SUNY at New Paltz - Paltzonian Yearbook (New Paltz, NY)
- Class of 1938
Page 1 of 148
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 148 of the 1938 volume:
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'Vx p4,3f9-mf, 7 37 '35-if '2, ,,flj2?Vi- I-ily. V- -Q V- lg 5-'Z 1. QQ.-ff-if 2.1fQiVq f:'?ff-,1f,Vi- '-?' 5-1.1.2, -View if 'ff-wif. if is Effg:-i'i 15... 1 migzf- 15.1. 2 1-ff W-V+-'ry 7-if --14, iggpfxwff w: 3.2 E? Q' ff EQ ig -Q ,,,f2Q-flyfl -',. 1 'QQ fig' gli,'Q1X5'f.7jQ'f9',Q-6 2gAQQQgjQf-1.- FWSVQ' fiQX'f' kQi'QjQ'- Q, V221 ,ffl-gr. -'Vgjgzz'Q-f,jifVQ'fi'f,,, - ?Qi?.w f H-2' .,z'-M. TV.uiaesilgr-'-VP:-rf.--'QM.-.iq,5iP1VV-Tiff3 gVVl5:r1f-'. V-- fig-ET-VX'ig5V,f' f'fi.C3 4- J .ff ,wx T-T-fi.-.Qi iz. 1: -VQ-5V,V'Yi,:'. 3.4.-KTA Yhsyf -VJ V'V'3.G.-..-9' 'J4.j'1?i2f' fl-FQJ-V V Bi- ' ihsi.,-iV',fi':V, .DNA -V.jV.V-Qpusfjif, fi'rf--ZX.-3. 5, uct, 555115 E25 11 V+ A W V V-?zf.Q'?A 3-fl 1125 -5'3x'iW'-f 366-5-gyAQ3V541iia?i1VTf.F7f PPM-SQ Q1 1 -3r---.:.w1ff.4.m- ' ',3.4Q-HV1-?T??fi1f?T'.V. .Vail QQXM-J.: ii: 13391-ik2i' M6425 1'S-Vvzikigf f.f,Qw55V ALTZONIAN For I956 'YYY' iY GNOQAN STATE. NORMAL school. NEW PALTZ NEW YORK x ', 3 X 11 - 1 , .lgggfwff A Q i,' ,, , I FA E .. 1 -6 X H if 1' ' 1 , M524 Q- A' y . , 5 : if 9 X ' i fm 4 P E1 9 , Q I F f f 2 K S xv' ' 1 ' If in sf ji vii , .Q ., . , Le . 1 5 I J, S GQ ,: 4 W 5. . Ll, : A ' ' ig? xl 5 5' 1 . 1. an , I Q if L , ' 1 ' I 3 i . Q. 4 .. YQ .ii !ft.. Q9 ,..k 'Q96ii Ill5-iliisi-fa,-it wg 4,:,'e'5'fIf!'l v , 5, feg--v.ega': 'MSHPQE 3 ' gn E a-Z '57 Q5 'ii 3 sr '1 .1 1-I '55 , ag, -1 N 1. SK .R t , I 5 4 5. E I s , K w a . 4 f. 8 N 5 ir Af h Q 2 U NL xx' ir, I g,, .3 x .. N5 1 .+ 3 U4 -. g 1 Hz . 1 'gy .4 ,Q x ,W i gf 1 Q, 4. n C 3 ,- M 422 . 1 H A J ,. X I ' ' ' I v . 1 5 11 3 P f xg- m A., N si .v , - .F,. N.-r .- 1 .: nw' , -- !'Erg'r --,. n..:...-.-- OST vivid of New Paltz memories carved in high relief upon our minds are those perennially linked with our Emily Z. Liebergeld. How clearly we shall always see here-as she flings forth some barbed sally, tinged with exquisite humor-as she delivers a rousing speech on sound economic policy--as she shoos the grinds be- fore ,her on her brisk evening walk home. Radiantly, Emily Z. ensconces herself in the niche of our hearts forever hers. xv: 4, ,yr 5-s-2-V1 , U. if ysxif-J T -Q-.r E ,:-uzqm, f. W-ff lfji.. '- if 1 , p A ff s-4155: Q 1 yr 'Y' 55.133-. 1 L -2 5, xv, -, ,f-,M 'fs-'z 'wQLJLaf s 4 ffrgiwysu f is 1 11x12-sew-r is-Masq . i- . j-'f: ' f ri' V- 4 ,3- '-Uf' 432, M 'iid-T .Jw , Q-fl?-f 5-if ff -2' ff -.1-5513? i EFA' -' af N f .- .N , .W-,N-. sf qi, - tg. 6? , my 1 vw- , lr.,-J, xr, ,- S ' by-K mxI,e-rim--Q r - so -, 2?gM.vqsagif.e,wgf-, I?-QI? -if mga? 3, ' M Q. 1,25 -L wi! t ti! I kgs- ff:-12-1.11 , 4 s9:C'?xS a 53555-1H'Qfmis?2,Eai,lQl:' - 4 1 . ffl'-Q , 1 -A f, 5 -- - rw- fi U -f . ,i ..,.i, y. i ,. W W R , N-XA-f - gvcvsa- s- -vf,.'.Qs'.1-- ' ' WTA 1:31-2r:,egfAg,w mwsizwf45,-gif-5-Y. 4, -. 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Our private life Iine in-as I :Hmm Scene of hopeful Thespicrns trials -..Hz -V fb. r , ,,-Q' ,-,, 145 ri ' ,L 'R Q ,Q ' ,v ' Y ,rf 5 w X,-V . ,.r. en. if Q- w. v E f E ,if '1 ,xx L- 1 kv ' if 4 14 if I 'SY H . 14 ,Wi Lk H fx lg, gk I A :S ' i?f, wwf , J- A .HW .uw JAY' wc- Clfl nf-fa? if -U f ' 2 HP, v 3'-:fr Q rn'-52 al .dw-'K ,fl f bitt? , .S ,.-fp A f W A HX ., A , , 4 mg ,baggy 1.3. MQ.. fy .N w-f.A Q if fx ,ray 1 J .-mm. ,- - ,kfwi The paths we're soon to follow one ri ' Y H r up 5- -- 'v ll uuud,ialnn lil! llill llllHllQln lvlmlvuull Ilsnullnnl I9 Ilfliliil K my-Qwsf ,. '1 F '1IIl '1 I: is ' I 1.1! ESQ. 0 9 ll ll Q L-.T l l W l ffxf'Rw'Nxxx, NM QURW 4' . V gx 1 q .'1,- . - ,Y WF! 4.-. '-if 1' ' A F' 5- -1, , i , . 4 wwf? . FQ 71 ' ' ' Q-ff w?t:1s.v. if ' 'f-sfwyhf-1.--, .. 'fkrjaSg.4Mg5.Q,.-.,.. . . fa, 'ffxsgmfyarbx A ,, kf,,,4. f '- xl- Y .Qi xg, J.. ISA , . :GHS .L r F E, 1 A, 1 - k A+ 5 2 The Chief 1 .MA ,Q go,-:HL 1. ., : - Q-.w..:.1-Qwrsz. BENIAMIN MATTESON Director of Training Truly cr man of destiny our destiny. GRACE I. MGCARTHUPL Dean of Women Keeps our dcrtes straight. 21 CORA E. VVADSWORTI-I CRITIC Keeps everybody on the string ETHEL MGCFARLANE CRITIC Smartly accoutred FLORENCE C. WICKS CRITIC Streamlined footwear ILENE H. COMPTON CRITIC Queen of the culinary art ARNOLD R. VERDUIN FLORENCE A LANE IENNIE LEE DANN HISTORY MATHEMATICS MUSIC Prodigious joke repertoire Hawaiian enthusiast One of the Bobsey twins- ROLAND G. WILL MARION H. HARDING HISTORY MUSIC Little Boy Blue Soczrs her way through bars W1 3-Pwwvwo RUTH MACK I-IAVENS A. BRUCE BENNETT MARY ELLEN RICH ENGLISH ENGLISH RURAL EDUCATION Not too earthly Daddy That is your little problem- GERTRUDE M. THOMPSON CRITIC HOWARD I. MOSHER Thimbletul ot energy RURAL EDUCATION From my observation of Paul-- ELIZABETH LOSEL A place for everythingl EDITH HOLT RUTH BENNETT cO JW4:CC Ummmmmmmm-those brownies!! ESTHER A. BENSLEY Modern Artic: supreme adventure ART ART ART ART LESLIE S. OAKLEY CRITIC Under the spreading Oakley tree ABIGAIL MERRITT CRITIC Solving for ihe unknown quantify MARY I.. PAGE EMILY Z. LIEBERGELD SPECIAL CLASS LIBRARIAN Lei's ploy store Heels, heels-Who, us? EDNA B. TAYLOR LIBRARIAN Rapid-lite converscziionolist Q-WL-TiuQZQ I BERTHA A. BENNETT PHYSICAL EDUCATION Oi course, there's more prestige . . MARY GRAY DEANE PHYSICAL EDUCATION Always pedclin' around LOREN D. CAMPBELL PHYSICAL EDUCATION Any questions po-a-cz-Q-I? RUTH E. IONES CRITIC Hove you met Miss Iones? DOROTHY GIDDINGS CRITIC Don't be focetiousn MARY IOSEPHINE MUFFLY CRITIC Knows all the country lanes . . STELLA HIGGINS CRITIC 'iWhc1t do you think I am . . . lightning? GERTRUDE E. STROBEL CRITIC You little rascal . . . LUCY A. E. LONG CRITIC Long and short of it G. BARBARA PFAFF ENGLISH Another romantic rebel IEANNETTE VAN ARENDONK ENGLISH A votre scrnte' REBECCA MCKENNA ' ENGLISH Delightlully erratic IESSIE T. PRISCH HOWARD B. HEALTH HOPFMANN You don't work, and I MUSIC know itil! MABELLE C. FERRIS Music ls My Hobby - recording No. Il DIETICIAN FO, Custodian of the Calories .,., A -K MAUD S. RICHARDS PSYCHOLOGY ?the other Bobsey twin EDGAR V. BEEBE PSYCHOLOGY purposes of illustration . CHARLES E. HUNTINGTON EDUCATION Head over heels . . . EMORY G. IACOBS HISTORY Dyed in the wool OLIN TODD FRAZIER HISTORY Liberty . . . Equality . . . Fraternity CHARLOTTE S. TAYLOR IANE TULLOCH SCIENCE SCIENCE Ramps through Physics She swings from a sky hook GERTRUDE I. NICHOLS SCIENCE MAIDA BUCHANAN STENOGRAPHER Little Miss Newly-wed ARLENE L. BARTELD STENOGRAPHER B-I-N-G-O ! ! AILSA REID SECRETARY All right, gentlemen 26 We generally shine our shoes Our loyal mentor A 2 OFFICERS President Mary Darrow Vice-President Shirley Stewart Secretary Iohn Meagher Treasurer Edward Fitzpatrick Roselin Adelstein Roslyn Heights Hints ot sophistication Pi Sigma Lambda . . . Outing Club . . . Basketball . . . House President . . . Amelia B. Amelio Harrison Languidly linguistic Artemis, Secretary . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Chorus, President . . . Country Lite Club . . . Outing Club . . . Soccer . . . Tennis . . . Emily E. Anderson Troy Sprightly bustier Arts and Crafts, Vice President . . . Chorus . . . Outing Club . . . Country Lite Club . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Student Council . . . Soccer . . . Archery . . . Vira E. Atkins New Paltz More power to you, Mrs. A. 31 Virginia Babcock Haverstraw What an imagination! Theta Phi, President . . . Lantern Bearer . . . lntersorority Council . . . Student Council . . . Chairman lntersorority Play . . . Eastern States Conference . . . Outing Club . . . Archery . . . William H. Barton, Ir. Newburgh Clio's chauffeur Glee Club . . . Band . . . Orchestra . . Intramural Sports . . . Kathryn M. Bell Garnerville Belle of the Board Agonian, President . . . Paltzoniari . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Dramatic Club . . . Chorus . . . Outing Club . . . Country Lite Club . . . Soccer . . . Helen Barbara Bender Glen Head Our blonde Venus Artemis . . . Dramatic Club . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Basketball . . . Soccer . . . Archery . . . Outing Club . . . 32 Ronald C. Blass Poughkeepsie Three E's aren't so bacl-are they, Ronnie? Delta Kappa . . . Country Life . . . Rifle Club . . . Paltzonette . . . Basketball . . . Baseball .. . Football . .. R. Kenneth Bloomer Walden Embryo Bel-Geddes Delta Kappa . . . Arts and Crafts . . . Dramatic Club . . . Community Chest . . . '33 Jennie H. Berlt East Chatham lndustry is her motto Ko Sdon Ya . . . Arts and Crafts . . . Outing Club . . . Country Lite Club ... Archery... Erna Blache Brewster Fount of perpetual youth Artemis . . . Glee Club . . . Chorus . . . Country Lite Club . . . Outing Club . . . Riding Club . . . Soccer . . . Archery . . . Tennis . . . Barbara Bossert Cochecton The little genius Ko Sdon Ya . . . Arts and Crafts . . . Chorus . . . Band . . . Outing Club . . . Country Life Club . . . Basketball . . .Archery . . . Dramatic Club . . . Claire Boynton New Paltz Crowned with sunlight 3+ Frank Bolander, Ir. Newburgh Caustically energetic Glee Club . . . Honorary Lantern Bearer . . . Country Lite Club . . . Nepano . . . Community Chest . . . Intramural Sports . . . Ilse Bornemann Massapequa Frank . . . but definitely Arethusa . . . G-lee Club . . . Nepano . . . Paltzonette . . . Edwin Braem Ardsley Sardonically dramatic Delphic . . . Dramatic Club . . . Glee Club . . . Rifle Club . . . Ralph Brevetti Highland Brevetti breeds brevity Delphic . . . Country Life Club . . Baseball Manager . . . Cecil Broad New York Make a good trout fisherman Pi Sigma Lambda . . . Outing Club . . . Country Life Club . . . Riding Club . . Archery . . . Esther Brophy Walden Under-currents of piracy Arethusa . . . Dramatic Club . . . Band . . . Orchestra . . . Country Life Club . . . Basket- ball . . . Soccer . . . Archery . . . 35 Eleanor Elaine Brown Rye Arethusa's flaming torch Arethusa . . . Outing Club . . . Country Lite Club . . . Nepano . . . Harold G. Bunting Kingston Dependable as Christmas I Margaret Burnes Poughkeepsie A naive imp Artemis . . . Chorus . . . Outing Club . . . Country Lite Club . . . Basketball . . . Soccer ...Archery . . . Emily Buzclygan Kingston Ukranian Krooner Theta Phi . . . Arts and Crafts . . . Glee Club . . . Lantern Bearer . . . 36 Theresa M. Candreva Inwood Our own Baby Snooks Ko Sdon Ya . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Glee Club . . . Chorus . . . Outing Club . . . Soccer . . . Archery . . . Dorothy Coddington Stone Ridge Her purpose is well defined Arts and Crafts . . . 37 Isabelle I. Byrne Kingston Poetry versus the test tube Artemis . . . Alpha Sigma Omicron . . . Dramatic Club . . . Glee Club . . . Paltzonette . . . Archery . . . Ann Callahan Newburgh Indornitable groundwork Agonian . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Epsilon Delta Chi . . . Sigma Pi Sigma . . . Alpha Sigma Ornicron . . . Country Lite Club . . . Paltzonette . . . Margery B. Connelly Goshen You'cl never guess itl Outing Club . . . Basketball . . . Archery . . . Kathryn Lillian Cory Newburgh Symphony in suntan Chorus . . . Archery . . . Tennis . . 38 Shirley Mack Compton New Paltz Elusive as a wisp of cloud Theta Phi . . . Paltzonian . . . Epsilon Delta Chi . . . Sigma Pi Sigma . . . Arts and Crafts . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Dramatic Club . . . Chorus . . . Riding Club . . . Marguerite Conklin Orangeburg Gets a kick out of lite Artemis . . . House President . . Chorus . . . Basketball . . . Soccer . . . Archery . . . Georqiana Costello Mount Vernon Diminutive dynamo House President . . . Outinq Club . . . Country Life Club . . . Riding Club . . . Basketball . . . Archery . . . Gladys C. Coy Modena Sweet is the word for Gladys Theta Phi . . . Epsilon Delta Chi . . . Student Council . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Glee Club . . . Orchestra . . . Lillian M. Daddazio Newburgh Almost too quiet Chorus . . . Archery . . . Volley Ball . . Mary M. Darrow Poughkeepsie Master Mariner Artemis . . . Iunior and Senior Class Presi- dent . . . Alpha Sigma Ornicron . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Glee Club . . . Nepano . . . Chairman, Freshman Service Dance . . . Columbia Press Conference . . . Eastern States Conference . . . Archery . . . 39 Alene E. Decker Hudson Does she? . . . She does! Arethusa . . . Outing Club . . . Riding Club . . . Basketball . . . Soccer . . . Dorothy D. DeRevere White Plains Mirror, mirror on the wall Theta Phi . . . Dramatic Club . . . Glee Club . . . Outing Club . . . Basketball ...Soccer... Iarnes Dever Peekskill Allergic to blushing Delta Kappa . . . Epsilon Delta Chi . . . Country Lite Club . . . Basketball . . . Tennis . . . Katherine Diehl lvlaclalin How firm a foundation Country Lite Club . . . Basketball . . . Archery . . . Baseball . . . Soccer . . . 40 t Burnice E. DuBois New Paltz A perpetual smile raises her face value Theta Phi . . . Arts and Crafts . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Glee Club . . . Outing Club . . . Band . . . Ronald Dutcher Newburgh Unobtrusively industrious Intramural Sports . . . Baseball . . . -H Elizabeth Charlotte Dietz Spring Valley She stoops to conquer Theta Phi . . . Alpha Sigma Omicron . . . Arts and Crafts . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Dramatic Club . . . Glee Club . . . Outing Club . . . Nepano . . . lnter- sorority Council . . . Basketball . . . Helen I. Downing Madalin Stable equestrienne Clionian . . . lntersorority Council . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Riding Club . . lean Erath Graharnsville Cinema addict Country Lite Club . . . Outing Club . . Soccer . . . Tennis . . . Archery . . . Rita Eronirnous Lackawanna Assiduously agile House President . . . Glee Club . . . Band . . . Outing Club . . . Country Life Club . . . Base- ball . . . Basketball . . . Archery . . . Hockey . . . 42 Catherine Edelstein Kingston A prolific output Alpha Sigma Ornicron . . . Marjory L. Edwards Yonkers Soulfully somnolent Artemis . . . Outing Club . . . Country Lite Club . . . Elma E. Evans Arden Interestedly Blase Agonian . . . Outing Club . . . Country Life Club . . . Basketball . . . Archery ...Tennis... Iohn I. Falvey Kingston Bubbling Beelzebug Delphic . . . Band . . . lntramural Sports . . . Iohn R. Farmer Newburgh Impregnably correct Delta Kappa . . . Sigma Pi Sigma . . . Palt- zonian . . . Alpha Sigma Ornicron . . . Honor- ary Lantern Bearer . . . Country Life Club. President . . . N.Y.A. Administrator . . . Palt- zonette . . . Band . . . Intramural Sports . . . Mary Lois Farrington Newburgh Adroitly trim Agonian . . . House President . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Glee Club . . . Outing Club . . . Country Life Club . . . Nepano . . . Paltzonette . . . Archery . . . Eastern States Conference . . . +3 Hope Finger Poughkeepsie Dimpling giggle Theta Phi . . . Arts and Crafts . . Lantern Bearer . . . Glee Club . . Outing Club . . . Soccer . . . Ruth B. Finley Lynbrook Fugitive from a chain gang Agonian, President . . . lntersorority Council . . . Outing Club . . . Country Life Club . . . General Chairman of Intersorority Prom . . . Edward I. Fitzpatrick Newburgh Truckin' on down Delphic . . . Dramatic Club . . . Band . . . Honorary Lantern Bearer . . . lnteriraternity Council . . . Class Treasurer . . . Margaret Flannery Goshen Original chatterbox Theta Phi . . . Outing Club . . . Country Life Club . . . Basketball . . . Soccer . . . Archery . . . 44 Marqaret Frost Fishkill A bit fastidious Ko Solon Ya . . . Chorus . . . Country Life Club '. . . Basketball . . . Soccer . . . Archery . . . House President . . . Marguerite S. Garrison Tivoli Garrison of probity Aqonian . . . House President . . . Arts and Crafts . . . Chorus . . . Country Lite Club . . . 45 Evelyn C. Foss Locust Valley Utterly charming Arethusa, President . . . lntersorority Council . . . Chorus . . . Outing Club . . . Riding Club . . . Basketball . . . Archery . . . Hildreth Franks Fond ot nature Ko Solon Ya . . . Chorus . . . Club . . . Country Life Club ball . . . Archery . . . Arena Outing Basket- Sylvia Gollop Kingston Sylvia knows her paces Gwendolyn M, Gould Poughkeepsie Gwennie knows more jokes Pi Sigma Lambda . . . House President . . . lntersorority Council . . . Chorus . . . Outinq Club . . . Riding Club . . . Paltzonette . . . Soccer . . . Archery . . . 46 Anna Glover Hempstead Heart's in the blue grass Country Life Club . . . Iosephine Goffredi Kinqsion Cupid's disciple Artemis . . . Archery . . . Arts and gags A .1-W JW GW 2 Helen Louise Gray Gardiner Perfectly poised Theta Phi . . . Band . . . Orchestra . . Basketball . . . Soccer . . . Emily Gregg Marnaroneck Dour Scot Agonian, Grand Treasurer . . . Arts and Cratts, President . . . Sigma Pi Sigma . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Glee Club . . . Outing Club . . . Basketball . . . Soccer . . . Archery . . . Elsie M. Hannigan Glens Falls Dark Eyes Artemis . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Glee Club . . Outing Club . . . Tennis . . . Riding . . . Patricia Hart Newburgh Absent-minded professoress -1-7 Kenneth E. HasBrouck New Paltz Ouqht to be in the Diplomatic Service Delta Kappa . . . Glee Club . . . Orches- tra . . . Riding Club . . .Rifle Club . . . Nepano . . . lntertraternity Council . . . Intramural Sports . . . Eva lane Heath Conqers Baby face Butch Clionian . . . Outing Club . . . Basket- ball . . . Sam Hochbera New York Enjoys a iam session Delta Kappa . . . Band . . . Country Life Club . . . Basketball . . . William Israel Kingston Loquacious Wag Delta Kappa . . . Alpha Sigma Omicron. Grand Secretary . . . Interfraternity Council . . . Country Life Club . . . Paltzonette . . . Nepano . . . Honorary Lantern Bearer . . . Community Chest . . . Intramural Sports . . . Basketball . . . Eastern States Conference . . . 48 Zelda V. Kahn Newburgh Partial to chocolate Pi Sigma Lambda . . . Country Life Club . . Archery . . . Volley Ball . . . Betty Kane Red Hook Sure shot Kane Outing Club . . . Country Life Club . . . Basket- ball . . . Soccer . . . 4-9 Margaret E. Kaemmerlen Newburgh Suavely voguish Clionian, President . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Intersorority Council . . . Chorus . . . Paltzonette . . . Soccer . . . Archery . . . Ethel Kahn Port Chester One of the two of a Kahn Pi Sigma Lambda . . . Outing Club . . . Country Life Club . . . Tennis . . Riding . . . Terrence W. Kelly Middletown Flavored with T.N.T. Delphic . . . Alpha Sigma Omicron . . . Dramatic Club . . . Student Council . . . Paltzonette . . . Rifle Club . . . Country Life Club . . . Eastern States Conference . . . Archery . . . Edna May Kempsell Glen Cove On Wings ol song Agonian . . . Glee Club . . . Country Lite Club . . . Outing Club . . . Archery . . . Esther I. Karnes Port Chester Smart scintillist Pi Sigma Lambda . . . Nepano . . Outing Club . . . Thelma M. Keeler Troy Even of keel Ko Sdon Ya, President . . . Glee Club club Outing Club . . . Country Life 50 Iarnes F. Kennedy Newburgh Expert dribbler Delphic . . . Rifle Club . . . Basketball . . . Baseball . . . George W. Key Poughkeepsie Key jingles Marily Delta Kappa, President . . . Epsilon Delta Chi . . . Honorary Lantern Bearer . . . Interiraternity Council . . . Football . . . Basketball . . . Baseball . . . House President . . . Doris Kilduft Napanoch Damon . . . Theta Phi . . . House President . . . Outing Club . . . Country Life Club . . . lntersorority Council . . . Iohn H. Knapp Hurleyville Beats the Band Dramatic Club . . . Glee Club . . . Band . . . Country Life Club . . . Rifle Club . . . 51 Anne Knetsch Kingston Kelly green, her favorite color Artemis . . . Arts and Crafts . . . Chorus . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Paltzonette . . . Basketball . . . Soccer . . . Tennis . . . Modern Dancing . . . Wanda C. Korol Bay Shore Wanda'd through Europe Outing Club . . . Country Life Club . . . Riding Club . . . Baseball . . . Basket- ball . . . Tennis . . . Thomas I. Lahey Newburgh, N. Y. Artemisian elephant Delphic . . . lntertraternity Council, President . . . Dramatic Club . . . Band . . . Honorary Lantern Bearer . . . Football . . . Basketball . . . Ruth I. Land Islip Terrace HaDDY landings Glee Club . . . Outing Club . . . Ko Solon Ya . . . Baseball . . . Basketball . . . Soccer . . . Archery . . . 52 Mildred Le Fevre New Paltz lnhabits Waste baskets Clionian . . . Epsilon Delta Chi . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Paltzonette . . . Chorus . . . Country Life Club . . . Basketball . . . Archery . . . Tennis . . . Mary Elizabeth Leonard Mamaroneck A handful of lacks Clionian . . . House President . . . Dramatic Club . . . Glee Club . . . lntersorority Council . . . 53 Charles La Poli Can he throw it . . . the baseball, of course! Delphic . . . Baseball . . . Roper Larsen Walden Give him enough rope- Delphic . . . Intramural Basketball . . . Football . . . lane E. Liscum Center Moriches Do you get it, lane? Arethusa . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Glee Club . . . Orchestra . . . Outing Club . . . Basket- ball . . . Tennis . . . Gertrude Lotz Inwood Lotz of fun Artemis . . . Glee Club . . . Country Lite Club . . . Outinq Club . . . Basketball . . . Tennis . . . 5+ Gertrude H. Lewin Albany The third Musketeer Pi Siqrna Lambda . . . Country Life Club . . . Outing Club . . . Intersorority Council H. . . Basketball . . . Bose C. Lewis Kingston At lonq last - Artemis . . . Herbert F. Lown Kingston Sea of seething moods Delphic . . . lnterfraternity Council . . . Band, President . . . Orchestra . . . Riding Club . . . Intramural Basket- ball... Mary Lyden Patterson Are you Dutch, Miss Lyder1? Hugh E. McCaffrey Bronx Senior Savant loseph F. McCaffrey P Poughkeepsie Looks like a Viking: struts like a rooster! Delta Kappa . . . Interiraternity Council . . . Nepano, Editor-in-Chief . . . Alpha Sigma Omicron, Grand President . . . Paltzonette . . . Intramural Sports . . . Community Chest . . . Country Life Club . . . 55 Edith McCarthy Brooklyn Hows' the going, Queenie . . . rough? Artemis, President . . . lntersorority Council, President . . . Outing Club . . . Country Life Club . . . Berngrd McCloy Newburgh Barney brims with boundless bldrney Delphic . . . Elizabeth I. McDougall Newburgh Rollicking funster Agonicm . . . Glee Club . . . Archery . . Agnes McGhee Pine Plains A Wrdithlike creature S6 Iohn C. Meagher Kingston He clicks Delphic . . . Epsilon Delta Chi . . . Honorary Lantern Bearer . . . Paltzonian . . . Band . . . Orchestra . . . Intramural Sports . . . Class Secretary . . . Eastern States Conference . . . Iune G, Messner Tappan No rnessin' around Arts and Crafts . . . Chorus . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Outing Club . . . Country Lite Club . . . Cornell Conference . . . Soccer . . . Archery . . . 57 lean E. Marien New Paltz All dated up . . . darn it! Arethusa . . . Epsilon Delta Chi . . . Alpha Sigma Ornicron . . . Arts and Crafts . . . Paltzonian . . . Paltzonette . . . Riding Club . . . Glee Club . . . Song Leader . . . Columbia Press Confer- ence . . . Archery . . . A Lorraine Marshall Tarrytown Marshalls her forces against gloom Pi Sigma Lambda, President . . . Lantern Bearer . . . lntersorority Council . . . Dramatic Club . . . Outing Club . . . Country Lite Club . . . Eastern States Conference . . . Robert P. Muller Highland Delphic Hop... Mary H. Artemis Archery 58 Pulverizing personality . . . General Chairman, Freshman Murphy Kingston Placid as a quiet pool . . . Chorus . . . Riding Club . . ...Tennis . . . Riding . .. Hazel Montgomery Arden Ardently attracted to Arden Agonian . . . Outing Club . . . Country Lite Club . . . Archery . . .Tennis . . . Emma R. Moriello Newburgh Seven hours a day! Chorus . . . Country Lite Club . . Archery . . . Tennis . . . Paul F. Murphy Newburgh He'll never grow up . . . We hope!! Delphic, President . . . Intertraternity Council . . . Paltzonian . . . Glee Club . . . Football . . . Basketball . . . Band . . . Mary E. Murtaugh Poughkeepsie Keyed to G Artemis . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Arts and Crafts . . . Chorus . . . Outing Club . . . Country Lite Club . . . Stu- dent Council . . . lntersorority Council . . . Soccer . . . Archery . . . Tennis . . . Mary Nolan Eagle Bridge Oneonta's doe-eyed damsel Theta Phi .... Mary O'Sullivan Roosevelt A Disney creation Artemis . . . Dramatic Club . . . Outing Club Council . . Chorus . . . Country Life Club . . . Tennis . . . Basketball . . . 59 Iohn C. Page New Paltz Perpetually seeing Red Delphic . . . Alpha Sigma Ornicron . . . Arts and Crafts . . . Paltzonette . . . lnterfraternity Council . . . Eastern States Conference . . . Athena Patsalos Newburgh An echo ot a goddess Archery . . . Tennis . . . Ni t Pauline E. Peaters Castleton Exernplifies her initials Ko Sdon Ya . . . Band . . . Orchestra . . Outing Club . . . Country Life Club . . . Bernice Piatti Williston He must be a florist Arethusa . . . Intersorority Council, President . . . Dramatic Club . . . Glee Club . . . Palt- zonette . . . Outing Club . . . Archery . . . Eastern States Conference . . . N.E.A. Con- vention . . . 60 Genevieve E. M. Randall Ouogue Spurs her Way on Clionian . . . Glee Club . . . Chorus . . . Band . . . Orchestra . . . Outing Club . . . Ridinq Club . . . Basketball . . . Tennis . . . Archery . . . Soccer . . . House President . . . Evelyn E. Bitch Bayport Not rapt in attention Outing Club . . . Riding Club . . . Archery . . . Tennis . . . House President . . . 61 Kathryn Provencher Brooklyn Trombone srnearer Theta Phi . . . Band . . . Orchestra . . . Outing Club . . . Baseball . . Archery . . . Mildred I. Radley New Paltz Slow reader . . . one Page at a time Arethusa . . . Arts and Crafts . . . Paltzonian . . . Alpha Sigma Omicron . . . Outing Club Council . . . Riding Club . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Inter- sorority Council . . . Basketball . . . Eastern States Conference . . . Cecilia Roche Not too cocky Outing Club . . . Hockey . . . Alfred Reeder Rockville Center Plenty of sax appeal Band . . . Orchestra . . . Country Life Club . . . Rifle Club . . . Nepano . . . Baseball . . . t llll 62 Eunice Roberts Baldwin Tapped by the wand of Wit Arethusa . . . Arts and Crafts . . . Glee Club . . . Outing Club . . . Country Life Club . . . Archery . . . Soccer . . . lean Marie Robinson Newburgh Chemically perfect Arts and Crafts . . . Volley Ball . . . Dorothy Rogers Albany Wickedly whimsical Theta Phi . . . Mildred Rogers Poughkeepsie Incessant good humor Theta Phi . . . Arts and Crafts . . Chorus . . . Outing Club . . . Iarnes W. Rornansky Spring Valley He'll get by Country Life Club . . . Glee Club . . . Cheer Leader . . . Baseball . . . Ernest Rossler Rosendale Lives in a world of his own 63 Ji' Q-. 'nyc 'Hb F I '11,-La . Evelyn Ruloin Poughkeepsie Cornell of N.P.N. Pi Sigma Lambda . . . Alpha Sigma Ornicron . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Palt- zonette, Editor-in-Chief . . . Dramatic Club . . . Chorus . . . Country Life Club . . . Outing Club . . . Nepano . . . Columbia Press Conference . . . Eastern States Conference . . . Eleanor lean Scharienberg East Rockaway No tenure Worries Arethusa . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Stu- dent Counctl, President . . . Dramatic Club . . . Glee Club . . . Riding Club . . . General Chairman Iunior Service Dance . . . Basketball . . . lntersorority Play . . . Lois A. Schenck , Patterson Tantalizingly enigmatic-but solvable Artemis . . . Glee Club . . . Riding Club . . Soccer . . . Tennis . . . Leander Schmid ' New Hampton Who's across the Hellespont now, Lee? Delphic . . . Dramatic Club . . . Glee Club . . Football . . . 64 Dean Shoup Albany Easily ruffled, easily calmed Arts and Crafts . . . Country Life Club . . Archery . . . House President . . . Elaine Shutts Philmont . . . and Pythias Theta Phi . . . Glee Club . . . Outing Club . . . Country Life Club . . . Archery . . . 65 Marion E. Schwenk Kingston Humor dry as a Martini Theta Phi . . . Arts and Craft . . . Chorus . . . Riding Club . . . Archery ...Tennis... L. lrene Shipman Maybrook A teaching enthusiast Outing Club . . . Country Life Club . . . Baseball . . . Basketball . . . Archery . . . Tennis . . . Ruth Smith Walden ' Pleasantly remembered Florence Snyder Kingston Delightful . . . Delectable . . . Delicious Theta Phi . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Orchestra . . . Chorus . . . Archery . . . lntersorority Council . . . 66 Florence Simon Kingston Not too simple Elma E. Smith Kingston Beaver-like tenacity Ko Sdon Ya . . . Chorus . . . Archery H . . Iessie F. Spellman Peekskill Nothing Les than a Ford will do Theta Phi . . . Riding Club . . . Outing Club . . . Soccer . . . Edna Marion Starr Ravena A star fell out of heaven Outing Club . . . Country Lite Club . . . Baseball . . . Basketball . . . Robert S. Stewart Willowemoc Lethargically slumberous Delphic . . . Paltzonian . . . Sigma Pi Sigma . . . Epsilon Delta Chi . . . Country Life Club . . . General Chairman, Senior Prom . . . Dramatic Club . . . Shirley M. Stewart Kingston Floating power Theta Phi . . . Epsilon Delta Chi . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Class Vice-President . . . Archery ...Ter1nis... 67 Elaine Sulzbacher Ossininq lntensely dramatic Aqonian . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Nepano . . . Dramatic Club . . . Glee Club . . . Outing Club . . . Riding Club . . . Country Life Club . . . Archery . . . Frances Elizabeth Tarrant Pelham Tirnorous as a forest lawn Country Life Club . . . Baseball . . . Basketball . . . C. Helena Terwilliqer Clintonclale Ring out, Wild bells! House President . . . Glee Club . . . Outing Club . . . Charlotte Tice Sauqerties Has a Coronet ot her own Outing Club . . . House President . . Archery . . . 68 Muriel E. Trebay New York Exotically artistic Lantern Bearer . . . Alpha Sigma Omicron, President . . . Arts and Crafts . . . Dramatic Club . . . Paltzonette . . . Eastern States Con- ference . . . Nepano . . . Country Life Club . . . Anthony Tronto Peekskill An alarming fevre Delta Kappa . . . Interfraternity Council . . . Country Life Club . . . Football . . . Baseball . . . Basketball . . . 69 Orville Todd Hyde Park Deliberate . . . disarming . . . dazed Delta Kappa . . . Epsilon Delta Chi . . . Alpha Sigma Omicron . . . Nepano . . . Paltzonian . . . Honorary Lantern Bearer . . . Student Council . . . House President . . . Baseball, Captain . . . Basketball . . . Iulia Anne Toronqo New Rochelle The eyes have it Glee Club . . . Country Lite Club . . Ruth H. Verch Albany Irnbued with Gaelic spirit Arethusa . . . Paltzonette . . . Outing Club . . . Riding Club . . . Eastern States Conference . . . Modern Dancing . . . Frederica Vermilyea Walden Pert . . . Piquant Areihusa . . . Dramatic Club . . . Country Life Club . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Archery . . . 70 Elizabeth Van Alstyne Chatham Center Devil may care! Arethusa . . . Nepano . . . Outing Club . . . Baseball . . . Archery . . . Vivian E. Van Vleet Woodburne Alliteration plus Lantern Bearer . . . Band . . . Outing Club . . . Country Life Club . . . Basket- ball . . . Soccer . . . Leona Vernooy Walden Lee and How!! Arethusa . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Dramatic Club . . . Country Life Club . . . Basketball . . . Archery . . . Harold R. Wenig Ellenville lt's hard to say Harold R. Weston Kingston Epicurean-exponent of expostulation Delphic . . . Paltzonian . . . Alpha Sigma Omicron . . . Columbia Press Conference . . . Paltzonette . . . Nepano . . . Country Lite Club . . . Community Chest . . . lohn E. Whalen Kingston Long, lank, and lonesome now Delphic . . . Orchestra . . . Band . . . Honorary Lantern Bearer . . . Football . . . General Chair- man, Iunior Prom . . . Music Association, President . . . ,..,.lllI 71 Elsie Wheat ' Rockville Center Knows her oats Ko Sdon Ya, President . . . Sigma Pi Sigma . . . Paltzonian . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Arts and Crafts . . . Palt- zonette . . . Country Life Club . . . Outing Club, President . . . Crlee Club ...Riding... Allyne C. Wheeler Port Iefterson New twist every week Clionian, House President . . . Country Lite Club . . . Band . . . Orchestra . . . Archery . . . Tennis . . . Iohn A. White Middletown lmmeasurably refreshing pedant Honorary Lantern Bearer . . . Alpha Sigma Omicron . . . Glee Club . . . Nepano . . . Anna A. Whitney Kingston At home in the second grade Ko Sdon Ya . . . Chorus . . . Intramural Basket- ball . . . Archery . . . 72 Marjory Gray Wilson Yonkers A character from Irving Ko Sdon Ya, Treasurer . . . Arts and Crafts . . . Glee Club . . . Outing Club . . . Country Life Club . . . Baseball . . . Soccer . . . Archery . . . Basketball . . . George Wingate Newburgh Iockeyin' for Position Dramatic Club . . . Country Life Club . . Rifle Club . . . Intramural Sports . . . 73 Henriette Wicks New Paltz Bubble, bubble-toil and trouble Theta Phi . . . Paltzonian, Editor-irr Chief . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Sigma Pi Sigma . . . Arts and Crafts . . . Inter- sorority Council . . . Chorus . . . Basket- ball . . . Soccer . . . Lois W. Williams Highland ' Dusky Highland lass Arethusa . . . Mary V. Yost New Paltz I-low Ya' Doolan? Clionian, Secretary . . . lntersorority Council . . . Glee Club, President . . . Chorus . . . Orchestra . . . Eastern States Conference . . . Tennis . . . Riding . . . Eleanor Young Port Jervis La plus charmante Agonian . . . Lantern Bearer . . . Sigma Pi Sigma . . . Intersorority Council . . . Chorus . . . Outing Club . . . Country Life Club . . . 74 Frances Worob Port Chester Female D'1-Xrtignan Pi Sigma Lambda . . . Outing Club . . . Country Life Club . . . Tennis . . . Mary Ann Wygel Poughkeepsie Discreetly sagacious Lantern Bearer . . . Sigma Pi Sigma, President . . . Marie Haley New Paltz Ernanates ennui Dorothy E. Hildebrand Poughkeepsie Art is her everything Arts and Crafts . . . Chorus . . . Outing Club . . . Q ilu illllemnrmm Vincent I. Bahr Kathryn Schoonmaker Truck to the right 76 The Iilt of young voices I - ji Vl1f,'g', ' k!LfQ'A.!f,2Z4J I K ' 'X , ,.,a,l f-9 , r Vid? 1,1 lik -K-4 JI , - 4 -I . ,,17f,47fl ' k H f if 'I ,t.L -79..?.xx I VN. IUNIORS PRESIDENT - - CHARLES HELMES SECRETARY - - IEAN RENISON VICE'-PRESIDENT - - SHIRLEY SCOTT TREASURER - - - EDWIN FORD ADVISER - - - - DR. WILL The Iuniors qathered themselves together early this year, and after a serious confab, decided that they were really going out for home runs. First base they made was Iunior Service Dance-the results-a more prosperous milk fund. Second base was an admirable addition to Epsilon Delta Chi-third base a hilarious Junior Prom-and home plate was their step up to Seniority in N. P. N. 77 Wffl IX Lyons, Carolyn Iuillerat, Virginia Bates, Helen Browne, Louise Enlund, Alfred Cosgrove, Philip DeWitt, Balph Churchill, Gerald Colligan, Katherine Brown, Hilda Canfield, Abbie Miller M garet if , tfdgtljgik Crystal, Mabel Davidoff, Ianet Denike, Ruth Boice, Vivian Alyea, Virginia Castagnino, Beatrice Brion, Gertrude Barber, Lillian Epstein, Evelyn Connolly, Francis Callahan, Eileen Edwards, Marjorie Decker, Lucille De Hart. Mae Brown, Moira Baird, Glenna Allen, Adelle Ashworth, Evelyn Baker, Virginia Carroll, Gertrude Close, lean Asher, Lawrence Brown, Betty Davis, Mildred E. Eckert, Ethel Anges, Dorothy Duffy, Eva Baumgarten, Annarnay Engle, Helen Anderson, Betty Caporale, Yolanda Bergmark, Anna Louise Ketcham, Isabel Florance, lean Halleran, Lillian Housen, Ieanne Helmes, Charles Fersh, George Haring, Robert Kennedy, Iames Hochberg, Oscar Farnum. Marion Hendricks, Annetta Hallock, Frances Iones, Alice Fisher, lane Kelley, Mildred Fitzpatrick, Ioan Flanigan, Ruth Fitzgerald, Iudy Hersey, Viola Fleischer, Helen Hicks, Charlotte Fleming, Patricia Ford, Edwin FitzGerald, Edward Hall, Betty Kosarovich, Iulia Kinney, Ruth Fitzgerald, Kathryn Keller, Gertrude Gelis. Marianne Hodge, Mary Herbst, Edwina Kennedy, Margaret Iohnson, Norman Hoey, Frank Iudson, Evelyn Font, Almida Israel, Claire Griffin, Eleanor Gassner, Adelaide Gutheil, Alma Finkel, Sally Howcl, Marguerite Houghton, Gladys Fisher, Ruth Paquet, Helen Peters, Christina Reilly, Maria Phillips, Edith Larsen, Theodore O'Neill, Frank Moynihan, Iohn McCreary, Lee Pearlman, Ieanette Odell, Winifred Reed, Margaret Phillips, Ethel x , Y ,Qi ll Leverich, Helen Pinckney, Margaret McKeever, Florence Ronk, Thelma Racine, Vera Matteson, Dorothy Rayno, Eileen Renison, lean RyanXRegina?, I Al S - 'Nil ,P ,Q K of -QF -v gg' X X X N 'L I 'al R x j 80 If A gn ,i'i 3 me u NN j Musumeci, Sadie Rosenthal, Abraham Neely, Elizabeth Malkernus, Loretta Robinson, Lois Matusky, Iulia Luquer, Margaret Puckey, Inez Pakula, Beatrice Logan, Margarita O'Connor, Mary Rogers, Iohn Maybury, Georgina Menz, Lucille Lake, Geneva Anderson, Marjorie La Mere, Eleanor LeRoy. Edith Miller, Charlotte Osip, Helen Leboritz, Beatrice Osofsky, Emma Lowe, Helen Rinaldi, Frances Squier, Shirley Sheeley, Virgil Weir, Donald Silver, Roy Zoobuck, George Sciortino, Thomas Shields, Charles Tantillo, Leonard Schleede. Olga Wick, Dorothy Young, Ieannette Streit, Edith Veith, Cynthia Tuthill, Doris Weick, Evelyn Ross, Helen Sturgess, Patricia Wilcox, Genevieve Stanton, Margaret Smellie, Betty Sturr, Dorothy Valenti, Lorraine Wesley, Shirley Thompson, Esther Snyder, Loretta Van Kleeck, Evelyn Tolve, Anne Tooker, Evelyn Watzka, Ruth Zehder, Rosamond White. Evva Wack, Eunice Stein, Evelyn Scoma, Iennie Schulman, Ruth Stockton, lean v In the land of Shcxnqri-Lct 82 Anxious moments for the qreenies v t FBESHMEN PRESIDENT - . WILLIAM RIDGEWAY VICE-PRESIDENT - - GORDON KELDER SECRETARY - - MILDRED BARRINGTON TREASURER - - - RooER SALZMAN ADVISER - V - DR. VERDUIN Another verdant group gamboled over us this year, a little more violent than usual perhaps, and in such droves that it might have been the numbers that deceived us. Astutely the Freshmen took unto themselves Dr. Verduin for their adviser, and proceeded to rampage through many amusing and successful ventures, until now they are entering upon their second year with colossal plans which they will probably bring to triumphant passing. l l l il J' ' ' Dolan, Elizabeth Clinton Florence lnton Marie Cr s Don Allen, John de Chelfin Marie Denninqer Margaret Dederick Catherine Brodsky, Edward Cox Mabel Dacier Helen Clark Marian Baldowski, Sigmund Carson Mildred Bouchard Leona Butler Ruth Duncan, Edith Beaupre, Leo Brissa, Mildred Davis, Robert Brown, Marjorie Davis, Earla DePew, Carlton Campbell, Rose Baird, Elmer Dillon, Mary 31.5 ,HU-J cuimhfm, William 'G 0' Duffy, Frank Brightman, Marion 661, ej0,,,u-vU S4 Y 5' I ' Xv:'x,x'f M., 4? . A Q t. ' vga -'Cfe pf' vfglafgr rfhffrffzfxf S J ' , Horlacher, Dorothea Ketcham, Sarah Hannan, Mary Fautz, Rita Honan, lane Limbacher, William Kelder, Gordon Harris, Norman Greaves, Dorothy Lindhorst, Eleanora Haynes, Carol Haller, Mary Iane Edick, Helen Lonergan, Claire Eggleston, Warren King, Everett Limbacher, Karl Hardick, Winifred Herbert, Shirley Keator, Dolores Kenny, Robert Q ,' 2 i ,,- 4 ,tv .255 ' f-'f.J'ff4jf', f'e ij Geisler, George Hart, Dolores Gumaer, Charles Letzeisen, Edna Flannery, lane Greiner, Audrey Hummel, Dorothy Elwood, Elizabeth Grusky, Marion lung, Anna Lull, Vernon Kraack, Lillian , Ludwig, Mildred Horn, Edna Henderson. Ruth Longo, Grace Horton, Helen Loomis, Ruth Liner, Eleanor Longhenry, Ruth if ,Z ,xfrb J nf Gibson, Madelyn I f Eymann, Dorothy J - My Goodfellow, Mary . yy! Iohnson, Constance ff -'-'CIM' M, fjly M ftwft K X , x K ij . vu tv 150 K: JM .T yt YV 0 Uv HJ X ' Yi X56 QQ fxy Mp '43, . Ao XJ ffl i,'1.lJbl 'K To .- s GJ 11 sa 4 5 5 NVQ A ,, L Gxm xxx C 'iqhs i L L il , Q. ,lei Q15 L f '11, ' 1 rn I I .lx ,f-N 6 L r X - :rf gf in LJ ' ,1 M -f rv' LQ. 4L.f Minogue, Mary Roper, Ruth Powell, Antoinette Rosenthal, Harold Morgan, William Pecheux, Paul Pfeiffer, Richard McKenna, Iohn McElhenney, Iohn Ostrander, Clare Roth, Theodore Nadashay, Lorraine McCloy, Miriam Minard, Helen 86 Markle, Earl McCabe, Margaret McCourt, Ida O'Connor, Muriel Pratt, Natalie Ortiz, Betty Petterson. Ruth Manion, Mary Ridgeway, William Mingle, Ben Quigley, Kathleen Mould, Elise McBride, Clara Nelson, Thelma Rice, Harriet Osserrnan, Dorothy Rooney, Helen Mones, Ruth Monroe, Muriel McCahon, Margaret McElhenney, Helen Mikesh, loseph Warian, Mary Wohl, Shirley Penney, Lucille Ollear, Ruth Miller, Martha Myers, Alma Powrie, Agnes Quackenbush, Thelma Mabee, Elsie Rogers, Mary Penny, Dorothy Mockler, Mary Rafalowsky, Florence Wessells, Rosalind Vores, Helen r 0wwLmWd yMu- rw! ,gp M123 ca-vera. I- wigidlaffxfljify Yfwnffki Tyler, Albert Zarembo, Helen Terry, Elizabeth Wade, Elizabeth Vllelcstein, Tess Wells, Betty Weissman, Albert Stubbins, George Wood, Richard Steinhoii, George Southwick, Arthur Troyanovich, Katrine St. Leger, Beverly Schneider, Dorothy Tompkins, Muriel Shields, Evelyn Schwartz, Helen Shertenlieb, Fred Salzman, Roger Weiner, Oscar Stolte, Ethel Taylor, Ruth Winfield, Evelyn Wright, Francis Webber, Doris Thomassen, Martha Wilhelm, Ieanette Wandzilak, Olga Small, Doris Sheeran, May Zimmermann, Theresa Watzka, Kathryn Siegel, Sylvia M. Winne, Hilda M. Sarli, Frances Stonebridge, Adelaide Young, Iames M. -Uma!! fffh-Y M' 04- a,j.f':::w cl an-Qgzuclf dogg A Tuthill, Doris Schoonmaker, Laura Schoeninger, Claire Terwilliger, Marjorie Wilhelm, Audrey Sundstrom, lean Silverman, Celia Walker, Marian Terhune, Charlotte Sadowski, Genevieve . - an' Deven er da fl 4444.11 Sigrist, Alice IS, Tompkins, Natalie N-bah-f , f A Sinsapaugh, Katherine v fy M Streit Taylor f f 1 .- f . 1 f - .CFA ijvs-4p,,L,fL. 41111, -10 F 'V-'wax 4 NA., ' 'f . , 1 M ' ee lp Cp-affect-J 'y ,y , 'T 'W' ' f7 , -4 - ' A , f- I I , ' , l 'K' ' . I ,LL I J' WL-Alla. Q,Lyi,.- ,j. g V 1 -.5 K. 51,-.I N V, ' 1, Vs ,V if-,, Ybxgla ' lvl!-s4.K,,'vLf . Lflirfkfllh f it - ,fan pike Ai - y fl x 1 1 ' Z Swinqster Sully! ! 88 Ein...zwei...drei... commence wf'Z M!47'L 'U V if ff Y . Eg kf :EW 51 ,J W -,,, N pe. V Eng-,Fe Q25 3 ,r 23 Y s+'s:5.'-I JP' A .- ., . .,..a,w,,,5, A , 1. N p . A 'A L V w W .. of 4 .4 1. , .Q I --Ig -, :vw N 4 Y'If'- auf , ' mm' fi-42: ' , 1 N ' A- -1-fe ... - f .-'fig J E Q f. 5 9 H5 l as Y . K zz,-. ,if . r , ,-., 5 M Y fhf' , .J . , A Z V QM, , . ,V - Ne-32 5 .' - ,gf Q' 4 ' ' F' W.. M 'Yay f - N75 4 ,, - 1-54-1,5 , .g1Y,iYMfi'jfk1. - . ,, gp, , X 4- , an Q L V W .L My I my ,- fffwfzwa fi T. 5 ak- pr ,f5 Q.,4g5, Y2aw5f'wf 1 1 -- -:fi M f 4 . Q Il .sifg - Q 27 . 1 x . -A 1555 15155 M N L V .ff M 3 .7 A '4 1 - J E Q - W U 1 vw .xg ,- Q . as K. P .. Q Midi ' 'gif X' - f1:Z3f , , E li-if Q is ' TL ' V 'Wi'-4ff,Q???i f -QQ , ,Q ,Q F 37 K, Q. Lg. 5 ' A' f rf?-fl' 'iff WF-E H 1 . ' Y ff- N , fag. ' ff' 335 H ,fer- -Q, ,. , Q3 , ENV-NN LLOYD SETTING THE DATES Fon OUR SOCIAL SIDE Isn't there a short story called The Whirligig of l..ife ? That in a succinct phrase expresses our career at N. P. N. As blithe young Freshmen we sign this list and sign that list, join this . group and join that group, volunteer for this committee and accept that job, and think, well, what a popular guy am I!! As Juniors we look with certain suspicion upon these titanic committees and begin to wonder whether the brat who constantly indulges in negativism Cpsychology lOl? hasn't really more good points than we heard about. At least we bet he doesn't swing from gym rafters trying to transform that crypt-like place into a roof garden! As Seniors we retreat with gusto into our little shells with the tip of our one deaf ear peep- ing forth. We look with definite askance upon special class meetings, prom plans, service dance plans, gift plans, skit plans, commencement plans, in fact the very word plan has sinister connotation. Plan- Committee-work: three words with but a single germ-work-which Seniors are very definitely shy of. The Whirligig of Life -pardon us, but we must say, And How! Q. Here We Are . . Friday, Saturday, and Sunday nights are the nights of the week set aside for the battle of the clocks. Clocks are about the most uncertain in- ventions that man has yet made. At least one gets that impression around New Paltz. Each Saturday night the battle of the clocks waxes bitterly. The New Paltz brand stands srnugly at the hour when every good girl is expected to be in her room. The clocks look around hopefully, and finding that there is one, no-two, no-three empty beds with- in their boundaries begin to grin with great glee. The corners of their mouths curl into wider and wider grimaces. Five after twelve, ten after, twelve after-listen-here come rushing feet- hasty good nights are dashed off and in comes a breathless victim. Thank heavens, she thinks, right on the dot! Good old Buick. Dependable every time. Twelve minutes from the Ford. That's pretty good time. Now to sign in and get into bed. Church time will come all too soon. What!! Sixteen after twelve! Impossible! Oh, that means Student Council. What will happen this time? Her watch said four minutes be- fore twelve. The Ford clock was even slower. The clock looks balefully up at her, ticking on its inevitable monotone rnen- tally adding a note to jump ahead another two minutes tomorrow. What fun to get these giddy dames in a dither. The rest of the 93 They make 'emg we break 'em. week-end passes in a frenzy of fretful an- ticipation. This has happened before. Last time one special was her verdict. This time it will be two, maybe three. Oh, why were clocks ever invented? Tuesday afternoon our victim walks slowly toward the fatal portals. Why, what's this? A long line is there before her-six, seven, eight others. Well, that's one con- solation. Student Council sits in conference pondering over these timely problems, and rendering verdict after verdict. Will these clock cases never close? Every government finds itself faced with two major types of case: one that is rather amusing, and the other that involves hours and hours of serious consideration. We are only too glad to note that the lighter cases are the more numerous at New Paltz. Among Council's heavier responsibilities are: the apportionment of school funds through its budget committee, the plotting of the yearly social calendar of the school, and the making of all general school rules. Seniors: Virginia Babcock, Gladys Coy, Mary Murtaugh, Orville Todd, Emily Ander- son. Iuniors: Eileen Callahan, Ralph De Witt, Ruth Fisher, Margaret Kennedy. Fresh- men: Constance Iohnson, Helen McElhenny, George Stubbins. Adviser: Edgar V. Beebe. 94 The Keeper of the Book might well be the sub-title of a House Presi- dent, for her duty it is to see that her wards relig- iously perform the irksome job of signing in and out. Thunderbolts and what not must follow when this, the sacred duty of Normal girls, is overlooked. House Presidents: Dorothy Greaves, lean Stockton, Ann Ryan, Wan- t da Korol, Irene Shipman, Margaret Pinckney, Teresa T Candreva, Loretta Snyder, Charlotte Tice, Anne i Tolve, Emma Osofsky, Florence Kelban, Elizabeth Brown, Ruth Williams, Evelyn Stone, Ruth Ollear, lean Erath, Ida van Devender, Lena Ward, Iennie Berlt, Olga Wandzilak, Rita Eroni- mous, Mabel Cox, Martha Thomassen, Ruth Petterson, Lorraine Nadashay, Frances Tar- rant, Katrine Troyanovich, Hildreth Franks, Ruth Kinney,Shirley Herbert,Agnes McGhee, Where are you going, my pretty lass? Vivian Van Vleet, Lois Robinson, Almida Font, Mary Lyden, Helen Rooney, Mary Far- rington, Elizabeth Van Alstyne, Marguerite Conklin, Lucille Menz, Beatrice Pakula, Ruth Fisher, Marion Flint. Honor societies can generally be de- pended upon to be in the midst of the vortex of controversy that is inevitable when the few people, fortunate enough to meet the requirements of these societies, are singled out for recognition. Despite the vortex, de- spite the controversy, we proudly present our four strictly honor societies. . sg QW, , awl sifwl Ifwfffff L9 M- T t lt- We ' A WM . if-ff W new -M W- ,- ,XY f C 1 1 e sometimes think of Sigma Pi Sigma education must include more than scholastic as our local Phi Beta Kappa. The people, who through their significant scholastic work, have attained a B average for at least six quarters, become members of this honor Our brain trusters . . . society. Unfortunately, it has not been neces3 sary to enlarge their meeting quarters to accommodate great numbers of initiates. This year Sigma Pi Sigma has embarked upon a study of scholastic factors through the school and we are Waiting with con- siderable interest for the report of their find- ings. lt would be enlightening to know why the rest of us must be content, yes. even grateful at times, to struggle along on the gentlemen's average. lt is true that an rating, but we can't help wondering whether some balancing of social and scholastic en- deavors cannot be achieved. These people have made rapid strides toward this bal- ancing yet the majority of the school finds their requirements too stiff to meet. Sigma Pi Sigma is numbered first among the honorary groups of the school. Members: Emily Anderson, Claire Boynton, Ethel Kahn, Frederica Ver- milyea, Yolanda Caporale, Gertrude Carroll, Alma Gutheil, Frances Hal- ' 1 , . .tl lock, Marguerite Ieffrey, Georgina Mayberry, Esther Thompson, Shirley Mack Compton, Emily Gregg, Mary Wygel, Elsie Wheat, Iohn Farmer, Robert Stewart, Eleanor Young, Henri- ette Wicks. Adviser: Rebecca McKenna. Parallel with Sigma Pi Sigma is Epsilon Delta Chi, honorary teaching society. This group is made up of students who have achieved distin- guished results in their quarter of prac- tice teaching. For a person to enter the classroom at eight in the morning, keep the chil- - dren quiet until noon, thrust them forth for lunch, shush them at one, and thrust them forth again at three, with but a single aim in view-that of getting them into the next grade and eventually through the teacher's guillotine and the child's nightmare-N.Y.S. regents -does not signify good teaching. Neither will he be a good teacher who mouth-wateringly views every other profes- sion and pounces on teaching as his com- pensation. No, he is worse than the shusher. Who is the good teacher? The good teacher is a good sport, a well-rounded individual, a ready laugher: he inspires the confidence 95 of the child, he leads the child to create: he is cour- t e o u s , healthy, and enjoys life. A good teacher must possess the attri- butes of a good friend, and no bet- ter characteriza- tion of a good friend can be found than in Emerson's Friend- ship in which he says, A friend is a p e r s o n with whom I may be sincere. B e f o r e him I may think aloud-a friend is a sane man who exercises not my ingenuity, but my entertainment without requiring any stipulation on my part.-Let him not cease an instant to be himself.-I hate, where I looked for manly resistance, to find a mush of concession. Better be a nettle in the side of your friend than his echo. Members: Anne Callahan, Shirley Mack Compton, Gladys Coy, james Dever, Mildred LeFevre, lean Marten, lohn Meagher, Ro- bert Stewart, Shirley Stewart, Orville Todd, Ralph DeWitt, Marjorie Edwards, Charles Helmes, Mildred Kelley, George Key, Lee McCreary, Florence McKeever, Maria Reilly, Vivian Boice, Ruth Fisher, Eleanor Griffin, Gladys Oberholzer, Charles Lee. Mannerly grace is their's. Advisers: Ben- jamin H. Matteson, M r s. I l e n e H. C o m p t o n, Mrs. Lucy E. Long. Arts and Crafts, h o n o r a r y a r t group of N. P. N., numbers among its members some of our most gifted friends. These people tap their store of creative ability and revel in the act of add- ing to our aes- thetic diet. They dabble in practic- ally all the fields of art, fashioning an amusing little figure, sketching some graceful landscape, paint- ing a quaint old house, or chiseling an arresting head. Each year the school looks forward to their annual Christmas Sale, when their wares, and those of the World, are displayed and sold. Each year we linger over the lovely things they make, laughing at the two- headed doll, exclaiming at the sombre etch- ings, fascinated by the intricate embroidery. We rather gaze at these folk with just a bit of wonderment, yet they look just like us, they act like us, and they laugh indulgently when We venture to compliment them on their work. Work?l That's no work, they say, Fingers fashioning fascinating forms. 96 Les Artistes. we love planning our projects and enjoy working them out: come up some day and join .us. We shake our heads and retell ourselves that we're not alike- they can do that work-we can't. We wonder why we can't. l..et's try!! After getting stuck in the rubber cement, completely messed up in sticky wet clay, and drenched with a particularly vile shade of bilious green paint, we again shake our hideously sprayed heads and again affirm that they can, and we can't. Members: Emily Anderson, Ethel Angy- al, Iennie Berlt, Kenneth Bloomer, Barbara Bossert, Shirley Mack Compton, Burnice Du- Bois, Hope Finger, Iosephine Goffredi, Emily Gregg, lean Marien, Bernice Piatti, Iune Messner, Mildred Radley, Mildred Rogers, Eunice Roberts, Marion Schwenk, Dean Shoup, Muriel Trebay, Elsie Wheat, Henri- ette Wicks, Robert Stewart, Dorothy Hilde- brand, Marguerite Garrison, Anne Glover, Anne Knetsch, Iulia Kosarovich, Evelyn Foss, Marjorie Wilson, Alfred Roeder, Salesmen as well . . . Eleanor Griffin, Kenneth l-lasBrouck, Hilda Brown. Associate Members: Elizabeth Coulter, Gwen Dornheim, Edwina Herbst, Leonard Tantillo, Genevieve Wilcox, Cyn- thia Veith, Ieannette Young. Advisers: Edith Holt, Ruth Bennett, Esther Bensley. Alpha Sig began the year auspiciously with two highly successful and eventful literary teas. Helen and Alf Evers lec- tured on their books in the Social Room, while out in the kitchen hyster- ics were gleefully being had by all. Three card tables of dishes collaps- ed with one accord, sending the poor kitchen crew dashing madly to catch them before woe spread itself all over the floor. Wild laughter at this ludicrous sight near- ly broke up the lecture. Tea was served, but as boiling water was scarce, many a cup of tea was drawn piping hot from the faucet. One poor, unsus- pecting soul insist- ed that the tea she received from the Alpha Sig affair was the best she had ever had in Normal. Had she but known! The next day, while another noted authoress, Hilde- garde Hoyt-Smith, was talking on her delightful book, Little Black Nose , noses began to sniff with that tell-tale wrinkle that presages the offensive. A rush to the kitchen found the place a mass of nasty black smoke. Poor pots-fthey certainly were a It's the man who pays. 97 Teaing, literarily. sorry mess. One cheery red one was so far from recognition that we literally scrub- bed ior hours before we came upon the faintest tinge of pink. Tea was served that day, too. Ah, these literary people certainly have perseverance. Roars of laughter from a certain well known campus group can generally still be taken to denote a reminis- cing oi the Alpha Sig teas. New Paltz has been chosen as the meet- ing place for the state convocation of Alpha Sig this year and the organization has scratched its collective head trying to work out an interesting and unusual program for the visitors. As we go to press the plans are jealously guarded from public appraisal, but it would not surprise the cynically mind- ed to find out that this guarded program is more or less of a defense mechanism, and that the real program is still blithely bound- ing around, daring the members to catch it, pin it down, and announce it. Cynics, as a class, are unpalatable people and it does our hearts good to be able to gloat over them-for in this case they are wrong- dead wrong-our program is planned- and will be successful. As the piece de resistance of '38, Alpha Sigma Omicron hopes to have the distin- guished honor of entertaining Maud and Miska Petersham. Members: lean Marien, William Israel, Gertrude Brion, Virginia Brown, Muriel Tre- bay, George Fersh, Isabelle Byrne, Mary Darrow, Iohn Page, Mildred Radley, Harold Weston, Evelyn Rubin, Ann Callahan, Joseph 98 McCaffrey, Charlotte Dietz, Ethel Angyal, Catherine Edelstein, Iohn Farmer, Eileen Callahan, Olga Schleede, Betty Smellie, Iohn White, Orville Todd, Marjorie Anderson, Selma Weiss, Terrence Kelly. Advisers: Barbara Pfaff, A. Bruce Bennett. Surely no more dramatic directors of plays than A. B. Bennett and Rebecca Mc- Kenna can be found. We defy you to pro- duce them! Our Dramatic Club ventures always meet with huge success, and while we have much respect and admiration for our young Thespians, we can't help throw- ing out our opinion that these two lovable creatures play an important part in every successful production. Anyone who watches Smear on the paint Behind the scenes. Mr. Bennett pacing back and forth across the auditorium, his hat on his curl-fringed head, cigar in mouth, brandishing one of his flock of canes, must be inspired to do his utmost. At least we shall call this impulse inspiration-some murmur that they get it -or else- The presentation of Spring Dance was undoubtedly the Dramatic Club's most polished performance of the past three years. lt is one of the admirable practices of the Club to take cognizance of all talent that the school is blessed with. No seniority be- cause one is a senior, a junior, or what-not. lf the freshman is good the Club uses him, and the choice always justifies this course. We are glad to have seen the addition of a faculty member to a Dramatic Club cast. By acting in Spring Dance Dr. Ver- duin has forged a durable link in that needed realizes that the actor depends heavily upon many people back stage for the effect he makes. And the Club welcomes people who are skilled in the technical side of play pro- ducing. Bravo!!! Members: Ethel Angyal, Kathryn Bell, Helen Bender, Anna L. Bergmark, Kenneth Bloomer, Shirley Mack Compton, Charlotte Dietz, John Farmer, Patricia Fleming, Sally Finkel, Ruth Fisher, Almida Font, Frances Curtain 8:l5l chain between student and faculty, and we shall ever remember and chuckle over his part in the play. Nor shall we soon forget some of the precious quips of that brilliant production. Perhaps the one that will linger longest is the gem which ran like this -a fandango dancer - forty years old - with buck teeth-and built like a moose. Membership to Dramatic Club is not limited, but one must demonstrate an inter- est in all aspects of dramatic art to be a member. Another practice that brings re- spect to this group is the development of its own scenery and lighting effects. The Bishop Misbehaves had the finest amateur stage set ever seen at New Paltz and Spring Dance ran a close second. So often people think that membership in a dramatic club is within reach only of those who are able to act. New Paltz Dramatic Club realizes that ability to act is a prerequisite of any person who takes part in a play, but it also Hallock, Edward Fitzpatrick, Terrence Kelly, lohn Knapp, Florence Kelban, Lorraine Marshall, Florence McKeever, Sadie Musu- meci, Leslie Ross, Abraham Rosenthal, Evelyn Rubin, Gladys Houghton, Lee Schmid, Maurice Solomon, Roy Silver, Robert Ste- wart, Muriel Trebay, Fannie Zeh, Dorothy Kelleher, Dorothy Def-tevere, Patricia Clauss, Albert Weissman, Larry Asher, Leo Beaupre, Isabelle Byrne, Betty Leonard, lane Martin, Beatrice Pakula, Evelyn Perkett, Bernice Piatti, Eileen Rayno, Eleanor Scharfenberg, Laura Schoonmaker, Shirley Squier, Evelyn Weick, Edwin Braem, Emily Buzydgan, Iohn Butler, Esther Brophy, Barbara Bossert, Ioan Brucker, Vivian Dworkind, Dotty Anges, Claire Lonergan, Iune Messner, Norman Harris, lane Hynard, Leona Vernooy, Mary O'Sullivan, George Wingate, Frederica Vermilyea. Adviser: A. Bruce Bennett. 99 A ' . t, xy, 1 in , ovjfbf QQ . QQ-ff Harmony is one of life's most pleasant ingredients. As one pauses in this tumu- ltuous age and v i e w s th e W o r 1 d, o n e finds little har- mony existing. The world is singing in dis- cord. Crash- ing c a n n o n chords rever- beratethrough- out man's do- main. Harsh cries built on the scale of hate grate upon the ears of peace. Harmony, the soothing, quiet- ing flow of sound, is being lost in man's avaricious race for power. However, here at New Paltz, we are constantly aware of the presence of harmony. One hundred and ten girls gather once each week to practice for eventual harmonic perfection. Each year the school looks forward to the performance ot Chorus in its yearly Spring Concert. One of the living memories the students of New Paltz will always enjoy is their singing of the Vesper Hymn. The first singing of the Vesper Hymn turns one back to freshman year during faculty picnic - when the Shaw- angunks are swathed in Phoenician purple, the burning sun takes its curtain call behind them, and dusk descends to find our hearts full- junior year we sing the Vesper Hymn as we watch our friends pass forth into life - senior year the deep inner meaning of this sweet song is completely revealed to us. When 'ere the sun sets far away o'er the Shawangunks in the west, will linger among those firmly entrenched memories of our Alma Mater. A la Helen Morgan. Members: Adele Allen, Betty Amelio, Marjorie Anderson, Ethel Angyal, Constance Baker, Lillian Barber, Mildred Barrington, Annamay Baumgarten, Ruth Breen, Emily Brengel, Eleanor Brennan, Marion Bright- man, Elizabeth Brown, Marjorie Brown, Moira Brown, Ruth Brune, Yolanda Caporale, Ienine Caracappa, Gertrude Carroll, Beatrice Castagnino, Mania Charm, Kathryn Cory, 100 Mabel Cox, Mabel Crystal, Lillian Daddazio, Mildred Davis, Ruth Denike, Florence De- Witt, Mary Dillon, Helen Edick, Elizabeth Elwood, Helen Engle, Evelyn Epstein, Dor- othy Eymann, Rita Fautz, lane Flannery, Patricia Fleming, Marion Flint, Hildreth Franks, Margaret Frost, Marguerite Garrison, Sylvia Gollop, Eleanor Griffin, Alma Gut- heil, Patricia Hart, Alice jones, Anna lung, Florence Kelban, Vera Kern, Anne Knetsch, Mildred LeFevre, Eleanora Lindhorst, Eleanor Liner, Helen Lowe, Mary Lyden, Caroline Lyons, Helen McElhenny, Florence Manning, Georgina Maybury, Lucille Menz, june Messner, Charlotte Miller, Margery Miller, Mary Mockler, Mary Murphy, Elizabeth Neely, Mary O'Connor, Winifred Odell, Mary O'Sullivan, Inez Puckey, Thelma Ouacken- bush, Genevieve Sadowski, Olga Schleede, Elizabeth Sheehan, Mildred Rogers, Helen Rooney, Marion Schwenk, Alice Sigrist, Elma Smith, Shirley Stewart, Ethel Stolte, Florence Snyder, Ruth Taylor, Marjorie Terwilliger, Esther Thompson, Anne Tolve, Muriel Tomp- kins, Doris Tuthill, Eunice Wack, Elsie Walt- Lift Thine Eyes. man, Olga Wandzelak, Mary Warian, Anne Whitney, Dorothy Wick, Genevieve Wilcox, Audrey Wilhelm, Hilda Winne, Helen Zar- embo, Fannie Zeh. Director: Marian H. Harding. Evening gowns rioting in color streamed onto the stage last March. Quiet waved its wand over the audience. A baton poised uplifted for a moment- descended-and the ecstasy of song engulfed us. Song enters the soul in all of life's crises. As small children scampering along the road toward home while the baleful shadows thrust out their tentacles, we sing-as gan- gling kids while waiting for our best girl to go on our first date, we sing,-as we enter the blissful state of matrimony, music leads us down the aisle-when spirits are low and life seems quite pointless, we softly hum-when lunior comes along we at- tempt to croon - as we sit waiting for lunior to come in from his first formal prom, we happily lilt-and finally as the great ex- perience of death overtakes our footsteps, music ushers us onward. From earliest ages man has let his soul overflow into music and he still does so. In all our rapid living and mad rushing about, we can always find time to relax and absorb the satisfying notes that come rushing forth from a hundred young throats, each pulsating with life and romance. In these troubled times, when the world is in chaos, let us give thanks that our Glee Club can provide us with an interlude of song. Members: Helen Bates, Anna Louise Bergmark, Erna Blache, Ilse Bornemann, Louise Brown, Ioan Brucker, Isabel Byrne, Ieanette Clark, Elizabeth Coulter, Mary E. Cunningham, Mary Darrow, lanet Davidoff, Dorothy DeRevere, Charlotte Dietz, Bernice DuBois, Ethel Eckert, Rita Eronimus, Mary Evans, Mary Farrington, Hope Finger, Kath- ryn Fitzgerald, Almida Font, Marianne Gelis, Vivian Globerson, Emily Gregg, Audrey Greiner, Frances Hallock, Elsie Hannigan, Shirley Herbert, Gladys Houghton, Dorothy Hummel, Constance lohnson, lulia Kasaro- vitch, Thelma Keeler, Mildred Kelley, Edna Kempsell, Isabel Ketcham, Buth Kinney, Eleanor LaMere, Ruth Land, Mary E. Leon- ard, Edith LePtoy, lane Liscum, Gertrude Lotz, Mildred Ludwig, Cora Lund, lean Marten, Clara McBride, Miriam McCloy, lda McCourt, Florence McKeever, Betty Ortiz, Ruth E. Petterson, Bernice Piatti, Agnes Powrie, Genevieve Randall, Margaret Reed, Georgianna Beinisch, Eunice Roberts, Lois Schenck, Laura Schoonmaker, Ruth Schul- man, Iennie Scoma, lean Stockton, Dorothy Sing up here, girls. These spell music. Sturr, Elaine Sulzbacher, Helena Terwilliger, Iulia Torongo, Katrine Troyanovich, Cynthia Veith, Evelyn Weick, Doris Weisler, Tess Wekstein, Cecilia Wheat, Elsie Wheat, Mar- jorie Wilson, Evelyn Winfield, Mary Yost. Director: lennie Lee Dann. On Monday and Thursday afternoons one hears rude noises come staggering from the Band room. One Wonders exactly what is going on. Certainly no musical organiza- 101 tion can be practising in unison? No! lust tunin' up! Silence hangs upon the air for a few seconds-then a flow of blended melody is wafted to us. Ahl That's better! Really to appreciate the performance of a band one should sit in on a few rehearsals, preferably at the beginning of the rehearsal period, when the music is completely new to the players, and they make their first stab at attempting it. lt's pretty terrible, of course! Forget them and set your next listening date for the evening of the finished per- formance. With the opening of the curtain you notice the change. The Band players, clad in smartly tailored uniforms, are ef- fectively grouped about the stage. Mr. Hoffmann, baton in hand, calls for their at- tention. Down comes the baton and you are amazed at the result. Smoothness, richness, sureness, prevail throughout the concert. Here comes the Band! 102 One refuses to believe that this is the same Band playing the same piece one heard four weeks ago. But it is. Members: Lawrence Asher, Barbara Bos- sert, Elizabeth Brown, Virginia Brown, john Chumas, Burnice DuBois, Marjorie Edwards, Helen Engle, Rita Eronimus, May Evans, john Farmer, Marian Farnum, lane Fisher, Edward FitzGerald, Edwin Ford, Madelyn Gibson, Charles Helmes, Don Hoffman, lane Hynard, Robert Karl, Mildred Kelley, Iohn Knapp, George Koerner, Iulia Kasarovich, Ralph Langwick, Herbert Lown, Cora Lund, Iohn Meagher, Benjamin Mingle, Clara At easel Ostrander, Pauline Peaters, Kathryn Pro- vencher, Genevieve Randall, Maria Reilly, lean Renison, Alfred Roeder, lohn Rogers, Les Ross, Marjorie Schupner, Virgil Sheeley, Charles Shields, Doris Tuthill, Lorraine Val- enti, Ieannette Weaver, Harold Wenig, Iohn Whalen, Allyne Wheeler, Rosamund Zehder. Conductor: Howard B. Hoffmann. Baby of New Paltz organizations is the Men's Glee Club. Singing in the past has been limited to the soprano, second soprano, and alto of the female voice, and while they have always provided keen enjoyment it was with evident pleasure that the school awaited the first appearance of a Men's singing group. Nor were we disappointed! From the moment that the opening chords were struck the audience beamed its com- plete approval. The solo work was indeed exceptional. Men's Glee Club may be the youngest organization on campus, but it has made its favorable mark upon New Paltz consciousness. Members: Charles Gumaer, Karl Lim- bacher, Vernon Lull, Benjamin Mingle, Roy Silver, George Stubbins, William Ridgeway, Oscar Weiner, Albert Weissman. Accompanist: Miss Myrtle Lord. Adviser: Howard B. Hoffmann. 5 QA To - J' 0 . ' P' 0 L, .1 X' ,B Cv 0- 0 5 Q. ulxvo 0 I ,QD VXI Kbx Lax' 5, . ww 1 . fy Leaderfgike up the Band! Sing We Noel The annual Spring Concert found the Orchestra tuned to the pitch of success. Each number brought forth longer periods of ap- plause until with the playing of a special ar- rangement of By the Waters of Minnetonka 4? M ,ea ur ,r f ., JI Ju 0 . wi ft .A Y the audience gave the Orchestra and Mr. Hoffmann a rousing ovation. Fine orchestral music is available to all of us through the radio, but too many of us find too few mo- ments to sit and listen to the many fine con- certs now so common on the air. It is, there- fore, an appreciated endeavor on the part of Mr. Hoffmann and his colleagues to provide us with a fragment of the classics in his yearly concert. The smaller group, reduced proportionately throughout its construction, gives us this great music in all its perfection. The instrumenta- tion of the New Paltz Orchestra has been based on the instrumentation of the Little Symphony, and the result has been really delightful. The members of this amateur group are to be complimented upon their mastery of some extremely difficult sym- phonic pieces. lt would be a welcome ad- dition to the social program of the school to have several orchestral evenings arranged during the year. Members: John Rogers, Helen Bates, Allyne Wheeler, Kay Provencher, Eleanor Bundy, Iohn Chumas, Gladys Coy, Burnice DuBois, Helen Engle, Edwin Ford, Madeline Gibson, Iulia Kasarovich, Iohn Knapp, George Koer- ner, Herbert Lown, Cora Lund, Elsie Mabee, Ben Mingle, Helen Osip, Clare Ostrander, Genevieve Randall, Alfred Roeder, Iean Benison, Virgil Sheely, Florence Snyder, Iohn Whalen, Charles Helmes, Miss Strobel, Mr. Oakley, Mr. Huntington. Conductor: Howard B. Hoffmann. Our Little Symphony 103 The English language abounds in words that conjure up complete sections of one's life. The members of the Paltzonian have one such word, which neither time nor vast experience will ever erase from their mem- ory. That word, harmless in aspect, yes, even having a pleasant connotation to many is INFORMAL. We never thought that such a meek-looking combination oi letters could pack such a terrific wallop! Early in September we had our first meet- ing. Light-heartedly we strolled into the Social Room, draped ourselves in most informal positions and innocently waited the arrival of the first representatives of the various companies. From the start we scented that all was not as tradition would prefer it. There seemed to be an invisible struggle going on between the old and the new. We knew, naturally, that this struggle was by no means novel, but never before had the intangible contestants marked out their ring so near to us. In the year 1937 All the news . . . Old was wabbling around on very un- steady legs, and nothing can continue taking such a pounding without some signs of weakening. Old fights, and fights, reaches a low ebb in its resistance, then gets a second breath and leads again with renewed vigor. One of our lighter moments. 10-1- We entered the fight at one of those low ebbs and poor old, Old took it on the chin. The decision went unconditionally to New. New had a nom de plume. This nom de plume was Informal Strange, this nickname, but what implications!!! What carrying their endless paraphernalia, snap- ping this and snapping that. What a pic- ture!! What a pun!! The group photo- grapher, patient angel, steamed all over New Paltz like a veritable War Admiral, and iiqgled himself into the most fantastic shapes in order to get the desired effects. A bad They hold the purse strings. possibilities!!! W h a t grounds for innovation!!! Did we innovate! The art staff rolled up its sleeves and plunged into a frenzy of planning. Figures went swimming around in Milly's mind, but when she brought them into meeting Mr. Gurwit urged us really to let ourselves go. Why follow any of the old? Diamonds, circles, tri- angles, rectangles, and all their variations came in for their share of use. The Art Staff went under cover, making out the dummies. Photography next reared its visual head and demanded a lion's share of work. lack Meagher and Iohn Farmer, quite oblivious of the far-reaching implications of the situa- tion, amiably agreed to shoulder this end of the book. Immediately, their eyes began to glint calculatingly. What about that! Good shadows there!! There's that elusive senior! Hold him while I get the camera! Flash!! One more done! For months these two padded around school, followed by a retinue moment arrived with the return of the group pictures. An intricate mathematical prob- lem made its appearance. The maiority of the Board quietly passed out, leaving lack that luscious job of reducing here, and en- larging there, multiplying by the appalling figure of fifteen-sixteenths, and doing var- ious other mean mathematical processes all tor the new INFORMAL Paltzonian. Ah well!! To one person goes a large slice of credit for this book. Chuny Wicks has been present on every occasion when her abund- ant good humor was most needed. She has Merrily we slave along. tactfully handled a group of rugged indi- vidualists, steering them through the in- tricate maze, that has culminated in what we all hope is a slam bang book. Paltzonian Board: Henriette Wicks, Editor: Iohn Meagher, Associate: lean Marien, As- sociate: I-larold Weston, Literary: Kathryn Bell, Assistant: Mildred Radley, Art: Shirley Mack Compton, Assistant: Elsie Wheat, As- sistant: Iohn Farmer, Business: Robert Stew- art, Assistant: Orville Todd, Advertising: Paul Murphy, Assistant. Advisers: Esther A. Bensley, Edgar V. Beebe, Rebecca McKenna. 105 A literary journal of superior rank is the by-line that the Paltzonette is entitled to. This publication is designed primarily to foster an interest in writing throughout the school and it is the rational outlet for those people who enjoy Writing. Each month finds something of rare interest unobtrusivetly cached between its Covers, and students and faculty profit by the type of recognition it can give. As is to be expected of a publica- tion which draws upon ' such a diversity of A contributors, the editor has numerous obsta- cles to hurdle, fre- quently he may be seen leaping around school for last minute material, but the ulti- mate product has been uniformly good during our sojourn. Recently the Paltz- onette has inaugu- rated a school tradi- tion by having an is- sue centered about the Practice School. The results have been amazing. The poetry gathered from our children has been of a gratifyingly fine type. Dale Carnegie holds the view that every one is most concerned with his own name, and the Practice School children are motivated to write in their very best manner through the hope of having their names published under their contributions in the Paltzonette. Mr. Carnegie certainly has something there, for the work of the boys and girls entitles them to a place in their issue. This number serves as a really definite bond between the Practice School and the Normal. Too, it provides an opportunity for the lower classmen of the Normal to become acquainted with the faculty down the hill, and also gives these prospective practice teachers a foretaste of the work that they may expect from their future pupils. 106 To quote Mr. Matteson's editorial in the March issue: The girls and boys of the van den Berg School of Practice are happy to identify themselves as contributors to the Paltzonette: and we trust this issue may prove interesting to its readers. This is but another way of saying that teaching is a co-operative enterprise and its success is measured in terms of displayed evidence of instruction and develo- ped ability. The glow of satisfaction which comes from our ap- pearance in print should warm the hearts of all ages. In a real sense the young men and young wom- en who have taught these children are quite as truly contrib- uting to this issue as are the young people whose writing it is. It is my hope that all concerned may feel complimented. Members: William Israel, Evelyn Rubin, George Fersh, Isabelle Byrne, Evelyn Stein, Iohn Page, Frank Hoey, Gertrude Keller, Ann Callahan. Adviser: A. Bruce Bennett. Deadline .... approaching! Inspiration, where art thou? Tuesday night in the Nepano office might be compared with a birdseye view of pandemonium. Re- porters come sliding in just under the line, typewriters pound forth the news of the week, proofreaders fever- ishly finish their jobs, last minute copy is distractedly set up, questions and an- swers dangle in mid-air- neither reaching their goal - shins get barked against tables - an unwary re- porter sneezes the copy all over five square miles- the clock passes three-thirty - three forty-five - fifteen minutes to deadline-and the deadline is met! How they do it will always re- main one of those tantaliz- ing puzzles. Yet when Thursday arrives the Nep- ano arrives: it is correctly set up, it contains few proof- reading errors, it spreads the news: and where is the chaos of Tuesday night? One feature of the sheet that should come in for special mention is the splen- did editorial policy followed this year. Editorial policy is the outstanding feature of any newspaper, and it is not uncommon in college papers to see in the editorial section wishy-washy, pointless paragraphs on nothing. Even if there is any meat in the column it can be de- pended upon to present the most conserva- tive view of any question or to reflect faculty opinion in the matter. Students of college age rnust have ideas of their own. It is not humanly possible to loll through twenty years of life without developing some ideas. That fact is established!! College students do have ideas of their own! What better outlet for these ideas than the editorial col- umn of their campus newspaper!! What an outlet for all kinds of thoughts, plans, ideals -. This year the Nepano has often startled New Paltz students with its frank enthusiastic editorials. Accustomed, as most of these people are, to the colorless editorials of their Hanging on every word. high school newspapers, these candid statements blaze away and are quite likely to be called radical and all the rest of that new- ly developed voc ary dear to the the neck in the servative: thinking Bird's-eye view of panclemonium. not too much to say that this column will be numbered among the foremost of any list of campus publications. Members: Ioseph McCaffrey, Gertrude Brion, Eileen Callahan, Betty Smellie, Olga Schleede, Marjorie Anderson, Glenna Baird, Eleanor Brown, Katherine Fitzgerald, Marion Grusky, Gladys Houghton, Mary Hodge, lohn McElhenny, Marjorie Schupner, Edith Streit, Marjorie Terwilliger, Iames Young, Rosamund Zehder, Claire Israel, Beverly St. Leger, Oscar Weiner, Lawrence Asher, David Wald, Philip Cosgrove, Norman Harris, Muriel O'Connor, Albert Weissmann, Dean Shoup, Ruth Petterson, Kathrine Troy- anovich, William Callahan, Mary Farring- ton, Ruth Kinney, Vera Racine, Helena Min- ard, Roy Silver, Ruth Schulman, Elizabeth Coulter, lane Fisher. Advisers: Rebecca McKenna, Roland G. Will. 107 Sorority Synchronizers. To run smoothly, swiftly, and silently every motor must have all its component parts Working in unison. No one part can stand alone and claim supremacy. No single fac- tor can claim leadership. Thus it is with several sororities that must live in the same town, sleep in the same classes, swim in the same creek, and, unfortunately, smile at the same men. They must construct some simple plan by which their greatest efficiency may be achieved. The plan worked out at New Paltz takes the form of an lntersorority Coun- cil. Each sorority has equal representation, equal rights, and equal votes. Strangely enough, of the two hundred days spent at school, it is frequently found that two of these six groups have one night set aside for socializing. To date, the number of 108 eligible male population at N.P.N. remains none too startling. That in itself is a problem demanding solution, but when two sororities pick the same night -- well, to state it briefly -that is calamity! Where are a sufficient number of drags to be found? One doesn't just turn over a stone and pick one up. No, no!! Cultivation, with great care, is some- times necessary. Something must be done! Hair pulling and other Amazonian tactics can result only in tragedy for both sides, for no matter who wins, they will all look like the rim of a tin can, which has been opened with an axe-no, peaceful methods must be resorted to. Why not have lntersorority Council decide this weighty matter? Some- one certainly explored the inner recesses of his cerebellum that time! One wins-the other finds another night. All agree and are happy. Rushing rules present another problem to the sororities. Only Council could mull them over - swish them around several times and bring out something acceptable to all. In this particular case it is highly desirable to give each sorority the same chance-let no one start early -or splurge too greatly -let everyone start with the signal and may the best man, pardon us, best gal win. Though hardly confined to sororities, money is another of their problems, some of the houses have more than others. Yet it is not exactly fair to let them go to great expense to attract the Freshmen, who, as is well known, are quite easily dazzled. When all the groups cannot afford equally elaborate entertainment some regulations must be made in order that each rush party and other rush events be kept within certain limits. Consequently originality and talent must be the chief lures and that is the way it should be! Anyone can call in a caterer and have a grand party, but to plan it oneself-that's something quite different. lntersorority Coun- cil regulates the social affairs and acts as the motor that brings out top-notch perform- ance in sorority life. Senior Members: Mildred Radley, Evelyn Foss, Berenice Piatti, Betty Leonard, Marg- garet Kaemmerlen, Genevieve Randall, Vir- ginia Babcock, Charlotte Dietz, Doris Kilduff, Florence Snyder, Evelyn Rubin, Gwendolyn Gould, Lorraine Marshall, Gertrude Lewin, Mary Murtaugh, Edith McCarthy. Adviser: Grace I. MacArthur. No wonder the League of Nations was a failure!! Fifty-seven nations faced with in- surmountable barriers, trying to agree on world policies. Contrast the League with two groups of students, each made up of members of the same nation, of the same race, of the same ethical standards, and members of the same school who sit in long argumentative sessions, debating, disagree- ing, wrangling about singularly narrow fra- ternal policies that apply only to their own institution. Draw the parallel further!! Each nation of the world is held together, as a nation, through a pulsating spirit of nationalism, which to be effective must sincerely animate the people. Once this spirit, the subtlest base of any nation, is nullified, the fate of that nation enters its period of declination -. So here in New Paltz, two fraternal groups exist on campus, each imbued with that na- tionalistic spirit that in their own minds places them unalterably in the right. Two diverse rights cannot follow their tenets on one campus. Both must give a little and, what is more important, take a little. This taking is not a pleasant experience. Some board of governors must be formed to decide on the giving and taking. Such a board is the Inter-fraternity Council, composed of the most level headed members of each group. These rep- resentatives, with their fac- ulty adviser, who rightly is a member of neither fra- ternity, meet each month to thresh out the vexing prob- lems of the Delphic and Delta Kappa fraternities. ln the main these brotherhoods are made up of men whose perspectives on life are somewhat different. What one wants the other doesn't, or at best is lukewarm to- ward, and vice versa. Dis- agreements are inevitable and to be expected, of course. There would be little significance in having two fraternities if the mem- bers of both were of pre- cisely the same type. People with varying view- points on life certainly are going to attack problems from different angles. Thus, it is the sometimes ticklish work of Council to bring widely opposing facets of ,the same problem into accord. An easy job? Cer- tainly not! The work of the Council is one of the most harassing at N.P.N., and it is pleas- ant to look back upon this year and note how well it has worked and, what is even more gratifying, to realize that a more friend- ly feeling has been built up between these two rival groups. They gather-men of differing lands and kinds - Comrades, yet separate, alone intent Each on the key-note of his instrument, Till, 'mid the discords, each the true note finds. Straightway, attuned as one, their several minds To one harmonious purpose jointly bent, Their every tone is with its fellows blent, And part to part melodiously binds. Grace Denio Litchfield. Members: William Israel, Paul Murphy, Anthony Tronto, Iohn Page, Vincent O'Con- nor, Thomas Lahey, Larry Asher, Bernard McCloy, Abraham Rosenthal, Ralph DeWitt. Adviser: Olin Todd Frazier. Miniature League of Nations. 109 Arethusa went Hawaiian this fall, throw- ing a regular Waikiki rush party. Freshmen, poor clears, expected to pluck pineapples from Evie's hair and to dive into the quietly lapping water of the kitchen sink, but pains- taking explanations at last convinced them that a too realistic interpretation might have unfortunate results. lntriguing rumors of the games that were the order of the evening came to rest on widespread ears, but even the most minute research failed to uncover the choicer details of the evening's capers. Girls are so very secretive -they never say a word. Observers were willing to make small wagers that brothers, fathers, and beaux would be all to unhappily aware that she was away at school, when they began their yearly search for those white ducks and flannels so religiously cleaned and packed away last fall. Finding the darn things al- ways entails much inward profanity anyway, and to find a dollar's worth of cleaning gone to waste is bad enough, but worse is to fol- low-jaunty little slits cut in crazy zigzags made a perfect outfit for her rush party. And after all, what's in a pair of pants? That is, of course, if you're not. Pants are a common commodity, but that first impression on future sorority sisters Cshe hopesl cannot be so easily substituted. She must put both of her best feet forward that night or perhaps forever look lingeringly at the gregarious girls she might have been a part of, So, what's in a pair of pants if they help her get what she so earnestly wants? 110 Are You English, old chap? Goodman . , or Toscanini Members: llse Bornemann, Esther Brophy, Eleanor Brown, Alene Decker, lulia Fitz- gerald, Evelyn Foss, Eleanor Griffin, Vir- ginia Iuillerat, Dorothy Kellerher, Iane Lis- cum,Iean Marien, Florence McKeever, Char- lotte Miller, Bernice Piatti, lean Rifenbary, Mildred Radley, Eunice Roberts, Thelma Ronk, Eleanor Scharfenberg, Betty Van Al- styne, Ruth Verch, Frederica Vermilyea, Leona Vernooy, Evelyn Weick, Lois Williams. Advisers: Dorothy Giddings, Emory Iacobs. One fool proof recipe that through num- erous trials retains its freshness and delicacy was again tried by Clio this spring and yielded its expected dividends of joy. The following directions may be noted for future reference: l. 2. 3. 4. No Set your alarm clock for six-thirty. lTry it some day in early spring and you'll find that daylight has actually arrived at that ghastly houri. Dress in some loose-fitting casual sports things. Breathe long and deeply of the vibrant morning air. After you have parked your car, My quietly and Watch the banks of damp white mist disappear into nothingness, revealing a panorama of unequalled magnificence. ' 5. Clamber into your quaint old buggy and start the climb to Mohonk House. 6. Pause on your upward ride to marvel at this perfect scenery. 7. Gaze in rapt wonderment at the gorg- eous rolling gardens with their banks of brilliant color demanding instant at- tention. Take breakfast in the glass-enclosed dining room and Wonder how people can do such plebeian things as eat, un- less their backs are turned. Climb the winding path to Skytop. 8. tj...v-- trespassinq! A jam session. ':Yf5'Sf+5+ Happily tired, take your way down the NJ-'J' u road to Mountain Rest, and so on to Sopv' New Paltz, casting a wistful look back on avg q',.,ot-Lie scene of a glorious day's pleasures. VV' ,had mbers: Marjorie Anderson, Glenna ur' ,VG r , len Bates, Moira Brown, Virginia WF! o ildred Davis, Helen Downing, atherine Fitzgerald,Eva lane Heath, Gladys n, Iane Hynard, Claire Israel, Mar- gare mmerlen, Ruth Kinney, Geneva e, Mildred LeFevre, Betty Leonard, Lu- cille Menz, Elizabeth Neely, Mary O'Con- nor, Genevieve Randall, Georgiana Bein- asch, Marjorie Schupner, Betty Srnellie, Allyne Wheeler, Ieanne Wolpe, Mary Yost, Rosamund Zehder, Shirley Scott. Advisers: Elizabeth Losel, Edgar V. Beebe. 111 Among the convocations that burgeoned this year was that of Ago who welcomed her state-wide bevy of sisters to New Paltz. The girls hashed over their plans for months ahead of time. The scheduling of an en- tertaining week-end at New Paltz is by no means the simple process it may seem to be. Many jam sessions were held before the Agonians made up their minds as to just what program they were to follow. Friday night was the date of arrival. Too bad that the handy old idea that guests must be tired and want to rest after their long trip has gone out of vogue. No, the modern means of transporta- tion are distressingly comfortable. Distressingly so to hosts-not to guests. What to do with the con- vocates on Friday night? Flash! A dinner at Clinton Ford! A capital idea. The music is good. The food not below average. Twelve o'clock on Friday, too. The parts of that puzzle fell into place quite easily - now to tackle the next--Saturday morning-no trouble there-meetings from ten until twelve- Luncheon? Where to have luncheon? What a day for Mohonkl Followed a rush for the telephone. In ten minutes the arrangements for luncheon, which everyone knew would l 112 The Dipsy Doodle! be perfectly prepared and perfectly served, had been completed. ln this way two prob- lems found their solution, for how better could Saturday afternoon be spent than in wandering around the superb grounds of Mohonk? The group was warned not to walk themselves out entirely because of the plans for evening and then scattered to enjoy the endless beauties that make up Mohonk. Satur- day evening arrived and with it the climax of this eventful week- end - The Iunior Prom - Dates had been arranged long in advance and now the local girls mutter- ed prayers that they l might defy aggres- sion. They were im- pregnablel! What a night! Sunday morn- ing and time for the convocates to start back to their home schools. As the last car dis- appeared the hostesses gave vent to a long, contented sigh- convocation over-con- vocation, a success-convocation, a happy prospect for next year. Members: Adelle Allen, Betty Anderson, Ethel Angyal, Kath- ryn Bell, Vivian Boice, Eleanor Brennan, Gertrude Brion, Eileen Callahan, Mae Chardavoyne, Elizabeth Coulter, Elizabeth El- wood, Mary Farrington, Ruth Finley, Marguerite Garrison, Adelaide Gassner, Emily Gregg, Lillian Halleran, Edna Horn, Edna Kempsell, Vera Kern, Cora Lund, Claire Long- ergan, H a z e l Montgomery, Eleanor La Mere, Ruth Petter- son, Vera Racine, Olga Schle- ede, Edith Streit, Elaine Sulz- bacher, Cynthia Veith, lean- nette Young, Eleanor Young. Advisers: Gertrude H. Thomp- son, Howard B. Hoffmann. The pause that refreshes. The House on the Hill went to town this year, entertaining its House Party guests at the Governor Clinton in Kingston. Such unparalleled munificence left us gasping. We're all pals together. Upon their return from a delicious supper Theta Phi had a swing band to provide dul- cet tunes for the dancing. All agreed that the Thet's House Party had been a smash hit. Yet smash hits are not at all unusual at the Theta Phi House. Their rush party this fall was another. Freshmen were given their first tang of college life with The Singing Sorority's Collegiate Bush Party. We fear they viewed the food situation with slightly protruding eyes and receding stomachs, when the franks and cococola were served-this wasn't typical college fare they prayed-no, they were reassured -one did get an underdone hamburger as a variant--freshmen eyes lit up in eager anticipation as they wandered around the rooms taking in all the banners so jauntily tacked on every wall,-hummmm, Yale, Colgate, Cornell, Harvard-not bad-not bad at all. Do they come trooping down to New Paltz very often? Oh! Never seen a Harvard man in New Paltz? Well there's always a first time. That's the spirit-go get 'em, galsl Theta Phi has become famous through- out the campus for its unbounded hospital- ity. One of the most verdant freshmen was amazed at his reception. He collared every passerby and poured forth this amazing tale, Gee, down at Theta Phi they ask you to take off your hat and sit down, gee. This spirit certainly endears the Thet's to the long legged individual, who was so amazed at his re- ception-we wonder what he expected? Members: Dorothy Anges, Virginia Babcock, Anna Louise Bergmark, Louise Brown, Ruth Brune, Emily Buzdygan, Beatrice Cas- tagnino, Shirley Mack Compton, Gladys Coy, Dorothy De Revere, Char- lotte Dietz, Burnice DuBois, Marjorie Edwards, Hope Finger, Marion Flint, Ruth Fisher, Marianne Gelis, Helen Gray, Alice Iones, Gertrude Keller, Doris Kil- duff, Dorothy Matteson, Margaret Miller, Winifred Odell, Helen Paquet, Katherine Provencher, Eileen Rayno, Maria Reilly, Mildred Rogers, Watchful waiting! Marion Schwenk, Elaine Shutts, Florence Snyder, Iessie Spellman, Shirley Stewart, Dorothy Sturr, Katherine Van Tassel, Henri- ette Wicks, Margaret Flannery, Gladys Ober- holzer, Mary Nolan. Advisers: Ruth Bennett, A. Bruce Bennett. 113 lt's . . . the Big Apple! The spirit of Pi Sig's freshman party would demand that this Writeup end before it begins, begin with the end, end with the beginning or some other combination of be- ginning and ending equally unusual. Pi Sig unearthed an original way of giving a party. The invitations, bearing the cryptic words, Upside Down Party had to be read from their reflections in a mirror, but the pledges didn't take the idea seriously until they attempted to make their entrance to Pi Sig house. No admittance signs barred their way through the front door. 'Where to go? Someone suggested the back porch. Of course! The south door welcomed them. Their hostesses greeted them with tender farewells outside on the lawn and urged the girls to keep their wraps on. Backing into the house they found that the floor pro- vided the only seating space, where the girls sat back to back. The girls sat on the floor and refreshments were served at once. Cocktailing with an upside-down pine- apple cake, middle-coursing with squab, and desserting with tomato juice, the program continued in reverse. Clocks were pushed ahead and set back by the half-hour. Good- night, Ladies started the dancing with the girls shaqqing backward. The Big Apple 114 became a little apple and the Virginia reel unwound at the wrong end. The girls waltzed to Hold That Tiger, foxtrotted to Turkey-in- the Straw, and Suzie-Q'd to Beethoven's Minuet in G. Bridge cards flopped face up on the floor, the lowest bidder got the bid, dummy played the hand while her partner sat silently looking on - spades reached a new low and clubs piled them- selves to the highest in history-the bid was the book and the book was the bid- deuce was tops and the ace was nil. The party over, wraps again indirectly attached to guests, the girls backed out the front door while bright hellos sped them on their way. Not upside down here. Members: Bosalin Adelstein, Cecil Broad, Mania Charm, Sally Finkel, Gwen- dolyn Gould, Dorothy Honig, Esther Karnes, Beatrice Lebovitz, Lorraine Marshall, Ger- trude Lewin, Zelda Kahn, Beatrice Pakula, Evelyn Rubin, Ruth Schulman, Evelyn Stein, Selma Weiss, Shirley Wesley, Francis Worob. Advisers: Edna Taylor, Roland G. Will. Ship ahoy! Artemis flung forth the life line this year and gave a Southern Cruise rush party. The canny members availed themselves of the superior engineering knowledge of the men, while stringing up their colored lights. One young swain found Iennie vainly trying to use the hinge of a swinging door for the resting place of a string of lights. Each time the door was pushed open the lights fell down. Iennie was losing her temper. The lights were not gaining anything. The boys dispatched this little problem with admirable sang froid. Ah, but the girls had made an interesting dis- covery. That helpless gag Worked every time! All one had to do was to stand there with a vacuous look on one's face and wait. Aid was always forthcoming. What fun!! The house was ready in no time. Wait! Where was the gang plank? The last users of the community plank had not yet returned it. Boys, how about rounding up the gangplank? And then the men be- gan to wonder. Were they, by any chance, being taken for a short but very effective ride? But, no! The girls were most em- phatic on this point. How could you accuse us of such low intentions? How about that around the town looking for the gangplank. The townspeople raised their eyebrows slightly - gangplank? - New Paltz? - could it be possible?-no, never that-maybe they're wrong-but they never will under- stand the function of a gangplank in New Paltz. At long last-the gangplank! A triumphant return rewarded the boys for all their trouble. The rest of the evening was spent in fashioning invitations and other such tame pastimes. By the time the house was put back into order, the decorations all in place, and the eight o'clock clearing bell had been ignored for a couple of hours, the boys had realized that their friends had once more shown that spark of genius, so common among girls, for ducking the duties of work, and had phenagled their worldly guests into doing it for them. Members: Betty Amelio, Helen Bender, Erna Blache,Margaret Burnes, Isabelle Byrne, Gertrude Carroll, Kay Colligan, Marguerite Conklin, Teresa Constantino, Mary Darrow, Lucille Decker, Marjorie Edwards, Ioan F itz- patrick, Iosephine Goffredi, Betty Hall, Elsie Hannigan, Jeanne Housen, Marguerite lef- gangplank? Resignedly the boys climbed into their cars and broadcast themselves Are these Normal? Caught in the act. frey, Anne Knetsch, Rose Lewis, Gertrude Lotz, Margaret Luquer, Loretta Malkemus, Edith McCarthy, Mary Murphy, Mary Mur- taugh, Helen Osip, lean Renison, Frances Rinaldi, Helen Ross, Regina Ryan, Iennie Scoma, Margaret Stanton, Patricia Sturgess, Iessie Thompson, Lois Schenck. Advisers: Gertrude Nichols, Howard Mosher. 115 lust a friendly chat. Lock up your doors, dogs, and dolls, the pirate party is on its way. Small groups of prowling preyers prod each likely looking spot for hidden contraband. Ko Sdon Ya is having its annual treasure hunt. Odd shoes, ants, decrepit sign posts, yea any- thing that is not literally roped down takes on shining brilliance to the avid bunch. Strangely enough, when the terrified towns- folk come peeping forth at dawn, they find everything intact. They can't help wonder- ing at this state of affairs, after gobs and gobs of girls have tramped by the night before in asserted search for such curious things. To Ko Sdon Ya goes the laurel for recognizing the spirits of these freshmen sprites so newly torn from home and family. To put it frankly they're plain honest to goodness homesick. The thought of staying within the walls of a room is none too pleasant. Ko Sdon Ya gives them the needed opportunity to join in a gang and have a rollicking good time. Perhaps you've never experienced that slightly vol- canic feeling at the spot so generally calm and so equally generally hungry, but if you ever have, and have had some stranger come up to you and help build up the ruins that might have been, then you can appre- ciate this graceful gesture of Ko Sdon Ya. Ko Sdon Ya, through its annual Alumni 116 Tea, helps tighten the knots of friendship that time has loosened. This afternoon provides a needed breathing span during a whirling weekend. A quiet spot of tea renews the vigor, and this lull provides an excellent opportunity for catching up on a few breaths that were lost somewhere back in the rush from house to house. This is another of Ko Sdon Ya's graceful gestures to their Alma Mater. Members: Constance Baker, Virginia Baker, Annamay Baumgarten, Gertrude Baxter, Iennie Berlt, Barbara Bossert, Emily Brengel, Elizabeth Brown, Teresa Candreva, Abbie Canfield, Yolanda Caporale, Marion Clark, Doris Crandall, Helen Edick, Helen Engle, Evelyn Epstein. Mae Evans, Earla Davis, lane Flannery, Hildreth Franks, Mar- garet Frost, Dorothy Greaves, Alma Gutheil, Florence lnderlied, Evelyn Iudson, Thelma Keeler, Margaret Kennedy, Lillian Kraack, Ruth Land. Ruth Longhenry, Mary Lyden, Florence Manning, Muriel Monroe, Dorothy Osserman, Pauline Peaters, Margaret Pinck- Gather 'round girls- ney. Natalie Pratt, Thelma Quackenbush, Frances Sarli, Laura Schoonmaker, Katherine Sinsapaugh, Elma Smith, Loretta Snyder, Ruth Taylor, Martha Thomassen, Natalie Tompkins, Esther Valenti, Helen Vores, Mary Warian, Rosalind Wessells, Elsie Wheat, Anne Whitney, Genevieve Wilcox, Marjorie Wilson. Advisers: Edith Holt, Gertrude Strobel, Stella Higgins, Florence Lane. AQQNQUQ CJfJic.,.,L Qffnwrw AAFQXALJ J Jfidffnkwww B And a happy time was had by all - this time-worn phrase is the only group of connected words that adequately expresses that contented, slightly sleepy feeling fol- lowing the annual Delphic Banquet. Eyes open with a tinge of astonishment to find those unpredictable clock hands pointing somewhere near the hour set aside by the English for tiffin. Realization slowly creeps over the recumbent figure and a reminiscent smile flits over the drowsy face. lt's Sun- day! Too late for church! He goes over the events just passed! A delicious dinner! Perfect music! A summer moon! The one person! Ah! perfection, it does exist. These thoughts flow through the mind while the coolness of a prickling shower flows over the young body, drowning the piteous ex- cuse for music, fondly thought to be vocal talent by its tousled-headed owner. Other thoughts too, flit by: the first rush party back in '35- the refined torment of initiation- the breathless moment of formal -the many juicy bull sessions-first intra-fraternal game--Delphic Banquet at the Colony- the quick passing of Iunior year with its many! happy events-and then the past year, mighty Senior year, looms up-rush party, but he's no longer the recipient of aforementioned refined torment, no, now the giver, ah joy! -the knowledge that one Do I see Esquire ? Goin' to town! swell gang of kids, despite all argument, is gathered under the triangle and circle, and now the culminating event of three smooth years, the biggest and best banquet has rippled under the bridge, and only the final cord binding school and student re- mains to be broken, that moment when he and his brothers walk across the stage to receive their parchments, and off again to become alumni of New Paltz and of Delphic. Members: Iohn Chumas, Gerald Churchill, Francis Connolly, Ralph DeWitt, Iohn Falvey, Edward Fitz- patrick, Edwin Ford, Frank Hoey, Norman Iohnson, Terrance Kelly, Thomas t Lahey, Roper Larsen, Theo- dore Larsen, Herbert Lown, Bernard McCloy, Lee Mc- Creary, Iohn Meagher, lohn Moynihan, Paul Mur- phy, Thomas Murray, Frank O'Neill, Iohn Page. Howard Rhodes, lohn Rogers, Leslie Ross. Lean- der Schrnid, Virgil Sheeley, Robert Stewart, Leonard Tantillo, Harold Weston, Iohn Whalen. Advisers: Emory Iacobs, Loren D. Campbell, Leslie m. . C, Oakley, Ruth Bennett. 117 The midnight oil burned and burned and burned. Faint in the distance shimmered the goal. Books, books, books-ah Why must this scholarship business entail such mighty effort? How could the coach ex- pect his men to be on the gym floor from three until six and the faculty decide that term papers, notebooks, and files would be Generally one of in order this quarter? these bugbears Was deemed sufficient in it- self to strain the patience of the struggling scribe, but fuel had been crowded into the gaping maws of Assignment, this quarter. Far ahead lay the Elysian goal-a smart silver cup, the possession of which attested to a superior degree of scholastic attain- ment. Nothing to do, but hold on a little tighter, shift into high gear, and get it! And get it they did! Despite the grueling hours put in for Mr. Campbell on the basketball court, despite the leaping around in other activities, despite all this Delta Kappa again won the most prized prize oi the fraternal groups-the Politi Scholarship Trophy, set up to go to the fraternity or sorority whose scholastic record was the highest during any semester. Delta Kappa was Well represented on our varsity basketball squad this year, and while the season was not a yowling success, many tense thrilling moments spattered the progress of every game. Another feather in the heavy laden cap of the Delta Kappa's Was their Winning of the Loyalty cup, for having the largest per- centage of members attendant at the series of home games. This trophy was won only after prolonged grim struggling of all the fraternal organizations, and it is a credit to the Kappa boys that their side Won the Bible . The history of Delta Kappa for the year '38 has been a series of pyramiding suc- cesses. Keep it up, men!! Members: Lawrence Asher, Ronald Blass, Kenneth Bloomer, lames Dever, Iohn Farmer, George Persh, Kenneth Hasbrouck, You tell 'em, Coach! Charles Helmes, Oscar Hochberg, William Israel, George Key, George Koerner, Ioseph McCaffrey, Vincent O'Connor, Abraham Rosenthal, Roy Silver, Orville Todd, An- thony Tronto, Gor- don Kelder, William 118 Ridgeway, R o g e r Salzman. Advisers: Mrs. Ilene H. Compton, Dr. Roland G. Will. Nothin' else to do. .LL V - They're off!! The average entrant of New Paltz Normal is woefully ignorant of the recipe for suc- cessful rural living. While the term barn is not totally foreign to their auditory senses, they have never realized that the barn plays an important part in the social life of the average country couple. Barn Dance!! What visions those hCIpDY words bring forth-. The dimly flickering lights of swaying kerosene lamps throw grotesque shadows on cobwebbed rafters-glowing ruddy-cheeked girls prancing past in the arms of swains, scrubbed gleamingly clean. Yards and yards of calico, gingham, dotted Swiss and, occasionally, shining folds of silk or satin billowing by, revealing well formed, firmly-stepping feet incased in strong durable shoes. The small, not very melodious orchestra blares out its'nectarial themes and the fiddle player obligingly agrees to jig. The dancers sink upon the nearest chairs to watch this inevitably jolly picture. Older folk, whose most pleasant moments are spent in indulging in remin- iscence of the past, perk up at this per- formance - their appreciative smiles out- shine the feeble lamplight. Barn Dance- how dear to every heart in the country- how novel to city dwellers. Country Life Barn Dance is one of the school's gayest events. On the evening of the dance New Paltz can hardly be classed as a modern institution of learning. The calendar is turned back to the middle of the last cen- tury. Bustles swish down the receiving line, voluminous petticoats billow as their wear- ers are whirled about in the lively Virginia Reel, blushes suffuse the healthy cheeks of buxom country lasses as their bashful swains whisper sweet somethings into hopeful ears. Bouffant skirts, intricate embroidery, quanti- ties of whalebone cause us to pause and eye these overstuffed dressmaker's dummies with just a bit of awe. How did they get around? lt is fortunate indeed that the many city slickers among us have the Country Life Club to act as their introducer to life au pays. Members: Betty Anderson, Gertrude Bax- ter, Iennie Berlt, Vivian Boice, Barbara Bos- sert, Leona Bouchard, Elizabeth Brown, Ioan Brucker, Iennie Caracappa, Abbie Canfield, Mildred Carson, Marion Clark, Patricia Clauss, Florence Clinton, lean Close, Philip Cosgrove, Mabel Cox, Helen Dacier, Ianet Davidoff, Earla Davis, Mae DeHart, Gwen Dornheim, Ginger Duffy, Vivian Dworkind, Everett King, Lillian Kraack, Ruth Long- henry, Ruth Loomis, Vernon Lull, Elsie Mabie, Lee McCreary, Lucille Menz, lune Messner, Peggy Miller, Sadie Musemaci, Lorraine Nodashy, Thelma Nelson, Emma Osofsky, Margaret Pinckney, Antoinette Powell, Vera Racine, Alfred Roeder, Howard Rhodes, Iohn Rogers, Abe Rosenthal, Gene- That's rural rhythm! 119 vieve Sadowski, Fran Salvador, Olga Schleede, Helen Engle, Evelyn Epstein, Rita Eronimous, Iohn Farmer, Florence Ferguson, Harold Fischer, lane Fisher, lane Flannery, Patricia Fleming, Helen Flood, Iean Florence, Helen Fleischer, Almida Font, Margaret Frost, Ann Glover, Alma Hope Gutheil, Mary lane Haller, Lee Halleran, Winifred Hardick, Robert Haring, Norman Harris, Shirley Her- bert, Viola Hersey, Oscar Hochberg, Sam We love the life we live. Hochberg, Edna Horn, Gladys Houghton, Marguerite Howd, William Israel, Connie Iohnson, Evelyn Iudson, Isabel Ketcham, George Key, Dorothy Schneider, Marjorie Shupner, Sylvia Seigel, Elizabeth Sheehan, lrene Shipman, Dean Shoup, Roy Silver, Doris Small, Sherry Squier, Beverly St. Leger, Edna Starr, Robert Stewart, Evelyn Stone, Adelaide Stonebridge, George Stub- bins, Pat Sturgess, Dorothy Sturr, Elaine Sulzbacher, Elizabeth Terry, Esther Thomp- son, Olga Wandzilak, Mary Warian, Evelyn Weick, Oscar Weiner, Elsie Wheat, Allyne Wheeler, Dorothy Wick, Genevieve Wilcox, Marjorie Gray Wilson. Advisers: Mary Ellen Rich, Howard Mosher. Cool crisp clear mornings made for the joys of hiking, follow upon each other with welcome rapidity in our sleepy little town. Many of these perfect dawns find the Out- ing Club girls starting briskly forth, heads thrown back, arms gaily swinging and hearts singing to catch the lift of an early 120 morning walk. Through their three years at N.P.N. these girls have learned to love the bluff-like hills, the curtain of royal purple that falls upon the Shawangunks at dusk, and the serenity of the orange moon in late October. They have minutely explored the perils of the Lemon Squeezer and bathed in the blue beauty of Mohonk Lake. They have stroll- ed along the banks of the Wallkill and rushed down the long hills that roll to the south. Members: Dorothy Anges, Lillian Barber, Anna Louise Bergmark, Hilda Brown, Eileen Callahan, Abbie Canfield, Beatrice Cast- agnino, lean Close, Mae De Hart, Marjorie Edwards, Evelyn Epstein, Sally Finkel, Ruth Fisher, Helen Fleischer, Eleanor Griffin, Alma Gutheil, Glady Houghton, Florence lnder- lied, Claire Israel, Elsie Wheat, Alda Barker, Marion Clark, Florence Clinton, Mabel Cox, Helen Dacier, Earla Davis, Robert Davis, Dorothy Greaves, Audrey Greiner, Mary Hannan, Anne Iung, Everett King, Lillian Kraack, Dorothy Lankenau, Ruth Longhenry, Ruth Loomis, Elsie Mabee, Dorothy Mauter- stock, Margaret McCabe, Thelma Nelson, Ruth Roper, Katherine Sinsapaugh, Ethel Stolte, Elizabeth Terry, Helen Vores, Doris Webber, Rosalind Wessells, Helen Zarembo. Adviser: Mary Gray Deane. The prize goes to you. ix . 43,5 . V A A A it t mff.. A They have their ups and downs. While N.P.N. riders do not ride to hounds they certainly make dogged attempts to improve their form. The clatter of hoofs snaps every- one from lethargy into ani- mation with eyes glued in the direction of the approach- ing cavalcade. A long single file line stretches far down the block. Sleekly shining horses proudly prance be- neath their correctly tailored riders. There emanates from these people an aura of fel- lowship-of iollity-of well- being. Inquiry discloses the fact that the early morning ride has led them out of the Gate House Road and far along the old trail to Mohonk. Those who know this treeorched path are well aware of its exquisite beauty. Riding through this lovely dale in early morning puts one in high spirits for the coming day, bring what it may. The horses, too, seem to revel in this beguiling route, for all stubbornness leaves them, they push along quietly, cocking an alert ear at the call of the wakening birds and neighing softly in return. The pull of the rein to indicate return is loathed by rider and ridden. Once made however, they Canter happily back to the clubhouse, where the cook has prepared a delicious breakfast. No time is lost in falling to before this wel- come feed! Each morsel is relished by the famished riders! Eight o'clock class comes creeping upon the blithesome breakfasters -and soon with one last, quick, indigestion- inviting gulp they clatter off to change for school. Eight o'clock finds them pert and prepared, a match for the keenest instructor. Cabins in the pines. Lovers of horses and lovers of riding find New Paltz an ideal spot for the indulg- ence of their hobby. The terrain slopes gently into softly curving hills, provid- ing a locale perfect for lazily walking their mounts, while the well kept roads 'of Mo- honk provide equally perfect places for faster riding. The soul is also fed while ridinq through the New Paltz terri- tory surrounded as it is by magnificent scenery. , Members: Charlotte Miller, Marjorie Anderson, Marian Brightman, Ruth Brune, Mil- dred Brissa, Ruth Breene, Shirley Mack Compton, Georgiana Costello, Ann Callahan, Patricia Clauss, Dorothy Coddington, Mary Frances Cunningham, Alene Decker, Helen Downing, Sally Finkel, Ruth Fisher, Marion Flint, Rita Fautz, Kay Fitzgerald, Carol Haynes, Mary lane Haller, Kenneth HasBrouck, Helen Horton, Eva lane Heath, Alice lones, Wanda Korol, Dolores Keater, Everett King, Geneva Lake, Betty Leonard, Clare Lonergan, Herbert Lown, Polly Miller, lean Marien, Lucille Menz, Mary O'Connor, Muriel O'Connor, Betty Ortiz, Virginia Poole, Antoinette Powell, Helen Ross, Genevieve Randall, Mildred Radley, Georgiana Reinasch, Dorothy Schneider, Doris Small, Sylvia Siegel, Sherry Squier, Beverly St. Leger, Elaine Sulz- pacher, Ruth Verch, Selma Weiss, lean Wolpe, Audrey Wilhelm, Marian Walker, Rosemund Zehder, lune Zimmerman, Cecile Broad, PGCJQY Miller, Shirley Wohl, Mrs. DeWitt. 121 At home on the range. Quivering quills go speeding on their courses toward loudly colored goals. Ten tensely stanced marks- men relax-and watch with calculat- ing eye the flight of the rushing arrows. Hopes soar high- poise in midair-and plummet to earth. The arrow disconsolately lodges in the trunk of a wormy old apple tree. Something rnust be definitely wrong! It couldn't pos- sibly be that the targets had moved. No, they certainly hadn't budged a iot. Perhaps the arrow had a knot in it! Would a knot deflect an ar- row that much? By the way, what is a knot in a piece of wood anyway? Two hands on the ball, girls. 122 Ag' , Friendly rivals. Do twigs tie single bows or double bows? When do they tie said knots. Regardless of the physical process involved-a knot could not possibly have sent that arrow that far off! Wet a finger and find the direction of the wind. Heck! lt's blowing in exactly the right direction-if anything the wind would have helped the ornery shaft. The only thing that might possibly have caused that terrific slice tif that is what one calls a boomeranging arrow? was the marksmen's poor stance --poor pull-or plain poor shooting. Better luck next time! From the dolorous accounts above one would gather the idea that the ringed, straw-filled targets so gayly colored with blue, yellow and red were never in need of replacement. Such is far from the case. The whirr of the speed- ing arrows draws the spectators' eyes toward the waiting cushion. Nine for the bull's-eye! Steadily the score goes up toward the coveted two hundred sixteen. Rarely does that haPDY hunting ground so dear to the archer's heart crystallize, but it always hangs as an enticing goal shim- mering to lure the hopefuls on. ff 2, 4... Uncanny how difficult it is to keep that ball up in the air, isn't it? Seems bound to touch the floor-and always on your side of the net! The players line up eager for the fray. ZIP! Look out!! Here it comes! Keep it up! Don't let it hit the floor! WHEW!! That was close! Heads and eyes strain to follow the return. Hands raise ready to administer that resounding slap that sounds akin to music to the ears of Volley Ball addicts. What a relief. Again it's safe!! The teams, both a little too sure of themselves, are brought to earth quickly on the next exchange. The ball sports a few square inches of fine flat floor and straight- way decides to settle down for a breathing spell. PLOP! How comfortable it is after being swatted back and forth over that swaying net. Annoyed hands slide over the smooth hide of the ball grasp- ing for a satisfactory hold. Hit the floor, will you, you bounceless baby. You'll be sorry! Whack! There they go again! Back and forth -back and forth! Shrill shrieks go rolling around the building with utter abandon. They sneak up on the unwary and scare out all the knowledge that three straight minutes of concentrated study has carefully wedged into one small head. Ability, stability and personability are three dominant factors necessarily present in a good captain. The players must not be able to scoff at the playing of their captain -they must look to her for calmness in that moment when a good free-for-all is im- minent-they must admire her personality and eagerly acknowledge her leadership. lt is evident that such people do not come in clusters. Neither is it true that they are freakish. Care must be the password in the selection of Class Captains -the trite old Lights .... Camera .... Action. phrase cool, calm and collected makes an efficacious slogan. The connotation that the word Captain brings to mind seems to lift the spirits. We see men bringing great ships through banks of fog .... we see rugged football men leading their elevens through a solid wall of flesh to victory . .' . . but let us not forget that in time of adversity we find the captains rescuing their members from the doldrums. 123 More and more males blazed their educa- tional trails toward N.P.N. as the years meandered by, and soon a pressing need became quite evident. These poor, bashtul boys were losing their wind and gaining tar too many pounds- l clothes began to bulge queerly - but- tons refused to per- . form their buttoning duties --the need be- l came very pressing - some sports program had to be planned. Football, baseball, basketball, tennis, shooting all begged to be among those pres- ent. They remained tor a while -but bas- l ketball and baseball soon outran the other hopefuls. N.P.N. con- centrated its physical and oral gymnastics on producing fine teams in both of these fields. Spring with its inevitable desire for languor finds the Baseball squad going through its The Champ! incongruous limbering-up exercises. The majority of the boys have been kept fairly Well oiled through a bang-up basketball season. The beckoning fingers of lassitude and lasses must be brusquely shrugged oft and the mind kept clear for the keen- eyed judgments that are so integral a part of any Well-played game. Late hours and home runs do not mix. One infallible sign of the baseball season is the gradual diminish- ing in the number ot cars parked on the campus drive. Mr. Campbell issues urg- ent Warnings as to what might happen should a sizzling ball and a Windshield meet on the ball's way to the tennis court. Shatterprooi as the glass might be, such an encounter does things to it! Cars do not add to the decorative scheme of the school anyway, and it is a signal con- tribution ot the baseball squad that they Big Leaguers!! 124 How're the training rules, boys? Our score's up! eliminate these eye-sores. Other signs of baseball and so of spring include the singing of the bat as it slams out a two-base hit- the heavy crunch of the players' cleats as they round the bases-the upward craning of interested necks as their owners' eyes follow the soaring of a fly - and the sudden quiet that falls upon the crowd as the ball descends rocket-like, to land in the glove of the jubilant sporting foe. Batter Up! Play Ball!! That's too easy , railed the painfully athletic type, as he watched a spirited volley in the Ping Pong Room. Too easy huh? , panted the drooping players as they staggered toward a chair, Too easy, that's your unwanted-unasked for-and untutored opinion. Why don't you try it? l X Naw, too sissy for me . Can't take it, that's your trouble , sniffed the exhausted players. Oh yeah, give me that excuse for a fly- swatter, l'll show you , bristled the Type. Confidence flowed from every movement as the Type swaggered to his end of the table. The first return found the tiny ball knocking its head against the opposite wall. At the end of seventy-three eternal minutes, the Type has shed his braggadocio. He was meekly listening to details and Volubly ad- mitting that he had been wrong-very wrong. Ping Pong was a good test of any- one's athletic metal. Follow up!! 125 First Basketball practice finds a rollicking gang of sun-burned aspirants appearing in a mass attack upon the gym. Weeks and weeks of tedious drill-a stringent set of self dis- ciplinary training rules-and the gruelling pace set by the leaders soon weeds out the weeds. The process is not complete by any means. Many more hours of monotonous practice find the leaders speeding up their footwork-dodging in and out of corners with more agility - and getting a line on the basket that is almost unerring. The weeds have blown back into school 'circulation and the blooming players have retreated further into their cowhide shells. They find no time in the lighter side of this educational mill. All waking moments are spent in one of three things - eating - studying -practicing. It seems that this sport business is an all en- veloping past time. It is, not too much to say that the only time the rest of the school really gets a good long look at our Basketball Squad is on Friday night, when the gym is packed to groaning capacity to watch them GIVE. And give they do! If one listens carefully he may still hear the echoes of the yelling crowds as the score inched its way up to eclipse the visitor's. Members: George Key, Captain, Ronald Blass, William Israel, Elmer Baird, Anthony Rinaldi, lames Dever, Fred Cryer, George Fersh, George Steinhoff, Robert I-Iaring, George Koerner, Manager, William Morgan, Assistant Mgr., Loren D. Campbell, Coach. A noiseless basketball game is one of lite's minor tragedies. Not so very long ago N.P.N. had to endure the chagrin of hearing a handful of opponents add more real spirit to a home game than We did ourselves. Nineteen thirty-eight has seen a change in all of that. Organized Cheer Leading casts its satisfying mantle around the shoulders of every home and visiting game. Grateful glances from sweatily-gleaming players make all this oral effort completely worth- while. It is interesting to watch the reaction of the team after an ear-splitting shout has spun its web of inspiration. The blast of the Whistle finds them up on their feet, eyes shin- ing - jaws firmly clinched - heads held high. That shout has shown them that we're for them, come what mayl Cheering is an impregnable cure for sliding morals! A shout a game makes known our name!! READY! AIM!! FIRE!! At this ominous call all cautious folks throw themselves into the nearest hole and slyly peek out to see just who is ready-where they are aiming -and how literally the term fire may be taken. The Rifle Club is enjoying its first outdoor meet. Bullets go whistling by a bit too fast for enjoyable catching and another bull's eye takes it on the chin, tif you follow usb. Bystanders, who have vaguely heard about guns wonder why the men squint up their eyes to look through that little hole? Seems to be plenty of room around the gun to see without going through such evident torture to pick out their target. Oh well, people are funny creatures, aren't they? RIFLE TEAM Back Row: lames Butler, George Koerner. larnes Young, Roger Salzman. Front Row: George Stubbins, lohn McElhenney, Theodore Roth, Warren Eggleston. 126 0 127 '-.. is x S X! P' I f i xv-'W 'Wk - 1 z . 5 Q, i fl 130 ADVERTISERS ADIRONDACK SHORT LINE INCORPORATED ALBANY IRON AND HARDWARE COMPANY AMERICAN CRAYON COMPANY - - APEDA STUDIO, PHOTOGRAPHERS - DOCTOR BEATTIE, DENTIST - - - MRS. E. M. BUCHANAN, ROOMING HOUSE MRS. M. P. COUTANT, ROOMING HOUSE DIEGES AND CLUST, IEWELERS - - E. C. ELMORE, CLOTHIER - - FAIRLAWN STORES ----- FORD, THE FLORIST ----- GLENDON BATES COMPANY, BOOKBINDING GREGORY'S PHARMACY ---- - Kingston - Albany - Sandusky New York City - New Paltz - New Paltz - New Paltz New York City - New Paltz - New Paltz - New Paltz - Poughkeepsie - New Paltz HAMMERSMITH-KORTMEYER CO., Printers of 1938 Paltzonian Milwaukee R. M. HASBROUCK, FLORIST ------- New Paltz MRS. H. C. HEROY, ROOMING HOUSE ----- New Paltz HIGHLAND THEATRE - - .,--,,. Highland IAHN G OLLIER ENGRAVING CO. Engravers of 1938 Paltzonian, Chicago LANE-SARGENT VARIETY STORES - - A. P. LE PEVRE, COAL AND FEED - LOUIS D. LE FEVRE, COAL - - - B. LUTSKY, CLOTHIER AND FURNISHERS - A. W. MALET, PROM DECORATORS - NELSON HOUSE ----- NEW PALTZ CLEANERS - NEW PALTZ INDEPENDENT NEW PALTZ SAVINGS BANK - O'REILLY'S STATIONERY STORE PARIS MILLINERY SHOP ---- I. C. PENNEY COMPANY ---- MRS. HENRY POUCHER, ROOMING HOUSE ROSENTHAL-ETTLINGER, CLOTHIER - 4 SAPPORD-SCUDDER, IEWELERS - - - MRS. W. F. SCHMALKUCHE, ROOMING HOUSE SCHRAUTH'S ICE CREAM i ---- SCHWENK'S BAKERY - TRIANGLE LUNCH - UNITED CIGAR STORE ----- MRS. D. VAN WAGENEN, ROOMING HOUSE VON DER LINDEN'S, SPORTING GOODS - THE WONDERLY COMPANY, DEPARTMENT STORE - - - New Paltz - New Paltz - New Paltz Poughkeepsie Poughkeepsie Poughkeepsie - New Paltz - New Paltz - New Paltz Kingston Kingston - Kingston - New Paltz Poughkeepsie - Kingston - - New Paltz Poughkeepsie - Kingston - Kingston - New Paltz - New Paltz Poughkeepsie - Kingston HAMMERSMITH-KORTMEYER C0. Engravers and Printers Milwaukee, Wis. N I -qi 5, , 1: h- , 127' Q4 :Q 5.1 aft' '-, fa 1 . , 'Q-f',1i 73:1 N, 1729525 T gy ' ,ft Ngssayff HQ ,' qi: fiffgf , W gfivyg Zffggf 45 T53 3,..g:?Tw,g ,H , im.: -7, -al -. hz' ,pi-Q Z 5 -,': 11,-L-.Vi-.55-.05 7 'jxr VV 7. ',.v,g,?f1 ,EI-,g .,y::P ll -'Y.:',i4!1Ityf, I-LTL ji? 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