Page 20 - TheGoldBug1931-32
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PAGE TWO The Gold Bug, Western Maryland College, Westminster, Md. A REVIEW OF GOt \IlG Around the Campus \ VARIETY, BOOKS, PLAYS, AND LIFE Anyone requiring advice expert how t.o win and keep a. man might ask on "STEAMBOATIN' DAYS" should fail to read it, and, having read it, no one will fail to feel a tinge of the occupants of Room 54, MeDaniel, By John H. K. Bhannhan regret that the "old etenmboatin ' days" for their ten rules, tried and true. Each Graduate of Western Maryland College have passed so irretrievably, in rever of Officinl student newspaper of Westcrn Maryland College, pubHslled on 'I'lrursday of this sngacicus pair will probably mod- the mere practical, hut much less roo during th(loaeadernie vear by the students of wuetem Maryland College, westmmeter, estly refer JOu to the other, but we sua- 'rhereSN'msto be litt1eof romance Maryland. Entered ns second-class matter at the West.min.ster Poatofflce. pect that both are rather good authcri- evident in the aspect of the present-day mantle, automobile. su!!eCIUPTlON PRICE $2.011 A YEJ-R ties un fhe subjeet, wharves of Pratt Street or Light Street, ESTHER V. RIOHTER, '34. and little of sentiment apparent in the EDITOR.fA.L STAFF None of the uaum puerile Hallowe'en unlovely e.raft thnt slowly and clumsily FROM DAY TO DAY ply their way back and forth across the EditlJ"T in Ollie! . ........ ' , , C. W. KOOCKOOEY,'32 pranks could possibly have aroused such Chesapeake Bay and into the narrow by- B~- Eerdynand Goetel ASIlOIlia-teEditors .. .. M RY LEE Sun'LEY, '32, ROBEI.ITL. ROOOTms,'32 pure mirth as did. the boys' post-mortem. ways of the creeks. Pew trnvol by watcr, News Editors .. ......... ,' ~f. SUSAN STROW,'33, C. RUSSRLLl:lEaBsT, 33 Sunday afternoon fcnud them gathered 'Pranslated from the Polish by Oopy Editors. , .. ......... , , ,LoUISE B. CROZlER, '3~, WlLLIAMG. PYI,ES, '33 in close conclave to re-live, with appro and aldll fewer are aware of the faseln- \Villifred Cooper atiug llistoricnl background of Maryland Sports Editors. , .. , ,A. BEA'r1UCE CROWTHER,'32, BENJ.HIIN O. BOYD, '3,1, prtate gestures, their Saturday evening This book is wnrteu in an entirely new "?fAKE·UP STAFF of sport. Interested observers found waterways. form of diary by the lending etiamcter, Ma11agillg Ea~tor ,V. OTTO, '3~ much amusement in the eoueerted glances bO~~;1,S~aan)~~~J;a~~:e;~;;~~ ~~a~'~;:~~~ in which he incorporates the text of a Assistant Manu,ging SPARROW, '33 upwards and around, the hearty boyish time when the bay boats flourished, and novel as he writes it. Tbe diary of his BUSINESS STAPF laughter, and the general "'Ve gotta. se- when there was a. thrill to be gotten by present sJlOWShis mental state and do- BlI-siness 3fallager ..•. ............ RoGER H. CISS};LL,'32 cret" attitude of the group, taking the "night boat to Baltimore." mestic life in the Polish eity of Cracow AdVllrti$ing MunGgt!'l' ., . ., .DAVlO T!l.UNDLE,'33 With a. pICMant, personal air of remi· after his return from the war. Tho Assistant Ad'vertising Mallager .• ., MILTONA, KATZ, '34 Possibly some. of the Jight-heartedness niscence the Il\lthor has revealed a little no~-elof his past tells of his experiences Circulatwn Manager , ,.WAyl.\'E MOORE, '32 re8ulted from the temporllry mental reo of the history, and a. great deal of tllC- as II prisoner of war in Turkestan. The Assi&tant Circulation Man.~gerll lief of lh~ subway-dinen, Imnlediately scnt·iment and romance of the old diary of his present is printed in. R-oman GLADYSEL. SOMTmS.'33 MAURICEC. FLE~uNG, '34 after dinner SUnday, elouds of IIteal;n "steamboatill' dnys" in I\b.r;yland-yet Je.ttersnlldthenovcl of the past is print· ZELMAB. OALVERT,'34 ARTHUR ,r. DOWKEY,'34- were to be-'leen rising from the cellar of those days are not 80 fnr past, for the ed in Italics, tllereby nvoiding any LORA M. OIlT'l'EN, '34 Seience Hall, but observers were allon trllllsit.ion from the old to the new mode chance of confusion. The objoct of the REPOR1'01UAL STAFF informed thnt this was not dne, as was of travel hilS occurred sinee HJ20. book is to show how a past-and to the Winifred Busll, '32, Alvertn Dillon, '32, Mar~' Hl1mphre~'S, '32, Sara Robinson, at first thought, to a certain visitor's Nor does 11r. Shnllnnhan treat only e.~sual o!Jserver, finished-episode in the '3~, Betty Allen, '33, Elsie Bowen, '33, Suaann!l. Cookey, '33, Tessie Cox, '33, 'fro)' "letting off steam," for thi8 gentleman the incidents of the Bar. He gives an writer's life has lingered on into and Hallibseh, '33, Anne Wolverton, '33, lIfartha Harrison, '3t, Katll,lyn Mellor, '3<1, hnd postponed his confer('nee till a later account of his own boyhood in EllSton, highly eolored his present. At first the date. Louise Ne1.!dy, 'S4, Esther Ri!('hter, '34, Margaret Yocnm, '34, Edith Forney, '35, then onl]" a yillnge, aud interestingly rc- diary and the no\"(!l seem two distinct Samuel Townshend, '32, Loui5 Tuckennnu, '32, Joseph Addison, '32, Howard Hnve you heard of the new device for veals somet1lillg of the lives of the more themes. bnt, as the book approaches. its Amoss, '32, Wilson l\IUHIlY, '33, Pnt ~[ahone)', '34, Ciluenee Bussard, '34, Brady identifying a football coach' An ob- familiar skippers. eODelusiou, tho two stories int('rweave until the no,'el fades out and it.s legaey, Brysoll, '35, Carlton Brinsfield, :35, Keithlcy Harrison, '35, Ro!Jert Himmer, '35. In the latit'r lJart of the book jJ,e sen-lint cop recommends watChing thc author hns included a novcl~tte called as it were, blends wilh the dil.lry, The acth'ities of thc man in question, during pa.~t catches np with the prescnt. Tho Worthy opinion; Model management; Correct news. a game. "'fhe Hammond Lot", but willi thnt we ending is superb. The theme ls good, arc not seriollsly COllcerned, Wo do think Various women r----------'-----------I Bnt sometimes tho police foree falls that }'lr. Shannahnn's snga of the Chella· The form is nloot ingenious and very just nlittle below 5ueh standards of pellke is written with such chorm, suell difficult to handle. And the book is truly a work of art. I E - D-I-T-O-R-I efficiency. For instance, a second Al vividness, a1l(1 such sympathetic 11llder- KA THL YN :MELLOR" '33 standing of the bygone days t1H1tuo one Capella sud his gang nrc rej)orted to be. Optional '1'hc tillle seems ripe to decide just how mnch longer the Instructors 1ll3J ha\e \ L k 0 h C at IlHge in the collage. suggcstlons to eon Recitals? College is going to be disgraced and its guests insulted on tribute on refornung the condnd of tIllS 00 ing at t er amp uses Among the- more spocwllzed types of I sue-h occasions as the Henry L, Soutlnl'ielt readings in ,,,I'g'". Alumni llall last Friday. Tlu'oughout the perfol'mance, despit.e the really fine monologue cnmmal noted recently IS the "tea '----------~---------- rendered by President Southwick, of tbc Emereoll College of Oratory, hound" It IS stud that Al Capone. and Boston Ulllversity IS plunlllng to have I eral, !lud the student 1\ho l.S fortunate there was an undercul'l'ent of whispering!>. gigglings, /lnd allied dis- IllS followcrs are not above oceasional Ii tran$ contInental debate "ltil the Um cllough to ootnm one of these scholnr participation \erSlt) of Southern C,1hforlllll b) meallS of this in the activities slllps 18I11suredof a \ery desITnblc means turbances from the unintel'csted' studcnts who were pt·escnt. dastardly menace to society. Publie of rlldlO, and an mternatlOnal contest of gettmg au 11 B or some other ad Now the writel' feels that he is not nrbitt'ul'iiy defending the stu- welfare r('quires the explanation that the \\Ith some EnglIsh um,erslty The '1lllced degree The socwl Ilfe at the dCllts in saying that it was not all tll-eit' fault. We grant that college "tea·hound" islikcly to hau.ut :McDaniel \\rlter sees 111tillS allllOUIlCCllIentan add twenty h,o colleges eOllllJrlsmg Oxford students should, having lieitousillquir' ston was one genial gentleman by the name of Al Oapone. As he and his they deserve it. I will be friendly. iell, but renlly the reports of our deaths guard entered the stadium the student.s [3] If I play in a group game I will play, not fot' my own glory, were greatly exaggerated. In December of this year thirty-two rose as s llIan and e.heered ill. deference but for the success of my team. Pyle, '31 men will be. appointed to represent the to his wishes, but it was a different kind of a eheer t.han that to which he United States a.JI Rhodes scholars at Ox- [4] I will be a good' loser or a generous winner. Hassell, '33 ford, These scholarships wcre founded hns been accustomed. He was given the [5] In my work as well as in my play I will be sportsmanIike- WernBl",'B3 to promotEl friendly relations between well-knGwu BroD..J[cheer which ,so upset generous, fail', honorable. Amoss, 'S2 the United States and England. The him that he left at tbe end of the third (juart.er, [From the Prize :f.forality Code widely used in schools:] Od-ober 25, stipends for thC1;1escholarships ale. lib·
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