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3 FIAT LUX

VOL. XXV FIAT LUX, SEPTEMBER 24, 1937, ALFRED, N. Y. No. 1

TEAM SET FOR HARTWICK;

PEP MEETING TONIGHT AT 8

Forum To Bring Noted Persons In Six Fields To Campus

With the sale of season tickets at registration time this week, the 1937- 38 Forum committee launched its campaign for the coming Forum Series, which features six outstand- ing programs.

Science, literature, exploration, drama, statesmanship, and music, are represented in the program. Having learned many valuable lessons from the experience of past Forum com- mittees, this year's committee is im- proving the entire organization and working of the Forum.

The series will open on October 11 by a leading British statesman, Lord Marley, who is Deputy Speaker of the House of Lords of Great Britain.

Marley to Discuss Far East Lord Marley will discuss a timely and vital issue, with his topic built about the threatening war situation in Japan, and the prospects for peace in the Pacific area.

Second on the series will be an ex- plorer who is well known by the books which he has written. He is William LaVarre, explorer of Central Africa, who wrote the books "Gold, Diamonds, and Orchids," and "White Man, Keep Out".

Explorer LaVarre will appear at the Alumni Hall lecture series on Novem- ber 22. He will discuss his adven- tures in the jungle lands.

Drama will compose the third Forum series lecture. Miss Blanche Yurka, Broadway and Hollywood actress who was recently featured as Madame La- Farge in the movie of Dickens' "Tale of Two Cities," will appear here on December 8.

Miss Yurka will give character studies from modern drama, although the exact characterizations have not been selected yet.

Doctor-Writer Coming

Science and literature will be repre- sented on the Forum by Dr. Victor Heiser, writer of the year's best-seller,

"An American Doctor's Odyssey".

Dr. Heiser, who has been interna- tionally employed by the Rockefeller Foundation on major problems con- cerning world health, is expected to tell more about his adventures, which were described in his "Odyssey".

Christopher Morley, whose name is familiar to students as one of the leading American essayists, novelists.

Fiax Lux Candidates Invited To Attend Meeting Tuesday

This and the Commencement is- sue to the contrary, The Fiat Lux has not gone tabloid. Neither has it gone communist, although someone playfully "planted" a

"Daily Worker" on a Fiat editor who thought he was showing his own paper to the freshmen.

There will be a meeting of the business and editorial staff of Fiat Lux in the Publications Of- fice, first floor of Burdick Hall, at 7 p. m., Tuesday. Candidates from all four classes are invited.

Assignments will be given out for the first regular issue of the year, to be published the following Tuesday.

Blue Key Dance After Hartwick Football Game

The Blue Key, national collegiate service organization, will hold a dance in the gymnasium Saturday night, immediately after the football game between Alfred and Hartwick.

Funds from the dance will aid the Blue Key program of winter sports, including ice skating, skiing, and to- bogganing.

Al Dorn's band will 'furnish the music for thej dance. Dorn and Lennie Rubenstein have retained the band which represented the campus last year, and are expecting several promising freshmen to bolster the talent.

Applicants for positions in the Dorn- Rubenstein outfit are requested to see Dorn at Room 11, Burdick Hall. From last year's veterans and the new talent, the leaders expect to organize a seven or eight-piece band.

and editors, will speak here on the Forum program February 16.

The musical number on the pro- gram, it is expected, will be a violin- piano concert by Miss Rose Becker and Mrs. Ada Becker Seidlin, both outstanding musicians. Miss Becker is assistant director of a woman's symphony in New York, and Mrs.

Seidlin is professor of pianoforte at Alfred.

Saxons Evenly Majched With Oneonta Gridders; Yunevich Shifts Bizet To Fullback

A giant pep rally tonight at 8 o'clock will sound the call to arms for a squad of 27 Alfred University football men, who will face the Indians of Hartwick College Saturday night on Merrill Feld in the opening gridiron contest of the 1937 season. The pep rally will be held at Merrill Field, where Head Coach Alex Yunevich will send his Saxons through signal drills and passing and kicking exercises

in the last night of practice before the Hartwick game.

Against Hartwick, the new Alfred coach will pit his first-string choices from one of the most promising squads to represent Alfred University in several years. Almost an all-sopho- more eleven will

Johnson's Indians.

meet Glenn A.

New Alfred Mentor

Bizet Calling Signals

Most logical choices for backfield positions tomorrow night are Larry Bizet, signal-caller; Bob Glynn and Walter (Bo) Johnson, right and left halfbacks, and John Ryan, Walt Gard- ner or Marcello Rollery at the fourth backfield position. Bizet, quarterback of the 1936 freshman team which piled up a remarkable three-win and one-loss record, is playing the tail- back or fullback position but is call- ing signals.

The spearheads of Yunevich's at- tack will be Johnson, sensational negro ball-carrier and passer, and Glynn, blond, 155-pound Irishman who is a shifty runner through the line and in open field. Bizet, too, will come in for several of the ball-carry- ing plays, and Ryan, Rollery or Gard- ner may be used 6n line bucks and runs.

Yunevich, a star of Purdue Univer- sity six to eight years ago, is drilling the Saxons in the Notre Dame style of play which he learned under the incomparable Jimmy Phelan and Noble Kizer. Reverses, spinners, and a passing attack will comprise his of-

fense.

Yunevich is slightly pessimistic about the ability of the forward wall.

"Sophomores," he says, "are not as experienced as the three and four year men we will meet on other teams."

Line of Sophomores

Dick Callista, 175-pound left guard and sophomore, is one of the most promising linemen. Bob (Butch) Eschbach,,husky soph, has been play- ing right guard or right tackle. Har- old Rouff is first-string center but may be placed at the right guard post, in which case Harold Edleson, a con- verted guard, will play center..

Bill Riley and Dick Thomas will fill the tackle berths while Eschbach is at guard. On the ends, Dick Brow-

(Continued on Page Four)

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Page Two FIAT LUX, SEPTEMBER 24, 1937, ALFRED, N. Y.

The

FIAT

Published every Tuesday during the school year by the students of Alfred University with office on ground floor of Burdick Hall.

y

LUX

Entered as second-class matter October 29, 1913, at the post- office in Aired, N. Y., under Act of March 3, 1879. Subscription

$2.50 yearly.

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF EDWARD F. CREAGH, JR.

ASSOCIATE EDITOR JOHN L. DOUGHERTY, JR.

BUSINESS MANAGERS ELENOR E. WISNISKI BERNARD SPIRO

A College Opening Welcome

As Alfred University opens for its one hundred and second year of educational service, I wish through the columns of The Fiat Lux to extend greetings and a welcome to all who in any way are directly concerned with the University's day by day operation.

These greetings and this welcome go to the freshman cla s, the Class of 1941, those young men and women who have finished their high school courses and now embark on a college career; to the old students returning from a summer of work or play or both to re- sume with us the courses previously,begun; to the faculty members of all departments and divisions of the University who have spent the summer in study, teaching, or recreation at home or abroad, and especially to that unusually large number of faculty members who are joining us for the first time; to all administrative officers;

to the men and women who begin again their labors, or who now as the University reopens merely change the nature of their work in the various offices, in the dormitories and other buildings, and on the campus.

Our various duties and responsibilities are all essential to the proper functioning of the school and the turning out of its finished product; namely, men and women educated in the best and fullest sense of the word. I trust that all come to their respective tasks with the firm determination to do their full part in making the year 1937-38 the best in the long history of the University.

J.NELSON NORWOOD, President

Need For Peace Action

The Sino-Japanese War and the so-called "Spanish" war, which seems to involve nearly all the rest of Europe in addition to Spain, are but two danger spots out of many that threaten the peace of the world. Clearly, there is more need for peace action today than at any other time since the World War.

The time is here to study intensively the problem of war and the broader subject of international relations. A practical philoso- phy of peace must be put forth soon or the catastrophe of 1914-18 will be repeated.

Alfred offers no course in Peace, but nearly all the political science and history courses throw light on the subject. Even more pertinent should be the International Relations Club, which is being revived after a season or so of inactivity.

If the resuscitated I.R.C. proves no more active than it has in past years, the fault is not with the organization but with the members. And if the students are indifferent now, they have no reason to be surprised when they find themselves on the draft list for the next war.

The season is opened by Prof. H, O. Burdick with the story about the absent-minded professor who dreamed he was talking to a class and woke up to find he was.

The new Almond-Alfred Station highway is a welcome change, but it may foster the disease which former Dean Conroe used to call

"Hornellitis".

Ancient Carillon Honors Dr. and Mrs. Davis

'Oldest Bells In New World' Now Ring Out Over Alfred

The long-awaited carillon of ancient bells has arrived, has been played, and is attracting wide attention. The first public concert, played, two weeks ago, drew approximately 2,500 persons from all parts of western New York despite a heavy rainstorm. Part of the concert was broadcast on Station WHAM, Rochester.

Purchased by alumni and friends of the university in honor of President- emeritus and Mrs. Boothe C. Davis, to whom they will be dedicated next Commencement, the bells were cast between 1674 and 1786 by the three greatest bell-makers of all time.

They were collected from Belgium, Holland, Burgundy, and Northern France, coming principally from churches, municipal towers, and old castles.

One bell is reported to have been buried for years at the foot of a tower because its owners feared an invading army might melt it for am- munition. The heaviest bell of the carillon, weighing 950 pounds, is said to have escaped being melted only because of its great size.

The bells were matched and tuned by Jef Denyn, master carilloneur of Mechlin, Belg., and were installed In a temporary wooden campanile or tower here by a pupil of Denyn's, Dr.

H. S. Wesson of Navasota, Tex., who played the first concert.

Wesson and other authorities are agreed that while there are 38 other

carillons in the "United States and Canada, there is no collection of ancient bells comparable to the one at Alfred, which will not be com- plete, however, until it contains 43 bells.

Ray W. Wingate, Alfred music pro- fessor, is to play the carillon in the future. Concerts are tentatively scheduled for sundown Friday and Sunday afternoon.

Alumnus Will Represent Alfred At Inauguration

Alfred University will be among the 150 educational institutions and learned societies that will be repre- sented in Allentown, Pa., Oct. 1 and 2 for the academic program marking the inauguration of Dr. Levering Ty- son as the fifth president of the col- lege.

Dr. Isaac Miles Wright, head of the department of education at Muhlen- berg and an alumnus of Alfred, has been named as the delegate.

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FIAT LUX, SEPTEMBER 24, 1937, ALFRED, N. Y. Page Three

SIDB

LINES

Faculty, administration and the young man's own intellectual in- capabilities conspired to rob the Fiat Lux of its budding Sports Editor in June. So here we are, back at the jub of turning out a weekly sports page. May the gods descend on Alfred, and leave here a "white hope" newspaper- man, ready, willing and able to take over the duties of the sports page. Meanwhile, we will be writing our own Side Lines column and doing the best we can with sports news.

Football, somebody tells us, is here again. We've heard that Alfred will open its season tomorrow night, and the opponent, according to informed sources, is Hartwick College, a team which we battled to a scoreless tie in 1936. The game will be played at 8 p. m. on Merrill Field, under the floodlights.

At the start of another season, Al- fred is more hopeful of victory than in many years. Students who had be- come resigned to the prospect of los- ing football teams are looking up- ward—interest in the 1937 Saxon gridders is greater than ever. And the only thing that remains is the most important thing—to win games!

We must not be too optimistic. We have a good team, granted. But we have almost an all-sophomore team, where other schools have juniors and seniors, with more playing experi- ence. Our team was highly success- ful in its freshman schedule last year, but Hartwick, Thiel, Kenyon, Ash- land, Buffalo, Clarkson and R. P. I.

are not freshman teams.

Let's have a reawakening of good old football spirit tomorrow night. A few cheerleaders, plenty of rousing yells, and a big crowd at the games will go a long way toward victory.

Down in the metropolitan area there's a college called Manhattan.

This college has the second best crosscountry team in the nation—

second only to Michigan State. And Manhattan is on Alfred's schedule this year.

Alfred vs. Manhattan will mean the toughest race the Saxons have had in years. The men who must carry the Purple and Gold to victory will be Captain Bob Hughes, for two years leader of the Saxon team; Lyle Per- kins, sensational junior who was out- standing varsity man last year; and Lennie Dauenhauer, sophomore who was fifth in the I.C.A.A.A.A. last fall.

Behind these men are half a dozen veterans and sophomores, all of them good, strong men. They include:

Russ Barreca, Walt Scott, Jake Dorn,

HARRIERS DRILLING

Frosh Harriers, Gridders Ready For Start Of Fall Drills

Coach Frank E. Lobaugh and Assis*

tant Coach Daniel Minnick. have issued a call for candidates for the freshmen football team. Practice is scheduled to begin Monday afternoon, October 27.

A large turnout is expected, since this year's class is one of the largest in Alfred's history.

The first game of the season is scheduled with the University of Buf- falo Frosh at Alfred, October 16.

The schedule:

Oct. 16—Buffalo at Alfred Oct. 22—Cook Academy at Alfred Oct. 30—Scranton - Keystone Junior

College at Alfred Nov. 6—Dickenson Seminary at

Williamsport (tentative) Prospects are bright for a success- ful season in freshmen cross-couutry this year. Already four men are tak- ing daily work-outs with the varsity and several more are expected to turn out with the opening of school.

The men already answering the call of Coach McLeod are Ed Lagassee, Francis Cronyn, Clifford Leahy and Carlos Morales.

Cornell and Syracuse are on this years schedule while two dates remain vacant-as yet.

The schedule:

Oct. 16—Cornell at Alfred Oct. 23—Syracuse at Syracuse Oct. 30—Open

Nov. 6—Open

Nov. 15—1. C. A. A. A. A. at N. Y C.

Eugene Keefe, Cliff Snow, Les Doy

•and Chris Pallotta. Any and all of these men must be up in the running if Alfred is to be successful against Manhattan.

But Manhattan is not the only team on Alfred's schedule this year.. Cor- nell, Syracuse, and Army are not to be sneezed at, the I.C.4-A is tough, and Colgate may spring a surprise.

This should make Alfred's harrier coach and fans happy—several promis- ing high school runners are entering as freshmen. They include Ed Leg- asse of Nott Terrace, Schenectady, Leahy of Syracuse.

And, surprise of surprises, we understand that Bradley Rendell, Fal- coner boy and national mile champion in high school a couple of years ago, is entering the agriculture school.

Which brings to mind the days when Alfred had Ag men on football and basketball teams. Perhaps this can be done again. There certainly should

material in the school.

Assistant Coach

2V7V

Daniel Minnick, former Alfred Uni- versity student and athlete, will be assistant coach of freshman and var- sity football this fall. Minnick, co- captain of basketball and captain- elect of crosscountry while at Alfred, was coach of the Ag

:

School basketball team last winter. This year he will be head coach of freshman basketball and assistant track coach.

McLeod Trains Strong Squad For Colgate Meet Oct. 9

By Goldie

Facing the most difficult schedule ever essayed by an Alfred cross- country team, 10 hill and dalers ans- wered Coach James C. McLeod's call for preseason training.

Returning for practice are six veteran lettermen of last year's highly successful team and also four promis- ing sophomore runners from the freshman team of last year which placed third in the I.C.A.A.A.A. at New York City.

The veterans are Captain Robert Hughes, Lyle Perkins, Eugene Keefe, Walter Scott, Alvah Dorn and Rus- sell Barreca. The newcomers include Lennie Dauenhauer, Clifford Snow, Leslie Doy and Christopher Pallota.

With two work-outs daily planned until the opening of school, the men are rounding into competitive shape rapidly in preparation for their first meet of the 1937 season with Colgate on October 9.

The schedule includes Colgate, Syracuse, Cornell, Army and Manhat- tan, with the I.C.A.A.A.A. winding up the season. The only dual meet new-comer is Manhattan, which re- places Toronto. Manhattan on its record of the last few years, appears as the most formidable opponent.

The schedule:

Oct. 9—Colgate at Alfred (Homecoming) Oct. 16—Cornell at Alfred Oct. 23—Syracuse at Syracuse Oct. 30—Manhattan at Alfred Nov. 3—Army at West Point

Nov. 15—I.C.A.A.A.A. at New York City

PIGSKIN POINTERS

By The Observer

When football fandom gets com- fortably settled in the stand for that opening kickoff it should be aware of the first change in rules for the sea- son of 1937, for the application of that rule may take place at the outset.

Should the opening kickoff (or any subsequent kick-off) go out of bounds, the ball is immediately put in play at the point where the ball went beyond the sideline stripe or on the receiving team's thirty-five-yard line.

Pointers on Alfred's opponents:

Hartwick, at Oneonta, N. Y., a United Luteran college of about four hundred students, and coed. They play fresh- man on varsity teams.

Ashland: Small college of five hun- dred students, coed, at Ashland, Ohio.

A new foe about which little is known.

Kenyon: A men's college at Gam- bier, Ohio. A well endowed college of high academic ranking, founded by

the Episcopal church. With a student body of three hundred they have had some fine teams in the past, and should be a formidable opponent.

Thiel, a small (350) coed college at Greenville, Pa. A worthy opponent of Alfred in the days of Bob Campbell and Bob McMann. In thfe midst of staging a come back in the gridiron sport.

Our other opponents are well known to all at Alfred.

The most important pointer for all Alfred students is this: ATTEND THE GAME; SIT IN THE CHEER- ING SECTION; AND CHEER THAT TEAM EVERY MINUTE—Win, Lose or Draw.

In no sport does the element of chance play so large a part as in the great American game of football.

Think back on last season and recall

come of the ups«ts, before you join

the experts who pick "winners".

(4)

Page Pour FIAT LUX, SEPTEMBER 24, 1937, ALFRED, N. Y.

Ag School Gets New Electrical Course

Enrollment To Be 225, Largest In 20 Years

A two-year course in technical electricity, designed to train students for work with electrical machinery manufacturers, public utilities and household appliance service, will be- gin November 1, at the New York State School of Agriculture.

The new course, bringing 60 addi- tional students and three new instruc- tors to the Ag School, was made pqs- sible by a state grant of $40,000 for salaries, equipment and repairs, Di- rector Paul B. Orvis said today.

An additional course, which will at- tract another 40 students, will be an- nounced in November and will begin Jan. 1.

Meanwhile, the Agriculture courses will open September 27, with an en- rollment of 125 students. Two new courses, Farm Machinery Sales and Service and Floriculture and Green- house Management, will be added and the Agriculture business course will be expanded.

The total enrollment of 225 students will be the largest in 20 years, Mr.

Orvis said.

The electrical course will include both theory and actual practice, with four hours daily in the la/boratory and four hours in related technical work including pure and applied drafting, electrical science, physics, public

speaking and business training.

The entire basement of the Ag School will be devoted to shops, and the third floor to laboratories and drafting rooms, for the new course.

New faculty members include Al- bert E. French, graduate of Rochester Mechanics Institute and Clarkson Tech, now Electrical Engineer with Eastman Kodak in Rochester, who will teach construction work and research.

William Harrison, R. P. I. graduate, now with Course-Hines Electrical Company of Syracuse, will direct laboratory practice.

Herman Siker, Buffalo State Teach- ers College graduate, who has been working on air conditioning with Pullman, New York Central Railroad and New York Central Electric, will direct appliance work, heating and air conditioning study.

New teachers in the Agriculture de- partment are Walter C. Hinkle, Uni- versity of Kansas graduate in Ag- riculture Engineering, who will teach Farm Machinery; and Phillip Post, Syracuse University graduate in land- scape gardening and Cornell gradu- ate in Greenhouse management, who will teach floriculture and greenhouse management.

The faculty will include 15 mem- bers.

Alfred - Hartwick

(Continued from page one) nell and Phillips (Blip) Greenman will be placed.

Brownell, Thomas and Gardner are the only three lettermen likely to start for the Saxons. Jud Gustin and Phil Corbman, both seniors and letter- men, are fighting hard for starting positions.

Yunevich will have a few likely re- serves. Besides his three fullback candidates, Winton Green, John Hal- pin and Sam Fossaceca are out for halfback berths, and Addison (Red) Scholes is playing reserve quarter- back.

On the line, George Batley, Carl Jones, Dighton Polan and Ken Tracey are end reserves, with Halpin and Green always ready for end positions.

At tackles, Corbman, Fred Schmidt are on deck. At center, Bert Lynn is understudying Edleson and Rouff.

At guards are Angelo Bosco and Gus- tin.

Hartwick Uses Freshmen This, then, is the squad with which Alfred tomorrow will plunge into a seven-game schedule, including sev- eral tough nuts like Buffalo and Clark- son, and several teams which may pull surprises on the Saxons.

Hartwick College, still operating under the four-year ruling of inter- collegiate competition, uses freshmen on its team, including about 20 new- comers who are reported to be top- notchers. Glenn Johnson, coach of the Indians, will be seeking the Saxon scalp because of the 0-0 tie which was the result of the 1936 Alfred-Hart- wick contest.

The schedule of the 1937 season follows:

Sept. 25—Hartwick at Alfred Oct. 2—Ashland at Alfred Oct. 9—Thiel at Alfred Oct. 16—Buffalo at Tonawanda Oct. 23—Kenyon at Alfred Oct. 30—iR. P. I. at Troy Nov. 6—Clarkson at Potsdam

The pep rally tonight will be held under the auspices of the Blue Key and the Alfred University Christian Association.

niuinu

— O N L Y THEOUGH THE OPEN AND I UNHAMPEPED CLASH OF CONTEAEYOP1NION5|

CAN TCUTH 6E F O U N D . " — G / e n n Fran/

I SB I I To the editor:

Alfred has progressed greatly since the closing of school last spring. The sound of the bells of the recently in- stalled carillon on Pine Hill, the mul- titude of new faces in the streets, more of them even than arrived last year, the gleam of new paint and furniture; all of these show that Al- fred is expanding and making a bid for a more prominent place among the colleges and universities of the East. And this is only just, for we feel—all of us that return to Alfred this year—that Alfred deserves rank- ing with the best.

But there is one thing missing from the scene this year. The green caps and berets of "the frosh". This lack is regreted by almost everyone, even the incoming freshmen themselves.

Last year Frosh-Soph fights were banned both classes abided by the ruling, but when Campus Court was dissolved the majority of the fresh- man men voluntarily continued to

Ten Faculty Members Added, Others Shifted

Seidlin In Education Department, Minnick Assistant Coach

Largest number of faculty changes in some years has been announced by President J. Nelson Norwood. Ten new names appear on the faculty di- rectory and several changes have been made in the positions of pro- fessors here before.

The new names and principal changes:

Department of Biology: Everett E.

Lund, assistant professor biology—re- placing Austin D. Bond.

Training: Iowa State College, B.S.;

University California M.A., Ph.D.

Experience: 1932 adjunct professor of biology, American University of Beirut, Syria; 1935-37, Associate Professor of Bi- ology, American University of Beirut, Syria, Chairman of department of biology.

Department of Economics1: Raymond H. Lounsbury, professor of economics, head of department.

Training: Wesleyan University, A.B., M.

A., Cornell Ph.D.

Experience : 1937-29, Cornell University, instructor in economics; 1928-30, Lawrence College; 1930-37, University of Illinois.

(Replacing Prof. B. B. Crandall, who has gone into the treasurer's office at Alfred)

Department of Education: Joseph Seidlin, professor of education, head of department.(Changing from depart- ment of mathematics).

Training: Columbia University, M.S., M.

A., Ph.D.

Experience : 1915-18, Rhodes School, New York City, instructor in mathematics and science ; 1919-20, Lincoln School and Clark School, N. Y. C, instructor; 1920-25, pro- fessor of physics, Alfred ; 1925-37, professor of mathematics, Alfred; 1929. associate at Teachers College, Columbia (summer).

Department of Mathematics1: Lloyd L. Lowenstein, assistant professor of mathematics.

Training : Cornell, A.B., candidate for Ph.

D., Sept. 1937.

Experience : 1927-33, instructor in mathe- matics, Cornell; 1933-34, auditor milk con- trol board, Albany ; 1934-36, accountant, U.

S. Dept. Agriculture, Washington, D. C. ; 193G-37, instructor in mathematics, Cornell.

Department of Physics: Alfred T.

teoble, assistant professor of physics.

Experience : 1929-33, assistant in physics, University Wisconsin ; 1930 (summer) in- structor in physics, Fall Rivers, T. C.;

1933-34, Post-doctorate research associate,

University Wisconsin ; 1934-36, instructor in physics, University Tulsa, Okla. ; 1936- 37, assistant professor physics, University Tulsa.

Raymond T. Alty, graduate assis- tant in physics.

Training: Alfred, B.S.

Experience: 1936-37, student assistant, in physics.

Department Physical Education:

Alex Yunevich, head coach intercolle- giate athletics and instructor in physical education.

Training: Purdue University, B.P.E., University Indiana, M.P.E.

Experience : 1932, assistant coach, Pur- due ; 1933, assistant coach, Lehigh; 1934- 37, coach of football, Central State Tea- chers College, Mt. Pleasant, Mich.

Daniel Minnick, instructor in physi- cal education.

Training : Alfred, B.S.

Experience : 1936-37, coach of basketball, New York State School of Agriculture, Al- fred University, Alfred; student assistant, department of physical education, Alfred University.

Department of Public Speaking and Dramatics: C. Duryea Smith, instruc- tor in public speaking and dramatics.

Training: Columbia University, A.B., A.

M.Experience: 1927-29, instructor in Eng- lish, Washington State College ; 1930-32, in- structor in English, Connecticut College;

1934-35, supervisor Salamanca Emergency Collegiate Center ; 1935-37, supervisor Dun- kirk Emergency Collegiate Center.

School of Theology

Sylvester S. Powell, professor Bibli- cal languages.

Training : Mercer University, A.B., A.M., Rochester Theological Seminary (now, Col- gate-Rochester Divinity School), B.D.

College of Ceramics

Richard Cragg, Stock room manager and Glass Blower.

Training: Colgate University (2 years), Corning Cilass Works.

wear the caps. This, I think, shows clearly the way freshmen regard this mild form of hazing.

There is also the fact to be con- sidered that most well-established col- leges have some tradition of this kind. They know that .tradition, is one of |the best pto&sible ways of building up school spirit. Therefore, why should we lose one of our strong- er and more established traditions, especially in a year when we have a varsity football team that gives good promise of consistently "bringing home the bacon"?

A Junior

Hazel Humphreys, Alfred, N. Y.

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A member of the Board of Trus- tees of Alfred University and the- Board of Managers of State Uni- versity of New York College of Ceramics at Alfred University, Charles Forrest Tefft was