State College News, Volume 22, Number 27, 1938 May 27

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All-State Show
To Raise Funds
For Silver Bay

Madison Theatre Program
Will Include State’s
Own Amateurs

The Madison theatre will conduct
a State college night, Tuesday, May
24, at 7:00 o'clock, as announced by
Mary Trainor, ’40, general chairman
of the program, On the stage,
between the regularly featured pro-
gram, State college will present its
most talented artists,

The program will include com-
medy, tap-dancing, vocal selections,
and many other novelty numbers,
Among those who will entertain will
be Charles Gaylord, Leslie Knox, and
Ed, Reynolds, seniors, and Bill Sivers,
guitarist, and Ed, Melanson, juniors,
Their acts are being kept as a sur-
prise and promise to be worth see-
ing.

“Send State students to Silver
Bay" is the slogan borne by the
yellow tags you have been seeing
fluttering around this week, The
tags represent the purchase of a
ticket to the State college night.
The Student Christian movement,
sponsors of the program, Is raising
money for the Silver Bay fund to
send a delegation of men and women
to the Silver Bay conference at Lake
George from June 16 to June 22,
Inasmuch as this is the first year
that Silver Bay has been open to
men, the Y, W. C, A. wants to send
as large a delegation as possible to
the conference,

As an added attraction, there will
be presented on the screen a double
feature program, “Tom Sawyer” and
“Sally, Irene, and Mary.” Since this
is an all-college affair of interest to
everyone, freshmen will be granted
late permission to attend the pro-~
gram

The committee for the event is:
Mary Trainor, '40, general chairman;
Jeannette Barlow, '39, and Marion
Kingsley, Janet Thomas, Dorothy
Yawger, and Sally Young, sopho-
mores, This group is assisted with
the Silver Bay promotion committee
which includes: John Edge, Janet
Gurney, Richard Lonsdale, Dunton
Tynan and Marion Rockefeller,
juniors,

Tickets will be on sale for twenty-
five cents in the halls every noon,
Buy a ticket, see three shows, and

help send a delegate to Silver Bay,

Potter Club to Have
Annual Spring Dance

Saturday night from 9:00 to 1:00
o'clock Edward Eldred Potter club
will present its annual spring formal
in the Commons of Hawley hall, ac-
cording to the announcement of
John Eckel, '40, general chairman.
The rhythms for dancing will be
supplied by Bob Reid and his orches-
tra, |
Guests for this affair will include
the following faculty members and|
their wives: Dr, Harold M, Thomp-
son, professor of English, and Mrs,
Thompson; Mr, Clarence A, Hidley,
assistant professor of history, and
Mrs, Hidley; and Mr, William G
Hardy, instructor in’ English, and
Mrs, Hardy, ‘The chaperones will be
Dr, Earl B, South, assistant profes-
sor in education, and Mrs, South,

q

Dy

Hrescripts

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Vou. XXIL, No. TA’ ; : : N.Y. May 29, 1938

AR, 32 Wi

Student Finance Board
Will Present Budget

y ? ? The State College Finance
r ° Board will present the approved
budget for the years 1938-39 this

Will Guide Upper Classes. ?.ii38@="
recommendation to the Student

9 association, discussion will take
place,
Student Body Elects The present and the approved

Edge, Kelly and Smith | ew budget are as follows:

During the morning exercises
on Moving-up Day, Warren I,
LEESE MANAGES DEBATE. Densmore, '38, member of Mys-
kania and president of the stu-

—_ coe dent association, announced that

Revotes Are Between Harper] (he student association officers

And Cogger For Junior Who will guide State's ship of an

state during the coming year mital ‘sports

Class Treasurer are: president, John Edge, ‘rum COUMLES cre es

—— vice-president, Lloyd Kelly, ‘4 Masohath

The certification of class offices! secretary, Stanley Smith,’ ‘41: Se tpenayeaatae

by Myskania, made public last Fri-/ and songleader, Mary Trainor, | Stivicut (uiitt

day, announces that Betty Hayford,| ‘40, Ra eersia CRAM
Rita Sullivan, and Merrill Walrath,| — Other student association offi- | Swretria! a

will head the classes of °39, 40, and] cers will be: representative to | ramus aand

Li wensuneiyely j men's athletic association, Wil-
i vi liam Ryan, '39; cheerleader

Ades, Cappiello and O’Bryan
Will Aid Presidents
Of Their Classes

Tout SULIT. BRIO,

Advanced Dramatics Class

DIRECTS PLAY

|

Other officers of the class of '39] sfuriel Martie, 99° Mone eae!
who will assist Miss Hayford ar ley ‘and Gordon Pentkle, joni :
vice-president, Christine Ades; treas-| and Jack Gardephe."4f"
urer, Michael Walko; secretary, Ca Dh DRETREHE deceaLat cf
olyn Mattice; reporter, Regina Mur-| SrA has not boon ween
phy; song-leader, Margaret Mattl-| od by student council
son; cheerleaders, Muriel Barry and
John Murphy; representative on M. ;

A, George Amyot and Duke Hersh- D b t ¢ |
rowiz: representative on w. a, VEDALE LOUNCI
A, June Palmer; manager women's
athletics, Della Dolan; representa~
lives on finance board, Hilah Foote
and Joseph Muggleton; and debate
manager, Joseph Leese. Hardy States Attendance ee

Members of tharclaagy ot 140 who Obligatory at Seminar At the last meetings, sorori

will act in official positions to assist
For Debate Squad

Miss Sullivan are; vice president,
Debate council has elected its new | ror, "9: vice-presidents Bet

Greeks Announce
38-39 Officers

At Last Meeting

To Serve the Societies
For Coming Session

Joseph Capiello; secretary, Dorothy
Pritchard; reporter, Otto J, Howe
gleader, Mary ‘Trainor; cheer- ePresent t ; “
jenders, Marion Kingatey and Gor-/Se22tGing to. Wiliam Bradt, “B [Stnyt buon Go seers te
10 ly : q fe counell) retary, June Amacher, ‘40;
don Penitle; representatives on M./members are: president, Leonard “t '
A. A, Ladislaw Balog and Willard | Friedlander, vice -' president, | horjy Porinat ag
Frament; representative on W. A. A..| Joseph Leese, ‘30; secretary, Janice Phi prealdeni; May Now
Janet Montfort; manager women's!Friedman, '40; and faculty coach, vice-president, Phyllis Scott, ‘4
athletics, Virginia Mitchell; repres-) William G. Hardy, instructor of ry, Betly Jones, ‘40: trensut
entatives on finance board, Joseph |English, Members at large include Leni Sweet, 30; ‘and’ mural
MeKeon and John Ryan Betty Hayford and Richard Lons- | Jean Schactter, M1.
Revotes for the office of treasurer | t#le, juniors; and Rita Sullivan, ‘40 Kappa Delta: president, Virgin

are being conducted today, The! During the past eleven years, de- | Furey, vice-president, Betty Me-

7 “ bating has grown into one of the Connell. recording ecretar
vandidates are Robert Couger and f | conng ‘ i secreta
Walter Haier au most important activiles al this |Helen Blake, ‘40; corresponding. s¢

vice-president, /debates, Oregon style debates, and line Mattice, "39:

treasurer, Roy | decision debates, were conducted Rattray, Shirley

Robert Mesek; ‘during the bast season, the largest; Psi Gamma: president, Jane Sct
reporter, Be er; songleader. in State college history, Places on | werzmann vice president, Jant
Mary Miller; cheerleaders, Dorothy | the varsity squad are open to Upper- Wulkehlager, '39; recording’ seer
Peak, and John Gardephe; repres- | clasmen who make good in the com. lar Haile Kerste, ‘39; correspondir

elections for the coming year took
place, Restilts of the elections are:
Delta Omega: president, Margaret

representatives for the year 1038-39, |Ginrk. “40; ‘recordinye soerelary, Dok

$|

| Miss Agnes E, Futterer, assistant
professor of E , who directs

Elects Officers Sororities Name New Heads |!iiny Fever,” a production of ane us

advanced dramatics class,

iy State Magazines
Select Officers

- Pedagogue, Lion and Echo

ty |
|

urer, Helen Roickle, ‘40; and critic,| Name Boards, Staffs

For Co: g Year

h, ae

0; | The student publications of State
college, the Pedugogue, the Echo,
Ml./and the Lion, have chosen officers
" Ita slaffs for the coming year,

c. The following will edit the Peda-

ry, deuue for the class of ‘39; Editor-in-
chief, Margaret. Mattison, '39; Busi-

; jcollege, Forty-eight debates, includ- | retary, Ruth’ Santway, '40; treasurer, | Ness Manager, Ruth Lewis, ‘39; Pho-
Walrath from |ing panel discussions, non-deciston | Janet Montfort, 40 chaplain Caro- | Lograph Editor, Robert Gorman, '39;

Art Editor, Margaret Smith,’ ‘39;
Feature Editor, Margaret Webb, '39;
p- | Literary Editors, Helen Lowry, '39,
et |Helen " Bifarella, 39; Circulation
e- ;Munager, Mary Agnes Metzger, '39;
ng {Advertising Manager, Marie Metz,

entatives on M, A. A., John Bakay | petitive tryouts next fall secretary, Florence Gebe, ‘40; treas. |'40.

and William Haller; representative |” tan announcement from Hardy, urer, Helen Henze, '39

The Hecho Board for the comin,

on W, A, A,, Louise Chapman; man-| the seminar meetings of advanced| Chi Sigma Theta: president, Mary |year has the following member
er, ‘38;

ager women's athletics, Mildred | debating will be conducted Wednes-| Agnes Met

board, Constantino Paris, toom 6, ‘Those students who wish Mary Arndt, '40; treasurer, Margar
|to lake advanced debating, English Fehiner reporter, Irene Sem

x vice-president, | Editor-in-chief, Pearl Sandburg, '39
Foley; and representative on finance day atternoons at 3:30 o'clock. in Eleanor McGreevy 9; secretary,

Managing Editor, Gordon Rand, '39:
et |Senior Associate ‘Editors, Hall Dow:
n-/ney, Helen Zeman, Junior Assoc-

8 4B, ure advised to leave this period anek, '40; and critic, Kay Lynch, 39, {late Editors, Edward ‘Tomasian,
Religious Clubs Plan vaeenl

(Continued on page 6, column

Examination Relief Appoixtments and Netlrenenix

During examination week, from |
June 4 to June 11, the Unitarian
Chapel on Washington avenue will

) |Howard Duncan, Harriet Spragu

Business Manager, Edgar Perretz,
{'40; Advertising Manager, Haskell
Rosenberg, '40; Art Editors, Mary
| Halpin, ‘39, Henrietta Halbreich, '39;
Cireulation Manager, Miriam Shap:
iro, ‘40.

hold half-hours of organ music, |
Feeling that a few minutes of relax-
ation would be invaluable during the
tension of exams, Y, W. C. A, the
Canterbury club, the Judson club,
and the Lutheran club are cooperat- |
ing with Reverend Kenneth Walker,
pastor of the Unitarian chureh, in|
sponsoring the programs,

Dr, Candlyn, assistant professor
of music; Dr. Harold ‘Thompson,
professor of English; Leonard Quant!
‘38; and local organists will preside
at the organ, ‘They will offer elassi-
cal and semi-classical numbe

Jean Mitchell, 40, is general chair-
man of the project. On the assist-!
ing committee are: Y. W, G. A,
Marion Rockefeller, Elizabeth Allen,
Carolyn Mattive, junior Canter-
bury club, Bob Martin, '40; Judson
club, Stanley Kullman, and Dick
Platt, sophoniores; Lutheran club,
William Mollenkopf, '38, and Fran
lin Kehrig, '39, The music commit-
tee is; Leonard Quant, '38; Kath-
erlne Adams, Margaret Mattison,
Juniors; and Merrill Walrath, '41,

ed today by Dr. A.
president,

Eunice A, Perine,
professor of art, and Assistant Prof-

vssor Anne L. Cushing, supervisor | physical education;
fol mathematics, will retire, Miss) Clark, M. A., Columbia, as instructor |echange Editor, Elinor Dibble, ‘40, |

Goshen College, as instructor
William

Presents Coward’s Drama

ae 4

Ruth Sinovoy and Tom Kelly
Are Main Characters
In “Hay Fever”

FUTTERER IS DIRECTOR

Page Hall Auditorium to Be
Scene of Performance;
Tickets on Sale

Tonight the advanced dramatics
class will present the second per-
formance of the comedy “Hay Fever”
by Noel Coward, at 8:30 o'clock in
the auditorium of Page hall, Miss
Agnes E, Futterer, assistant profes-
sor of English, will have charge of
the entire production with Mr, Wil-
lam Hardy, instructor in English,
in charge of sets and Joseph Leese,
‘39, stage manager,

Included in the cast are: Judith
Bliss, Ruth Sinovoy, '39; Sorel Bliss,
Jeanne Chrisler, '39; Simon Bliss,
Kenneth Doran, '39; David Bliss,
Tom Kelly, '38; Myra Arundel, Edith
Cassavan' Sandy Tyrell, Ray
Walters, '39; Jackie Coryton, Vir-
ginia Hall, '39; Clara, the maid, Dee
Jesse, '39; Richard Greatham, Jack

‘dell, '39,

Members of the class who are ser-
ving on committees are: house, Gar
Arthur, ‘38, chairman, Virginia’ Bol-
ton and Marion Minst, juniors; ad-
vertising, Elizabeth Lockwood, 39,
chairman, Edith Casasvant,
Jesse and

pro} 39,
man, Vera Haas, Jeanne Chrisler,
and Ray Walters, juniors; costumes
and make-up, Virginia Furey and
Betty Hayford, + and sets,
Charles Walsh, Hart, and
Joseph Leese, juniors,

‘The regular reserve tickets will be
seventy-five cents, and the general
admission ticket will be fifty cents,
If students wish to reserve seats,
they must pay fifty cents in addition
{o presenting their student tax
tickets, General admission tickets
for the students will be twenty-five
cents plus student tax tickets, For
the balcony seats, student tax tickets
will be exchanged,

Leaders Make Plans
For Freshman Camps

Student-Facully Committee
Announces Counsellors

Plans are well under way for
Freshman camp, designed to help
initiate the Incoming freshman class,

Freshman girls will have the op-
portunity to meet their fellow class-
mates, several upperclassmen, and
members of the faculty, and to be-
come acquainted with a few of the
traditions of thelr future alma
mat

The program at camp includes a
varied sports schedule, stunts, a style

of | staffs of the Lion for next year id | show displaying the appropriate

As | jtor-in-chief, Richard Lonsdale,

ss | Business Manager, Gordon 'Tabner, |
‘39; Managing Editor, Gordon Rand, |
39; Advertising Manager, Betty !

wen, B,S.,|Denmark, ‘40; Associate Editors,

in/Charles Franklin, 39; Leonard Ko- |

Ross |walsky, ‘40; Charles Walsh, '39; Ex

Perine has been a member of the |in English; Walter Niles Abbott, M, Circulation Manager, Bernard Gatt.

faculty since 1900, and Miss Cushing |A., State College, as instructor in ‘ney, '39,
French; William H, Gilbert, Ph. D,,
Leaves of absence have been | Chicago, instructor in social studies:
and George Raymond Fisk, A, B.,
State College, teacher at Ballston | qj:

hus been in g ce since 1908.

granted to the following: Dr, Harold
W, Thompson, professor of English;
Miss Catherine W, Peltz, instructor
in English; Miss J, Isabelle Johns-
ton, instructor in physical education;
Miss Arlene Preston, instructor in
French, and John J, Sturm, asi
ant instructor in chemistry, Dr,
Helen Halter, supervisor in social
studies, has gned,

The new appointments to the staff
include Miss Ruth Hutchins, Ph, B.,
Syracuse, formerly dean of the Art
Institute of Chicago, to the depart- |

‘The staff is composed of the fol-
lowing: literary staff, John Wekel,
'40; Jeanette Evans, 41; Rose Lison,
Stanley Smith, Business

Lake High School, as instructor in|state, Kenneth Haser, do: Blane

chemistry,

;Kirshenblum, '41; Art staff, Ethel

The following members of the fac-| Cohen, '41; Henrietta Halbreich, '99;
ulty will return from leaves of ab-| Mary Halpin, '89; Ethel Long, “Al,

sence: Dr. ©. Caroline Croasdale,
Gertrude
Douglas, assistant professor

director of health; Dr,

of, Tabner Is Council Head

biology; Miss Margaret Hayes, as- Contrary to the statement in the
sistant professor of guidance; Eqd-|last issue of the News, Gordon Tab-

ward Cooper, instructor

in

com-/ner, '39, not Bernard Gaffney, '39,

merce; and Louis Jones, instructor |will serve as president of Interfrae

in English,

ternity council for the coming year.

dress for different occasions, discus-
sion groups led by the students, a
student-facully panel discussion, and
jthe traditional candlelight service,
Following are the counsellors who
were chosen by a student-faculty
committee: Christine Ades, Victoria
Bilzi, Curolyn Mattice, | Virginia
Purey, Betty Hayford, June Palmer,

jJanet Gurney, Jean ‘Strong, Helen

Prusik, Della Dolan, Mildred King,
Anne Kalichman, Bernice Mackey,
Virginia Bolton, and Dorothy Mac-
Lean, juniors; Virginia Mitchell,
Mary Trainor, Ruth Santway, Marie
Metz, Fay Scheer, Virginia Elson,
Jane Wilson, and Rita Sullivan,
sophomores; and Mary Miller, Cath-
erine Shafer, Frances Riani, Beatrice
Dower, Tillie Stern, Madalyn Beers,
Ada Parshall, Virginia McDermott,
Catherine O'Bryan, Anna Norberg,
freshmen,

Busses will leave the school for
Burden lake at 2:00 o'clock on Frie
day afternoon, September 16,

Page 2

STATE COLLEGE NEWS

STATE, COLLEGE NEWS, MAY 27, 1938

the unaeesttblished by the Cinss of 1918 P 5 P ersonal P Ss
e undergraduate Newspaper of New York State
Chilers ioe tanctern Memories — Suggestions Viewpoints tatesman
Published every Friday of the college year by the =
fews Board representing the Student Asociation Seven more days, one hundret
. Telephones: Office, 5.9373; O'Hora, 2-0424; Strong, OMMENTSTATER igty-elght Naiee ten thousand Fae
2-5545; Hertwig, 2-4314; Bilzi, 4-7606 eighty minutes, and six hundre And now for the grand finale,
Entered as second class’ matter in the Albany, N. Y. We have moved up!!! We have climbed one more | to" thousand elght hundred This noble effort marks our final
postoffice rung in our educational ladder. Some have gone out

AAPREOENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTIBING BY

National Advertising Service, Inc,

Collage Publishers Representative
420 MADISON Ave, NEW York, N. Y.
CHICAGO = BOSTON + Los ANGKLES + SAN FRaNctaco

Epoar B.
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Luonarn
Saury B.

Vierorta A, Butt

Joan M,
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THE NEWS BOARD

O'Hors

E, Kowarsky
Youna

CastiGhione

Managing Editor

Associate Managing Editor
Associate Managing Editor
Associate Managing Editor
Business Manager

Brnon Advertising Manager
Circulation Manager

Co-Hditor-in-Chief
RONG soon Co-Hdito
Rosert BH. Heerwia
Orro J. Hows

n-Chief

Charles Franklin
Betty Clark
William Ryan A

Joseph B

Albert Architzel, Charles Ettinger, Joyce Mays
J, Edmore Melanson, Charles Walsh, Alice
Bartlow, Robert Cogger, Saul Greenwald,

Assistant

Assistant Advertising Manager

Marion Ayotte, Ray Carroll, Elizabeth Donahue, Nor-
man Levy, Miriam Newell, Betty Parrott, Helen
Powers, Madeline Scesney, Catherine Schaefer

THE NEWS STAFF

osley A
Associate Editors

David Minsberg
Assistants to Business Board
Business Manager

Business Staff

Men's Sports Editor
Women’s Sports Bdilor

stant Sports Bditor
stant Sports Bdilor

. Harriet Sprague
Kenneth Haser

ck,

Gathering up our new task hopefully
we look forward to a year of newspaper
work replying to the hidden challenge of
last week’s editorial—that of thought pro-

voking

-- And We Begin

journalism.

may be the result,

The smell of the Activities office and
the bustle of dead line meeting is as strong
within us as it was within those editors, H.
T., Fred, and Squook, under whom we
We plan to
carry on an editoria] program that will be
aimed at the improvement of this, our Alma

served o

Mater,

We know you won't always agree with
us nor will we always be correct, but if we
make you angry enough to attempt to re-
fute us—or to correct the evils we think
we see, we have completed the work our

ur apprenticeships.

predecessors set up for us, have 1
i. eee aa f re ee ° recently
To the old board, even you must be | Pt live the exciting life of a newspaper man or

weary. Take your ems and your deadlines
and head for the morgue where every good
journalist must go some day,

say, “Ma.

y you be as succes

600 Publicity Agents

At a recent discussion the question of
The

publicity

for State college came up,

that they

A college

Book

with those
ference bet

concerning

work of the Press Bureau and the various | one of the

publications and debate was stressed, but

: she
we want to personalize the matter even | ie fellow

mor

and we think that it can be summar-
ized in one questions What kind of public-

ity for State college are you?

Just a

of its advert

its studen

of 1942 a1
upon the
show next

The fh
scious.

th

sa store

ts. ‘That this publicity 9»

id its successors Li

nature of the publicity
fall,
©

is judged by the quality
ing, soa college is judged by

wehes
the people of the state is important, but
what is more vital, the nature of the class | Roose

that we

when Ella
lor Senator

wdvanitagy

to their
to climb; others will go on and take the extra step to
get their doctor’s degree. We give our best wishes to | lege. For the students, however,
those members of the class of 1938 who will have the
ambition, and we know they will, to continue up the
educational ladder to success and the enlightenment
of mankind,

Now for a swift backward glance at State actiy-
ities during the past year. The classes have continued
importing name bands for State's social high lights.
‘This year they were Joe Haymes, Claude Hopkins, Art
Shaw, and for Inter-sorority, Anthony Trini, We hope
that next year's bands will equal those imported this
year, Presentation by Dramatic and Arts council of
Lotta Gosler and Music council of Toscha Seidel, add-
ed to State's intellectual entertainment of the year,
The constitutional assembly gave State the edge over
other colleges in debate and we are glad to hear that
it will continue to function during the coming year,

We hope that during the next year the Class of
‘41 will turn over a new leaf and use good sportsman-
ship. During the past year both the sophomore and

freshmen classes signed a pledge to discontinue un-
organized rivalry,

We would like to suggest to the administration

and substitute a course in “How to study” and “How
to read the newspapers.” It is certainly a fact that
We're positive our | ® college
editorials will be provoking to some one or
something and we hope constructive action

the high school and most freshmen need guidance in
studying to help them get the most out of their courses.

knowing how to evaluate “Current Events,” As it is
now, the social studies students are the only ones who
really keep up with the world and get the most out
of the papers. The majority of the other students
have (oo much to do to spend an hour a day to peruse
their daily paper—they spend five minutes to read the
funnies and they have read the paper. We hope this
suggestion will be given due consideration,

Journalistic Adventuring

“Assigned To Adventure” by Irene Kuhn, J, B, Lippin-
cott Company, Philadelphia and New York, 1938.

To those of you who would perish if you could

Woman, here is a book for you. During the past few
years a gr
porters and ex-Journalists and many have been excit-

To you we | ing, many
ful in outside

of that type of biography, It is full of the glamor of
work as you have been in News work,”

the greatest job in the world but It is also bursting

I think some of the most interesting experiences
that the book contains is bound in the first chapters

With the bustle and the fury of the State Pair, and
“dBA Boole Wp and down the territory

Another amusing experience is the one where she
covers (he stories on Margaret Sanger in China, Miss
Sanger was
» Of birth control and though her ettarts
were of Hite avail she made good copy lor Miss Kubin
for many months
columnist she covered the
elt Longworth and Mrs
yeely depends | ¥OM Our reporter gol in by appealing to the south

American diplomat who was tendermy the party. 1
happened that this man had been « reporter himsell

und even provided her with un
hmen will be advertising-con- | matic corp.

The impression that we give them,
almost unconsciously, will largely deter-
mine their reactions to the problems that
sy will face: the honor system, rushing,
handshaking, What will those reactions be?

Living in the days of heetie news events
ered everything including the Peaches Browning story

Yes, here is a tale of the golden age of newspaper-
dom when men like Winchell, Doherty, and Oursler

were starting in-on the tasks which were to make
them famous,

practice teaching and have but one more rung | jege will of!

en years as

final hour
concentrate

ee ee

tions, and

perienced,

with a guilt;
experienced
“watehful pr
ully will be

*

fee ee

peals and in

abolish py

bed mathematics and science

propert; ys

curriculum is a great change from that of

student should not be graduated without
caught,

tration or to
dent council.

of the Week:

As a fitting

the state, we
although our
(On sale in the co-op)

casting station,

dents could

dramas, and
eat many books have been written by re- | entertainment

doesn't have
elaborate, but

trite, This we feel rates high in the list

sma}l intimate details that make the dif

ween an interesting and a dull book time. This mat

her work on the Syracuse Herald, Here

be:

slunters of his day, she fell in toye | 8B@ hope we |

was trying for the Republican nomination | thanks for lste

Ki
trying lo show the people of China the

Mins Agnes. ©,
professor

Th her career its a Washington

offers iw prize of
to the winner.

‘orl trom his diplo- fire

she coy-

arion Minst, ‘39

given honorable a

seconds are left, and State col-

there are ten days left after the

ams the night before they occur.
eee

After a report given by the

honor committee in which 70%

of State college students said

they cheated on the examina-

quest of several students, the
administration decided to “bear
down” in the coming in spring
exams, And bear down they
will! From reports heard in sev-
era) classes, proctoring, this sem-
ester, will be the most intensive
that any students have yet ex-

In one of the social studies’
tests, proctoring was so heavy
that many students todk the test Who gave Dotty North

y cons

students who are inclined to
Tt would seem that the Class of "41 | cist thelr ginnces astray, Be-
broke its pledge when it kidnapped Lloyd Kelly on :
Moving-up Day eve. The hot-bloods among the fresh-
men were unable (o control their emotions even after
their class had made its pledge. In the future we hope
the members of the Class of 41 will be able to keep
any pledge they may make.

In the same vein, we wish to
Peer Vat to ae aieR | That didn't look like a St, Rose
for prospective teache
language, there are a certain few
students who, in spite of all ap-

been extremely apparent in the
science departments from which
several hundr
equipment have been stolen. The
thief, or thieves, has not been

It is the duty, therefore, of
every student of the college to jt they say about homing pigeons?
appoint himself a special police- |

man and report any suspicious
actions, either to the adminis-

plies more strongly before ex-
ams because there is an increas-
ed tendency for stealing as the
semester ends. Let us
individual policemen!

lege year in which State did its |
part in among the colleges of

we establish a small radio broad-

those interested in radio or in
broadcasting, or in dramati
in English, an extra curr
activity In which to spend thelr

be given care
over the summer,
ee

And above you see the first of
she took her first airplane flight with a pilot who was | the new Ego,

too much, Tf we have made you
Cink or Jaugh just onee, ‘ts
enough, From

Prize Speaking Contest
To Be Tuesday, May 31 |!!!) memdrrs of the class to wet

English, announced this
Week the annual prt
dinner between Alice [lest WHL be conducted on Ma
Gann in whieh Dolly 8:30 o'clock in Page lull, D

Brubacher, president of the cotloy

The contestants and their coaches | el
Marilyn Groff, 41, Virginie | pi

99) Doris Cirossinan, 41, Deo tors who are Wearing 4
30; Rosemary MeCarth:

Belly Daniels, 38; Anne Rattray
‘41, Belly Haylord,
nell, '41, Jean Novak, '38,
The winner last year was Ruth} so many of its own members are not
Donnelly, 40, Rita Sullivan, '40, was) wearing the gowns,

contribution for the year--boy, are
we happy!

At the Junior Banquet, Dean
Moreland proved that the Statesman
was not the only person who knows
the hidden lives of all the lads and
lassies, During her discourse the
blood pressure of many 39ers went
up a few notches at pertinent allu-
sions to their pasts,

Did one of the cigars, which he
has been distributing gratis, backfire
on Cuthbert last Saturday?

Rumor has it that Gaff has
changed his affiliations, Who Know-
les? Is it true that Murph is filling
Gaff's shoes this Saturday?

We hear that the mighty Mechan-
jeville midget was a frequent caller
on Warren St. last week,

Sully may have gone to Cobleskill
with Marie but we think that Stratt-
ner {s leading the race for the Ie
with the syncopated scrutinizers,

ficlally end two doz-
a state teachers col-

in which they can
(cram) for the ex:

‘at the personal re-

those
clence. They |twelve Sunday School attendance
the first taste of |pins? We're not saying anything
‘octoring.” The fac- | but the first initial of his last name
on guard for those jis Schonenberg.

How did “Pinkie" get thos
shins at the Chi Sig Picnic?
Reports have it that Doc Gleason

will soon be middle aisling it with
a home town girl.

scraped

wee

in (girl in Brophy's company last Sat-

8. plain | tirday, Maybe that St, Rose angle
is just another story
Seconds ticked o}

spite of any sense fo: eapinly for

ae vceseAsyy inve. Beale Bent Re last Saturday that he didn't
school propert

dents who intend to enter the
public schools, stealing public

have time to say goodnight.

And orchid man Quinny taxied
from Troy to the Commons but ‘twas
worth it, wasn't it, Ace?

Can it be that Toad is really in-
ee in a certain Tarrytown high
i LORD ;school student?
ed dollars worth of |""We chink thal Bekel should know
who's hand he holds before he starts
to squeeze,

The Mayor of Rensselaer will be at
the Dorm tomorrow night. What is

‘ty, Mind you, stu-

‘his condition has

And now amid showers of tears
|(and probably tomatoes) we take
2 jour nose out of your business and
A member of Stu- | become normal again, Thank you.

: oe |
EIS TRANS sap DENIS A, PEPER

i

ict as

closing to a col

COMMUNICATIONS

wish to suggest,
aim is high, that

To the Editor of the Srary Conean

News:

T was amazed to find on the bul-
letin hoards a notice which inform-
ed us that the Class of 1938 had vat-
ect lo wear gowns from May 23rd to
the week of exams,

This so-called yole was taken at
the Senior banquet, No official no-
(ice Was posted prior to the meet-
ing, so that nearly two-thirds of the
class Was unaware that a mecting
Was contemplated.

Thus, the meeting was illegal on
two counts, First, to be present, a
senior had to pay one dollar, the cost
of the banquet, Payment of dues

¢ alone Is the cost of admission to of
We've had fun [ficial class meetings ho other

laven’t bored you charge, 10 matter what the reasons
van be levied, Second, and more ine

portant, is the fact that no public
the old Eyo— Jnotice of w mecting was ever posted
ning. ‘That ts prerequisite for every regu.
GO tur or special class meeting, Any
vole taken at the banquet was mere

ly ah expression of opinion by. the
members present and does nol oblige

, as many colleges
done. The stu-
present debates,
other worthwhile
over the air, It
to be anything
{t would provide

Or
cular

we feel should
consideration

u

(he gowns, as wt
ly would
| Those
speaking con- gowns

Tat | so
ALR.

5; Ml volo undoubted.
uttorer, assistant HOGS)

nilors Wha Wish to weir
rainly wre entitled (odo
but TL thoroughly object to. the
Dona oF a notice Which gives: the
iilse impression to the college
twenty-five dolls |more than 200 robe wre aw
wot wearlng gowns are violating a
Ss ruling, "The class never legally
j bussed such w ruling, and those sen=

soWNs because
rroueous belief may discard

1,) 00 this
‘41, [them freely,
Myskania should remove this mis=
80; Julia ‘Pin leading noice from the bulletin
|bourds immediately, especietiy when

+ Mary Milley

rwention, Peney Wouman, 138.

Clubs Announce
Senior Leaders

For Coming Year

Departmental Clubs Pla
Varied Entertainments
To Climax Year

The departmental clubs announce
their new officers for the coming

yeur as follows

Commerce club will be under the
direction of William Ryan, '39, presi
dent; J, Edmore Melanson, '39, yice-
president; Elen Jebett, '40, secre-

tary; William Sivers, '39, treasure)

French club will open the year

with the following as officer:
,
secr'
Greevy,

‘39, treasurer,

German club elected Karl Sense,

39, president; Mary Arndt, '40, vi
president; Leah Wilks
urer; and Ruth Kerle

International club is anticipating

un active year under the leade:
of Leonard Friedlander, '39, pt

dent; Charlotte Fox, '39, vice-presi-
dent; Geraldine Ewing, 40, seere-
ver; and
Beatrice Shufelt, '40, reporter. Dur- . P
ing the year there’ will be outside Intersorority Council
imilar features,

tary; Sadie Flax, ‘40, tre:

speakers and other
Math club will resume its activi

“s next year with the following] the repr
UeTache SLURS Walder, 80; a Blof the fourteen sororities of State
» OR idea a presi. {Clleee, announces the results of re~

offic
dent; Marion Dayton, '39, vic
dent; Geraldine Thompson, '40, s

June 1, at MeGowan’'s Grove,
‘The Peace Club office!
bert Frankel,
Rosenberg, ‘40,
trice Shufelt, '40, treasurer
Blanche Kirshenblum, ‘41,

Classes to Meet Today
‘The senior and sophomore classes
will conduct. meetings immediately
after assembly today in Page hall
to complete elass elections,

Marie] and Soph ranks, John Howgate,
president; Mary Notseaux,
and Eleanor Mc-

hip} rear with the string bass,

and Robert Hertwig, 39,

‘They will climax this| oni
year with their annual picnic which
will be held Wednesday afternoon, |secretary, Christine Ades, ’39, Gam-

-)body of rules, pertaining especially

STATE COLLEGE NEWS, MAY 27, 1938

Strong and 0’Hora Will Be Co-Editors
Of State College News for 1938-39

Page 3

State Students Form

Two Swing Orchestras

Old man swing has been play-
ing havoc around State lately.
Yes, indeed, Two, yes, I said
two, bands have been stirred up
into action, Yeah, man, Sam
Coppolino, ‘39, who swings a
mean alto himself, is going to
n| sive Benny Goodman a little
competition and Frosh Cyril
Kilb and Bill Miller, leaders of
the other “cats,” will come in for
their share, too.

Coppolino says he can't lose
with Les Dryden, '39, as alto sax,
Howard Sanford, '38, as tenor
sax, Max Griffin, grad, and
Charles Ettinger, '39, trumpets;
Harry Bergstein, '39, trombone;
Jack Adams, '41, bass fiddle;
Bill McCracken, ‘40, pianist; and
Bud Barber, drums.

Kilb and Miller have unearth-
ed their talent from the Frosh

TO DIRECT NEWS POLICIES NEXT YEAR

Howe, Kowalsky, and Young
Are Associate Editors
For Next Year

HERTWIG TO ASSIST
Bilzi, Byron, and Castiglione

Head Business Staff
In New Setup

Jean Strong and Edgar B, O’Hora,
juniors, will serve as co-editors of
the Srare Coui.zon News for the com-
ing year of 1938-39, Managing edi-
tor will be Robert E, Hertwig, '39,

‘Under this system of co-editorship,
one will act as editor the first sem-
ester while the other will take charge
the following semester, The ar-
rangement will be dependent on the
teaching schedule of each,

Assisting Miss Strong and O'Hora,
will be the following who will act
as associate managing editors: Otto
Howe, Leonard Kowalsky, and Sally
Young, sophomores, The business
board will include: Victoria Bilzi, '39,

‘40, swings a mean alto sax, too;
Glenn Clark, ‘41, a tenor sax;
Jimmy Chappell and John Ald-
en, freshmen, trumpets; and
Stanley Kullman, '40, trombone,
Bob Mesek, '41, is another hot
pianist. Cy himself plays guitar
and Bill Miller, the drums, while
Jack Mesek, ‘41, brings up the

Both units have been rehears-
ing most enthusiastically in pre-
paration for “swinging it on

° "\as business manager; Joan M, Byron,

down” next year. Jean Stron e 6 .|'39, advertising manager; and Grace
J g and Edgar B, O'Hora, juniors, who will serve as co-editors iz ‘i a

of the Srars Couiwor Naws for the coming year of 1938-39, CESHENGNG, (98. OUESUIRLOR: AAA

Elects, New Officers! Ascombly To Continue | A. E. Phi Makes Plans

ntatives elected by each Activities Next Year

Students Nominate Candidates

In Tuesday's Busy Session
Sigma; vice-president, Pearl —STet

Sandburg, '39, Alpha Epsilon Phi;} Because of the interest displayed | Eta chapter of Alpha Epsilon Phi

this year, and the success the group |S°rority will celebrate its 2ist anni-|" Junior assistants to the business
ma Kappa Phi; treasurer, Betty|nas enjoyed during the past year,|Versary by a reunion to be held the|board are: Harriet Sprague, '40, as-
Sherwood, '39, Beta Zeta, the Constituional Assembly ” will {Week of June 18, It is expected that |sistant business manager; Kenneth
‘The Council since its organization | continue next year, according to an|the founders of the chapter, includ- '40, assistant advertising
has Successfully Promoted frlendly | vsnouncement by Speaker Leonard |ing its first president, Marion Levitt ae Mary Sao A 8k
relationships among the different |" : Greddson,,'18, wilt be waresent; sistant circulation manager.
sororities and established a uniform |Friedlander, '39. i The rewmion program includes a{ The following freshmen have been
Tuesdas ion consisted of the e reunfon program includes 2 appointed to the business staff:
to rushing, passage of resolutions calling for |¥eception at the sorority house On) yrayion Ayotte, Elizabeth Donahue,
According to Miss Metzger, a full| the establishment of a State Depart-|32 South Allen street, participation !jorman Levy, Miriam Newell, Betty
program of events is being discuss-|ment of Justice, Civil Service for |i? the alumnae activities, a banquet! parroit, Helen Powers, Madeline
ed this week, Tentative plans in-| election officials, legislative and con-|&* the the hotel Ten yak, Seales Scesney, Catherine Schaefer and
clude Intersorority tea, Oct. 1; stitutional convention employees, {HOM Of seniors in the graduate éhab-| Ray Carroll, '40.
al Sue Masked, Foe, and the adoption of initiative for |{0r, in", A blene brent ast a

The sports department will be
composed of Charles Franklin, edi-
tor; William Ryan, and Joseph Bos-
+ ley, juniors, assistants; Betty Clark,
For Annual Reunion jsoinen sports eaitor.

acennnasetiesiany Associate editors are: Albert Arch-
Program Includes Installation, | {lzel, Charles Ettinger, Joyce May-
Hréiklasl: sad Wedeptian cock, J. Edmore Melanson, and
oe Charles Walsh, juniors; Alice Bart-
a low, Robert Cogger, Saul Greenwald,

and David Minsberg, sophomores,

Inte!

cent elections of officers from the
senior class for the coming year:
president, Mary Ann Metzger, '39,

Rivalry Riddle Regulators
Resolve Reasonable Ruling Cogger, Ken Haser, Edgar Perretz,

History was made at State college
| Friday night, Student council
has decided to leave the soph-frosh
rivalry Lied at 19'; points each, Be-
cause of the draw, both classes’
numerals will be engraved on the
sil cup. Each class will hold the
cup for a half year, and at the next
Moving-tp day’ ceremonies, the win-
ner of rivalry will be awarded the
cup as usual,

The unique had happened. The
president of Student association won
the rivalry cup for one week, Never
had this’ happened before, Never
hetore in State college had any two
chisses been Ued in rivalry, Tn past
years, there hus been close compe-
tition between the soph and frosh
classes; even upsets in the winning
of the cup have occurred. Four
years ago, Ue chiss of '38, hy its
freshman year, won rivalry. “Lady
Luck" cast ils favor to either class
iy previous years and will, we pre
dict, continue to make surprising
decisions,

Let byxones be byyones
SEVINE BOGS.
whieh reached tis peak when the
president was, shall
We say, mulated a litte. ‘Phe dis-
quntled freshmen, breaking thelr |
promise, (hought te sophs had won |
rivalry, and wreaked. thelr disap-
polntient on the soph chiss prest-
dont, But events on Moving-up day
proved (heir 5 (0 be ground
Rivalry way Hed

AL (he stunt show on Moving-up
day, the competition was so keen
that the judges found it ditfieult: to
dleclcle winner of the rivalry
shunt, ‘Phe majority of the vistors)
whom we questioned, thought that
the soph stunt would win; even!
many of the freshmen conceded vi
tory lo the sophomore class, How-
over, the judges, taking Into consid~
eration, originality, direction and

so the

The spirit of rivalry |points; men's basketball, 3 points; }polntment bureau,

Freshmen’ report n it~
Intersorority Ball early in May cotiniry home of Mrs. Samuel Cap-|oyini stall will be: Allee Abelove, Jo-
: New York State, lan, honorary, in Nassau. The pic-|Coohine Autilio, William Brophy.

Nominations for officers for next|nie is to feature the announcement] Jone, Busacker, Noreen Cappiello,
year were conducted, Those named |of the scholarship award to the stu-|furviet Conklin, Mary. D'Arienzo,
for the post of Speaker are Robert |dent with the highest average. Dorn De Michele, Frelde Diamond,
Prominent among the hundred) penis Dole, Beatrice Dower Dorls
and Fred Weed, Nominees for the |and more guests expected is Rosaline | H eer, Betty Elson sylvia ‘Green-
ee -——— | clerkship include Ellen Best, Ger-/Green, radio's “Lady of Charm.” Alii ‘Adeline Kadgis, Cyril Kilb,
to the sophomore class, third place Jaldine Ewing, Sadie Plax, Fay Scheer |former State college student, Miss|yeion Leary, Mary Grace Leggett
to the junior class, and, finally, last }and Beatrice Shutfelt, Green's eventful career began with] Rose Lison’ Beatrice Marashinsky,
place (0 the senior class. ‘The frosh | ections for these officers will be| bil parts at WGY and was climaxed | xine MeGiuiness, Hyman Meltz, Wile
Was given three rivalry points for}yeid at the last official mecting,|b¥ her portrayal of Marie Lou onlin Miler, John Murray, Evelyn
this event, scheduled for Tuesday, May 31, In|the popular “Showboat” program. |Oiivet, Clarence Olsen, Sally Pine,
In the evening the spi room 206, at 3:30 o'clock, All stu- reg Ivene | Pogor, Elizabeth Pritchard,
had been mellowed by the solemn) dents are eligible to vote, Allard Publishes Poems | Anne Rattray, Charlotte Ritchie, Is-
More OnIG eM UES a Suggestion for the formation of| | Fries of Miss Allee Allard, '37,Jabelit Robinson, Ruperta, Simmons,
Stern,

Was the climax to soph-frosh rivalry. ti.4 Constitutional Assembly was first | will be interested to know that a{Louise Snell, ‘and Tillie
oki slasues Were th Gxeallene apie nade by Dr, Robert Rienow, in-|book of pocms, Firv! Sun, written by {Margaret Webb, ‘30, Ellen Best,
even squabbling during numeral) mycior in government, when he ad-|her brother, Mr, Leo Allard, has|Helen Blake, and “Edmund Caine,
formation when the sophs took the | irossed the siudent assembly last {been recently published. ‘The book 1s] sophomores, have also been appolnt-
red trosh Fibbons, and precipitated 8} October on the comig Constitution- | now on sale at the Co-op for $1.25, | ed to the staff.

ry in the ais as the sing progressed, |Ptlediander = immediately took it
‘The Judges chose the freshman class | WON bimsell fo organize & group of
us winner of the ‘sing, the sopho- jorowned when Friedlander received
more els coming Unit, Ja eangractiatary ter team Gaver-
year, and hoped to win one of these |" Lehman,

events to cineh the cup, Expecta-

Uons, however, often go astray, and} Appointment Bureau

YWCA Assumes Change in Title
To Broaden Scope of Activities

: Vion, several new commissions WIL be
Begining Chis September with the) started in whieh students ean follow
new college year, State College's Y.} up thei special interests, One com-
so it was with the soph class,’ The . W. ©, A, will be known on the cam-|inission will study comparative rell-
Junexpeeted happened. Lists New Placements pus as the Student Christian Asso-!gions and have disctissions on reli-
Rivalry points for the sophomore} ‘There will be a meeting of all) ejation, according to Marion Rocke- gion and philosophy, Another will
class stand as follows: Ist semester's | juniors, ‘Thursday, June 2, in room) felter, 's9, new president of the or- {sponsor speakers and discussions on
rivalry’ sing, 24 points; women’s 25, al 4:26 o'clock, according to an ganlantion, vuriotts phases of nurrlage igluca.
sports, 3 points; men's pushball, d}announcement issued by the ap-|" i oe = oe tion, A third commission will learn
? : ‘Phe meeting in|, “HRs eane in mute Wilh pera cr out Albany und promote
mascot hunt, 6 points; and men's }in regard to placements and inWo- | iviies and more cooperation with feommunity understanding and ¢
pushiball, 8 points, ‘The tolal for all} duction to teacher placements, the mon in college altars which are {operation among college students by
events Was 14s points, Seniors who have reevived posi |e itorest. to boll women and men,|SPONsoring tips mM the city, One
Freshman class won the following ions ave: Helen MeCurthy, French iy den took form during. the past {Hip for example, will be on juyentle
rivaby potnts: debate 24 points; fand commerce wt Redtield; Stella] it When, the urgunizntion, invited {WHat and, after a talk by
girls! baskerbal, polis; women's |SaMpsON, ENED td a ee ieee ie aie ene ttund sey (Ame WULhOriLy on the conditions 4
banner hunt, 6 points; stunt, 3] Hobart; Kama Dwyer, commerce at anil of its fimetions featuring such | Albany, the group will visit: soctal
points; women's athletics, $ points; | Brownville, Glen Park; Bdward Rey- yo nanent speakers as Dr. Wilhelm {Wencles sch as Boys Club to ob-
and rivalry sing, 3 points, nods, selence wt Oriskany; Pei nnd Girne Loucks MOLL. fSetve What they are doing to meet
AL last We come tou few general {Anthony Miranda, commerce and : ee this problem, Also included will be
conclusions, From the above sta-|couching at Oswegatchie; Vivian |, 1) order to carry out (his idea, the yan industrial Wip and one to a for-
Usties, We find Uhat the sophomore {Salisbury, Latin and Prench at Hur. |Preshiman Commission whieh has toign section within the city of
men are athletically superior to the |leyville; Henry Groen has received | Proved to be so successful this yeu | aibany,
freshmen men while Whe freshmen }a teaching fellowship in German at} W!Ht thelude both men and women!” syne officers and members of eabi-
women lop the sophomore women | Louisiana State University. fy the year 1098-39. Junior MeN) pet for Student Christian Associa
athletically, Tn the “gift of gab"| Graduates recelving postions are: |@nd women will wet ay advisors on | ion in 194d-30 Will be installed nexe
the Irosh have w slight edge over | Gladys Fasoli, ‘37, substitute in com. }the commission. |The progeatn Will weok, ‘Lhe new officers wre: prest-
the sophs. Tn the art of “twitler- {merce al Kinderhook; Marjorie | the Incoming aeanmed n AM "} dent, Marion Rockefeller, '39; vice-
ing" or if you prefer, mob vocalizing, | Wheaton, 36, French at Goshen; |orentalion, through talks in US| president, Carolyn Mattice, '39
both classes are equal. Th playing|Helen Danahy, 35, English and {members of ie faculty, discussions | iveqsurer, Mary ‘Trainor, '40; See
hide und seek and find, both classes | library ut Ft, Edward; and Harriet }O8 different: phases of campus lite, |

presentation, awarded first place lo
the freshman class und second place

4 retary, Ada Parshall, '41; undergrad
are about equal. So, rivalry ends |'Ten Eyck, '35, commerce at Bedford [#4 social functions.

uate representative, Jean Mitchell,
until Lhe class of 1042 comes in, Hills, Besides the Freshman Commis-!40,

State Nine Drops Shut-out
To Strong Hartwick Team

Sixth, Seventh Inning Hits

By Hartwick Nine Score
Thirteen Runs

Ye Gods of Sports laughed aloud ;
Jast Saturday afternoon as the State
nine tossed and booted the ball to
all corners of the Hartwick park, for
when the dust cleared away, the
Hartwick boys had crossed the plate
twenty times while State contented
themselves with elght goose eggs.
Yes, the final score was 20-0; but
this score does not tell the sad story
of the game, Van Keuran, on the
mound for State, hurled fine ball
for five innings, during which Hart-
wick scored one run on two errors
and an infield out, State in the
meantime kept things clean with
a row of neat ciphers, Then the
boys came through with a fine case
of dropsy and wild fielding that con-
tributed seven runs in the frame and
ten more in the seventh, Solid hits
rattled off the Hartwick bats which,
along with erratic support, account-
ed for the mighty basketball score.

In justice to Van Keuran it must
be sald that he pitched a fine game,
He certainly did not deserve the
beating he absorbed. The fielding,
which has been failty at times, was
beyond words, while the hitting was
extremely weak, State just didn't
pack the punch to drive over the

necessary tallies.

Hartwick has a fine squad which
is conceded to be one of the strong-
est in the state and it is certainly
no disgrace to be beaten by them.

The loss of Schmitz, last year's
hurling star, and Larry Balog, second
baseman of '37, has been a severe
blow to State’s hopes and is partially
responsible for a disappointing sea-
son, We hope that they can close
the season this week with a victory
over the Pratt nine. State opened
against Pratt in New York last
April and took it on the chin to the
tune of 13-5, This, too, was a loose-
ly played game in which Pratt earn-
éd only three runs of their entire
total, Let us hope that improvement
will be shown in the final contest
and that State will display a brand
of baseball of which they are capable.

The box score by innings is:

State 00000000 0
Hartwick 1 0 0 0 0 710 2 20

M.A.A. Lays Plans

For Track Meet

Torrens Will Head Program;

Teams to Represent
All Four Classes

Next Friday afternoon M. A, A,
will stage its fourth annual intra-
mural track meet, on the front cam-
pus, This event will treminate the
extensive intramural program spon-
sored by Intramural council during

the past year

BI Torrens, '39, will act as di-
rector of the sports program, assisted
8, George Amyot,

by Tom Ryan,
"39, Barney Tutt

‘40, and Ste’

Bull, ‘41, each representing his re-

spective class

The Intramural tracksters will be

running for their respective classes,

thereby placing four teams in all
events, Last year the class of ‘30

with a 46 point aggregate—ran off
with top honors,

John O'Brien, past president of
M, A, A,, has announced that an
award will be given to the ¢
ing the greatest number of points
at the termination of the meet

as follows ;
100 yard dash—John Ryan, ‘37
‘Time—10.5, Record set in 1936,

200 yard dash—John Ryan, 37 |

‘Time—23.9, Record set in 1937

440 yard dash—Tom Ryan,
Time—52.3, Record set in 1937,

800 yard dash—-Anthony Wilezyn
ski, ‘39. ‘Time—2:17.6, Record set
in 1937

Mile run--Harold Haynes, ‘38
Time—5:12, Record set in 1936.

880 yard relay—cluss of ‘39, ‘Time

1:43.5, Record set in 1937.

High Jump —'Tom Meehan, 37
Helght—5' 7", Record set in 1)

Broad jump—Bob Coutant
Distance 20' 142". Record s¢
Shot put— Charlie Morris
tance—40’, Record set In 1037

‘$8.

STATE COLLEGE NEWS, MAY 27, 1938

State Tennis Team Wins
Victory Over Hartwick

Camp Weekend
Is Final Event

Intramaral
Spring
Sports

Officers and Awards
Numerals, Seals

those finals...
dread of every stouthearted soul

. creeping up every second . .

. hour and day .
to be just seven days away, the
sporting blood of State is con-
. with the result that
the ranks of intramural sports
. is thinning out. , ,
ghost here and there
minder of what has bee!

Softball, the step-son of base-
. . Went strong for two
straight weeks, but...
a boo, F----, yes, you've guessed
. routed it for a dead loss.
. Avalon hall and
Kappa Delta Rho, two wins, no
losses, College House, one win,
one loss (fifty-fifty) ...
, no wins, two losses
. Yes, they were thrown for a
. We predict that this fall,
when softball comes into its own
for a brief spell...
be on the other foot .

Making rapid headway .. . is
the story that Intramural golf
. They have completed
the first round and are now in
the semi-final bracket .. .
Coppolino, with a win over Jim

the shoe will

tied A. Casper
Bill Williams .
ed No, one player...
sometime this

who won over
. Casper is seed-

Duke Hershkowitz, seeded No.
two, won over Joe De Russo . . .
the juniors over the seniors
. While Joe Whitey
came through to beat Nat Gaoz-

la...

Nine more matches and the
. of the tennis

those still in the running are . | .
in two straight sets... ;
Bakay, Eckhardt, Clark, Shapiro,
Bromley, Ryerson, Weed,
ancheck, Howgate, Dooley, La:
sing, C. Kelly
set winners ..

and the three
Durling and

We are hearing
about the Intramural track meet

We Fone, we hope,
we don’t want
disappointments

see you at the track meet .

Softball Program
Begins Monday

and Thtramural council,
co-chalrmanship of
, and Larry Strattner

it and present heads of Intra-
Softball Night
the|
finals on the apr sports program, | ‘39,

to take place this Monday and ‘Tues- | Marie Metz, and Sally Young, soph-

mura K, wall pecuiaes

hold- |
\ouse Guinneutton to that of rivalry
Jbetween the

The events to be run off Friday jinittee plans to hive the trosh meet
und their present record holders are |

» Will Stack against the sen-

softball game there
* Individual contests In which

Will be included: throwing a ball the

and | addre
» Loo numerous to mention.

of Monday's and Tues-
» will be played a
» WIL be posted on the M, A.
bulletin bowrd
i participating In the s
‘The matches will start at 4:30 o'clock | permission to attend and for appro-
Por any uddition- | val of proposed summer
jal Information, drop @ note to elther | gram, ‘These students may see the
| Pat or Larry.

in the ufternoon,

organization for the past year.

were presented to Marion Lawless

ed three years of participation,

years of participation, Minor “S'

were presented to Agnes Bullion,
Betty Dodge, Margaret Hickok, Lil-
lian Hines, Mildred Mosier, Cather-
ine O'Brien, Marie Peetz, Evelyn
Purcell, Marion Rockefeller, jun-
iors, Marjorie Baird, Ellen Best,
Betty Bunce, Betty Denmark, Vir-
ginia Elson, Frances Field, Lillian
Gallimore, Louise Hessney, Lucy
King, Marion Kingsley, Bertha Koz-
iol, Marie Metz, Virginia Mitchell,
Anna Prahler, Florence Przyborow-
ska, Helen Roickle, Fay Scheer, Rita
Sullivan, and Sally Young, sopho-
mores, The awards for one year of
participation, class numerals in felt,
were presented to Athena Cum-
mings, Margaret Hora, Eleanor Mc-
Mildred Maloney, Edith
Mary O'Donnell, Mary
Marion Reintjes, Augusta
Shumann, Virginia Strong, juniors:
Jean Mitchell, Janet Montfort, Edna
Potter, sophomores; Anna Acee, Iris
Barnett, Madolyn Beers, Neva Ben-
son, Dorothy Berkowitz, Ruth Boet-
zel, Violet Caganek, Loulsa Chap-
man, Hattie Conklin, Mary D'Arien-
zo, Elizabeth Donahue, Betty Elson,
Mildred Foley, Laura Frost, Made-
line Hunt, Marion Keables, Blanche
Kirschenblum, Ruth Larson, Helen
Miller, Anna McGuinness, Ruth
Munyer, Anna Norberg, Dorothy
North, Enes Novelli, Catherine
O'Bryan, Ada Parshall, Dorothy
Peak, Bertha Petit, Helen Powers,
\Frances Riani, Charlotte Ritchie,
Isabell Robinson, Jean Schaeffer,
Catherine Schafer, Tillie Stern, Ver-
nita Stoltz, Grace Sussner, Maria
‘Tripp, Roberta Wilhelm and Frances
Wood, freshmen.

Lotta Bunkers emblems for com-

were presented to ‘Thelma Mil
8, Lillian Hines, Ann Kalichman
and Dorothy MacLean, juniors; the
two year emblems, to Phyllis Arnold,
0, Betty Clark, Virginia Elson,

omores,

to Thelma Miller, the outgoing presi-
usw token of appreciation for
vice to the association during
the past year,

Dean To Aid Freshmen

Dr. Milton G, Nelson, dean of the
Jette

Of 1941 and all in-

tere

room 20, ub 3:80 o'clock on ‘Tu

Dr, Nelson further announced that
All students now registered in the
A.| regular session, who wish to attend

p nterested | the 1948 summer session, should re-

port to the Dean's office for written

sslon pro-

Dean on June 1, 2, or 3,

STATE COLL’

NEWS, MAY 27

Tense Assembly Watches
Myskania Tap Thirteen

Miller Climaxes Ceremony by Tapping Thirteenth Member
New Myskania Includes 7 Men and 6 Women

The tenseness of suspense seized vi
the whole student body along with
culty and guests for Moving-up
the annual tapping of My-
skania took place last Friday in the
auditorium of Page hall after hy
actual moving-up had been effected. jn
Tradition
Myskania decided “not
expected, that is, choose the new
alphabetically,
was changed to outbursting excite- |
ment when O'Hora followed on the
heels of Ades and Baker, y
knew then that anything could hap-

Sorority Groups
Select Officers

(Continued from page 1,
Alpha Epsilon

> a
Squad to Play First Game
At Home on Saturday
With Bard Team

To even up the beating given the
Peds on the diamond last Saturday,
the netmen of Minerva journeyed
along and bested Hartwick's aggres-
sive courts-delegation to the tune

Chess Team Wins Over
Mt. Pleasant Champs

Shades of chess nuts, the State
chess team has done it again!
Meeting the champs of Mt.
Pleasant, of Schenectady, the
checkmaters took three straight
games to clinch the match for
their second win of the season.

Captained by Steve “Shaw”
Szawlowski, '40, and managed by
Lee Durling, '41,
of the chess varsity, the first
of its kind here, is the outgrowth
of the M, A. A. sponsored chess
tournament held earlier in the

Of Sports Year

Miss Johnston Announces

Ruth Pekarsky, “

The festive Moving-up Day week-
end at Camp Johnston climaxed the
whole sports program of the year
1937-38, After a hilarious meal on
the hill in front of camp, the annual
awards were presented by Miss Isa-
bel Johnston, faculty advisor to the

a
or of "ae com: | Svivia Wels

Since the racket wielders had es-
tablished a losing percentage by vit
tue of losses to Drew and St. John
on the previous weekend after their
initial ganie and victory over the
, this game also served
a second purpose in bringing the
future Budges
position on the right side of the

ritualist, Miriam Shapiro,
; notary, Malvina Grossman,
activities chairman,

the formation
Alice Abelove,

Jeanne Weinberger, st
vice chairman, Frieda Kurkhill, '39;
", Mirlam Newell, '41

Skins with class numerals and the
W, A. A. seal imprinted were pre-
sented to Irma Anderson, Marjorie
Jobson, Phyllis Jobson, Thelma Mil-
ler, Ruth Shoemaker and Ruth
Thompson, seniors, for having com-
pleted four years of active partici-
pation in the asociation’s program,
Skins with only the seal imprinted

Seeing that there was an in-

sport, the boys decided to form a
«p of the cream of
the crop and play the represen-
tatives of local and Capita) Dis-
trict chess clubs,

* initial victory was
scored against an Alban

The trip to Hartwick was the third
$ “away” games.
. was to witness the fourth
on the Troy courts, yes
The game, originally scheduled for
y, Was rained out, defeat-
ing the Ped's urgent desires to get
back on the win side.

names juggled up as Ades
"Hora, Hertwig, Friedland
Hr é

vice presidertt,

anne Gur ney,

y, Joan Byron, '39; treas-

s Field, "40; clerk, Murlel
» Maric O'Meara,
3 criti, Jane Barrett,

ident, Betty Sher-

tapped in that order
It looked as if the number would
be twelve at first, but. Mysk:

‘38, and Elizabeth Allen, Phyllis Ar-

Doug Murphy,
nold, Harriet Green, Florence Hab-

“Slim” Hoose won their re-

1938

Many Summer Students
Need Social Security

Prosperity is just around the
corner, so they say, However,
we know that this summer
there will be a great many more
college students working in
hotels, camps and other summer
resorts than ever before. Mrs.
Anna M, Rosenberg, regional di-
rector of the Social Security
Board for New York state, wishes
to remind all students, who take
part-time or temporary jobs dur-
ing the summer vacation, to ob-
tain socia] security numbers,

Under the Federal Old-Age
Insurance plan which includes
part-time, temporary, and casual
work, the employers are required
to file reports on wage records
with the Bureau of Internal
Revenue, and the employees,
therefore, must report their ac-
count numbers, Another import-
ant feature of the plan is that
the amount an individual ulti-
mately receives will be based on
his total wages while engaged in
employment covered by the
Social Security Act, All wages
are entered into the employee's
accounts in Albany,

Page 5

Denominational Clubs
Select New Officers

The results of the recent elections
for the denominational clubs have
been announced by the retiring
presidents.

The officers for Newman Club for
next year are: president, Lawrence
Strattner, '39; vice-president, J, Ed-
more Melanson, '39; secretary, Alice
Brown, '40; treasurer, Helen Leary,
‘41,

The officers of Lutheran Club will
be: president, Franklin Kehrig, '39;
vice-president, William Sivers, ’39;
secretary, Bertha Petit, '41; treas-
urer, Ellen Pedersen, '40,

The results of the elections for
Menorah Society are: president,
Herbert Frankel, '39; vice-president
Eve Bialeck, '40; secretary, Sadie
Flax, ‘40; treasurer, Belle Lashin-
sky, '41; reporter, William Miller, '41;
members to the executive board,
Beatrice Koblenz, '39, and Herman
\ Kleine, ‘41,

Betty Bunce To Head
Press Bureau Board

Press Bureau, founded in 1935, has
grown until it has become an im-

erer, Ann Kalichman, Mildred King,
Fannie Kurlansik, Dorothy Mac-
Lean, June Palmer and Ruth Wool-
schlager, juniors, who have complet-

t Nco-pruablent,
Virginia El-
Virginia Strong,

, Jean Mitchell,

sighs of relieved rest
ways, Tollovs an ordeal of this type, |

n to rustle and | S44)
1 of the morn-
Myskania had other
and brought another
Then Thelma |

spective matches while Caramia

to see the local sports ager
in action on home courts, when the
second game with Bard is scheduled
Odds are in favor of the teachers to

moves to take the match, 3-2,

settle down for the

alumni secretar Wilkins

T,! Bump,
“40;

this mewling but growing infant
and give the men yet another
sport to participate in,

W.A.A. Announces
Athletic Credits

120 Participate in Sports;
Program Has Interest
For Many Women

Jeannette Barlow, ‘39, received the plans however

only Major “S," for completing three

9: marshals, Betty E 0

The’ plncesol Uils:gome wanyaml 39; marshals, Betty Elson and Helen
decided at the time of printing of
the News, but such information may

Pi | Alpha Tau pr esident, Charlotte
be found on the men’s bulletin board,

ry, Anne Kalichman,
. Cecile Pockross,
Eve Bialeck,

the award for two years of activity,

‘The decisive victory
Hartwick came with the
cl

garnered over

and reporter

which made ts all the more anxiou

, | Papemaier,
Kesley, '3
son, '40; treasurer,

knew the new |
1s Dick Lonsdale
cended the stage together

The members of the new Myskania |
in order of tap- |

'39; vice-president, Helen Lowry, '39:

on the confident hometowners, oe sponding
“41

Frament, Cahn, Rand, Smith and

the courts by winning their singles
matches in no uncertain tones. From
these matches, Hartwick had to be
, {content with taking only one victor:
To add to its score, the purple ar
gold followers took the doubles, 2-1.

al, Betty Allen, '3

fo 40;
Hope! tre

vice-president,"

sports have announced the names of | cial’ studienand_mi

nd Junior years,

Sweet, '39; secretary, Isabelle Ram-
ell, 40; treasurer, Emily Vogel, '39,
sident, Leah
ident, Charis
reasurer, Helen Lannen,
‘cording secretary, Mary Ruth| stowed upon them by the college,
Kimball, '40; corresponding’ secre-
tary, Marian Toles, ‘40; mar:
Mildred Selden, Teresa Wals
omores; chaplain, Violet Caganek,

Epsilon Beta Phi: pr
40; vice pr

1,
Sigma Al

,| Ayotte, ‘41,

fy Phi Lambda: president, Lois Wes-
‘ter, '39; vice president, Betty Hardie,
secretary, Beulah Gifford, '40;

urer, Mabel Farell, 39,

shals,

portant activity of the college. The
work of the bureau consists of pub-
licizing the activities of State col-
lege students by sending releases to
jJocal newspapers telling of appoint-
ments to teaching positions, partici-
pation in activities, and honors be-

Appointments to the press bureau
board include: chairman, Betty
Bunce, '40; seniors, Robert Hertwig,

O'Hora and Jean Strong;
s, Alice Bartlow, Robert Cog-

: president, Harriet)ger, Saul Greenwald, Otto Howe,
’ dent, Ruth |and Sally Young;

Ellen Peder-| Abelove, Steve Kusak, Irene Pogor
deline Block,

ponding secretary, Marion

sophomores, Alice

and Ruperta Simmons,

During the past year press bureau
nt out 1600 letters, publicizing
ctivities of its students. This
year it will attempt to get recogni-
tion on the Student association bud-
get,

who have received credit in
They are as follows:

Frament, number one man by virtue
, [of his victory over Captain Harold
-|Cahn in the recent

spring sports.
Archery—Allen,

schlager, junio!
Beers, Frost, Parshall, Wood, Tripp,

“ladder tourna-
" teamed up with his captain
to smash thru to a win

Rand and Smith duplicated this
feat by subjugating the second On-
eonta doubles team,
. | match, Kilb and Doran felt the sting
of defeat when they dropped thei
hometown lads,

For Fyn nd Sun

“Get Out And Play!”

In the third

PLAYSUITS in

allik, Jobson, seniors; Dirndls, Sharkskin, Mexicana

standing at such a late stage of the
Woolschiager, juniors; Baird, Bunce,

Colorful Prints.

cheer, sophomores; Berk-
», Barnett, Caganek, Chapman.

ALBANY, N. Y.—To meet the Aa]

Miller Announces

W. A. A. Officers

sociation offi-
announced last

1,98 - 2.98 | rudents with a pract
berg,’ O'Bryan, Peak, Petit, Ritchie,

|Galieue is offering again in 1
Bowling—Delong, SCULIVE COUSE:

SWIMSUITS in

Satin Lastex, Celawesc

‘This course is designed to combine

‘ounting and sec~

an
dward Hertwig will be mun-

cers for 1938-39 wel
Thelma Miller,

Joan Mitchell, * student to attain advanced business

who will compose
» organization,

Kirschenblum, Law and Accounting

‘The correlated study of accounting pus
jand business law develops in the /inis demand that Albany Business
of Mundt College is offering the College Ex- |
ecutive course during 193

Because of the advanced nature of
(raining, it 4s recommended on-
for students with at least two
your's of sutisfactory wniver:

1.98 - 6.98

ployers for

Lotta Bunkers

Jotudent a full knowledge
+ prinerples, und the }
+ principles in

pletions of three yeurs Eedulre antes s SKIRTS in
Janet Montfort
representative

Mildred Foley this

sof great value
wom wnticlpalings it
High phice in business,

reen, Kickok, Mac-
1, Pects, Rocke-

"ava
quirements,

Executive course develops
tduaite iw high degree of teeh=
shorthand at about
}150 words-per-minute 4

A combination wrist wateh ana | feller, Strong, Pur
stop-watch Was presented by Council | HHNES,

Appointed and the
Mitehell,| representative Is to be

Sullivan, Young

nek, | Intramural Softball
Opens Spring Season

With the bowling seas
attention of the

je uit Ho, Donahue, with Mr, Pren

aber a Ueda etn suraells
tu English aid minor

s Which opened tts
last week with
first win of the s
than extra-iining
aguiust Colley

Smart New Cotton

Hatfield Lists Games

fact that the pre
but half completed
Iiok Hatfield has already
cd upperclassmen on the sub- | retleased the Purple and Gold base-
Jeet of mujor and minor fields, tn | ball
ntlny. |

And Summer Students | Hayford with

and Gay Colo
Tn spite of the nad y Color

fnounced that he will) ent campaign &

Employment Opportuni

Hug tne noelal stu

Dunton Fort Pyman wilt University, Ohio State

ures of these

» Wellesley and Wil-
attended Albany Business Col-
during Une past year.

MADISON’S

“Better Specialty Shop”

fifteen with John 1
leading with Uiree,
lowed by ibd Bromley,
Schenectady

: Was able to fill only
jubout 6% of the requests from eni-

“games home:

Executive Training Planned

For University Student

EMPLOYERS SEEK COLLEGE GRADUATES AND ALBANY
BUSINESS eOLEEGE OFFERS SPECIAL COURSES

— +

Summer Typing

As part of the regular sum-
iner schedule of classes, Albany
Business College offers a special
typing course, mornings only,
seven weeks from July 5 lo Au-
ust 19 A nun-
ber of electives are
available servations should

be made Uirough the College
office.

38, +

A variety of other cout
Je for those with special re

Conf
A conter

nee Suggested

Wei

Ci

ol Adu

one-yeur Cal-
eculive course follows

A

P Accounting, Klementary ¢Pheory) 3
Accounting, Elementary (Prae=
io)

Husiness

Contracts 2
Shorthand ‘Theory 6
‘Typing

Law, Principles and

Vl

college students with a
wss Uraining, and it is to meet

ty cred
es are |

may be arranged in
Ihe College ottice from 9 to 4 dally
melt, Jx,, Diree- |
ons, New bulletins
ave available by writ
ing to Albany Business College, 126-
14 Washington Avenue, Albany
New York

‘The outline for the
lege I
Semesters U1 weeks)

Credits

B
| accounting, Partnership (Theory) 3
Accounting, Partnership (Prac-

tce) 3
| Business Law, Agency and Part-
| nership . 2
Shorthand Theory 6
Typing 3
7
Co]

| Accounting, Corporation (Theory) 3
Accounting, Corporation (Prac-
tice) 3
Business Law, Negotiable Instru-
ments and Corporation 2
Shorthand Dictauion 6
‘Transeripuion 3

17
dD
Accounting, Cost (Theory) 3
Accounting, Cost (Practice) 3
[Busines Law, Sales and Baile
ments 2
Shorthand Reporting os Hh
‘Transerlpuion 4
| —
Mi

elves inelude; Distribution,

yor telephon- Hinnehl, Governmental and Social

Security Accounting; C, P, A, Prob
lems; Auditing; Advertising; Bust-
Jess Machines; Business Psychology;
Commercial Art; Costume Design.
ing; Credit’ and Collections; Beo-
homies; Etlective Business Letters;
Filing, Finance; Income Tax; In.

Jsurance; Journalism; Office Prac-
|Uee; Organization and Management;

Penmanship; Public Speaking; Pur.
chusing; Research and Statistics;

, Hetil Sales; and Sales Management,

In order to be ready for summer
and full opening dates, young men

3)and women interested in business

are urged to request at once full Ine
formation about these courses,

“Mary Carolyn Mattice wilt
Page 6

STATE COLLEGE NEWS, MAY 27, 1938

Revision of Rivalry Regulations
To Result in Rip-roaring Races

®

When next year’s hopefuls, the
class of 1942, enter the portals of
State, they will be greeted by a set
of rivalry rules quite unlike those
that faced their predecessor and
rival, the present class of 1941, The
following changes were recently
made by Student Association,

Under the new system mascot
hunting will be much fairer, In-
stead of the sophomore class hiding
the mascot and gaining their five
points when the freshmen fail to
discover its hiding place, Myskania
will now conceal the small image
and both classes will hunt for it.
If one of the classes finds it, they
will gain the coveted five points,
If not, there will be no losses or
gains on either side, This will elim-
inate as well the passing of mascot
from sister class to sister class.

In athletic contests many new
events have been added, The men of
the two classes will be given an op-
portunity to show their prowess in
football, even if it be only touch-
tackle. Three points will be awarded
to the winning team, Likewise the
girls of the rival classes will engage
in a hockey game, the same number
of points to be awarded the victor
of this contest,

Moreover, next year, the men will
compete in a softball game, as well
as the girls, adding the possibility of
another three points to either side.
In the event of a tie in any of the
athletic events, as was experienced
in this year’s clash, a deciding game
shall be played,

The newest innovation in rivalry
is the “tug of war” gaining two
points for the class whose team, con-
sisting of twenty-five men or any
other number determined by the
rivals, shall successfully pull the op-
posing team through a stream of
water which shall be half-way
between the two classes at the open-
ing of the tug.

Naked Freshman Rides

In Waste Paper Basket

Monday afternoon proved to
be an embarrassing day in the
life of an adventurous freshman,
Some ardent sophomores, emp-
tying out the large canvas waste
paper basket in the men’s lock-
er room, dumped a protesting
freshman, naked, from the show-
er room into the basket and
pushed it out into the hall near
the girls’ locker room,

One young lady, passing by,
turned red as a beet, and ex-
claimed, “Oh my,” Another one,
seeing what happened, stared,
then blushed, and with a slight
scream, refused to go any fur-
ther, and fled back down the
hall, Still another young lady
passed by and observed the fel-
low's discomfort, She was a gay,
bold young spirit; she passed the
freshman in the basket laugh-
ingly, and perhaps, we could not
see, cast a side glance at the
dripping freshman, What ex-
treme types of girls we have at
this institution!

The poor fellow, turning red-
der by the moment, begged and
beseeched the laughing men in
the hall to push him into the
locker room, No one was willing
to do so until a voice of auth-
ority quelled the entertainment,

President Brubacher, disturb-
ed by the nolse as he walked
down Draper hall, admonished
them to be a little less boister-
ous in their activities. The fel-
lows, heeding his request, end-
ed the sport by pushing the
freshman back into the shower
room where he completed his
semi-yearly ablutions,

Pi Gamma Mu Pledges
Thirteen Candidates

Cain Heads Committee
For Anrual Senior Ball

The . traditional annual Senior

Ball will take place at the Colonie

The annual bids to Pi Gamma Mu, country club on Monday night, June
honorary social studies society, were| 20, at 9:00 o’clock, according to an
presented to thirteen candidates in| announcement by Dorothy Cain, '38,
the Moving-up Day assembly by | general chairman of the event.

Professor Walker of the social

Committees assisting Miss Cain

studies department. The pledges, are as follows: arrangements, Flor-

selected for this year were: Albert
Architzel, Ruth Butler, Richard
Lonsdale, Joseph Lesse, Thomas

ence Nelbach, Greta Jackson; or-
chestra, Leslie Knox and Richard
Cox; faculty chaperones and guests,
Florence Zubres and Alfred Tre-

Loyalenti, Marion Rockefeller, Jean! nanon; bids, Janet Dibble and Ur-

Strong, Ruth Fallon, Helen Zeman,

sula Tetrault; publicity, Paul Ditt-

Bu ee ee man, Edward Reynolds, and Charles
hori aunts : jaylord,

EAT AT JOHN'S LUNCH
Dinners 25c and up
Delicious Sandwiches and
Sundaes
7:30 A.M. — 11:00 P.M.
Opp. the High School

GOING HOME?

Get Your Greyhound Bus Tickets
— at the —

COLLEGE PHARMACY

7.No. Lake Ave. One Block West

FREDETTE'S:
65 Columbia $4 3° coor obove Peart

FOMPLETE OPTICAL SERVICE

Geo, D. Jeoney, Prop

Boulevard

198-200 CENTRAL AVENUE

Dial 5-1913

Cafeteria

and Grill

ALBANY, N. Y.

Councils Announce
Members, Officers

Lramatics and Arts association,
and Music council have elected their
officers and members for the follow-
ing year, The names were made
public on Moving-up Day.

Officers for D, and A, are: Vir-
ginia Bolton, '39, president; Ruby
Stewart, '40, secretary; and Vivian
Livingston, '41, treasurer, New mem-
bers from the class of 1941 are: Mary
Miller and Vivian Livingst«

Music council's officers ar
beth Baker, '39, presider
Brown, '40, secretary. Rosemary
Brucker and Lona Powell, freshmen,
are the newly chosen members,

At the

ANNEX

You'll find
the very best

Ice Cream in
Town

WAGAR’S
e

For the daily
snack

For parties
large and small

“Chesterfield’s my brand
because they give me more
pleasure than any cigarette
I ever smoked—bar none.”

More smokers every day
find a new brand of smoking

vane Sie AOS

"March winds bring April showers”

pleasure in Chesterfield’s refresh-
ing mildness and better taste.
It’s because Chesterficlds are
made of mild ripe tobaccos and
pure cigarette paper—the finest
ingredients a cigarette can have.

Rain vie been such a regular thing for

ersity of Southern California students

| lately that Delta Gamma’s Barbara Ross and Pi Beta

Phi’s Rosemary Livingston have adopted Singing in the

| Rain as their own private theme song and the umbrella
as their mascot,

Gack MookE
ANDRE KOSTELANETZ
PAUL WHITEMAN
DEEMS TAYLOR
PAUL DOUGLAS

Congress heard their plea for aid for needy students

+++ youthful U, &, citizens from the ranks of labor and collegi izati
2,000 on Washington last month to urge Copan : pass the $500,000,000 American ae
Act, Above is part of the procession that marched down Constitution Avenue, while at the right is

poate of the crowd that jammed a hearing.on the act conducted by the senate education and Inbor

Coppight 198, Liars & Mytus Topacco Coy

Volume VI Issue 19

Fs Lug A
* ERIC
DEMAND J
© FUR FLQORE SHIDPING \*
GLEN KS AUNION LEW.UY
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sets
Congress heard their plea for aid for needy students
.. youthful U, §, citizens from the ranks of labor and collegiate organizations marched
2,000 on Washington last month to urge Congress to pass the $500,000,000 American Youth
Act, Above is part of the procession that marched down Constitution Avenue, while at the right is
a portion of the crowd that jammed a hearing on the act conducted by the senate education and labor
committee, Vem

"March winds bring April showers”

A fas has been such a regular thing for
Rain University of Southern California students
lately that Delta Gamma’s Barbara Ross and Pi Beta
Phi’s Rosemary Livingston have adopted Singing in the
Rain as their own private theme song and the umbrella

_ as their mascot.

Cookery icin rte tenad
Delano, Graceland College sophomore.

He’s the only man in the college’s home
economics classes.

“The majority of
tobacco growers
favor Camels
because we know
what choice
tohacco goes
into them,”

TOBACCO
PLANTERS REPORT

IN RADIO, TOO, THEY DISCUSS THIS SUBJECT:

BETTY MIDDLETON asks RAY WINTERS, THE ANNOUNCER:

"RAY, ARE CAMELS REALLY SO
DIFFERENT FROM OTHER CIGARETTES?

NO TWO WAYS ABOUT IT, BETTY.
WM REHEARSING OR ON THE AIR FOR 40
HOURS A WEEK. ITS TOUGH ON MY NERVES,
DIGESTION, AND ESPECIALLY MY THROAT. “The favorite with
MY CIGARETTE MUGT AGREE WITH ME. most men who grow
AND CAMELS DOIN EVERY WAY tobacco,” is what

Vault Snowden, vet-

THIS IS

RAY WINTERS, doesn’t buy just any

FOLKS, WISHING tobacco—they get the be:
YOU ALL GOOD os 2, Camel buyer bought all the choice
NIGHT fy " y grade tobacco of my last crop. I’ve
< been a steady Camel smoker my-
self for 19 ye

B. F, Bivins, an-

other experienced

tobacco grower,

knows what ciga-

rette pays more

for the choice leaf

\ tobacco, “The

Camel people sure do get the best
‘ades,” he says. “Take my own

‘ crop last year. Camel bought the
best lots, And other planters will
A nn tell you the same, You bet, I

WHEN RAY WINTERS SIGNED OFF (above) he had a s his verdict. “In the ten years I've been enjoying
long, hard day behind him. Ray has thought a lot about | them, I've never known Camels to make my throat feel
which cigarette best fits in with the nerve-and-energy-con- | scratchy, my nerves ragged, That says mildness, doesn’t it?
Oy 5 suming work he does. “Camels are different from other ciga- | There are so many ways in which Camels agree with me!”
As I was saying...

Lecture Notre Dame

smoke Cani

Father Peter Hebert puts a
point across to his Quintillion
Orations Latin class.

js journalistic,

makes effect!
‘ oratorica

University’s

Conference Pa Director Arthur Kitti and Michael

wski lay final plans for the prem
two new collegiate love songs, Everynight and Love at Sundown, which

teatice will be featured in the Michiya ege ini si sisi
eaece aaa muse shen Apel . ie College of Mining and Technology spring

New Deal's No. 1 Utility Buster

Two's company, three’s a crowd. President Roosevelt learned that early from his tutors at Hyde
Park. Now in his 56th year, he is plagued by its application within the directorate of the most
important project of his administration, the TVA.
Directors David Eli Lilienthal and Harcourt Morgan make the company, director A
: + one , "
Morgan, the crowd, But essentially the incompatibility exists between Lilienthal and Chairman
A. E. Morgan.

_ David Eli will be 39 in July. He made Delta Upsilon, Delta Sigma Rho and Sigma Delta
Chi at DePauw University in Indiana during the war years, After a Harvard law degree, his ora-
tory and journalist skills were soon di ted against public utilities in Chicago and Wiscor A
law colleague af Donald Richberg’s in Chicago, it was inevitable that he would be one of the bright
youngsters in the New Deal. e

If David Lilienthal has his way, home-owners in the TVA area will buy power free of the

agency of private utilities. If A. E. Morgan wins, the utilities will conti i
benefactions, If President Roosevelt wins, there may be a new dinette Pk EET

And many millions of other
smokers find what they want
in Camels, too.

‘ORE and more experienced smokers
are concluding: "Camel is the ciga-
rette that agrees with me.” If you are not
now smoking Camels, try
them. Look for the dif-
ference between Camels

and other cigi
rettes, Find out
what it means to
enjoy Camel's
costlier tobaccos.

eo.

HE'S AFTER A

PEOPLE DO
APPRECIATE THE

COSTLIER
‘ee TOBACCOS

Monday at T. IN CAMELS

E-D-D-I-E
C-A-N-T-O-R

America’s great fun-

|" THEY ARE
Nai THE

BENNY (Q0DMAN | ARGEST:

THE “KING OF SWINe”

os SELLING
: CIGARETTE

IN AMERICA

over Columbia Network.

EXPENSIVE TOBAC:
= Turkish and Domestic.

ONE SMOKER TELLS ANOTHER

“CAMELS AGREE WITH ME”

He's been growing
tobacco forl0 years,
“I'm in a position
to know a lot about
the quality of the
tobacco that goes

into various ciga- &

tes," James Graves, another

well-known planter, says, “Most of

the growers around here—myself

sold the best leaf tobacco

ir last crop to Camels, I

know tobacco so I smoke Camels,”

“I'm the fellow
who gets the check
80 I know they use
more expensive to-
baccosinCamels,”

Craig
n starts out, “I had
a fine grade of leaf tobacco last
yoar, At the auction, Camel got
the best of my tobacco, That was
true with most planters T know,
tov, 1", Camel is my cigarette.”

an
'

Cova right, 189%, Ht J. Repolia Tobsege Company
Winpton-Salem, North Capen

Students win a strike

Demonstration

Led by a modern fife and drum
corps, National Farm College stu-
dents march on their campus to
demand the ouster of a dean they
called “uneducational and without
respect for the students or faculty.”

Acme

A royal procession steps into the spotlight
Carnival Queen Louise Weeks led the colorful group that marched
Ceremony to the platform to take part in the ceremonies during which she was

crowned ruler of the brilliant Colby College campus fete. Colby’s Pres. Franklin W. John-
son is in the rear, Conuestate Dicest Photo by Joe Smith

Chi Omega’s Jean Heslop poser for camera students Keynoter tv's Unvery of Cian gates muna, an

A _ “After training hard for their annual race with the
Only mat Ma university offering a full course in photography is 4 political Union meeting with a stirring keynote address. ‘ Oarswomen Cambridge University (England) women's ores these
Ohio University. This photo was taken by student Norman CoLueaiare Dictst Photo by Eiscrntratheltobway : Oxford University co-ed rowers were doomed to disappointment, for their intended ,
Kugler under the supervision of the course’s instructor, Raymond Paul. 2 fivala could nor muster a crew, International ane

To give you an inside pic-
ture of just what goes on at a
gymnastic mect, the CotteciaTe
Dicesr photographer shot the
winners at the Big Ten meet at
the University of Minnesota won
by that institution,

Gymnastic meet participants
work for no world records, for
scores are made only on how close
they come to a mythical perfect
performer. It’s an individualise’s "%
sport, but a strenuous one.

SHOULDER

STAND on

the rings in per-

fect form is exe-

cuted by University

of Chicago’s Nels

Wetherell, 1938 Big

Ten rings champion.
—

“Big time” apparatus for college news training

Rewriting i + + a story as it comes over the telephone, a Syracuse University

journalism student gets a taste of the real thing as she takes a hot
news story from a reporter talking at the other end of the newly-installed phone system.

Movies Go

BACK FLIP with a one-and-a-half twist is just being finished by ~

Cornell now holds two-mile record
: Howie “Wrecker” Welch, Cornell
Speed King University distance runner, is shown

at the finish of his record-breaking two-mile run of 9:32.4,
‘Aeme

A photographer named her “most beautiful”
T . . Of all the co-eds in Northwestern University’s
Ops 1938 Waa Mu show, Of Thee I Sing, was Joy
Hawley Denton, Kappa Kappa Gamma, according to Pho:
tographer Paul Stone, who took the above picture to prove
his point,
+

Collegiate

With Professor, Beware! and
College Swing now being finished
by the cinema collegians of the

Paramount Studios, movie-goers

of the nation will soon be seeing
some new versions of college life.

They'll see Harold Lloyd and
Phyllis Welch (right) in Pro-

fessor, Beware!, a story that’s 3X.

something about a professor who
goes searching for relics.

Jackie Coogan, Betty Grable
and Skinnay Ennis (below) are
among the stars now getting a
rest after their stint in College
Swing. Just what it’s all about,
we can’t say, but it has in its
cast such eminent “collegians” as
George Burns and Gracie Allen,
Martha Raye, Florence George
and Edward Everett Horton.

DISLOCATE on the horizontal bars is executed by Howard
Stuart, University of Minnesota, top honor winner in the com:
petition on this gymnastics device.

ONE:-HAND BALANCE on the parallel bars was just one of
the difficule feats performed by University of Minnesota’s James
Hafey to win in this division.

30

pipefuls of fragrant tobacco in
every 2-02, tin of Prince Albert

Joe Giallombardo, University of Mlinois,to brilliantly win the title
in the tumbling division. He also was named all-round tumbling
champion for 1938,

THESE ARE THOROUGHBRED
ARABIAN HORSES, SOME
FOLKS SAY ARABIAN HORSES

ISN'T THIS ONE
HANOSOME

THAT RA.NO- BITE PROCESS
CERTAINLY ASGURES An
EXTRA-MILD

MORE BITE
IN_HIM THAN

PRINCE ALBERT WAS A ‘FIND’
FOR ME. EXTRA-MILDNESS AND
A MELLOW, COOL, SLOW-BURNING
SMOKE EVERY TIME!

PRINGE ALBERT =:

" I?
MATE DIGEST Hhuian hy Jerry I
J t

Co lesiate

“Look Pleasant, Please!”

; ae : ey c Gd) t final blow to end the fight
And Villanova College’s gridiron Wildcats purred of j , ip : Battle Auhur “Phoh® Powter, Caiersit of Alabama's southeastern feather
prettily when this candid camera fan visited them during, ee haa fs y ; ed BC CLE cenrcianpion deli his ppaaent Shaw, finthe AnGeUN HieaBREleES
a recent spring practice session—a time when fans are few F >. between the Crimson White and Criseesity al Mississippn The decision way a techy
and favors ai bia : Pie ‘ ; nical knockout after the Mississippi coach: threw uy the towel

Classes in Caves

. is just one of the many unusual
features of the Resistance University
established in Yenan, North Shensi
Province, China. Here’s the “dean”
of the new school, Gen. Lo Jui-
Ching, former commander of the
Chinese red army, standing in front
of the university’s general office. The
institution is housed in 170 moun-
tain caves, Nenie

Whi OPS. jon Martha Watt

vent shioaty aa
she coaches tia the paseceae curing
Wet tot ttn and th bho k In

wi tulle skates She eo tothe Time Out

Hany cathiasnest renee wt dees Fons ob rebesation cn ditherent pouty ot tha ee
vuthe Cys Ala Tithe cases at Bob Mi belband and shaw Gr gik ot Yate

Wie attorien Ge tid asthe custeae than as) syeceasdiany

and Gancen sities

(Custodian

. of the trophies for
the recent Butler Univer-
sity relays was Mavilla
Rainey, shown here hug-
ging the team champion-
ship trophy.

a

‘ + national sorority in-
M stalled on the University
of Georgia campus was
f Beta Sigma of Alpha Chi =
mae) Omega. Here’s the sign-

hanging ceremony. ——»

He's investigating America’s centers of ‘earning |
In the 52 years of his life William Buehler | NOW ON THE AIR
Seabrook has seen and experimented with many of |

the ingenious ways mankind tortures its own
flesh. At 30 he was a private in the French army

at the Verdun carnage. He ate roast young man |
with cannibals in Africa, He has seen a native |
child offered up as a sactifice in Haitian voodoo |; |
ceremonial. How he brought his chronic alcohol- ||
ism to the mat is told in Asylum, a 1935 best- fF
seller. {| Ene r |
Now Seabrook, a Phi Gam, is engaged in 1 “ ad og / a
studying that species of torture known to college | | j
students as thinking. He took two degrees at three || ¢
colleges without, .he says, acquiring a single original | |
idea. Lately he has been returning briefly to college | |

classrooms to find out whether collegians are

rr |
Canmibals and Colleeians

Installation ceremonies are colorful
6 th ++. chapter to be installed by

5 Mortar Board, honor society, is
that at the University of New Hampshire.
Photo shows the recent ceremonies. Moore

MM if William Seabrook can be expected to make his ||
NNN um ms thing. Among the Bedouins, he rode out on raids

if ty As an : having any better luck. You will shortly see reports | .
i : } | on his quest.in magazines and a book. \| America’s great fun-maker and personality
discoveries trenchant reading, He is eporter .
: ~ 1 who finds out by looking carefully into every. {| —every Monday night at 7:30 pm E.S.T.,
She’s studying up on her politics tibesman of good standing. In Haiti an . i :
GOP . . » bigwigs, pointing for the 1940 West Africa, he got into the louse of “ts 6:30 pm C. S.T,, 8:30 pa M. ST. and TaO ae

7 One of Oberlin’s ace dramatists election, are organizing Young Repub- most devilish of black magic and voodoo ritual. | | ‘ '
{ t . . « Lois Bileen Scheibe, lican clubs, or rejuvenating others, in many colleges His Magic Island and Jungle Ways sold like ' ] P. S.T., over Columbia Network.
i L AC ress Oberlin College sophomore and universities. Peggy Anne Landon, daughter of marihuana,
recently played a major role in the Dramatic Candidate Alf Landon, has just been elected vice- Born in Westminster, Md., Seabrook attended

Roanoke College, Newberry College and the Uni- |

versity of Geneva (Switzerland). As a reporter

he moved swiftly from the editorship of a Georgia |

Paper to nation-wide syndication. As he visits

colleges on this new assignment of his, the investi- |

Ration of thinking, he is being asked most fre- |

quently two questions: “Why did you give up |

drinking?” and “Are you sticking to it?” His | i
|
}

president of the University of Kansas chapter.

Association’s presentation of Alien Corn.
Contectare Dicest Photo by O’Ambra

answers; “Because I abused something not basi-
cally wrong,” and “Yes,”

BENNY GOODMAN

Hear the great Goodman Swing Band “go to town."
Every Tuesday night at chis new time — 9:30 pm E.S.T., 8:30 pm C.S.T., 7:30 pm
M.S.T., 6:30 pm P.S,T., over Columbia Network.

Radio Goes 4 ]
To College 4 ]

Exactly Jou US |
dnd Canadian colle

and ainive

‘Copyright, 10a, NJ, Maynelde Toba
eal ba
Here's a new extra-curricular activity for collegians

A ction Students in the Ohio State University poultry department turned auctioneers for a
U day recently when they sold poultry during Farmer’s Week, Harold Glenn Koker and
Sidney Drake were doing the spieling when the photographer appeared on the scene, Camus Frevlincers

71-year-old boxing coach can still show them how

Pun h Johnny LaRowe, University of Virginia ring mentor, does most of his coaching from a
CI) chair, bur frequently he puts on the gloves and gives a slow motion demonstration like
this one with Al York, his assistant. LaRowe gained most of his experience in the Marine Corps, from
which he was discharged 45° years ago because of a “hopelessly” bad heart.

Wide World

Smiles

All. of these Indiana
University co-eds have
good reason to smile,
for they’ve been judged
the most beautiful in
the Hoosier ‘institution.
Yvonre DeBruton (sec-
ond from left), last year's
campus quéen, was again
voted chief co-ed cuty,

Cor eaaraTe Dhaest
Hhoto by Hunsi

Nga

Start

. . . of Pennsylvania
State College’s
$5,000,000 building
program was made
when Pres. Ralph D.
Hetzel curned the first
spadeful of earth. Gov.
Earle led the applause
section.

Rae Bs td

i
Fighting iacce
£ 2 Loyd K. Gar-
rison, University of Wisconsin,
laid down the law to the Lawyers
Guild at their meeting in Wash-
ington, urging them to lead in
the reform of the legal profession
and to resist “dagger thrusts at
the heart of democracy” through
suppression of free speech. -\:1"°

Students turn reviewers
B ++. Jotting

usy down notes are
these Southern California
university and junior college
students who saw a preview
of The Buccaneer, competed
for prizes for best essays
about the super-production.

There's really something to this act
M + Paul Schwen doesn't fool when he goes about proving the effectiveness of
agic his magic, for he also hypnotizes his helper to prove that he's really versatile.
The Drake University student is shown drawing cloth from the mouth of a fellow-student
he has hypnotized and placed between two chairs.

ne epee Te oa

Pearls . + + from abalone "8 ‘ \

shells are proving \
lucrative for LaPlace Bostwick of , 4 ahi o. a
the Scripps University of Ocean- ° mie
Harvard Hasty Pudding ography, who devised a method to

Club officers gather around grow the gems in much the same

while Benn Welles, Jr. manner cultured pearls are obtained +

from oysters. res eet { ut ry Wwe
r i

Acme

mixes up new tunes for So
i Proudly We Hail, latest
— — nies : ware " ‘i production of the all-men

1,500 pieces of plyboard in this piece of land dramatic group.

M di Helmuth Wedow and Dr. R. H. Pegrum,
ode. University of Buffalo, examine the Niagara
Falls model which took 15 students two years to build. It
weighs a quarter of a ton, and is considered the largest and
most accurate map of its kind in the world.

f 4 ¥ . y A ey 4
Couteciate Dicest Photo by Nixon | ne , - ea , i \ A Collegian tells congressmen about rearmament
i ? : id Frank Littell, Union Theological Seminary stu-
! : . z , ° Lecture dent and social action chairman of the National

Council of Methodist Youth, told the house naval affairs com-
mittee the president's program is an “anti-social action.” — Sem

- Volunteers!

Only these students are
not firefighters.. They're
just out for some fun
with the apparatus Uni-
versity of Notre Dame
students 38 years ago
used to fight campus
blazes. Today the build-
ing is used as a gardener’s
storehouse,

CoueguaTe Dicest
Photo hy Haitheock

JUSTAS FRIENDLY AS THAT PRINCE WELL | WOULDN'T Mar Hy BETTER PROOF |
ALBERT ‘SMOK| . 1 THAT. HERE’: WORLD @op
‘AND IVE SMOKED THE SAME FELLOWSHIP IN EVERY PIPE~

KIND FOR 18 YEARS > FUL OF PRINCE ALBERT
= ay

SAYIN’ PRINCE ALBERT IS
JUST LIKE SAYIN’ REAL PIPE JOY.
THAT'S @OOD TOBACCO !

PRINCE ALBERT'S “crimp cut” aswuren
good packir drawing. The special
“no-L.te” process means extra-mild, mellow, ff
and tasty smoking in any kind of pipe!

Dr, and Mrs.
; ; Scene S. G. Bolton of
A, eke nae ie Skidmore College are shown in

; . ; a , a touching scene from Faculty
The World's Fair licenses started something Women made the dates at this party Flickers for the Foundlings, a

Ad C. Frederick Kellogg, Cornell University senior, got a Hel ++ for “lonely” coreds was Free for the asking when the University of Wichita recent benefit performance for

Vv. ticket when he blotted out World’s Fair advertising on p Y, W.C. A, staged its annual party, Officers provided a date book where girls the 28 freshmen who lost their i " ; ; erie mnlvaivl pipefals of fregrant tobacco ia
‘ + . * Addi 1

his new license plate and replaced it with a hotel sign, could see who was registered, and sign up with men they wished to dance with. possessions when their dormi- rising Set N jor smunt every 2-05, tin of Prince Albert

tory burned,

Victory : _« over Washings
t

on University in
basketball brought Grinnell Col-
lege students to the home of
Pres. J. S. Nollen (center),
who finally granted de-
mands for a holiday in
which to celebrate.

Hhote hy Cogswell

=~ Candidates ;

Pe she, winner,

.. for the freshman queen title at”

yeacuse University are these five of

« group of 20 from which Broadway's Walter Winchell will pick

two Colorado We

experts, caught
by an enterprising c
man. They're pra

i
for a place on the col-

lege team.

A Twist
and sou're gradu

owas the pre
re when Hanter Col

’ est

Vol-Vi Issue 17

They want a good grade in batting averages

Batter Up! These nine Villanova Col-

lege diamond aces crossed
bats for a season of good luck when they got together
for their first practice of the season. Wide World

ualifications: Beauty, charm and poise
. » among all students at the Woman's
Tops College of the University of North Caro-
lina is Marietta Muller, who's just been selected to
head the May Day festivities at her alma ma;

An organization very much in the market for bright shiny cinema starlets is Darryl
F. Zanuck’s 20th Century-Fox. Having found Marjorie Weaver of the University of Ken-
tucky campus, this company is now dipping into its coffers to get you and me to know
her better. The alumnae of: Kappa Kappa Gamma at Kentucky already know her well.

Te is one of those stories. A fan magazine was offering a dance scholarship to the
prettiest face in the country. Judy Parks, her Kappa roommate, sent in Marjorie’s picture.
That was practically all there was to it. Zanuck’s boys were around soon after winner Miss
Weaver arrived in New York to claim the prize. So you'll see her dancing in Sally, Irene,
and Mary, Marjorie playing “Mary,” Fred Allen doing the comedy. , ,

In case they haven't yet come your way, look hard for Marjorie in This Is My Affair
and Life Begins at College. It won’t be hard to find her in Tyrone Power's arms as they
play “Second Honeymoon.” Judy Parks, who sent that picture from the Kappa house, is
Marjorie’s stand-in and roommate in Hollywood. ,

And just to make you believe more in h Kentucky loyalty, she’s shown below read-

F ay : fannie :
ing her alma mater’s newest picture bulletin while resting between takes on Kentucky
Moonshine.

“Tiltell you

the differenee
[have found

in cigarettes

‘WILBUR SHAW

je that agrees with me
cigarette let’s me enjoy smoking to the

COMING NEXT MONDAY
E-D-D-I-E C-A-N-T-0-R

great fun-maker and per-
sonality brought to you by
ettes, Every Monday

and 7:40 p

“You're known as a

great Camel smoker,
Mr.Shaw. Are Camels
really so different
from other ciga-
rettes?”

That's why
¢ the racing drivers’ favorite. To fellows like
us, there are so many things that mean a great deal
in smoking. One big angle that carries weight with
me is that Camels agree with me! V've smoked a
good many thousands of Camels in
years, so I know that from experien

iiawaablas

AFTER WINNING the 500-mile Indianapolis race, Wilbur Shaw reached for a

Camel and went on to pi

t out another difference he finds between Camels and

other cigarettes: "I get a grand ‘lift’ with a Camel, just when I need it.

“PEOPLE DO

APPRECIATE THE

COSTLIER |

meetaee| TOBACCOS

over Columbia Network.

And —Next Tuesday (March 29)

BENNY GOODMAN

THE “KING OF SWING”

at 9:30 pm
7:30 pm M.S. and 6:30 pm
Network,

Camels area
matchless ft)
of finer, MORE
EXPENSIVE
TOBACCOS
Turkish and
Domestic

IN CAMELS

THEY ARE
THE

LARGEST-

SELLING

CIGARETTE
IN AMERICA

‘ONE SMOKER

SHAW “noodles” out a tough
automotive design, gets in a bur to Mrs. Shaw.
bit of C
it, "Camels.are extra gentle to "for digestion’s sake.
my throat," he

el smoking doing — move is to light up a

finish off « meal,"

vctsome Camels 99
agree with me

eas
Schuylkill

Acme

“Camels are
preferred by the
tobacco growers,

who know leaf

tobacco from
the ground up”

ing to the
observation of tobacco
planters themselves

Thomas Middle-

ton and his twin

brother James

have been grow-

ing tobacco for 14

years, “The Cam-

el people bought

last year,” Tom

‘They have for 12

years. When anyone talks about

finer, more expensive tobaccos,

that means Camels to me. I smoke

‘em—my brother smokes ’em—and

so do most of us around here who
grow and know tobacco.”

Henderson Carroll
has been growing
tobacco for 18 years,
1 my own smok-
ing,” he says,
like Camels, I know
buyers
ed just about every top-
grade lot of tobacco at the sales I
went to last year, My own crop
was a dandy, And,as usual, Camel
wot the best of i

“I've been plant:
ing tobaceo for 20
years,"says Harry
C. King, a sue-
cessful grower,
who knows jobac-
cofromtheground
up because he grows it. “Camel
bought the choice lots of my last
tobacco crop — paid more for my
best leaf tobacco, So I know they
use finer, more expensive tobaceos
in Camel cigarettes, That's one
mighty good reason why my ¢
rette is Camel.”

“Down at the

tobacco ware-

house they told

me they'd neve

seen finer tobu

co than my last

crop,” says J. E

Jenkins, veteran vovacco grower,
“Camel bought all the top grades,
It shows that the Camel people
make sure to get the choice lots of to-
bacco, I prefer Camels every time,"

|, 1888, M9, Rernolde Tobaere Company
Wiovten-dalem, Dierth Caroline

Nineteenth century costumes for a nineteenth century art exhibit
In keeping with this costume feature, bue not with its dance motif, is this photo
of College of William and Mary students entering the exhibit hall, They’re being
given temperance handbills to add a touch of antiquity,to the occasion.

Conneatare Disest Photo by Vele

An errand boy picks up the corsage,

Prison grub was served, too
. when University of Tennessee Kappa
Sigmas staged their seventh annual prison-
ers ball, at which all men must dress in
the familiar stripes of the rock pile.

Photo'by Pentecost

Whiskers must then be whisked,

A knotty problem com

At last, they're all ready,

Paper exchanged for pasieboard.

Here’s how decorated domes looked on dance floor
“Miss Vanderbilt” Miriam McGaw was dancing with John
Donald, another Owl Club initiate (See Page 1), when our photogra-
pher attended the Vanderbilt University Washington Ball.

CROWNING,
EVENT of most
collegiate dances 1s
the Coronation of
the queen, Here
Henry Kleen is
crowning Alice
Greene at the Uni
versity of Rochester
junior prom.

Ah! The program—and ...

Acme

In tests made at De-
Pauw University by Psy-
chologist Paul G. Fay
and Physical Education
Instructor L. L. Messer-
smith, it has been found.
that basketball players
travel almost twice as far
under the new rules as
they did in the past. A
metal “follower” (left),
attached to recording in-
struments, is moved on a
miniature court to cor-
respond to the movements
of each player. In four
games tested it was found
each man averaged four
miles, as compared to 2!
miles under old rules.

ha: tee
Universi¥¥ -

Chicab™

: ' x
These 7,000 “subscribers” listen, not read
This is just a portion of the vast audience who saw
Crowd and heard the Rollins College Animated Magazine
“come to life” as a Founders’ Week program. It was the eleventh
issue of the “only magazine in the world that comes alive.”

They honored one of Union's founders
G Dirck Romeyn, leader of the group
Tr ibute founding Union College in 1797, was
honored at the annual Founders’ Day-convocation when a

tablet to his memory, sunk in the chapel floor, was unveiled,
Featherstonhaugh

He won first prize two years in a row
Ed Sabol, with a Dr- Jekyl-Mr. Hyde act, this
Actor year again took top honors at the Ohio State
University Collegiantics amateur show.

Coureciare Dicks to hy Campus Freelancers

4
An outstanding musical award to Pomona
t Pomona College won a victory over the University
of Southern California recently with a Loyola man
as referee, Pomona will receive the music library of the late
Ernestine Schumann-Heink, the court ruled over the protest
of the singer’s two sons (above) who contended that in grati-
tude for services rendered it should goto U.S.C, Arms

i . .. and answers came in rapid suc-
Questions cession when Miss Lisa Sergio, famed
Italian radio commentator, was interviewed by Elizabeth
Foote and Marian Baillie on her visit to the Cornell Univer-

sity campus.

bs

. have been bloom-

Blossoms tig for months down

south. Here Marjorie LaCour, Louisiana
State Normal College co-ed, demonstrates
how she’s regularly been picking mag-
nolias for the past two months.

REMINDS ME OF THE WAY
QUR FAVORITE PIPE SMOKE,
ALBERT geag

PRINCE ALBERT SURE CLICKS
WITH ME. ITS MELLOW, ITS MILD,
IT SMOKES COOL. IT PACKS
AND DRAWS RIGHT— AND
IT TASTES SWELL /

pipefule of fragrant tobacco in
every 2-02. tin of Prince Albert

to develop enerBY

found that the

n individual’s

Examination time is cramming time *

. Bracer A University of Iowa co-ed, studying late
cae and in for her next question-and-answer session,
teresting are takes time out for a refreshing dash of cold water. See

Mt additional cram session pictures on page 7.

A “bloody red and ghastly white” banner is their flag Wide World

Lam ooners “Join now, you'll never live to regret it,” is the battle cry

Sar mpo nu of the “Institute of International Ill-Will,” founded ra

a ry en undergraduates to satirize the war promoters. They are shown
ey stormed the Emory campus to harangue fellow-students to join the movement.

> Jimmy Lightbod
Spill ery iene:

breaks the tape to win for
Harvard in a mile relay.
Gardiner Mille of Yale
collapsed a stride from the
finnyh

run
ne underg}
ee )

He's nation’s oldest rowmg coach
Coach Jim Ten Eyck, 86-year-old Syra-

Veteran cuse University crew mentor, played a

prominent part in the recent annual meeting of coaches. He’s

” vest determines f e MIA. “f ;

inure: vs ¥ £

vermin ail - 3 fag! shown addressing an important session on rulings. His assist-
she — ant coach is his son, Ned, Jaterr ation al

Chief Snow-in-the-Head

Long cap-feathers made their bow

She Forsook the Microphone for

When a group of
Salem College co-
eds recently found
the old stagecoach
“Hattie Butner”
they dolled up in

' their best old-fash-
ioned clothes and

y hired horses to pull
them on a tour of —~
Winston-Salem, N.
C,, streets, —-\eme

WHAT M. C. COBEN SAID TO HAROLD SNEAD,

CHIEF PILOT OF TWA

. reigned briefly over winter activities on the . at the Wellesley College ice carnival. These

Purdue University campus. skaters are getting ready for a turn about the One Thing After Another

Couneciate Distst Photo by Withamson meadow ice rink. Neme

AMISH FOLK ride only in’ horse-drawn
velucles. and oe are called an to aid Westminster
College students who wane to go: sleighoriding.

Perfect floating form
. is demonstrated by Norwegian Nils Ete, world’s
intercollegiate ski champion
=f

In 1929 a production of Cyrano de Bergerac at
the University of Wisconsin set a record. It ran 10
nights, played to more than 3,000 people, Victor
Wolfsohn was “Cyrano,” his “Roxane” was a chubby,
attractive Stanford graduate, Kathleen Fitz, who was
teaching education and studying for an M.A. in
psychology. E s later Victor Wolfsohn had
written a successful Broadway play, lase year's
Excursion. and Miss Fitz was acting in One Thing
After Another in New York.

Kathleen Fitz must be set down as a Kappa Alpha
Theca with determination, Like Don Ameche,
another of Prof. William C. Troutman’s alumni at
Wisconsin, she took the hard way to learn to face
the footlights, Her teaching days and M.A. didn't
help when she was batted abour in Pacitie Coast
stock. Star in Pirandello and Shaw plays ac Wis-
consin, Kathleen toured the U.S. as the heroine in
Phe Drunkard, playing in hotels as well as theaters.
She trimmed her figure for pictures, only to gee a
“bit” no one noticed. She had the lead in Vhree Men
on a Horse when the leading lady was on vacation.
she went on cour with
Boy Meets Girl, ina part you could find only with

After that period of

a microscope

Turning to radio, Kathleen auditioned herself into
the lead in a nacionally-known domestic serial, Dun
Harding's Wife. When a pact opened for her in
One Thing After Another, she gladly forsook the
microphone

One of these days Stanford’s and Wisconsin's
Theta, Kathleen Fitz, hopes to be the bride instead
of the bridesmaid in the cheater.

"Da you °

Harold Snead gives his own answer —“Camels agree with
me!” he says. And millions of other smokers agree with Pilot
Snead, making Camels the largest-selling cigarette in America

ON HIS SECOND MILLION MILES!
Snead has been flying since the
“night mail” days. He knows what
he's talking about when he says:
"You've got to take care of your
self in this line of work. Ragged
nerves are out.1 smoke—all | want.
Camels don’t get on my nerves.”

THEY ARE THE

A FEW of the instruments that Pilot
Snead has to watch, After a trip,
Hal likes a Camel. "When 1 feel
tired, 1 smoke a Camel,” he says.
“Yes, | get a ‘lift’ with a C 1.
You may think I am enthusiastic
about them, Lam/ All in all, here
is a cigarette that agrees with me!”

LARGEST-SELLING

CIGARETTE in AMERICA

Camels are a matchless biend of
finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBAC-
COS —Turkish and Domestic

iT
ONE SMOKER

“Some people say
all cigarettes are
alike, Mr. Snead...
Can Camels really
be so different?”

“There's a big difference, sir. I
know most of the American fliers
with records of several thousand
hours in the air. The majority are
steady smokers and prefer Camels,
as I do. Years of experience
have taught them that Camel

< isa really different cigarette!"

f% Uy

AFTER THE BIG TWA SKYSLEEPER, above, was set down in Newark Airport, M,C. Coben
was chatting with Hal Snead, chief pilot of the Eastern region, and Isabelle Judkins, air hostess,
Hal pulled ou his Camels and offered them around, And so they got co talking cigarettes!

ON DUTY, Isabelle is a per-
fect hostess! "I notice most
of the passengers on the
TWA tun prefer Camels,”
she says. “When conver-
sation turns to cigarettes,
someone always exclaims
that Camel is certainly the
cigarette that is different.
The comment I often hear
is,'Camels agree with me.'"

NEW DOUBLE-FEATURE
CAMEL CARAVAN

Two great shows—"Jack Oukie College”
and Benny Goodman's" Swing School"
— in one fast, fun-filled hour.
On the very Tuesday night at 230
pm C. 8.7.70 pm
mP.S.T., over WABG:
Columbia Network.

TELLS ANOTHER Camels agree with me.

Coppeieit 19aN A tes har Sale,

She ruled Wisconsin's gala prom
: . on the Ur
First Lady 3, %iwv.
campus this year is sophomore Jean |
co-ed queen of the annual junior prom
> | a member of Kappa Kappa Ga
Kes,

}
4
Battling basketeers of the Pacific coast fe

Hank Luisetti (on floor), star Stan-
Rough Stuff ford forward, ae a head injury
in this mixup in the game with the University of Southern Cali-
fornia. Luisetti, however, scored 28 points to lead his team to a
64 to 54 victory, Wide Worl

Young collegian wins from former golf pro

Prize Henson Maples (left), young Davidson College student, re-

ceives a trophy from Guy Pierce of Philadelphia for winning
the mid-winter golf championship at Pinehurst, N. C. In the finals he
defeated R, E, Harlow (right).

bhai

Initiates of the South:

Messier cv. M, Clifford Townsend of Indiana : . Reverse et

iy honor relay winners
His physics glossary defines 3,250 terms Y

: Dr. LeRoy D. Weld, physics department

Com iler head at Coe College, has just finished a
8

glossary of physics terms, the first volume of its kind in English,

mines the trophy he will present to College “I” club had to wear all of their
¥ the winning team in \'« university section of the 6th annual clothes on backwards during the pre-
hich lists and defines 3.250 terms. ¢ ; running of the Butlc: University indoor relays March 19, initiation period,
which lists an F i j

_
Crams and Exams Go Tovether

rt Uriverstt
Know All the Stay J

‘hammers

N P
Oldest and youngest chiefs of West Point
Greetings Brig. Gen, Samuel E. Tillman, retired, oldest

living former superintendent of the U. S. Mili-
tary Academy, chats with Brig. Gen. Jay L. Benedict, the youngest
superintendent. The latter took over command on Feb. |.

Acme

The Night Is Still Young, and at 11 a.m. these cram-sessioners show
no signs of fatigue.

This columnist won a literary prize
Wi . ++ of the summer scholarship to the Broadloaf School of
inner English awarded by a national magazine, Bette Hurwich, Uni-
versity of Chicago sophomore, claims her prize essay was written by cooly calculat-

ing what type of composition would win. She’s a columnist for the Daily Maroon,
Cotteatare Dicest Photo hy Eisendrath-HHolway

An Optimistic Lady is this sleepy resident of Clinton Place, for at 2:30 a.m. she
sets her alarm for 6 a.m. so she can get in an extra hour or two before exam time.

Exclusive Counitate Diorst Photos by Margaret Myers:

I DON'T KNOW
WHAT IT 1S, BUT

\
yer
Mae
SAY, BOB, YOURE
ORINKING AN

“ER UP WITH THIS
PRINCE ALBERT

THIS HOT SUN
GETTING Jy
Coffee Hour comes at midnight, when caffeine is used to “so
destroy the first signs of fatigue and brighten up weary eyes for Ps
another hour or two.

YOU CAN SMOKE ALL YOU
WANT OF PRINCE ALBERT.

IVE HAD!
MY PIPE AS MUCH

samt ts
. . AS | WANT AND.

| eS A Aways ENJOY iT!

| DON'T WANT TO WORRY ABOUT PIPE TROUBLES,
5O | STICK TO PRINCE ALBERT. 17'S COMPLETE
PIPE PLEASURE, THANKS TO THE NO-BITE

SMOKE 20 FRAGRANT PIPEFULS of P:
you don't find it the mellowes!

Bare feet are best substitute for galoshes—in Hawaii

Storm Wear

When it rains in Honolulu, it really pours.
Co-eds at the University of Hawaii solve the

problem of wet shoes by not wearing any. Here’s Mildred Liu rushing to

classes in her bare feet during a recent downpour,

\ Connearark Diokst Photo

President Roosevelt accepted their invitation

$ Jame Easly, Rep. A. W, Robertson, Gen, Charles Kilbourne, Sen,
Inviters Carter Glass, K, D, Scott and J. W. Johns formed the special
delegation that invited President Roosevelt to deliver an Armistice Day address in
1939 at Virginia Military Institute to help celebrate the 100th anniversary of the
founding of the famed college.

Aeme

After the Third Night of cramming,
1b

midnight found this young exammer
already in the land where education
and teaching methods are just names in
the catalogue.

One of Collegiate Digest’s

Stones of Higher Education

bacco you ever smoked, retu
with the rest of the tobacco in it to us at any
time, within a month from this date, and we will

Signed) R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company,
inston-Salem, North Carolina

Copyright, 1988, RJ. Heralds Tubarey Co

THE NATIONAL
JOY SMOKE

50

pipefuls of fragrant tobacco in
every 2-02, tin of Prince Albert

Volume VI. Issue 10

llegidle Diges

A leading L. $. U. campus beauty
Favorite . . . on the Louisiana State University

campus 1s Delta Delta Delta’s Dorris
Bowdon, junior in speech, yearbook beauty, dramatist and
athletic contest sponsor.

They're doing the famed Austrian “ski waltz”

. sae of : : Debut + +» of the famed dance, with this photo showing 11s hold-up

Hot music from sweet swingsters é 5 e- Wi marathon finale, was made at a recent outing of the Inter-
: A portion of the Drake University band gathers t : — .

Jam Session around Bandmaster-Pianist Gordon Bird for a

collegiate Outing Club, with delegates from Dartmouth, Vassar, Smith,
e Pembroke, Radcliffe, Amherst, R. P. I, Williams and Mt, Holyoke
bit of jamming after a regular rehearsal session. participating. Contgcrvie Drauet Photy by Hteown

They're watching the game attentively
A group of DePauw University students sit quietly

Attention as they watch every move in a recent intramural

y ‘a of student
aught by the equally attentive camer

sports event. They were c

Fred Amft.

Winter Contrast

In the north Princeton and Boston University
hockey squads were battling on cold ice (above)
in a slashing, sliding puck battle, while Rollins
College’s co-ed crew rowed daily (below) on Lake
Maitland, one of a chain of lakes adjacent to the
Florida college’s campus. Walle Woihd

, ; He's one of nation’s winningest coaches

- ‘ Elizabeth Bruskin of . W. Read of Western State Teachers . , , : : - — -
Coach Herbert W. r ie = ‘
Miss Brooklyn College (fore: Leader College, Kalamazoo, Mich., devises another play to add to : i ae : “i Candle march protests poor lighting
ground) has just escaped a thrust from “he beskerball players who have not given him a losing ;

a . f ; . ee ‘ ... paraded through the University of
Maria Cerra of Hunter College. The the repertoire o He's also chairman of the rules committee of the National ~ 200 Marchers a paraded through the ersity 0

F rs, fornia at Los Angeles library carry-
latter won the match in the inter- team in 16 yea "A vise 8 y
Wine Worl Basketball Coaches Association,

3 = ing candles to dramatize their demands for a more adequate lighting
i js Oo re ; ‘i -
CO ees wat te the bul They om down ben ocho sted wea

studious co-ed, who seems to be enjoying it all immensely. seme

OPHONIST HAL KEMP (North
Carolina °26) organized his band while in
college, got his start by winning a vaudeville
impressario’s intercollegiate band contest.

First All-American Dance Band

When the All-American season was at its
peak and football fans were lying awake nights
worrying about the standings of their favorite
grid greats, our special New York correspond-
ent for things musical caught the fever and on
this page we have the result—the world’s first
All-American Dance Band. Composed only of
orchestra leaders who attended college and play
instruments, it is a band that would please
swingsters and waltzers alike. CotLectaTe
Dicsst is particularly proud to be the nation’s
first publication to honor these men of note in
this manner—and we only wish we could get
them all together to entertain you at a super-
deluxe swing session.

Of course we would include in this band a
number of other musical aces, but space limita-
tions prevented our presenting their photo-
graphs.

DRUMMER GEORGE OLSEN studied law at
the University of Michigan. He led the college band
and was the first drum major to twirl a baton and
throw it over the goal posts.

studied music to almose comp’

ather courses

de Mund

Artists

... of the stage must
also be. artists of the
grease pencil. These
two Capital University _
thespians learn this
complicated art by pre-
paring each other for
appearances in student

stage plays.

Velma Stafford has
the reputation on the
Iowa State Teachers
College campus of be-
ing the only student
who can pat the bald
head of a professor

and get away with it.
her Fyrey

PROFESSOR BENNY GOODMAN REPEATS HIS COURSE
IN SWING-OLOGY FOR THE SECOND SEMESTER!

Goodman. And Drummer Gene

The famed quartette, which steams

on the Camel Caravan, consists of:

agony pipe” (clarinet)— Gene Krupa

uitcase” (drums) —Teddy Wilson on the “moth

box" (piano), and Lionel Hampton on the vibrophone.

EVERY
TUESDAY NIGHT

Radio’s big double-feature program,
an—60 fast minutes

E.S.T., :
M.S.T., 6:30 pm P.S.T.-WABC-CBS.

Coprright, 998, HJ. Mermelde Tubecee Compoor, Winston Halen, North Caruling

BENNY’S “IN THE GROOVE!"
Swing”— Professor Benny Goodma
They "go to town” every Tuesday nig!
ature Camel Caravan coi jack Oakie
Then Benny Goodman's “Swing School."
Time—9:30 pm to 10:30 pm E,S,T., over WABC-CBS,

T
and his g0°
id.
Hollywoo!
“geu” Erwin. Hear

Prez” —runn

ck” Oakie— *"
forget it!

“PUSHERS” getting i hort, original
improvisations) on thei (saxophones).
Benny Goodman and his Swing Band won the title of
the most popular band in the country, You just haven't
hei SWING” until you hear Camels’ Professor of
Swing-ology—Benny Goodman —burn up the ether.

PEOPLE DO APPRECIATE THE

COSTLIER TOBACCOS

IN CAMELS

THEY ARE THE

LARGEST-SELLING

CIGARETTE IN AMERICA

“he tenseness of reading a dramatic tine

, . « is effectively e
Washburn College
dance recital,

‘orded in this off-the-record photo of Joseph Gartside,
nglish instructor, giving a poetic reading for a student

First in our candid camera news review
. is this packed-with-action photo of an in-
terpretation of shining the big apple by Goldie
Brickhouse and Bundy Fekete as they introduced
the Big Apple at a University of Towa student
night club. hamay

Ferry travel
- gives time for study and
‘ea cliscussion for these students of
Hunter, St. John’s and N, Y, U,
students who must cross from
= their homes in Staten Island’ to
New York City every day,

WA's

Time out |. letailed instruction
++ finds Actress Mii \dams, former stage star and
now head of the Steph» \ollege drama department, giv-
ing pleasant pointers vol Hielbronner and Virginia
Branum.

semi

coup of Mount
show.

» song bein
‘Holyoke College i"

a Walk, a production of the Syracuse University Tamborine and Bones Club

Rehearsal is almost over
_ and Melvin LeMon, director of the Bucknell
University band, lov if he’s finishing a most
strenuous session of baton waving, Koss

Herbert Block was on hand to catch th

ampus’ new “dry” night club,

=
Soda fountain sips

sare part of the daily routine

of Patty Sanford, Betty Sparks and

Maxine Rouse, Michigan State College

students caught by an alert candid

photographer, :
-

Post Box Romance
And at est Truc Lo

A lot of publicity and very little ro- /

mance was started when R. M. Brandin ,
) and W. A. Gilroy (at left) began Prince-
ton’s Lonely Hearts Club. When they
advertised in the Vassar newspaper, “Hun-
dreds of men are lonely in Princeton. Are
you lonely, too? Find your post-box lover
by writing the Lonely Hearts Club,” they
received stacks of responses. But Vassar
venuses (below) claim it was all in fun
and are shown giving the razzberry to the
melancholy Tigers. Meanwhile, University
of Toledo's Edmund Keefer (right) in-
vented a “cupidoscope” which allegedly
tests “true love.” The prospects for matri-
mony hold hands, hold electrodes on the
machine, and a meter tells them whether
or not they should proceed with the affair.

They'll star in a lively, ghostly production

, M i ( J Drake University’s Dr. H. F. Brande : Prof. Charles M. Callahan, director of the Rider College
echanical rap gives a demonstration of how to use his Huddle dramatic guild, and his four leading ladies do not seem
newly-invented mechanical blackboard graph. The device can be adapted to any in a ghostly mood as they discuss plans for their presentation of Three

graphical presentation, with the circle at the right being used for pie graphs, Live Ghosis,

Here’s new device for fact-and-figure lectures

Just how modern U. S. dentists learn the practices
and procedures that make them important and indis-
pensable members of our communities ‘puzzles many
collegians and average-citizens alike. In this chapter
of This Is College, Corceciate Dicest tells the pic-
ture story of the purely mechanical side of a dentist’s
education, reminding its readers that there is much
more to dental training than mere chiseling and drill-
ing. Follow this interesting and informative series
taken in the University of Iowa’s
famed dental school.

He can “clip” without penalties

‘Barber One of the few football

plier nthe U.S. whores
Sophomore dentists use models “clip” without bringing reprisals from the

locke of bone into the chape of teech, Thee (aa ! ; - to learn the technique they will aoply on referee is Al Rosato, star University of Day- OH, JACK, THAT'S AWFUL! IT MAKES a g eur THis ONES FINE |T SHOWS JUST
MESS! OF" BANE IED CHE .SUApE IGT Cee, _LnGke ‘ : patients at the clinic in their junior and senior ton guard. He is a licensed hair-cutter, and ph ey coreg. Hecate 10 KNOW PRINCE ALBERTS
models must be made with exactitude, and by the years. They use ordinary dentist's tools and instru- earns his spending money working on his |} f STARTED ON PRINCE ALBERT y NO-BITE MILONESS AND GOOD,
time the student has completed the work to the niet, classmates. : ec TASTES d

Beginners learn from bone model

Freshmen begin the dental course by carving

instructor's satisfaction, he has learned the exact
shape of each tooth in a normal jaw

; , oe : Z TONG
Model jaws . 4 ~ : 7 | f y y WZ,
. . are used by - ; | ; 1 Whit Hi iat Whi, th,

some students to 4 oi " fr” Sprenger
learn the intricacies Vi ’ ASK THE EXPERIENCED PIPE-SMOKERS!
of dental procedure, . k . - THEY KNOW A GOOD BUY IN TOBACCO—
The ip Dt, -AGn ~ a : ae PRINCE ALBERT. IT'S NO-BITE TREATED

a no Y sn . (FOR MILDNESS— CRIMP CUT
ie i lewvatng ; | TO PACK AND DRAW RIGHT!
-

U, S. methods so . ' 1 : ee ee Genii caine

—
she can obtain a . r \ \ ‘SMOKE 20 FRAGRANT nce Albert. If you / :
: 16 don't find it the mel pipe tobacco you x
license to practice . patel , )
here, r g pec i ;
i ae The toothache victim's nightmare’ ‘

Counnorare Diuest

“ Winston-Salem, North Carolin :
Then they graduate to clinic courses

Copreight, 1908, Hd. Mende Hobaree Co,

Histovtg lah . might be the title for this picture of the University of Iowa’s

ate iob i inati dental clinic, in whose 190 chairs sit the laboratory projects of 5
» Where their first job is examination , Y projects Kay Ingold, Westminster College junior,

and prescription, as this student is doing. approximately 100 junior and senior dental students, Chimer works his way through college by playing 50 pipefuls of fragrant tobacco in Pri | CE A LB ERT THE NATIONAL
n \ the memorial tower chimes at Westminster. He is a major in every aoe, tin of Prince Albert soy sMone

music, and plays vesper concerts on Sunday and Wednesday
evenings,

He rings bells for his bread

Perfect
Goal

The camera
flashed and clicked
just as the speeding
ball slid past the
goalie’s arm in a
water polo game
played between two
teams of the Ohio
University swim-
ming team. Their
coach, Raymond
Paul, is now ‘vork-
ing to have the
game approved by
the officials of the
Buckeye Athletic
Association for in-
tercollegiate compe-
tition,

| Pace Brickley, stellar

Swish! Unvenity of Pens

sylvania basketball star, demon

_atrates perfect free-throwing form
to candidates for positions on

Coach Fon Jourdet’s cage squad ‘ll ° No elty aring-Clark, University of ne

noo: her latest hat creation. Ing
ents: one white lampshade, one bathtub plug chain, one shoe lace,
two paper clips and an artificial bouquet.

eat

EE

His dinner jacket won costume prize

Dancer 1% 2 Smiths Jr ase

ant dean of students, Uni-
versity of Chicago, is known for his friendly
relations with the student body. He came to
a recent Chapel Union barn dance in dinner
clothes, was awarded a prize, and recipro-
cated by doing a tap-dance for the crowd.

Corcriatk Dicks Mates hy Risenaleath Ee

Floor
Fight

Thy tangle of galas
tes might: have been
taken alter a tackle in
a football game ita
weren't for the fact
that they are mem
bers of the George
town aad New York
University basketh all

This is a photo of stars’ trails ; j wm” — va mt
Paths : . + followed by stars when the earth turns are ‘ c : ” Pee : la ae aan

traced in this unusual photo taken by Blackmer ae Sa he 1 ‘
Humphrey on the Williams College campus, By pointing his y HURT AED aden
camera upwards and northwards, and leaving its shutter open for : now torte ball Lhe
a considerable period of time, he obtained this record of what, ; : ; York u
to the earthly observer, seems to be star motion, Patience and nas : Ce i
intelligence are necessary to take this type of photo, says Pho-
tographer Humphrey, for there are many complications that
atise to plague the amateur in this type of work, not the least
of which is the formation of dew on the camera's lens...

ty the collar ot enge

neering

REG CARRINGTON ASKS COMMANDER ELLSBERG:

Seen “Can you tell a Real Difference
... _ | between Camels and other cigarettes?”

“Yes —absolutely!” says Commander
Edward Elisberg. And millions of other
steady smokers agree that there is a
distinct diff

REG CARRINGTON: "I sce you're a
steady Camel smoker, Commander,

‘There really isn't any difference ‘ why Camels are the largest-selling

in cigarettes, is there?"
cigarette in the world.

COMMANDER ELLSBERG: “You're dead

wrong, Reg, The life of a deep-sea diver is

tougher on a man than most work, Most of

the divers | know are steady Camel smokers

and, believe me,theyknow there'sa difference, ——

‘Take my own case, for example, I stick to . ELLSBERG is used to fatigue. IN ACTION! Commander Ells-
mels--have smoked them for ten years. He says of Camels: "I found berg shares danger with his

They never get on my nerves. Smoking that smoking a Camel when | men, He says: “The last thing a

Camels, I feel that | enjoy life more, Camel feet tired after an hour under diver does before going down

water—or any tour of duty—  —and the first thing after com-

gives meaquick'lift’ in energy.” ing up—is to smoke a Camel.”

is the cigarette that agrees with m

CLUB-ROOM CONVERSATION (above) so often swings around
to cigarettes —an interesting topic to smokers generally, “I
can tell the difference in Camels," Commander Ellsberg says. :

“That famous saying, ‘I'd walk a mile for a Camel!’ expresses THEY ARE THE

how enthusiastic am about Camels myself." . LARGEST-SE LLING

CIGARETTE IN AMERICA
NEW DOUBLE-FEATURE CAMEL CARAVAN, Two grcat shows

"Jack Oakie College” and Benny Goodman's School"—in one . .
fast, funcfilled hour, On the sir every Tuesday 4 ‘Copyright, Bid, Red Heynolds Tobaren Gu,, Winston-Salem, N.C

neg tcadme mt a : 7 j ? 2
d np : ‘ q ‘ —" 3 sai : 8.7, ave Camels are a matchless blend of finer, MORE
owe OS ot Swedes t — o> mt i EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS—Turkish and Domestic,

j Pioliveesc ¢ ar ma w go mragn ne i Peace x stew Achanonsen: siorsie cm
HIS FAVORITE sport —small-boat

| Dram u MAS MU PTApUET wont me We *« Troggn: 4 wi i, .
oe weese | peomt 3 ere io iS champion sagt B ing, Camels are right beside hie! QNE SMOKER
2 imo - 30 tee ‘ RN SUE, intone ‘Camels fit in with my leisure hours,
deni ficcoorene <teiress ; : re el he aida swimming p to0," he says. “I've never known TELLS ANOTHER
bi : OCI AY SOWA!) Ronee stn fe them ¢o jangle my nerves, That
, meansalot--because I smoke a los!"

This machine bends atoms
: Dr. Thomas C. Poulter
Big Pus (right), Armour Institute
of Technology scientist, and Robert Williams

are shown at work on their new press which
gives pressures up to 1,500,000 per square inch.

Neane
. An unusual action photo

Miss °; DePaul and Long

Island University basketeers as they

scrambled for the ball after one of
them fumbled.

The box from home—high spot in student life
Treat Members of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority at the Uni-

versity of Pennsylvania all gathered ‘round when this
box of good things to eat was received by one of the sisters.

They must have had a good time
Riders Emma Jean Toth, Gene Gettrust and Zella Mae
Davidson, Kent State University students, thor-
oughly enjoyed the sleigh ride they took in an outht borrowed from
a friendly farmer.

lows «colonel
B f the Univer-
OSS . I lowa R. O.
TC. at so far as the
co-eds are ned, is Jannes
Savery, reer commissioned
honorary ca olonel,

They have a good reason for being sleepy vost a foul Gal ati oy abs
Saidee Hodgson and Robert Schnautz almost fell oe af modern basketball are g Le .
e of mor i e

Drowsy asleep while they were having their picture taken at F The speed wad tre askable action ioe $ inch “Pound jy var, Old models for modern ae study oa. .

the conclusion of University of Georgia psychology tests during which Action exemplified in a Dayton star, evading Fa) NOC foe 4 , ; Nav A miniature 17th century navy is represented in this collection

they went for 100 hours without sleep. The tests proved that slumber is 1: Backe, University of Bay ‘ y of 107 models of English warships recently bequeathed to the

essential to quick mentality, sharpness of vision, good humor and clarity £ Ohio Wesleyan van ua ye nial 4 ear Academy by Col, H, H, Rogers, The collection is valved at
Acme

,000, ‘

i Sa eae ae
of hearing, and that it 19 not essential for a good appetice. Acme

This was alt

shows Elme
Kirchwehm o

so ERTS ere PET RTE

Winter Traming }
For Spring Sport

Harvard crew candi-
dates are shown at
work in the indoor
rowing tank, prepar-
ing for the days when
the ice breaks up in
the Charles River and
they can go out into
the open for their
practice sessions. In
the rear, casting watch-
ful eyes are Coaches
Harvey Love, Bert
Haines and Tom
Bolles. Wide World

regularly each day. They are shown here leav-
ing the pillared agriculture study center on the
Wisconsin campus. vie

SD" Sticy

For Spring Sowing

To give young men of the farms a broad edurational
contact which will train them to be better farmers and
better citizens is the purpose of the “Farm Folk School”
operated during the snow season by the University of
Wisconsin college of agriculture.

The school’s term runs each year from the middle of
November to the middle of March, days during which
active farm work is curtailed by the cold and the snow.
The full course requires two terms, but many go back for
the third and fourth. Average age of the 300 students is
22 years. The entire four months’ course, including food,
shelter and tuition, costs but $97.50—and this includes
medical care.

There are no entrance requirements or examinations.
The course of study is built around the social and cultural
needs, as well as the vocational interests, of America’s
future farm leaders. The former course gives them an
acquaintance with economics, history, sociology and politi-
cal science, The latter covers all phases of farming.

Plans are now being made to extend this type of train-
ing to the farm girls of the state, so that they, too, can
use their winter months’ leisure to train themselves for
more efficient and intelligent summer months’ activity.

from Wide World

Oberlin co-eds’ new mascot
Residents of Churchill Cottage at
Snow Lady Oberlin: College proved themselves
proficient snow artists when they built this snow lady in front of
their college home.

A THOUSAND THANKS TO YOU,
JUDGE. BESIDES THE GRANO
WAY IT DRAWS PA. IS THE
MILDESY, TASTIGST TOBACCO
1 EVER SMOKED

THE PIPE AT ALL - ITS PROBABLY
THE TOBACCO. FILL UP WITH
THIS PRINCE ALBERT.

IT'S CRIMP CUT TO

Agricultural engine

ering is an important part of the course, This
class is learning the latest developments in farm machinery from
Instructor Duffee,

Animal husbandry is a popular course, for many are interested

in dairy cattle management, feeds and feeding and other related
subjects,

Us Behinedthe Scenes Sterres of Eligher

Four Leaders

Four Ohio State Univer-
‘sity faculty members have
recently been named heads
of professional organiza:
tions, (L. to r) Dr, H. M,
Semans, president, Ameri-
an Association of Dental
“Schools; Dr, H, W, Arane,
‘president, Association of
American Law Schools; Dr,
H, J, Upham, presidene,
American Medical Assacia-
"tan, At right is Dr, O, V,
_ Brumley, Leap Anat

PACK RIGHT, THAT
INSURES EASY

50

pipefule of fragrant tobacco in
every 2-02, tin of Prince Albert

PRINCE ALBERT IS A SHREWD BUY,
PIPE-SMOKERS! P.A. HAS MORE

OF WHAT YOU WANT — MILDER,
MELLOWER SMOKING —

PULLER, RICHER BODY 5

SMOKE 20 FRAGRANT PIPEFULS of Pri
don't find it the mellower

Copyright, 1988, R, J. Reynolds Tobacco Go,

PRINGE ALBERT "2°

Thirteen University
of Illinois coeds (left)
formed the court of
honor for the pageant-
ty which preceded each
Illini football game.
Each of the Big Ten
schools and Notre
Dame was represented
by a girl from the
school’s state or com-
munity. \

Kitty Lou Loper
(right) was the foot-
ball queen at Witten-
berg College in Spring-
field, O. She ruled over

homecoming festivi- ss iereriag
ties. Acne

See cee

Boss of MSCW’s beauty court
r Mary Lucille Ward, Mississippi
Queen State College for Women senior,
was recently voted “most beautiful” of all the
members of the student body,

They're learning all about good behavior

. on what and what not to do

Pointers ete given this special social be-

havior class at Hunter College by Mrs. Catherine Meigs
(seated). Wile World

| HOPE THE BOYS
KNOW THAT A
GIRL ALWAYS

MADE FROM FINER, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS

Give Camels for Christmas! There's no doubt about

Research

An unusual photo study of a science student
at work in a laboratory, This picture was

taken in a Fenn College science workshop,

Mt. Holyoke’s first male president

To the lone society of two men who are presi-
dents of eastern women’s colleges, has now been
added Dr, Roswell Gray Ham. An ex-captain in
the U.S, Marines, he has been selected to head
Mt. Holyoke College, the first male president in
its LOL years, It began as a female seminary in
1836, today is pioneer among schools to offer
higher education to women.

Tt took almost a regiment of Marines to over-
come the opposition to Dr, Ham's appointment
He personally was under no harsh scrutiny. He
had taught in Woman's College of Albertus
Magnus and had faced co-eds at the Universities
of California and Washington. It was just that
under woman's hands, notably those of retiring
74-year-old President Mary Emma Wooley, Mt.
Holyoke had grown to an eight-and-a-half million
endowment, During her 37-year administration,
enrollment has doubled, the faculty quadrupled.

Dr. Ham is 45, six-foot-three, a native of Cali-
fornia, For 16 years he taught at Yale, a good
part of that time as professor of English. He is
much younger than Smith's William Allan Neilson
and Vassar's Henry Noble McCracken, who have
learned to delight their girls with clowning, -

APPRECIATES
A GIFT OF CAMEL
CIGARETTES

WHAT I'D LIKE —
AND THE ANSWER
IS THAT BIG
GLASS HUMIDOR
OF PRINCE
ALBERT

| BELIEVE IN

GIVING MEN GIFTS
THEY CAN USE, SO

IM GIVING
THAT SPECIAL 1-LB,
CHRISTMAS TIN OF
PRINCE ALBERT

CAMELS HEAD
THE LIST OF
WHAT | WANT
FOR
CHRISTMAS

how much people appreciate Camels—the cigarette
that’s made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS,
A gift of Camels carries a double ‘greeting from you. It
says: “Happy Holidays and Happy Smoking!”

(right) The famous Christ-
mas package, the Camel
carton—10 packs of"20's"”
—200 cigarettes. You'll
find ic at your dealer's.

(left) Another Christmas special—4 boxes of Camels
in “flat fifties"—wrapped in gay holiday dress.

Prince Albert

THE NATIONAL JOY SMOKE

If you know a man owns a pipe — you'll be mak-
ing an appropriate selection if you give him a
big gift package of PRINCE ALBERT. Prince
Albert's as mild a pipe tobacco as ever delighted
a pipe-smoker. It's easy on the tongue—doesn’t
bite, It’s extra’cool, thanks co its “crimp cus.”
And it's cops for mellow taste.

(right) A pound of Prince Albert in a glass
humidor thac keeps the tobacco in prime con-
dition and becomes a welcome possession.

(above) One pound of mild,
metlow Prince Albert—the
“biteless” tubacco—placed
in an attractive Christmas
gift package.

This quarterback helps out underclassmen
Nile Kinnick, University of Iowa quarterback, works his way through
college by being a proctor in a university dormitory. He’s shown helping
two befuddled underclassmen. Couisaryte Dickst Mhote by Jonson

These classmates are foes on the gridiron

Tony Blazine (left), Chicago Cardinal tackle, and Edgar Manske, Chicago Bear  taterastionsl
end, arc classmates in the law school of Loyola University, where both are taking Oe
post-graduate work. Acme

Music instruction

He heads America's young farmers

President J. Lester Poucher, 18-year-old Univer-

" “ sity of Florida sophomore, is the newly
All play and no work elected head of the Future Farmers of America. Aum

, . « » bring ineligibility, so Sid Luck-

Gridiron speedster slows down for his studies man (right), Columbia University

William C. Hutchinson (left), Dartmouth’s sensational back, gives a few class- triple-threat ace, bones for recitation
room pointers to a teammate, Tackle George Summers. nal during a class study period.

Big Time

newspaper meth-
ods were taught to
members of the Uni-
versity of Texas Daily
Texan staff when
alumnus Stanley
Walker, ace city edi-
tor, returned to his

alma mater to lecture.
Photo by Fayite

ouch!

Charles Cox delivers

a smashing clip to the
head of Thaddeus
Grosscup II, who
ducks to win an ele-
gantly performed
“touch” on his oppo- att ‘ ‘ .
in thi iversit : Bringing with her the teaching of Ethel Barry-
pel ating os : Ar tist- Teacher aan i famous mother, Ethel Barrymore Colt
ing class match. —> . instructs the drama students of Beaver College in the art of modern dramatics,

Wide World She's shown giving pointers to Barbara Lewis and Maude Manogue. seme

She’s teaching the “Barrymore style” of dramatics

Rai Stans eM ARC a

Every day is derby day for Butler seniors She's a student of rare flowers
. +» of the variety so proudly being displayed here are worn by all 7 Betty Diltz, Mundelein College fresh s
t vari i y Diltz, Mundelein College freshman, says
Tron Hats Butler University seniors. Well-enforced rules prohibit other than Orchids “orchids to botany field trips” after visiting a
seniors to wear derbies on the campus: Shown here are William Olsen, Roger Hooker, suburban Chicago greenhouse recently to examine specimens of
Robert Sorenson and James Stalkers. ; rare blooms.

- ro ie
Getting Mail i

. is a popular morning Sylvia Sidney rules student desks in India, too
between -classes activity at adorn the walls above

the College of William and (Queens and Goods jg. jit desks in univer

ere 7 - Th whi sities in India. Pictures of Gandhi, Sylvia Sidney, an English beauty
tended, either. f, ys a queen and the god Krishna reflect here the clash of old mystic
Washed postalficeiaf restore tradition and modern English influence in the minds of these

Williamsburg is in the back- hy
ground. Vote by Velx —- YOUNG, people.

: fl Ee

et

Microscopic examinations

» require careful and_ skillful

preparation. Here Nell Heino and

Louise Reed prepare a piece of tissue

Tails z ; for mounting on a microscope slide.
of many kinds
are made by the
medical technol-
ogists, and here
Veda Huston is
learning the correct
procedure to be fol
lowed in making
test tube experi-

ments,

bo ge: Double
X-ray machine operation ; Blood donors , : . W yr kc yut

++ an important part of the course. Here a » must be tested : ’ bs
student is demonstrating the correct method of °° that their blood 7 ail nn . Dr, George Sandgren, Fashion stylists are going to the dogs
centering an w-tay tube above the part of the body — roperties can o \ ,? ‘ Brigham Young University . «+ are the latest additions to Betty Coed’s ensemble, lars
to be photographed, determined, —> i ~aw , on Publications (Wes? 420 Sexton Uuild- graduate, wanted i ~— Do Collar: S this University of gg trio are wearing the dog collar belts that
iw an : ise than one punching bag Sh us these days, é
Advertising Representative: cise than one pi are so popular on the Showme camp
isaeri Wide, could give him, a0 he devel a a i maa
oped this ewo-bag outfit,
ny

First jazz lecture course
+ appreciation is being taught at New

Music York University by the popular dance band
leader, Vincent Lopez. He’s shown giving the first lecture

of the course.

Acme

“Ladies” of the ensemble
+++ cuties of the
Chorus current Mask &
Wig Club production at the Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania are shown

as they went through their routine
during the first dress rehearsal.

Nome

She's testing perfume strength
4 If your perfume is too
Mechanical Nose potent, or too weak, this
laboratory device will tell you in exact numbers just what its
strength is, It's called the osmoscope, and it’s being demonstrated

by Martha Hunkapillar, junior in the University of Oklahoma
school of pharmacy,

Thud +. and another season is ql

under way with a crash
that stops a touchdown run. Golden

Gopher Larry Buhler demonstrates his (ame

All-American fighting spiric in bringing a
determined Minnesota opponent to a

smashing standstill,
Conasinans Dian Photo hy Goldstein

ape

Students
* Chape gather from
all points on the campus to
attend the regular chapel exer-
cises in the historic church atop
a knoll on the Middlebury

1% College campus,

F o 2

* Here's how photographers get those football pictures

Shooting .. . football action pictures is no easy job for either pho-

] x
. is dance time tographer or player. Here's Tackle Jack Wright of Columbia
Tea Time Every Wednesday going through his paces for our cameraman. Ame

afternoon in the University of Iowa’s
The ordnance department of the Memorial Union. More than 150 students

Accurate U. S. Army has established a com- dance each week here free of charge.

plete precision gage laboratory in the New York University ure oes. Coeds ie a

college of engineering. It contains instruments that measure :

up to 3/1,000,000 of an inch.

Nation's most complete precision laboratory

?

. : 4 SN
KZ ~~)
“Camels go big out our
way,” says Charlie Belden,
boss of the Pitchfork
Ranch, Wyoming. “Cow-

boys like that ‘lift’ they get
out of Camels."

“LIL tine up 100% with
Camels,” says Ve F. Gut-
endorf, class of ‘40.
“Smoking Camels at
mealtimes and afterwards
gives me a mighty swell
sense of well-be

els set me right!”

7 M I . + piece of farm
Fy Most Important jsf the world
is Oklahoma A & M College’s one-acre tract planted smoke Camels," says Miss Jose-
and cared for by Agronomist H. J. Harper. It has ; phine O'Neill, co-ed. “Mental
been planted in wheat for 44 years in ten divisions =r ™ : 4 F ‘ mos res faces he work often affects digestion.
of plant tests, and records obtained are said to be a «as AN al q Sd HB  'Camels went ‘round the world camel A he adr I find Camels make food seem

sy jnto ess ite as poad:!"
i Ul om a ig, ne “08+ twice as good.
invaluable. Few e laters with ame, UH bet on them any ou al" ld —
time," ‘round-the-world re- ¢

y wD iN
. So Harry March lengthened the football week- porter, Miss Dorothy Kilgallen,
Invented by Columbia ( } There was once a time when the football week-end tapered says. "With Camels, steady
ze .

University’s B, D, Wood with tomato juice, Sunday morning quarterbacks and the s) emoningy:*e iRtEasy, leaguer

(right), first continuous pages. Now professional football prolongs the week-end

use of the mechanical Sunday afternoon. With the subway trade, it really begins

grading machine is being b For this, Dr. Harry W. March of New York is responsible. |

made this fall by Univer- i persuaded Timothy J, Mara to finance the first big-league

sity of Georgia freshman 4 football team—the Giants of New York. That was in 1925

placement testers. 4 Harry March once liked football so much that he sample: “PRA IOKR RROTURARACCANRN
under assumed names at four schools, Ohio State, Ober! gaakoess ve smoked them for
Kenyon College, and Mount Union College. He gave his rizht many years,” BIN Tilden states,
name at Columbian (now George Washington University) an alee one aly pole sbaseGan:
took an M.D, in 1901, Unlike many tramp football stars, | IEE (hay eT RACE RIOMT LV

found doesn't upset my nerves.

March had a sharp and restless mind, He established a
medical practice, but kept his thoughts in the pigskin world
writing sport stories, The idea of writing he received [1
Authors Channing Pollack and Don Marquis, his Columb
roommates.

‘The famous parachute

jumper, Joe Crane,

4 says: “I've smoked
The idea of professional football he may have carried throu, , » i r enough Camels to

he ye f f - " prove that they don't

the years from one afternoon when, aged 19, he received $10 ! ‘ y = frazzle the nerves.”

playing in a tough contest between Latrobe and Jeanette, P

Professional football has grown beyond his expectations int]

larger cities. The better to be the center of this growth, 1)

March founded the American pro league last year. He hopes

_ ’ "
— ™ . “
see a gridiron world series some day—the established Nations COSTLIER TOBACCOS : an P THEOAMEL CARAVAN
e tic + i a y show!
ahaa IN A MATCHLESS BLEND... nisi: sucess MME RISEN ase Oat nent tr Comm

f id fi ad
blend of finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBAC ‘Turkish and Domes- iB He ue 6H
tic, Skillful blending brings out the full flavor of these choice tobaccos,

i
N
y
1

un \ngelen.

hg tee raetrenemmenncorecere=

Decay, the aars of mort _dental Second, the saliva is sealed in a testube
agony, has been eliminated, with a together with finely powdered human enamel
New women’s sport First, saliva and bacteria samples are secured perfection’ of 4506 Keak aldeclagnons Dr. L. S. Fosdick is shown at the exacting task of

i ry Here Dr. R. E. Blackwell, assisted by Nurse Charlotte procedure be rl bok closing the tube.
eau ‘ ‘ G an
Epple, is taking specim from the th of Patient scientists working under [ental le
his zane Spann on ™ A. D. Black. Follow this Cotreciate

Grac 2, Sey ’ Sho
ace of mo- ; . % Milton Nathanson. &
’ ) . Dicesr Picture Story to learn the steps
of the new pain-eliminating process.

Aeme

tion is represented in

this striking photo of $ } f is the work
two Michigan State ‘ Mar Ellen \
Normal College co-eds ‘ eriid, i = tis pic

racticing shot 5 :
Peer on vide Worle brain-coral i
E A a a University of

ami marine
class.

sig
Tube is then rotated} ‘s % Then the mixture is tested
J... for four hours in a : ; to sce how much of the enamel the saliva has dissolved. If
special body-temperature 2 the amount is large enough to be measured, it shows the suscepti-
_ water bath, 5 bility of the patient’s teeth to decay, and a medical consultant
. decides on the treatment or diet to correct the salivary condition,

For the collegians of 8113 A. D.

Relic Oglethorpe University students 6,000 years from
S now will thrill to the relics of 1937 when they
examine material Oglethorpe’s Pres. Thronwell Jacobs will soon

place in a vaule beneath Lupton Hall. Nee

Towa’s new grid men-
tor, Ira Irl Tubbs, in- |
structs his backfield men

ee “
Books can be returned after hours re , ia . \ She's modelling Alfred's campus in a play that he hopes
N When Temple University students wish to re- They're objecting to a rise in cafeteria’s pie prices a | Sad Susie Khol, Alfred University will baffle Hawkeye op-
Gadget turn books after their library is closed they Strike When the university council of the University of Sydney, Australia, increased tl Miniatures sophomore, is shown working on % ponents, Mente
merely send them down a chute provided for the purpose by price of steak pies, the students refused to buy them, Hundreds signed a petitio | the models of campus buildings that will be assembled into : Ma ‘
a complete miniature campus, Pacis ly Veislene

Librarian J. P, Danton.

protesting the increase, so university officials have a pie surplus problem on their hands,

America’s largest social fraternity’ is
Sigma Alpha Epsilon (109 chapters,
32,500 living members). One of Ameri-
ca’s most pretentious national fraternity
conventions is that staged by SAE’s
officers and Eminent Supreme Recorder
Lauren Foreman. Distinguished by its
seriousness of purpose, a prominent
place on its program is given to a
Leadership School for the training of
undergraduate fraternity leaders. Most
serious are its general sessions, where
discussions of ritual, scholarship, fra-
ternity history and purposes do not let
undergraduate delegates forget the
great social aims and accomplishments
of college fraternalism. Not unlike
other fraternities is SAE in its con-
vention program. Here CoLteciate
Dicest presents typical scenes from a
typical college fraternity convention
taken at the SAE meeting in Evans-
ton, Ill.

Night View

A striking angle
photograph of the in- - ve
Sereiting Eaves of the Watch out for this smashing Army tackler
Baker Memorial on : Candidates for the U, S. Military Academy's first-
the Beloit College Practice string grid squad are put through their paces every

campus. day tackling the swinging dummy. Nene

Nem» nw ag Pe a

SAY JUST SMELL WHY DON'T
YOU BOYS
f 1B
FRAGRANT eee pstheg yin)
TOBACCO K— | MAYBE WE CAN
LIKE THAT 7?

The old guard talks over old times. nen: $ { . { pe +3 ae FE HI APC LiGHy |

Conamitvin Dusest Stat Phos hy Harvey Gubltan Oldest and youngest in attendance.
a

PARDON ME, SIR. GEE, THIS RA. SURE IS EASY
JOULD YOU MIND ON THE TONGUE AND COOL.
GELLING WHAT. t : THE MAN AT THE STORE |
\ND OF TOBACCO [emp | WHERE WE BOUGHT PRINCE
YOURE SMOKING ? - PATHE MILDEST, ALBERT SAYS THE NO-BITE
iT SMELLS so ‘TASTIEST TOBACCO PROCESS TAKES OUT
HARSHNESS, AND THE

CRIMP CUT MAKES IT

SN BURN SLOW AND BAGY,
eo ee

BF Dedicating SAE's "Lions of Minerva.”
i

Fraternity Facts ; > Ne ae
The division of nae college fra- Sun Is Ne sa f <a 1 THERE'S A MILDER RICHER-TASTING TOBACCO
ternities and sororities in the United States Movie Star aS eee { FOR YOUR PIPE: IT'S PRINCE ALBERT. PA. GIVES A
is as follows; miscellaneous fraternities, , 4 SMOOTHER SMOKE, BECAUSE ITS NO-BITE PROCESSED
2 y

156; local fraternities, 390; local sorori-

ies, 200; cl ieties, 67; inactive f S Through a 50- foot a 4 : | AND CRIMP CUT. YET PA. HAS THE FULL BODY
ties, 200; class societies, 67; inactive fra- tower telescope (shown : \

ternities, 60; junior college sororities, 5; above), largest and most ni ’ | FOR REAL SMOKING SATISFACTION
junior college fraternities, 1; national 50- powerful instrument of ; \ \

cial fraternities, 76; national social sorori- ite kind in the world, } A : j SMOKE 20 FRAGRANT PIPEFULS of Prince Albert I you
ties, 29; professional fraternities, 80; honor ,

. eo rest of the
2! ! mn University of Michigan riven
societies, 69, Excluding local fraternities astronomers, working. in

and sororities, class societies and inactive the new McMath-Hul-
fraternities, there are 10,126 fraternity
, ell ‘ chapters in the U. S. There are approxi-
AD sone re mately 2,729 chapter houses owned by

7 cae - Elections, and the old president Aw We
Honoring a famed SAE at graveside ceremony. ‘ p fraternities and sororities,
congratulates the new

bert Observatory, are now

taking moving pictures of ¢ £7, ;
the sun. A photo of the yy pipefuls of fragrant tobacco in
sun's sola bt wt the ‘ every 2-08. tin of Prince Albert
right. Neuve Servier i

THE NATIONAL
sor smone

He raises fruit flies by the millions
Dr. Calvin B. Bridges, famed Cali-
Research fornia Institute of Technology
biologist, studies fruit flies to determine how they—and
hence humans—inherit their characteristics, “In their off-
spring, heredity and development of flies follow the same

Prescribes afternoon tea for fatigue

4 Dr. Donald §
Teatime Laird, Colgate st

University psychologist, says that
because most desk workers drink
orange juice in the morning, eat
pickles at noon, they suffer a mid-

the football season, and all are “pointing” for the
thrilling games as are these up-in-the-air Villanova
Wise World

rul in the children of the Smith and, the Browns,” afternoon letdown. He urges tea and

he says. Keystone wafers for a pickup. Seme

. .. and football go to-

gether for Holy Cross
College gridsters, for Coach Eddie
Anderson knows that all play and no
study brings an early end to a foot- S h | Ella
baller’s gridiron career, Wide World CNOLAL Garth
Choate, beautiful Univer-
sity of Louisville centen-
nial queen, has been
awarded Pi Beta Phi’s
award for outstanding
scholarship and service,

Oberlin is celebrating founding of first cod college
: High-wheelers are making a come-back at
Centennial Oberlin College this week for the great cele-
bration of the hundredth anniversary of the enrollment of the first women
ina U, §, institution of higher learning. Bob Porter and Betsy Mook are
two of the enthusiastic high-wheel riders, Additional details on page 6.

: ‘coca all Learning old-world tongue with modern machines
First university course in air conditioning Learning old-w 8 r bi

In higher education’s first air conditioning laboratory, the University of

Pionee T'S ihinois has established the first complete course of study of “man-made air.”
Shown here is part of the apparatus by which students learn by the scientific observation and
analysis of an actual plant in operation, Acme

Closing Day ge . is an annual affair at

University of Califor-
nia, and it isn’t the last day of school, either, To prevent
any group from planning to open highways through its
campus from, one part of Berkeley to another, every
entrance into the campus is closed by gates for 24 hours,

Oberlin College students learn Spanish by

Practice speaking into dictating machines and later

correcting their faults after an instructor has criticized their
recordings. Wallace Kirkland

Ser
hicagy, Boston,

Lax Angeles,

5 oe

Northwestern opens five $40,000 houses
: ; Hampden - Sydney
Dedication College’s Freeman
Hart, vice-president of Pi Kappa Alpha fra-
ternity, dedicates the new Pi K. A. chapter
house at Northwestern University. Other
fraternities in the building unit are Acacia,

Theta Xi, Phi Mu Delta and Phi Epsilon Pi.

King of the white waters
Ch “Schoolboy Joe” Connor,
amp University of Minnesota
undergraduate, is shown winning the world
championship birling (log-rolling) contest
that made him undisputed ruler of the twirl-
ing trees, Sine

Id ] Above is shown part of the ideal college
€a co-ed’s wardrobe as selected by vote of
seniors in 157 colleges and universities, © Voxe, from Acme

+ 15 meeting tougher opposition now

Ie is no faule of Senator Alben William Barkley that Mar
College, once the pride of Clinton, Ky., no longer exists. In the la
nineties, long before he became the new democratic leader of 1
Senate. Alben went out once a week to “do or die” on Marv
football field. His muscles had been hardened on his fath
Kentucky tobacco farm. It is said that when Alben Bark
came down the field, everyone got out of his way. But he co
forgive his enemies while demolishing them, for he never mi
prayer meetings at Marvin College.

Young Barkley was a forerunner of the youths who w

their way through college taking magazine subscriptions. He ».
kitchenware from house to house. The

best senior honor
Marvin was the Declamation Prize, Senior Barkley won th
He remembers that for a long time afterward no function \
considered complete unless he delivered his recit

Marvin College no more, Emory Junior College and the (i
versity of Virginia law school have made the most of his ne
prominence as democratic Senate leader. He studied at bo:
schools, but learned the rest of his law in Paducah, Ky., unde
the prototvpe of Irvin S. Cobb’s “Judge Priest.”

Senator Barkley bit through a Pipestem while waiting for 1!
results of the Senate’s poll on a new leader. He slid throuy!
score 38-37, From his eminence as President Roosevelt's “yoo
friend Alben,” the new Leader can look back on a career ver
American: birth in a log cabin, campaigning on a mule for «1
early prosecuting attorneyship, learning law in a picturesque la\
office, finally soliciting votes by way of horse and buggy to pei
to Washington in 1912. There he has remained, leaving the
House for the Senate in 1926,

Already 60, husky, quick with a joke, Leader Barkley’s posi
tion will be a difficult one when Congress reconvénes, The party
revolt is under way, and the ©pposition won't clear out as easily

as that which faded before Alben Barkl ing d he
football field for Marvin College, en eet

ation.

‘. ++. university in the world
F irst operated solely for the purpose

of educating students in physical culture
has been established in Warsaw, Poland,
Here is a class in action.

Marksman 4) b+! W-

Spiller, 21-year-
old University of Florida junior, is the
1937 national individual champion marks-
man among senior R. O. T. C. units. He
shot a score of 197 out of 200.

BLE FEATURE
New DOW MEL CA

2 GREAT SHOWS
IN A SINGLE

ayy Ockie College

“PREZ” J. ACK OAKIE AT THE HELM

BENNY GOODMAN

AND HIS SWING BAND

= with the famous Carrying on the summer course in

o “Swing-ology” as taught by that inim-
Goodale Tris ‘and itable master, Benny Goodman. Try
Quartette

to keep your feet still when the Good-
i !
going to town!

Assisted every week by an all- Hear that educator of
star Hollywood cast including: educators —s “Honest
“STU” ERWIN + RAYMOND = Jack” Oakie gag the
HATTON + WILLIAM AUSTIN highlights of college life.

CGopyriaht, WHIT, HJ. Heynolda Tobacco Oompany, Winston Salem, North Caroline

—at 9:30 pm E.S.T., 8:30 pm C.S.T., 7:30 pm M. S.T., 6:30 pm

man quartette gets “in the groove.”
E __ P.S.T. over WABC and Coast-to-Coast Columbia Network.

NIGHT :
BROUGHT TO YOU BY ig >

CAMEL

A MATCHLESS BLEND
_ of finer, More Expensive Tobaccos,

Turkish and Domestic

ory “Good Morning” : :
‘on photographer we e An early morni
: W
co snap Alamied —_«  pepped Miss Swain
when she
wich breakfast.

Ruler of forest festival
Jane Greer, University «
Queen Ws Vinina se
this month rule over the colorful >
‘6 come. Mountain State Forest Festival as Queen Re . : Ds lca Mt |
Sylvia VIII.
He carns his way making puppet dolls
- Hobart Baker, talented University of Hawaii
>¢pe ,
Puppeteer sophomore, is shown with two of his 100

all of which he made himself, He is demonstrating their
o Betty Steele before he appeared with them in a campus

ast
ng nap after break{
mornin
_ greeted the p for the strenuous
: d
was on han

No. | registran
with hee ham sand

Marionette
abilities t

how. He has used more than a mile of string on his troupe of actors.

Corerensen Etssesa Hlater iy Mat tangs

Beating 1,000 other early risers
eceived her first registration

_, . Miss Swaim F
6:30 a. m.

: e with her advis

ferenc Topping the scrimmage line for a small pain
First came a confe

department | 4 2 C. J. Remann, stellar Navy backfield man, crosses the
A. Philips Beedon, journey require High Flyer

+e forget the line to be stopped by UI. 1. Whitehead, Jr, as Coach : i ‘ ds “ihe
that she mustn ¢ TOFB® Hank Hardwick puts his focthall sailors through the paces scaaaean Mechanical smeller aids policemen

Drunkometer By recording the amount

of alcohol on the breath,
and thereby giving an index to the amount that is in
the body, Indiana University’s Dr. R. N. Harger
(above) claims that his invention will be of great help
to peace officers,

Swaim

:
First student check
of the 1937-38 school ia
ai id by Miss Swaim—and sl e
pda cheerful doing it,

s They beyan the building af Colby's “model callege” a a
. $ ms Four college presidents were in attendance when work n honor of Clnef Justice Marshal
freshman was given Great war! ws yfeted and Groundbreakers

Help for » mixed-up

was begun on Colby College's new Mayflower Hill Centennial Sculptor Richard Flesch is put-
MrCormack after Miss

= hacsod erp 6 Vel " ing the finishing touches on
campus, which will be completed in three years at a cost of $3,000,000 and will accommo: . * ting ¢

date 1,000 students, (1. fo r) Pres. F. W. Johnson of Colby, Pres, A. A. Hauck, University the bust of Chief Justice John Marshall for Marshall
of Maine, Pres, Kenneth Sills of Bowdoin, Pres, Clifton Gray of Bates, Wide World College, Nem,

Hees, Rich-

m the bursar’s office, | « for Miss say
congratulated by
ard C. Foster.

Swaim returned froi
. to Margaret

Co-Education’s
100th Birthday

For 200 years following the found
of the first’ U, S. university  (Harva
1636) ‘the education of young women was
left to the “female” institutions whose
courses were comparable to’ those offered
by academies and secondary schools today.
Higher education was not for women.
Neithér was co-education, until Oberlin
College, on Sept. 6, 1837, ‘admitted four |
women to a regular college course :

America’s first co-ed

Caroline Mary Rudd may prop-
erly be known as the first co-ed,
for her foun is the sory Pe mf Sc ee : Wearld's fest sauthority:on: baruaeles
exrane of te our Young Bes a : : } Expert. Weer Reserve Universiy’s Biologist J. Paul Visscher gives

First woman M.A ; ’ fost of his tine tothe atady af the hundreds of different

Emily Frances Fairchild Fair. bo Rie wi kinds of cirripedia (barnacles, to you) that cost shipkeepers a pretty sum
field, acknowledged to be the first \ - ' i ] 7 every year. Lens § Letters E Aceanie
woman to receive an M.A. degree " : : Oday is thi xpense uu

in any U. S. college. Joe Laputka of Duquesne

University, clad in his new
football uniform, demon-
strates what it costs to outfit
anyone who desires to be a

well-dressed football player.
Wide World

I

ROPE, 20GB = 1 STICK TO
MAKINS” CGARETTES WITH PLENTY
OF PRINCE ALBERT IN'EM

Mud covered the floor, moral lectures filled the air

. when co-educational Oberlinites gathered for their segregated assemblies in
the early days of higher education for women.

This descriptive picture of the historic Oberlin campus dates back to 1860. Relief for hayfever sufferers
In the foreground is the old Chapel, central meeting place for all students, and ; .

: : With this new air filter developed by Dr.
in the background is Tappan Hall. Filter William H. Welker, University of Illinois sci-

HERE (TIS - ALL SLICK AND

FOR A CHRISTMAS PRESENT,

entist, air free from irritating substances is drawn into the SHINY LIKE met eee) ) ps
room from the outside. The filter attaches to an open window. {tL LOAD HER UP WITH ))
ie

THERE ARE ALL KINDS OF PIPES, BUT ONLY
ONE PRINCE ALBERT. RA. HAS THE BITE
PROCESSED OUT— THE COOL, EVEN-BURNING
CRIMP CUT PROCESSED IN. AND JUST
TASTE RA‘S FULL RICH BODY

Oldest tradition ,
ls , y SMOKE 20 FRAGRANT PIPEFULS of Prince Albert. If
Although her ante don't find it the melloweet, tastiest pipe tobacco you
cedents are obscure, ever smoked, return the pockot tin with the rest of
ix the tobacco in it to us at any time within « month

“Priscilla of Baldwin” frets thie dates end ee tik heed ian —

is fought for by men ; ; plus postage, (Siened) B: J, Reynolds Tobacco Ce,
and women students , — ’ . Coprrigh, 1967, Red, Raraside Tobacco Ce,

@ whenever she makes Largest mounted canvas in U. S. a

Today Oberlinites listen and learn in comfort ame her appearance in the Paintin This painting, “The Interior of St. sat warvowas

A far cry from the mud and discomfort of the first meeting house is 7 9 pe co-educational dining ‘ 1 g Peter's,” which hangs in the 104-year-old Ri N A LB E RT (ay enone pipefule of fragrant tobacco in

the modern Finney chapel, where students must attend assembly at noon room, University of Georgia chapel, is probably the largest mounted every 2-05, tin of Prince Albest

canvas in the country.

me, North

—___ Sheaffer “Woidlds lowest cost pen
CARVE A CAREER
wih SHEAFFER'S.

way te paste;
does not curl thin-
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SKRIP.GRIP Li
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a, \

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Pen-SKRIP, Successor 2-Way Feather-
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manent or washable °. . . One-Stroke
types SKRIP makes Vacuum and Lover Filling,
all pens write better,

YOU THINK, and IT WRITES! Before you touch
point to paper, the Dry-Proof Cap keeps the
tip moist, ready-to-go. When it touches paper,
the platinum-channeled Feathertouch” point
flows freely, instantly. While you write, Stream-
lined Balance’ design prevents hand fatigue,
offsets brain inaccuracy. As you're writing, the
visibility feature warns when to refill. And when
you refill, ONE forceful stroke empties, cleans,
fills, keeps the pen fit... As the years of use-
fulness add up, you realize the economy of a
Sheaffer pen. Through school, through business, t0 $15. Other
through life—Carve a Career with Sheaffer's! Excomblons $3.98 op

° pyle

. cit or 5 a\PeP ras a)

Visible Skrip Supply...
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aN PENS, ALL COLORS, $2.75 TO $20
°OAVS MOST DESIRED PEN FEATURES PENCILS, $1 TO $5

He does thriving business at initiation time

Gi iant “dummy” advertises subscription campaign Paddles Carpenter David C, Kauffman, chief paddle-

maker for University of Pennsylvania fraterni-

Members of the staff of the Santa
Ballyhoo Monica Junior College paper held open ties, is shown at work on a few of the many models that he has

house by erecting

a giant dummy, — Globe designed, Wide World

i cca a a

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December 24, 2018

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