ONTVERSITY
.'
R ARY
1'0UNDaD
1eee
COLCATE "UNIVERSITY, HAMILTON, N. Y. , WEDNESDAY, APRIL27, 1927
YCILUME LIX
Nllm ElECTIIICIAN
·llll GIVE ADDIISS
AT COllMENCDIJiT
Caard Swoop, Pnaklent of
C. E. Qimpany, to Speak
Before Criduates
Birtl,1 1, Elut,tl
Baiet6al/ M•!'•f:'
At
Boatd
a
mt.'Elections htld Monday
o(
- .IT, 0.
8inley, '28• ...,
ol vartlty lwketbllUor tht 1921-1928 INIOtl: T. 0 .
0-b!MIi blllketb&II. Md J, P. Wtkh,
"28, mainaatt of lnunta. t.ket~ ~
BASEBALL TEAi OPENS 1927 SEASON WITH
VICTORIES ma MANHATTAN ANO N. Y. u.
Metropolitan Collegea.-lQ!n Ca111e1 Cancellation
of Game With Fordham
The MU()OI\ nine ICart«I the teuon
awpiclomly by pining a run in thtu'
fnt lime al bl:t this ,-r. Wckh ain,aled
and l00Rd on Ridwdlon'e tripl~. How-
eo,ate
~
0.•••• ••
1 «wd• will ttart
Fdlll,, Jae 10. JIIIII concli.'* tbe liodow·
e- en S
•
C
O>tcate'•
loqed ahead in
~
Ki-,,f•rtl Trial, al
"Ail" B•iltli111 Fritla1
n
111t Klllcffll·
liOIIII* llaiD,
0CIIChed t ~ will lesYe Sunday for a
Prua Wa,land si.p.S*I., U,D., flltffll t:np LO mett r~P1c:te11tat.i¥1Ct of
.alocllil.,.p......,tolPlilBe&a~ Wake':ON1t0:>lkpand_Oh.~Weeeylan
• 11111 Mtioclll Pftllidtat at eec. Thda A , t1ft1¥n1ty. Tt:ie &eun "!'U be compoeed I
wm ..._ die Pbl a.ca Kappa ondon ol WIiiard E. Riot, Fl'1'dtrld( ~ Cut, and
klt!MO.,.SltwdayolColllm!tlC'tfflfflt Qlctnt P. Hc«mann, whowallbt IIC(l()ffto
Wtlk, <-we Bll1cNI Cuttm.. LL o.. ~ by Protie.r C. A. Kal!crm, OOllt'h
Pi d1 zrt cl tt. Unlw.nity, will dtliver and d.,rtetor ot dala
UM ~ ~ in the Chapel
Wake Fom:t Coiklt, ol Wakt F«tst:
!ilmdly moml,w, and Prot. William H. W. Va.. will be mtt on the ~nc ol
Allloa, Ph. D.• will epea.k a t the 5cmi. Mcnday. May Z, at Louimllt, Ky, In a
- , WYkie in the Baptbt ChW'dl that "'911.
BaCJ(ilt ConventiOn. Tht Colpte tn.m
Comell'• tiucti.11 tc.am wlD app•r on ..;H &ppdl'" lhffe oo in¥itati0n ol I.ht
'MdtnaU F'ltld. Moaday afternoon. 11 lht offldall ol the convt"ntliol'I who mended
~ lc:ttuR ot the commmcmai.t
\he in¥it11t.ion bccsme ol the rtcord Uw
PAUL W. HOPKINS
....... A hcN:nt arid horM CJCNrlfflfflre, local lnltltotlOl'l !'In mainllliMd in debate
_ . - - ii an llnllll event on tht cltdft in the put, Two*>"' later, May with Fordham, •·hich wu to have o,o.
ldledllle8 ot the two unlwnitlel.
4, lhetuie team will a:,pNr in the annual CWTtd )'t&U'tday in HamiJl()n.
Mr. Swoop ii l'IOl.ed both • an ind...,. conlelt with Ohio Wctltyan Unl\"trfllty,
1'ht Manhaltan game was marktd by a
ltfdM. and • a tclmtilt. m. ,1 In which has an.rs IOollM!d as one ol the poor , . . . or fttldina and very free
118ha mott fonnidablic foremk rivals ol tht hhtina, a typical eatty 9CUOfl game.
a-omi•.wr.ee llllOQI el,ctrical etpietn
ttpOrt at that
GIN 0ub llld Symphony Orche&tni. Thtrek no ronnai ttbuttal. all rdutation
nu. wlll be lollowtcl by the lft'llor ~ b:in, 00l'lt11lntd in, the IIIJffll'l:W'it. ThJs
tknil'I theffuntinatOriCy!Nlllium. CLal8 plan k entirtly dltfffll'lt from any Uled
day tMlm. will be S.twda.y, Clw herttOl«tb)'thaetwounivtnltiel.andU
rtll'liOrl8 trill be tbe ame mcmiQI'. while.
nd NlitfactOl'Y wlJI probably bt UMd
fratsnlty ud Q(ft.be lbat l'\"elMC.
tmployed in the wattm put of 1ht
TIie 11v11il&I moetinp ol the board ol a)w\lfY, WMR it has atOUMld great in,
tr\1lllelll ol the e.pcht Education So-- tctat both on the part of the dtbattt1
dttJ ol the State ol Ntw York, and theffllelw:s and the a\ldk-not. Hcca.uat
ol dlePbl Otta Kappa Sod11ty wiU allO of the l'IOYt'lty ot lhe iorm or ~ t a' ibf- hdd s.tun:lay. l n addition to thc'lt I V bt ut..d, th,.R wlU be M dccitwn in I.he
......_ Uwre will be mertinp ot the: Ohio-Wt!ltlyan dtbralt:.
unm:inlty board ol trutteN and ot the
The debate with Wake Portal will bt
Cardner-.
tall
right,ha!Y.ltd
pitcher,
for t ~ ~va1t·
(AfflRN TOUR WJNS
FA• FOR GLEE CLUB
Easter Trip Is Popular Succe&s
p.-
hi• ddivtry. F't0renu wtnt Ult' "'·hole I to 2 vmlitt, while Hopkins ttedved fiot
dlstarn ror the viiitors.
Isupport in addition to his clever hurling.
- - - - - - - - - - - - , Nortoo'• home nan wilh a man on hue
prt:\'tnted a thut.out. Richardton and
•
Sttittbtta: kd In hitting, tam makin1t three
safe II.its.
llnt
The C.olpte team .wt!d it& toorinc in
_
the fourth iMin,, •·hen Vi't>kh wn sate at
Both Te.ams Play Errorleu Ball flffl on Madlton'• mor.
Ridlardton
Do
S I·
Bal Whll
• sil'lgl«I to ffllttt, and Stti.nbtrJ lmmodi·
~Ie! Id :aSr~ a 1 S
e
nttly hit to the ame spot, toorinc Wtlch.
nut
OW$ peed
(CONTINUED ON l'AC! 3)
fR($ff11lN flN( WINS
OPENER FROM co-LL
=~ ~:
w...,
Alkn, "27.
11\e trip it~lf PfO\'td to be mo.t pk-,1t,
int lO tht mttnbm ol boCh the musk:11
dubt. Saturday l'IOOl'I. April 9. both
orpnixationt teft the campus by but for
Troy. whcr.'! tht l\nt conmt ..,., held in
w wmbly lull ol A:usaril Sag,e Coll•·
The da,u •·hich (ollowtd the conotrt
owtcl ml.ldt of its J.Uttt'll!I to tht • ~
pated music fomhhtd by the orchescta.
Tht IM'.d day. S.arxia,·. th~ GI«- Club.
una('()Omp:l:'ikd by the orchcst~. tnivritd
to 8ratll~. \ll.• wtw:-:i It WIX at the
eovening 9!1'Vke of the Fir-.t Uaptisl
FAlDllUCK N. SCHOLTZ
Chutth. M-Oflday nig.ht found the Cite
_ _ _ _ _ __ _ __ __ _ Club. still wltho'Jt the «chestni. in
Worwster, Mm .. whete they s:t.1¥r a t tht
thtma home run by Norton, ~ Colca.tt $..,uth 8.1?:bt Clw.rc!1.
-
----
DR SW''N f1UU1KH
l-rff(S
•
LAST EVENT DECIDES
Uiell..----------- - - '1
staf"ttd tht. ooatce:t for the Colp.le tam
and served tffectl\'tly r« bl.r innit111,
alkw.inc but five hilt and ,triking out
at\'tn mtn. H~ 'A"h loro..-:l to tttk
thcllff howcvtr, whim one. Manhatt.anite
had betn rttin,d In tht firth lnllin;. From.
then on C.pWn St:holtz kept Ute in- 1line pm¢rld dt\'tn safeties. lndudlng
Vlldtrl wdJ In hand, a l l ~ Man- two doubln and two tripb from tht
hatu.n 900ffll three n.uu after ht tntertd loll'tnn,s ot CaUagtltr. Sewn ffl'otl by
I.ht game, only one Ale hit bdn, made off the oppolin, tt'&lll, aided (;o(pte to ilS 9
~ a 4 to9 victotyovtt the Comdl
Allonl Corporatioo.
run in the customary way. whh dlmt UNVfflltY f ~ Q ~,11 team, the
Spedal Pulll*l trul iterVke will b@ apeecha; and refutation by each spcokcr . Colgate )~lines ~ U y opened thtir
bo4h Wn ...S alter the...,. H.,. tbtn, wUI be both an audlenoe de- ...,. on the Wlutnall rciNe.lllllwunHallllltc.DandNewYcrk. dllionandadedtionbythr'Ctjud&U,one a l ~ . Thtpriw. whlchwssfflOthe
ot
ll k hoped wiU be the Ma,.,. o( _ , . , ""'1" 1 re, tho """'""· " "
Thirteen Points
time.
five-run nlly by IDOnn& fou, timet 1n the
1,11 ..,, ot .,,. IMlog ,. a """· , triple.
as Singers and Orchestra
and , ....
Manhattan ........ In
Visit Music Center~
the Colptc haU ol the ttVMth !Min,.
Bridp doubled. to0lc third on a sacri• The Colaatt Unlwrsity Gke Club
fice. and adckd lh¢ 6nal toOR of the pme att0m1>1nlicd by the "Maroon Coilepm''
oa an ffl'OC'. ' From the 61th inl\mg on. the orchewa mad ~ thclr debut Into &Ni New
i.nvalJinc hitten •-ett kept ttll in haad £ticlaad State$ 0.1 thri.r aMual F.Mttr
by Scbofu.
tour. F.:.- ~ tint time in the mart)'
Five thouland spt,C.Uitort • • Colclte yean whkh the Cite Club has toured to
admlnbttt to Ntw Yorli: Unlvutlty It• vmiouspolnulnthcUnit.edStalcl.ilwa,
~ dtfea.t c:,t Uw lfllllOI\ on c»Go F'teld . poaiblr to Pl'*l'lt C'Ol'l(ffl8 in iuection of
C.pWn Hopkw. in the blaate. the «iuntt')' which ii the homt ot Midi
allowed only tb tcattffld hltt. one ol othu oolltciate mueltal orptit&ationl q
lhOle ol Amhm1, Harvard, Darlrnoutn.
Wetleyan, Williams and Yale. The fact
that the Colpte Clee Club and Otthtstn.
wu mttwd in t'YttY place wilh hNrty
applautC! and hia:h appreciation l:t sl;e·
n.16cant ol the: hlch (II.Wily whiCh they
attaintd., The orpnh:aUoa waa dltt.cttd
in it:.t a ~ by Ptor. William H.
HotrmU. and manaced by Lfflwd 8.
Cotaate•vl\Dlty o( three tm:>n.. •ililt
the Jupers were not ootittnt \lfitU they
had doubled their opponenu. best «reru
atld had attained a total ot lU.
Roll Is Colgate's High Scorer
In, First Coolest, Cains
d - • i•
elicibk•and thoae intttut.rd thould
1-------------
bem bod, Italy ud llll)id, until today Maroon. The dtblte with the Otiio in,
ht 18 not only ~ t o t Che a::iuntr)I'• •titu tion will be held thit ~ at Dtla·
..,.._, tlcaricu cqtJi:pmcnt rwm., but watt~ Oflio. insltlld ol on a neulr1.I plat•
allo an ctra., ol national dfictrieal o,. form a.s bal been the cu,tom for ar:vttal
pnb:atiom.
ytari in tht' pUt.
Doctor Sihepltdton, who it a CO!di.n of
A nOYCI innovatiDr. F. L. Sheplrdlon ol the ¼ 11u Dtl:an.re. whert. the ddlate will ~ run
Wty. hat ac:Mu«I di.tlnC'llon . .. an a ooordina to the ()nsoo. plat, which Is.
tdt.ac:a\Or, ~ ltn-ed • IIUl)trinttndtnt Ln tfftct, identk:al with th<.\ form loOo-.«1
ot • ·tial 1115nolt diool di:drictt and at liepl trials. 1ht tine. 1pcakcn a~
• prole.or ot hiltory at tht Uniwnily I\Vffl eiahtetn rntnuttt to prettll thtir
ot Odarco. Ht 18 now conrw:cud with a entire c:asc. the te0()l)d SPt*kffl en:.pri'l&le inltitution.
examine•hothtr for fifteen mitl.utet., aoo
a.em. will be opmc,d wilh a c.::inc:ut the wt ll)CS.ktn are giVffl rmecn minute.
Friday tvfflinc, Junt 10. by tbt Cdpt.e in whid1 to sum up thtir atgW'ntntt.
N.Y.U. TRACK TEAM
OEFEATED 86-60 IN
EXCITING CONTEST
(mtu:nan Of ,ophomore
"""Y
Completiac the dtbatc tch'ldule for tbt
)Ur,
J...,_.
lnlllng. and made
•
. . . , will help to t,mw old ,nctuaus iw-.nt
the
teCOnd inninc, by tallyin, twice on a
wiflc. two . ; ~ and a paaed ball.
They added CO their IOOf't in the fifth,
when fi" ol the Manhattan twn ao.ct
... ......
Colpte had tallied twice in the fourth
D(IAJERS TO
RNAL APPEARANCES
"'Mandoy .,-..,-. - - will Cloelng Debates ot the Season
ad i - 9. In to tbt - - Will Aleo Mark Completion
adm eetMlill. lhn will be a number
of KalJdr , Coa hi g
cl ....a ..... dunna the netffld,
.....
._her pncc_kally Ill ot the
llldtn ill Colptt Ille. RNnloM ud
~-
NO. 26
Trial• for the Kinpf«d dcc:lama,
lion eontat will bt held In the
Little 11utff or the Adminit.tn·
tion Bulldinc Friday antmoon at
few o 'dock. Any mtmbtr of the
J\laroon Nine Plays Well In Initial Cootests Against
V,ctcriee over Manhallln Colkct and
New Yori( Uni•cuity Thur1day and
EXAM$- TO END JUNE . 9 ball C. M. ,Shaw, '29:) J. C. Sllturday, uahffld l.:n the 19rl7 ~
Genni Swoop. Pflllidmt ol lhc Gitncnl
Schneider. '29. and O, 8. Willoa.
lfflOChalt for
Univenity, Tbt
Ellctrtc ~ a~ one ot Uw Gal·
'29,wtte:fc,ctedlMiilcafttmanace,&.
Manhattan nint ~ to Hamllcoa
"""'"' ....... of U.. c:ounlr)'. will
tftd met debt on Whitnall P".eld by a
..,._ at -, .,, ca,w Day .... r-- - - -- - - - -- - - 'l toOC'e o,I 8--7: and two dayi later the Ma·
0
cilcs a..., il WII lwllld , _ . . Y Ht
llllff
rOoa tNM will dtliftf the principal adclrftl ~t tht
IUlllt
York Uni'IU'lity nine on thri.r oppc:>ntntt'
hi Mcoday.
......... 9-2.
JUM 13,
Rtiin prevented the tdM!dulied clath
~..
II
STlllrvft'
$ECOIIJ TIM[
t.nh)
v1ci:",;,, ......
and ...... .;.;........
ll'(Ond and third platts.
Colaate took riaht f-nt p1110e& ttVtn
IOCClnd plaoes. and Im third placee.. F.ddle
'ptaclnc
°' Colpi....,..by wiMins 1.,.
Roll """""
'"'"'
In - ·
and
l.onJ and H«kman won two events each.
Roll •'On the 440 and 880-yatd runt and
platu,1 ~ in the 220. Heditman won
the thotput and javtlln throw. while
12()..yard hijh hurdle!
and the 220-·ym-d low hurdla.
laWTf!DC:e, who won the ditrus throw
and tooll IICCClnd place in the javelin
lhrow. wat hl&ti poln.t maaoo tbe N. Y. U.
uun.
The~ York uiam made the only
dean fWOe'P at tht day. takinc all points
In Uw dbait throw. 1'ht other evtnla
•'()ti by thee ViOliet were the 100.yard ddh,
lhe one and two mile runa. the pole vault.
and the diacus throw
(n the one mile nan. Haltoo. (ormtf
captain ol the Violet tcom, W()l'I b)' two
)'WtfromMIUttofColptt. H ~wonby
• spriul on the homt tCrttch after Milltt
had pus.,'.d, him oo the Wt turn,
The tumm.2ry:
120 yard high hutdlcf-Long:. Colptt,
fint: Lid!trie. N. Y. U.. teCOl'ld: Frar i«, .
Cdpt,, third. Time 0.16.
100-ya(d dalb-Hl.tg\Jlenit1. N. Y. U..
fint: Reimer. Colpte, ICCIOnd; Stein, N.
Lona eapcured the
Y. U.. lhitd. Timt0:103-5.
One--mite run- llalto:\. N. Y. U., Br1t;
MUltr. Colp.tit. !ltC'Ond: Booth. N. V. U.,
third. Time 4:44 1-S.
,t40-yard nan-Roll. Cotpte. lirsl
5':boolman, N. Y. U., slCO:id: Moo«.;
Colptt. thltd. T'unc O.SS 1-S.
16-pound thOit pul- H~m!l"I. Colaat.r,
(ltlt: Wclbcf'I. N, Y. U.. aco:,nd; Vid.m,
CTwo-mi» nan- Roth. N. \', U .. ftm.;
Tot rono"'·U'lg nlgtit came one of lhc Rota. <:alptt. M'COl'ld: SchWI..Y. N. Y. U.•
belt COCKfflS ol lhc entire trip- that liven third, Time 10:20 Z..S.
in 0c,,&1on 11.t th" WabM NriJl:hbomood
Javriln throw- Hedt.matl. c.ot,att. first
Club. l ea sue«. is in a largt measure l.a'llTtnce. N. Y. U.. "'-Ond; Veit. N. Y.
due to the clTortt of Robert W. Moort, U.. third. Dlsta.nct 175 feet 5 indict.
Jr.. totttthcr with other Colgate Alumni.
220,y.t.rd ~ hutdles-1.cq, Colpte,
The orthaua tt·iolnod the Glee Club for first: Hclbttg. N. Y. V .. 8tCO!'ld: White.
Uih ronotrt. 0,, Wednt!Sday night both N. Y. U., third. 'T'ime 0:27.
tM G:<.-e Club and Offllt8tra pul on a tin,: Pok Vault- Willatd. N. \', U.. flt8t :
program und~ the a ~ ol the Kappa W~tney. CAlp)ll Thtta 'w:-orlty ol Adelphi Cot~t. third, Hd.8ht, tl fctt.
ln the rroin ballroom of the Hott! Roose220-)·atd d.Uh- Rftmer, Colptt. tint:
\'• h inNewYork. The lJ1itcon(~.rtorthe Rotl. Colptc-,t1~ond:Schoolman,N. Y.U.
trip came th.! r01.10•.-it11 evening at Ea!t third. Timc0:23 4.S.
Ora1tge, N. \'.. 11t the Woman's Club.
RuMin&' hi,rtl jump-Slalford. Colgalt:,
Th.is concert was comldffld by many first: Fritdbtrg. N . Y. u .. IIKOOCI: P'Um,p,
to bt the nut 1U1Xe&Sful appear1.nce of Cola11te. third. Hei,tht 5 feet 10 inches.
lhe tour. with tht p(*iblc tta'P(ion o{ the
(00.'lTINllt.1> ON PAet: 4}
Bostoo (Ol)()trt, The w«ea o{ thl• tll•
ta-uinn'IC!:lt was adckd to mat""rially by
.. . .
th, dforu ""' forth by u., • l,moi ol 1hat
N:&iiOn a.nd die Watchul)Jf Club of tht
u.
UnlW<'AlY, _ _ __
-
Colpte opened ita tl'9Ck teUOrl S.tur~Y by ddieatln, N. Y. U. 66-«J, at Ohio
F1dd. New Yortt. The meet wu dOK
lhtouchoul and wa, DOl dffllkd ut1lil the
6naJ twnt tht broad ·
Moore
BASEBALL TEAM WILL
MEET ST.BONA VENTURE
CAIBER TO PLAY AT
(COHT•• = °" r.oi s,
,..":'J,!'\:Cu..~..•::IPopular Speak•• R- --...... o1 ... cold..,ort•ca""""""''"~ pus to Speak on Problems RECORD HOLDERS TO
w;u, • r... """' ot ,·kk'"" b,h;nd
LACROSSE TEAM OPENS playi"''""' in. hodeond;,,,. (,om'''''"
o( Sod.ol S u Hygl•••
SWIM IN POOi. HERE ""'"· ,.. ""."""' vanity nlno will ........
1
... Pram
· ""' .... by SEASON HERE
... bocJ,pite:hing
"""" .,.,..
"""
"" ball,
.·~
o( " "''
"""'
' " ol St.
" " """"'
~Wlll>
Jmllor
Ccmml
· MOND A y ..iCritr\fl.
for the.
Mtroon
cub1..
Returning to the eampu.whtn
,they
!face
the"l "
$1ro"I
Bon:,.
tiltiont b1.e .been
t'IOffll~ u:~hn,:
allowed but nine hit, duriiu the w,cn time thi• )'tat. Or. E. L Sw11A. IOCial
Mar..• iMinp he was on the mouod. ~ hygSeni11t. add~ the ttucknl body in
llk:kwt.W..-, 11,
kecpinglhctn•'tlldimibul.td,hew~ mos:t chapel, Thurlday, on the Jll()l)lems of
First LMeu• OatM
tffeetiveLnpinctt,,,,.J. With but twoinni.np $.~. and 1'ith hia dlarut«istic 8alu1e
to be played, Daddona went into the bo( ackno,r.•lcdaed the ovation accorded hi m
~ A.mold F. Amok! ol S)'l'Ullac IIOO lcept I.he ComtU bltamen at bly th'l by the students.
Unlnnlty, hu been appointed. by the tttt ot, the pmc. A fa.st double play.
"I believe in the ~ of romantic
held rtfttll: Of the lnttn:olk-Jiate La· when )oung took a hard line drive in teft lovt. the kiDd you fflld about in l>Offllt."
cro.e ~ l i o n to ~ftttt ~ht Cclpte- fldd Md lOMCd. it to Alk!11 atstCOt'ld fora he d~:t,~:J. ;n I p>inted out its ftffill
~ary~
Whpl1
F ~, May 2 , ~ out, kil_kd ~~~~-eighth Inning vJJue to the Individual physically. ethicary_..,.
·
,,na: ,.... tt'Vtnl1 ....y. 1nthentnlh~111thowedtom? ally alld ,piritually, "ESJlltrially d (lQI it
wee:kt aod won. over Harvard Int ThW't< effective twitting by atnklng out the thttt idmulat~ lmaclBation." he Aki, "And
day by the tCCrt. 7-4.
batsmen whO opp0ted htm.
all creot, m a ~s thinp lh:&t Mve been
Candidata for t~ Maroon team re-- The heavy hlttltll( or Oowltr wu a achieved o:,me throuat, the lma,lnat6on. ··
t ~ to c:oUtae dum:'l lhe· ~ nca.- ~ture of the came. D..rin,: hit fint
Speo.kin1t britlty of the o:ptoic.ation of
UOn t« practice. , whkh has t1nce been tilne at bo.t. In the,ecorld lnnin,. h: h.lt n l".JC appeal at the ~ t tlrM Doc:t
, by orpnizcd pmes._ The mtt1 home run, and i11 two mOO? trips to the $'1,'(1,n said that tJlU'e •'trC low- ~tontf ::
are t.rain&nl hard for the <>Ptnlnl came ol plate hammered out a double and a Cngtc. the froot ~ o( ~ momina
: ~~but as )'t't 110 tentative li.nftq) ~ · Allen, and Yow,g with two hits whidi madt use ot it.
11
new men in this
apklC'le:,_prowd to be the othtr yurling t 11bjtctlnchlklhoodha.srn1cn.medthent•
M=--Scott, SchtNdt, and
~si~
in the mind d the adult. hC'
ahow aptntst ror the ,came and may be i:..e. played the '-t.
for C.omtll. poin d out.
\lied in the tnaount« •ith the Maryland Morgan and ROM', phchtn1 (or IJie lth~ a
Doctor Swn.n ans~'tttd N'Vfflll QI.M'S·
#Oldtc't. With the: i911,W11 o{ tiahtoen ntw mm. Wffl: unable LO ktep the Maroon hit* lions that had bett'i tiktd him by a numbtt
unilorms this s>Ut Monday an iDceft. autred, but pitthed good ball during ot studtnt•. In ttpl ytng to one or them.
t.ive hat bttn l.nlrodu«d which will nw.ke most o r the Pfflt'•
he .utod that JltytholOfDCII txptnmcntm
the mm wort haJd l.n otdtl- to keep thtm.
The fa.,t M.an)Qfl infidd at Hogy, Allen, had rounc1. that 29yeanb the ideal agt, tor
Victor RoM. a,,othtr aaeodatlon ttftrtt. Bo.uck« and Otteff givu prombe to be nWl to marry and 25 )'t'oll'S ror ,..nma.11,
has rectlved tht 11p1>0i.ntmtnl for the New ~ ot the Sltonltfft ever lO rtprcsent the. "''! th a \ •a.rialk.'e (If four )'tllts in ~it.her
York Univfflity pmt to be pta)'fd May Maroon MiOt'L Mud. intcretl is bring d1rtetion.
Gwber' and bis t.nd. co fWTlitb mi.aaic: and Ma,ylutd Twtht WWI
mltl1aimnel'lt for lhe l)'ffltlUium dance
to be held thetffllilll ol Friday, May
thirlNnth,00
p&a,- bm:lme practically com,
p1e111 far thk ,-r'a Junior Promcnldt
Jan
Gwbtr'•
mum ~ t b 'a
, _ . cl the popularity wflic:h his orchtt·
tra won htff tM:t f*'. Thlt year
Gwber'
hat k.c:oepo.•ted _.,....
new
ardll:t into the PfJIOftl,el of hh fiJt.een
...., orcbestn,
"Rudy.. Ntional:ly
imo.n JUl',ilt who ltNr 'yan ISO d&._.... the Colp~ pn:11111C1.SU.. with bk
repetoin: o{ DOVelty acu. has rtttlMed
toGarbtr'• orchettn and will ,cain tntff•
lain tboet &1ttiend en the llocr ol the
HIIDtinctffl l)1rlDllliium.
AA *trica1
dKonrtinc ICheme
tome-
wbl&lbillrlOUitoneworkedoutayear
. . ril pr,mde a beautihal and pleaainr
llltlh for thedlace. Lau.ice ..-ortc lft'ICa
.m. ~
oil the portion ol the l'loor
.._.., to I.he walls LO form hootht f«
die varb» campua IJ'OUl)t,
At a joint mNtinc ol the Social oomllliltee of the faculty and ~ Prom com·
mlttillt today Che final decWon ,rill be
reldled M to wh•ther S.turday nia:ht •·ill
ti. 8ft Mide- for the GPft\ houtt atralt. a,
°""'
Celt.....
S:::'en i:p
,_t~
the
Lani-::
=f=~
.=r;..
:~
~
=~
~ci_!~i1::~~~~ ~rii~:: ~F:~~~::,:n~t;_~~"'c::~~t~~:: :~::
Su~-:'°:
tract::n
Team WIN Dtltltd Ill Tlttt
In t..ul MNI
,'t'ntutt te,am this $.'ltwdll.)• aftttn()OO 0.'l
the t.c-nc dlamond,
The St. l)on.w('nture nirw-, n!lhough
forttd to tt!itlqui.Sh pmet to N. Y. v..
St. Mary'• School or Ualtimon:. and CcN-·
neu by me !lOOl'el of 8-6, 2-bonu n formidable ~combiNtk>n •·hlch
F.ntM r<>r tJ1: Ne-w York Statt champiomhip t-wit'M'llna nwtt In the pool of
the Colpte «ymnasium, April 30. indud~ JOmt ot tl1ie ltad1n1t aQualk start
or 1h: Eruit.
The Uroolclyn ~ tral \', l\l, C . A.
~ I m•..~'(llder
ll d ' ot the ~~tion:il thampion,
"'' P, w~
tvt ~ &WI~ to1 u ~ Its
laurt11 in compcttUOn w,th 'I . M . C. A.
t,:amt from all ov« tbe &tat:. Walter
Sp.•noe, hold« "' sevtral world rtCOrels:
Robert Hotk. brlckwoke d.amplon. and
()(h...,. rast mm ar.o on tlit Brooklyn tam.
Troy, Sc,htnttuidy. Utica, Buffalo. 8it1g,
h.11m1on, Syracuw. Rodwster, and Clov·
eraviJle ·will be «'Ptt9tnted in the vark>us
becomts au t1,c mere dMltft'OUS 10 the
~taroon b..-cau:,eoftbesedoeeddtats. In
all of the ~ames ap.inst tlllfllt .-ron,,: op~ t , tht ~ Ltd untl.l tht dosint
1nnitlg11;. ,.,hffl tliey we-e rorctd t o ~
dicfcot thf'QIWI last mlnutt rallies. To
a,'t~-.i t.he!le df'f'ta1.t they ha,·e a,nccntrattd upon handi1'1Jf a it1.·back to the Col·
,ate nine this S:l.turd:iy. The team from
Otean has a., an addtd Incentive for vie,
tot)', Ult desire to ll\~t the 9-2 de(tat
sl.lff'crtd al the hands ol tht Mnroon l.asl
C'\'tnti
year.
1
•
•
n-~,:i c"' ~:ci~
Ut_!! ; ,
b~I~
the Ne; ' v"ork" ~te ,;>'*"l ~tor,
Soriety. and wlll be first Ntw \'Olt Stat
c hnm1>ionshi1> •·•.-immina inttt and t~
f1n.t lmportam aquatic C"OC'l'lprtition hdd ·
this .«til:>n or the , t.11 tt
m
\\"11'
8. F
.'.
.
1
lul
,a m ,.
. ()(Si tt, i.;1:ncral dta.!rmtlll·
out \l,e d~~ds r0r
. mon s N1d hor>tl enl)lijth m.ltl"dl
se:«~ :k•n«
,n~~c:~t:: ~r.::.n:~:·:i,~i~ :.~~la~su;::;
In Joe Conlon, outflddtt, Joe Cutn1nif•
~ie Pll.lermo at third al)d
Cynl Kntur m the pl.tel.er• box.. St .
Booave11tu~ ~ four •tcllar Ptt·
fonnm; 0..rnml!lcey"s 11.'0lt was lllf'
(c:nure or tht Cornell ca.me. The \'ttcnan
fint wkcr s,oll'd three, h~ts i" .five triJlB to
ll~ ~ate. two of lll4;" beu.'IJt tnpla. lltld in
~ii~ c-Jthibl.t~.• tbshy fiiek!ing :ti his
Po$illl)fl on the 1n11W bag, Kntztt. a l90 a
key~at
~
~E~!:r~l~ :~s: ~~~:5~:
1
Y, . ,
pr:ac
n u
gtOtta noon• . -..uw
d.antts to 5trt Cooch timt lc,cturin1 in collt«cs uodtt t he au undM pool .and pladng Utica 00
· h< 11
ihe ~ t tttti"A: aside (l( Saturday dlttccion ol MS:isl.llnt MAtlagtr R ~ Abtl's mm -.'Ot'k in hdll't ba~II tp{(:iN: or tht Amtrican N.:u ional 11 1·c 1 • e.. h N · . y k 3Jld : ; up m t • ~ · The bautr)' will l)rQb.
nlpt for the cto.d dancu.
Ad.ail.
wealhtr.
Awoda .
YJ "-'
ua · r« Yilt
C\\:
or·
01 r ahl)' coos,st of lkl(>ldM at 1hc hurting tt'ld
lion.
c~n1mol 3<1ua1b.
and Hunt at the rt«-ivin,: t>nd.
«
Tim COLGATE MAll00N
OTHER COL LEGE
S If e Colgate SI a r o·o n
~ t Offioe M
Stocond Cl•
SMALLErS HAMILTII TIIATRE
COMMENT
PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY QF THE COl.l.ECE YEAR BY THE
STUDENTS OF COI..GA.1'£ UNIVERSITY
Entcm:I at the Hamilttln, N. V.,
·'"
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27- ·MaUnee 3 P. M.
FLORENCE VICOR in "AFRAID TO LOVE"
MaUtr
M£MB£R OF THE EASTERN COUF.GIATE NEWsPAPER A.$SOCIAT10N
SAT URDAY, APRIL 30-Mattnee 3 P. M.
The Creal Dram, of Circus Ufe
"THE MONKEY TALKS"
Starrlna Olh-e Borden
Editor-in,Clritf
Mat1a«lnc. Editor
AffOCIATE EDITORS
COIJim.ANI> 0 . Rcle90N, '28
Cg()ft(;C 5,. TAff'., '28
Cttff1"£1l L. HllLTS. '28
ED'erAJID N. M,0·1111,
'28
WtU the butball MUOa hu startedand •ith ii the ut111l taotr ttonr.. Jnfltt,
(frtM "lllit Datt-..t:11")
REPORTERS
RottUt
E
M
'29
"'"
have
it
,tni,ht
from
Mac
that
the
We
once
heard it ~Cid by an underHAIIOI.I) 8. DAY. '28
• • UMl'OIII).
pm, mtn are aolna to bt tQ\dpped with enctuat• that Dartmouth wu "a tchool
F1:20CRtCK C. Hu.osa '28
KrtNNCT11LA,Roeatt
M~uNCln&.
'29 dfetrlc (oot Pldt. But to .....
_, ti.ck to .,.
..6 L ~ - - - -• - - , _ _ ..
••~
O,ucs. '29
,.,._ _....1- E Ytt1 an ou-.
CIOYS A. NA<'.l'.a,. '28
.
.
bndJlll- lhe pme ThW"lday.,. a aood can dilceffl 1*11aJ ttulh tn Out IUlteC. Boa11• RotlA, '28
JAMF.!i E. 8.ut~. "29 ont. A link- wtt-a little lone-a littJe me:nt if tie ralillf't that in ffll!lll dtpar\•
Fullutac TIK*S. '28
C ROHRTL B1tua.. : : wobbly in ptacea- but acill a &ood one. me:ntt one third ot lht
mark is 1-«I
RoeElt'T A. Bt.,uwum. "29
fUlffllll
OIICAN,
It WM l'tllllY tul'JJri"'1c the nllfebu of on Che rallltt ot t.hete mont.hly Ulll,t. Joe
E, $1'ANUY Col'f:LAI«>. '29
A. DANIA. SCHUIHD., ;9 IWdenls that lltffldtd. OJ.u.dt ot the J.oet!ecdv,e livu in COQltslt ttnor ol UMffl
JAMU F. G,\aVBY, '29
Plmlclt.JCK C. Sllll&.'f. 29 tu ttp)fltn, tM frtthmao battl>tll aquad, whik tM Phi ~klot,ctownon lhtn. with
C. Wtt,,:oKU. K.lu.000. '29
WtWAM M. Sn:ri111t. '29 and a rew
humans there wett ttie indiftft"tlltt ot one ot hi• mmtal abtl·
- - - - - - -- -us
- ,N
-·ESS
- -- A_R
_D_ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ q1rhe a rew oot prt:te:nL And NY, isn't ity, Pa)'C'holocilU have proved that ez.
JOHS S. Tll1!.W1!II. '28
ruw
RM
..,,annc
UuaioeaMana,er
90
S
. M T\JCQJI '?:/ that newCdcllte- )'di • aood ont, uolnatlonl can bt no more than a rouch
and t h e ~ of the Alma Mat.cir- why
Will Rotera himldf. COUidn't haw doM
MMUl,u 8.,.,.,. Manarecr
bd.tc:r. It l0W'lded like three
Atlid&nt C!malatJon M...,.
1111>-fmhmcn mci1¥ ''0ld John Harvatd,"
- -..,.
-,_
- _- · - - . ,_-,..
- ,..
- ...
-., ..
• ___- _,
- lb- ..,
- Thou
- -1'1
- Dd
_ lO___ _ __ 1 Anyway that"a ont came the ~
fS\lfnlt.t of a atudent'9 abillty-}'n Uity
'w. wtll+nourllhed lilt It Dartmouth.
N ~ we btt~ that lht ad·
van~ of theee l'fCUllUd queationairet
far outweicbt their fawta. For the in,,
CIIR't annul.
ttlklctl,IU they «kr a chance to chcd "*P
Adclrt# oxnmuniaitiontl for t h e ~ mana«u to lh! Otlt.a Up&ib\ Hou,o.
on hit knoalcd&re Md dite0ftl' Mt --k·
4
Ollict: Tdtphont. Ha.milton 7-M.
Spina hat come and with it the old . - . . They ltr'Ve u a Pft'l)eluat *PUt to
W'IC to ,et 1way and to IOft'IWll.,.-- k«I> the. avfl"II'" 1tudent from nepcting
nm MAJIOON it not rtep()nli.bk for t.tattcnu'IU made In CIOll'IIIUllcationt. but dots
mayhap the Cotlowln, ditty will be of hdp. hit daily work. In tM way the man who
not publith anon)'fflOUl ltttm. All communications thOuld r.ch lhe «Iitor by Sunday
cannot • into the milty h1t11re it-~
""
--"'-'"'- "°"
_._ ..,
_ ,_c1_1o,n
_·,.
_w
______. ___________ If to New York your n.y you11 W'tfld, IOfflt ol the torture ol IMC mloutt "cnn,.
1bke heed, a wamin,. do not fl)fnCI
mire" before fln:als. Hour e:xamiMUOt'ls
______su_BSC
__R_1_PT_I_ON
_ _R_A_TE_S2_
.50_P_E_R_YEA
__•_ _ _ _ ___ 1Your time In pl.cu o1 ill tame:
maylhmbt~ • • ~ e v il by
&.it r1.thcr Md a apkty danw.
both the !IO.llty and tht ~ I . I l l e
body.
Ja,e Editor. . ........ ' • • • • • . • .. • • • • .. • • • • .. . ..... . E»wAIID N, MAYl!II. '28
r .
• h heart
We an: cl the opini«I. howtw:r. lhat the
Duk £di tor .. . ••. , . . . • . . .. .•. , •• , ., • • • ,. . , ... , ••• , ... Fltll>PJC T)IOMS, "28 ~-:""'" • 11 W\l
do :
,ttOnK
pment macl'lintry is ru1ty and warped.
ANnCant Dt9k Edltor ...................... .. .. .........C. Ebm,,. ROSA, '28 ~
ooc:'u=- iuout wrooa,
10
Oil and rtadiultmmt •·o-.ikl do ml.tdi to
She11 beat you in:,. drinkil\t bout.
,..kt the whole fllnCtlon mc:n fil*Ablc.
h k only natural that aeveral df:plttmfflts
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____ _ _ __ _ 11r )'OU know not w!Ml'e to go
dtrem it actvhablt to Cive hOur euma at
Tti;t her down to arre Old Joe
about lhe. llmt part of the 9tll'ICltf"r. The
_ ___ ____11.uo
__,_-_._N_._v_._. _....
_ ,_,_2_7._,_m_._______ ,At
f'o.-ty,Siltlh Strttt.. jlllt ol'f Pi.hi'!.
rtl\llt it dislRNinc to the e:tl.KltnL Ofttn
A place to c.tl or just a ••hiff.
ht findt that bmdtt ooc>lnc with hit daily
INAUGURATION
routll'l(' ol WOfk he mu1t Pft1*l't for t•'<>
This iswe o( THF. MA.ROON marks the rtlimnent from office o( That's fMUCh ror Oki NN· Yortimpor12nt tnll on the 9Affle day c.-. Pf'"·
ami1a11on Mana&ff
TCl'UCN •
'
WIU.IAM A. F••cKa. '27
• JAM£5 STAffllllO, '28
JOt?N H. Soon. '28
v•
'°- """"'
-
Id
----------------MONDAY, MAY 2
MADGE BELLAMY in "THE TELEPHONE GIRL"
TUESDAY, MAY 3
Maaque and Triangle Presents "THE SHOW OFF"
Bu)' Ttcket, Now
WED., MAY 4-·"MADAME WANTS NO CHILDREN"
·Knox Hats
Have you Sttn the new
styles of Knox Hats? New
colors and shapes. Quality
ranks first and all the time.
When you buy a KnoxHat
you get your money's worth.
Knox Quality
ss.oo
Emett G. A.nmlrong, editor-in-chief, Donovan M. Jenkins, managing Thffl:•s p&enl>· there who dol1't eat
port. hlPI, t\'('n thrcc on t•-o PJC'i.'c.iw dl)'t.
editor, Raymond D. Merchant, sports editor, and Russell E. Howard, And now •'e'II JO to the emit • ·lid West
This h a handicap whldi the avtntet
<'Olktt man nnds dit'l'IC\llt to
Evettll M . Lane, Robert G. Stark, and Ernest F. Staub. associate Wlwff men arc mtn and womtn bts:t.
Florsheim Shoes
°'~
editors.
The administration of thef.e men has been a most progressive and Now Cle,,:land is :11 t ity fine
succ:esslul one, for under their guidance the paper has bttn impro,.·ed It mis in (ait CHo't d ime:
II.I_,, are
and bcave. and tcut:
in many ways, both from an editorial and mechanic.al viewp0int. The Watch
out ror O:IIX or they'll ,et yo1,1.
""°""·
introcluotion ol the "Other College Comment" and "Campus Society"
columns and the addition of numerous feature and human intertst
stories ha1; broadened the S(:()S)t of the publication and !earlessl'le58 in
advancing a well-defined editorial Policy has made TH£ MAROON a decided factor in the formation of undergraduateopinion and faculty cooperation. Improvement& in chapel programs and changes in regard
to the cut system, two of the objectives of the retiring board, have been
made during the past year and student thought on many campus prob!ems has been stimulated through the editorial columns of Tue
MAROON.
Without doubt the inauguration of a new editor-in-chief and a
new managing editor always arouses considerable speculation among
Colgate undergraduates. faculty member&. and alumni as to the poli' wm
"chthe new •---•
'II ake as 1ts
· p Iationn.
,
N o ra,d·ca1A1..ae&
UUcUU WI t
1
\dianges
in editorial policy will be attempted by the new edjtors at this time
but this does not in(er ll\at there is nothing radically wrong with
campus affairs and activities. Man}' just criticisms of student aov•
.
· · "'
emment have been made through these column, dunng the pa!it few
months and it is the intention of the new editoriaJ writen to continue
discussion of this weigbly problem and kind.red toPics. atways striving
for constructive rather than destructive suggest.ion. Student thought
has been aroused in regard to improvements along the line of student
government but as yet action has been lacking.
Despite the fact that few Colgate students will admit it, Colgate
is provincial. The college is provinciaJ not only in regard to the
non-cosmopolitan nalure of iu student body, as was suggested in these
oolumns a few weeks ago, but in other ways as well. notably ln regard
to atudent government campus politics scholastic endea\•or and even
. ·t
'
'
'
spm.
No drunkards run around il• ttrttU:
Its ,:irls wear d:iru •ith many ple:111.
With purentl8 it i1 (l)Vffl'd white
It, cou,:hoe,t sl)(lrl is brldxe at nJMht.
Bamboo C:i.fdeM with Eme"'°" cm-
More than dancirur. Yol,l'II
nie £n,lith t)'!ltffil. or tducatiol'I i• hncd
on tpttialiu.tion in one tw.ndl of know!·
ed,c and Amcrican1 ol'lffl admit that i.n
many tttl)t(ta It Is suPffl(lf to our own.
Ytt in 11'1e: prttmt t)'&tffll ol liwt exami,
natiOOll •-e find a complete de:nial or lhis
lhtory. For instance, a i:t'l.k.ltnt b ft)o
q11lttd to db play a llawtt. koowkd~ or
IIOfflt natural ,drntt during one period or
UM' day and a few htlurt la t« do UM' 111me
in a romance lan,wip-.
Wt bdiev-e this
to bt ,n itnl>Q1!181billty for the n ~
mentality.
)'OUr filL
The tolution.. a more compelent lld·
jUAtment ol hour tnminadon 8dltdultt,
Is relatlvdy e:impl,t. J111oort and 8tf\ion
On•·ard to the tMm ol poi~ .
a.rt allowed mott 1periali1.111inn Mid p-eattt
frttdom in their que&t ror knc,,wkc:I~. and 1
The littJe villact, Boston by name-.
rightly
The bnint ot the :itt.llCk is
Has vtr)' Huie claim to rame-.
borne by {l'tl!hmtn and IOl)hOmOm; •'hO
OultidtofWdle.ltyintbelot
• hoc
ate subk,ct IO requirtd introductory
n, , no1h· thffl: lh1 t'
t'IOurllfS. For the l'Ol'l\'C'nitnce and btlW'fil
ffe '
· ll'lft
' very
•
of thil loa'ft' hal.f ol the coil* • 13uttau ol
.
.
Hour Examlnatlona mlgtit bt romwd.
cou,w tl""': • ~
· quite dem1,1rr. v.•ho!M! duty would be tM ~ lation of
V.ho tPtAd their llmt amon,c the poor,
thele- t tt;ts in IUCh a manner tha t I.ht man
Social 8ttVlct. dondla.kllo'W.
v.ilh two on one day or evtfl on alOOC:!Ni'I\I
And t!\'er'Y one tnu.11 have Mr btllu.
da)"I would be the txet9(1on, We bdltYC
thlt would be a vita! sttp in the adva~
You dare AY dh'tS In M h a plactl
ment ot che prttmt lfMIIMic aw:r.11et of I
YoufrahYOW\&lhiJ'l«. w-e'lldapyour r::K"I'! the M'lllff ci.-..
Drink. ..tly no one·, rvtt tried it,
1-J:ctt>t v.·i.«i Harvnnl had it& riot.
MCMII~ au.Mlnatio,n, II Co11at• . ,.
CM.til'II)' fMtllfed tty U MUI)' dlM/dAnd'° w.-e 1ea,-e this stern aid tMm,
¥MIII.. U .,. ttioaa 11 OartNVl:tl,
They ne,w ta~h, they. only frown
Prof....,. 1,- ,..,Ired 10 IMldtf 1d1Mu,.
A sleeper takffl an tht n11ht.
de r-,o,ta lo tM ,..,.., ofllu at r19111i.,
HtaCkd Wte:t w.•lll fid )'OU riaht..
1111:a,vllt 1.nd dl111t, 11 1, oMy 111111,t.1 that
d111rl111 ttia WNk Pfa>otdi!III th• day an
THE MAROON is in favor o( the formation of a 1tudent council at
~
at• dua Mur tuMI•
Colgate. Such an organiation may seemnn............t to the jdeaJ o( stU J ust fifty miles from Hamilton
...,..,...._
1llC place q ao to sl)ttld our "mnn"
11a
Stud,• tt tiava at
government but when a student body chooses to become indifferent to Ytt. S)'nlCU9t It • llrM• "-- eall" u,otl to ttva 1n 9'CMld
its responsibilities no Olher COW'tt seems apen but that ofestablishing Hearken ladt, tlie oo-«1, play:
fA IMmNI¥. . 111 "'' " eoutMt durlnt a
tlftlla MOtfllflt,
A l111rat111 o, Hour
a ttpresentative body of students for the purpose of initiating Jtgj&Rt'C.
wn11, ha~ tvt, eo pipe down. boys.
If you have never worn them, fall in line
- you will like their l'Omfort and the long
wear they wil give you- most styles ..... .
JACK MacQUEEN
New Spring Models
SPORT SHOES
DRESS SHOES
STREET SHOES
'°'
O!
John Ward Men's
Shoes
Inquire of ~S. M. Tucker
D. U. HOUSE
t,_.. ,.,.,..
11••• """"L
lation. The dut.ies of such a council would in general include the presentation of undergraduate interests to the University authorities. the
direction o( undergraduate poHcy, the supervision of clw organiza.
tion, the control of student government finance.• and similar prob1ems..
Such an organiiation would not take the right ol suffrage from the
student body as a whole but would do much to instigate undergraduate action on various campus problems wht:n such action is needed
THE MAROON l• in favor of a thorough revi!Aon of the constilution
of the Students' At9ociation and complete rtgard for its regulations
and lo, thooe ol parliamenWy proctdure during all Students' AS60ci.ation meetings It is a reoogniied fa,ct that the constitution as it
- ,~.
· IY ,,oIIowed a nd
,
. means
now~
..... 'l!i not •~
~na stnct
. sueh a situabon
that the constitution is either out-of-date or is unknown to members
ol the student body A committee for bringing it& provL'Uons up to
date should be appo,inted., and. copies or the document should be dis,,
tributed to all students
Underclassmen should be allowed voice as well as vOte in student
meetings. freshman participation in di&cu&sion being withheld until the
beginning of the seoonct semester The present method of giving
notices at student meetincs should be revised. Annoull(:ements or
meetings. practices, and similar events would be much more cltarly
understood and more quickly presented.if read by the preskling officer.
The present pian for chapel programs it proving its worth but
greater student co-operation is needed if the plan is to be entirely
successful. The faculty has aided matters by providing an improvement in the se:rvicee but the undergraduates have thus far failoo to receive the various speakers with any great show of interest. The plan,
as first proposed, provided for addresses by faculty members but thus
far few professors have spoken, it is to be regretted.
Continualion of the present cut system, the establishment of more
''honors'' coun;es. the appointment of a graduate manager of publica-
nie colkce up tl1ttt on the hill
lullllniat6ofl1, 9ilelil aa It 1111....N abeva
WO.Id tM'tllflty ltftd to 1'911tff 9Udl OOII•
dfti1M19. If auc,11 a f8Clllty C.MMfftM It
d"mad lna,cMIUlk II It ......ltM Ul1t
NEWTON'S
Cream Mayonnaise
Pu, H'l,,ol1Jt>'flll1 D1/icio,"
1, tutt «> giw! a man .i thrill,
Pi Btu Phi and Allila Phi.
On Sunday nwi14 U1er ltn'e t'()C)(I ( ?) tta. •••• ff takan IO a111»111tw1a tllort 1aa1,.
t1va11 WMkfy, for tt.. oonflkti1111 i.o.ir
·
A. J. NEWTON
Hotr1i/10,. , N, Y,
The Uidaknintz, out Jamtt Stttt-t way. anmfn.ati!Ml9.
i.r it dlotap. for~ YoU'l1 PlY,
And ,u b y ~ )'OU hear~~. ~imn.
POLITIC$
Don I falter"°"'· 1"'*' for 'Sime"
And ~ my t>tn i• runniO;ll cir)'
Be pe.11ent reader, do not 9isfi.
And if ..,,, town q didn't mdl
1
No doubt 11 hasn't mud! to 1eat1i.
'Nutr Said.
£, N. M.
(frl)ffl IIH " O•I.. WM&tyan T,1.nacrl,t"
"I can 't help but think that C'Omi,am:I
11rith acme ol the puty polltldam are ama1eiura." e;aid
Woodrow WiflOn 90me time btforc hit
death. "The fl'lll)' pollticb.n 1>1ays l,b
(OOSTII\Vl!I> ON PAC~ ,I)
.
.
.
.
uons. the contmuatK>n of the present rushing $}'$tern, and stricter
enforcement of underclass rules are among the olhe.r causes favored
by the new board.
TH& MAROON wishes !iincerely that its pages ma>· be reg~ed an
an open forum for any student, prof~, or alumnus who wishes to
convey t~ ~ readers of the paper his 1deas on e:i-n~pus pr<_>t>1cmi1.
~~umcat~s are _w el~me. Th~ whose duly !t _is to w~lle the
ed1tona.l.$ of this pubhcation fuUy rea~1ze that the ~mons which they
prese~t m these columns may "?' be m run aCC?"1 wit~ those of many
of their readers and therefore ;"ish that othe_r sides of important p!'°b·
lems may be represented. W1t~ co-OJ)erallon from st~d~nts, fHP.
MAR?ON may ~ t as ~ true_ mirror of undergraduate C>pu~1on ~nd in
SO doing ma}' aid materially tn the J)mgress of Cohcate Umvtrs1tr.
$1 0
Do You Know
That a discriminating choice of clothes can only be
made from assortments that are coq,lete and cardully
prepared. Without this essential there can be no 8CJOd
choice.
In the MENDELSON Hne you will 6nd that IIGffldhlna
which makea our dolhes the choice ot Collate - .
I I.
JIU} t
11
h t 1 s n 11
New Haven,
Represented by Ceo. MtndtllOfl at Colaatr:
Monday and 'fuel.day
•
.... n,,..
T•
fllE COi.GATE MAIIOON
R.CARW
Shoe
Repairing
AIIIENDIIIENT IIIOTION
IS STILL ON TABLE
DAVIDSON WILL OPEN I
Dlbtll'S W
Tit TIIFIIP Slit~ TENNIS SEASON HERE
..,_. ......... Oldl 1.......
C.rtl ......,. tw Tltt
Wld!MwNIIT••
M.clt DhcllNIM h KNNI ... ti.. Rlfll•
flf '-11 v... ud Vtlot ftr
,
UMlll'dnee-..
.....
The Man W ho Wrote
The Story of Philosophy
~
...·.-.,
--
E xplains Those
COLGATE
Youthful Suicides
PHOTOGRAPHER
Dentist
..
•
Will Durant hu joined that 110up of wrild1' wh1,
n,alte Co,mopolio.n the moM: alen 1N1Pl,ine in
Amt>rica. How dteply he h:ae thou1h1 out the
~1bj«t he: wri1u of ts shown by tht"k: qumions:
•' \Vhat happe11, 101 he bmous' i; rsc law of na1u re,'
in thue insuncut What impulM" is it 1h.:u it
,o JCront that a.II tbc in«in('ll, all the hunter
for pnucu,ion and lcwc ind po•' N crumhle
a1 itt eomin,r i How ('i.n the will lo li,·e l,,~ itt
omnipacence when 1hebodyl1 Millyoontr, and
1he blood COUtHS freshlythrouirh Ml ,•dnJP' '
And Iii• a.n,wcr is M> coldly lcli[1c,al, chat it i,
ac11Rtional by virtue of it11implici1y.
-
Read ,'t-and 24 Other Grtat
Features, Stories and Novels in
SOOA
Alli
A Renclawul fo, lbe
COLLEGE MAN
Comfortable Soda Booths with
Pleasant Surroundlna•
An Ideal Place to
Enjoy a Dalnly Sundae
or Soda
SPECIALS EVERY DAY
Utntin Olllstlm
This M's
Allen,
La•,, Eua,,
Ar, Dae Ma, Seto•4
..................,.
0n'U'lo c. f.
Palermo, 3b.
Flynn.,...
E,tcy, 2b.
Ski.ty. l.f.
Wahh. c.
Comittey. lb.
Conm r.1.
Cornell University
The Luher
~
Conteu for
Quench Your Thiret
turuOl'I and tho Alltn Eel.ay Contest
f or ,ophomom clo,e Monday.
May aecood aoo au - YI r« compdition thou.Id be lo the: bwlt of
Profeaor Baldwin at that lime.
A u,t of the eubj«u for both <»n·
tatl ii p,oCted on tht top, tlo« of
Lawrence Hall.
JIJ
at
the
Sugar Bowl Ill
Anything in SOFT DRINKS & CANDIES.
Krilzff. 1>.
Summer Session
in LAW
'1m T..,._ Jltflll IO It J!'f f7
CONTRA(."l', P,or,"°'" Wh.uu.idt
of th• Corn,cU t ..., Sdiool.
PROPERTY, Dun Kirkwood of
1M S1111t'ord Uni•t""rtity I. aw
""""'·
t'ONFl.l(.."T
o.-
1.AWS, Protmor
Lorcnn• of 1.hc Yalc- Univn,il )'
School of I.aw,
COMPARATIVE I.AW, Prolu.or
The right of way-
Lottw1zt.11.
NF.OOTJA81,t~ PAl't:R, Pro(mor
Moo« ol th, Coh111nhi1 U11i v,r
1i11: I. aw ~hool.
INSUIANCE1 Aui,0111 PtoCruot
Noquestion about it-for thorough·
going smoke-enjoyment 11at11ral
tobaao taste has 'em all stopped!
Farnltam 01 1M C
"'-'·
DOMESTIC RELATIONS. Auiu•
111,1
Ptolt"-,
Fu11h1m,
..._.T--.J-')'ltlll._,t
CONTRACT, Auan1111 J•roftttor
BiliJ of the CorMII l~aw SACl'IONS1 Prolc-.or Wilton of 11\l'
Coradi L1• Sc:hool.
•
CONSTIT'lJ'l'IONAL LAW I Pro-
'
"-or Pow,11 of 11M Law s'(hool
of Hu-urd Univ,n.ity.
CONSTITUTIONAi. I.AW II,
Proiu.ot Powell.
PRIVATE
CORPORA1'10N'S.
Prof:t..,. Stc,·tn, ol tht Co.n,11
La• Sc:ltoo&.
QUASI-CONTRAC'fS, ProCmor
Chotha• of rile C.:orntl1 l,a•·
"'-'·
PUBLIC SERVICE ANO <.'AR·
RIERS, ProkNor Th1>mpton .,r
dtt C'Of'n,11 Law Sthool.
So1d-rfltt nuy btain the uudy
law in 1h,r wmnwr ftUiOfl.
o(
t'w uulo,. :addrtu 1ht
CORNELL LAW SCHOOL
1-., N.Y.
OSTEOPATHY
The wodd't 6nC:ft dglfftte
tobaccos- and r:vuy bit of
aatun.l toba.o:o chanctcc ft•
..
1'1M~an8111111d1Dc9
., _ _ Do_
..U.
...........___... . . 0 U ,....
--tnlWr.p.ol Sor
ta.i.ned and brouJ:ht out to
full ""'""" perfeaioa I
FRANK BRMlh~
•ut8oo1 Shop
...,_ ..,._. .... s.,-..N...~
WUT9 flOa CATAl.00-
Philadc(phia Coikae
of Owtcoparhy
19th •.nd $rrint Q;irdtn ••. ,
Pbi!.Jtlphbo,., Pa.
c..._r-,..i....,,'-" s-,-, ..,_
-,N_ \ '..dJ
At the Smoke ~hop, Next to Smalley's Theater. April 28th.
Chesterfield
1'-'Saftf'I--'
y,t,
tJwtre MILD
Wcdnaday. Aarll 21. 1917
~Four
RESQLUTIONS
~ Ond in Hhinfttlite whdom t .
,oen rrt to r11D0Yt from thil euth the be·
Whit:rea&. It hat pkaed Cod in His
inllftite wildom llld IW!rQ' to take from
our midttourM_Doctor Melbourne Stu.rt Read, tc.ppa
Nu, '9'2, and
WhtttM. We -1th to tx:Pl'W our dMp
aorrow at the km of our btkwe::I Friend
ai)d Jkodi~ : b~ it Or.::clo:-c
8e.o1v..-d. ni.t ~. the 1bcta Pli
Chapter "'r Phi GJmma Delta, cxt·;lld our
mott hcard•: tt SY'ffl;:,:tthy to bk wUe ln
u.i.. her hour o( b'.-t'\.":lvtmient: aad bt it
fu;rther
Reaoh'td. Toat a o >py ot tht4ie re.du•
tiom be ,c.11 to hit -.i(c. tha t a 00l>Y pc
tt\'Ol'd<.d In the atdllv.?S ol the Thell
P a ~. and that a ropy bJ P®tithtd
in the G>l)l;\t !! Uniffl'tit)' MAlt()()",f.
John E. HulL
Henry P. Lanp.
Garland S. Brown,
t~« the Chapttr,
W1M.'ttl\S, It hN pl·.mtd Cod in Hil
infinite witdam and m ,tty to take from ut
our btlovcd B.-other, ltvi!:111' Bacon. ol the
a. of '9S. an\1
Whm:aa. We -'•-" to c.rp,us our do,,.-p
'°"'°"" at w IOa ol our 13rothtt: bo it
U11tttfott
,_ c. ,ox,
Olllnet .......
111 UM•Allluot l k. ,..,_, R...,...,., N, Y.
loved ~ - of our fnffldl and brothffl.
GriMUI C.JMr d: Noyel)N and Oeniel
Wortr; on SliJlmen Hall. I.ht- n:-• frn:-i,
de NOf'llla. U'ld
man donnitof)'. •• b,,t,run durin,- l"'-1
Wbereu. We wllb to txSW- our deep Eaetct ...,._ and It PC'O(eedi-. raiik!Iy
IOf1'0W at oor brothfn' ka: ~ it there, In otd« thll thl' bwldi'*S ,my be eom,
kn
pkled by ~ b t t 15. The w.:,Jlkn
Retotved. Thal we, the membtff of floca Chapter olThict.l Chi. est.end to Wm aamc.t linithod, and aw--.c laytn, ,.,., ~ll'ld to their raflllly oor btarddt ,ympathy l\ln Moacby arter~'IOOII
in this, thek hOJr or b~:t.1V>!m-mt. 111"ld be ~ dormhory iit to~ 163 r«t 9 incl11H
it fl.ll'ther
hrc.' 5 1 r<'d 10 ind'IN .-ide, and rou.r
Raol,,..;I, That 11 00l>1 ol thu, ~ U· ttoriti itl hrilh,t. On ,~ floor I.ft'
Uo:it buprnd on the r.:-:x.1t ol the cha p.. lhirty,two room,, w:lich will b: dlvldod
ttt and tbll a O'JIPJ b: PJ'>1i,:1d in tht lAIO fieht tuites ol two bildNOfflf aOO a
Cdpte Unlvmlty MA1t0011•
ttucty room tach, and ri&tit "'ttudio"'
W. E. RUMkr.
bfdlo.,ma, that it. ttudy and bedroom
J. D. Rkhtt.
combined. As,ptoximattly ni.Mty me,
C. 0. Robiutl.
wiD be aCOO(r•nodattd. Whsc:u tit.•
f« the C!up:,y.
three dromit«i.:s now on tbt camp.u arr_ ____,
dirickd Into l#O Sffl.klnt Cid\, SClLmL,
Hall will 00l*ltt of thlft tt<'tlo:w.. ftldl •
W,__._ Cod itl Hit i.Rfil'IUe wdom ~ ~nit in illltlf. Ptrtprool co:.·
and judplent bu teen flt to tffl'IOYe from ttrucUOn • atlllC'td thrOul:hOut by 1M
thh ciarth OW' bdoved friend and houte fact that only the doon and wi;idows will
rnoUier Mrt. 0.rwin E Lebnd. ud
bt wood. while the wood'ffl Boots • ·iU be
~ We wilh to ~pre.~ deep laild (l"m' rrinfon:ul IOffOWat theio.otour(ritnd beit there- ~ tbret mltlnM 00 I.ht north NCI'! ot
Iott
'
the buiktin,, which faot11 the quadranslt
RtlOlvcd, That f t. the Ntw York llld Alumni Hall, and there will bt! IIO
Epailon Cllapt« of Pbi Ka* Pli •· cnttmieet in the mr.
tmd our heartfd:t ,ympalby to her f~mlly Forty-lt!Ytf\ men "" now fflP(Cd in
lueolwd. Thait ..-e. tl•i, Thet11 r.i Cbap·
~-",.. Phi Camrnaeh ~ta: ~~ ~ In thlt. ow hcM,ar of mutual be.es•tcrwtlt:
· - · t 1ympa y to,_ wi1e in ...., """ Uld be It
hour cl bttawc:mmt: •nd be it furthtt
R.-lved, that ln her dat.lh our Chapter
Raolv«I. Thl,t a OlP'Y of ~ ttllOht- lOlel a failhM and WC friend• and be it
tiofls bt lk"nt to hit wlft, Ulat a copy be further
·
mcordtd in the ard'liVta ol lht ~ ~
ftaohoed, Thal a rffllCd ot tbett tt1(>,,
Ch.peer and tbat a copy ~ publilbc!d ,n lutk>nl be plaood in the records or tht.
the Ccil:iatc Univenit~ M.u,oos.
. c:N;J)t«, and that• copy M pubtilhtd in
tknty I, l.a"llt,
Rofxrt H. Kirk.,
theColoteMAaQON,
·
Fot the Chapter,
Ridiatd CIIITIC)'
Robert G, Ahlhd.m.
For tht ~ .
Raymond V•n
Paul Fo.-..-eu.
Wherut, Cod in Hi.'l infinite whdom
bu 1ttr1 tit to ttll'IIM: from thlt urth the
bclowd mothtr ot Ollt frittld and plfdp
SHOll4 YHr
COLUGI CIIIJISI
a.a, "-YJIDAN
w. Lamtoo. ...
WI-~ we ,rnt1 to &Pft'tl ow deep
ltOffOW lor our plitdge brOO)Cf in this
hWt of bereavement; b? it
Ror Lambda Chi AJ~- cxttnd to him w"'•
t1101t li.llttN :and lldlltfclt ,.,m..,.lhy, •""
, .~ it furth.u
R-..,..,.
..'ved, I.hat a or .,_,
••- · ,-...
~..
tlons betffit toourbdc:wod l)lcdccbroUlct.
that a <'OPY bti sP"t*,I upon tbc mil\\ltte of
U11t7A'la.Wthataoopyb(oipubUslwdin
• the Ccll«ate MAltOOL'il
"""""· L
II
. ·.
Trac..... lllfat
Or. Charks Bem&teio. tuperin~.\l
ol lhe~i ~ 1ysl.ftrl, and Dr. G . H.
H11tchinp. flll)fflntendent of the Utica
.iate IQpi.tal. ~ inlt!at«l Into hooonry"
mtmbcnbiJ> it1 the SoclolocY Q11b at a
mtttinc htld Thunday n'fflinc. Aptil 1.
prec«Sin, the EMttt VKlition. They ue
amon« the leaden in thtir rupccti\·c rtdd$
of wotk, Dr, Hutcbl.1111 llddrt:Md the:
,_:,3'.'." c.- "
•
•
(COSftNl140 l'fl3'.I' t',\Gg
nn- R!)}I,
I)
,,,
88(),y,11td
urtt:
Brown., Coq,tc• .,,...xi~: V<1it. N. Y. U..
C,OIJHt,
third. Time 2:03 l •S,
Di
tN.t
=
Chto"N
. -L1,wr,n...
•• N . y , U.,
o. rtt •, .. 1nitttOC1e:, N • y • U,.
be Ny U 1h'td Di
·• '"'·-
~
3 1
• • ....:,
••
·'
•
. ..• wen
I •
tcCO
tUkt
Slan(-e
_....
--
~~
--------
'""""Y" wh!le
$9
'°"'"''
The .., trip. · - w..
t«l dw'iflf die Eh:tcr V1K"ltion by P~
" W F • - • - • o(
••
CN01" "·
• ~ , . ,...,..
vo.'l)art·
· - •-~ by lhttbt:
mmt, WM wtII ah.aiua1
students..
.__.. , •• • ' - or · , - , •·~ no•..,.."'
,.., ._.,_ ~:-- In ,.,..., w '"" ""'"'
...,
v....ttd • ·u .,..,, ,_.., (lrioo."I at Qwl\i~
~-~tyrema'fltd ..-,.,~irada .~
.,,.
>' "'·"'
·n - · , " '
Loal • ..,.. ,
I
t-·--·
I
'Ill
s. Ill. TD£I
St< HI, 01•}1!>Y '"
RAUSAS
SMOKE SHOP
,,-~u ,- ,-,
......,
'"""
ur·,•
. ......
t , other
Runnina bread jump-Kutner, N. Y.
U., first: Mc:>clff. Co1pte. IICa>nd; Pump.
Colptr. third, Oklancc-. 21 feet, 6 7,8
inditt..
"''' r- Dukr
''1lle ..,, .~. ud Oevtiopmfflt of the
Colony Syttem in Rome" was outlined by
N Y U 66-80 Or. BermteiD,
•
on it. Thi, 1bin bu
the Jone point collar.
It ii made of • pnuine imponcd Encliob
Broadcloth-tho best
in eolian and in obins
rhu you. can buy.
theN toftMNrtloo....~-~~~ Qt 11-.e
OrtheMltm \ . , U I ~ Coc:nc>IIIY,
~ ~ Twtrlly•fow' llborm. five ~ IIIMOna. Iii*" cwpenlen,
and a tnckecpcr we at w«k under tho
ditectlo;1 or • IUPffll\tenditnt.
Club Oft
---•
...
1.G
tf«n..
- - -- ··
m
f-'01 the i'..et:a,
~rthur E. N.a!ti,
(:ro~ A. Na,d.
G«lflt" H, f'aitfa.,.
CAINS IIITTS
tloo·
f7
~~~
·---·..-·-
Folloll,ina out thrir rcantJy inducted
prop-am. the Weatcb$.tt Cwnty Club
bdd a ~ t and smoktr (or aJwnnl •nd
prospective: Colptt studtntt on tht tvtt1·
in« or Al)ril 12 in lht. Btlmont Hoed, Ntw
Yuri. Cily. R. E. 8rool.t. teetttvy ot lhe
Alumni corporation; Gtorse I-bu.er, foot•
t.J, coadl; William Timm. loot'-11 "*'P.
u ,in-t!t-et: and Char1tt Adams. ~ I
ol the d ub. •we tlir s1ldktn. T!w nw-t
in,c wM ,r,'dl ;1ttended
l'rtsi~-nt ~ 8. Cumn the 1llrindpal addn.-is of tllr.' evc:lit11 a t a
b:mqu,tt in Uticn on Wtdnet!b)', April 21.
'hie ba1)Q\lt't wu one d the many Yl\111
··Round tht World" dinners ht.-ld tl\llt
nt,l1t a, J)Q.tl of a hte,.1 c:ampilgn 10 St'CU:tt
an ffldcrNmrmt fond of tw~ty rnilllom or
doll:ars to bt uteCI in inttMlin« Uie sal!lrie-J
or the Y~lt f.nculty m~bt-:11. TM llTO•
«ranK or the b.fflQ11tLi were ht\a:ldc!llll
by ntarby n11rUo 1;tt1lioo,.
Dr. Alfred E. Alton.
With Bostonian
or
Biblbl llttn1IW"C nnd .«retu.ry of the
Univtnity, aca,•c the ~ " ' !lfflMl'I :it
iumt School in 1-\lrt ~ t . Mal')•land.
profaillf.or
!Oxfords
1927 SPRING STYLES
THOS. STRAIJNG & SON
Haymood &. Brooks. u-tcutiv,- l'JICt\'·
WY c,( the Colptt Alunvll Cors,ontion,
is attmdine the routtetnth annual conftrtt'l('.e ol the Aaociattd of A!umn,
Se,cm.arie., the Alumni Map.tines Aao-
dai.ion •nd the AMociation ol Alumni
Funds. The conJtftl'lal opens today at
Chap~ Hill, N. C.. tht hOmt of the
IJnivtnity of N«th Carolina.
MAIN STREE1'
..,===========
=
R. RAUS A
Smoke Shop
Mr. Brooks will tuppott a dittuMon
the: advnntai,:e, of .cctional orpnb:ations u a pn,t of II procnw v.•l\kh •ill be
tarrifrd oo for teVMI da)'L On Monday.
ot1
MAIN STABBT
Mr. Utookt ,.,.. ~ t at the ,cniwal
N,-,,. TUMN
mcecing and banquet or u11e r,;,OrtJ~tcm
CNo Alumni District a t Clc,-dand. O.
1'1litl pthtril'III' ,.._ ht'ld II.I the Arl«on
Hottl.
DR. WELLS
Conditions itl AM Minor and t"c
histOric !!'o'tnlS which lifd to the 1llta'ltity
or the work of the Ntilf Eal-I Rdicf ,.'fff
dt«aanb:atloo In A talk t,;, the studt.11t body.
Monday, in chaipcl. T\t.'(I boys .Carted
the rtlitr worpii:an1 •'t'ft being t.akm care of. 35.000 I
of whom are still under its c:u-c, Mr. f:ddy
Dentist
Bank Bulldlna
,,,=,,.===========-
said. A1 a l'Ul.llt ol T\rrkish e n ~
he dttllttd. tlint orptW1, art all that are
ldt to make the Anneilian natii::.1 of the
f\llUttJ.
THOS. B. BELL
Hardware P1umbtn., Htattnt
The dat~
One man tells another
m2tie oontc1t has llttl\ sn Wad I(•
Sportina and At.hlttic Cooch
\\'ednNdo.y, May 18. 11lf: fflltt,n spoi,.
soctd b)• UPlllon AIP,a Delta. 11,ill btftat11rtd by cvui. more tntriet than u•ua!.
'nie 'fl' i:l'lncr ot thi• oonttst ,.,;11 pin
poatalion ol the extra l:arge sifrtr lovlne
Kodak, & Oneloplng
cup otrucd b)• the dnimatkl ho!~ry
ftatffllll)'.
Neu t o Post Office
THE COLGATE MAJIOON
'27. ICl27
[_cAMP
__u_s_·soc_I_ET_Y____.l
F. 0. CHURCH
c.,,.,,
u.1,,nit1 . , , St,re
Price slashed on the Colgate Songbook-only $1.39 each while they
last. Get your copy at once, as
they will go fast at these prices.
Pac• Five
Dwirla the Pl•t wtie:k thltt)' IMOn from Lafayette Hieb School, RulfU>. 110COfllC)lflkd by Komtr Cue, "IG,. vbited Colpte whiJe on• tow to lleftlnll Ntw York
Statt
The l'Ml'I WTMd Friday ale.noon and weft entertained c,,. rqbt at
the variout fraternity boula. DI.IMC the afternoon they iaepeded the amp,11 and
by • pnlp'U\ ol apeUen. lllllllc:, Uld the mocjon pict.lD't ••Roommatc,i" arrmipd
apecia)ly klr tbtm. Doctor Cunm. Pelmllel f>nttor" Howlett, ~hH or Kallptn,
Ccadi Abel. Ray Broob. and William 'nmm, '28 addr-...ed them oa Vlriou..• ~ ol
Colpte lile ot ~ inlffllt to the mbormhlNn, Tbe ~ of the vi.It ... to
acquaint tbttmdwt ,rilh the eollelt arid liYe thendwt a belief la'ldentll'ldln ol
the plKt: in ordff to help Uiem deelde wbdber or 004. they wiim to Cl'l.ter Colpte nttt
col._
,...
HERE
Onema'ldrtd M t . I t ~ hdd a ~daabMquee.attheffotffMa;.tk',
llllca. Stlutday nlcht, They met little oppollUon frrm the ~ and curled
out lbe .«tit UM'IOletted b)' the tl•al ca. The ll*bn wm: N'tddal Mehler,'27,
William nmm. "'23. Haroid ~
. '28, Char1- Ad--. '28. and Cart Ma,tkat,
.,.,
T HE' (.(.'()TH!!, Hvt'BE''R..,'D..ASHE''l(y.
Hvt'TS, SHOlS, vfl>U) S'1'0'1{_'TSWE'vt'7t
D•YliLOP/iD BY FINCHL8Y FOR
COLL/IC/AN <,'SACB FOR SPRING
,,,ILL RB BXHIRITBD BY A R8P.
Jt8SBNTATIY6 PROM NEW YORK
- AT -
. The Iron Tea Kettle
Today and T om orrow
TOW.CARLSON, Rep.
SUITS vtN..'D TO'P(Ovt'TS
FORTY,FIVE DOI.LARS
TOUGH Skins
Tender Skins
't X ]HETHER your face is as tough as
Vt' raw hideorastenduasadentalncrve,
it will enjoy A9ua Velva,, the new scientific
after4having liquid made by the make.rt of
Williams Shaving Cream, For Aqua Velva
consuvcs the skin's natural moisture, IO
nccusary for all...day faoc comfort. lt keeps
that wonderful feeling of a \Villiams shave
all day long. In big S oz. bottlcs-soc.
Williams Aqua Velva
NJOY
~'=l~G
SSNSIBL~
- An I.Rlormal
dance
will be hdd at
LoW
-·
Colptt lM Friday rdaht, Mmie: • i ll ht
(umi~ by tht h.le o" 9luegatthestra.
Tlitla CJII
- Doctor Swan was the
l\,IHt
or the!
rrattmity at dinn« W ~ y.
-Qarloa Sc:h•tt. '27. and Eur--rie
Ct1:btnltatltr, '29, attffldro a dance 111
Elminl ColltC(I Sah~dly.
I
I
..:;;;...
- Proleacr Elwood Cata. Ray Brookl,
Ow-and 'I'lyk,r, "27. and William Timm.
'28, autnded an aJumnl dinner at HinK•
THE NEW PULLMAN DINER
MAN
24-HOUR SERVICE
_...
CLEAN QUICK SERVICE AND GOOD EATS
TOM WALKER
Chas. A. DePuy, Prop'r
N ICK CARTER ADMITS T HAT HE IS BAFFLED ..•
CAN'T F IND A COUGH I N OLD GOLD CI GARETTES
hamton,. Friday.
- Doctor and Mn. M. L. lltky and
Proiuw 111d Mn. E1wood Cal.ti ,pent
W ll)rin< v-acatkln in WMbiJ'IC(.on, D, C.
- Doctor and Mrt. Robert Moore and
J'rcitNOr and Mn. Shepardeon litltcd
Atb ntie City durt111 the van.tiot'I.
1,
.,
••
3.
LaMWaCMM,lla
,,.,_e, PINfS
Sid!WY Btck. "30. Rridttl)Or'l. Conn.
.
OU'RE probably
fcd,up wit h
Y
fooJ advice. lt'1 a
botbenome barra~.
But you actually can
enjoy aen1ible eat..
ina by just m.a.king
one meal, a ny
meal, every day, of
Shr edded Wheat.
A.,.,,. t• Oaeati..,
A,A,, .. Pa,, r•re,
" 'rboy otfen.d a rolA·nrJ
10 lhe m11n wl10 t-ouJd finJ
:\ t('•Ul(l1 i11 1111 Ou, Gou>
"C"un,cel ' Nitk Cart<'t
hW!l-.J , 11,3 h ~uk c.dumJJt•
C'll i11 hi~ chnir. "For n
whC)I{• y,•ur on t tw fr11il
1m1l nnt l'l.c:k)w."
" I lm\'C ~tthcd the
cou11trv C)\'f't for a yt._r,
c·itilro,f tf' . ,\rul Xiek ( '11r1,•r took tlw t n:1jl wil h L'Onlill •t l L'I' !;0n, of pag:l $UC-
or Ot.1.> Cm.1> ~mok(·~ in
r. ~ . ·•
f'flH ,h,"
-
cre1>t. \1p Uf)OII thOtl1!3Ud~
t ho l,n,lf• t'f lw:1rin,: tlwm
20
6.
Throuah, 1hirty,6ve yean of "Eat this and
that," thlt p ioneer whole wheat bilcuit ha.a
caprured ever-.,owing favor. Made of the
m oat carefully selected ,\ heat grains,
mredded for utmoil dige1aitpclear throuah for appetite enchantment
chat'• the Shredded Wheal Story,
11
New appetite appreciation, freedom from
drup an d laxarlves, better health every
H'l1u•y wc•n• !Ill imrnurw. [ ,imc)lwcl O LP
Clo1,06ltll_\')l('lf :11111 ffinlcfn'I
h·:1.!111• :, ,•0111th out nf m~·
t hro:11.''
A ~w:m.1 thr1l
l ' \'NI
Nick C:1rlt•r L'Olllil u of
C'l11im I ' 11mt rt•\\'tird would
lu~vc, t,ou~ht
11~ :,
l•)t or
Oi.o \":(H,o 1·i.11:1m.•ltf,i1, 11ml
b1•!il•,·o IUC', tlu•y'n• w1'lrth
buying.··
day; Shredded Wheal can give all 1hit and make you like ii,
SHREDDED
WHEAT
'CRY IT A WEEK AND SEE
OLD GOLD
I T'S TH E SMOO TH EST CIGARETTE
,.. "\'OT A COUGH IN A CARLOAD''
..
BOX SCORES OF GAMES
ne • ..-1111110...
Society Brand
Clothes
Cdpte
Bric:1se1. 3b.
A.B. RI K. P.O. A.
6 l
I 2 0
Wddl,c.f.
Rktrardtoo. 2b.
Stitl11bers. 1.1.
Damone. lb.
P. Smith. rJ.
~ :neou e,e
To be had in regular stock
sizes or mad e to indiv idual
me11,suremen ts
3
I
I
0
0
3
t
l
2
0
O 2
1 12
O O
0 0
Lao.a. u.
Jonet. c.
,
3
I
l
Cetdner, p.
Scboltz. p.
I
2
O
0
..........
-....
She,idlai., 2b.
, 0
O 3
O 2
6 0
I 0
0
0
2
0
3189'¥17
Total,
Our College Department specializes in fabrics that appeal to t he
College Man.
3
2
4
,
3
A,B. R. H. P.O. A.
3 l 1 0 0
,1
I
l
S
3
3
2
4
,
3
3
1
l
l
l
l
0
0
l
0
O
I
I
I
l
0
O
0
O 3
2 0
2 0
l
I
9 0
6 1
O 3
0 0
1
31 7 • ..
. k & S pen cer, Inc . '-Bo•"",.,.,.
TS a w y er, F 1s
.. .,....
10
Hindldllk.....
C.Smlth, U.
Hlyet. c.f.
Cuey, r.f.
CARL. W. BAUM
1.-----------------------l"-··
Ryan
Cronin, l b,
Davit. C.
Local RePl'eaentallve
PHONE 118
8MAINs-mEET
"So,;U,
Maque arid Trianele'• proctudlon.
''TIie Sh)w.()lr', will be s:n-nted al
1 Smalle)-'• Theatre ~ n.-tly. May 3.
g It ... orlclnallY intended to aivt the play
O ., a .,.. . . ., .-Jkr elate, but the s,N!O ..calioft,... UNOttunatdyddt.y~du~to
thedeltb ol D.xtot M. S. R<*'-•00,c-,c,r,
1
altbiftainthec:aetotthtplay. Hoa~'t·',
0
l it ii • ceuiDty lhlt tblt PllY. wtiktt i.
MNque and TriM&le"• major J:l"()ducUoC'I
of the,_-, wiU be penecud .:> that it will
be liven on the date now wt, May 3.
E. Tho acCion in •"The Sf»w.(W' m,vu
·~
._,.;,,
1I -Pipw. to....
be pla,-1
byWilliam
.
0 Piper Ill a man ol the IQlld,mouthed
0 Vlriely with ui alt'Cllldy f.ll(ICl,t_icu
2 nai.m. Hi& IUl)e:riority coml)k.x wm,
O 1i:1r him the kwt ol the lri..ome Amy
0 Pllber, 1'tKI mania him contnty to the
wW. ol ' - pmtntl whO ttgard
0 at a ne'tr,do.wdl pn.Ulitr.
0 Amy hat a brother, Joe. who is doint
0 teNltdl oo an antl•Nlt 00fflPOl,lnd f«
aod • . . . Clara. married to
2
al
all Tim11.
Excellent M eals
'Bu.sin11s Lunch
lofftt Shoppe
Special Sunday Dinner
GREEN LANTERN
7 PAYNE STREET
H O M E COOKING
Furniture
•
D. P. Maynard
10 MAIN STREET
PHONE :178
di..,. C
TM N, Y. U. O.•
R, ff. P.O. A. E.
I
2
2
1
2
3
0
4
2
1
0
3
E-,lltlne la
BUY
It ...,._
•
Sllflll'$
at
I
)
wlU be ....
Pi-SU
WIiiiam Coppage
Harry Kawman
Phllip Lyon
Emerut Cartman
0.igbt Strickland
William Starkweathct
JOM Roll
Robert Etwood
COMPLIMENTS OF
LELAND COAL CO.
Free Willard Battery Service
Drlvt around eqery two wctks ,ind get FRE·E WILLARD
SERVICE. " w~ uc: proud lo serve you...
SPARROWHAWK'S SERVICE STATION
Look for the Rt.d Sign
1----------------
Walktr C«ldct
=.'
PHONE 3
UTICA STREET
'~·')
. •'
'J/
mon
332627147
•Ran for Stewart in 7th.
CLOTHES
........,,.. . .
.....
&8TAaLt 8HID INGL18 H U N IVE ..S ITY
··Batt«I tor Cal~ in 9th.
Col,ate
000 20 0223-9
the
N-tw York Uftiv. 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0-2
Two baN hlt&-Gt.11:qhtt, We:lch.
Ridtardlcn. 'lllm- hue tdt.-Dumont.
Bridge. Home run-Norton,, S.crll'INil1>1.mont, Catdntt. Leh Oft butt-Col·
11te4.N. v . u.& Struttout- Hopkins7•
pkiM 4,
sunshine
c.,....... i.
8TYLl8, TAILO"ID OVUI YOUTH,UL
CNAwra SOLILV 1'0 " DISTINOU18 H10
911:IIVICI IN THI UNITED S TATIS,
~
I
....... T••••••
3
t
O
O
2
4
3
Do..·ler, r./.
Younc, l.f.
Tffl'Y. c.l.
'1
0
0
1
t
2 I
0 2
3 0
2 2
O I
I 10
l o
I
2
0
1
1
0
Griffin, p,
4
2
4
3
Daddona, p,
I
Enoch, c.
-
OUR STORE IS THE
Qth~'rtet J'&ouzt
Allen • Schmidt
The character
of
the 1uit1 and
overcoats tailored by Charter Hou1e
will earn your most sincere liklna.
H. RICHAflOIO N,
-
0
0
0
-&
O O O 0
Totals
324112711
Comd1 frOlh
Donelly, LL
Drultt. 2b,.
a.h. r. b. p.o. a.
•
2
2 I $
3 I I 4 2
•
0 2 0 0
• 0 I I 0
Johmon, r.f.
F. Moon, c.l.
Br SPECIAL APPOINRIENT
t
Ttle FrMlual•O.,...
Cdaate F'roth
:a.b. ,. h. p.0. L
HtCY, lb.
4 I 2 11 0
Botied:er...,.
Allffi, 2b.
Dt-tctt, 3b.
&x*<>ut. I.I.
tbbidtt. 3b.
A. Moon, lb.
i.oo,. c.
Morpn, p.
·Roer:.
p.
3'
2
00
0
•
I
3
l
2
2
I
0
I
0
0
0
9
6
0
3
0
3
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
34 3 9 ~ 1'
a-baU«I for Orexkr in 9th.
•-eriffll'I out. h.lt by belled b&IJ.
Cc;icate Ft'Olh
O 2 l O I O O O 0-4
Comd!Fr'Olh
001010 10 0-3
Two hue hits-Bookout. OoMtlly, F.
Moon, Allen. Threc-1-t hitt-Joluuon..
lbgy. Homenm-Dowttt. St.olim buN
Tota.ls
-Bonadler. Tmy. s.crifiott- Tmy 2.
Dnublt J')lay-Younc lO Alkn. Ldt on
1-ct-C,olpte 4, C:mell 6. 0... on
belle-Off Griffin 3. otr R-»t 3. SlNck
out-by Gr'l.fl'Jn 6. by o.ddona ,. by MorWI 1, by Role 5. Hitt-di' Moqan 6 in
3 2-3 inninp; olf Criffin 9 in 7 inninp.
off Role Sin, 1-3 innir,p; off D:kldona 0
in 2 inain,a. Hit by pitchtr-by Griffin
(llabitht). Wild pittb, lnddona. Winrti·
lnr pilchcr-(;ritfin. Lctin, pitchfrMorpa. Umplre-Kdlrnumy. nme c,t
pm,-2'21<
L. A. Gulbran
redr.._
0
0
Scdnbtrs,u.
4 l 3 0 3 1
Dutnont. lb.
,
l
l 11 0 O
Smith, r. (.
'4 I O t 0 0
Latham, Lf.
2 0 0 1 0 (!
H~~ ~
3 0 0 6 2 l Aubft-y Pil)C'r
Hopkinil, p.
'4 1
l
2 2- O Amy Fishtr
(lutce, l. f.
I O O O l 0 Clara Hyland
-c.rdntt
0 0 0 0 0 0 Jo? FSlhd
- Mn. Fhhtr
Tot11lt
37 9 11 27 1l 2 Mr. t'ithu
Fnank Hyland
•&tkd for Latham in 7th.
i"
Mr. Gill
NN York U. A.8. R. H. P.O. A.
Mr. RQIICn
Robert."- 3b.
,t
O I 2 2
Madi:,on, 2b.
2 0 I 4 0
WalP'I. c.f.
,
0 0 3 0 1I
Brooke. lb.
3 0 0 9 0 2
Dean, U.
,
0 0 I 0 0
Stronc. r.r.
-&
o o 2 o 0
4
l
2 2 2
2
Nottotl. C".
4
1 I 4
7 0
Cllllfthtt. 1>.
3 0
I O 3 I
•R.Boyd
00000 0
••Briante
1 0 0 0 0 0
Totak
Expert Wiring
29 Mala Stnet
Sttwatt.,...
COLGATE'S BEST PLACE TO EAT. MEALS
BY THE DAY OR WEEK
Radio Sets
•
Aa,tlal., s, 1dlll I
•nlo .,..,
fer ,-..
I.hat Aubrey t:ionon
1111tom0bile and dapit.e hNI autemmt that
he ii • moat competont driver. loec:s con,
trd ot the car in • meet conaaud dlftrict
no loncer CMflnittc it to lhe roed, •nd 1,
atn:11ud tor
dtM._, At I.his
ti-. Mr. Filher, whoee hMtth has CCII·
liftlaally btitrl poor, diea from• ,tro1te.
Aubrty'• CNCrin ol brin( urC!IUd ii rurther :.tlaeated whffl he ta Mt made CXCCtl•
tor ot hl8 fathu-lni-11.•'• win, La.r1dy
~ ot bis boMtf\d mannic,t In C01,1rt
be ii lined a tbouaa"4 doUan. whldi h
~ by Frtllk Hytatld.
1be play o::mcs to a succeufll.l end 1(ttt
Joe F'hhtt nets • fortune from hi\ rust ,
proof compound and MrL Fisher rel«lt,,
alblring Aubtey and Amy to move into
lhe hOult.
The cast it b foUO•'S:
-
T HI fllJlALL ITOal
Kodalc1
Aubtty!I!:=-==-==-=====
......... ,
0 2 0 0 5 0 0 0 0-7 ber time equally betwetn thints. ol OW
Two blM- h1tt-Ctanln. Dwnant (2); fllOll ~ ny1 cl NMi"'I thf'
llriclr&ft, Three bllle . h i t . - ~ home and deviaitll rneM11 cl prtwnting
Stden
Stein- Au.brt)-. now in poor linancial tondilkwl.
Cdplt
A.B.
Briden. 3b.
5
Wektl. c.f.
S
Rlchatdlan. 2b. s
Prescriptions
Records
..................,_,_.,....., Colgate Jewelry
plt,dwr. Sddu.
•••
and
• ,....K,,.. . . . . . a , d . - ........
Lel't on Nlf:1-Golpte ,. Mafthluan 3.
a- Ol'I bllte-CMI' Cudner 3 in ' 1-3
inNIIO, df ScholU 2 in ' M ilrinp. otr
Flcnna 3 In 8 lirrinp. Slnd outb)' c:.ntocr' 7. by Sdliolu , , by P'loRma 2.
Hitt-off CardMt 5. df Sdiolll 1, df
Pkn:lua9. PMeedball- ,Jona Winn~
.........
Drugs
Victrolas
- '*'·
bets,
P. Smith. Double p l a J ~ to I:>ma.
Your H omt
Aueta over U , 200.000.00
lntereat • Per Cut
3
.,..._t..tbut.
Secrificce--Rkhanl•t•li (2), Ha,-. from morina into the ~ -
COLGATE INN
Oepo1ita over Sl.800,000.00
~
.-----------------------,l
w
dch.
Hamilton Laundry
Representatives will Call.
C. A. Sprague,. Pr o p.
The National Hamilton Bart
..--a.tUd for Sheridan in 9th.
1ar w ~ o1 IMartln, a bocnt. Mr,.
CdpM~':...
IO O 2 4 0 IO 0-41 ....., ~ on _,Irie lldy -
INVESTMEVT SECURI T IES
CARLETON
POTTER
4ff . . _ , .,_,
o •DA. N. Y.
....... ONNd •
2
••o
lffl I illll Jrilllp
• PrlNlt ·1111-lff"
WHEN Greek or colculua gm you into • tight
c«ner, tie a tin to trouble--& tidy red tin of
Prince Alberti T amp a load of this rully
friendly tobacco mto the bowl of your jimmypipe u,d u,ht up, Watch the sun cruh through
rhe cloud, with evuy pull!
P. A. can't bite your tongue or parch yotlt'
throat, no matter how fat you feed it, becawe
the Prince Albert proc- gave Bite and Parch
the olr at the ltart. Cool u a Laplander's fop.
s- u apple cidu. Fragrant as spring bto,That'• Prince Alba-ti
One pipe,,load invit.. another. And •••
you am bit P. A. from morning till midnight
and it won't hit back. Don't put off 10 tomorrow
wh.t you can anoke today. Get a tidy red tin
of P. A. UK! turn on the sunshine • • . nowl
IOIDL
• •" · "
.,.,, ........ t,,.... , ..
,.,, , •••• ,.,..-# ... ...,,,,
Ii• ........,,...... ,.,
,.•••1 ~,,.,., ,,.,_...............
• ·ill ...... .....,.,...... ,.,..
A-4 ..,.,.,,, •lo.\ *"*'I .,,
~
,. ....1
., .. """ _1, ·-·..# .:"
I A• .P·1l1N• Alt~•I ,,~~.,._
PRIN6E ALBERT
-no oth~, tobacco is lilt~ it!
===s================·-'----"'--
•
ANDREWS HALL
Q!ollrge ilifr Number
:allay 1927
Page Two
THE COLGATE MAROON
College Life Number
'- '---'<..- ......
><'.
,..::::_../$
Qtha~Ut ffl®St
CLOTHES
..........
AMOut .. Orffr
..... an4T•.,•••t•
Thia large inatitution with all iu reaources at your
command ia ready to asaist you materially in having
beautiful things for personal uses and for your home.
'40,'45,850
ALLEN - SCHMIDT & CO.
158 Genesee Street
UTICA, NEW YORK
Plan your shopping hours here - there's much to
repay you.
John A. Roberts & Co.
Utica' s Greatest Store.
Colgate Theological Seminary
Salina, Jefferson, Warren Streets
I
Dey Brothers & Co.
,
SYRACUSE, NEW YORK
a
An Undergraduate Course leading to
the Degree of Bachelor of Arts, with
Major in Theology.
For Particulars Address
Central Ne,,, York's
Greater Departn1ent Store
DEAN THOMAS WEARING
Han1ilton, Ne,v York
arnntt
FOUNDIED I
VOL1!1ME l!.IX
eee
Collep Life Number
COLGATE UNIVERSITY, HAMILTON, N. Y., 1927
--------
COIPETENT FACRn
•KE CIIRIS OF
STUDY INTEIISTING
IDEALLY ·Lam IN PICT. . TOWN
CUTE IS AMPLY mlPPED F• STUDY
Natural Beauty and Buildings With Fadlltles for All Phases·
of Undergrad11ate Ufe Make the University
Campus Very Attractive
Curriculum Designed to Glve
Broad Backgrc)und for
.
Speclallled· Study
Situated in the beautilul Chenan&o mc,,iliclllt Olien which form an archway
Valley. with a campu11 oompritod of mono of - t charm, whether covered with the
than three hundred ll
---
ARTS DEGREE GIVEN
lcloal ourroundillp, (lf)lllplete equip,
ment and a hishJy ccmpetent twhinc
otaff lend to Colpte the opor atmoo111
phere for ltucly. The ltudent
ia liVffl .
not on1y the beslefit of a luae and inter
Colgalt L,-brary
..un, variety of coww but allo uoocla· _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
tlonwlthmmofwide,-perienoewhoarein
:_:tc!::
==~~for
the-·
Beginning with the present freshman
cluo, only the dec,-ee of Bachelor of Arts
will be given . This in no way interferes
with or limi18 the curriculum, the atudent
beinc at liberty to major either in arts or
The object is a broad and liberal
education with the privilege of ,ped•Jirlnc
in ICllDO particular itudy which eul18 the
individual's JIUl'POIO.
The ooune ia a four year one and COD·
liatt of sw-ribed and electivesubjectsin
. . . , _ , literature the arts ICience and
mathematl<1. The 'subjects ;... IIIT&llged
under three main groups.
The lint includes language, literature
and art. Fourteen OOl1r10I in Latin, th,
_,. number In Greek.
well u an
81
honors OOIIJIO, cover the field of ancient
1anguaaa. The Modmt ~ cou,v
emincel complete inotruction in Spanish,
Frencll, Italian. and German.
A wide lield of literature ia open for
atudy, there being this year eight OOl1r10I
in pnera1 and lourteen in Engliah literature. Couneo in Joumaliam short
atcry writing and the writing
play
give oplendid opportunities for the atudent to develop atyle and aaftlmanahip.
Public speakinr, debate work, dramatic
in~tation and practice are offered to
the otudents inclined in this direction.
The oecond group of studies iocludes
mathematial, chemi1try, bioloC)I, reoJ<)cy,
phyaic:a, ph)'lioloCY, hygiene and military
llciena,. In ti- acienoea there an,
forty-five oour• offered. The mathematica coww offer a wide nqe from
plane aeon,etry to differential equaltons
and , _ . ...,,_,
Suneying.
mechanical drawiJIC, deecriptive aeomet,y,
lreelland lottering, pen, field and ooknd
topopaphy, hirbway oonotructlon, sanltary problems are c - whicll teach
the fundamentalt of engi-ng and
applied mathematical ocience.
In the third group an, included the
mental and IIOcial scienao: history, potitical_ economy, IOciolocY, ps~choloCY, ed~cabon, and philosophy. Vanous 0011r1011n
history. studies in diplomacy and inter·
national law afford the moot advanced
knowledge of modem alld peat political
a_>nditions. The various branches of
h,atory trace the mental, moral and IOCia1
develOl)fflfflt of nian from ancient times
~ the present dar, All phues of economICI an, most t h ~ l y treated in the
numerous oounes ,n that department,
while complete edw:ational oouna afford
in1tnic:uon in the principles and practice of
ed"":9tionll "'Ork;
oounes in
m1111c and pcactice. ,n vocal work an,
among the othe~ 1UbJ~ll taught. Many
t1111rt ...., ~ucted in the atudy of the
Bible and relipous teachings. The usual
(CON11NUED ON PACI! 16)
aaence.
of
:i""eral
fnlm the lloor of the valley to the top ol
OubWldlnc -
the -
build·
~ HUI! Colpte Unlnnity lial an inp bocaulo of il8 liJe is the Huntinston
~ i-tlon for ~ Institution of learn Gynmulum. The J - C. Colpte
mg. Skillful arch1tectwe, both land- natatorium, a,mpleted this imt fall has
acape and lll\lCtWal,
oomblned with made poooible a wider nqe of oporta
Natun! iil endowins the univenlty with at Colpte, and IWifflminl u a Vlllity
a campus oecond to none in' bo!allty ,port wu ina111"'11ted thia winter. The
hu
Colg11te Foa•tletl by Tlairtien Pion,er,
~hu-:.,_~ i ; : ! in matllrinr anc1 :'!;!::. ~o o a c ~ e s · " : :
to Uacate Candidate,
lot Mini11-1~fy!ng ~ coll~ buildings.
ma· the
portion of
CJ'OIIRd lloor.
,
•., JOl'1tY ol wllich
oontUUCted of natural The nwn "gym" lloor, 80 by 40 feet. takes
the
major
the
an,
------
Remarkable History of Institution, According to Tradition,
Began With· Endowment of
'Jlhlrteen Dollars
-----•
Colpte history began when thirteen I 1839 these restrictions won, removed. and
men pthried tocether in answer to a call 'I the institution wu opened to non-miniafor all thooe wlio won, intereoted in found· terial 1ttidents. In 1846 the school be~ng and p,lllllOting an Institution of leant· caine chartered under the name of Madi·
1ng for the educatioo of young men who son Univerlity.
ooucht ~ t e ~ t l o n for the A year later sevMI attempta were made
Christiari mimstry. Thi•· group of edu· to change the location of the unlvenlty
catiorial pi.,_.. met m Hamlltlln on from il8 present site to Rocht!ltk, N. Y.,
Sept,inber 24, 1817, and' althouch
but t i - attempts falltd to pin any
what dlooouraaed' by their smallnlfil of hearty support and in 1850 it wu delinumi..:-, ~ to form The Baptist i nitely decided that Hamllto<> should be
Education Society of the State or N..,. made the permanent silt'. The inlti,
York. Eadl man ~trl~ted me dollar tution. at thi1 period in its history showed
as an t!Yldenc:e of his uncmty and earnest- exceptional growth and 111osperity. In
nesa of pwpose in the new project.
1853, a preporatory IChool wat f ~ ,
"To furnish the meano of inotructlon to called the Unlvenity Grammar School,
1
NCh )'OUJIC men of the Baptist Denomina, whicll wu connected with the univenity
tion u lhall give to the chun:hOI of'wbicll proper. This school, better known u
they are members and to the faculty o1 the "The Academy" ftourilhed for about
institution under the patronage or the sixty years.
IIOciety satisfactory evidence of their piety
Beginning with the year 1870, the lnoti·
and of their call to the Goopel ministry." tution entered upon a period of moat ex,
Such was the ~·ording of the charter that tensive development and iJOWth. Jn
WU granted to the 90Ciety on the fifth of 1873, James Boorman Colgate erected the
Maich. 1819.
Academy Building, now used u the Ad·
•
•
ministration Building, which wu to house
~ name 11~ to th" newly founded the preparatory school organized twenty
IOciety, aa:orcl,~ to the chart.er, ~ years before. A few years later, in 1884,
The. ~ t m Literary and Theological the Chemical Laboratory .,11 builL The
lnatitution and the only ~~ offered to oornentone for the Library Building wu
the ~ 1 8 was 1natruct1on 111epsratory I laid on Commencement Day, June 20,
for the m,mstry. Slowly the number of 11889 and the building was dedicated at the
students oncreu,d unbl "' years alter the Commeru:ement in 1891. During the
< ~ was granted. an enlarsement of previous year the name of' the Univerelty
eqw-t was . round necesury. ~ had been changed from Madiaon to Col·
result wa that ,n Marth, !826. Samuel gate u a airnaJ honor to that family
Payne and his :"'fe pve a luae part of through whole ~ t y and intereat the
: : . ,farm~ch
.
; : " , :~arms _the inatitution had PIOll'!llod 90 -tly.
mentl ~f the ~ . the Western ':;u,:: The endowment fund wu materially
koown W t Hall
erected and ,nc: ,11ed when at Commencement ,n
00
he
f 1891, it wa1 announced that in memory to
827
1
1
. atructi ,n
-~ t
t c:oun,e
Dr. Dodge, who W8I prtlident during the
I
~WO ...:'1a':':en
,rt~oury_ean
periodfroml868tohi1death inl890,Mr.
Six ;..,_ alterw:_• ~ " " ~ James B. Colpte had ovm the unlverotty
Western Edifice .
thon Eu
a million dollan.
1834
Edifice now ~ u East •Hall ~ From 1890 to the 'p resent time the Unierected'.
'
venity has shown marked developn~\t in
all directiono. In 1893·9' a gymnasium
At thio p,riod in the development of the wu trectecL Within tlie twdve years
institution the educational -.·ork wu following the buiidinr or the gymnasium.
divided into ,th"'° diatinct groupo- much wu accomplilhed. The old cllap!I
academic, oollegiate, and theolccical: wu re;,,ovated, the new President'• house
By 1834, when Eut Hall wu added, the wu built, Whitnall Field dmated, Taylor
student body numbered two hundred 'and Lake constructed on the' site of an old
the faculty seven. During the lint swamp, and in 1906, the Chemical
twenty yeen, only candidates for thelLaboratory waa enlarged and LathJOp
Cbriatian ministry were admitted; but in Hall completed. At the Colgate Centen•
I
- 1
:::;.,.led . ~
a:"
.:.S
stone; and the location of moot ol them in up the central part of the oecond and
a clusterm ~ aide of the hlll inveltl thtm third floors. while the wings or the second
with ail alt of a l o o f ~ Golf lloor include a trophy room, wrestlinr and
OOWIO, lake, well placed ahrubberl', and boxinr roome, and the oftices or the diffl:.
marnJflcent shade
all combine to fo II tor of athkti<1. The third floor wings are
form a truly beautiful campus.
occupied by an auxiliary gymnasium and
Hamiltm, the 818t of the university, ii a by several squab and handball courts
small town with a population of aPl)C'01i· which an, yet to be oompleted.
mately two thOU....S, and ill qulet n!ilt·
Lawrence Hall, the large c1..-oom
fulneol' is an influential factor in the envir· building which W8I oompleted on the hill
onment of Colpte. It ia situated in Mad- quadrangle thia fall, wu the gift of Cclonel
ltOl1 county, near the _.phicat ~ter Austen Colgate. This splendld 1t111Cture,
of N"". York Sblte, and, because of 118 completinr the group about the quad"':""""tY to Utiea, Syracuae, and Nor- rangle and demcned in keeping with the
wtcll, euy ..,._ to t i - cities IS made othen, ii now the home of the history,
available through the medium of motor mathematica, . . _ , literature, and
ooacli service. The main motor blrhway public speakinr ~ 1 8 . It contains
between Utica and the 10Uthem ~ of, a Juae lectute hall with a balcony, u well
the 1tate and the N. Y., 0. & W. radJ'(l8d u a otudy room furnished with study
alao nm through Hamiltm:
tables, and claaroomB for all the departThe town afford& a splendid blcqround menl8 whicll occupy i~
for _the Univerelty. ~ out like the
Moitly stately among the buildings of
typical New England village, around the campu11, the Colgate Memorial Chapel
a central park, it is marked b Y atandl at the head of the quadrangle. 118
attractive homes and wide, well shaded massive Doric portico and colonial t o •Inlets. Broad Street, the main thoro- lend a dignified and imp()ling air to the
fare, stretches .r'?"' the ~tral park to structur~ in whicll an, centered the
the 10Uth : and ,t II along this avenue that religious activities of the univerelty.
the tm!venity rround• and most of the Speskinl conte118 and debates, concerts,
fraternity houle6 an, located.
and meetings of the Students' ~ t i o n
Attra<;tive at :>11 ~ s of the
the an, al90 held in the Chapel auditorium,
campu1 !' especially 90 m ~ spnng tu':'°. which seats approximately one thouoand
11,en It 11• that
many diffen,nt opeaes peraoo,s. The orpn has been pronounced
of trees With which the campua is abund- by E. M. Skinner of the Skinner Company
antly stoclced an, in their prime, 81 well as to be the finelt-toned lnatrument ever
the ahrubbery whicll formt a great part or built by that oonc:em. The Chapel wu
~ landscape development. The glisten· the gift of Mila Mary Colgate. In addition
me w_a~ o! Taylor Lake do their shan, to the main auditorium, a large lecture
in divenify,ng the scenery, and the room and roomo for the musical orpn;.a.
~~ Path, probably the moat dis- tions an, included in the building.
tinet1ve feature of the campus, 11 m full
Lathrop Hall adjoins Lawrence Hall on
bloom, especially at the time or Junior the northml lido of the Quadrangle. It
Promenade. This P8th, extending from the hOUIO$ the natural science departmenl8
entrance to the foot of the hill, ia lined with and contains recitation rooms and labor- - - - - -- -- - - - atoriea for the zoology, botany, geology,
nial in 1919. the beautiful colonial chapel and ph~cs departments. The building
wu dedicated and in 19'l3 wu completed aJao contains moot of the museum exhibits,
Andrews Hall .dormitory a gift of
which embrace a very extensive range of
M . Colgate in memor,' of Dr. Newton object,, including many rare op..'Cimens.
Lloyd Andrews. who spent over half a
Attheea,ternendofthegretn, directly
life-time teaching at Colgate and who for opposite the Chapel, is the Chemical
many years wu d,:an or the oollege. In Laboratory whicll is furnished with very
19rl6 one of the largest gymnuiums in the complete equipment for work in that
eastern states. Huntington gymnasium, field. It was built in 1884. but doubled in
wu ready for U1(. This building was size in 1906, when Andrew Carnegie conmade J>C)OSible by I.ht oombined efforts of tributed $20,000 to cover one hall the
the Alumni and 1tudenl8 to raise auf- e . _ or enlarging the building. Lecficifflt funds. This year marks the laying ture rooms. faculty offices, and laboraof the foundations of a new dormitory, tories, not only for the study of organic
Stillman Hall, the gift of Mr, Robert qualitative and quantitative chemistry,
Harkneaa, of New York City, in memory but a1ao ror private reeearch, an, now inof Thomu Edgar Stillman, Colgate, '59. duded in the structure.
Thia dormitory is tobeusedentirelyby
Eatt and West Halls complete] the
Freshmen.
(COOTINUED ON PAGE 17)
~
rear•.
'!'"
Richard
Collqe Life Nwnber
THE COLGATE MAROON
PaaeFive
- - - ----- - - - - - - -· · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
CAPABLE STAFF OF
118-COACIID lfl ITrack. Team Eclipses MAROON ELEVEN HAS SUCCESSFUL
SEASON WITH HAUSER AS MENTOR
WINS TEN OF SIXTEO All Fann• Records
DIBTORS ASSISTS
~·-·
ON SCHmULE BriDiant Season
allael
Princeton, Yale and Fordham
Among Colleges Defeated
During 1926 SealOII
Includes
Victories Over N. Y. U.
and Syracuse
Grid Team Suffers Two Defeats But Regains Prestige by
Fighting Powerful Elevens of Brown and
Syracuse to Tie Scores
Oqale foocbllll blllory . . , _ upon a
Track activltiel on the C<>ipte c:ampua ,-p1,aa dwil>c tbe 19Gl6- with tbe
play a broad port in the recttatlonal Ille appoln-.tof Geors• W. Ha,,., u beld
8 • 11 bu aJwa _ , _ _,.11 ~ .mdapwloate 1tudenta. Thla ii true cmch. U - tbe 1uldara of the new
IIICI •;;:;:. tpOrt : ; Colp:.-:__, not Ilene ~1ae
tnck ."'*'>, tbe Maroon 1 - main~ Ill
I
M1P1C1111 failed to win a majority ~ C<>iple tnditiooal ~ pre- hlcb ~ ....... the IHilera of interof tlm eon-; and tht l !ll'l6- : " . : : ";...-:. ' = a l l
i» ac,epllan to tblo. Cc.ii Reid's team wide - - t y b tnininJ and compemrb
iewler AmOIII othen
~ better than " - ••on, tition in thia 6elcl oullide ol vanity inter- aridlnJD bllloryu
wLiilllc 1111 out of con-. ·Con- colleliate , _ _
11 of Mmoan
lid tac Ibo fact that ...,... men ....., 11111 In cocnpetition with other lnltitutiona,
pladn the coUep of the
bJ pwluatlon. ~ ieconl Ill hilhlY ...,._ Colple'o track ieconl baa alwaya been yw, the , _
.
of the
...table. VICIOIIOI ovw ouch teama u _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __
prommen1
~
and few aitb thou&ht that Colpte a,uld
...,. be .e;,,:, or1*1 by IUCh a team qaln,
but tho 19Gl6 eleven . . . - by
manyulll'Onluthatoftheprevlouayw.
Head Coach of Football
_ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ __ _ _
againlt Brown univeroity on Thanktgiving
Day at Providence. Before meetins the
Colple team. Brown had won every game.
having defea1*1 •trons combinations of
Yale. Harvard and Dartmouth.
Its
"Iron Men" had been ra1*1 u the best in
In point or numbeT-a.' compared with
athletic pen,onnel or other imtitutions
equal in size and interest in physical edu·
cotion, the Coiple stall is amall; lo.- there
are only seven men, directing teams that
c:ompe•· ·1n · - ·1nter•ooll"'"•te · - · in
the East. and by many, the best in the
country. In one of the best interool"8Jale pmeo of the 19'16 sea.on, Colpie fousht the great Brown team oo even
terms to a 10.10 ICOfe. in the annual
Thankacivlng Day struule. Tho BrownCoiple ,conteot ia beconun, one of the
Eastern cluliai on the holiday, which
markl the climax of the college pmea.
The 19'16 !ootboll compaign wu offic•
ially opened with a 19-0 victory over the
Hamilton College team at Clinton. N. Y ..
on September 25. The game marked the
addition to freshmen athletica.
The
versatility of the staff permits this amall
num~ w·1thout ·1mpa·1n·n• th-••hn-in
the whole pcogram.
m=. ::U!i..,
OllJ,wla.:.,r::::=:..'::: _,
t!.i.., --:i .,_t
Yalt. ~ . Fcnlham, Weoleyan, and
e,poclally - Y - Holy
l'lnlllylnnla. Cornell, SL Law·
, _, and Syrac,ne on two 001:a - .
the lelm, who defoa1*1 the Maroon.
Union -
en..
Jolln C.
lllurko
R. P. I. wu met and -1*1 12 to 0
in the _.;ne pme on April 24, the Ma·
,oon nine pouncllns out 14 hill at the n·
- o f threo of their _...,11 pitchon.
Bunchins eleven nw in ear1, lnnlnp, Col·
pie pined • OOllllllllldini lead which left
little doubt u to the remlL
On April 30, the Maroon was again vlctoriou.•. def..tinl the strong Union nino
4 to l in a contest marred by rain. Col·
pte scored two runs in the opening
inning and. although outhit 9 to 8,
nunched hits to greater advantage. In
opile of a wet 111111 and a muddy diamond
only one error wu made.
St. ·Bonaventure was nexs forced to
Maroon triumphin,
9 to 2 ovw the Bonniea in a home eantat
held
Ma 5 Colpte IC0C'ld eiaht of
her on in ~
when . hill
. runs .
••~,..
•~linked "'th two emon - t the """"""
far into the lead CG1pte'1 other tally
in the
. i•• frame when three
came
open·~
hill were bunched
accept delfat, the
dllrd .,._,__
Colpte'• winninl atruk was unex•
pectedly broken when St. Lawrence won a
. -tional cooteot 3 to 2 on May 11. The
Mmoan held the lead for Ii• ilininp; but
a SL l.awtfflc:O rally in the seventh and
eiahth, aided by three Colpte errora.
brought in Ihm, nino which spelled victory
fo.- the Crimton. The Maroon rallied in
the ninth and succeeded in filling the
- · but was unable to """"·
Syracuse was met"" Mar 15, and in a
clooely played ean~t WM triumphant by•
oan of 3 to 1. Neither team .... ~ to
""""until the. third lnnms, when a tnple
followed by a 11ngle produced a"'" for the
Maroon. No !urther _llCO"'.'til the lut of the e,ghth when a tnple
With a man co tied the acore for the
Oraop. Colpte failed to oain, in her
half of the ninth. The fint Syracuse ~
::.S~~
U:':'.
:u~iux:v~
tory to Syracuee.
In a heavy hitting oontat Colple
o,eowhelme,l Clarklon 17 to2 0ft May 15.
£ichleen bib were IOC\lred olf the Clark1011 twlrt,r who went the lull roule
•
·
Thirteen nino were IICOttd in the liltth and
(CONTINUED ON PACE 8)
_ _ __ _ __ _ _ _ __ _
William A. Reid
C-h of Buketbell and Buoball
_."":'.,_aft«
a.enanco
In securing Hauaer as head ooach.
of Traek
------------ol
•
thl . trad" .
worthy
her whole • etJc
,uon.
F,opeci•lly in """'t yearo the Maroon
baa filured in track circleo, placing well in
the difficult oompetition such 85 that en.
countered in the Penn Relaya, the Mill·
rooe Cam... the Ohio Stale Relays. and in
scheduled meets with teams of the calibre
or Army. N. Y. U.. Syracuse, and Dartmouth.
The 19'16 ..,.,.,., w.11 the m01t succeM!ul .,..,. experienced by a ~ . track
team. 1.ast year, !or the fint ume 1n the
nineteen yean of tncl< relations belwee~
Colgate and Syracuse, th~ Maroon t_ri·
umphed m the annual varsity meet, winning by the close score of 68 2·5 to 6.5 3-5.
The v,ir1ity"s briltiant victory wu further
enhanced when the !reohmen easily der..ted the Orans!• yearllnp. Bealdeo theoe
performances, the Maroon overwh,lmed
H'lffli!ton and Alfred. took 8«CI in a
triansular moot with Anny and N. Y. u.
and placed in the three important rela.y
events mentioned befon>.
The p resen, ""'""' has been an un·
fortunate one. since the physical disability of Captain Charles and Clark has
le!t the team unable to support ill lielP
ltrength with an equal atren,th on the
tnick. in the duheo and in the diatance
runs. Th,s unfortunate weak~
gave
Sl'_1"8CUIO a 71 tn 64 v,cto.-y m the bis meet
thia year when the Orange. team out~Colpt~~to l~mtheanderevenll.
f~ulon. le thh1$ ,.° eat t O team( wathS SU(>)OIO•
m t • ,1r,t ronlflt O
e IOUOII
·
N y u and late made 1 ·
'ii,. Ann r
ill-·- .,.1111n•1....
y.
w ....,
met u- ......,_
. .
The 19'16 tam made a cuod beciM,ng
when the mile relay team c:omix-1 o!
= ·.·
o.rt!.,~
Frazi~, Kreh!. yan H~ and ~plain
Craning took third place m the Mdlrose
Cameo at the Madison Squa,e Garden in
February. The ~ quartet with the
exception of Frazier. who WU replaced by
Fink, was entered in the small oollege c1...
at the Penn Reial"' and again pl_aced lh_lrd .
In the same meet Charles. run~11ng aga~nst
9?"1e of the fastest dash~ m co.llegiate
c,n,J.,., broke the tape third. beating out
Hu""y of Booton College who had httn
favored to win the event.
Colgate's mile reJay quartet bettered its
showiOK in these first two meets when it
defeated the strong field entered in the Ohio
Stale Relaya at Columbus. TI1ia victory
gave Colgate the oecond leg on the relay
trophy.
(CONTINUED ON PACE 17)
Colple followed in the footalePI of several
other leading univeni~ in introduclna:
Weotern methoda into Eastern football.
Before oomin, to Colaate, Mr. Ha,wao c:ooch at Iowa State, where he had
developed oome strone to bottle
on the gridinon. Fo.- the fint seaoon under
h Maroon
·
the Western ayalem t e
mamtained ill hish pooitioo, losing but two
of ill encounlen. both defeats by amall
.
bei b a field goal and the
margins, one
OJI Y ,
•
I
other by a. touchdown . . In spite o the
fact o! lo,ung two maior conlelll, the
r--'_,..te team was ra led as a ~ lender
for ~ n honon, beta- 01 11• atrong
ahowing dunng the entire oouon.
At the opening of the seuon. Coach
Ha_. !aced one of the moat diffocult
problems ever to confront a mentor. The
year before the Maroon had completed ill
grealelt seuon, not a defeat being scored
apinlt it. To equal such a wu
almoat an impoeaible feat to acoomplioh;
I
(CONTINUED
o,:
PACE
8J
===========================
·
Pait Ba,k,tball S,a,on Mark,d
by
•
B,,t R,cord
Mad, in Seo,ral Year,
______
Accomplishments of Recent Predecessors Dimmed When
Court Team Wins All But Three Games
on Difficult Schedule
-----Wlnnlnlf eevmteen out of the twenty ' the collegiate world, ~ their defeat
eanlelll scheduled, the Colpte buketball nant a great deal towards Colaale'o
team clooed the _ , with the belt reputatlon on the court. Williams was
ieconl it hu attained in several yeon. completely outplayed in Colgate's second
Teams of hi&h calibre were met and pme of the ......, and Rocheoter was
vanquiohed and the Maroon made valient turned back in the fourth pme of the
tand
· • -•
N
Y k U ·
·1
d
s
s even '" ucoeat.
......,_
""' or
mvem Y was eCornell foaled 43 to 21, the •trong offensive of the
Agrep~ - t i n g
• Maroon overwhelming the New Yo.-kero.
Bullalo, Hamilton.. and ~
· bowed Clarklon Tech and St. Lawrena, were
before the C<>ipte five twice th11 - · downed· and Niagara pve the Colgate
Tho first pme ol the seuon with Hobart five the• hardeot oPPolition of the seuon
Colleee predicted • ~ u l future lo.- thus far, being nooed out by the scant
the Maroon, Hobart gomg down to defeat margin 32 to 26 giving the Maroon court
by the oain, of 40 to 14. The oec:ond game team Its tenth ~traight victory Union
played with Hobart WII practically a "!'pe- Coilel!e was defeated at Schen.;,tady by
titioo of the first. Buffalo offered a httle the IOOle o f 25 to 19. and with it the
more opposition but was turned back to Maroon woo the distinction o f being the
the ooores of 32 to 21 an~ "l:l to 21. In_t:,vo fillt team lo defeat l_!nion on its home
Cast games Colgate gamed two dec1s1ve court in three seatons. After the defeat
victories from the Cornell quintet, one at of R. P. I. and St. Bonaventure the
home and the other on the Ithaca court. Maroon victories totaled 14.
and Hamilton was twice overwhelmed,
49 to 35 and 52 to 29.
Credit is giveo to 5}'1'3CU&e and Rochester in stemming Colgate's t ide or victories
Other teams to taste defeat at the Rocheater was defeated earlier in the
hands of the Maroon were Williama. season, but in a rotum game on the
Rocheoter, N. Y. U.. Clarkson Tech, St. Rochester oourt, the Maroon waa downed
Lawrence, Niagara, Union, R. P. I., and by a one point margin. SyraCUJO has sucSt. Bonaventure. Many o! these teams ceeded in defeating the Colgate quintet
had been awarded bulcetball prestise in
(CONTl'1UEO ON PACE 7)
___ .
Seven Men Devote Full Time
to Gymnastic Work and
Coaching Teams
A ~ and wtll-equlpped IYIDnuium, IPlcioul athletic: llelds. and othor
nic:roatlonal equi_,t of a limilar ebarac1er aie .....,tial r..1ura in the ix n•
ix,,cram of ph)'lica) education on the
Colpi. campus . Yet Important• 11thinp ~· thore_11 another .iement ewn
man Vital to thia phw ol Colpte Ille.
and that 11 ti"; character ol the men IJ&.
hind the athletic pcOifam.
Perbapo of all the liplific:ant poinll in
collep Ille, there ii none man, waJ,mble
than the pe.aonal eantact with men on tho
laculty. 'nle aame ii equally true of eontacta co the athletic llold with the .....,_
and dlnctora or the athletic IJl'Oll"UIL To
thooe
col• activity baa broucht
them into this relatlonahip, and on the
CGlpte CIIDpwl the numbe< ii large, there
is a luting mnembnmce of the . _ .
that U- men have tauaht.
Several of the men who now are directing the athletic deotlnieo of Colpte have
oerved over a Ions period, 10 that their
names have become traditionally bound
with the Alma Mater. The remainder,
although new men and lo.- the moat port
men having no (onner connection with the
university. hav~imbibed the true opirit of
Colgat.e and are carrying on the work with
deepening interest.
Anotha- , _ phw .-cded in
C<>ipte 1ootb1111 when a Mlchipn Slate
llaWled 'to Hamilton to _ , , , .
ter tho Maroon on Whitnall Piek!.
Tho trial of intenectional IUCh
a that the athletic autboritiea
hav,, planned to continue that pollcy In
futwe yeon.
Olle of the oulltandlnc feaiw. of the
a
c 'Mll"
fall C111111J1isn the - - ·pme
Smee one CGlpte eleven IUl1lriled the _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _
coUesiale football uni- becli in th•
fall o1 1913, whm a ..at Yale tam wa
G-.o W, Haudefeated 1&-0 In 111 own - · the Maroon
hu alwayw held • a ixoali11ent pooition.
Smee that time different Colpte teama
have IC0C'ld noud vlctoriel aver ouch
IP" idiron repc-tativea ~ Syracuee, Yale, I
Dartmouth, Brown, Princeton, Columbia, Illinois, Army, Corneil and other
strong foea. Ao a fitting climax to ouch a
reoord a 19'l5 Colgate team went throuch
it, 11declared u an Eastern championohlp
team by many critics.
":i amoc:_
moENT ATHLETICS
w-
=
=
m,
--
..,.,. -
·~ --
At the head of the department of phyllical education at Colgate i• a man who has
ser,ed the univenity in that poli lion for
twenty-seven yean.-Proreosor Ellery
Channing Huntington. Few Colgate men
know him by that name. however. To
them he is iust "Doc"; and it ia the famil·
iarity suggeoted by thla name by which the
campus knows him, that reveals why
"Doc" is a penonal friend even of the
lowliest !rooh. This i, his twenty-seventh
year of service; and yet "Doc" oeerno to
have the greatat personal interest in his
work. both in aupervising gym c l - and
in directing tho athletic teams. Although
he has plenty or capable assiatance,
therearefewdaysthat"Doc"Huntin,ton
can not be found on the big ftoor during
gym cla,ses having u much fun as the
rest o! the boys. It was hia wholehearted interest mani!eated thus in
bu1ldinl up the physical eduatlon
~
at Colpte that prompted the un,.
vemty ~
- to name the line .....,
gymnasium'" h,s honor.
Deco- Dr Huntington's name is
10
bound up in Colgate history it ia natural
to think of him a, originally a Colpte
man Such is not the case how...,,· ro.. (CONTIX\/EO 0'1 l'A~E 8)
'
- - - - - - - - --
---
Dr. Ellory C. Huntlntton
Dlroctor of Athl-
Pqe Six
111E COLGA'l'B MAROON
111d i.c-of tht imllllt.Jrity and heteropneity of Ille
C OLGATE'S ATHLETIC POLICY
"Rbtl!!fPnffi"8s-A}'D=~l'N.o'f..tlffl1~
ltatlndat.U.Ka~N.Y,.Poat0ac.aSecoad
-------------=--=MBMIWt OF ~.."ss88ffilsl!LLBOIATB NEWSa - -.
HOLLAND' L. SMIT H. '21
RONALD F. DIXON,...
Bdtt«-tn-a.w
.......,., .......
ASSOCIATBllDITORS
~llfi'l.l'C,!;: l!.'l'-..ll!. ·1:1
COUR~.f&
''.mkN s. TRBMPBR, ·,a
F. C. IOLDNBR, '•8
G.A,NAGl£'r,'28
C. B. ROSA, ••
~: r , t 0 ~ E
:.'ffl'l·,:: dilion of IP(Jrlllnanlhip whk:h raiaeo Colple athletk:a
to a plaa, above that attained by •part at many in•
otitutlons.
Athlef
tr••-ie
~•
h 'n thei _
ICIB _..... are ....~,enq l
r_..
that
,
thletic bl lit to
de
every man poll<~"I a , . a y any •
gree may find a pm ,n ~tition. Of COWte, only
th _ , _ 1
_,_ __. ,
the
'ty • -
RBFORTl!RS
'
R, E, MUMl'O D ...
K. A, McCLl~HfB, '••
L,R.OAK.J...'20,
/; E. BAR ,vN, 30
ff, B, DAY,...
' 29
s. s. C01'11LAN,D, '••
J. F, GAJ!.Y_EL_.,.
G . w, Kal,,&,.,Vlo\;, •29
Much of Colpte't fame it without doubt clue 'ID
the unuauai IUCCOII of her athletic teams. FootbolJ
•·· __.___ '---•t _ _ _ ,.,_ to the Maroon
•-.-,...,. .... ._..... ....... ".__.u,,w..
....
·•bu
_,_.,_--~-ha -~
uou, any ou... 1port, t .,. • ...,.. """""' ~ been made in other ,portl. Colple ii not exceptional
· he thlet'
_,_,. a11....nand uni
1n r a
IC 1ame. 101' .... - ..-...uY
........~
~
venilieo pin their IJOPWII' name in the -Id of aporta;
but there hat lfOWll up in tbe·Chenan&O Valley. tra-
c: f: ~~~~,.
A. D. SCHLB.,i!R•.,.
F. c. SEELY, ·,o
w. M . SBLTZER. •30
e u,u....
ew may__.. • ...-tiOnl on
Vll"li
-·-
but a wide ranp of inler-murai and inler-claae evenll
BUSINBSS BOARD
live -1Uftit for
. lid lion by the - thlete Co..... ~.
par pa,
atanda
..,..,.,..
• · ·-- M,...,,
JAMBS ST
, ;.a a
.
. . • new CYftUllll'Uffl
u a ,_.
,--lNat arcoa.uo. Mio...
JOHN H.
• 11 ial to the men who have striven on the track, the arid·
-,..,.;......- - , . . . ... - . - , . , .,. ... .,,,... iron the diamond and the court.
~~..
~"1.rog, ::;
Clwistil
_.iatlon, cannot be IUftlcient to live Ille mon, oomplete lnoiaht to tbeoe .., tmlc: activitiee that la nquhed
by thoee who.,,, to
'liont of leadenhip. On
t - 1 D . - -- 1.. f
C. A.
account of the
•JecUoo and
maturjJy ........, , . . _ O
•
•
.
, pMan Servi
of ill ttudent body, the a,Uep ~y 811D at the coora10l'IIII
I)'
Cea
dinatlon and oomlation of the vanout field• of human
For Colgate l)tudents
occupy-.
.-1er
y M
.-1er
' •
,
endeavor, au-,nptq to how each ~ · ill The Cdpte Unlwnlty Chrisllan
- l l a l contribution to the pn)CI. . of manlund.
Unkn, UIUIIJy known .. the C . u. c. u..
Unlea the coJJece actlvilieo aft oelected, lf1'm1Ced. ia ~the local branch of the national Y. M.
and weJahted to live thl1 wider vioion of human ac- C; A. orpnuatlon. 'I'hrouchout bls 1""'
- - of undetlraduate life, the tbldent
livilieo, the atudent will enler the apedailzed trainincof COlllOII into daily contact with the Cbri,theproleuiona(tchool or the -=1111,ed tralninaol the lian Union, With a divenified PfOll1'8JD of
.
·~L-t
,
_ ___....
tlook h'ch the I
(old rfi but
.,.1,,.,,,..,..
vocauon w,u,.,..t the penpective or w~ N Oil
w ,
oort e,
em,.~,ng more
it to live aJanlficance and value to the ocxupalionai life. ~ l l y the IOCial and reliliout sides,
her ___._
,
male ••• individ
thia orpnizalion ii a stronc force for '
Inot
_,_ the collep arm• to
e u~
uai _ _, uplift
the
-- C U
capable ~ beinc aomelhinll mon, than ~ opecialiot in
hio particular chooer! field, to llberale hin1 from the
...,._confineoofhio,pecificOttUpationand"'-him
the wider oblipliona and fielda of 1trvi
open to him who is oocially minded,
u
well
as
pro-
11_..
on
campua,
J.m::
C. U. -
•
,
and promotel aeverai undertakinp which .,,, invalua~ to
plemen. lnaquletwayw«1<11camed
on. in opite of inadequate lllcilltieo and
great
<:o'·
difficulties.
,
•
°"'" - ~ ,.. ,.. b - ...._ '° ... ·Colpte bell....
· in atrict - . . . a , of elillibllity feoalonally minded.
The u,oominc ff11hman claN m the
o.tta"'=,,
tint few dayo of the orieolatlon period
oac, TlloBy lulfillinc ita mm of livinl a limited - t ol tint
to know aomelhinll of the w«I<
ac- • - r..- ,.,.._,. ...., ta ruleo a a part ol her prqpam of clean aporumanah,p. opec:;,,uoed trainl which baa t>bem11nq111 of of the Union. Durinc thia period a recep---~"' - ..iri:-•-,....,._ All Mlintalnq fair play u their ideal Colpte teama have,,.,...,...., ng
a .
tion la held fur the new men at which they
~,.:=.,.,-_,,_ .., _ •• ,_ encounlllnldaomeofthe oironceat'collep_...liona provldiJWthe~~twith theooclal-ier~.""'idl meet for the lint lime their lutun, proPl
lkmllt'"' 41,M.
-
•
cxmetl
Two
SUBSCRJPTION RATB ••.,. PBR YEAR
, ,
I.,. F.ditor - , , · , - - · - - -, , · · JottN S. 1'UMP!tll, 'Z8
Deak F.dil«, •... , •....• , . ... GaoYI! A. NAGEL, '28
Alaittant Deak F.ditor •. ...... _ liAROtJ) B.
o.,Y, '28
·
=================
'
In the counb'y and It can be truthfully lllld that -it footer cooperative ltvinc, and 1111 of fumioltq the ,..... Good feelinc and _.ilon an:
conteat hat .,.;,, a credit to Cdpte. Loyalty to Alma atudent with the ..,..,. uncla-.clinl of and the"-" at once pnera_ted ~ - faculty and
,
aympathy with hia fellow-men, the ooDoae may per- otudent body m th11 way. At another
Maler baa been placed above the deolre to w,n.
,
.
. , ,
meeting" campus leaden in all activiliel
·
form a umque aervice to the 1nd1.;dual, and. thrOllch
the
.
,__
thi
.
,
·
_ , t to
entenng c - some ng
Thts. the Collece Life number of 1"HB MAROON, hia leadenhep, to the oommunity and the Grat Society about their own pooitiono. It is then for
emphuueo the athletic recorda ol Colgate teams. Some which a,mpriNI the 1'-crld.
.
the lint lime that freshmen begin to
*_ _ _ __ _
realize the opporturulieo in extra-curricueach reflecll the apirit of the team- "Colpte lint."
THE LIIERM., BALANCED LIFE
Col,ate i, u a liberal arta colJece. The
won! "liberal" in ita most obviouo meaning, as applied .
THE AIMS OF A COLLEGE COURSE
to education, bu a wide connotation. It aicnifieo a
p,.etw1 and plentiful training, a traininc that 1.Education haa challJed a .,-.at deal within the last
fifty
yean. The Phi Beta K.ppa key wu the lone
fnllll ip,oranoe, aupentilion, dotlmatitm and nanow'd
doc ,
th'
~ ~ .~, . ideal of a collop man fifty yean qo Scholanhip wu
, _ In I eaa,
tr1neo, or aympa
ieo. , o .,. 1,.,..,.. ta
•
. ,
.
,
the eoJe aim. Scholarlhip is atill the primary aim
to be free, to be liberated, to believe m the ex-on of
fned
• ed tionai Political IOCiai relilious. and of colJece but alonll with it hu crown up an increuinc
~ ·~ ."""
', --~~•
inlereot in the vaiueo of atra-currk:ular activiliet which
oCher 1natitut10111. 1t '" ..,,...,.ng - , - -..t upon . .
.
.
.
,
lmowledp, yet of a different order. Knowledge it but 111ve J)one element in the makinc of a "freeman."
c l - . .. Today the aludent muat vie with the
An I - io h'berated not by information and athlele, the muaician, the "'riter, the campua Politician,
by
leaminc, but rather by an attitude toward Ille. and the IOCiai lwter In hla search for underwn,duate
,
_,.
, pn,minence
To be able to oee two aideo of a queolion, to•="" II·
·
- - . to a-iale expert aervice, to feel an abiding
There.,,, a larp number of varylnc opinlona in reobllptlon to ltUdy and direct the COWte of IOCial life, pn1 to the purpooe of a coll• education, b u t ~ ore
to be puWc 1pirited, to r_,.ize the claima of national' two philOMJPhiea which NOm to be l)and lnlernationai obliplionl, theoe are the hall-marka There ii fint the cider prulooophy which inaiall that
A.:_,,_
.-1
COLGATE: PAST ANO FUTURE
Colple Univenity haa juat concluded a most
au«-lul year. On the athletic fltld Maroon teams
.
have won more than 75 per cent or their oonteota.
Lawn,nce Hall and Huntington Gymnasium have been
in uae for the lint time, oervinc a student body which
outnumben by fifty unclrqraduateo the atudent body
of
A
baa .
,.._,_
• year aco.
new cut tyolem
111ven """""te
men a -ter freedom in their tcholutic work.
A new _ _ , of chapel exen:iaH hat added
-Uy to the cultural featurea of Colpte life. Campus
publications have in moot C8IIOI maintained a hlch
ttandard """ mUeee nwaical activilieo have _ , at a
"'...,_ - of - - • ~ - than 1 _ _,
De,...,_ poutt - ...or ~ m yean,
partmental duba have cauied wt well-planned prosnma. Orpnizaliona, which becauN of long inactivity have proven that they have no aeriow, reason for
exiatm,, have been done away with.
of the man whole edw:atlon baa made him free. Only coUeaeoexlatlOlely to develop inlelJectuaJ life. thlo beinc,
G-I ~- ~ "·'-•·'• _ , t'II
,_ •II
• •
•
•
.
· - · - '--'11 -..gGLC - · I l
grelu:. Wi
aaourcolleptoubmit theiratudentatobr(l8(1, pne,oua, 11milartothedoctrin0whtch holdathat ?".'ch~ex11ta be t,u future. The Univenity hat not yet reached
and bmnane Jeaminc, calculated to f ~ theoe vir- aolely for the advancement of the reblP(JU1 Hfe. A perfection alone any line of ~ t but each year
tueo, '*!I they hope to lend forth free ethzen1.
I newer phlloaophy claima lllat the principal aim of the - addition& to the ph)'licai equi-t of the inlti·
Liberaliam in ill stric~ oenoe is applied mainly to· colJece la to train men to tit toeially and mentally into tulion, crowth in the size of ill ttudent body, and im•
inlellectuai freedom but ,t may refer to the entire the dutieo which await them in later life, an idea very provernenta i~ ltudent activitiea.
coll,cialepn)Clan,. Uberalltminathlelic:o.joumallom, almilar to the modem tJ>ouaht that the chun:11 ahould
, and IOCial Hie mutt be considered in a broad IW'Yey or aerve •• an edw:atlonal and oocial center u well aa a
Important years for Col,ale lie Just ahead. More
tha
pp1·
_,_,
ha
•-•
wtdeqraduate activity for in the balanced life of Col· religiow, cenler.
-...--,r
n 700 a tcanll 1or -,.ttance ve au-Y exaate extra.curricular lntereete are o( vast importanc.e.
-• \i£U l)Rlled their deai.n!: to enter the University. No fear
1- ~ la held for the narrow-minded one who or\ few collecet atlll <.line tenaciOWlly to the old u to the character of nnt year'a in<'to Colpte eolely for athletica, or for social Ille, doctrine which - - that inalitutlona of hicher learn- be felt. Athietica will in no way Joae prominence
er llr - y . than for the ix-1-nllnded individual ing ahoold conaiat tolely of lib.-aries and cluaroomo, but durinc the next few yean if we are to baoe oor expectawho witheo to pin a true liberal education from boolc1, moot collecea have come to the concluaioo that 1Y111· tiono upon the athlete& ol 1930 who have to date J01t
friendohipa, athletic&. and activilieo alike.
naaluma and fratemitieo and extra-curricular activilieo but foor conteoto in thirty atarta. A new dormitory
The ltudant decldet what ehall be the reoulll of his haft• vital influence upon the ohaping of a man'a Ille. wt11 be ready for uoe next autumn, increaain, the room· ••
• part of the chan 1-1 Iha • - ,
coD•se tourae. For the men whodeaire to pin only the And the ,n~reaung
,
P
. t •~~ men ing facilities which the Uniffl'lity may offer.
ooclal preolice which colJece olfm, IOCial ....,.,.. la in oc:holaatic Unea ""' atill numerous. Phi Beto ~
aVldlable. For the man who cxmet1 for athletico alone, keyo""' •till honored, and the ltudent la atiD reapected.
~ot only "'" mattera on.
Colpte campu~
atbletic fame la ohllinable, For the man who entera Intellectual activity haa not lleclined. Students have runm'." ~ l y but ,the ~rvtttet of the aiumm
__,,_ I the ad •·-of· tell tai ad - . - t _..ty attained a br(l8(1er outlook on life which allows o,pruzation ""' ""'"' m evidence than ever before.
...._. or
van._- m ecu
vancemen
_. ,
.
.
Thnluch !ta publication and throuch the work of ita
Phi Beta Ka- •-- an, aet .,ft u rewarda for hoaeot that aoaitlon of an mkffllt en affalra other than ,thoN
-,•
~
of the textbook.
oocretary the Alumni c.c.i,or.uon baa dalte much to
..-v.r. But fkeep Colpte padualel in touch with one another:
I
lion f1
comblnlld, the lbmal "" '11< o«m a balanced ltle.
Tbo who
any one of theN three objecli
lie
bit 1111
11 . ,
thlnc
•• · - Hfe, Of what value ta the
Phi ~ key II the ••er •,adualel with few
frlenda to whom be can tum for council and advice in
luture)'a'll? Ofwhatvalue.,,,thecollecefrimdahlpa
•__ ...._
if the aodll sradualel without a atrong body to
caJT)' bim throQah,lllebattleoof life? Of what value are
· ~~
Y11111ty ~ · -llGpily cupa if the winner cradualel
without an lnte!lelpnt attitude toward and knowledce
of the ...,.t forcea which make up Life? Only liberal-
"""*
":.:. :=- • ,..
Modem instruction oenten around the funda.
mental activiliea of phyalcal, family economic civic.
-tional and _....,_,_ 1•1 - ~~ :_~
·-,
,...,_ 1 e. .._ may .,. ~ " the basic Die intereota.
Elementary achoola and
IOCOndary achoolt have atriven to do fur the total popuJation, what the colJece atlempto to do for ill higher
level of oelected population. The elementary tchoola,
~ of••.......
fk
led
1
UQ;;auae u1111;1l"eoetllryem...-11oatooao
now ae.,
the
throuch
diotrict moelinp and banqueto Colpte aplrit
haa been kept alive in citiea and viii.,.. far from the
~ -Vaile
_ _ al
. bod
·ta1 ,____ •
'"'-..nao
y. ..., umor
y, a v1 ~~ m
Cclpte life in the past, will continue to aid its Alma
Mater in yeani to come.
lar w«k and to understand the IJ]irit and
ideals that ""'Colgate. At the cl<* of the
meeting each member of the new clua is
pn,aented with a F"'8hman Handbook by
theChrialian Union. 1"hla publication is a
manual containinc uaeful infonnatlon on
all pj,aNI of Iii< at Colpte, activities, or-·•-tiono
and hinta to ff'Ollhmen. Every•thing that will help the new man to be• kl • -• •"-"·hi ace!'
come qwc Y ~ N "-,v.. Y
,maled
i• included
·
A task performed successfully year after
year by the C. U. C. U. ia the moil aervic,
liven at a oma1l to the lllldent
body. The convenient location of Taylor
Hall, euily - b l e to both the darmi-
tori,o and fra~lieo, makeo the pool
office popular with everyone. The early
deliveries. a Sunday delivery, and u,,,
brincinc of all heavy mail, to the "Y"
an, advantaca or thi• aervioe.
In the lonll period between Christmas
and Ea.«, when lime becina to drq,
the Chrialian Union providfS ~ ftee ~
of entertainment in movinc l)ICturea given
every olher Saturday nicht for more than
two montha in the auditorium of Lawrence
Hail. The ahowing of comediea and high
claN lllms i1_ made pooaible ltrl"IY thrwgh
the _...,._ty of Mr. Jamee C. Colpte.
~ng the put year, two ahowt were
IJYen, one at 7:00 for the three upper
daaeea, and the IOCOftd at 9:00 for the
ff'Ollhmen. In Ulla way everyone who
can!8 to see the picture may do so withoot the di,comfort of standing during
the performance.
Another accomplishment or the C. U.
C. U. haa been the development of an
empi~t bw-eau under the per.l()aupems""1 of Or. A. E. Alton. By mean,
of the bunau, needy studenll can find
work durinc the school year to help d•·
fray expenses. The acency alao belps to
locate men in jobs for the aummer vacalion period ~ in permanent position•
after graduat,on. The work of the employment bureau it eapeciaily deserving
---•-u·oo, smce
. 'te 'nd'
ti 'els
o1
I .'"" Y a,
ao many atudento ,n a financial way.
-•w-=
The aending ol deputation to ,urrounding towno it a ev.ice performed by
the Chri1tian Union which,i• not -1'lly
known on the c:ampua. n- ...,
oom~ of ,,.._ ,I n deco who opeak
at ,meetinp of youna
and more ea_
peciaily of hich ochool ho;. on Colple,
The Colpte _alumnus who ~uma to Hamrl'."" at ita opportunltieo and can,puo life. Every
CommenoementhmethioyearW1llfindmuchthat1anew phase la - l e d ' ° that the audience
. .
.
.
.
~ -· ......a ·th~--•
-*
"."'.Y. """"''":
and 1nd1calive of growth. He w,11 note With pride the
acquam":" wt ~ acmade and will h,oties a nd_ideala. It II by auch methods
conclude Iha be . . . •••
cha
. ... that the un,venlly comea to be known and
lam in the underwn,duale'e ootlook upon theoe inlereoll
t t wutution •= overy
nee m ~~ undentood in thit oeclion.
can give him just what he deoirea-a balanced college world of srowinc into one of the grea.,.t univenities in
Emphasio is not placed entirely on the
Ille.
the country.
(CONTINUOE ON PAGE 15)
=====~===========·I various advancement& which have been
THE COLGATE MAROON
Collece Life Nmnber
F,o,lt Atiletic S1,t• Prewtla for
PastlalWS..
Col1ate'• Se,en •i•or Sport, Haie
111st ii IMnl ,_
Caref•I Trainifll of Fir,t Year .,,.
·
Prolflinent Part In Atltletic P,o,,,.,,.
and CrOS&-Country Attract Especially Large
Number of Candidates-Swimming Has
Encouraging Flnt Season
Colpte'• 10Ven minor gporU, I...,_
nrimmlnc, aoa country, tennll, aolf,
ri8e ond 1)'111. all of which are ..,.,,.,...
tl-..ly new to the unlwnity are now
attractlnc alnpt hall o1 the athletic
talentintheunlwnity. Boxinc,whichattalnod oome p ,pularity year, has
fallen into dllalrd and will p,obebly be
replaced by ooccer. accordins to plans
bei"nc lqrmulated in the athletic ollice.
Mmlben of an four c.._ are en,;ble
to win vanity letters in minor 1port1; and
many 1n11unen. banned · from major
IQUlldl, ha"" taken advantqe of the oppcrtunity in reoent _ , . _ Tbe intrFTd~ popularity of the oporto m,an1ec1
by the athletic - t i m with the omaU
"C" II attested by the !act that 57 minor
1etten ...,... .,._.ted at the laot vanity
banquet, u c:ompan,d with 54 letters to
athletes in the lour major gporU, football,
buketbell, track and baaebell.
Outotandinc 8Jll0ll8 the minor 1portl i1
~ - Ito introduction at Colpte
dates back only live yan. but eecb achedule has i-t characterind by - l u l
opponento. Two out or eiaht resultedin victoriealor theMaroon dwincthe
1926 campaign, Union and St. Lawrence
beinc the defeated coll- . Other teams
which met and deleated Colpte'a aUck
"wielclen were thole ol Cornell, Harvard,
West Point, Syracuae, and Hobart.
The team which la coached by Lieut-.
Col. James Ballantine fac,g an equally
difficult _,...,. thll y,,ar. The Uniwnity o1 Maryland, New York Uniwnity, Syracuae, Hobart, Union, Craao,t Athletic Oub, and SL Lawrence
. _ the schedule.
The strmuoua game II already repnled
u one ofColpte'11eaclincoport1andnever
faUa to attnct a large aquad.
Swimminc II another branch or sport in
which the central New York W1lvenity
anticipates much activity. The put
eeuon witneeeed Cotgate's debut in
-tic circiel. With a team com-
IX-'
almolt entirely of underclulmm,
the Maroon deleated Oxnell and R. P . I.
b y ~ acoreaand loot to Union and Syn,cuae by equally unbalanced ficurea. The
entin, squad or eicht lettermen and 1_,.
point winners who failed to win their
vanity enllania will mum next year to
panicipate in a much more pretentK>UI
achedule.
The openinc of the new pool in Huntincton gymnasium, one or the finest in the
vicinity, has created much intettlt in this
IJ)Ort. More than sixty studento tool<
part in the interclass tank meet con.
ducted by Coach Starr. Victory (ell to the
IOllhomocea. with the lreehmen a ci - · The third y,,ar men were third
and the seniors were relegated to the last
potition.
1be Cl'08I country team succeeded in
winnina only two of its five intercollec·
iate meets lalt !all, but new Iii~ was Injected into lone di1tance =inc at Colgate by the large ,quad or men oeekin1
placeo on the team. The mass ol low..clamnen out for the sport succeeded in
crowdinc oll all but one ,enior, Captain
John C. Smith, and on• junior lrom the
vanity. Three frelet,ters during their fint spc,rt aeuon in
collel!e.
(CONTINUBD , _ PAGB 5)
,
1or the PMt thm. ,_.,._ In the lint
Yearllngs Have Good Sealions on Diamond, Gridiron
and Court-Class of 1930 Breaks Record
For Number of Candidates
pme with the Oranae 1h11 year, the
Mal000 ftve failed to find IIIOII, and, due
to poor ....,, - k and inaccurai.. pno;111,
a,mbbwl with the wooderful offensive
Teams from Alln,d Un.ivenity, Syn,- - o f the 5)'l'ICUIO quintet. the Mal000 Since the inaucwation or the one y,,ar Tl to 21 victory. Two -i.a lat.er
CIIIO Un.ivenity, and R. P. I. acored vie- live " " ~ · · - - by a 100ft of 33-IS. l9lldenoe ru1e · three ye1r1 aao. requlrlnc St. John'• Military Acad-y met at
toriea over Colpte while Hamilton ond In the 110011d S)'t"IO* pme, the Mal000 that a lltudent complete one collep year Manll111. The lared no better
Hobart failed to matcll the llridel and en- matched the Orance
lor pl, but at Colpte before belnc eligible to a place than the Onnae yt,arlinp ond _.. forced
durance of the Maroon harrien. Hamil- went down to defeat apin. d"" to ~- on a vanity team in major aporta, lreoh- to the ohort end ol an 119-37 - . C«nell
ton lllttllmbed 23 to 32 and Hobart~- loul~nc 00 the pert
man athletial have played an important Frooh _,, the final - t o ; and a
l00ftd ~ ~to.toColpte'119, the loweot
=
·con~to,;:::
part in Colpte lile.
. . - replete with thriila wu held. All
count w1n,:,1nc in thla ndd of oport.
•
event, were clooely contested and it wu
For the undeveloped freshmen, Coach were propheoized to be the peatelt oourt
The past year has _ , lour able treoh • not 1D1til the ftnal event that Oxneli
Jsck Rourke an-anaed - 1 with battlea of the ........
.
man teaml ,epi . . .nting _Colgate. The .,._i out Colpte by a ocant maqin.
yartinc teamo o1 other c:clleceo and preThe HIDltlnct,on gym11U1um wos com- -..i1 team repre,enting the c:lall or
parotory IChool aaregation1. The more pleted 1aot - · _a nd the baoketbell - -- - -- - - - -- - With thele two .....,... ov«, the 1929
proficient lreohmen harrien were per- _ , ~- the lint in the annals _or the
Earl c. Abll
lreshman teams became hiltory. School
mltlal to a,mpete with the vanity.
new builclinc,
The new_ bulldinc la
opened In September with the c.- of
A teem of wt.eran temla playen will modem In every reopect and 11 ...,II able to
1900 the WJ'lt that hal ever enten,d
apin compete
Colpte In a IChadule or hald the c:apadty crowd• that attend the
Colgate. Exoept for prep IChool - ,
ten mmto 1h11 oeaaon. A lalrly aood -- important conteoto. The basketball court
little waa concerning the athletlc
1011 durinc Im& has bom writ ten In the equals the belt in the country.
ability ol lhll claa. 1-!owever, the frooh
boob to the cn,dlt of the tennlo team. A large part of the IUCCl!IS of this y,,ar'a
,0011 •tiafied ....-yone that they were the
Beatm In the _.me mat.c:b 1aot y,,ar by team ll1Ull be siven to the endeavon of
equal in athletic ablllty of every lint-year
Cvened lhemoelveo and deleoted Hamilton termen left lrom last IIOIIOO and - 1
Earl C. Abel, AU-American tackle while
on the nnt matcll by the same acore. promilin« rnemben or last year'a lrooh
at Colpte and Blliltant vanity football
Union ouffen,d deleot lrom the Maroon team. Coach Reid built one of the rutest
OOICh
1925, took """' the task or
raciiet wielders, but l'ffin and New York c:ombinatio:,a ever to repment Colg•te on
c:cachinc freshman athletics, sua:eeding
Un.ivenity triumphed in the nat two en- the court.
KmdaU Edkinl. who lelt to accept a
gagementa. Followinc a victory in the
pooition at the Utica Free Academy. All
S.S. Y.C.-ttho Colptecourtplayen In the_early games ol the season the
(reshman teams. with the exception or
were forcecl to acapt a deleat from their Colgate hneup changed lrequ~Uy . . New
track, which i1 CI08Ched by Jack Rourke,
arpiayen were developed and mJunes to
vanity track coach, are under Mr. Abel's
The outlook this s,ason ia tinctd with IWeral left vacancies here and there.
guidanct.
aunshine. With last year'• team aue- T h e ~ twn, """:"-· rounded out to
Coach of Frooll Allll1tlco
A call was i,sued /or football candidates
mented by new moterial rrom the fresh- two aemon. one Jumor and two 10pho_ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __ _ _ (or the 1900 team. Hereto/ore, filty had
man cluo ready (or action, numerous vic.
i - t conlideffll a large delegation ol canHoward Bicldo
l1929
"on e;,ht contesto from a ochedule of didates ror freshman teamo. Ninety
includes meet,, with Hamilton, Tulta,
twelve games. The moat powerlui offense answen,c1 the call this
maki111 the
Devidton. New York University, The
wu shown in the contelll with Carthage lreshman uad consld
than
South Shore Yacht Club of Long lllland,
Hich and 0.'"'80 Normal School. Tbe
. aq
era Y - • two meets with Un.ion and twowithSyraformer deleated 16 to 2 and the lat· an_y varuty ,quad ever ,had '-'· From
c:uae.
ter 20 to 5. The
li
tarted oll the 1h11 material a team wu formed that we,t
I
.
year
tlCI
throuch the oeaaon undefeated: or perhapt
To relieve the demand lor the _ . 1
-.on
wtth a 2 to I wm
the SYr1ICIIIO it would be more accurate to •Y that
tenni1 courto the University is about to
lreshmen: but the JOY of this vtctory •·u teamo were formed, ror In each game
start con1tructkm on six new courts on the
loot a week later, when the Orange batted three
I
tea 0 I about equal caliber
West lield.
the ball all over their home neld and ,....,
or our
ms
Golf i1 enlerinc its fifth years u a minor
easily, 14 to 4. Other deleato were ad- •-ere oent on the neld. The onl~ team
rninl-.cl by Cortland Normal School that came anywhere near deleaunc the
1port at Coipte. In put years the teamo
have •-on their share of tlie victoriea ex•
Cornell Frooh and SL John's Miii~ lrooh WU St. John's ~ilitary A- y.
cept (or a c:omparotively IUUIUCtt8lfu1
Academy. Two or theae defeata were ~ held Colgate yearlinp to
campaign in 1925. M uch the 11me team
a...,,..i in return conteltl with Cortland tie. In all the 0ther gamea, the yearlinp
.._
won by large acoreo. St. Thomu loot the
u played for the univfflity lut seaoon will
and St· John
opening
game 27 to and the followinc
apin matcll ito goll and 1portlmanship
Three .-to were on the schedule of the wee1c Union Frooh loot 46-6. Cortland
with intercolle&iate opponentl this year.
yearlinc track team. The Syracuae lresh- Normal 1UThouch publicity in recent years hao i - t
men were met in the initial contest, home game, the freshmen ran up the
lacking. this sport jg not without many
Coptaln of Buketball for 1127-28
when the Maroon cuba easily took a highest 100ft or the aeaaon. Filty-eisht
a u ~ who applauded Ito s to 1 vic:majority of lint and aecond placa to win pointo were tallied by the lour teaml which
tory over SyraCUIC univtrtity in the open•
inc meet or the seuon thia year.
morea. Captain Clark and Harold Kent = = = = == =======lrep-,ted 1900, while their opponen14,
nedy, ,eniors, Howord Bickle, a junior,
OoweKO Normal, failed to come within
Francis Wallh and Howard Bollerman, the lint Syrac:uae game. The N. Y. U. l0oring diltance. St. John's Military
,ophomores, were the regulan chooen and game fumilheda spectacular sight, when Academy battled the lint year men at
LIMt.·Col- J1m11 B1t11ntine
had as their alternates Thomu G lenn and the Maroon team confined itoeif to the Manliut !or lour quarters to succeed in
Adolf Martin. oeniors, Christian Makholm long shot playinc with a back court type of holdinc them to a scorelela tie. The
and Bernard Conners. juniors, and Bruce ollenae. An example or clever delenlive remarkable was clooed on Alumni
Dumont, John Redmond, and Edward playinc wu shown in the Rochester game, Dey, when the Maroon eme,ged lrom a
Cool<. oophomores. In the Union game, when, durinc the entire lirlt half, the battle played on a neld ol mud with a
Bickle, injured his knee and was lon:ed Rochester quintet made but two loul 9-0 victory over Syrac:uae Freshmen.
out or the play ror the remainder or the tries and l00ftd no lie1d buketa. The
.
aeaaon. but Coach Reid developed an ex- Buffalo gam,e were marked by aensational . The athletie talon~ ~I the claaa ol ls:MI
c:eptionally copable subatitute in Mak- playinc and ci- guarding throuehout. ~1d not _,. to be lun,ted to football. lor
holm
in December, when Cooch Abel called (or
·
Durinc the past seuon the Coipte bauetball candidates, no lela than lorty
Howard R. Bickle was choaen captlin of quintet made a point acue ol 757, while wearers of the .,_, caps - - ·
the 1007-28 baoketbali team, 1ucceedinc her opponento made a total score ol 455, Ten wins and three i.... _,, the record
Raymond Clark, who will be graduated thi1 which will inopire luture combinations to estoblilhed. Proopects did not look very
JIDIO. Clark is a (orward, while his hard play.
promiainc at the start or the.....,. !or the
Coaeh of l.aml111 and Rlfte
1UCce100r has been playing the i\W"d
II
t plan
terial"
to th opening game with Syracuoe Central High
I
pooition. Bickle wu a very capable pivot
pregen
ma . ,ze
e School resulted in a 28 to 25 victory lor
- - - -- - - - - -.- --.man on the 1925-26 team: but when Boller- 10tilfaction 1 all coll- involved. a new the high echool. Tbe next night, however,
In addition to matches with Umon, man became eligible to play on the varsity eastern colhse ~etbell league ms~ be the team showed a reversal of form.
Army, Brown. Wesleyan, Woroester Tech, Bickie's lix loot one appean,d dwarf-like, lonned. Th11 will include Syracuoe, Pitto- deleating Cortland Normal School 34-2Z.
Holy Cross and M. T .. ~embers or the and he wu lhilted to a cuard pooition burg, Perin State and Colgate ~ the nu- and started on a wiMing streak. SL John'•
team wdi compete ,n the mter-coiiegiate where he has made a huce IUchampionships which will be played in OOOUlistent IICONll" and an able defenlive pooaibly three or lour entries from """.'"ll being the teams to deleat the cuba thereSyracuse.
.
. . . player.
N. Y. U.. Rochester, Brown. Lell,gh, arter. The sting or these deleato was
Among the I~ con~p,cuous ac11v111es
Fordham, Union and_ St. L a ~ . All somewhat oet oll by the !act that both
The ,econd Syracuae game morked the the teams oo the hot are nvala, and opponents had been prev"oulll beaten t
00 the campus 19 the nfl• team, coached
by Lieut.COi. James Ballantin: : Ham- final court appearance or Captain Ray- Colgate has me~ them all at?"~ time or Hamilton. Two wins
eorwu:d
15
pored by lack of adequate lac,lities. the mood Clark, Harold Kennedy, Thomas aoother. . II 1h plan mate~alu:es eac_l1 Normal and Little Falla High School, and
shootmg team loot both or ,ta telegraph Glenn and AdoU Marun. Clark,. and ~liege w,11 meet the other twice, and thlS victories over the Comell F rooh and Dean
meets, to S)•racuse and Penn State. Inter- Kennedy have been the moat consaatent with three or four other games, would Academy ace included in the season's
class competition (or the ,everal cupo has l00ftrl for Coipte during the past two admirably fill out the oeaaon. It will not record
been the chier activity on the rifle range ,easons, and on this account their loss will be possible to settle this definitely before
·
thi1 ....1011.
be keenly (ell, but among this year's sub- the basketball oeason ol 1929, but by Large squads and good lorm in preThe moot recent addition to Colgate's llitutes and members ol the freshman that time it is hoped that all the pro- season training indicate that the record•
athletic _,...,. is the gym team. En- team are several very capable men pre- ~ oolleges "'ll adopt the plan. Coach of the preoeot lre;hman cl.,. in track and
Pline in three meets, the team ol callow partd to fill the vacant placa.
"Biil"Reid is one or the staunch aup- baseball will be equally us gratilyinc u
gymnagto lost each decision but arouted
Versatility has leatured the Colgate porten or this plan and has given conllider- thole or their lootball and baoketball
hopes !Of' a brilliant aeaaon next year.
play on all occasions this 1eUOr1 e.xoept in able consideration to it.
seam.
aom.
:!.i~
of''°
W::;
ror
ror
.
re:· •·-
°""'
a...,......
o.
°
L
Howard Starr
'ove,Y
Coaell of Qym T11m
'l1IE COLGATE MAROON
-
-
-
-
---
-
Page Nine
TH E COLGATE MAROON
College Life Number
Lacroaae Team
The Band
f ootball Team
Charles Finishes First
Syracuse vs. Colgale
Page Ten
THE COLGATE MAROON
Lawrem:e Hall
Symphony Orchestra
Masque and Triangle
College Life Number
College Life Number
THE COLGATE MAROON
Page Eleven
Memorial Ch111el
Debate Squall
Maroon Boa.rd
Page Twelve
THE COLGATE MAROON
College Life Nwnber
Huntlneton Oymna,lum
Alo111 the Drive
Main Gale
Eaton Hall
Swimming Pool
COLLEGE LIFE
NUMBER
Non Athletic Actibities
·sECl'ION
II
MUSIC HUS PIOIIIINT POSITIII
RVE PUBUCATIIIS DEBATES AND ORATORY CIITESTS GIVE
AMII& Ctl.GATE STUDENT ACTIVITIES AND PRESS BUIIAU
AMPLE TIAl•G IN PUBUC SPEAKING
Musicians Earn Widespread
DEVB.OP
IITERS
--,..,.
c-. ..
- - rForemk: Schedule Includes
Reputation For CdJege
-
Pref. WIiia• H. H11n w
on Extensive Trips
Muoic ii an important ~ of Colgate
life. Whether one i,.. an actiYe part in
101110muslc:llorpnizatK1<1ormerelycom•
In contact with it at atudent functionl, ita
lnftuenc:io on tho
1, evident to him.
The mllllc department wa founded in
1912, with Pro(..,.- William Henry
Hoermer at ill head. •~-that••- ·,t •-_,.i.,i and ~ to;.~ ~
where it now providea COlllNI in •pprecil·
lion, writine, and production. At the
Dir.- fl Muoio
_ , time more men an, ""'""" in - - - - - - - - - - - - ...,. branch of IIIUlic than an, enCllled
in any one apart or other llincle extra-
cam""'
HONORARY SOCIETIES
REWARD_PROFICIENCY
_
Prol111cr ~ ia born llllllician,
I
and a choral and ocdlatrl leader ol ex- E-urq 1 S.rviN in Varloua Flokl1 of
ceptionli ahillty and wideopread reputeAe11wlty, Tlld"I 8-ulul
lion. Hia name lo Included In "Who's
Into Momblrllllp
Who in MIiiie:", he is member of the
__
8
boerd of dlrectors of the New York
Nine honorary ooc:ieti... ,epr ...ntina
State lnten:ollegiate Glee Club Auociation practically every branch of college activiand fer oevera1 yean he bu occupied tis, """""'1li' work in their respective
prominent pooitiono on the faculties ol fields by rewarding """"""lui participants
IIUlllmer IChooi 8"lliono at Corneil Penn- with memberlhlp
aylvania, and New York Univ.;.._tiel.
Oul.ltandinc ."mo.,g these organizaHe opent oeverai yean atudyinf In Paria t.ionl lo New York Eta. the local chapter
Berlin, and Vienna, in addition to
of Phi Beta Kappa, membenhip in which
done in hia field of ltudy. in thia country. ii indicative ol hi&h schoiastic atandinc.
Previoul to hia aa,epWloe ol the chair The requirements for entrance into this
of mlllic hen,, Profalor Hoeinaer wu fraternity an, riild, and 88 a result
enpaed in choral din,ctine. Three years the number of undergraduates elected
aao two of his orpnizationa pined nation- each year aeldom
twelve. !leeat recoanition by winning first and tion• are held twice annually, limited
p - in intercollegiate compe- number being choeen early in the fall on a
tit.ion. Fer thit achievement hia w«k bull of thn,o years work and the n,maind.,.. praiaed highly by aeveral great der at Commencement on the work ol
critica.
their enUre college coww.
Preleaor Hoermer and hia lllistant.
A p l for students in chemistry i•
Ford B. Saunders, who ia al10 the uni- membenhlp in Alpha Chi Siama, national
venity crpniat, have developed the llllllic chemical fraternity.. Students an, elected
department to a hilh degree of efficiency by the active members only after they
and now have a mge registration in their have shown proficiency in cheml1try.
various couneo. Theae include muoic Candidates an, required to major in the
"'->' and dictation, choir clut. music ,ubject and to hav, maintained an averappreciation and history, elementary and ace of at least B. Each year from ten 10
advanced harmony, <0cheatra claa and tWfflty men are elected to membership
0:4-te S~mphony orcheltra, melody in thi1 organization.
writing, counter-point and chord proTalont and Industry in the field or
gmsion. In addition to theoe ci-., journalism are rewarded by a bid to Pi
the department holds w,ekly organ re- Delta Epsilon. national journalistic fracitals during the winter months, brings ternity, Alpha Iota Chapter o( which is
acco,nplished musiciana befon, the 1tudent located at Colgate. Membership in this
body and townspeople, and directs the in:r society is not Um.ited to those active in
portent work ol the several fflUllical clubs. writing. but ii open to oul5tanding execuThe trips Which the musical ciubo take tives 00 the business and circulation
each year and their home conoerta an, the boards ol campus publications.
moat prominent featun, of their activities.
Another comparatively large Gri3Jliza.
The annual Chriatmaa concert or the Col- tion at Colgate is Phi Upsilon Kappa,
pte Choir and Glee Club and the honorary theological
fraternity. Its
Collate Symphony Ordlestra wu held membenhip is not restricted to the
in the Colgate chapel December 20. The Theolo&ical Seminary. but oPOR to leaders
annual Spring Concert wa pven March in the many pl,.- of college lile, selected
21, during Beethoven Week, The latter because of their Cltristian character and
part of March the Glee Club , _ its inten!lt in religious topics.
first lrip or tho_,.,, lincinl in Buffalo Collate'• hononry musical lraternity,
an,I Syracuse. Durinc the Enter vaca- Mu Pl Delta, dates back fiYe yeanwhen
lion it made its annual ll)rinf tour. The it was orpni,od under the leadership of
trip last year coven,d thn,e thooand Pro(_,,- William H. Hoermer. It promiles, the club 111,cinc II far 11 vides .-xiation for thole studenll who
Chicaco, while this year the part haYe n,ndered service to the university in
of the country wa covered. Aby the "Maroon Coii.;ana", the student an, elected to its ranks each year, and for
eiiht-piece dance orcheltrl. the club made this n,uon the Mu Pi Delta keys an,
ill debut at R-0 Saae Colleae in Troy. tieasured -ions.
A dance followed the coocert. The next Upsilon Alpha Delta is the honorary
day, Sunday, the larrer o,ganization dramatic fraternity, and is devoted to
traveled to Brat-teboro, Vt., when, it ,ang 1tudenu of proved histrionic ability.
at the eveninc service ol the Bapt.itt Membership is granted tho,e playinf
Church. Monday night the Club ,ang at ieadinc roles in thn,e drarnatic productioos.
an evening service o( the Baptist Church In n,oent yean it ha1 been extending
of Wcroeater, Masi.
Tuesday niJht bids to lower cia..men, the only honorary
it waa n,joined by the orcheltra for a con- fraternity to re<:ruit freshmen and !IOPI\O·
cert pven in Bolton at the Waban mores.
Nei&hbcrhood Club.
On Wednslay Colgate students prominent in debating
nifht both the Glee Club and m:hettra and oratory find recognition in Delta
work
••cuds
(CONTINUED ON PACE 15)
-()pportunities For All Types
Encounters With Seven
to Journalists
-COMPETITIVE
PLAN USED
___
AIM IS DEVELOPMENT
Other Colle&a
of Writing Are Open
MANY MEN TAKE PART
'
cunicuiar ICllvi
K..-......
(CON'l'lNUEO ON PACE 16)
Sewn inr.....,u.cl•te forenlictllllllWI
COllltituted the IChedule for 1h11 yar'1
- t e IQUIII. T..,. from Cambridae
Univenity. SyracuN Uni...ity, Albany
Law School, Wike Forat Collop, St.
Lllw,.,_ Univonity and Ohio Waleyan
met the Colcate triao in clebatel upon in,.
JOUfflliiam ia well n,pr-,,ted amonc
undeqraduate actlvitiel at Cola•te. Five
pubilc:ationl and a unlvmlty bureau
offer active traininc to the 1tudenta in the
varioua IY!* of writine. The pubiiCI•
tion1 an, under the direction of underanduate edlt«ial and bull,- ltalh
whole membera have
aecwed their
pooitionl in competition with other candlda~ durinc a period of tnininc under
the direction of a member of the board.
Oul.ltandinc aervice in this field ii rewarded by ,election to membenhip in Pi
o.lta Epaiion, national honorary journaliatic fraternity. . .
Many fields of wnting an, COV1!n!d by
the Collate periodicals. THE MAROON
,. the campus newspaper, appeanng
weekly ~ t the coli~ year.
S a l ~ , 11 the year~ published by
the l ~ clus. The w,_llow Path ':"""
fineo 1taelf to purely literary eub1ect
matter, while Banter publishes material
of a humorous vetn. The Handbook,
published by the ~pte University
Uruon. ~tams manner of an
informative nat'!re. m carrying out _us
~ of ~ua,nbng the fmhman with
his new en~nment. The Press Bureau
se~ds news items of oollege even_~ to the
daily news~pers ol near-by cities and
New York Caty.
Membenhip on any_ of _the ~itoria1 or
art boards ol the pu,bbcations II obtained
only ~fte,. ~he candidate ~ demonstrated h11 abihty to do the lme ~I work .reqwred and a devo~1on to duty_ in carrying
out _th•. tasks Blllgned to him. Th....,
pubhcati~ use the scrub syoiem,. whereby al\ ~idatn '"'. given ''.'"1"'ct,on_ ~
practice m ~ particular ki nd or wntm_g
that the pubbcat1on calls for. Under th11
SYSI';"' ~ t e records an, kept of ':"ch
candidates work, and n,co~ndat,ons
an, made to the board"'.' the~ 01 these
records. Two .ma.~,,~ cocwder the
amount of th~ indiV1dual s .matenal. accepled_ !or pubhcatt_on the. baa,s 01 ele<:tion.
Buamess a nd c,rcu~~ion departments
are ~ r .th• superv,s,on or
S t u·
dents Advui~ry ~ : an auxthary of
the Students Assoc1at1on. comp()Oed ol
both St Udents and , faculty members.
Each ~per has a business manager~ a
c,rcula_boo manager, memben of the seruor
or Juruer cl..... and as asa15tant ~ each
fr°'? the next i~wer cl- The asa19tant
business and Clrcuiabon managers are
ch_01e11 r~. a nu_mber ol ,cn,bs who n,.
oe,ve tramm~ m ~th departments.
The Sluden~ AIIOOClation eltcll upon
n,co~t,on ol the preceding mana,en. Aloistant managers ~re r,,gularly
a d ~ to full managmhip upon the
e~p,~t,on of one year _of aauafactory serVtce m the 1..., poe,t,on.
Financial n,tums are r,,edved !or work
done in some capacities.
Busi....
IDIRBlerl and editoni-in-chief an, per.
mitted to keep a pe:oentage of the profits
of the publication, although the rest must
be turned over to the Students' Advisory
Board to ro into a sinking fund. Mem•
bers of the Press Bureau an, compensated
by the newspapen to which they supply
news. Univenity Cn!dit to a limited
extent is pv,,n for werk on the periodi·
cala by the English department which
ollero oou,... in the several types ol
writing.
'
In 1868 was founded the Colgate
MAROON, the oldest publication on the
campus. It was then called the Madi9<)1i·
Dramlllo 0'1•nlnllon l'rlduee1 M•ny
Play1, lncludl.. Popular
Currant Oll1rl"11
.
Despite ~he. fac_t that Co~pte does not
tnJOY the d11~t.ion of haVtng a dramat!c
IClw?l, dramatu,a play no small part ,n
the bfe of theoollege. To take the place of
the dramatic ach_ool, a society known as
Maaque and Triangle hu been formed.
Thia society nwnbe,. among ill membero
only thooe wh~ have .~n able to pua
9!'V1!rli very stnct qual1ly1ng ~ti. Every
year, early m the fall. a call II made !or
st~ents who are to _be ch01e11 !or member1h1p. Th... _candidates, although they
usually are picked from the two lower
cl...... may be mtmben 1any clato. The
number or ac~ve memben ~f !he club it
bnu_ted._ making .membemup ,n the orgaruzabon a d11tinct h~. . .
.
The_ work ol the orgaruzation II quite
extensive. Thi• year. besides ~ usual
one act plays, and the reproduction or a
""'."nt Broadway success. Ma9<1ue • nd
Triangle produced the ~t amateur ~vie
ever to be_ •~tempted in ..the collegiat~
world .. Th11 p,~ture. called Roomma~
was wntten, directed and acted en,tireiy
by _Colgate.men. The the~ of the J)ICt~
w~ch depicted Colgate hie. was quite
onginai.
.
. The moot important p u ~ 01 the
pi~ture was the th""'ht 01 having somethmg accurate to show Colgate sub·
freshmen. Many of th~ larger colleges
~d struck upon the idea 0 ~ showmg
pictures or ~e campus. athletic events.
a nd faculty in oroer IO interest young men
who we~ P_lannmg to enter 90me college,
but as th11 idea had become quite
ban,.. Coipte led the ~ay to something
new in bolh the movie and collegiate
worlds.
Sometime just alter Christmas, Ma1que
and Triangle presents several one act
plays. These plays are on a basis
or their literary and acting qualities. The
usual number of three pves this erganization a chance to produce all types of
drama. A comedy, tragedy, and a combinat.ion ol both usually make up the
program.
The major work of Colgate's dramatic
Othe annual thn,e act play. Thi• play is
ch-, after a great deal ol effort and hu
its lint showing in Hamiitoo. The idea
of this production is to bring to both the
students and the townspeople a current
succe11fui production. Along with this
is the thou&ht or doing in an amateur manner what haa been 111ccessfully attempted
by prolessionals. This becomes exceedingly difficult due to the absence of
female students at Colgate. but a great
deal of interest is added to the perlormanoo when boys are cast for girl's
parts.
(COSTINUEO OS PACE 14)
(00.'
?"•~
the
D-•
C..h "
_ __ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _
STUDENT THESPIANS
ACl"'E
T CO''G
Ir• A
" AT'E
°
thread-
portantquationaofthedly. Tlueeofthe
fflCIOUllterl took plawhile tripe were , _ to Sync,ae. Canton, Louirrille, Ky., and Delaware. Ohio.
Althoulh then,
the UIUII number of veteranl on the aquad, Cold! Kall·
'""'drilled a competent group of speaken to meet the teama called fer by this
dlllicult echedule.
For,ometwentyyearsMaroontpoaken
haYe been actively enpaed in intercollegiate conlolll. Up until the lut
few years decbions by judges had been
the method empioye,I in determining the
outcome or the - t e . Thia year however in only thn,e of the seven debates
wore judie'• decisions n,ndered, all of
which were won by the Maroon oombinations.
Thi, brinp the total nwnber ol vietories for Colgate up to 65, out of a po,sible 85, ror the twenty years debotinc hu
been an activity atCdpte, indicating the
excellent record the college holdJ in loren·
sic circles.
On November 9 n,praentatives of
Cambridae University were welcomed ·n
the Memorial Chapel at Colgate. -r!.e
qllfflion to be diacuaed wu in. llubetaoce.
that advert.iainc ii detrimental to modera
lile. The affirmative ,... upheld by the
Enclilh speakm. In meeting the Cam·
bridge team the reix-,taUvea of Colpte
laced men all ol whom an, active in the
politics of their own couotry and ol whom
two an, prominent authors. The natun, of
the 111bject mad• it nocessary to follow
the English method of dilcuaing tho
question in a general way instead of the
American method ol buildin, ract upon
!act in loaical ordtr to support a certaio
definite point. After preoenting their ·
arguments to an audience which filled the
Memorial Chapel a vott was taken among
the memben or the house on the meril5 of
the question. Tne majority or those
preoent voted in favor of the negative.
The second debate O! tfle 10a1011 WII
held in the auditorium ol the Fint Baptilt church or Syraruse under the auapioea of the Syraruse Civic Forum on
March 14. Here a question now or great
interest to citizens of New Yerk State
was discuned pro and con by the two
teams. the Maroon team favoring the
affirmative and the Orange trio upholding
the negative side ol the propooit;on,
"Resolved: Tilat the Government of
New Yerk State Should be Reorpnized
in Accordance with the Following Proviaions;jl.Aieailiatureolonahouselhallbe
elected by popular vote: 2. the Governor
shall be elected by and from the legialatun,; and the Governor shall eiel:t the
Governor's council lrom and with the
approval or the legislature: 3. the Governor and Council shall have the right to be
heard in the legialatun,; 4. the Governor
shall be removable by the legiaiature: and
5. no more than lour years shall elapse
between general elections.
Apln. in
order to locus the attentioo of the audience
on the question itaeif and not the outcome
of the debate a de<:ision of the judges was
omitted and a vote taken in the audience
on the merits of the q~estion. Opportunity was alto given at the ciooe of the
refutatioo to thooe in the audience who
were-
(CONTINUED ON PACE 14)
College Life Number
11iE COLGATE MAROON
.
PROJIINENT POSlflON MAROON ELEVEN HAS STUDENT THESPIANS
OCCUPIED BY MUSIC
SUCCESSFUL SEASON
ACTIVE AT COLGATE
(OONTINUl!D PROM PACB 13)
fine.,...,_
(CONTINUBD rR0M PACB 8 )
put 011 a
under the auapk,ea point lead, which wu IOOll b>t.1111d to
of the Kappe Alpha Theta d'Ority of lO poinll Barbutl, Oranae fullback.
Adelphi C:OU. in the main boll room of r*"'1 33 ,,_. for • touchdown and with
the Hotel Roooevelt in New York. The an extra point ~ for the ~ t alter
1ut oon..n o( the trip came the lollowinc touchdown. With a 10-0 defeat ID front
them. tbe Maroon ..,_,_
evenins at l!aat Oranae, N. J.. at the ,.,
,,.._,.,.
_,_.
Wcarm'• Club. !!efflal man, tripo are 1~ a l l and blocked an ~ PIIDI,
New Spring Models
(OONTINUID PROM PACE 13)
Alter the aponinji porformaru:e the play
ii iuen on tour. The uaual itinerary
inclma oeveral ol lhe ' - of the up11a11 dtlel, and a few of the IUffOUDdinc
...... cot•- ,.__ V-n , N
v·~
a
--•
•
~Y • ow ~•
• - ''The Show off" ii the moat recent
ol Ma,que and Triangle'• productiona.
SPORT SHOES
DRESS $HOES
S'I'REET SHOES
"Ii••• .,..
~-£~t=~~ ~~Fi.~~a-::5:~
Pr~:
Ru..... , . " '1"
[
Vanity QuarteL Beine up of the
beot ......... in the club, it has had •
pn)lllinent place 011 the iirosram o( ewry
oon..n. A ,...- BIO, wblle 011 the New
York trip, the quartet IBnf the Alma
Mater for recording by the Victor Phono-
liamoon dropped back to the Maroon 24yard line and tied the ...... with • pedect
fleld pl. Thut ended anoth<, traditlonal
Oranp,Maroon andiron bottle, which WU
a clwacllrillic conftict of the annual
.._.....,,
papli Company.
The lut to be put hebe the
Colpll &ridmen in the 1926 ....on wu
the Thanlallivinc Day pme with Brown
Uniwnlty at Providence. Undaunlld by
ihe fact that Harvard Yale and Dart,
mouth had fallen bel..,; the attack ol the
famoul " Iron Men" the Colpll mm
~ to np1n 'an loot pr,et1p and
held the Brown machine to a 10-10 tie.
The tie ICXll'e lhatllnld the fond ' - of
the Providence team to claim the Eatem
champlmohlp, whk:h had ._, within
Ila pup up to the time it moountered the Prot- R..i Spien ii in charge of
Maroon. A fleld p l by wuu.n-, put all the dramatic work at Colpll. Prothe Maroon forceo ahead durinc the firat leooor Splera. who ii a nant cn,duate of
half, but a new Brown 11am came out on the Syracuoe Univeraity Oral Enctilh
the field the eecorxS
and ecored a College, i1 extremely. w,,U qualified to like
touchclown and field p l to lead 10-3. can, of Colgate clramatica. He has been
But the characteriatic Colpll spirit intimately UIOCialld with amateur draprevailed and the MalOon opened up a matica for many yeara and lull had aome
fut over heed attack that ""1llld in a experience with prol'81iocore, with Shaugh.-y ctrrying the ball lideo havinc direct..i all the Colpte per.
over the final line. wmi- raited the fonnancea. he hu both writttn and acud
Maroon total to 10 poinll to equal that ol in several very SUthe "Iron Men" and to btolt all hopes under hia dir.ction that the picture
ol beinc awarded the Eallm crown.
"Roommateo" reached ill -1u1 ftlm.
The cx,mplete record of the_,,
ing. In addition to hi& dramatic work,
19
Hamilton Collep
o ProlOIIOI' Spiers io an in&tructor in Englilh
411
Clarklon Tech
o Llllrature.
44
SL Bonaven= College
O
Pitllbursh
·
11le
highe1t
honor
that_
can
be
atwned
19
16
N
by a Colgate otudent m the ~Id of
7
13
~~pn Stall College
clramatica, is election to membfflhip of
38
6
Providence Col!ese
28
O Upolion. Alpha ~lta, ~ national honorary
S)'nlCUIO Univeraity
10
10 ~ramauc lratenuty which numben arM0I
10
Brown Univeraity
10 111 honorary ,_,,be,a many of Amtrica •
_
_
leeclinc actor1 and ac:tftaeS. Memberthip in thio fraternity is dependent upon
218
58 the
_____
number ol leading parll played by a
G eeks Play a Large
student. It is nece,ary .to have ..,.._.
r
fully portnyed three leading c:haractera in
Part In Student Life u imny productiona ol Ma,que and
-TrianaJe, to become one ol the c:hooen lew.
.
(CONffllUID PROM PAGE 4 )
tained by the lratemitieo at the varioul
houoeo. No invitationl for memberahip Christian Union Promotes
may be civen out durinc thil ruahlnc
Religious and Soda! Life
period. On the night of the tenth day,
all fratemitiel - t their bi,11 to the
Pan-Helltnic Council. and this body
. ~OONTINUKD FROM_ ~ACE 6 )
formally placea thete invitations into the IIOdal side,
for it 19 U1rOlllh the
•--•- ol th
t
horn the
effortt of the Un1C>r1 that many speak era
•-=
• men
w
Y are o(
tlonal reputation are -··ht to
reopectlwly extended. Alter rushing oeana
.
~aon the fraternitiea ma bid mtn at will. Colgate for. mtetmp and claooroom _lecY
turu. During the achool year. meetingl
in the varioua churchet are spon~ by
,.,.. I. ,.,.-.
the C. U. C. U. and a t ~ m some
churc~ urpd. The orpn1zallon was re11)01111ble to a poet decree for the change
in chapel exeraoeo broucht about durinc
the put year. The altered procram ha,
promoted creater interest in chapel.
Colgate oenda delep.111 to moot of the
national and sectional college Y. M. C. A.
conl.....,ceo and conVffltiona. This year
the Univfflity wu 1ep1eecnted at thrtt
sucll gatherings. The retuminc delegalll
brine bock the new ideu in effect at other
colleae&, In thil way the Christian Union
k - abreast the p.-ocreaive 1pirit of the
Amtrican col'-·
Rlvallna the Glee Club and the Quartet
in importance ii the Colpll Symphony
Orcheatn, cx,mpooed ot, about fifty
playera. Shortly alter his arrival Pro,-,. Hoe. mer formed a llmlC quartet.
From time to timt he added to thil
nucleus until it became an OCIIL Further
it a minialun> orchee
tnl. For aome timt it WM known • the
"Little Symphony" but finally out into a lull-8odpd IY)llphon) ~chee
tn. It , _ hu filllm different inltrummll. Much ol the equl-t WU
PolBiblo by the sift ol a thouMnd
doUan by Mn. Auaten C,olp_ll_ 1 _few
ymn IIO- Resular ~credit~ II"""
the playera. but occaoionally tripo are
taken for practical expenence. Lall year
the _orcheotn. gave oeveral ooooerta in
conJunction with the Glee Club. It alao
playa at timtl before the lludent body. .
In 1904 a student band ~ lint 1n1t1•
tulld for the P11<1X* ol
fflUIIC
at lootblll pmea and other gatherlna• dur·
Ing the fall and winter. Thia W1111 later cli1bandfd but wu ren,poired about fiw
)'IIIR BIO· It II now ClOl1lpooed ol about
forty men and is firmly eatablilhed u one
of Colga11'1 llrOllC mlllical. orpni~tiona
and renden invaluable oervice durinc the
fall. It ii partly aupportod by an annual
IIC day held during the football -,n,
Thia year the chapel period Wll1I reviled
and one day a - ~ wu oet aide for
IDlllic. B - lilleninc to the Glee
Club Symphony and 1tudont-, the
.-'rpadua11 ~Y hu had the privil'I•
o( beerin& oullide proleaional muo1caJ
artilll, oevera1 ot them nationally known.
n,e notable of u- wu Dr.
SiiPnund Si-th prominent critic anc1
author and lect~ in the fielcl o( mu,ic.
Hi1 lectwe COl1lillld of an analysis of
.....,._t made
lumisrunc
melodlet and their appeal to the ~ .
and wu iUmtralld by oeloctionl on the
piano.
Jllll belare the Cbriotmu vacation
Mill May Banat ol New York, lomaty
a contralto with the San Corio Open
Company and now enppc! in conoert
work, gave an evminc conoert in the
chapel, Early in Much, Cameron
Md.ean an
American baritone,
appeen,d in an
recital in the
Colp11 Chapel, and the next morninc
appeen,d durinc the nsutor c:bapelpslod.
when he - " " ' hill _..,. of dwic
and popular- to the-ta.
-t
evenms
Colpll boull a fine collectiOll or
ooUece- that range from the dramatic
to the bWDOIOUI. These include many
•tlninc football odeo, anu..m., and
man:hiJlc One 1mique Colgate
tradition ii that every IOIIC, when given, ii
eunc twice. In order to ,timulete 1ft in·
aeaae in the n\llDl:8' ol repc c•ntetive
Col8ate the Skull and Scroll Senior
Sodety holdl ml 111111ual IOllC writinc
con- and awards a laqe lovias c:up to
the c1ul writinc and -tine the beat
IOIIC·
Under the dkel:tlon of Proleooor
Hoenner, Colpll lull ._, leading •he
modem trmd ol col1- in ......,tine
more worthy for ill mmical
club - . Durina the put {,ow yeen,
-tally. the dubohave received -ted
_,;tlon for thil move. One famoul
mu1icaJ critic llid in -'<1111 ol .a .-eaent
concert, " Woulcl that every oollep in
country would lollolr the lead ol Colpll
and a few othera who are doing the ame
kind of work. The inftuenoe
,John Ward Men-ts-·
sh·oes
•
.'
-Oil
Inquire of S. M. Tucker
D. U. HOUSE
Compliments
of
BARKER HOUSE
Morrisville, N. Y.
Special Sunday Dinner
GREEN LANTERN
7 PAYNE STREET
HOME COOKING
however.
°
muolcal Hie of !he entlft C0Ul\tl'Y -
be
tremendoul. Colpll Univenity can be u
proud ol ill mutical clubo u it i1 of ill
nat brilliant oratora and debatera."
Five yeara qo Mu Pi Delta, local
honorary musical fraternity, wu cqan;..,d
at Colpte. Each year thooe men who
.haw, ~yed exceptlonaJ ability in any
ol the various mUlicai organizationt and
who have made some .diatinctil(IO contributlon to Colgate music are elected to
membenhip.
The C. U. C. U. cabinet is cornlQod of
a ttprOOOntative from each fraternity and
the neutni body, and ii under the genauperviaion of Dr. A. E. Alton, faculty
odvioor. Too much ettdit cannot be
given to the Jl'OUP for ill oplendid work
throua;hout the colte., year. ~ally
cleaervinc of praioe is Doctor Alton, who
lull giveo unllintingly of his timt that
the - k of the organiJatlon might prove
111«-ful. Unck< his leadenlhip, the
influence of the Union baa made itoelf felt
on the campu, , and its work is held in hi&h1
reprd both at Colgate and outside the
univenity.
'
COLGATE'S BEST PLACE TO EAT. MEALS
av THE DAY OR WEEK
CIGARS
CANDY
Tennis and Baseball Equipment
College Pharmacy
"On the Corner"
KODAKS
SODA
Do You Know
That a dilcrlmlnatlng choice of clotba Qll oaly be
made from nwtments that are complete and carefully
prepared. Without thlt essential there can be no 800d
choice.
In the MENDELSON line you will find that aomethtna
which makes our clothes tile choice al C'-ol,ate men.
I. Jll!tnbtlsnn,
New Haven.
Tallon
Reprwatad by Geo. Mendelaoa at CGIIIC.
Monday and Tuetda)'
Pap Sixteen
C'llleae Life Number
THE COLGATE MAROON
OR. W. H. HIXON
Hamilton
Laundry
FAcuiTr co•POSBD 'Sectional Clubs Ass·,st .PLAN ,01 c01111N1NG
OF COMPETENT MBN
SBMINARIES FAVOUD
(OONTIIMID PROM PAGE 3)
opportunltiel for sn,duate work comp1e1e the curriculum.
C~lage lqanizations
Perform Valuable Service In
Advertlsln& Cubs When
With 11a varymc and widely divene
I n - the Colpte curriculum rlabt11
deoer-. prOIJOf ,_ition.
more
__
' - - • the faculty, which OOIJlilta T-.ald the adminiltration in opreadins
of 66 men, many of whom enjoy national information about Colpte . _ ..,,.
Pay your bill at the lat and inla'na~ repu~tiona for ,-,ch pocti.., mldoota and to !Olla' O!lpte
wort and apenmenta in lhel. 1eopecllve acti¥ltieo whk:h take place in tbe oeclloal
of the month.
lludl&
that dub. ilpr IIDt .....-al ........
'
Dr.
Gtorwe
l!artlJn
Cutten. ~ t of of 111...,.. comli,c from the -Yiclnlty
Socks darned, Buttona
the uniYawity, ii one of tbe mc.t prom!- or preporatory ocllool haw orpni..S into
-eel · on, and RJpa nmt educatcn ln the country and ii ln dubo.
continual deaoand u a lectwer en Nlllc·
At - t tlwre are el&lll of -eel up FREE.
1ouo and poyc:holc,ciaJ oubjecta. Hil dubo which actively function on
~ ''The l'lychok,sy ol Alcoholi1111", th• camp>a. The Watchuna Oub rep'
'The l'lycholoaicll of Chria!!ax county New Jwy· Sea and
C. A. S~RAGUE,
lllnity", · ~ Thouoand Yean of Shell, the Atlantic City diltrict; Scalp and
Mmtal Hoellna' , "Mind: Ito Orialn and Blade, Buffalo and vlcinity·the Anthrmte
Prop.
Ccal" and "The 11uat of Lellwe" ~re Club. N ~ .,.;,,aylnnla the
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ . nallmally INnilior: and hil artlcleo on Weotcheoler dub.
County
DEN1'1ST
Students
Over Collese Pharmacy
Latter Are on Tour
or....,
,_ta
w-
Colgate
Photographer
of
<.:O..nNum PROM PAGE 4 )
hirther - k which will pw him the
Muter of Ara and later the Bacllelor of
D1v1n11y d - .
The oem1n1ry 1111doo.. are in
Eat.on Hall. -blq-toonjoy
a-
inclepeoldoot We than othenrile.
Two atrona ....,..._ ailt in the
focm of .tbe Eaton Hall F- . . p and
the Corinthian Chapter of Pbl Upoilon
" - , national bononry theololical
fratemlty. The termer .-ta a feelilll ol
in tum fOllal a
opirlt of a,opmation in the dormitory life
of the hall. Tbil poup ii ~ of oil
: nidenta of the Hall, while the hanorlry
fraternal poup llmlll its membenhlp to
11- wbo ....., obtained a bllh ocholarlhlp '""?'d and hrfe , . _ an active inm ........,..._. a4aln.
Durinl the pat wlDm a - poup hu
had ill oripl In the form ol the Molphl
Society. Ito ~ ii to conduct • ·
-
~-·which
~ and rellciwldeopreod attenllcn.
The Mount H«moo and - a n d provideaul~IOloandquartet
Peddie dubo are comix-1 of otudenta muok: at church fwlctiona. With this end
Dr. William H. Crawthaw
who attended two preparatory invlewoervlceohavebeenconductedIChoola.
Sanday ewnlna In nearby citim and towns
All ~ orpniiation• are attemptina includinc Syracuoe, Waterville. and Earlin oome way to al)lmd abroad 1hc name or ville.
.
. .
thrir Alma Mater in order that Colgate . An annual recept~, which II held oome
might be - C u l in culling the beAt time befon, the Chrutmas receoo, and a
poogible material ror its undera,-aduate Senior Party are the outstandina IOcial
Come in and aee our
body. To do this the memben visit events or the yar at the Seminary. Senior
BASEBALL
high 9Chools and 0 ;h.,. places giving in· Party io hold .in May, and at this time the
ronnalion c:oncerning the opPortunilies hall honon its sn,duatin& members.
and
ollered on the Colgate camJ)There are .....-al reaoons advanc:ect.ror
'
FISHING TACKLE
wherever po•sible cooperate with the the _removal of the Colgate Theol?£ia)umni orpni-zations in a definile pro- Seminary to Rocheater, .For a long time lt
SPECIALS
gram of activities.
hu been rett that there 1s "'? need for two
Theee grou._pa, hov.-ever, do not ftlnction Baptist. 1c:hooll to, cloeely satuated. Abo
merely for thenulelves, but by encouraging the coat of t\\'0 su<=;h achool1 teems to be
Dean of the Colle11
participation in activitiK by their own grea.ter than the maintenance of one strong
members contribute much to the me oC seminary. ,
.
.
.
the college itselr. and in serving to keep
The comb1nataon will ~ t e an enttrely
Dean William H. Crawshaw, profesaor many of the alumni in touch with the new. plant. Each w1U &1ve up any
of Ge>eral Literature, is one of the belt college make mott effective the work of chenshed cw,toms and tradition• for the
known authorities in hi• field in the the Alumni Corporation.
·
purpOSe or fonru~g a firm ..~bhshmffl_t:
country today. Hi• lecture cow.o are
Another important reature or the samona the moot popular on ~ hill. HI• tional clubo is the aid which they give in that or the new instit~tion. Although a
books are "1be Interpretation of Liter- thrir partic:ular vidnity when a Colgate name has not been decided upon, 1t 11 an
ature''. "The Malting or English Liter&· ocpruzation is givlna a pmormaru:e ot eotablillhed fact that the _ , t title will
t="· "TheGeniusorChrist", anannoted any oort. The Glee Club is eopecially not be uled.
. .
edition or Dryden's "Palamon and benefited by th, interest which the
Al_ to the choice of dean. noth1na "
FURNITURE
Arcite" and " Lit,rary Interpretatioo or sectional clubs =te when tho fonne, is defirutely known; but the faculty will cooLire."
.
on a tour. In thii way the groups act as ai.!lt of the _p rof,euors fro!11 each of the
COLUMBIA RECORDS
Dr. R. ·w. Moore, professor of German, links between the organizations concerned present eemmanet.• It wdl be neceseary
isinternationaly ramous asa lecturer. His and th• public.
to how,e the ochool_m the preoent Roches.____________...;: I work durina the war, when he lectured The eligibility 10 membership in these to< buildings until ne:' ones . can be
for The American Red Cross. The Na• dubs is a matter of residence. Thcir
and ~
. eqmpment 1n1talled.
tjonal Security League. The Lta,g,Je to number varies from ten to forty or more. Acll~ on new bu1ld!np has been dela~
'Enforce
Peace and The Y. M . C. A., re- according to the number or student, from pendma the oomplet1on of necessary legisLincoln
Fordaon
ceived highest oommendation.
the respective sections.
• lat.Ion.
Dr. H. O. Whitnall, head or the Geology ============= The lile or the aeminary is bound up
Department, is a man of eminence in the
with that of the university in all respects.
field of Geology and is the author of ''The mentioned as leaders in their own studies: The student group is further kept in
Prolesoors Arthur W. Smith. head or the touch with the activities or the denominaAuthorized Sales and Dawn or Mankind."
Profeaaor Frank C. Ewart, head of the Mathematics Department. Wayland M . tioo 10 that conatantly the purpose or the
Service
French Department, has tong been recog- Chester, head of the BiolocY Oepertment, rounders may be fully carried out.
Barraina In
nized as one of the leading prof--. in Clement D. Child, head of the Physics
this subject in the country. He ltu Department, Ellery C. Huntinat,ln, DiUSED CARS
trawled and studied extensively in rector or Phyoical F.ducation, Alfred E. Honorary Societies
Phone 70
Europe and especially in France and u a Alton, Secn,tary or the University. and
Reward Proficiency
result has a thorough knowledge of the William H. Hoemier, Director or Music.
French language. literature and people
It is men who, combinina a kindly
-.
which brings added interests to his clalle8, interest in the undergraduates with a vast
( CO.~TINUF.D FRO~ rAG~ 13)
Dr. Freeman H. Allen, head of the l11nd or knowledae and ability to teach, Sigma Rho. national honorary fraternity
History Deportment hu allO travelled make Colgate a place not merely to ac- •ith mono than 50 active chapten throughextensively. A,, a result he has not only quire knowled,e. but a IOW'Ce of ins.pirap out the United States. As only those who
oboerved American methods or teaching tion to the students who gather from their have distinaulllhed themselves on the
but hu made ezha11Stive studies or his instruction and example ideall which will platform ""' bid by Delta Sigma Rho. its
Hotel Hamilton
subject. His wide teaching experience, remain with them through life. The fact membership is small, uNally remaining
coupled with his travel make him a that many of them have spent the beat less than l\\-dve.
Ford• a Specialty
very instructive lecturer.
years of their life at Colgate, not only inTwo aen.ior IOCieties play an important
Pror....,, Joeeph F. McCr,gory, head or terested in teaching but in knowing men, part in camp11S lile. Gorgon's Head and
the Chemistry Department. is the oldest makes them well fitted to undertake the Skull and Scroll. Bids are extended to
Chevrolet Sale• and
professor in the university, having started task. With a curriculum ever increasing members or the graduating dass in recoeto
teach here in 1838. Foreign study and in variety or sub;ec:ta and new°"° or this nition or their campus accomplishments.
Service
individual research have made him an type oomine in every year, Colgate is Each cooperates in promoting activity
authority on the subject. and the books he oertain to retain its place among the fore- and progress among the students in
has • ·ritten are widely u!M!d as texts.
moot ol the smaller American colleges.
Colgate.
Dr. Donald A. Laird. Prof....,, or
While at MANLIUS
Psychology. while still a youna man and a
comparative newcomer to the Colgate
STOP at
faculty. has helped to advance the roputation of Colgate by his research work in
COMPLIMENTS OF
the psychological laboratory. His articles
or a scientific nature in several periodicals,
his books and his maga:dnc. "Industrial
P&ychology havedonemuch to guarantee
him a national reputation.
and be REFRESHED
Space does not permit mention of
every distinguished name on the facuJty,
but the follo-ing men deserve to be
.._,..,_ta,
T. B. Bell
Piet·r ow's
SUITS PRESSED
for SO Cent•
R. Rausa
Confect Iona
Marazinea
.~irarettfll
Ciran
H.K.
VASSAR
,..
..____________
,.
When You Come to
COLGATE
Eat at the
Green
Lantern
'
Thoae·Goocl
CHOCOLATE SODAS
Crowe's
Drug Store
,
The Orvis
Gift Shop
We have juat the
NOVELTIES
for
YOUR MOTHER'S or
SWEETHEART'S
•
BIRTHDAY
ere<:t.ed
LELAND MOTOR CAR CO.
WEEDEN'S
GARAGE
,--------------------------'"I
SMITH'S RESTAURANT
LELAND COAL co.
Colleae Life Number
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'!RACK TEAM ECLIPSES
ALL FORMER RECORDS
-t
(CCNTINWD , _ PACa 5)
S,- the ftnt
to be
- In a vanity Ind< and 1111d-. with
the
that the Maroon _ , Ito lint
Ind< 'rictay over the Oraap. In a tmt will newr·be ""1otllll by U- who
witne••d It. When the lat
the
jump, callod. • llnt place Im
either 111m w t victory. l'le•k'AIIIY
outjumped by two S , mtriel.
. . , _ put -,.thine he bad hll
llnll lelp to win both the ...,t and the
by a maclD ol 3-4 ol • Inch.
Capaln {lraolnl led hil 111m In the
100Cill& with finll In the low and blah
hunllel. md a IOCOlld in the half mile,
wblle Sharl broke the OCJlloao record In the
dilcul u,,- with a beeve ol 129 ft. 3
lndwl. Tryon lllamd with a lint In the
pole vault. Charla, I oophomore md
later elected c:aplain o1 the "l:7 111m,
carried away the booorl In the dalhu with
finll in both the 100 and 300-,ard.
The week followinc the triumllh at S,..
cuoe,c.o.dl Rourketook hil._to W•
Punt for a tJuee comered with
Anny and N. Y. U. The cadllt ms Id
nine fintl for a ea,re ol 85 1-6, with the
Maroon - · Ceplain Granlllc lpin
led the ocorins by taldns the low bisrdlel
and the 880-yanl race. and a __.,
in the hich hunlla Cilarlfa lnlfllled the
~tionl ol Colpte mm by wimllnc
hil
In the '"!'lUIY __,t
be the W• Point ceconl in the tima
of ten IOOOllds flat. Tryon the other
hich aoorer. Hla pointl were . . - by a
lint in the discus. thin! in the pole
vault and fourth in the 9hot put.
On the two sucaosive Saturdays. Colpte overwhelmed Hamilton C-oilep md
Alfred.
In the Hamilton moo£. Clwl•
ranthel00-yd.inthetimeol94-SIIOCl0Dlla,
...,.t
-tt.
hi'<>_...,,_
.
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,
THE COLGATE MAROON
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IDEAUY LOCATED IN PICTUIBSQUB TO'ffll
· COLGATE IS A.PLY EQUlrPED FOi STUDY
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.
College Men
Suit Themselves
(ClltfflNIJID , - PACa 3)
tained in Lalhrop Hall, Eaton Hall, and
balldkw, wblch face lbe quadranp. the 0-ical Laboratory.
are the two <*leot bulldlnp, on the Ealon Hall, - t ol the aala eoUep
bat both i.n .,_, ,_,tty b o ~ ""'- the thoolop:al Nn11nary.
When they come to this store for
iemochhd IICld are weO-equlpped lndudlnc daaooml. dormitory. and
their clothi111 needs they don't
darmltorleo. W• Hall ii the older o1 the a111coo Ito quiet and charmins location
have
to be "aold" on a Dartlcular
'-Yins .,_, built in 1827. £alt _._ it an ld1111iaidenco Im U... 1tudystyle.
They come in with an Ideal
Hall - completed in 1834. They ...,. tac for tho m!nlllry.
suit firmly in mind - and they
lain IIOQomodatiooll for rm tlrm ISO Tllo Admln"""tion Bulkllnc. whk:h la
rec,ngnire It when we
tlwn
_..,IL The ailllp ,.,.11_ ii localed wr the main mtnnce to the com""'- lnone of the ma~z:iplea oC
ID 1be 1atur bulldlnc, wb11e W•
Hall cludll the auditorium M UU!e
Maher and Kuppe . clothes.
- • • llqe ooc1a1 coom.
a1 de OOilll, and Amona: the · final on the for the ....,.. 11111...ity cffldall.
Clllll)IIO ii Andmn Hall. the Mwllt
111,tor Hall. known 10 the "Y".
""'!llleted donnitory. Built in 1'lldor M a ClirilUan Union bulldlnc,
ltJle, ol native the hall ii in aop- The lludlnt poll olllce ii located here.
Inc with the - of the CIIIIPUI i,..n,111111, There are allo oommittee and readlns
"Styles for the Educated Tu te''
which It 090lfoob rcom the Glth. It roomo for the - ol .mda11ad- and
•
•
IMMl - f l l - 8' nu-,. Each ICllte ii lbelr .....,iat\ca. It will be 1emodeled
Oppoaite Hotel Utica
r.lUrld by a 11qe fire.place. Tbls into a laallty bulldlns when the I
dormitory built in 19123 md wu the Cbrlltlan Unt... toulldlns to ClOllqlieted.
UTICA, N. Y.
sift o1 Rlc:hard C. Cclpte.
Pl.- lor the Cbrlltlan Unm
.
'
S!Plmon Hall, the addition to baildtac hne .,_, dola,ed by the lire .,__ _ _ _ _ _ __
the com- i i , _ under....-... whldl clllta.,,..S the old umnalllllum lut
Ja+t ol. Audcew1 1fa11 and back ol oprlnc. A will be placed on
•
,lh;annl i:wt. It II the sift o1 Robert Ito 111U bowe,..,, to.form one ol the llneot
Has',i•, the dooor o1 the Harta-. c:oUeae Y. M. C. A. bulidlllll in the
Memaclal at Yale, and ii to be a donni- country. Here will be the poll offloo. a
tmy IOiclly Im fnalunen, It will have llqe auditorium, committee and
~ rm 96 boyo, and is to readln& roo,m, and other nec111ary
be ready for occupancy Mil fall.
quarten.
Fnm the artildc point of view, the Col- Two ntber buildinp are owned and
pte Ubrary ii the final bulldinr on the operated by the unlwnity, althoush not
Thia store gives the best ol service lo our Collete
comp-. Situated a llhort diotanco up the located upon the campuo pcopor. The
Men. Nationally ad vertised merchandise can be had
bill, It is a center, not only Im.literature, Infirmary. on Pleuant Street, i.. modem
but allo for art and advanced ltudies. The equi-t for twenty-live .-tiento, and
here In College styles-such as~man Memorial collection includes 11 the headquarten of the coUeae health
excellent reproductions of many ol the departmoot. The CoUeae Street Dorm'llincludes about one hundred thousand Street just o/1 the campuo. provides livlnc
.obllllOI,
Hlnriel
being
!or more
than
_ _ _auzlllary
___
___
_main_ _quarters
_ _ __
__
_twenty
_ _ men.
__
n-
'*'•"'
aw
n-. ....
I
Maher Brothers
.
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.
Clothing and Furnishings
Headquarters for
· Colgate Men ·'
Hickey-Freeman and
Michaels-Stern
Suits and Overcoat s
Knox Hats. Florsheim Shoes
MacGregor Spor t Wear
Manhattan Shir t s
within one-fifth of a aecond of the 'lln><>Onl. His remarkable time lll8hlilhed
a now coliby his teammate, Captain Gruins the tape in I :57 minuta, runlnc the half
mile apinot Alfred. This time, lik.,.i...
oet a new Colpte for the event.
The record ol 19'l6 with itl victories
over Syraaa, Jia?,ilton and Alfred. and
ito breakins of coll
rACK Mac
events. wu a most succeaafvl teUOI\, es,.
pecially in view of the mediocre proopect&
with which the )'Mr waa opened.
Colgate was apin . ~tee! at the
Millroee Gamea in New York this winter
and apin captured third honon. The
Maroon quarut had thnle men lrom the
freahman ,quad of Jut year. Clark. Brown.
and Moore. Miller. a eenior, was the
fourth member.
The Joos ol Gruins wu a distinct handicap to Coech Rourke. for it Jelt the ,quad
very much wakened in the middle distance run1. However. Roll and Brown
from the yenrlins team. with Miller. de,.
veloped rapidly and have shown to 800d
advantage in all meetl this year. Clark of
the mshman ,quad or wt year promiltd
to give the Maroorl proper strength in the
Jona distance racoo, but unfortunately wu
taun sick before the ......, opened and
has hem unable to pee form.
Faci111 N. Y. U. in the mt meet of the
"""""· April 23. Colgate manaced to
balance Ito ltrencth enouah to win 66 to
00. Roi). winner of the 44().yd, and 880yd .. and man in the 220-yd., was
high ocorer. Hedeman broke the c:olleae
record in the javelin with a throw of 175
feet s inchel. He aJeo took mt in the
ahot put. I.me triumphed in both high
and low hurdle ,....,
In the Army meet Coipte IUllered a
slump. many of the men fallinfr to approedl their usual perfonnancoo.
The with Syncuae May 13 saw
the Maroon come bade to true form after
the Army slump and bat.tie the lmlrlC
Oranp team on even term1 until the final
evenL The Maroon oullCOnld her traditional rival 46 to 18 in the 6eld eventl
but WIii equally O U ~ on the track.
Thohurdle timeo were very cloee to the college
marks, u was Stafford'• hNbt in the high
jump. Roll dilplayed a a-t fiahtins
spirit when he came from wt place in the
half mile to two Sy"""* otan on the
llrailhtaway and to follow Proudlock,
Orance coptain, to the tape with only a
rew feet ....,.tine them.
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UEEN
Clark & Jaquay ~~~~~iLET
SHERBURNE, N. Y.
Used Cars of All Kinds
Will take FUR COATS In excha nge. Send for Ust.
us what you have.
Tell
Thos. Stradling & Son
The Quality Store of
Hamilton
ALONG THE DRIVE
Clothes for All Occasions
I
CARLW.BAUM
I
TAILOR
[]
MEN ' S WEAR
LATHROP HALL
-
1'HE ®Ii.GATE MAROON
.
0:iP1 ".illl\la tw
.,
•
•
c:.ltate '""
.
THE PLACE TO EAT
f
'
The GETMAN
'
-
I
Restaurant
Lunch C·o unter in Connection
JJ JJ
Correct Clothing
The VALUE is On
the PLATTER
for Colgate Men
Suits Topcoats Overcoats
A Real Selection to Choose From
s37.5o $40 s45
to
.
I
JJ
$60
JJ
110-12-14 EAST JEFFERSON ST.
W. F. SULLIVAN
122 Eut Gen- Street.
SYRACUSE, N. Y.
"20 Yurs ol Oulstandlnll Quality"
Opp. Onondara Hotel
I'
;
SYRACUSE,N. Y.
,,
I•
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I:
College Life Number
THE COLGATE MAROON
F. 0. Church
Page Nineteen
The National
Hamilton Bank
Interest 4%
Colgate University Supply Store
Everything needed In Fountain Pens, Loose Leaf
Notebooks, Typewriter Paper and all kinds of
School Supplies.
Dep_osits over $1,900,000.00
Resources over $2,300,000.00
Colgate and Fraternity Stationery, Pennants and
Banners, Books and Magazines.
We are Prepared to Extend
Every Banking Service.
Birthday Cards and Folders and a GIFT SHOP
Section.
Safe Place to Satisfy Your Musi ca l Needs
COLCIATII: INN
BUCKINGHAM & MOAK
H A M ILTON. N . Y,
ESTABL ISMl!D 1821
The Oldest Retail Piano Business
in the United States.
Special Attention Given to
Guests of Students
D. D. HOOPER, Manager
Anything that is to be Printed
Can be obtained a t
Pianos Radios
Victrolas
119-121 Genesee Street
UTICA, N . Y .
Good Things to Eat
The Hamilton Republican
BLODGETT'S
Office-th e home of
308 S. Clinton St.
Sy r acu se, 1' . Y .
GOOD PRINTING
Restaurant
Coffee Shop
Quality Furniture
of distin ct value. Prices never inflated
in order to give big discounts. T he attractive and la sti n g quality of our
goods is the surest proof of hundreds
of 1ati1fied patrons.
The Leaders -
Williams & Morgan
31 Genesee St. a nd 110 John St.
UTICA, NEW YORK
Smalley's
Hamilton Theatre
a
FIRST a nd BEST in
An1usements
Page Twenty
THE COLGATE MAROON
College Life Number
When In Syracuse
EAT
'
·'
AT
~
.
O'Donnell's
482 S. Salina St.
E. Jefferson and S. Warren Sts.
118 W. Fayette St.
e, ;,·:,
I
SLEEP
.
)
AT
Empire Hotel
"'
~-
/'
Salina and Genesee
FAMOUS SINCE 1879
Globe Hotel
Smokers of Napoleons know the keen enjoyment of
a mild, eatlafyln& amoke l Seven alzea- lOc and up.
NOW-Better than ever
IWo bJ POWEI.L 6 GOLDSTl!JN, INC., 0..W.. N. Y,
40 S. Salina St.
NAPOLEON Cigars
-FOR-
Footbal I -Basebal I- Basketba 11
and all
School and Social Activities
''PLAY SAFE''
Take a Colonial Coach