Gold Footballs to Grid Squad Voted by A.A. Alfred Gets Practice Field on Old Terra Cotta Site Anti-Syphilis Campaign Starts

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Gold Footballs to Grid Squad Voted by A.A. Alfred Gets Practice Field on Old Terra Cotta Site Anti-Syphilis Campaign Starts Member Of The Published By The Intercollegiate Newspaper Assn. Students of Alfred University Associated Collegiate Press FIAT LUX Student Box Holder VOL. XXV FIAT LUX, NOVEMBER 23, 1937, ALFRED, N. Y. No. 9 Gold Footballs Alfred Girl Wins Praise As Singer Norton Will Call Anti-Syphilis Campaign Starts, To Grid Squad Paul Jones Dance Editors Work for Wasserman Tonight At Gym Voted By A.A. 'Honey A Paul Jones has been scheduled to Test in College Health Exams stait the evening's festivities tonight Miniature gold football's will be Martin* The Fiat Lux and 30 other college at the gym where the Y.W.C.A. and Dave Gold's Uncle, presented to the 26 members of Al- newspapers, members of the Intercol- is a blonde singer with; theA.U.C.A. will be hosts for their an- fred University's unbeaten, untied Meier Schutman, legiate Newspaper Association, today Andy Grillo's Velveteers, nual costume dance. began a concerted campaign against football team, the Athletic Govern- Fiddled For Czar new Hornell orchestra. "Charlie Norton from Eas: Valley, syphilis. ing Board voted Sunday afternoon in The editors will fight the social In private life she is one of the best callers in this local- David Gold, a Kappa Nu senior, a meeting at Kenyon Hall. disease by educating college students The Saxonian's Rose- ity, will have a fiddle and guitar is a nephew of Meier Schutman, The footballs will be in recognition against syphilis. Inclusion of the mary Hallenbeck and a team including Miss Beebe and Fred former fiddler for the Czar. of the greatest season in the 42-year Wasserman test in every student In the years before the revolu- junior in Alfred Univer- Benaway to do the honors at the health examination is the first main history of Alfred University gridiron tion, Dave's Uncle Meier was a sity. The nom de micro- "square dances". objective of the drive. competition, and will be presented by favorite of the Czar, who gave phone is Andy's idea, A lemon dance, number dance, and Passed unanimously at the fall the Athletic Association. The award him an estate in Moscow and one not Rosemary's. a grand march will be some of the in Petrograd. meeting of the I.N.A. at Lehigh Uni- is the first of its kind to Saxon grid- other specialities on the program. versity, November 13, the resolution In her debut last Fri- As official court violinist, Mr. ders. Prizes will be awarded to those who providing for the campaign of anti- day night "Honey Mar- Schutman instructed many mem- Sixteen varsity sweaters were voted have the most original costumes and bers of the nobility, until he con- syphilis education goes into effect tin" was the hit of the in varsity football, and eight varsity to the winners of the number dance. tracted tuberculosis and was sent this week. evening. She will be A's were voted in varsity cross Judges include Dr. and Mrs. Joseph to Switzerland to recover. Two committees, one made up of featured again Wednes- Seidlin, Dr. Willis C. Russell, Dr. and college editors and the other of pub- country. There he partly regained his day night at the Nut Mrs. Samuel R. Scholes, Chaplain and health but upon returning to Rus- lic health officers and community "Undefeated" Frosh Acclaimed Club dance in the Hotel Mrs. James C. MeLeod, and Coach sia, he suffered a relapse and leaders, are functioning to provide and Mrs. Alex Yunevich. died shortly before the war. His the educational material for publica- Nine freshman numerals will be Sherwood. tion. awarded in frosh cross country. To According to all traditions there is wife and children are now resi- dents of the United States. Burdick Backs Drive the five men who scored most of the no dating at this dance. Music will be supplied by the Palmer Sound "I am one hundred percent behind points in the frosh harriers' unde- System. All members of the faculty you in this movement and will fur- Photo Courtesy Hornell Tribune Pledging Tonight feated season will go special shingles have been invited to attend the dance. nish you with all the material in my marked "undefeated". John Kolstad, chairman, is assisted For Fraternities possession," Prof. H. O. Burdick, Al- Football letters will go to: Richard by Joe Proe, Walter Hedden, John Al- fred University professor of biology, Brownell, John Halpin, Bob Eschbach, Alfred Gets Practice Field bright, and Donald Faulkner. As Rushing Ends and a nationally-known research work- Richard Thomas, Bill Riley, Dick er in his field, told The Fiat editors; Callista, Harold Rouff, Harold Edle- this week. On Old Terra Cotta Site Five fraternities will pledge fresh- son, Bert Lynn, Jud Gustin, Bob "Your drive is a great step for- Wee Playhouse Club men and other eligible men at 7 Glynn, Walter Johnson, Larry Bizet, ward over what might have been Alfred University's football team Athletes will be able to dress in the o'clock this evening. Walt Gardner, .John Albright, varsity Plans Spanish Play done a year ago," declared Dr. Gil- will have a practice field next year for The Greek letter men held their manager, and Al Nutt, frosh man- gymnasium and reach the practice bert W. Campbell, professor of philos- the first time in Saxon grid history, last rush parties of the year Friday ager. field through the rear exit. Monday, Dec. 6 ophy and psychology, who teaches if present plans materialize. evening and mailed lists of bids to sociology courses at Alfred Univer- Gold footballs will go to those var- Athletic Director James A. McLane Miss Lelia Tupper, clerk of the inter- Contributions by Alfred townspeople sity. sity athletes and Manager Albright, and Harry Greene, Superintendent of The Wee Playhouse, Alfred's little fraternity Council, Saturday. and also to the following squad and merchants are helping to allay the Grounds and Buildings, have played theater group, is planning to present Eligible men mailed preferential Within six hours after the resolu- members: Charles Spiro, Ken Tracey, cost of the new field, which is located the Spanish play 'The Women Have cards to Miss Tupper before 6 o'clock tion had been passed by the I.N.A. Angelo Bosco, John Ryan, Stan on the old Terra Cotta property be- an important part in bringing the new Their Way," in Alumni Hall Monday Saturday evening. delegates at the convention, tele- Gutheinz, Phil Greenman, Ad Scholes, hind the gymnasium. field here. evening, Dec. 6, at 8:15 o'clock. This After the comparing of the lists, grams had been received from five Fred Schmidt, Marcello Rollery, Win- William Collins of Hornell has the The old Ludowice-Celadon Company, will be the first entertainment after fraternities were notified of the men prominent men in the field of syphilo- ton Green, Sam Fossaceca, George contract for leveling the property, and manufacturers of brick, was located on Thanksgiving vacation. they had pledged, and tapping will be logy who offered their services on the Batley. work already has been started in cut- advisory committee. the site of the new field. Idle for 30 It is said that the English trans-, tonight at 7. Varsity letters in cross country go ting out brush and trees on the area. years, the site of the plant is honey- lation is almost as laugh-provoking as A closed season begins Wednesday Philip S. Broughton, information to:, Captain Bob Hughes, Eugene If the field can be leveled and filled the original Spanish, iand that stu- and lasts until Thursday, December representative of the division of ven- combed with kilns and tunnels which Keofe, Lyle Perkins, Russ Barreca, with dirt and sod before next fall, it dents will derive much pleasure from 2, at 6 p. m., after which fraternities eral diseases of the U. S. Public Cliff Snow, Lennie Dauenhauer, Var- will lessen the strain on Merrill Field. must be filled in. seeing many of the better-known facul- may pledge at any time. Health Service, addressed the general sity Manager Martin Dykeman, Frosh In the past, the necessity of practicing ty members and townspeople taking session of the convention. He point- Manager Carl Swanson. on Merrill Field has left the gridiron the parts of simple Andalusian vil- ed out the present campaign through- The "undefeated" frosh cross coun- in muddy condition for athletic con- St. Pat's Festival lagers. Student's Poem out the country by various organiza- try shingles will go to Ed Lagasse, tests. tions, and said he considered college The scene is laid in a secluded Gene Burgess, Milt Tuttle, Frank March 17 And 18 newspapers as vital in the drive Andalusian town where women out- Wins Contest Cronyn, and Cliff Leahy. Frosh num- against venereal disease, although. erals also will go to Peter Keenan, Repsher Elected number men five to one. Many of the The fifth annual St. Patrick's Fes- "The rate of syphilis in colleges is Jim Hollingsworth, Stewart Cole, and women are still young and attractive. An Alfred senior, Edward F. Creagh, tival will be held by the New York small, perhaps the smallest of any Myron Shiverick. Math Club Prexy A distinctly eligible young man comes won first prize last week in a contest group surveyed to date." State College of Ceramics at Alfred to town to help settle the affairs of a sponsored by the Cuba Poetry Society, The solution came from Howard '• Co-Managers of Football University, Thursday and Friday, recently widowed aunt, and— well, the secretary of the society announced More than forty students and mem- March 17 and 18, 1938, Jud A.
Recommended publications
  • The Newark Post VOLUMN XXIII NEWARK, DELAWARE, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1932 NUMBER 1 Newark School Graduate JAMES A
    t The Newark Post VOLUMN XXIII NEWARK, DELAWARE, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1932 NUMBER 1 Newark School Graduate JAMES A. M'KELVEY, PROMINENT Makes Good at Harvard DEPUTY SHERIFF SHOOTS ELKTON NEW ARK CITIZEN, DIES SUDDENLY Wallace D. Newcomb, class of '28 been renewed each year. This an­ ROBBER EARL YSUNDA YMORNING of the Newark School, who entered nouncement was made at the · annual Harvard on a scholarship from the dinner of the Harvard Club of Dela­ Death Resulted from Attack of Cerebral Hemorrhage Harvard Club of Delaware, has main- ware held in Wilmington Tuesday Authoritiea Think Arrests Will Stop Robberies James A. McKelvey, 58 years old, tained scholarship grades throughout night. Harvard graduates at the an- George Short and his cousi n, James 'proprietor of the Deer P ark Hotel, AETNA TO HOLD his career at Harvard. He is now in nu~1 meeting from Newark were: WILMINGTON AUTOMOBILE J ones, are in the Cecil County jail, here, and one of Newark's best-known MEETING THIS FRIDAY Ihis senior year and plans to be grad- Professor Crooks, Professor M. M· I SHOW OPENS FEB. 22 the former suffering from gunshot citizens, died unexpectedly at the The regular monthly meeting uated ~uI?e , h~93~. ~he sCholars~ip ~ahug~ eriY' San: . Superintendent of The Wilmington Automobile wounds in his legs, and the latter with d hotel shortly after 9 o'clock Monday of the Aetna Hose, Hook and awar e In IS res man year as e 00 s ra . rInser. Show, under the auspices of the bad cuts, as the result of being caught morning.
    [Show full text]
  • Your Guide to the Classic Literature Collection
    Your Guide to the Classic Literature Collection. Electronic texts for use with Kurzweil 1000 and Kurzweil 3000. Revised March 27, 2017. Your Guide to the Classic Literature Collection – March 22, 2017. © Kurzweil Education, a Cambium Learning Company. All rights reserved. Kurzweil 1000 and Kurzweil 3000 are trademarks of Kurzweil Education, a Cambium Learning Technologies Company. All other trademarks used herein are the properties of their respective owners and are used for identification purposes only. Part Number: 125516. UPC: 634171255169. 11 12 13 14 15 BNG 14 13 12 11 10. Printed in the United States of America. 1 Introduction Introduction Kurzweil Education is pleased to release the Classic Literature Collection. The Classic Literature Collection is a portable library of approximately 1,800 electronic texts, selected from public domain material available from Web sites such as www.gutenberg.net. You can easily access the contents from any of Kurzweil Education products: Kurzweil 1000™, Kurzweil 3000™ for the Apple® Macintosh® and Kurzweil 3000 for Microsoft® Windows®. The collection is also available from the Universal Library for Web License users on K3000+firefly. Some examples of the contents are: • Literary classics by Jane Austen, Geoffrey Chaucer, Joseph Conrad, Charles Dickens, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Hermann Hesse, Henry James, William Shakespeare, George Bernard Shaw, Leo Tolstoy and Oscar Wilde. • Children’s classics by L. Frank Baum, Brothers Grimm, Rudyard Kipling, Jack London, and Mark Twain. • Classic texts from Aristotle and Plato. • Scientific works such as Einstein’s “Relativity: The Special and General Theory.” • Reference materials, including world factbooks, famous speeches, history resources, and United States law.
    [Show full text]
  • Penrod and Sam by Booth Tarkington</H1>
    Penrod and Sam by Booth Tarkington Penrod and Sam by Booth Tarkington This etext was scanned by Ken Smidge of Mt. Clemens, MI. PENROD AND SAM Contents I. Penrod and Sam II. The Bonded Prisoner III. The Militarist IV. Bingism V. The In-Or-In VI. Georgie Becomes a Member VII. Whitey VIII. Salvage IX. Reward of Merit X. Conscience XI. The Tonic XII. Gipsy XIII. Concerning Trousers XIV. Camera Work in the Jungle page 1 / 351 XV. A Model Letter to a Friend XVI. Wednesday Madness XVII. Penrod's Busy Day XVIII. On Account of the Weather XIX. Creative Art XX. The Departing Guest XXI. Yearnings XXII. The Horn of Fame XXIII. The Party XXIV. The Heart of Marjorie Jones CHAPTER I. PENROD AND SAM During the daylight hours of several autumn Saturdays there had been severe outbreaks of cavalry in the Schofield neighbourhood. The sabres were of wood; the steeds were imaginary, and both were employed in a game called "bonded pris'ner" by its inventors, Masters Penrod Schofield and Samuel Williams. The pastime was not intricate. When two enemies met, they fenced spectacularly until the person of one or the other was touched by the opposing weapon; then, when the ensuing claims of foul play had been disallowed and the subsequent argument settled, the combatant touched was considered to be a prisoner until such time as he might be touched by the hilt of a sword belonging to one of his own party, which effected his release and restored to him the full enjoyment of hostile activity.
    [Show full text]
  • Penrod and Sam
    Penrod And Sam. Nowadays, it’s difficult to imagine our lives without the Internet as it offers us the easiest way to access the information we are looking for from the comfort of our homes. There is no denial that books are an essential part of life whether you use them for the educational or entertainment purposes. With the help of certain online resources, such as this one, you get an opportunity to download different books and manuals in the most efficient way. Why should you choose to get the books using this site? The answer is quite simple. Firstly, and most importantly, you won’t be able to find such a large selection of different materials anywhere else, including PDF books. Whether you are set on getting an ebook or handbook, the choice is all yours, and there are numerous options for you to select from so that you don’t need to visit another website. Secondly, you will be able to download Penrod And Sam. pdf in just a few minutes, which means that you can spend your time doing something you enjoy. But, the benefits of our book site don’t end just there because if you want to get a certain Penrod And Sam., you can download it in txt, DjVu, ePub, PDF formats depending on which one is more suitable for your device. As you can see, downloading Penrod And Sam. pdf or in any other available formats is not a problem with our reliable resource. Searching for rare books on the web can be torturous, but it doesn’t have to be that way.
    [Show full text]
  • The Spectrum Official Publication
    NORTH DAKOTA STATE COLLEGE THE SPECTRUM OFFICIAL PUBLICATION VOLUME STATE COT,LEGE, NORTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1931 NUMBER 3. COLLEGE LIBRARY STAFF Don Lawrence Wins N. B. Black HAS TWO NEW ASSISTANTS Bison PlayWisconsin University In Two new assistants have been added Memorial Scholarship for Seniors to the staff at the college library. They Second Big Ten Game Tomorrow are filling the vacancies left by the Misses Sylvia Ellingson and Leona Rei- Given By Fargo Rotary Club ; neck who were married during the Finnegan Says Wisconsin Game C. F. Monroe Announces Music Department summer. Exchange Closes For Will Be Tougher Than Winner Today Misses Sarah Olson and Angelin Minnesota Clash Shows Increase Tesdell, the new assistants, were gradu- Fall Term Wednesday AWARDED FOR FIRST TIME ated from the University of Minnesota GAME SECOND IN HISTORY Margarui4e Beard Will Teach library school in June. Miss Olson is Profits Are Used For Building Scholarship Will Be Open To Piano ; Norman Ostby a former assistant in the library, and Improvements ; Ten Per Badgers Familiar With Bison Both Men and Women Teaches Violin Miss Tesdell comes from Huxley, Iowa, Cent Rate Charged Plays ; Bison Unfamiliar near Des Moines. Next Year With Badger Tactics With the addition of two new teach- After selling some two hundred Donald Lawrence, senior in the ers and the use of Festival Hall for books the Y book exchange closed for For the second time in as many school of agriculture, is the first re- rehearsals, the Music Department of Bison Editors Now the fall term Wednesday afternoon. weeks, the 1931 Thundering Herd of cipient of the Norman B.
    [Show full text]
  • Classic Literature Guide
    Your Guide to the Classic Literature Collection. Electronic texts for use with Kurzweil 1000 and Kurzweil 3000. Revised April 25, 2019. Your Guide to the Classic Literature Collection – April 25, 2019. © Kurzweil Education, a Cambium Learning Company. All rights reserved. Kurzweil 1000 and Kurzweil 3000 are trademarks of Kurzweil Education, a Cambium Learning Technologies Company. All other trademarks used herein are the properties of their respective owners and are used for identification purposes only. Part Number: 125516. UPC: 634171255169. 11 12 13 14 15 BNG 14 13 12 11 10. Printed in the United States of America. 1 Introduction Introduction Kurzweil Education is pleased to release the Classic Literature Collection. The Classic Literature Collection is a portable library of approximately 1,800 electronic texts, selected from public domain material available from Web sites such as www.gutenberg.net. You can easily access the contents from any of Kurzweil Education products: Kurzweil 1000™, Kurzweil 3000™ for the Apple® Macintosh® and Kurzweil 3000 for Microsoft® Windows®. The collection is also available from the Universal Library for Web License users on kurzweil3000.com. Some examples of the contents are: • Literary classics by Jane Austen, Geoffrey Chaucer, Joseph Conrad, Charles Dickens, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Hermann Hesse, Henry James, William Shakespeare, George Bernard Shaw, Leo Tolstoy and Oscar Wilde. • Children’s classics by L. Frank Baum, Brothers Grimm, Rudyard Kipling, Jack London, and Mark Twain. • Classic texts from Aristotle and Plato. • Scientific works such as Einstein’s “Relativity: The Special and General Theory.” • Reference materials, including world factbooks, famous speeches, history resources, and United States law.
    [Show full text]
  • The Noveis of Louisa May Alcott As Commentary On
    THE NOVEIS OF LOUISA MAY ALCOTT AS COMMENTARY ON THE AMERICAN FAMILY Martha Irene Smith Shull A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate School of Bowling Green State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY August 1975 Approved.by Doctoral Committee i 1 k - - II ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I should like to acknowledge my grateful thanks for all the assistance and many kindnesses shown me by my committee: Dr. David Addington, Dr. J. Robert Bashore, Dr. Frederick Eckman, and Dr. Virginia Platt. I should like especially to thank the chairman of my committee, Dr. Alma J. Payne, who gave unstintingly of her time, her knowledge, her experience, and her­ self. My committee are more than academiciansj they are true reflections of Chaucer’s Clerk, "And gladly wolde he lerne and gladly teche." TABLE OF CONTENTS Page INTRODUCTION..................................... 1 Chapter I....................................... 26 Chapter II....................................... 82 Chapter III.............................. 137 Chapter IV....................................... 203 Bibliography..................................... 233 I INTRODUCTION The novels of Louisa May Alcott shed a great deal of light on the complex plight of the American family in the Gilded Age. It is generally accepted by social historians and sociologists that the beginnings of the erosion of the American family as a tightly-knit unit exerting consider­ able influence on the mores of society began with the 1870s. Parallel with this working hypothesis is the supporting literary evidence in the American novel. With the excep­ tion of the sentimental and sensational novels prior to Realism, the American novel generally did not center around a family situation or around American social behavior.
    [Show full text]
  • Vaudeville Hits Tractions to Include the World’S Hollywood’S Gossip Brought Cooper Fame on the Silver I Finest Vaudeville Performers
    Cooper-Colbert in “His Woman” Richard Spiro, Now Baby Star, Added Hit of Para- mount Thriller A new child wonder, a baby who makes one torgut all about the marvelous acting; of such favorites as Jockie Cooper, Jackie Coogan. Mltsl Green and other movie kid- dles, is little nine months old Rich- ard Spiro who appears in “His Woman" Paramount's new hit co- starring Gary Cooper and Claudet- te Colbert, which opens a four day engagement at Warner's State to- day. This youngster literally “steals" the picture from the adult stars. He act sin a perfectly natural, un- affected manner and Just gurgles Natalie Moorhead, Uu Banquette, John Holland and Virginia his way into the hearts of the mil- Leo Corbin In a scene from "Morals For Women” at the Strand to-day. lions who view this picture. Gary Cooper, Claudette Colbert and Jefferson Machamer tn a Incidentally “His Woman” scene from Paramount’s new hit ”1110 Woman” at the State to-day. marks the first time Cooper and Colbert have appeared together ment to procure outstanding at- In and is the type of story that first | Vaudeville Hits tractions to Include the world’s Hollywood’s Gossip brought cooper fame on the silver I finest vaudeville performers. sheet. I By DAN THOMAS proceeding. Perhaps it has been ine uuseu un a. uu-vei, the current stage siory, Headlining NEA Writer discovered that there is nothing on "The Dale Col- at the Strand show is Will Mastln and His Service Sentimentalist,'’ by Oang, which to base a Garbo suit.
    [Show full text]
  • Penrod Part 1
    by Booth Tarkington Part 1 Booth Tarkington Booth Tarkington (1869-1946) , American playwright and author, won the Pulitzer Prize in 1919 for his novel The Magnificent Ambersons (1918) and again in 1922 for Alice Adams (1921), later adapted to the screen starring Katherine Hepburn. Exploring the realms of middle-class, middle-America, romantic illusions and the power and corruption of wealth, Tarkington became a leading voice of his times through his memorable characters and social commentary in his novels and plays. Praised by the father of American realism William Dean Howells , Tarkington's Growth Trilogy, based on America's Industrial Expansionism started with The Turmoil (1915), then The Magnificent Ambersons , followed by The Midlander (1924). Dozens of his works were adapted to the stage and screen during his lifetime and as recently as 2002. Newton Booth Tarkington was born 29 July 1869 in Indianapolis, Indiana, the son of Elizabeth and John Stevenson Tarkington, a lawyer and judge. He first attended Purdue University in Lafayette, Indiana, then Princeton in New Jersey where he was editor of the Nassau Literary Magazine . Ever the raconteur, he was immensely popular at school, and later earned an honorary Doctor of Letters in 1918. After having started writing at a very early age short stories and plays, he always knew he wanted to be a writer 1 and upon finishing school put pen to paper in earnest. Not disheartened by numerous rejections, Tarkington's persistence would soon pay off. His first novel The Gentleman from Indiana was published in 1899, followed by his historical romance Monsieur Beaucaire in 1900, which would later be adapted to the screen starring Rudolph Valentino.
    [Show full text]
  • [129.Book] Download Penrod and Sam PDF
    Download: Penrod and Sam PDF Free [129.Book] Download Penrod and Sam PDF By Booth Tarkington Penrod and Sam you can download free book and read Penrod and Sam for free here. Do you want to search free download Penrod and Sam or free read online? If yes you visit a website that really true. If you want to download this ebook, i provide downloads as a pdf, kindle, word, txt, ppt, rar and zip. Download pdf #Penrod and Sam | Tarkington Booth | 2014-02-25 | Original language: English | PDF # 1 | 9.69 x .80 x 7.44l, 1.52 | File type: PDF | 388 pages | Penrod and Sam | |2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.| Nothing deep, but very funny, if dated | By Anne M. Kleinginna |This book was written just prior to the First World War, and is rather dated in its racial views, but should not be offensive to anyone who has read "Huckleberry Finn." It is an accurate depiction of small- town midwestern life at the time, and is one of the funniest books I've read. Penrod Schofield and Sam Williams a | About the Author | Booth Tarkington is the author of Magnificent Ambersons. This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We believe this work is culturally important, and despite the imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide.
    [Show full text]
  • In Person at WSAI Schurnann-Heink Starred on Eisiu
    Volume 1, No. 50 WEEK ENDING MAY 5, 1932 Price 5c They . Are Cace in WI., Murder Triai Pons, Gigli and Rudy and Irene in Person at WSAI Schurnann-Heink Starred on eisiu Beniamino Gigli, Lily Pons, Mine. Schumann-Heink and John Charles Thomas are among the 12 concert and operatic artists who will present a Musicians Emergency Aid one -hour program Sunday (\ fay 11 at 4 p. m. over \\SAC (NBC -M 1:_1F ). This is it place of the regular Gen- eral Electric Circle program. Walter Danu-osch will he master of cere- monies and will lead the National Symphony Orchestra. Other participants are George Ce- hanova.y-, baritone ; Aida Douinelli, soprano; Giovanni Martinelli. tenor; Grace Moore, soprano : Carmela Pon - selle, mezzo soprano; Gladys Swar- thout, soprano; Theodore Webb, bari- tone, and Reinald Werraurath, bari- tone. PRINCE ON AIR Prince George will be the third member of the English Royal family to be heard in the United States and Rudy Vallee and Irene Bordoni Canada when an ach'ess at the annual dinner of the Royal Academy- in Lou- Rudy Vallee and Irene Bordoni will appear in person at WSAI don is broadcast through the Co- in Cincinnati Thursday (May 5) at 7 p. m. for the Fleischmann -Pho'ograpiu uy A« c man l nuirc an,«h,'s, (inchinati lumbia network from 2:19 il p. to is Saturday (April 30 1. Hour over NBC-WEAF. They will be here because Rudy trav- (1) Mrs. William Heald; (2) Mrs. Sophia Flamant; (3) Mrs. William is at Brady; (4) William Ramsey; (5) Reginald Barnard.
    [Show full text]
  • Enriching Witw Life Books
    ENRICHING WITW LIFE BOOKS Bulletin 193 of the AgTicultural Extension Service Ohio State University Contents THE FRIENDSHIP OF BooKs .............. ~ ews magazines . 20 WHAT Boox:s CAN Do FoR Us. + Picture magazines . 2. t: Books aid us in understanding ourselves . + Women's magazines ............... z1 Books aid us in understanding others. 5 Specialty magazines . z 1 Books give us poise and assurance. 6 Men's magazines .................. zx Books stir us emotionally. 7 Popular magazines . 2 I Books stir us spiritually. 8 Quality magazines . n Books stir us mentally. y Farm magazines ................... zz Books give us companionship. Io Children's magazines . 22 Books question our ideas . I 1 Reprint magazines . 22 THE HOME LIBRARY . I .: BooKs THAT CoNTRIBUTE To A CAPABLE, Books are marks of culture . 1 z WELL-ADJUSTED LIFE ............... 23 Finding time to read. io Health and physical growth. 2 3 Financing the library . 1 3 Mental growth and social adjustment .... 2<; Choosing book friends .. .. .. .. .. .. .. i+ Sex education .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 31 Reference books . 1+ Family and community relationships ..... 32 Text books . r ~ Boo KS THAT ENRICH LIFE. 3 5 The classics . r ; Places to visit . 36 Modern works . I 6 Interesting people . 3 7 Children's books . r 6 Stories - old and new . 39 Books about special interests . r 6 Essays . ................... 42 A BRIEF H1sTORY oF Boo Ks. r 8 Philosophy . 43 PERIODICALS . 20 Poetry ...................... 43 Newspapers ............ 20 Drama ................... 44 Magazines . zo Special interests . 45 • • Acknowledgment The Ohio Agricultural Extension Service of The Ohio State University is indebted to the following for their courtesy in supplying illustrative and other material mentioned below: Houghton MifHin Co., Boston.-Poem "Memory" by Thomas Bailey Adrich on page 7.
    [Show full text]