in my day we had to have marks above eighty five even to be considered
for state college

now they seem to be letting them in with an average of sixty

but of course i havent been out of the woods in a long time

and things change

that was certainly a fine extra that the news published the other day
about starting the dormitory i always said id like to be around
when the first spadeful of earth was spaded and it seems they are
going to do it next sunday

Two Hundred Ninety-fiz

1932
WU,

ANN
PEDAGOOGUE

the lion is still quick on the uptake too did you happen to see
that number they had satirizing the extra gee that was good

and the budget george rice certainly made a stirring speech
about humor magazines at the class dinner

it did my heart good to see so many of the old classmates out

at a class dinner even if some of them did fight about budgets and
finance

after all what is a mere budget between friends

they can talk all they want to about dean katies being antedated
but she was quite a girl in her day

theres some life in the old girl yet i says to myself

when i saw her making up to professor bryant at the

english departments lounge tea

i hear theyre not going to serve tea anymore

the college slogan is more than one half of one percent and
dean belknaps a strong partisan

there was quite a little talk at the dinner about the dark horse
at the socialist nominating convention

it seems its none other than mr. miller who has decided that
law and order dont mean a thing

he learned his lesson while he was in the state senate i guess
from what i hear tell

i was in the boulevard the other day you know they moved out
and took over the cafeteria and annex

who do you suppose has harrys old place

none but miss thompson she makes a pretty good caller too
seems just like the square dances in polk center

i tried to get near the mail box yesterday noon but i couldnt

there was a pile of notes three feet deep all around it and

a sophomore behind it sorting out notes that were less than

four feet four inches square i really wanted to look in the box
because i thought there might be something for me in it

notes used to be left all four years long while I was there

without being removed and i was afraid id forgotten some when i left

Two Hundred Ninety-six

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PEDAGOGUE

i think that’s a good idea having only one sorority in the college now
of course when we get the dormitory fund together and the dorm built
there will be no need for sororities

one of the girls was telling me that she dates in the hawley library
its the quietest place shes been able to find and cosy too because
theres never anyone there it seems too bad when i think of the
propaganda about night work when i was in school

i saw mr nelson at the reunion and i heard him say in an undertone
to mr sayles
that girl has a bad case why didnt you know she has roving foot

the new curriculum is the nuts honest i always thought that we should
do away with a lot of those courses but to think of anyones
having the genius to do away with all of them that took brains

i was glad to see all my old pals again though i hardly recognized
some of them

it seems funny to have them all old and gray but i suppose

thats what school teaching does to a person i have avoided that
pretty well because we stopped having school up in polk center
shortly after hoovers administration

dottie hall certainly came in great style

in that airplane

well freds an engineer he ought to have an airplane

but those kiddy cars they have for the children

are swell

well i guess id better go along home now _hirams having

to milk the cows all by himself while im on this jaunt

it certainly has been downright pleasure being back again

and im sure im going to have plenty to talk about for the next few years
its hirams turn to get out into the world next

yours till the cows come home heh heh

Two Hundred Ninety-seven

WWE

AY
——— PEDAGOGUE

| “THE ARMY GREAT ”

BABY AUSTIN EQUIPPED WITH

SUPER-BRLLODNS AS REC-

OMMENDED BY JUDGE
MILLER (rg) FOR USE BY
THE PROPOSED EDITORS!
BOARD.

MR. RUTENBER (ket). WHO
WAS ANNOUNCED HIS
INTENTION OF PETI-

< TIONING ASSEMBLY To KEEP
THE AUSTIN IN THE PHONE BOOTH,

: BELOVED FACULTY MEMBER
EXPRESSION RECOMMENDED ABOUT TO INFORM FROSH
BY BUNDIED Sie TORRES rig - cICCOMSTINEES'IS NOT
See OREN ON CUNCED »caauM STANCES:
ENT FROM OBJECTING To

DEMAND FoR f2ioosaiAcy BUT RATHER “CIRRGY,

oS
eS *,

“TX. LO WHAT THE RAY REVEALED
7 ORs

THE KEYS TO THE SITUATION"

Ba! /////

AW
PLDAGOGUE

LOVE IN THE CHORINE STAGE

Place—Boulevard Cafeteria.

Time—3:15.

Characters—Five State College seniors: Joseph College; George P. Randolph;
Charles Hatbox; Andrew Hrallins; Samuel Dormouse.

ACT I—SCENE I
(J; Cs. GoPUR Go)
G.P.R.: Well, as I was saying, about that budget, Charles, I think you're all
wrong about it.
C.H.: Well, where there’s smoke, there's always fire, George, and I smoke.
J.C. (sotto voce): So does Vesuvius.
G.P.R.: We're getting off the topic. As I was saying, Charles, you're all
wrong.
C.H.: What do you think about the subway?
J.C.: It's going under, fast.
G.P.R.: Grrrrrrr. As I was saying, you're all wrong.

SCENE II
(JeCG: POR: G. HS. Di)

S.D. (bustling in): Say, have you boys seen the copy for the next Echo? It’s
hot. We've got some darned good love poetry in it.

J.C.: What do you guys think about love, anyhow?

G.P.R.: As I was saying—

S.D.: Well, if you've got to have love, let's have it—and the best possible.

SCENE III

(J. C.; G. P. R.; S. D.; A. H. coming in)
A.H.: The best is none too good—What are you boys having?
C.H.: Make mine coffee.

Two Hundred Ninety-nine

ws 1952
WW

AN ////

S.D.: I was reading a mighty good book yesterday: ‘A Son of the Sahara,”
written by the same woman who wrote “The Sheik.” and the Bedouin
said caressingly: Ah, coffee, it should be like our love—black as sin;
hot as hell, and sweet—sweet as a woman's lips. just kissed.

G.P.R.: Gosh, that’s hot stuff, but to get back—

C.H.: Have you read “Milly” or “Bad Girl”? That Vina Delmar can write,
I'm telling you.

§.D.: Vina Delmar! She's got nothing on some girls here in school.

C.H.: They keep it to themselves, though—

A.H.: Not always, they don’t. Have you heard the latest about that Chi
Rho girl? You know, the tall blonde they call Cherry? It seems (all
get their heads together about this) ssssssssss. Honest to gosh, boys, that’s
the dope.

G.P.R.: I alway said that she was working her way through college. By the
way, now that we're talking about money, what do you think—

A. H.: Not only that, but one of the K.D.R.’s was there and he told me
everything about it; he said it was scandalous—

J.C. (who has been listening intently): What's the Chi Rho telephone
number?

A.H.: 2-XYZ4.

(Exit J.C.)

SCENE IV
(GeP: Re S: Ds 'C HA.)

G.P.R.: That was quite a party they had up at the Chi Rho house Saturday
night. I was up there with one of the girls and the party didn’t break
up until 7 in the morning. A couple of Freshmen made waffles for us
in the morning. They were good!

$.D.: Who, the Freshmen?

G.P.R.: Well, the Chi Rho’s got some good girls this year.

A.H.: “If you converse with me,” said Voltaire, “you must define your
terms.”

C.H.: Good? They've got to be good! Not only that, but they are good.

Three Hundred

193 2 =m
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—— PEDAGOGUE—
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PEDAGOGUE

§.D.: What did you say the Chi Rho number was, Andrew?
A.H: 2-XYZ4.
(Exit $.D.)
SCENE V
(GPR A. Be Co.)

G.P.R.: Now that we're quite cozy and chummy again, Charles, let’s talk

about the budget again.
C.H.: Budget’s unnecessary, George. Let's change the subject.
AH.: No, Terrill, in Commerce 10, said something quite apropos about

that the other day: “It was the best butter.”
G.P.R.: That reminds me of those waffles.
CH.: What was that number again, Andy?
A.H.: 2-XYZA4.
C.H.: Excuse me, please.

SCENE VI
(GP, Rey AvEX)

A.H.: Gee, there’s going to be another party up there, I guess. Those Chi
Rho's are darned popular.
G.P.R.: Well, I guess State College men can pick ‘em.
G.P.R.: I'm thinking we're going to be missing something, George. Whom
were you over at the party with Saturday, old kid?
GP.R.: Well, I started out with Rose, but then Lena came along and after her
I was cut in on by Rose. I ended up with that blonde freshman. She's
just what I want, about 5’6”, blonde, blue eyes, winning personality—
you remember my article in the Albany Evening New s? She wrote me a
note after that and suggested meeting me, so we got acquainted.
A.H.: There's a girl up there I'd like to see tonight; but I've never met her.
You know the one I mean: little brunette with glasses.
G.P.R.: What was that number, Andrew? What do you say we go make
fun tonight with the Chi Rho girls, if there's going to be a party. We
don’t want to miss anything.
(Exit G.P.R. and A.H.)

Three Hundred One

es 1952,
AS

AYN H//
PEDAGOGUL

FOR LION
BOARD MEMBERS
ony “7

SKELETON OF “PTERODACTYLUS”
FOUND UNDER HISTORY 11

DEBRIS REMOVED ON INSTAL
LATION OF 'PHONE ROOTH fy eae ON EXCEEDINGLY RARE VIEW OF EXCLUSIVE}

p-ION CHAIR VACANT. USUALLY IS OCCUPIED

IBY M,E +E, sE+fL,P.B,N.S,PS.A,08A,GAD,
E.C,,P.C.,D.C,V.M.,Y.W, H.E.C,,P.T., AND RARELY, 1.8,
OU,THE TEMPTATION OF A COMFORTABLE CHAIR!

ACTIVITIES ROOM PAGE

(left) EMBARRASSING INCIDENT RETWEEN
GRAD STUDENT GOING TO MASQUERADE AND
COP LOOKING FOR THE KIDNAPPED BABY

BwY//////

AMM |
PEDAGOGUE

°° FRIENDS. ROMARS,
COUNTRYMER’”’

Place—Boulevard Cafeteria.

Time—4:10.

Characters—Five State College girls: Josephine College; Helen B. Bobbitt;
Florence Findlay; I. Jane Pierce; Katie Bran. 4

H.B.B.: What did you think of the discussion of philosophy in Kirtland’s
class today?

F.F.: I always said there was something #7 humanism.

K.B.: What do you mean by humanism? If you converse with me

I.J.P.: Humanism, as a system of philosophy, started in the late twentieth
century——

J.C.: Retournons a nos moutons! Don’t you think Mr. Cooper of the Com-
merce Department is good looking?

H.B.B.: Well, J like Mr. Bryant! He has a future

K.B.: Sometime there'll be a college with no instructors over 33 in it.

J.C.: He has curly hair, anyway——

I.J.P.: Humanism is a wonderful method of living

H.B.B.: Let's do some really serious thinking now. What do you girls think
of Walter Lippman’s ‘Preface to Morals’?

J.C.: Well, I was talking to Joe the other day, and he said . . .

H.B.B.: You should do your own thinking, my dear.

J.C.: Joe says that girls can’t understand philosophy, anyway.

H.B.B.: Well, I think they can. . . . I read “Mansions of Philosophy” by
Will Durant and I knew what he was talking about

I.J.P.: What do you think about this definition of education: “Education
is what is left after you've forgotten what you never learned.”

K.B.: I think that’s culture.

F.F.: What is culture?

J.C.: Culture is education.

K.B.: Well, that makes culture fit that definition.

J.C.: Definitions are dumb, anyway; who ever got anywhere by defining?

I.J.P.: If you converse with me——

K.B.: If you converse with—

H.B.B,: If you converse——

F.F.: If you

JG TE

Three Hundred Three

WR

BY {H//
PEDAGOGUL

HAN DSHARING

That peculiar and intimate practice of handshaking has somehow evolved
from a physical to a mental idea. We call it ““Handshaking’”” when we grip our
pals in a chummy linking and pressing of fingers. This may have several secret
meanings, such as ‘Hello, old bean. How goes it?” Or “Hello, you old fool, and

good-bye, get your cold, clammy hand off. If I never see you again, it'll be too
soon.’ Each with a broad grin on the face. How can we tell if a pal is sincere?
We can't—so what the ——! The more overpowering and nerve-shattering
the clasp the better pal we are supposed to be. But somehow that doesn’t seem
fair. How about the weak, limp, damp paw that falls timidly into your merciless
clasp? Maybe this poor brother is a pal. Why isn’t he more enthusiastic? Is he
bashful or is it just too much of an effort? Don’t judge others by yourselves. You
see—YOU have that certain knack, that indescribable something, personality,
S. A. or “It'—that the poor weak brother lacks. He may have something you
lack—B. O., for instance. This business of handshaking, mental and physical,
is a matter of social accomplishment.

Do you know the art of mental handshaking? Have you conquered that
subtle talent? The answer is either “yes” or “no,” not “perhaps.” You have only
to regard your academic record of the past four years to discover the truth. If you
have conscientiously cut classes, ignored your lessons until the night before exams,
and as a result received miraculously four “\A’s” and two “B's,” then you are a
successful handshaker, whether you know it or not. Probably you know it. Now
you didn’t get those four ‘‘A’s’’ and two “B's” without effort. You wore yourself
out laughing at ye olde prof’s jokes—you contracted athlete's foot from hanging
around her (or his) desk, joshing about the price of prunes (i.e. x + y—=z)—you
got your face paralyzed in a swell attempt to look feverishly interested and mourn-
fully sympathetic. To cut a long tale short, you soon got “in kahoots with’ the
prof. You're pals. This means you are excused from all assignments, recitations
and other curricular activities. Your time is practically your own, except for a bi-
weekly visit to said prof or a rendezvous for tea at your loss AND gain. Cest
tout! You lucky devil. How in the heck do you get that way? I’m the harm-
less, unsuccessful, weak brother. I may be weak, but I’m damned deserving.
Let me clasp your hand just once. I may catch on.

Hopefully and admiringly—
“STUDE”

Three Hundred Four

13 2am
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————EEEEEEEEOOEEOEE—————eoee
AMM

PEDAGOGUE

METAMORPHOSES (IN A COLLICH MANY LIFE

Le
Pa ENN. »

FRESHMAN SOPHOMORE
oH. MR
ZiLeH~
FUNIOR SENIOR

To the gallows with all punsters and those who indulge
in the language atrocities current on the State campus! Then
no longer need we hear in corridor, locker room, and activi-
ties room such conversations as the following:

“Owhay arehay ouyay’’?

“Erm fern. Her er yer’’?

“Inefay ootay. Ankthay ouyay.”

or
“T can’t tell one of these rocks from another.”

“You must be stone blind.”

WR,

BYN/H//
— PEDAGOGUE

THAT ley

cont 5 ER

mee ny SOcoRity Pours
ar!

a a Feiss

(1 esc To THE

New classification of foods compiled by biology majors
after extensive research in the Boulevard. The requirement of
napkins rather than calories is the basis of classification.

cup of coffee In.

coffee and buttered toast 3n.

egg sandwich 2n.

egg sandwich with catsup 4n.

western egg sandwich 3n.

western egg with catsup 6n.

pickle with order Yn.

Three Hundred Six

103)
Bw ///i/

AMM

———— PEDAGOGUE

This page is for those who
are never satisfied anyway

J Le 7)
WW

BEN
PEDAGOGUE————

SENIOR CLASS CALENDAR

Senior Hop Friday, October 30, 1931

Class Dinner—Tuesday, December 15, 1931
Class Dinner—Tuesday, February 16, 1932
Moving-Up Day—Friday, May 20, 1932
Class Day—Saturday, June 18, 1932
Baccalaureate Service—Sunday, June 19, 1932
Senior Breakfast—Monday, June 20, 1932
Commencement—Monday, June 20, 1932

Senior Ball—Monday, June 20, 1932

tk ys———_>
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SNABS

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WISDOMS SHRINE

we 1952
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ANY
BUN
PEDAGOGUL———

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ADVERTISEMENTS

ws 1952,
WWW

AYN /H/

“Jahn & Ollier
Again

OVE are America’s largest school
annual designers and engravers
because we render satisfaction
on more than 400 books each
year Intelligent co-operation,
highest quality workmanship
and on-time deliveries created
our reputation for dependability.

JAHN & OLLIER ENGRAVING CO.

Photographers, Artists and Makers of
Fine Printing Plates for Black or Colors.

817 W. Washington Boulevard . Chicago
Telephone MONROE 7080

We do not sub-let any iS)
art or engraving J §)

Three Hundred Twenty-two

te yA— 7

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PEDAGOGUE——
AX

——— PEDAGOGUE
Telephone 3-2785
LYNK BROS.
Printing

115 Beaver Street, Albany, New York

POTTER & TRACY

Real Estate
Specializing in Sorority and Fra-
ternity Houses

Telephone: 4-0189

BOULEVARD
Cafeteria

Central at Robin

Albany, New York

JAMES H. MURRAY
Manufacturer and Wholesale Dealer in
CONFECTIONERY AND SPECIALTIES

96 Madison Avenue

Dial 3-7373

C. & C. Annex

Cor. Franklin Street

Leary Printing Co., Inc.
Particular Printing
Printers of State Lion
414 Smith Street 4-6379

Schenectady, N. Y.

A gift from
VAN HEUSEN CHARLES

Means More

Van Heusen Charles
Co.

Albany, New York

Three Hundred Twenty-three

1932
WY,

ANN
PEDAGOGUL

Albany Teacher’s Agency

74 Chapel Street, Albany, N. Y.

Affords the teacher a reliable, efficient and correct means of

securing a good position
Positions Open Now

Good teachers wanted—Personal interview desirable

We will defer the registration fee of all candidates graduating from the
State College until after they have secured a
position through our aid

W. W. Andrews, President

Gowns Hoods Caps Fo r

For All Degrees

opr
Every
The oldest organization of its kind

in America . . . supplying the out- Occasion ef
standing universities, colleges and THE

schools with Academic Costume.

Sole deposit legiate Bureau
Albany, N. Y.
Cotrell and Leonard “An United Hotel”
Alb; SIN. :
any Witiram A. McCusker
Established 1832 Manager
Three Hundred Twenty-four

lh ——
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AWE
PLDAGOGUE

+--+---

The Albany News Company
66-74 Orange Street

Albany, New York

A. HAGAMAN & CO.

BAKERS
877-885 Madison Avenue Albany, N. Y.
Branch Stores
206 Lark Street, Albany, N. Y. 1110 Mz n Avenue, Albany, N. Y
20A Steuben Street, Albany, N. Y. 130 Q , Albany, N. Y
173 Central Avenue, Alt N.Y. 123 ny, N. Y.
885 Madison Avenue, Albany, N. Y. 32 Fourth Street, Troy, N. Y.

“Buy Bonnie Bread”
Sliced or Unsliced

Leones Beauty

Meet your friends here for

Parlors Deliciously Different
DeWitt Clinton Hotel
Phones: 48614-46111 Ice Cream and Sherbet
Albany, N. Y
Featuring Realistic and Radio Permanent Owen's Ice Cream Store
Waving and Leon Permanent

Waving 803 Madison Avenue 2-3530

And all branches of beauty culture

Three Hundred Twenty-fiz

WER

YU

STATE COLLEGE
Cafeteria

Laura F. Thompson, Manager

es sauce Inc.

( al”

Salons Th
Alban
“STRAND” “FOUNTAIN”
133 North Pearl 11 North Pearl
Opp. Clinton Square Home Savings Bank
Telephone 3-4231 Telephone 3.3632

Frank H. Evory & Co.

General Printers

+-----

36-38 Beaver Street Albany, N. Y.

College Candy ppep

(Just a bl

ck from colleg

Good Eats

Low Prices
Collegiate Atmosphere

Drop in and see us

ite yA———_ >
Be /////

PERKINS SILK SHOP
15 South Pearl Street

Materials at reasonable prices—esti-

mates on completed gowns
New Dey

artment

French Crepe Slips $1

PEDAGOGUE———_
\W

PEDAGOGUE

The College Pharmacy ¢

7 No. Lake, at Western Ave.

Albany

3-7768

Distributors for State College Seal Stationery

We Deliver

SENIORS—We have observed that the students who love good books
have better fortune in life

Please remember us if you have need of any one of the

800 items carried in the

CO-OP

Bon voyage in life!

C ompliments o of

eA Friend

2-9853 785 Madison Ave.

Madison Sweet Shop

Try our delicious hot sandwiches
Salads and Sandwiches
Home Made Candies

Third store from Quail Street

DE WITT CLINTON

Pharmacy

Cor. Eagle and State Streets

Albany

Three Hundred Twenty-seven

md YZ
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AYN
PEDAGOGUL

For a good meal, or morsel, properly prepared, daintily served,

economically and reasonably priced, don’t fail to visit

ee

Cafeteria and Sandwich Shop

Uptown Store
Cafeteria and Sandwich Shop

Central and Lexington Avenues

Downtown Store
70-72 Beaver Street

Private dining room and banquet hall

We are fully equipped to cater your next party, small or large. Place your order

with us, and rest assured of a successful affair

HowaRDE. MARSTON

INC.

OPTICIANS
Ten Eyck Hotel Building

“Eye Wear” of Distinction

YOUR PRINTER
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L. A. Bookheim NZ La
Reliable Meats Ae a = :
and Poultry |

Special Attention to

; ALBERS ee E
846 Madison Avenue EL BANY, Be
336 Central Avenue Dial 6-2037

6-1837

Three Hundred

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——— PEDAGOGUL

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“, Another Arthur Studios ~Annual”’

The Arthur Studios, Inc. consider it a privilege to
have been connected with the staff of the PepacoGur
in the construction of this beautiful volume, and to
thank them for their codperation, which insured the

success of this work.

Arthur Studios, Inc.

New York City

NGS hee

Three Hundred Twenty-nine

wee 19352

AN \
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—— PEDAGOGUE

ENGRAVING CoO.

CN 414 BRroapway £7
ALBANY, NEW YORK

MAKERS OF
PEA Bis
THAT PRINT
IN ONE OR
M O° RE
€.0O°LO'RS

ae

ENGRAVING + ILLUSTRATING + DESICNING

Three Hundred Thirty

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AUTOGRADHS

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AUTOGRADHS

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AUTOGRAPHS

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Metadata

Containers:
Volume 24
Resource Type:
Bound Volume
Rights:
Date Uploaded:
May 10, 2024

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