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Image provided by: Binghamton University - The State University of New York
t '.· . . . . tw . s ' ' - ' .... · : '~- . ' . ' . . . . \ - . . VOLUME I Endicott, N. Y., Frid~y, Nov. 22, 1946 NUMBER 1 DEC. 13· Collegeto Hear School Library Taylor Tues. PlanS Opening · Constitution Dr. Philip H. Taylor, professor of international relations of Max- wen School of Citizenship and Pub- lic Affairs, Syracuse University, wil1 sp.eak on \American Poli!CY Toward Russia\ in the Union En- dieott High school auditorium on Tuesday night at !:( p. 111. Dr. Tay- lor is the second speaker in the current three leacture series on Russ•ia arrungt'd for Triple Cities College student3. Dr. Taylor wa.s graduated from thE> University of Maine in 1924 and since that time has done grad· nate work at Stanford University and the University of Southern Caldfornia. P1·evious to his ap- pointment to the School of 01tl· ze.ns1hip, Dr. 'faylor wa:1 assi·starrt professor at Califol:nia Christian college, and an instructor at Stan- ford. A rese·rve officet·, Dr. Taylor was called to active duty early In 1942. After serving in Washington and several training camps throughout the country, he was assigned to the military government in apan. He sl(>rVP.d as a lieutenant colonel on the staff of General MacAr- thur in Tokyo. Dr. George D. Cressay, h€ad of the dep~rtment of geology an.d (Continued on Page 4) , The college 'library, with an in·. ven.tory of 1255 volumes, 41 periodi- cals, and ten daily newspapers, will open upon the installation, of light- ing faciliti{'S, John Allen, college librarian announced today. The a'lsistant librarians are Janet WagneJ• •and Miss Norma Carmon. Stud ->nt assistants are: Arthur C'auley, A·br:-t.ham Schwartz, Owen A.;;h, Jr., Hermau Fitchner, Robert Dickerson, and Agn.es Poti- pan. ThP library will be O<pen rrom 8 :t. m. to 10 p. m. Monday through Friday and from 8 a. m. to 6 p. m. S·atm·days. All books may b€' bor- rowed for a twQ week period ex- cept the reserved books on the overnight lis1t. Reserved books can be obtained from the Endicott li- brary until furth<?'r notice, and any book in the coHege library can be borrowed for the regular peri·od. The out of to,wn newspape1'S on fill:' are: the New York Times, Her- ald 1'ribune, Ohristian 8-cience Monitor, Denver Post, Times Pic- nyanf', Kansas City St,ar, PM, and 3an Francisco Chronicle. According to Mr. Allen, new edi· tions will be added regularly and wer a hundred pe·rlodica·ls will · ~oun be a:t the dispo.s·al of the s,tu· dents. Your Newspaper (.;Oion 1al News repot ter Larry McGrath, 1~:->ft, interviews Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Rockwell and ba.hy. :Mrs. Rocl\Wf'll, a native of 1\IexiC'o, finds AnH'ri<'an life strange in somE> respects, but likes it. Her husband is a TCC Spanish instructor. Like It Here, Says Mexican Wife Of Spanish lostructoi By LARRY McGRATH \I like it here!\ \Vith tb.E>se words ~Irs. Harold gmf'rson Rof'kwell exprE>ssed her rea<'tion to the lT.S.A. and to Endieott in particular. Mrs. RoC'kW£'11, the f.ornlPr Maria Luisa Sandov,tl T~>kda of MPxieo City, with hE''' elevPn-montb-old daughter, Emma Luisa, recently joined her husband at their new home a.t 219 Cleveland A venue. Binghamton Station Broadcasts Weekly Student Interviews I A fE>w months ago the Rockwells wE>re living in Mexico, where Mr. RoclrwE>ll, well known to many j Triple Cities college students as an ! instructor in Spanish, was t>ngage>d I in teaching English. · Mrs. Rockwell, a teacher in pub- . This is the firs~ i.ssue .of your college newspaper. It is ; lie schools in Mexico City for thir- your paper because 1t IS Written by you, for you, and mainly Jay Fitchner, ,a navy veteran, teen years, has visited the U. s. about you. · will appear 011 the \Jan's Tune- twice before. She finds many d.if- In a democracy a newspaper- no matter how small_ room\ program over station. vVlNR, fPrE>nC'es bPtwf'en life Iwr a.nd life _ .. tnust~ ;;ali.ze ~he responsibility of .its fu~ctions. Good news- Binghamton, today, as the sixth in MPxiro, f'HPPC'ially in rPgard to paper JOUlnahsm adheres to certam basic rules. We ·are ob- coHegf' sttJdent to be interviev>ed ~Pogr~phy and '~PathPr, for ME'x- ligated to subscribe to them: by staff members of the station, H'? Ctty boasts lugh. ruggf'd moun- To present issues plainly, accurately, without fear or according to Prof. Brodrick H. tams and a warm climate. favor, and under no influence from anyone. Johnson, dil'ec,toi· of 1mblic rela-1 Tlw defferenrP in languag-P is T tions at the college. ·perhaps Mrs. Rockwell's biggest o present all sides of controversial issues. The weekly interviews are unre- problam at pres(lnt; she has never . 'fo lil!lit ne~s. columns to factual, u~~iased news report- ht>arsed and usually last from s,fx studied English, nevPr having 1ng, casting opiniOn only through privileges of editorial to 10 minutes. The program starts found it a necessity until now. comment. t 1 05 I a : . P. m. . . Another diRshnilarity is one of . ~sa college paper,. however, additional standards and Pre~wu pr.ograms have mcluded diet, says Mrs. Rockwell, who finds rev1s10ns must be upheld. i.nterVLews With Joe Glt~~cksman, our foods contain an excess of We must be nonmpartisan in racial class and religious former Jl1ember Olf the ~'hhtary In- sweets. issues ' ' · 1 tenigence Service. United States , · ··· . . '. Army; .Miss Judy Gregory; ex:· 1 Mr. Rockwell, too, 1s rather our Because we also. ~epresent t~e stu~~nt body, w_e can:p.ot member of the WAC; Miss Nellie of his environmen-t. Although a support any one pohbcal or party factiOn to condemn the Gados, employee of IBM; Miss citizen of the U. s., he has spent other. Florence DesGrange, a native Mis- several years i;n Mexico. V\Then he We will advocate vigorous student participation in the sou:rian recently discharged from went to Mexico in 1930, be did not extracurricular activities - student govermnent; sports, the Ca·nadi.an Women's Army expect to re~ain in .that. country forums, dramatics, and all other endeavors symbolic of Corps; and John HammonQ.,. veter- for .a -~ong periOd o!. tlme. He wen.t wholesome college life. ,.. an of army service.. . 1 t~ m v estigate touJist trade possi- This is a new paper in a new college. It is up to ··ou Regular. panel ~IscusE>Ions and J bilities. . . . . . . . • _ • _ __ \ · · · _ if_ . , forums, w1th occaSil·Onal drama pro- At the Mexican National Museum To Be Okayed December 12 A \United Student Govern- ment,\ ombodying 13 mem- bers as provided in a pro- posed constitution, is slated to become Triple Cities Col- lege's first permanent govern- m<'utal body on Dt>c. 13, when the studt>nt body will go to the polls to name its leaders. The new body will replace a current temporary student govern- ment, whose eforts ince com- ruencement of .school, have been devoted to thf' framing of the pro- posed constitution. 'l'he constitution will be up for ratification on Dec. 12 at the Knights of Columbus hall, Endi- cott, betwef'n 4 and 5 p.m. Candidates for the office of presi- dent of the United Student Govern- ment (USG) will be required to speak to the student body at this time. On thP following day, Dec. 13, voting for the 13 officials will be held in the college book store from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Toe constitution provtdes that there shall be a president, vice president, secretary, treasurer ·and nine members-at-large. Students wishing to run for aJ..- :fice in the USG are required, by 1be constitution to submit to the )ffice of Student P'er:'lannel the fol- lowing: \1-A petition, the form to be provided by the Office of Student Personnel, to which are affixed the ~ignaturt's of 25 full-time students, flxcept for positions for the office t•f prf'sident and of vice president, h which case 50 signatures shall ~e required. \2-A certificate of schol~stic eligibility, signifying a cumulative average of ''C\ signed by the regis- trar.\ ' No petitions will be accepted af- ter Thursday, Dec. 5, it was an- nounced. Applebv to 'Head Maxwell School Syracu~j.e-President Truman yes- erday accepted ~he re·signatlon of Paul H. Appleby as Assistant di- rector of the Budget Bureau. Ap- pleby is rasigniflg as of Jan. 15 to become dean of the Maxwell ·G~ad uate School of Citizenship and Pub. ic Affairs 1 Syracuse University.· all .. Of _r~u, to lllSUre ItS SUCCeSS. It W.1ll reflect you~ Vle~S ductions, are. p.laniled hi addition in Mexico City, he studied ethno- and opmwns, thos-: of ~~e aggregate stude~t body. Pr•mar1ly to the inte-rviews as soon as de- graphy, archaeology, and Mexican a news organ It Will reflect your a,chtevemen.ts - and tails ~Jan be s€Jt.:.i,ed by Professor history. Later he began giving pzi- failures. Johnson and Mr. l)ern<ard Morley; /vate instruction in the· English The Present With a Futu.re-'(J. The Co~NIAL NEWS is your newspaper. -- program directot• of the statton. language. .. s. Sa.'ip:gs Bonds.