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Page2 FOUNDED 1946 EDITOR-IN-CHIEF ·- DONALD S. SOWTER Managing Edlto1•- Joe D. Gluecksman, News Editor - John W. Hinds ;feature Editor-Owen J. Crumb Business Manager-Aysel Searles, Jr. Advertising Manager---Dolores Green Photography-Howard Engel. Mt Editot~Norma Carmon Proofreader-Eileen Schochet )i)ditorial Staff-Tom Ca:llooan, Jean Fairbrother, John Kar, William Sharpe, Larry McGrath, H. J. Accurso, Elliot Chester, Theodore: Chronil'l, R. J. Koloski, Ralph Linnell, Burton Weinstein. Business· Staff-Shirley Dawson, ·wilbur Brewer, Richard Hamann, James Jordan, Annette Smith, Sonia NeJame. Sports Staff-Howard Scheinholz, Alec Hazen. Photog~phy Staff-Martin Citron, Gerald Shapiro. Feature Writers- Chester Fish, Allan Hansen, Robert Jacobson, Mon- ica Seruenek, 3\Iargret ·wallace, S. T. Slotz}ry. The Colonial Nuws is thlil official student publication of Triple Cities College, Syracuse University, and is published each Fri.day from Sep- - tember to June. Application for e11t~'\' as second class matter is pending. Your Political Future In a few weeks all of us will be asked to vote in the elections of our student government. We will be asked to elect a certain number of our fellow students whose task it . will be to represent us, voice our views, and direct some of our college activities. To be able to vote intelligently we must acquaint our- : .. selves with various facts. We n1ust know. our candidates, we must understand the . , ·views they advocate, the issues they represent, the .factions into which they are divided. Know your candidates and know what they stand for. Secondly, you must vote. It is not only your privilege to vote - it is your duty. To many people \student government\ implies a youth- iul, innocent go at legislative attempts and a laboratory period in pol.ities. We do not share this view. We believe student govern- ment to bo the governmental body of a student society with duties and responsibilities tantamount to the representa- tive group of any other cm:nn:mnity under our form of gov- ernment. We sincerely hope and expect that our stadent govern- ·.ment will embody many of the things that are so sadly lacking in most of the major governments of this chaotic .. wQrld. We trust that our government will stand for honesty, integrity, fair play, justice, and unselfishness. We trust that .it will work for the good of the student body and that it will put; the interests of its constituents above any of its own. We ltnow that if these are the issues they are willing to work for, stand up for, &.nd be accountable for, we may be certain of a stud€nt government of which we and the University will be proud. Thani{s, Triple ~Cities We believe we express the sentiments of the student body in saying \Thanks Triple Cities,\ for the courtesies you have extended to \Joe College;' and \Betty Coed.\ To area residents who have opened their hon1es to those of us from other cities, we are especially grateful. We hope that \College Town\ will mean to you nothing less than admiration, and that our behavior here will con- form in every part to the codes you rightfully expect. November 22, 1946 Ramblings At Random ·····.-.~T····s· ve·· · .. By Sid.Siotzky ·By Owen J. Crumb So here we are~se:ven weeks deep in the .messiest :barrage of It's been suggested that we caH facts, figures and miscellaneous learning ever hurled at anybody any- this column your civilian edition of wher.e. The pressure mounts. Quizzes, departmentals; mid-terms, \B·bag\, but several co-eds resent- hang like vultul'es .over the struggling scl10lar-then pounce down for ed the implication; anyway fellows the lcill. It's rough! It's starting to feel a ·bit like college in the and girls, here's your chance to generally ll!Ccepted·, non-TCC, sense of ~he Word. \blow it out.\ We hope to rp:ake We si.t back and reflect for ten seconds on th.is strange ·new n.fe tliis fea·ture both interesting and of o.urs, and try to arrive at some conc'lusions. But we smack up. informative as well as an outlet for aga+nst a stone waTI. Pavi:lions, club-houses, at·my barracks, .pot-belly: the Vets' opinions. If you have stoves-it doesn'tadd up1. Maybe it's too ea·rly.. We're sti:ll too wrapped any questions or .gripes drop u!J a up in it all land we. •need distance to acquke perspective, line and ''blow it out\ nere. So, acknowledging that the last seven weeks-the wackiest seven weeks on record anywhere-has placed our fair institution in a C'lass · This will be of interest to those by itself; we'll leave it for future generations to sfft through the gory· of you who are wondering where detai:ls. Let's be content to say that as the erratic, wobbly offspring of the next meal is coming from. If old Syracuse U ., we are pioneers, and by treading unfamiliar ground that long-awaited check hasn't ar- a lot of unexpected things can har,pen. rived yet stop by the v. A. office That way-back-when era of registration and Pavilio~ class-es won't • and give Miss \Volford your name. soon be forgotten. Those wer·e the days of the super h<!>pped~up She will send out a tracer and try educational faciliti.es-when you could be sitting in economics class to fix things up so yoH can start and learn psychology .at the same time, all through the magic of the eating again. canvas curtai·n-when Miss Planki·nton could pause momentarily in the course of an En.glish lecture and hear what she had just said com.ing from Mr. K·imball in his class next door. And Mr. Moses tell.s us about the time he escorted a visiting I.B.M. en.gine·er through a h¥tlf-finished temporary building. The gentleman stepped on the protruding end of a board with a saw ,and a hatchet on the oth.er end. His weight threw the whole sheban,g in to the air-the flat of the hatchet neatly wacking * * * him on the back of the head. .Things got pretty deranged those first few weel.:s. . One of Mrs. Easton's chem classes gawked wide-eyed one morning at theJr late- arriving prof carrying a textbook under one arm .and her two-year-old son under the other. Nobody could be found to take care of him at home, so, toddling on a near-by table, Junior got a little chemistry Don't drop that G. I. insurance -something new has been .added! A new bill recently passed· by con- gress J:las revised and increased the advantages of your National Service Life Insurance. Incident- ally, World \Var I veterans who kept their government insurance will receive a 33 %% dividend to be paid this year. It could happen to you. * * * instruction. Thelma Cary, super saleswoman of the bookstore, accidentally slipped the story of how she happened to have a corsage the night of the cornell game when all Ithaca fiorists were closed: At the P'hi Kapa Tau house one of the gals passed out from too much of the wrong stuff, so Thelma's hubby merely lifted s0me flowers from the If a certain honey-voiced charmer of the airways accomplishes her. objective the navy's electronics de- partment should soon be filled. with bright-eyed new recruits. While .. her victims are relaxing after a couple of Woody Herman's latest body and the problem was solved . That brings us roughly up to date. . waA.\WOrks she turns on the sugar -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~an attem~~seducesomemMe innocent young men into Uncle The Co-Ed Call By Mar.garet Wallace Men! Men! Everywhere! Hun- dreds o.f them ·swarming about tthe campus! In one class alone there. are more men t:han aill ~eighty-six of the co-eds ·shared .during the war. Wonderful, isn't it girls? We have heard that T.G.C. men see this situation in a sUghtly .dif- ferent light. Bill, for instance, saunters out of F·rench class and s,pies Janie, who he distinctly re· mflmbers as being the only touch of feminity in his tri1g class. Bli.U dons his friendliest smile and waits hopetully for a smile from Janie. UnfortJunately, nearly twenty other men also .spotted Janie and are giving her the glad- eye, To Janie none of these beam- ing faces are fmnillal'' and, tilting her chin in an attempt to be non- chalant, she breezes by. The first time this happens BHl may give Janie the benoelfit of the doubt by assuming, that she simply didn't see him; but if a few days later he .shou1rl. meet her on Main Street and she still d·oesn't s~peak or smile, he comes to a different conclusion. Witb his ego some- what deflated, he decides now .that Janie is an educated ice cube. College. Town . Sammy's navy. And how about those enthusiastic army recruiters who sneak in between plays on the nation-wide football broadcasts By Bob Jacobson \The Frontier of Industrial De- mocracy,\ as Endicott is frequent- ly called, has certainly proved it- self to be an ideal coHege town. It has enthusiastically answered our calls for aid in every possible way and has given clear indications of continuing to do so. to tell a-bout the wonderful lands of Japan and Korea where our troops have nothing to d0 but admire the Geishas and bank in the sun on an exotic beach? Left-Overs By Crumb According to history, the fir.:;t Portraits in an efficient news- white men who caml' into the l'<'· · Ed\t s t h\ k room: 1 or ow er on IS nees gion of Endicott found it sf'ttled by under the news dPsk-pr.aying for small villages of the Iroquois more copy-Joe Gluecksman tear- league. These Indian settlements ing his hair and cussing-in fivP. were established all thtough the different languages. Red hair, red valley and remained there until h t 1 d f t 1\1- a anc rP ace-repor er ' c- General George \Vashington order· Grath cracking wise at everybody, ed an expedition to expel tlwm. everything and flveryshe. News The vi11age of Union, a part of News Editor, head-line. writer, greater Endicott, received its name when the armies of Sullivan and proo-f readflr and copy boy John Hinds, wishing he were on a 1 '!l~il:Ge-- Clinton joinrd in reinforcement ful bombing mission over Ge1\many. .. there. Professor Johnson-Please, Lord, At the turn of the century the Endic~tt Johnson Corporation es- tablished factories in the town of Union. The new place, called En- dicott, was incorporated in 1906. Union and Endicott were merged by authorization of special elec- tion proct'edings on January 20, 1921. don't let them bring a libel suit down around our ears. * * * This one is even too bad for a colm.nn, but an editor came up with it so here it is: The drunk who slipped a nickel in the fire alarm box, looked at the town clock and gasped, \My gorsh, I've lost fife poundsh.\ • * • £VENTS CALENDER I Dec. 13-Student election day, 8 . . a. m. to 8 p. m. ·Sinee this is probably the genw eral concensus of opinion among th~ men at T .C:U., '\Ve s1hould like to give our s1de of the story. We certainly are not attempt- ing to be \.distant and indiffer- ent,\ but we are finding it difficult to remember the names and faces of seven hundred men. Being in the minority we undoubtedly a]l· pear more outstanding to the op- posite sex than they do to us. The more recent history of these communities is bound up with the development of two of the coun- try's most prosperous industrial in- stitutions -the Endicott Johnson Corporation and the International Business Machines Corporation. E:ach company is, as Ralph Waldo Attention news-hounds: There will be a regular meeting of all .staff members of the Colonial News every Wednesday afternoon at 4:00 p. m. in the newsroom. alt LlL.•~ bers are required to be present. Nov. 26-Dr. Phild·p H. Taylor speaks on \American Policy To- ward Russia,'' U. :ID. auditori·um, 8 p, m. NC!V. 28-Thanksgiving HoU:day. Dec. 2-Dr. Warren B. W&lsh speaks on \The Bases of Soviet Policy,\ U. E. auditorium, 8 p. m. Dec.· 11-Student Electiion a.s- sembly, 4 p. m. Dec. 18-Christmas assembly, U. E. audi,torium, 4 p. m. Dec. 20-Dhri·s,tma:s ·formal, 9 p. m. to 12 p. m. De.c. 21-Christmas vacation be- gins at noon. Protect your i:utur·e With U. S. Savings Bonds. This may be the way it appears, but actually we would even give up drooling over \Frankie\ for the (Continued on Page 3) Emerson would say, \the lengthen- ed shadow of one.;man\~George F. Johnson's policies being respon- si·ble for the outstanding success of the shoe .company, and Thom-as J. Watson having fostered the world.swide service of IBM. * * * And then there was the coed who thought \medieval\ meant.. half bad; her boy-friend figured Bar Harbor was a refuge for alcoholics. Our boy McGrath and his signs of the times on the newsroom mucH· age jar: \It paste to be ibnerunt.\