- CUNY Academic Works

Transcription

- CUNY Academic Works
m^mmmwmm^r¥:
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Winnings
As Cagers Meet
JLOJT
.59 *
"TH$rt& Hemr* of Re«|NmstMe F r e e t l o m
Baruch<School o f Bosmess a n d Public Adroinistrotion—CHy College of N e w York
f ^ « * l r t y , February 1 9 . 1 9 6 3
.
By Subscription O n l y
Upset
By Jeff Palca
• -••—Gity^CoIlege's basketball team will pujt^a three game
winning streak on the line tonight against Fordham University at.Wingate Hall (Uptown Center). Starting time is 8,
preceded by the freshman^game at 6.
The Beavers a r e Out to repeat last seaion!s 62-61 tipggt£~
climaxed by Don Sidat's t w 0 ^
ninfi gamps nlaypd^bftw^gn,,
the cliibsl h o w e v e r , ~ C S ? ^ Y r TeaSST
in t h e lifetime s e r i e s 30-16. The<_
rivalry started i n 1906.
Once a g a i n t h e R a m s w i l l b e
F o r w a r d s B o b MelvTn UnS* Jmi~"
favored a s t h e y bring a 13-7 record
Manhardt, both 6 4, load t h e F o r d into- t h e g a m e , including a tnree
ham a t t a c k . Melvin, a . senior, i s
g a m e w i n n i n g s k e i n ._ oyer A r m y ,
points^''p&r
The Student Council confcpleted t h e p e r fection of t h e final draft of its recommenda- Queens, a n d Boston College. Ford- averaging"' eighteen"
g
a
m
e
,
and
i
s
t
h
e
second
leading
.^ nbdut 13ie O t t r e l l Report which will be presented to t h e faculty and the administra- h a m ' s m o s t impressive wins w e r e
reboundef
on
t
h
e
sqUAd.-BAfch
gteqlg^r
tions:
tion? f ^ o r T g i n a l " a r a f t vrss the-wrorfr: of the,GettreB— Report Committee, consisting of a nine point victory a g a i n s t -Cont h a t Melvin, w h o b o a s t s a n e x c e l Richard <21antz '66 and Seven * ^>^^^;^»:-: yr^.- S;^ ^ ; >!*?^:^^$:^::^:i^-' ^-^r^^^ -x^^-;-^
t o a better student body, and a t - necticut, and a thirty-one point lent shot a n d good speed, h a s - *
tract more capable teachers. He- drubbing o f Columbia.
Eagle *65.
good chance to turn professional.
R
a
m
coach
Johnny
Bach,
while
further
felt
that
it
would
not
b
e
In short "Council agreed w i t h t h e
Manhardt, a junior a n d * t h e '
unfair t o those who were excluded" disappointed w i t h his team's record, team's captain, i s hitting
authors o f t h e report t h a t t h e d e fifteen'
since they could further their edu-. is looking forward t o a successful points . per g a m e , which i s under
cree be changed t o a Bachelor o f
cation through an A . A. S. pro- finish_of t h e season. H e is particu- his t w e n t y point a v e r a g e o f lastScience; there b e more courses i n
g r a m ~at: the proposed Manhattan larly anxious t o avenge last year's season. "He h a s an e x c e l l e n t j u m p l a n g u a g e , mathematics, ]and t h e
Community College—another f e a - "bitter defeat" to City College.
natural and social sciences; a n
shot from all a n g l e s of t h e court
lnntion of t h e multiplicity of '
Bach f e e l s that h i s club relies.
ture of the Cot,t,r*»H Report.
Sophomore ctSHter John S t e v e n s ,
specialisations i s n e c e s s a r y ; there t
Donald Glickrnan '63, S.C. treas- mainry on g o o d shooting- Fordham ~6-5, leads the t e a m in rebounds
is a need f o r bigger and better
urer, dissented with this view. H e a v e r a g e s forty-five per cent from with thirteen per g a m e , -while a v e r facilities; and a Manhattan Comstated, "it is unfair t o late bloom- t h e floor. H e noted that City h a s a g i n g over twelve points. H e "won
munity College should b e erected.
ers . . . Some of our poor students an a d v a n t a g e playing in i t s g y m , the M e t A . A . U . h i g h jump -crown
Council took exception t o t h e
t h e c o u r t i s narrower- than 4- l a s t summer~with a~teap~of 6-6*4.
make t h e best graduate schools in
proposals that the School sever i t s
t h e country," he facetously added m o s t courts that t h e -Rams have Bach i s pleased w i t h h i s p r o g r e s s ,
ties w i t h t h e City College; t h a t
in reference to a n earlier statement" played on.''
but f e e l s that h e is still f a r f r o m
the School m e r g e with a new Manb y another representative on t h e
In 1960, the last time the R a m s reaching h i s potential.
hattan Community C o l l e g e ; a n d
q u a l i t y of students t h a t attended played in Wrngate, Pordha-m w o n , * T h e backcourt starters a r e 6-3"
JXisfcer. ^toot© by Warren ^Tockennan
t h e School.
that i t raise i t s entrance require57-48, after trailing . a t t h e half. senior B i l l S h e r i d a n a n d StJJLsophoments.
"There
ought
to
be
someplace
Of t h e fifteen g a m e s played on more W a y n e McGuwirt,. each a v e r Richard Glantz
for t h o s e w h o can't g o a n y w h e r e C i t y ' s court, t h e Rams have w o n a g i n g t e n points p e r g a m e .
The Council disagreed w i t h t h e
else," added Jeffrey Levitt '64, S X . only t w o , b u t most of those t i l t s
authors of t h e report t h a t t h e e n - cipal college."
The Beavers w i l l be under a
Robert
Horn
'64,
proposed
t
h
a
t
corresponding secretary. Mr. L e v i t t w e r e played •when City had a "big height handicap, since t h e y w i B
trance requirements t o t h e School
should b e raised. The original v e r - the section be amended t o read: made reference t o a recent study t i m e " teamT
be outsized a t every position.
". . . t o e entrance requirements . . .
sion of Gounca?* report read, "
F
o
r
d
h
a
m
h
a
s
w
o
n
seven
of
t
h
e
(Cowrraoed o n P a g e t i y
CCoptftJiyg
o
n
P
a
g
e
8
)
t o a level more favorably
<-»/*» M M iw) rmmffl wHy jyiwittanee
comparable . . . " t o t h e other *e&to the-Parnrh School should b e o p e n
a r e . lor golieges...
in thngaji.3i±ioaCMifih
o f t_h e motiongita fnfnr TKTffpt- •T^h.e^ .mafcer
_
_ _-coB?
„_+_
maining in the overtime period.
: :
:
•
*
_
.
.
•
-
-
-
:
.
.
^
J
i
,
;
.
'A Goo?
a nee t o a n y o*ner~four year muni-
D"Hee ais angoodE
right hand,"
tended higher standards would lead _,
Anti-Tuition Group
Plans to Mobilize
Gathers
Public
declared Dean Emanuel Saxe,,
referring to the retiring Dean .
C h a r l e s ' J . Eberhardt. Dean 1
T h e Joint Citizens and Le^slators' Committee to Save Saxe added "we will miss him
Free Tuition convened a meeting Wednesday night to " t r y sorely, but wish him well.'^
to spell out what we can do" to preserve free tuition at t h e When he w a s asked in an interv i e w w i t h . T H E TICKER to d e City University, said Melvin^scribe Dean Eberhardt's contribuSieged Baruch School leader
iion t o t h e College, Dean. S a x e
in the free tuition fight.
t o Retire
June
•*t&ifi
sr^y* .
noted that "he headed* a-'^first-rate" *
Senator Frederick
Ohrenstein
corricular
- guidance program. H e
from M a n h a t t a n w h o chaired t h e
a l s o praised Dean
Eberhardt's
committee s t a t e d t h a t " w e a r e y
"very
fine"
program
to contact
talking about illusions" w h e n w e
metropolitan high schools and> indiscuss bjJJs in terms of r e s t o r i n g
form them o f t h e educational o p free tuition t o t h e City U n i v e r s i t y
portunities a t t h e School.
or t o rescind t h e tuition f e e t h a t
T h e aid g i v e n by Dean Eberhardt
was levied a g a i n s t the s t a t e univerto each" entering class and his work
sities.
as
chairman
of t h e School's
Mr. Ohrenstein* hastened t o c a u Scholarship Committee were espe^_
tion, h o w e v e r , t h a t t h i s realistic
cially singled o u t for praise. Dean
•
i
Ticker photo hy Mare-Ames%
viewpoint i s n o t indicative of. a d e S a x e noted that in these activities
featist trend. A s s e m b l y m a n J o s e p h
COUNSELOR AT WORK: Dean Charles Eberhardt gives
he h a s been "of great help."
Kottler added, "no bill h a s e v e r
advice to a.Bamch student.
Dean S a m u e l Thomas affirmed
been moved o u t of c o m m i t t e e a n d
Dean Wright unreservedly c o m D e a n Saxe's comments, adding t h a t W r i g h t of the Student Life D e p a r t passed in t h e memorjr of m a n . "
m
e
n
t
s
t
a
t
e
d
:
"I
hadn't
a
n
y
i
d
e
a
mended
D e a n Eberhardt's w o r k
D e a n Eberhardt will be "a hard
They both u r g e d -vigorous- action i n
t
h
a
t
h
e
w
a
s
thinking
of
it."
D
e
a
n
on
t
h
e
Scholarship
Committee. S h e .
m a n t o replace." H e particularly
the essential local l e g i s l a t i v e d i s cited Dean Eberhardt's advice. t o S a x e claimed t h a t h e " w a s s u r - declared t h a t h i s work in t h i s field
Ticker p*»oto by Mare Ames
tricts.
w a s responsible f o r m a n y b r i g h t
freshmen, allowing them t o plan prised."
The t h r e e provisions t h a t t h e
Melvin Siege!
D
e
a
n
W
r
i
g
h
t
added
t
h
a
t
she^had
s t u d e n t s c o m i n g t o t h e Baruch
their programs most effectively.
committee f e e l s m u s t n o t b e n e Even though h e h a s so m a n y first known Dean Eberhardt a s an t School
g a t h e r persons f o r t h e Albany
gated are t h e concepts, of f r e e t u i According t o A s s o c i a t e R e g i s t r a r
varied responsibilities, Dean Eber- "excellent physical education teachrally.
"~ ~
tion a t t h e s t a t e universities, a n d
e
r
;
h
e
w
a
s
very
dynamic."
H
e
then
A
g
n e s Mulligan, D e a n E b e r h a r d t
hardt
h
a
s
found
t
h
e
time
t
o
perAside from t h e rally in Albany,
community colleges, a n d t h e r e s became
t
h
e
chairman
o
f
t
h
e
Faculhas
b o u g h t a house in Connecticut,
the Y o u n g Democrats, in conjunc- sonally speak before many outside
toration o f mandatory free tuition
tion witfe t h e Senator and other -or- groups, including schools. D e a n t y Committee on Student A c t i v i t i e s . out beyond commuting distance.
a t the Cfty T J n i v e r s i t r t o s t a t e l a w .
ganizations, a r e coordinating a T h o m a s concluded by stating t h a t U n d e r h i s tenure a s chairman, T h i s purchase first alerted h e r t h a t
P l a n s a r e a l s o being
made
"Dean
Eberhardt
h a s a l w a y s Dean "Wright noted, students f o r he w a s c o n t e m p l a t i n g r e t i r e m e n t .
through t h e Y o u n g D e m o c r a t Club campaign t o g e t students and their worked hard a n d planned t h e in- t h e first time w e r e granted m e m When asked about D e a n Eberand S e n a t o r Wilson o f M a n h a t t a n p a r e n t s t o write protest* letters terest o f t h e College first. I w i s h bership o n t h e Committee. S h e hardt's' successor i n t h e Guidance
to organize a demonstration i n A l - t o Governor Rockefeller and their him a healthy and fruitful retire- indicated that h e w a s a m o n g t h e Department, D e a n Saxe remarked
bany o n March 11 t o p r o t e s t f o r district assemblyman. Through t h e ment." :
leading proponents of t h e s t e p , t h a t there i s someone t e n t a t i v e l y
the discharge o f t h e b i n s o n 1fce v a r i o u s students in t h e State a n d
and
t h a t " h e w a n t e d t h e s t u d e n t s t o selected. T h e choice i s n o t y e t final
T h e n e w s of Dean Eberhardt's
free t u i t i o n . mandate. T h e Y o u n g C i t y Unr«rtersity s y s t e m s , there i s retirement c a m e a s a surprise t o f e e l that they w e r e a p a r t e f - 4 * and will n o t be announced untaV
tw^p^ t*ffl^wiJTMrt h e assembly a n d
D e a n JirOernardt's retxremexrEi
m a n y i n t h e School. Dean Ruth C . <the c o m m i t t e e ) . "
^
al ,
8)
t. •
of
«
nfi^^FiB•r T^• ^
«-i««tinat«E
to
T u e s d a y , February. 1 9 , 1 9 6 3
THE TICKER
1*
»i
*
•
i ;
i I
*f
t&eauty Can test Slated
To Select
Sweetheart
SC Elections
Set is
Lecture
. A n d r e w Radding *65 defeated S t e v e n E a g l e '65, 5 4 - 2 4 , ; " T h e P s y c h o l o g y Society in
unction "wftlr t h e A m e r i U w r e n c e Handelsman '65 o f t h e Beta S i ^ m a c h a p t e r for the open S t u d e n t Council r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s e a t in t h e Class ^, cconj
F r i e n d s Service is preaT1
'65 in t h e special elections held W e d n e s d a y . Jeffrey F e u e r ]| s e n t i n g D a n S e e g e r on "Paciof A l p h a E p s i l o n Pi, announced t h a t t h e chapter will select of
,_ v
,
, , . ^
.,
.
,
I -^en1
its s w e e t h e a r t to run a s their representative in the-^beauty 64 w a s elected to Council gar- *
fism and Conscientious Objecc o n t e s t held by the national f r a t e r n i t y .
t
n e r i n g 44 "yeas" v e r s u s 11 T w e n t y S t u d e n t s V i e o r s , " T h u r s d a y at 12 in 5 0 3 .
Any, co-ed m a y enter, w h e t h "Ir. addition to the lecture, a film
er o r n o t s h e groes to t h e Ba- 1
!
entitled
" L a n g u a g e of F a c e s " will
In "the freshman elections held } W i l l i X O r i H e r
CfieSS
l
e s u tWR a 5i
ruch School. A p p l i c a t i o n s for !
- a separate -feature.
F r i d a y in the auditorium at Fresh- T ^ - | n - | - | . , | . . . - I l y f r j f f - y - K o |Tt~^^ ^ fhe c o n t e s t m a y be o b t a i n e d !
*
*
. ! The society has planned a po5-_
man ,A>*enibly. Marilyn Cohen b i ;
from t h e brothers of A . E . P i
T w e n t y Baruch School City -Col- s ; b j e psychology fair which w o u l d
received 55 votes and Joan Win- } U?ge students- will simultaneously i f
in t h e t e n t h floor cafeteria or \
4
e a t u r e ^ug-h exhibits as lie deteci g
in 104 of t h e S t u d e n t Center. ; f p ^ ^ ^ B ^ - ^ i r ; •—. -•'-•£- -* * l^-^ ston *-6_7 received -3© votes to grain •I | Piv-their skill _at_chess a g a i n s t that ' t u r j rj^tjamiejit s^ JRqrschach t e s t s ,
The frrst c o n t e s t will be held Fri- ; r%K
S. W
r a - , :aa n d W i g g l e y Blocks. Also planned
election as Student Council repre- of Mary Bain,^former U. o.
»i o«i«day at 8:30 in the A. E. Pi frater- f ^ ^ ^ f :
ens'
Chess
Champion,
on
Monday,
li ; a booth at Madri-Gras to be Held
s e n t a t i v e s in the Class of "67. Den i t y house, located at 42 E a s t 2 3
^
^ April ""27.
feated w e r e Carol Lipman '67 and March 11, at 8:00 P.M.
Street. The winner will be entered
"Chess is a favorite student
Janice W e i » s t e i n *67, -each g e t t i n g
in tiie elimi-nfltioncs held by the
g a m e , " stated Mr. Richard Farrar,
f r a t e r n i t y ' s conclave of
Metro27 votes.
supervisor of the chess a n d bridge
politan 'chapters. The remaining
Ten f r e s h m e n were elected as p r o g r a m a t the College. **Their
f e m a l e will ascend to the national
Class Council representatives from academic curriculum g e a r s them to
run-offs. which will be held .at the !
considering e v e r y aspect of decision
the Class of '67: Lawrence Bron
p r o u d l y congratulates
fifteenth a n n i v e r s a r y convention in i
m a k i n g and c h e s s both s h a r p e n s
the N e w York Hilton in September.
stein, 67 v o t e s ; Joel E i s e n b e / g and benefits t h i s training."
A L A N E. W E I N E R
The local chapter winner will be
S t u a r t Blecher, and Rita Ei
TVio first t-n,-<»r>1-y p l n y o r g tn s i g n
awarded prizes by the Beta Sigma •
on his e n g a g e m e n t
• 1 stein, 66 v o t e s ; Carole Lublin an
up will play. S e e Richard Farrar
chapter.
Ticker photo by Marc A m w Ira^Theodore. 6 3 i t e j _ P ^ j l « t _ - ^ ^ ^
Wednesday
g
1
Cho3, c l u b on
to
A m o n g the c o n t e s t a n t s Js Janet '
Lawrence
Handefeanart
loff, 62 v o t e s ; Irving Kravitz, 61 afternoon or e v e n i n g , in 410, S t u Siegel "66. currently reigning as
SUSAN BALOPOLE
M i s s Baruch School.
~:y^p-v o t e s ; Irwin Zaretsky, 60 v o t e s ; dent Center, or see the reception(Hunter '66)
The w i n n e r bf the contest will
and Joel B a i l e y . 59 votes. Andrea' i s t in 104.
be c h o s e n on the basis of beauty "
B y k o f s k y , g a r n e r i n g 57 votes,, w a s
and personality-. T h e f-er«f*a-t -of-the _// of:
Central House Plan will hold
defeated.
c o n t e s t will involve each girl being
POST 6 5 A c k n o w l e d g e s t h e "loss'
:
i
t
s
r
e
g
u
l
a
r
-meet
ag
tomorrow
at
A member-at-large seat in the ! |
asked q u e s t i o n at random with re- !
Ala* Evaas to Saaay Friedman <rlu«ter>
6:30
in
402
of
the
Student
Center.
g a r d s t o boys, school, currentClass of _ '64 is available.
A
And —<r Irs "S»ratc to Joan »afai«»»ili
e v e n t s , etc. T h e judges f o r the con- ! Beprena«l»tire« frooi aU t h e
l e t t e r to S . C President Neil Pa.test will include two f a c u l t y mem- • house p l a a s ia t h e School a r e re"Iomha *G3 is all that is required t o «|
W e Concede w i t h Congratulations!
-bers ( t o be announced at a later j quired t o attend.
obtain a s e a t .
jdate) and s t u d e n t s .
\
ALPHA
PHI OMEGA
CHM>
^ H ^ W W f f g * * ^ ^
The series is presented by S i g m a
Alpha, the honorary service society, j
and will include a s u r v e y . of t h e ;
psycn^to"gtcat- a s p e e t - a n d trhe liter--i
ary trend of the question, "Where ]
Are W e G o i n g ? " T h e speaker frpm j
the Phyehologry Department will be
Professor Edward L. Arluck, w h o ;
will speak later in the term.
j
Doctoral D e g r e e
It w a s announced last week that l
Mrs. Gadol had earned her doctoral
dejrree. T w o years a g o she ,-ob- <_
tained a leave of absence from t h e ;
School and ^traveled in- Europe in '
order to g a t h e r research m a t e r i a l ;
and observe first-hand the subject ;
of her doctoral thesis.
1
Dr. Gadol's paper w a s a s t u d y
of the a r t i s t i c , scientific, and h u manistic a s p e c t s of the .life of Leon.
B a t t i s t a Alberti 41404 1472) —uni^
- versal m a n 6T the Renaissance. I n
particular, \ she dealt "with t h e s i g nificance of eaeh phase of his w o r k
and the integration of t h e three a s
a whole. Mrs. Gadol considers A l berti a forerunner b f TJeonardo -DaVinci in the wide ken, of his R e n aissance work.
Dr. Joan Gadol
nt*' '.in.
Kd
Students
'concert T6~5e ^e!d March 16 in the
Baruch School Theater.
"With intelligence,
sophisticaj t i o n , and none of the black-voice
buffoonery of Amos *n' Andy,"
states
'Time'
magazine,
"Dick
Gregory ha= become the first N e g r o
comedian to make his way into the
night club world big time."
r A I n the review "Time" noted that
^Gregory's materia-1 ranges every-^
where from the possible effects
President Kennedy's religion ~\\
<"Fcur years of bingo") to the
Israeli A-bomb: "Th«y w a n t to find
out if there's anything that v i U
crack open a stale ^taget^
condition of + he colored mar. is his
The prices of tickets will be a s
follows: Orchestra, $3.00; back o r chestra and mezzanine, $2L50;. and,
balcony, $2.00.** ~
Dick Gregory
A bridge- tournament -will_be, ,
held Wednesday, February 2 7 ,
-at 8 p.m. in the Oak L o u n g e .
Prizes .will be given to all those.
who play. M e m b e r s * f o r
the
bridge t e a m will be picked f r o m
those who compete.
To s'gn up for the t o u r n a m e n t
rnum* In - f l l in f h " g f n * * * " * <">nt e r , — tomorrow
between
1
"theme;.
. y o u do t o t h a t chicken, w e re g o r
A notice to all g r a d u a t e and
'*Time" commented further that, ing to do t o you." What did Greg-i!ii-mll«B--ilH-l!n *.BI:Jitt!tllWW=«H HilffiKI'fliHffliRUJBril
liif
undergraduate
education
s t u - "Some of his commentary has even
more insight than hum.or: "There's
dents :
.no
difference between jthe North
Applications for the following
m u s t be fi4ed no later t h a n and the South. In the South t h e y
T h u r s d a y : s t u d e n t teaching, don't care how close I g e t a s long
a s I don't get too big, and in the
courses in methods of t e a c h i n g ,
North they don't care how big I
transfer t o the School of Educag e t as long" as I don't getr t o o ^
tion, written English qualifying
examination, oral speech i n t e r - • d o s e . " • And some -is. farcically^
v i e w , and medical e x a m i n a t i o n . broad, as when he tells about three
P e t e r Reichenberg, and
Melvm
D a y Session students m a y file white brothers called K l u , Klux,
T h e brotherhood of Phi S i g m a
and Klan, who once surrounded him Delta- announced its executive coun- Harris.
in 1109 Monday through Friday
*
*
*
'
in a restaurant saying, "You can't cil for t h e spring t e r m : Don Goldfrom 9 t o 4:30.
P
o
s
t
'65
announced
i
t
s
new slate
eat that chicken in here; w h a t e v e r man, t^a^ter frater-president; Lynn
of officers for the current semester^
Kenner, v i c e - m a s t e r , ^ frater-vice
v i c e presi-P
o s i t i o n s of pi
president; —Richard Tayl/ir,,, 'ke^per^
of the sacred scrolls ( s e c r e t a r y ) ; dent, secretai^y, ffUSP U e a s u i w
>- I be filled by Ira fiarot^, Arthur
Howard~Mersky7^eepeT~o:
respondence; Lloyd i;azes,
^ ^
Cazes, ^
k e eppeerr Y^ter, A a r o n
Social e v e n t s
7 Z exchequer; Richard Hoffman, K e ^ l e rH^ r e ^ e c t ^ y
will he~ tenidiedr-by Maurice D i c k bearer of the mace.
son.
All students interested i n
ad
p ee n
n ss ee ss and
and occasionally
*
*
*
U Byi Mike
a i E
Wl k i *n
a
dm
m ii n
n ii ssttrraattiivvee ee xx p
membership a r e invited t o drop i n
for s u c h e x t r a s a s / b o o k s h e l v e s .
The Retailing Society congratu- a t 302 Parkville A v e n u e ( E a s t 8
T h e U s e d Book E x c h a n g e , under t h e
The books handled*by t h e U . B . E . are t h o s e lates the following members . o n St, near Glenwodd Road) or call
a u s p i c e s o f Alpha P h i O m e g a and Boosters
currently in use and designated b y t h e of- their election to office: president,
handled 1 5 0 0 b o o k s v a l u e d a t over $6,000 ficial book list. In 410 of t h e S t u d e n t Center, Fred Di Marco; vice president, GE 4-9524.
*
*
*
t h i s s e m e s t e r A n e w a s s e m b l y line s y s t e m the sellers w e r e g i v e n receipts for %., y%, or A l e x i s Polin; recording secretary,
Theatron
completed
its casting
e x p e d i t e d t h e procedure at receiving and
VifeO^ t h e original sales price of t h e book I Marietta Schialdi; corresponding for the major roles for i t s f o r t h h a n d l i n g t h e books, a n n o u n c e d Jerrold E p d e p e n d i n g upon i t s condition. I n a n adjoin- [-secretary, Judith Zimmerman; a s - coming production, of " B y e B y e
s t e i n *62?, profllfTgnt pf A ^ P J Q .
irtstant—corresponding—se^ret^ry, TU^Mo " tti»i.i> wnriwyr ^hr>rii<? p a r f f t
Victoria Dt'Nardo; treasurer, Mich- are still available.
Under the hew sys.
_
ael Wiener; publicity director, Ken*
*
*
tern-, e a c h seller's book
nith F r e e m a n ; a s s i s t a n t publicity
Members and n o n - m e m b e r s «re^was p r o c e s s e d by a line
director,
Marta
Telo;
A.C.B.
repcordially invited t o c o m e u p toof B o o s t e r s , e a c h perresentative,
S
t
e
v
e
n
F
i
s
z
e
l
:
presiri ill el and either study in t h e s t u d y t
forming a
separate
dent
A.A.S.,
Gail
Rubinstein;
vice
quarters, eat in t h e d i n i n g r o o m ,
o p e r a t i o n . Previously,
president
A.A.S.,
Joel
B
e
n
g
a
i
t
.
w a t c h television i n t h e reereatton
one girl completed a #
area, or use the library. Hillel i s
o p e r a t i o n s of checkA l l students are invited to attend located a t 144 E a s t 24th S t r e e t a n d
ing, filling out, filing,
the Retailing Society
meeting, i s open from Monday t h r o u g n F r i and s t a p l i n g t h e book
Thursday at 12 in 1322. The main day from 10-5.
card.
*
«r
*
topic of discussion will be* a proT h e girls found t h e
The brothers of t h e A l p h a E p s i g r a m o f events for the term.
s y s t e m m o s t efficient
Jerrold
lon Pi fratejnity ^wish t o c o n g r a t u — n o t to mention the
Epstein
late H a r v e y S i n g e r o n r e c e i v i n g
Pi Sigma Epsilon, the marketing
t h e "Best Brother A w a r d ; " a n d
boon t h e book sellers n o w g e t of m e e t i n g
fraternity, announces i t s officers
John Goldstein^ on r e c e i v i n g ' t h e
t h r e e o r f o u r g i r l s i n s t e a d of one. Possibly
for the Spring *63 semester;- presi
t h i s i s t h e s o u r c e of t h e n i c k n a m e . U s e d
dent, Donald Richards; vice p & s i - •Best P l e d g e Aware!?
"Booster** E x c h a n g e , heard around the'Boostdent, Elliot Fj:iedlajndoj_secretary,
~ AlphaT EpsiTon l ^ f r a t e T n i t y 1 a n er office. • ' • • - Gerard Levine; treasurer, Arthur
nounced the election of t h e f o l l o w T h e work of t h e U . B . E . w a s divided into T H E BOOK S E L L E R S : Frank Seffinger, ( a t Salmonson.
i n g officers for t h e S p r i n g t e r m : ,
two f u n c t i o n s — r e c e i v i n g a n d selling. B o o s t - r e g i s t e r ) , and Alan Granat sell b o o k s a t t h e
Robert PjtlejTj m a s t e r ; A r t h u r I n a s t h e brothers of A J \ 0 . look on.
P i S i g m a Epsilon will, hold a
ers, u n d e r t h e c h a i r r n a n s h i p o f Arlene Okosh- U . & E .
dursky, Lt.-master; Michael E l k i n ,
marketing
seminar Thursday a t
ken '64, a n d a s s i s t a n t c h a i r m a n s h i p of Karen ing r o o n v purchasing of books b y s t u d e n t s lM
„
o
exchequer; George N a d e r , recordFeder~*64; hantHed t h e . r e c e i v i n g of books and t o o k p l a c e s i m u l t a n e o u s l y n * O C k e t b O o k s a r e 12:15 in 403, Student Center. T h e i n g scribe, Robert B a l l o w i t z , h o u s e
the notification of t h o s e w h o s e b o o k s w e r e
- «S_ y ° v" ^
«S
A "t e^5 "Kv
I T-. B
B .E
E .. sSii n
ne
c e* tt hhee speaker will be Merril Laub, divi- m a n a g e r ; J a y H u r w i t z , pledgeiaa»>
not u P s u
by- U
not sold. A.P.Q. directs t h e setting and t h e £ £ v i S c h i r g e i s often m o r e - t h a n t h e pos- sional m a n a g e r of Bliss E x t e r m i ter; William Miller, social c h a t t n a t i n g Co., Inc. A l l a r e inyitedr^
d i s b u r s e m e n t of m o n e y t o book sellers.
man;
and S t u a r t Schiff, m e m b e r sible s a v i n g s t o t h e s t u d e n t s .
M a n y m e m b e r s of t h e t w o service organatdarge.
A l m o s t e v e r y o n e «f the- 3 5 0 s c h o o l s in
T a u D e l t a P h i congratulates i t s
*
*
f
'
" -— izations devotechnot o n l y s i x d a y s of v o l u n t a t h e ^ f t r ^ S , a n A-P-O- c h a p t e r j h a s a n e w brothers: P h i l i p Metzker,
ryn gw owBtK-mau.
r k a t t h e U . B . E . b u t •m u„c h pre-sale
A l p h a Epsilon Pi f r a t e r n i t y e x m
. o iplanU B . E . run b y t h e national service fraternity- Leonard* Kesnicoff, I v a n Sokoloff,
(,„ev
ningA lwaonr kS, ralso.
a n a t '65, controller, a n d Sidney
. ^ ^
Controller Granat, U.B.E
. i s Jerrold Irwin, Kennith Nadel, H a r - tends its heartiest congratulationa
l ainr zGranat
Sidney
^Continued on P a g e 9 )
Y^A
ow
'64 a n d'65,
n r vcontroller,
t y Y o a t o wand
i U 66
^
A c g o r d m g ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ important s e r v e s a n d v e y Watkins, Gerald Silverberg,
c_i__i
h ^ r m e n explained
that t n e t * ^ " ? ^
t o tv»<»
t h e sstudents.'
y^" o fr^g r e aa.t *benefit
~«*- +n
tudents.
V n i 0 ;nA^ t h a t r h e *.!»> s e i v i t c
c h a r g e paidA b
y t h e b u y e r is used entirely l o r
i s ox *
3 PACKS FILTER G0ST YOU 56c (19 |/3e«a.)
3 PACKS K I M COST YOtt 56c (18 2 3c ea.)
3 PACKS RECUUR COST YOU 54c (I8c ea.)
U
t
U
•
•-••»V*W.
Your City College Store
In the Student Center
S?£fc^ir7a^7;^r7;frir/^7gti»^
-a —
Annual
"Segregation is n o t all that bad,'' c h i d e s a N e g r o comedian.
Dr. Joan M . Gadol of t h e H i s t o r y D e p a r t m e n t will^
"Ha^fe you e v e r heard of a w r e c k w h e r e jthe people o n the" back of t h e bus g o t hurt?'*
speak on t h e topic, " B r a v e N e w World o r lHS4r—^Where A r e J
"I s a t at a lunch counter for nine mon ths." h e continues. "When t h e yw finally inte-*We G o i n g ? " T h u r s d a y in 403-405 a t 1 2 : 0 0 . I W lecture^ t h e
:
:
grated,
thev didn't h a v e w h a t *
'
•
•
first in a ' series under t h i s *
=—rs&rr———
ory do-?-"I kissed ^
the chicken.
Tickets are o n* sale
every d a y
I wanted."
' --•-*—.»
title, will e x a m i n e t h e h i s t o r from
11-2
in
t
h
e
Student
Center
ical a s p e c t of t h e q u e s t i o n ^
The humor is that of Dick Gregl o b b y . - A l l s e a t s w31 Be" sold o n a
ory who will star at t h e Intert h r o u g h a s t u d y of t h e t w e n - |
*"xaternity
Council's
third
annual
first-come;
first-served basis—There
tiett* c e n t u r y
"'
*
will Be- noLjreseirvSaffiaS-
A
Get 1 FREE
SxXtt&9<&S<
Program
Automated Procedure Used at UBE
FEBRUARY 2 0 t h
^ft^^^^A^^B^CT^^
SA. Lecture
The d a t e s for the Subsequent lectures o f the series have y e t to be
announced.
1J«*|.:
JSNWMMHHMmmM*
xmac
t?tub
..». . . " - i ^ . .
"
•
'
*
*
*
.
For Dmy
view with THE TICKER, stated that the Associa- when labor and civic leaders and alumni of other
tion provides for undergraduate and graduate municipal colleges gathered to discuss formation
scholarships as well as maintaining a loan fund. . o f a citizens committee for free tuition.
T h e Association, of which t h e Baruch School
FinaJTy; association members met with and
Society i s but one part, sponsors a yearly alumni briefed student leaders ^prior to t h e students' dedinner where awards!Tor_service and achievement parture t o visit -units of the State JLJniversity
a
» iHvBBented, The eighty-second annual affair where t h e y ' a r e ' engaged in assisting student
B y Steve E a ^ e and ^ethSterlliifir
was held last year a t the Hotel Astof.
groups on these upstate - campuses in organizing
The authors are indebted to Steve
Rappaport
The College's athletes are honored each year "grass roots movements" on this issue.
S3, Managing Editor of THE TICKER, for his during
The ^Baruch School Society i s supported by
Aft-Sports Nights co-sponsored b y the
intensive
research on this
project.
Alumni Association and Alumni Varsity Associa- a rebate of funds from the Association.
One of the foremost contributions of the group
An alumnus returning to City College to be- tions (athletic).
is
the
Baruch School Alumni Association scholarcome- an active member in the Alumni Associa; In addition, Dr. Weisman said "One of our
tion for the first thne is hardly earth-shaking. unusual activities concerns keeping an up-to-date s h i p program. JBach year the Society gives several
"grants t o recent graduates and alumni.
But this alumnus happens t o be from the Class
Another activity in which t h e entire College
of '88 and ninety-five years oldL
* Association took part led to the establishment of
Although this is an unusual case-—seventy-a graduate program offering masters and doctoral
five years is a long time before.renewing aiwiuain-,
•degrees.
tance with one's Alma Mater—membership in the
Alumni Association h a s been increasing a i an
"Our objective is to maintain City College's
ever-growing" rate.
superior academic standing and individual identity," said Dr. Weisman. It is in this vein that the
Since 1953, when its membership w a s less
Association
sponsored a forum on t h e Cottrell
than 7,^00, the rolls have doubled. In 1962, 15,000
Report,
and
is" currently engaged in discussion
alumni paid $108,000 in dues. The
Alumni A! s 1
concerning—which—recommendations—they—shall
rocintiorTa membership this veai is expected to
support.
reach 20,000, wjt-h $^25,000 ,to be payed in dues.
These fees wSJ^finance the association's program;
The executive secretary added that the Aluma program designed in part to aid urtdei g rad uates.
ni Association could expand i t s program if addiI t is interesting to note, that over one third
tional funds and facilities were available.. He
of the association's members are Baruch School
suggested 4hree projects, which are gander consid-graduates.
eration, for potential development.
They comprise a Him o f the City College ( i t s
The Baruch School Alumni Society, to which
campuses
and facilities), a C.C.N.Y. Dining Club,
any Baruch graduate who is a member of t h e
^and the establishment of. a summer camp where
College-wide Alumni Association automatically
alumni can meet. Such a camp could a i s o be used
belongs, serves those whose ties acre Downtown.
for freshman orientation and other programs." .s
The president of the society, Joseph Douglas
The Association's leadership i s not concen-^30b, estimates that t h e society's membership
trated in a n y one class. "BotlK_ybung and old
is around 5,500-5,600. It h a s its own board of diGOING
LIKE
N
I
N
E
T
Y
:
President
Gallagher
graduates
are active in our organization," said
rectors which meets fn t h e Faculty Council
(right)
and
the
late
Eleanor
Roosevelt
help
Weisman."They
don't always volunteer, but when
Lounge every month, and plans activities for the
Bernard
M.
Baruch
'89
celebrate
h
i
s
ninetieth
we tap tfiem for their talents v they usually r e "betterment of the membership and the School.....
birthday
in
a
ceremony
at
-the
-Hotel
Aster
4wespond.*'—^—
^:^-^_,~_. --- .—~~- : '|ggg^:^'-' Dr. Seymour S. Welsman 'aSUexecutive secretary of the Alumni Association, in a recent interIir 54?veial _^ther cities, such a s Buffalo and
loyal Batruchuma
Have forTfted ftrancggs~
rscogd^of - ± h e achievements of -every graduate^ Chicagu.
of
t
h
e
Society,
wliTcTii~was
founded In" TSSO. Re^
This is done to keep in touch with alumni for
recruitment purposes a s well as publicizing their cently, a new chapter w a s opened on Long Island.
Among t h e social functions o f t h e Alumni
accomplishments."
. Another activity is the publishing of the "City
College Alumnus," a slick-papered magazine,
which keeps graduates informed of events taking
place at the College. It appears seven tunes during
the academic year.
"Homecoming," said Dr. Weisman, "is an
event w e began ten years ago to bring alumni
back t o t h e College. It
i s held a t t h e Uptown
eampus sometime in M a y A thousand frmA*******
usually return t o listen to topical discussions b y
faculty and guests Last -yearns forum w a s
to the "Space Age."
- N e w programs and benefits to Alumni Association members are being added. X>ne pew offering,
is t h e opportunity to purchase life insurance
under a liberal underwriting plan. Another new
idea includes summer travel to Europe, a i special
reduced group rates.
On a topic of pressing importance, namely,
the preservation of free tuition, ".'. . the Alumni
Association h a s been the most vigorous and articulate supporter," Mr. Weisman asserted.
In addition t o supporting pending legislation
., _.
.,
to1 amend t h e State Education Law mandating •NOW I IffiMESffiKt . .
free tuition for both the State and C i t y U n i v e r s i - former football coach a t t h e College, s p e a k s beties, t h e Association i s cooperating w i t h S t a t e fore 500 guests a t Ait-Sports Night hist year.
Ivm Abrams o f t h e Bronx and alumni membership for colleges of its.size in the
t
nation.
Charles Henderson of Hornell, to convene a breakfast meeting of t h e state legislators, today, i n Society are dinners and a homecoming a t i t s
Albany. President Gallagher i s t h e principal
special annual meeting.
The Society also provides
speaker.
a reception every term for graduating seniors!
A letter from Mr. Saul J. Lance, current AsOther groups of alumni, such as the athletes
s o c i a t i o n president, summarizing arguments in of the Varsity Association^ aro agsrwriated with
support .of free tuition, a s advanced "by ^Eugene the School Alumni Society and are partially supB. Power, has been circulated to all members of ported by it." ~
the State Legislature.
Membership dues range from t w o t o ten
A J e t t e r to be sent to all P^T^A/S^ labor organ
dollars per annum. T h e newer graduate pays t h e
iz-ations. and civic groups* listing t h e members lesser amount. "This i s a Tather^archaic^method,"
-erf the S l a t e Legislature and h6W they voted last stated J Weisman, **but it serves i t s purpose beyear on the bill which would have restored t h e cause it gets members to_ioin." TheJDity College
mandate for-free tuitk>n> has also been prepared Alumni Association i s in the top ten percent of
by the association^ Furthermore, association repre- alumni momborohip for collogog xxf itD siao t n the
C9
sentatives have participated 4n public meetings
nation.
Baruch
i.
S
• 1
By Taube Lee
'
:
Tlw total day session enrollment of the School t h i s semester is l 2,T47 students, accord-mg to the most recent figures released by t h e registrar, Miss Agnes Mulligan.
The lower freshman class numbers 185, sixty-nine of whotti are newly entering fresh^men. The other 116 are stud e n t s , who _ remained lower
freshmen from t h e previous
class.
. • __-_
_
__
Chapter
.
T
*
ii '
i
ion
By Stan DiMBtey
Twentieth century Jews must-apply laws to the situation
at hand if the l a w s a r e to be of any modern value, declared
Dr. Trude Weiss-RoSfnarin in a lecture .before HiBel, Thursday at Hillel Headquarters. *-~
—r=
—
Of the 2,147 registered students,
2^072 are enrolled in the School. of
Business and, seventy-five are registered in the School of Education".
r -
-
. -
The number o£-transfer students
is . 149. Sixty a ^ from JJj»tew«
City, sixty are from- evenings session, and twenty-eight « r e from
other institutknis-. In addition, there
are forty-seven re-eiiteriiig students. Twenty-six students t r a n s ferred from the Baruch School to
the Uptown center; There are 1,714
males -and 398 females in the
School.
"Unless traditional law coincides
with Hfe, it is meaningless," she t
said. Comparing the- Bible to t h e
constitution. Dr. Rosmarin stated
i that one must live by the constitution as •well as its amendments.
Amendment is important in developing: Jewish law, explained the
:imuu;i:ii:tin \'.\i\\
1 sneaker, since- its scope 4s so-'wide.'
tip*I'iiiiiiJMliSiliiMiwiilMllii;,:;!^!::::'!!:.:;:^!;,^,
The new decrees must conform to
that which th« majority of the
Jewish Community can and will live
Come to School Friday and
•>y. "Whatever you induce from a
only
George W-ashmgton Will be
law is implicit in it," she said.
here. Tomorrow's classes wffl"folDr. Rosnfarin stressed that there
Weiss- Rosmarin
low Friday's schedule.
:s "no distinction between sacred Jews may or may not do in view
and profane" in Jewish life. There of the.public spirit."
is no division of secular and7 reIn answer to. those •who claim
ligious as there, is in Christianity,
everything: in "Jewishriess" ..befng that a change in laws is a defense
holy, with "one's daily dealing's in mechanism for those who want to \
piety really being; tested," she con- ease their obligations of religious
the tecturer pointed to
tinued.
several
modifications
of the law
There has been a great change
between ancient usage of Biblical which should be mandatory to safelaws and the way in which we use guard lives.
Dr. Rosmarin concluded that the
them today, emphasized Dr." Rosimportance
of the-talk was- not to
marm, relating that "no eontingency*~of 1-rfg is' nut covered "by
o
*
z^z - 7 , - , ;
i
terms of positive actwin, but rather
_JS5L.JfeQCLlX4l^l|U«ll
I t is important..for. us to redefine |
to broaden -the listeners' views as
The annual Student Council Boat Ride has run aorround. aspects of the laws of antiquity in to the great scope covered by Jewthe time having come ish Taw in all aspects of life.
Tie.trouble concerning the Boat Ride—scheduled for May 12 our times.,
lii'iiiitliilic
'what
I;Pip>;i;iiiiiiiIIl iiiiilFiHv-liiiillliiitliillllliiiliiiiRiiii^iiiiinii
re-evaluation
—has come in the form of the unavailability of the Peter for
SC Seeks
Alternatives
h
r Annual ~Boaf2tiete
Stuyvesan^ Excursion Boat
P«M»T»
spring
Play
EisBfi^ to Star
In Musical
According to Student Council
President Neil Palomba *63, Couni! is looking into the possibility of
Robert Eisner will star
purchasing
nasmg aa block of
of tickets on
on.,
T h e a tron-production of the
adequate
boat
going
to
Bear
[
" m p d v hhit
Bye
i t -"Bye
Bve
any.
musical, comedy
Bye
Mountain bri May 12 or renting a Birdie-^"--which will be presentCircle Line boat and taking an ed on two successive Saturday
- vening cruise from 8-12 midnight. ~T•"— M a r c h 2 3 a n d 30
-.round Manhattan, Saturday, May;
^
_K rElisner
; _ _ K
o c appeared
a T m M r
Mr
has
t"wice
11.
before in a featured role in a TheaIn the event that both of these tron performance. His first was in
jj.ossibjjitj^s
prove
unadvisabie the drama "Look Homeward An'.here Will be no boat, ride this , geL" Last semester, he won high
.ear.
•J _
'
.
i acclaim for his portrayal of Harry
| Shapiro in "Stalag 17."
i ^
Publicity Agent
Robert Eisner
i
The star-to-be serves, in addii tion, as one of the organization's reserves will be held no longer
I publicity agents.
thaTf^MTarch 8. ~
I The full-budget,
off-Broadway
*'Bye Bye Birdie" is a musical
; production will co-star Patricia fraught with teenagers, rock and
Resolved: That t h e nonCommunist nations of t h e : Dingle, Joel Terrace, and Mary J. roll, an Elvis Presley type singer
Aorld should establish an eco- ' Donnelly.
complete with gyrating hips, songs,
nomic society. This was the
The show's director is -Jerry Ar- music, and dancing galore. The
subject of Thursday's debate i row who also directed the produce story, written by Michael Stewart,
<>f the Debating and Discus- [ tions "Look Homeward Angel" centers "on the tribulations of Alsion Society.
' and "Stalag 17." The musical di- bert Peterson (Mr. Eisner).
The group has begun a series of j rector is Harvey Spivock with
Havoc Raised
;C:>ates to be held in conjunction : Michael Aubrey doing the choreHavoc is raised in the town of
•- >th its regularly scheduled meet- T ography.
the
• ••I's Thursday at 12 in 401.
j Reservations for blocks of tickets Sweet Apple, Ohio, when
guitar
strumming
idol
Conrad
The society will have another * for both performances will be *c-/ Birdie visits the home of Harry
u-uate a t its next meeting Thurs- cepted until Thursdav. Tickets go -MacAfeo—-ajad—provokes him to
) on general sale February—25—and
•'•i'-y at noon.
Slates
Series
iVo ftCBS\Sw
«>-
The loss of the use of the boat
comes as a result of ^the sale of
the Hudson ttver Day Lane to the.
Circle Line. The- Peter Stuyvesant
is the boat usually rented by Council for the trip up the Hudson to
Rear Mountain
•:»mw^mx$P'$-
Juanita Hall Lecture
Set i W t r s d a y
Theatron will have Juanita
Hail appearing as its guest
Thursday at 12 in 404.
Miss^ Hall, remembered for her
portrayal
of. Bloody
Mary
in
"South Pacific," has been seen
-more recently in "Flower Drum
Song" and" "House of Flowers."
Her current engagement is at the
Fortune Cookie Room, an informal
nigbt club in Manhattan.
- The atmosphere at the Theatron
fo*uih^
is • generally
pleasant
-arrd informal, similar t o
thfe
club environment.
The proposed
J u a?mt a HafH
format of the address was express
when she said
sing the hit tune "Kids." Conrad sed by Miss Hall
a
appears "at "the home of MacAfee" t h a t Hshe wants - fce-4et tbe~
to bestow a farewell kiss upon his feel they are in my living room."
Miss Hall further expressed h«r
daughter Kim before Birdie's defreedom
of expression by stating,
parture for the army.
"Whenever
I get the urge to sii*g
Many repercussions^arise in trie
mi
«;n
rf
T fgel like visiting
g
small* town as Birdie's appearance
confuses Hugo, Kim's bewildered some folks at a table and chat>»
ting, 111'do that tooi"
boy friend.
The response after radio personIn the past Theatron has presented other musicals such, as ality Jean S^hepberd's -appearance
"Damn'.
Yankees,"
Pajama | as a speaker last year has prompted Theatron to expand its pro>Game," and "Guys and Dolls."
Theatron has
also
presented gram to include" a series of speak-serious dramas, "Look Homeward ! ers this semester, Miss Hall being
the. first. Other speakers will apAngel," "Stalag 17," and "Teal-pear i» the -future^.
house of the August Moon." -----
m
TH£ TICKBt
Febt-awy r » , 1963
Page. Seven
J
m»&&g&mgss£^m«5i*M&ii8£&^&s&
An
Hillel t a k e s , can be s u m m a r i z e d a s follows:
Let u s be clear, first of all, on t h i s : The majority of
A s I understand it, t h e i s s u e American students are n o t active or e v e n -deeply interested.
around .which m o s t o f t h e - discus^ \ Tjterr concerns, are Imore "private than civic jtuid>oftenr^eir
Joseph Traum '64
EcKtor-in-UhieT
S t e v e n Rappaport '63
x
-Managing
Editor
^
m 11 » * H K w ! 5 e e ^ 4 4
News
Editor
T h o m a s N i c a s '65
„Asst. Netps
Editor
mark Grant '$4
Copy
Editor
lorenee Gross ^BS
Associate
Editor
S t e v e n E a g l e '65
.
A s s i s t a n t Editor
.Alan Granat *65
'Warren Tockerman *64
Co-Photography
Editors
^Leonard J .
n o t t h e real o n e . S t u d e n t Council
G a r y S p e i s e r *S4 m o s t efficiently w i t h F r i d a y n i g h t
m e e t i n g s because H i s t h e n a s s u r e d
.4*soc. B u r n e r
Mgr.
S t e v e n D e l y * 5 tiie l a r g e s t attendance f o r t h e p r o tracted time needed f o r i t s m e e t AeeottM&rat
I r v i n e Y o s k o w i t x *8C i n g s . T h e countering a r g u m e n t h a s
focuood o n t h e f a c t t h a t t h i s policy
A itvcTvt9tttg "*jtcasyBr
discriminates
a g a i n s t Sabbath—obP h y l l i s W e i n e r *«S
servers.
BUlinf*
Manmg+r
T h e appeal t o efficiency nuiy~be~
M r a A m e s **4
opposed
b y pointing t o t h e practice
Photo.
Editor
R o b e r t B r o o k s *ttt o f other city colleges, m o s t o r a l l
Editor
Em6rUm* ^ 'of -which m e e t o n other, w e e k d a y s .
H o w e v e r , I believe that^even if it
N e w s and Features Staff: L a r r y Capalda, Marilyn Cohen, D a w n e D i l - could be demonstrated w i t h full
lon, Stan Dinsky, Michael E l k i n , P a u l a Giangreco, Richard Glantz, proof that Friday n i g h t m e e t i n g s
J a y Haberman, Renee H e r m a n , T a n b e L e e , Dale P i e c k t a i t i s , S e t h a r e the most practical, this need
Sterling, Ronald "Ward, Ira Yellin, a w l S i d n e y Y o s k o w i t t :
=
not be the over-riding consideration. W e often put aside the a r g u ment for efficiency, w h e n e v e r other
v a l u e s of greater"" significance are
threatened ( f o r e x a m p l e , prac-
raids, m a s s partying/*—Thomas Hayden.
the active and the p a s s i v e a r e e a c h elements of t h e college population,
l h e dual m e a n i n g i n h e r e n t in the term "college student" requires e l a boration. Consider t h e s e t w o c a s e s .
H A R R Y : Harry b g i n s b i s .day at 8:30 each weekday m o r n i n g t o
g e t t o his UMK> c l a s s e s — F r i d a y , S a t u r d a y , and S u n d a y b e g i n a t 11:00.
T h e siibway I s not t o o crowded a t t h i s hour of the morning, a n d H a r r y
g e t s an e x t r a hour s l e e p o n t h e w a y t o s c h o o l . .
— T h e first c l a s s i s dull a n d boring t o -Hairy-..even- t h o u g h s o m e
"big mouths" i n t h e c l a s s k e e p a n swering questions Obviously, t h e y
J f l ^ J i e a r i n ^ J & e ^ s e h r e s talk or
else t h e y are t r y i n g to g e t o n t h e
"right side" of the p r o f e s s o r .
"Those damn psychology, c o u r s e s
are all t h e s a m e — a l l -discussions."
Harry finished o n e a n d one-half
p a g e s of doodles.
The history, the E n g l i s h , a n d
the political science c l a s s e s are "all
the s a m e t o Harry. "The s a m e
The cry of "Allagaroo, garoo» garah" is preponderant •> tic&lity i s certainly not amone the
damn boring teachers." .Who needs
-TWbpr ttanqttrtmnrt
ling, of Lhe Baruch School For \ gv a n^t aig e S
^ fdemocracy)
S a ^ T ^ —
to know this damn junk f o r m y
s of
jtomght, the C. O N . Y. basketball team hosts t h e Fordham a d In
specialization a n y w a y . "
w h a t is involved
Rams in a contest which promises t o display the long^stand- is thet hwi si l linstance,
i n g n e s s of S t u d e n t CounAh, a t l a s t : t w o o'clock—free f o r
,£.^ ingr, fierce rivalry between t h e New York- City rivals.
cil, a s the representative b o d y of
t h e day "Harry p a y s a m u s t 'visit
:^iid£^Last season, the Lavender found themselves thirteen
pluralistic c o m m u n i t y ,
t o t h e t e n t h floor c a f e t e r i a t o check
^"r point underdogs ^ h e n they faced Johnny Bach's big-time at o religiously
m
a
n
i
f
e
s
t
its
deference
t
o
t
h
e
_
with
his f r a t e r n i t y brothers f o r t h e
rintet. However; spariied~by a vociferous rooting corrtmgenl- r e l i g i o u s tradition of a sizable s e g latest dirt: " N o , the d a m e I dated Saturday n i g h t w a s a dud^~or **Say,
-from "visiting" City College, the Beavers pulled an upset,
m
e
n
t
of
its
constituency.
I
t
is
on
did
you see 77 Sunset Strip l a s t n i g h t ? "
^Sarhen Don Sidat's two clutch foul shots with one second left
grounds
of
propriety
and
respect
S o m e brothers g o t o a .Student Council m e e t i n g , but n o t good ole
^provided the 62-61 margin of difference.
for t h e ideals implicit in the S a b - H a r r y — " A r e you kidding m a n , I hate t o listen t o t h a t bull, I have
The editorial board of T H E TICKER unanimously supports the C ^ . N. Y. cause a s t h e y try once again to over- b a t h t h a t Student Council, rep- more important t h i n g s to do, a n d besides, I am already loaded w i t h
i n g and represented b y s o l W O rk." A n o t h e r b r o t h e r s u g g e s t s cards: "Yeah, let's g e t 4ip t o t h e
^come the favored Rams, t h e order of t h e day should therefore r e s e a t'^ewish
students, a m o n g oth- house quick—111 buy t h e beer." .
. . ^ e a a : ^Let^sjmake"'em crx ^t, Tfr rfTharnT*
"fraittmtrexn offir inT »"»«"
- B y 6r00 H a r r y i s h o m e . H e finishes supper7~takes a n hour's rest
ness
sss^me e t i n g s on F r i d a y night. , ^ . ^ i a , n j f t mind." and w a t c h e s Ben Casey, t h e Beverly Hillbillies,
*~t
JSwWLjIEPtSLregardless o f { B ^ ^
F l i ^ * ^ ^ A t . ^ . ^ i K c Pf<,^"a "T P ' ^ ^ T tP^t—big tt^t t n t h e number of Sabbah-bbservers morrow. L i g h t s out a t 11:15.
that are affected b y the p r e s e n t
*
*
*
zs^rir: n c e At
its
special
Thursday
night
meeting,
Student
Council
ruling.
I
t
is
totally
unrelated
t
o
J A C K : Jack's d a y b e g i n s at 7:00 each day. H e finishes t h e l a s t
l i s * r o , n a g a i n debated a motion to change its meeting night the question o f how m a n y or h o w chapter in the philosophy a s s i g n m e n t , e a t s breakfast, and i s i n c l a s s a t
f?|ffc'?
Friday- This move surprised no one, iwit disappointed f e w there are i n proportion t o total 9:00! Jack is a "big m o u t h " in h i s c l a s s . H e a l w a y s h a s t o k n o w t h e
•i;^^. m a n y .
figures. It is -motivated rather b y w h e n , the where, and t h e w h y of everything. N o t h i n g c o m e s e a s i l y t o
^f-.l_
. We wish there were some way which we could find out the desire to encourage a g e a t e r him. H e h a s to probe a n d s t u d y to learn anything^_____
whether or not the statement that Council could not effective-1 appreciation f o r t h e s i g n i f i c a n t
C l a s s e s end at 1:00 and h i s n e x t s t o p i s t h e S t u d e n t <^osa*cil^ office
ly operate on another weekday night is true. A one semester v a l u e s in life over and a g a i n s t the t o check on h i s committee's p r o g r e s s . J a c k picks u p some literature
experiment would definitely t e n us^tita*. However, it seems s e e m i n g l y practical and efficient— from the N . S. A . files t o take h o m e t o read. The s t u d e n t m o v e m e n t in
S. C. is blind to this sort of possibility.
which is t h e k e y purpose of all the S o u t h ' f a s c i n a t e s h i m and t h e problem of integration f r u s t r a t e s
The-week before t h e special meeting, Student Council education and knowledger;
h i m — w h a t c a u s e d p^ApW **> a<^t in wnch a.n inhuman u n j u s t m a n n e r t
iteld its regular meeting; Thursday night. It was later claimed
I h a v e g r e a t confidence t h a t S t u I t i s c a m p a i g n t i m e a g a i n and J a c k w a n t s a n e x e c u t i v e ^ position
" at several representatives w^re watching t h e clock t h a t d e n t Council will respond s y m p a •on
t
h
e S t u d e n t Council. S p e e c h e s t o f r a t e r n i t i e s , houseplatts, a n d clubs
ght because they felt t h e y had to leave early in order to do thically t o t h e a t t e m p t t o bring
are a n essential part of t h e b a t t l e t o d e f e a t h i s opponent and h e w a s t e s
homework.
a b o u t a c h a n g e in i t s
fe^r •words.
We cannot approve this* arirume^t because a one meeting W i t h v e r y b e s t w i s h e s , I a m
H e s t o p s in a t T H E T I C K E R office t o pick u p h i s a s s i g n m e n t f o r
*est to determine passage or faitare^of the motion is a s good
Rabbi M a r v i n Goldfiae l h e week. T h e s p e a k e r s ' ban i s t h e big issue a t t h e m o m e n t , ' a n d t h e
H& a three minute final examination would be to t e s t a s t u editors w o u l d like f a c u l t y opinion on t h e subject* a s c o n t r a s t e d t o
nt's knowledge. What is needed i s a series of weeks., in
student
opinion.
'
meetings are held on other nights than Friday, anck T o t h e Editor o f T H E T I C K E R :
On the w a y t o a f r a t e r n i t y m e e t i n g . J a c k s t o p s i n t h e library t o
en, andTmly then, can it be ascertained if the eight-sixteen
t
a
k
e
h o m e s o m e required economic t e x t s . T h e fraternity m e e t i n g e n d s
c
o
n
c
e
i
v
e
d
in
liberty
and
*" against the motion was a correct step.
a
t
7:30
and Jack is h o m e b y 8:39. The economics, i£e* E n g l i s h , a n d t h e
to t h e proposition t h a t
We -therefore condemn Student Council for voting down dedicated
al
political science a s s i g n m e n t s a r e completed b y 12:dd^but t h e r e i s a b i g
e rriotion, and we hope that students will remember that<| * £ ***** *** created equaL
pfaflo
e x a m tomorrow. J a c k "hits t h e sack4* a t 2:30. (
Today, s o m e people n o w add,
eeting when election time comes for next term's Council
A
^
*
^
"if he c a n afford it, or if h e i s not
ts.
- •
"
"^
True, these s i t u a t i o n s * s e e m e x t r e m e , but, nevertheless, t h e y do
a N e g r o . " Is t n i s the h e r i t a g e t h a t
exist. It is unfortunate t h a t t h e Harry t y p e student g r e a t l y o u t n u m b e r s
s o m a n y have died t o p r e s e r v e ?
W e c a n add w h a t e v e r c l a u s e w e t h e "Jack" t y p e . I n t h e B a r u c h School, there are 2J20QI s t u d e n t s , b u t
The fight to restore mandatory f r e e t u i t i o n at the City wish, but t h e t r u t h r e m a i n s : .most of t h e s e thirty a r e s t u d e n t s who are already quite a c t i v e i n
other organizations. I sincerely doubt .of more than ten per c e n t of t h e
JLJniversity is slowly climbing to a peak, and once again we "equal" is the l a s t word.
c a n answer w h y b e was-1 s t u d e n t body i s actively^ e n g a g e d i n co-enrrics.
^
,.
_ ^ . _
mrjge
all
students
n
o
t
t
o
s
i
t
i
d
l
y
Isy-ragrhfr-firiHEfT^fftY^
T
h
e
simple
f
a
c
t
i
s
t
h
a
t
t
h
e
remaining
ninety
p
e
r
cent
d
o
n o t careT
mVurden. If each student does his part, we are certain t h e i *>&m a Negro or a Jew or a Puerto
S t a t e Senate and Assembly will have no choice but to re- Rican- or a pauper. We shouldn't T h e y do noY w a n t t o believe t h a t their activities m i g h t m a k e a difference. A b o u t three-quarters o f t h e s e students try t o convince t h e m ffpond to the people and return to law the provision so neces- try- *
sary to give people from all walks, of_ \jfe a chance__for__Ja 4 But what purposes do our gov- s e l v e s that grades m a k e the difference between students. T h e r e m a i n i n g
COllege e d u c a t i o n .
e r n m e n t s serve if not t o protect one-quarter of the ninety per cent are simply in school f o r t h e f r e e
and
*
.
.
"
^
Tlie circulation of petitions which calls for restoration]
advance the equality of all its ride.
individuals?
They
m
u
s
t
accept
u
s
These
ninety
per
cent
g
o
through
the
required
motions
o
f
w
o
rking,
~ibf the mandate was begun last week, and we hope that all who
a r e called upon will sign them. However one hundred names for w h a t w e a r e , for w h a t God but they seldom g e t involved w i t h the content of t h e courses or with
the activities of the school. T h e y seem to cherish a lack of c o m m i t m e n t .
cannot take the place of one handwritten letter when pre- made eacK of us to be.
<
.
.-Whprp,
if.
not
here
a
t
OUT
!
free"
It i s here thaJLJ^e _steadents .sabotage, their o w n education and r^afrrict
ttontod to the governor and tho loading legislators.—
N o w is the- time to act. Tomorrow will be too late. All stu- City Colleges, are our "unalienable" production. True enough, t h e y m a y turn out the credits and, possibly,
<4ents, faculty, administrators, and parents must take their r i g h t s cherished so d e a r l y ; "with the g r a d e s ; b u t they do not beifeve that it reaHjT m a t t e r s , in a n y f u n d a in^ hand and let t h e lawmakers know how important it malice toward none, 'with charity mental sense, w h a t t h e y think and feel.
These students feer a kind of insincerity t o w a r d s school, per s e .
-m t o retain the X l o year tradition on free tuition at t h e for all.
.
.
...
€C^tvn11rrntf^
nn
Pa«r<»
ft^
.
—
—
Victor
Warahaw
*61
City University.
-••••
'
Let's Make
:
•
*
9
Em Cry
,
Write
Letters
Eye
For
Am
Eye
.
.
* "By Larry Capaidi
Something old, something new. This will be the basis of the new Student Council Committees. "An effective coirmiittee system," observed Vice-President Mark Grant '64 "is a
By Florence Gross
vital part of any organization. Because of recent amendments to our charter, the committee
system is now more i m p o r t a n t ^
COMMITTEE: Under Catherine
'An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth." This Bibical than ever."
Vanderman
'65, it procures films
F R E E TUITION COMMITTEE:
io tat ion, which we have all seen and heard many times, ex- Chaired
that are shown each term.
by Ronald N o v i t a '65, i t
my view ^on the matter of capital punishment.
T H E LIBRARY COMMITTEE:
is a t t e m p t i n g t o _ have, the, s t a t e
Many people w i l l a r g u e t h a t t h i s i s a primitive outlook on life.
fadt/ one_ of the .most crucial a r g u m e n t s against capital p u n i s h m e n t
that'we are cWrhzea ana t n a t capital pum^hm^tf^sra^n>"uf-^Tatfed way
castigating people. A s t a t e m e n t often made by the opponents of
ij>ital punishment is t h a t "we have made progress in every other
|rld, w h y not where h u m a n l i v e s are involved." I cannot a g r e e with
us at all. I a m a firm believer in "an eye for an e y e , a tooth for a
Loth." M o s t people w h o disagree with me will ask, 4 *what g i v e s one
l i m a n being the right t o t a k e the life of another?**
~
Chaired by Florence Gross '63, it
government restore t h e m a n d a t o r y
purchases popular pocketbooks to
free tuition law. T h e r e wi"_Jbe a
^se,
" loaned 1 lu the- sUnletrt-s TIT
in -the—~
concerted e f f o r l ' b y - t h e d t y - e o B c g c s - ^
to contact high s c h o o l s and other
second floor library..
colleges and ask t h e m t o send proTHE NATIONAL
STUDENT
t e s t letters t o Governor N e l s o n A.'t ASSOCIATION
COMMITTEE:
Rockefeller and their local legislaUnder the chairmanship of Bartors.
bara Dee Scherer '66, it seeks to inCITY U N I V E R S I T Y COMMITform the student body o f the actiT
B
E
:
Chatrea"
^by-nGaTy-^erkley
vities"of
The^NTS.A., which e x t e n d s
My answer t o this i s that one human being d6es n o t have the right
sends
a.
representative
t
o
services
on t h e national and inter-.
take t h e K f e o f another-"innocent" human being."
each Council of S t u d e n t Body Presnational level.
When a murderer-kills a n innocent person, he is willfully taking idents' meeting,. This council coTHE INSIGNIUM COMMITTEE:
«> life,"of a human being. .He will, in turn^ once he h a s been arrested ordinates the actions of student
It reports its findings of candidates
and sentenced to death, plead for bodies of all the c i t y colleges.
to Student Council, which decides
Mark
Grant
T H E ELECTION COMMITTEE:
on the receipients of t h e Insignium
mercy and- f o r g i v n e s s . My queshas
helped
t
o
institute
twelve
new
Chaired
by
H
a
r
v
e
y
Kornberg
'64,
it
award on the basis of co-curricular
tion is this: by w h a t right does he
is open t o any student and super- courses.
activities.
plead for his l i f e ? The usual ansT H E G R I E V A N C E COMMITv i s e s the -election o f b o t h C l a s s and
T H E BLOOD B A N K COMMITwer to my question^ is t h a t "two
C o u n c i l m«>itihpr<;
T E E : Headed by Michael Kreitzer T E E : Chaired by Paul Zarretx.'66^
THE
ACADEMIC
A F F A I R S '63, it has helped in g e t t i n g new it organizes the Red—Cross drives
wrongs do not constitute a right."
I will agree w i t h this only up to a COMMITTEE: Chaired by Paul lighting in the Oak Loungre. Its arkr plans some n e w and interestpoint. I do not think that once an Gerston '66, it handles the new grievance box can be found in the ing incentives for g e t t i n g blooti.
individual has taken another per- elective courses t h a t t h e students lobby of the Student Center.
STUDENT COUNCIL EVALUATHE
son's life he h a s / t h e right to be request. "Tn the'TasT three terms, R
ANtT S P E A K E R S T^ON—COMMITTEE: Under R i c h - —
treated as a human being-.
ard Glantz '66, it w a s created last
term to evaluate Council's action
The murderer repents. "I have
and to find w a y s to effect better
seen the evil of m y wicked- w a y s ,
cooperation a m o n g students and
please let m e g o now." This, t o m e , i s a little irrational. The stafaculty.
<iics on how many criminals have been rehabilitated a r e often jfiven as
T H E SOCIAL
COMMITTEE:
irumehts a g a i n s t capital punishment, but even animals f e a r death
Chaired
by
Janet
Calabrese
'65 it
r.d will retreat w h e n t h e y realize t h a t i h e y are trapped. W h a t have
coordinates
Charter
D
a
y
Activities"
. se murders g o t to lose?—certainly* not their lives. The essence
and other -social functions of S t u : all this is that e v e r y time a murder admits his g u i l t and promises
dent Council.
repent—are w e to absolve h i m ? I think what m o s t people fail to
PROCTORING
COMMITTEE:
alize, is t h a t these sudden realizations of guilt are manifested by
Headed by S u s a n Manasse '66, i t
.>• fear of being j u s t l y punished—being put t o death.
will provide s t u d e n t s for the d e TTig "tnWn f h o
fttlwy
f l i g « > l r " p H i l n c r t p h y U a figo rnAo
p f ethjc_S_'in
poTtmoate-^teeding them to proctor
I••'• fvpryday life, b u t n o t when it comes to murder. L e t as^turp fpr
finalt examinations.. , . ,. _.
^__
iioroent -to the-viciim-Kajfchej^-than. the-murderer. T o t a k c a a - innocent I
- C H A R I T Y D R I V E S COMMIT-•' is a crime t h a t is s o despicable, that it is hard to describe adeT E E : Headed by Mark Grant '64,
ately. One of m y p r o f e s s o r s read a quotation to m y c l a s s which
a s vice president, it decides w h i c h
ties: "did you ever s e e the eye's of a man who has j u s t been put to
charity drives will be conducted
h ath ? f o r a f e w m i n u t e s the e y e s seem to. be alive, e v e n though the
n e x t term.
ad is disconnected from the rest of the body." I ask this question
•". what about the e y e s of a murdered victim? The q u e s t i o n i n g look
<i the e y e s a s k w h y .
Let u s question ourselves and ask if we would r e m a i n forgiving
I nd merciful if a murderer maliciously took the life of someone dear
u
s , e-g., one of our parents.
In 1923, e i g h t of the
most
successful financiers
A s crude a s Tt m a y secna, capital punishment a s well ^L& being a
Ticker Photo by Steve Eagle CTHcago:~ They •were m e n
t reward for murder, e x i s t s a s a warning when t h e t e m p t a t i o n -to
i arises, b e f o r e h e "pulls t h e U i g g e x " the m m d e i e i thinks twice "I MAKE A MOTION": Donald Glickman '63.brings opt the found t h e secret of m a k i n g m o n e y .
motion that Student Council change its meeting night.
They w e r e : T h e president of t h e
r out the consequences. I f cannot b e denied that m a n a s w e l l a s animal
largest independent s t e e l company,
irs death. To be deprived of life i s t h e worst punishment t h a t can be
B y Richard Glantz
the president o f the l a r g e s t g a s
-towed upon a criminal a n d t h i s f e a r both a c t s a s a deterrent to
At
a
special
Thursday
night
meeting
of
Student
Council.
company, t h e g r e a t e s t w h e a t spec;rder and a factor in our. modern day /"rehabilitations.**
Donald Glickman *63, treasurer of Council, moved that S.C. ulator, the president of the N e w
Albert Camus s a y s in h i s e s s a y , "Reflections on the Truillotine/* change its meeting night from Friday. Mr. Glickman stated,
York Stock E x c h a n g e , a member of
=
=
. let u s recognize i t f o r w h a t it u l t i m a t e l y i s : a revenge.** I d i s a g r e e , UA
segment of~ our stu-$
—:
the president's cabinet, the g r e a t pital punishment- i s not a r e v e n g e , it i s a punishment applied, t o an dent body is discriminated
Mark Grant *64, vice-president of est "bear" in Wall S t r e e t , the head
iividual by a s o c i e t y w h i c h i s governed by certain l a w s . Revenge,' a s against, (i.'^., those of t h e Student Council stated, "I think itfined by Webster, is t h e desire t o seek vengance; a l s o t h e gratification Jewish faith who observe the is discrimination . but not in the of the world's g r e a t e s t monopoly,
-uch a desire. W e Kve in a s o c i e t y w i t h c e r t a i n l a w s , moral a s well Sabbath). In my opinion this same light as direct discrimina- and the president of t h e Bank of
International S e t t l e m e n t .
,
actual ones, w h i c h g o v e r n . u s and w h e n one. of t h e s e l a w s i s broken
tion." On basis of previous, weekis
pure
a4scr^3lm&tion.
*
In Milwaukee, t h a t same year,'
- criminal m u s t p a y the penalty. I believe, as I s t a t e d before, t h a t
Zachary Dyckroan '64 presented day meetings Mr. Grant f e l t that a champion w a s crowned at the
only j u s T p u n i s h m e n t f o r o r e m e d i t a t e d murder is capital p u n i s h m e n t s
the report of the "Meeting iNight Student Council eould not operate 23rd Annual A.B.C. Tournament,
A s an e x a m p l e , let usMook a t Caryl Chessman, w h o -wrote his Committee." Mr. D y c k m a n reported effectively.
the -world's most important bowl'obiography. a n d - r e s o r t e d t o e v e r y means possible i n a -desperate that the committee f e l t "weekCorresponding Secretary Jeffrey i n g tournament.
empt t o save h i s life. Did h e g i v e his victims the s a m e o p p o r t u n i t y ? day -meetings are clearly feasible Levitt *64, introduced an amendS t a r bowler- E v e l y n Teal, who
'.-y did not have—nine y e a r s to fight with every l a s t bit of strength and t h a t work c a n be done on ment that the motion should apply
w
a
s born in 1923, did some rethem a s Mr. Chessman did. I am not defending or accusing, the late weekdays."
as of next term. After being ruled
r
yl Cnco3roan of a n y t h i n g . I am ""merely using M m a s a n eKflinpfer - Jeffrey F e u e r *64r-an Orthodox o a t o f or&eZy M r . , L e v i t t appealed search and found out where these
• y should the murderer have an opportunity to r e p e n t and re- Jew, whose future o n Student Coun- the chair's decision. The appeal m e n are, fblrty "years later.
The president of the l a r g e s t in>ilrtate himself, w h e n he has not given his victim t h e inherent right cil w a s affected by this motion re- clearly failed.
dependent
steel company, Charle?
all human b e i n g s , life.
The debate then w e n t into the
marked, "I cannot s e e h o w y o u can
Schwab,
died
bankrupt, living on
It is possible t h a t a s you read this column, you m a y feel that I make J e w s second-class citizens." realm of discrimination. It was borrowed money for five year&
e been too emtional w i t h o u t appealing t o the f a c t s involved. It is my
A n opponent- o f t h e motion, .discussed whether or not discrim- before his death.
• tention t h a t the question of capital punishment i s a moral question H a r v e y Kornberg 564 felt t h a t ination would occur if the meeting
The president of the largest g a s
i not a question of h o w m a n y f a c t s and statistics one can use. I changing the m e e t i n g n i g h t would night was changed to Thursday,
company,
Howard Hopson, became
• sure there are a g r e a t m a n y people "who will d i s a g r e e with m e on mean that S t u d e n t Council would since other organizations m e e t that
insane.
question. I o n l y a s k t h a t you think about what I have said. Par- have to hurry t h r o u g h legislation night. Donald Glickman, upon hearT h e g r e a t e s t w h e a t speculator.
ularly bear in mind, t h a t f e a r makes men do m a n y t h i n g s , especially ancTIose its als^inctTonT a s a" cTelxb- -f irig this debate, stated "Those who
Arthur
Cotton, died abroad insol^n t h e y feel -^their l i f e is- in-- jeopardy^ -Let us n o t -allow t h e e r a t i v e body, Mr.. K o r n b e r g also f e e l this is not discrimination are
vent.
•-' to be used a s a n instrument b y a scared 1 animal, for t h i s animal stated, "no minority should subject blind and stupid."
;
The president of the N e w York
The motion, when b r o u g h t to ^r-j
s not give" "his p r e y t h i s s a m e escape. Capital p u n i s h m e n t must ! its will on a majority if t h i s , will
(Continued on P a g e 9 )
[ i s harmful to the majority."
vote, w a s defeated 8-16-0.
j
vail.
_.
Special Meeting
Held
To Discuss SO Motion
Financiers Discover
Money Not S u c c e s s
;
.
-l-
:
:—_:
___^_
»
y
* r
i;'
(Conttanerf front P a g e I )
h
u _.—
a t Brown U n i v e r s i t y , w h i c h accepted some students it normally
"would h a v e rejected. The study, h e
claimed, showed that t h e s e s t u d e n t s w e r e capable of c o l l e g e level
•work.
S. C . vice
president,
Mark
Grant '64, read from t h e Cottrell
Report which stated that there w a s
a h i g h e r correlation b e t w e e n coll e g e entrance t e s t r e q u i r e m e n t s
ization a t t h e college level. T h e
original version s t a t e d , ". . . undue
e m p h a s i s ~on specia&uilioii T ~^~vahould be avoided.*' M a n y Council
members had not read the Cottrell
Report and inferred t h a t i t advocated t h e abolition o f c o l l e g i a t e
business speciaKzatiaas.- Rictorrd-CrlartteE s u g g e s t e d t h a t asentence- be added _ s t a t i n g t h a t
specializations should be reviewed
according t o t h e criteria s e t forth
in the report. T h i s w a s unanimously
' A recoTnme-ndatio<n t h a t t h e C i t y
*ttS&-ssrcces5 in college tfaanlH'twmm
'.I
»
high school a v e r a g e and future col- of erecting a hew Baruch School
l e g e performance.
n e x t t o or near the U p t o w n center
•was
also defeated in f a v o r o f a
The motion, producing t h e c l o s e s t
v o t e of t h e e v e n i n g , failed 11-13-0. downtown location.
Mr. Glickman then proposed t h a t
Alan Silverman '63, t a k i n g e x t h e section be changed t o read -that ception t o t h e proposed n w w ,
". . . S. C s e e s no reason w h y the a v e r r e d t h a t there are m a n y advanentrance requirements t o t h e B a -t a g e s t o t h e p r e s e n t location,
ruch School should be changed." a m o n g which a r e a co-op p r o g r a m
and the e a s e of a c c e s s t o s t u d e n t s
T h e motion p a s s e d 13-10-1.
Another stumbling block in t h e and faculty -who hold outside jobs.
debate w a s the section o n special- T h e section w a s stricken .M-T-O.
Harry and Jack . . .
ftuiu P a g e 1 )
^ ^ ^ ^ . " j ^ ^ l ,
governor w i t h letters. They hope They conclude t h a t one cannot be
the school or f o r a c o a r s e ; t h a t one c m * h o n e * « • * » . « * = « « • » , . »
to accomplish this by h a v i n g s t u dents pass--out petitions 4 » their
^ ^ f S W h t e n i n s truth i s t h a t H i s these ^ - - f ^ f
£
t
neighborhoods.
f o . i J ^ ^ S S J w * through the high, school P. T, A.'s take school s e r i o u s i y , w h o work
and student organizations, they who f a l t e r in t h e real world. College i s part of t h e real world—
feel that parents w i t h children t h e place for t h e total e n e r g i e s of every individual.
^
who will s o o n b e ' e n t e r i n g college |
I f oue is\apathetic about one's work it is hard-to prevent this ai>;.
will join t h e fight. F a c t sheets | from spreading t o other areas. But, conversely, the v i t a l i t y and s.
about the—tuition—issue—will—be. ; for r e l e v a n t aocompUifluueut that students may gain_in_ college
handed out a l o n g with petitions. | spread t o their academic framework and t h u s t o their l i f e ' s work.
Senator W»k»on wciU aaerhia pm\- T
">»^^*--*>-*»»-~-* l . ... — r — • ~+ •K^j^fau. yp<xt iuid^not simp
tion a s head of t h e State Task playful preparation or a childish thing. If a student i s doing poor 1
Force for F r e e Tuition t o influence school, and is not active in school, and declares t h a t "I cannot
m a n y of the* adults in his district to g r a d u a t e and g e t into t h e real world to make some money."
and also h i s fellow legislators. can b e sure of just one t h i n g — t h i s student will never m a k e it, ir.
However, since t h e committee is
real world, in college, anywhere.
composed mainly of Republican
r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s there i s doubt t h a t •viii arlso suffer. W i t h increases in , itself strictly t o t h e fight f o r :
uition on t h e public l e v e l , the door 1 tuition. The current issue will
niuch can b e accomplished.
's l e f t open for private -JM^hxM>ls_to_usent_jt_history of the City Co.
It^ ap^>ears7 stated Melvin Siegel also request higher fees.*'
• as well a s a report on the~pro£
spokesman f o r t h e Y o u n g Demoso request nigner i w » .
—
crats a t t h e School, that "in t h e T h e Student Democrat, the club's ; of t h e current c a m p a i g n for 1
end s t u d e n t s in private institutions official n e w s l e t t e r , i s also devoting latkm.
The Qieen Bee
IT'S *•
PEOPLE W I T H STUflFY
NOSES, H A Y FEVER,
(Continued from P a g e 6 )
-
has
applied
t h e stinger
PIZZA
161 E. 23rd Sr. t> 3rd Ave.
If you're m » too h»n«ry
drop in for PIZZA
Bring Your rFrtends Wit* YoiT
G R A M E R C Y J » H O T O SUPPtY
Complete Pfcoto "fiaishteg Sacvic
J
B fr W fir Color
Finns * CaaMfas • Projector
32 L e x i n g t o n JLw*^ N t f w , v o » " k **•
y
Git S-W*^
To participate i n a n a s a l
p r o d u c t e v a l u a t i o n test t o b e
conducted b y
,*,.
• % _ • • ! • - - -
a n d Eileen
*66 -wftuld tike t o m i t e - ^ Zeta^ J ^ s i k ) i r Gh» *«nn^uoK^^
Ull- freshman girls—to attend, ita Officers._foj|L^ftl.^>ring / 6 3 terrnr^Binstock.
* *'""" *
>4»nwwa«r 1 ^ i f f i a i n WatSana; -vice
<Coatinued froni P a g e 7 )
Thursday a t t£z99The
-Young
Republican
Club
will
House Pian lounge i n tfce 9ttldeat|«mwnc«aor, dfichael
Dougherfcy;
f
master
dt
tixe.
scrolls,
Paul
K o s t e r ; nold a special m e e t i n g Thursday a t Stock E x c h a n g e , Richard Whitney,
Center.
w a s sentenced t o S i n g S i n g Penikeeper o f t h e coffers, Vincent Baar- i 2 i n 403,
tentiary.
(Continued from P a g e 3 )
Le Gras '66 would like t o con- ile; m a s t e r o f rituals, Ronald HarThe new officers for the StatistiA member of t h e president's
ita ra»wly imfairted brothers.: T a t a l a t ^ ttst -TICT officers: -papeai~J. nisch; social 6o-ordinator, A l P^rcal
Association
~are~~Hs~^
follows:
cabinet,
Albert Fall, w a s pardoned
Gerald
odore "Blechex, A r t h u r Blutter,- lent, Nadane Menahel; vice-preai- nuca; sargeant a t arms,
president,
Arthur
Janiger;
vice
from
prison
s o he could die a t
.,rc Cohen, Steven Danow, Mich- lent, Michelle F i e l d s ; secretary;' I'Healy; historian, J a m e s McGinty
president. J a y Herson; secretary, home.
Feldman, S t a n l e y Garfunkel, Bonnie Eckers; treasurer, Karen
Fredda Steckler; treasurer, Steven
The g r e a t e s t "bear" on Wall
-.ton Glarer. John Goldstein, Sandburjr; Central H o u s e Plan repMr. Robert F. Hart, in charge of Whitman.
Street,—Jesse—Livermore,—commitl
e
s
e
u
l
a
t
i
v
e
s
,
M
a
i
y
J
o
—
P
o
n
n
e
l
l
y
-haei Goldstein, D J U I ^ — K o r n ,
wore,
[ F i e t d Personnel f o r t h e S. C. M
<-d H m U u n m ; — S t e v e n — P h i l l i p s , I and Bonnie Garson; m a s c o t , Paul'Jjiqrporation. will speak Thnrsday
ted suicide.
Jtael IXHaekj, Jeffrey Rees-r^ho^
T h e h e a d of: t h e world"s g r e a U
"hr "Hire O a k ' t i o n n g e a t I S r i S . Mr.
Schuldwach. Charles Siejjel,
est monopoly, Ivar Krenger, comHart will speak on "Ethics In Busiarles Spitxer, Fred S t e i n , S t e v e n
Phi S i g m a Delta, w i n n e r o f t h e ness." A l l a r e welcome t o hear
mitted suicide.
i. aokur, .and Lawrence Zeff.
I. F . C. sing, ehallengea a n y school this discussion presented b y t h e
T h e president of t h e Bank at
group t o such an e v e n t . Phi S i g m a Christian Association.
International
Settlements,
Leon
*
*
*
"The Bible Comes Alive,"
Delta
will
a
r
r
a
n
g
e
a
c
o
n
t
e
s
t
at"
t
h
e
Frazier,
committed
suicide.
Alpha P h i O m e g a w i s h e s t o a n the second lecture in Hillel's
cjnee i t s executive ooard f o r t h e
:'orum series, wiirbe discussed" . T h e winner o f t h e A 3 X ^ s i n g l e s
All girls are invited to Boosters
ganization.
F
o
r
information
speak
n g - s e m e s t e r : Jerrold E p s t e i n ,
by Dr. David Neiman, of the Title in 1923 w a s Carl A . B a u m get-acquainted"
t e a Thursday.
i i d w t ; Jeffrey Manoff, _. "ftrst to- Donald Goldman, president-..of I from 12-2 - rrT 467 of- the—Student- J>epax±mfint> Lfif. _ Comparative gartner. In~19g3, "forty years»after _
president; A Ran F u s s , second Phi S i g m a Ifelta.
Religion of the New School wrinning k his A.B.C. championship,
Center.
president; S t e v e n Scoll,, third
of Social Research, Thursday he i s still g o i n g s t r o n g and i s a n
president; Joel Gensier* s e c at 12:30. The lecture will take advertising a n d public relations
T h e Finance Society, c o n g r a t u Reservations
for
blocks
of
tickets
iry; Alan Granat, treasurer, - j -ites the following, on their elecplace at Hillel Headquarters, executive living in Garden . City,
for- "Bye B y e Birdie" t o be pre- 144 E. 24 Street.
N e w York.
-ion. t o office: president, Arnold sented 'March 23 and 30" will be ac
Dr. Neiman, formerly dean of
The conclusion? Stop w o r r y i n g
""7? until
"i-V'o
-A!
T»L \ ~-will
-n
The new officers of Tau Eps.ilon} Srobks;* vice-president,
„ *
„ A l a n Goz;
.^ ( "'
eeptea
Friday.
Tickets
the
Academy
of
J
e
w
i
s
h
Studies,about money , and business', s a y s
. » r e : ghancellor. J a y W«llejr
etary, Lawrence Hershkowitz^ i
,
, ^T , ,
,
has
written
several
v
o
l
u
m
e
s
on
the
Mrs. Teal. Go out and bow*.
chancellor. Barry M i n t z e s ;
_
~
t1 go
on general
andthan
reserves
will besale
heldMondaV
no later
ancient
world
of-"•
t
h
«
N
e
a
r
East.
-ar, Berel Spevak; pledgesnas T treasurer, Barry Korn.
1
March 8.
'__
\
"Among his w o i k s are ^The-Lachiah
Irving Becker; recordmg scribevl
r
Letters" and "The Patriarchal InThe Finance Society will meet
-ey P a l c a ; corresponding scribe,
POST SIXTY-FIVE
Congratulations
to
the
cast
of
stitutions." He is a t present prerhursday,
in
1014.
A
l
l
persons
• id Ttosner; chaplain, Howard
Congrarttiates^NeW
en; member-at-latrge, A n t h o n y nterested a r e invited t o attend | Bye B y e Birdie: Robert Eisner, paring a volume f o r publication
his
meeting
which
will
be
held
a
t
Patricia
Dingle,
Joel
Terrance,
entitled
"The
World
of
Living
Rerigemma;
historian,
Robert
12.
j Mary Jo Donnelly, Peter Morten- [ ligions."
rman.
ABC and HOWIE
—
•
•
•
- i
•
»
•
»
-
•
*
Second Hillel Forum
Dr. Neiman on Bible
*
*
*
•
Lamport Leaders
KELLY GIRL
Services, tnc,;
A SNAP!
•?.
TO^STODV AtfD
/»y»i
I - f- *•
QUIET
FACT
<~. M • F I * '
B0UMSEL0RS
M r . J . M a t e r . o$ t l i e
TfOn
I IIBIIUVIIH.III
H
l
Federa™ **«»•*•
(|~TCbonfry"afiH^CIrjrtJerir € a t n p »
crfftlicited w i t h t h e F e d e r a t i o n
of Jewish Philanthropies, w i l l
interview
C.C.N.Y.
students
o n Feb. 2 5 b e t w e e n 1 0 A . M .
a n d 4 P.M.
congratulate
Interested students must r e g ister a t t h e P l a c e m e n t Office
Brother
first.
itoger i f f M
^
o n his p i n n i n g o f
(N. Y . Community
L
College)
THEATMN proatactim of
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wnrmrrj'
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BY JULY
V 1
AGE:
I,
1963
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P a s e Ton"
• i
HUNT 63
THE BROTHERS OF
.1 •
TAU EPSHON PHI
lis
Roanie Kate
on his e n g a g e m e n t to
on his pinning t o
MYRA HOFSTETTER
i ?'•
outstanding^ member
PAUL JACOBS
• M I I H H V ••
nwi
i
Sonoral Gamp
Counselors Wasted
MEN AND
WOMEN—1000
openings wttfc the 58 country
mnd ( h y o m p t affiliated with
tne Federation of Jewisk Philanthropies. Preference siren to
psychology, sociology,, or education major* with camping or
group activity leadership background.
APPLY I N PfcRSON
Mondays through Friday*
* J 3 0 AJ»V-Aaft^F5Mr~
also open Tuesday to 7 P.M.
Not Affiliated with City College
__
FLY
TO
E--U~R-OLF_E !..
Camp
(3rd SUCCESSFUL YEAR)
WE'LL BE WAITIIiG FOR YOU
AT OUR SMOKER
FEB. 21, 8:30
Federation Employment
& Guidance Service
$259 up R O U N D T R I P
4 2 East 4 1 st Street 1
N e w Yok
N O FEE FOR PLACEMENT
Departures June 18—Jwty 4—Juty 15
CONTACT? M C I . KAMTOR
2 7 S 4 MORRIS AVE.
BJL N . Y.
FO 7 - 0 1 3 5
Not Affiliated with City H o i lege
The Brothers of
pn n OMEGA
FREE
IV
IK
The Brothers of
TAU EKIL0N
COKE
vm
r
W i t h This A d a n d the PurchaseTo! a G i a n t 'Burger* a t tf»o
HERBAS LUNCHEONETTE
CONGRATULATE
ers
|)rop 4th Tilt
F e n c e r s Down Rutgers;
Advance Record t o 5-2
By Steve Rosenblatt
T h e City College fencing team assured itself of a winningseason,by defeating Rutgers 15-12, at W i n g a t e Hall Saturday. The win boosted the Beavers r record to 5-2T wfETT t w o
contests remainings.
**
:
:
The score was deceiving as City I by a 6-3 margin with Vito Mannino,
built up a ^L3-5 margin through 6-3 j Ed Martinez and Al Turner taka n d 7-2 victories in the first- two ; ing two victories each. A l l - A m e r i rosnds. A f t e r t h e Beavers took can Mannino w a s back iri form
the^ first match in the third round after a cold limited his effectiveJA t haiCttme t h e J a s p e w l e d 42to clinch"the victory, Coach "Ed Lu- nesslri several recentTmatches. Vito
High scorers for the- Beavers
cia sent in his reserves for ex- is 13-5 for t h e season.
?:e Ken Trell with sixteen points,
perience.
Stan Lefkowitz and Marshall
^iderably below his a v e r a g e , .and
Sophomore Aaron Marcus was Pastorino took one bout apiece i n
kve S a k sw i t h ten.,Trell and Saks
t h e star of City's triumph, with a the epee, which Rutgers won 7-2; e each held to only two pointstirple win in the sabre. In this
The fencing t e a m has two t i l t s
t.he second half.
weapon,
Leon
Agaronian
won
two
remaining,
t r a v e l i n g t o "Brooklyn:
Bob Melvin
J i m M a n hard t
:: the Q o e e n s ' g a m e the Beavers
matches, g i v i n g him a 17-3 record College Saturday and. to N . Y. U .
lied by 42-26^ a t half time. With
for the season. Other sabre win- March 2. N . Yr U., one of the top>
. seven and a half minutes_reWingate H a l l dan be reached by ners were Bob Kao and Roy Lee t e a m s in the country, is expected t o
wing
the .Knights
increased]
(Continued from P a g e 1)
IRT to 137 -Street or I N D to 145 with one w i n apiece. ,
offer t h e Beavers tough competi- /
i lead t o 60-41, A t this point
Although Fordham will play St. Street. Admission i s free - upon
The foil t e a m won its matches tion.
Beavers rallied to cut the lead John's^ N.*Y.U., and Manhattan presentation of your identification
!'-T-60 w i t h 1:40" remaining:. Two within three w e e k s , the Rams are card.
k Beaver steals led to baskets "up" f o r this g a m e . Bach said,
Al Kleirthans and L e w Lipset "I'm certainly hot looking p a s t
i.i h cut "the deficit to three. A f t e r } City arid my t e a m isn't either?" He
w>.na - lost, the. baJJU Dave Sal
added, -^J—know - XXave Polansky's
UfromJPage lZ>
•n*d a jump shot and the L A V - J
-freshman—contest,—preceding—the.
By Stu Kaplan
jder trailed by one.
work their patterns very •well. It varsity a t 6, which will feature 6-4
In 1844 t h e slogan, "Fifty-four F d r t y o r F i g h t / *
>nc9 again Queens lost the ball should be a real good game."
Albie Grant, of the Blackbirds," an carried J a m e s Polk to t h e presidency. For t h e Beaver s w i m <: w i t h 6 0 : 4 5 remaining Trell put
Bach w a s present at t h e <5.C- all-scholastic from Columbus -High m i n g team* however, 5 4 T 4 0 meant a defeat to L a sf a y e t t e S a t rebound to g i v e the Beavers N.Y.-Yeshiva g a m e , but did not School. He is a v e r a g i n g nineteen urday
a t Easton, Pennsyl-*
7^—
ir first lead of the g a m e 68-67. comment upon the Beavers', play. points and nineteen rebounds per vania. I t was City's seventh j winner by hitting 2:35.3.
ments l a t e r Trell added a foui
?ame. L.I.U.'s freshmen have a setback a g a i n s t one win,
C. C. N . Y. took the 400-yard
Coach Dave Polansky said., "I'd 12-2 record, losing to JNew York
t that added to the final margin.
C. C. N . Y. dropped their sixth ^free relay in 4:14.4. The sophomore?
"re 11 led the well-balanced scor- really like to beat Fordham, but University and Hofstra by only decision to Columbia, 64-31, Wed-' studded quartet of Mora, Gerard
nesday a t W i n g a t e pool. In both j P e s s i s , Tom Hoeppner, and W a l l y
I know it will be a tough game." three points in each contest.
with s i x t e e n points.
losses, t h e - .Beavers . w e r e . handi Koaon w e r e the performers. Only
c a p p e d . b y the sickness of several P e s s i s is a junior. ._
key performers.
In t h e Columbia
Lion con-pIn the meet against the La- test, Steehler, a sophomore, c a m e
fayette Leopards, Dennis Mora through in fine fashion winning| copped the 50-yard freestyle: He
both the 200-yaxd freestyle in.
was defeated only once in this
200-yard backstroke
event this season. In t h e 200-yard^ 2:10;5 and the
M
" .
"
butterfly. Jim Steehler emerged the in 2f4d:
LIU
Fifty-JFouj'Forty
or Fight
But Mermen Bow, 54k- 40
PHI OMEGA
I n Becker
VARSITY SWEET SHOP
O N HIS P I N N I N G OF
Page Eleven
T
THE UNIQUE FRATERNITY AT |ARUCH
congratulate Brothnw
•>
Steve Whitman
pot n » l t i n g p i m w l
D O W N T O W N CITY'S FAVORITE E A T I N G
Pbylfis RabiMwitz
+
:-7
B O A C — A I R I N D I A JETS—SATURN
THE TICKER
1963
he Manhattan College fresh:i basketball team pulled out to
• arly lead and w e n t on to de•„ the Beaver jrr. ; 84-56 yester- >
at H a n s e n Hall. City's record
now 5-4.
he Beavers" scored their - fifth
over Queens. 69-62, Wednesday
Hanses Hall.
congratulates
Extend besf wishes o^*d congratulations Jte._ Brother
19,
Snuvi Mtvo, Irv.
1 H E NEW LOOK"
(HUNTER)
»
FEBRUARY 21
•
8:30 P.M.
323 Park Ave. South (cor. 24 Sr.)
TAU E P S I L O N
eKiMi-AWWlTAL
RM»«E
PHI
1
SCHOLASTICALLY
TOPS ATHLETICALLY
APHI0
SMOKER
TOPS SOCIALLY
JSTAYta stay alert
harmful stimulants
NoDoz keeps you-mentally
alert with the same-safe refresher found in coffee and
.tea. Yet NoDoz is^ faster,
handier, more reliable. Absol u t e l y n o t habit-forming.
Next time monotony makes
you-feeLdxawsy while driving,
working or studying, do as
mi&ons do . .'. perk up with
safe, effective NoDoz tablets.
Another fine product of Grove Laboratories.
A SMART G U Y
KNOW
SHOULD
BETTER
The Brothers of
SEPa-ANKVRL
TAU
congratulate Brother
T.
2.
IFC
Division
3. O n e of T w o
BCo^SKvVCDCutU-.'
Four Y e a r s .
n Island
Champions
to W i n Two
in Last
I
Party and
^ Ben Maksik's
MARCH 23
APRIL - • • *
THUBSDAY EVE, FEB. 21
8:30 P.M.
., N.Y.C.
«V o AVE.
M A Y 4 : Spring
M a y 1 9 : Picnic
I
M A Y 2 5 : Track Wrre
(
Harvey Saodter
onrjh is--pinning of
.^.i^
a* Weschester Towe House
to State Park a t Hat
(Adefphi)
Wi
-•r~*j-
'• - •
•--
•
"•;
* » . * - . .
'—*•.-•"->;-v --'-%v.r>-V;H_jC>a -..-..:.'
J ^ * ^ - .
City T r a c k m e n T i e Iona
F o r C T C Relay Crown
A
track
victorv
tf*™
ferenee
i-i
H*-.
mite
relay
enabled
to tie Iona. 16-16, for
the
Beaver
Dickinson
and
indoor,
the Collegiate Track
relav- c h a m p i o n s h i p . Saturday^_at_ Queens
Fairleigh
u.
in t h e
Kings
Point
followed
Con- ,
College.^
with
ten j
p
SPOH ! is
,
m
p o i n t s e a c h in t h e t e n t e a m c o m p e t i t i o n
C c . N J . stent
i n t o t h e m i l e r e - *v
l a y , t h e final e v e n t , With e l e v e n J
p o i n t s - T h e ' G a e l s had twelve. T h e J •
B e a v e r s 1*d a i l t h e w a y a n d e s t a b lished a*new meet mark of 3 : 2 6 3 .
I o n a finished s e c o n d . T h e C i t y p e r f o r m a n c e by N o r m J a c k m a n . Bill
C a s e v . Bill Hill, a n d - O w e n M a s t e r s
c a m e w i t h i n t h r e e - t e n t h s of a seco n d o f b r e a k i n g t h e a l l - t i m e C.C.The" B e a v e r hoopsters w o n
N.Y. mark.
their third straight g a m e b y
In t h e t h r e e "other e v e n t s . C o a c h
overwhelming Yeshiva, 78-66,
F r a n c i s c o Castro's team copped two
Saturday, at the Power Mes e c o n d p l a c e finishes a n d o n e t h i r d .
morial
Academy.
11
w a s
T h e d i s t a n c e m e d l e y , w e n t t©
City's h i g h e s t point total ot
K i m z s Point in 10:64.1. approxim a t e l y three seconds better than
Tri-State Standings
w. u.
Krbruory 19, 196!
r^A^t.
w h o s c o r e d f o u r t e e n i n t h e fir
n a i f , w a s %ottled u p b y C a m i s a
t h e secorkl_^period, a n d w o u n d ..
"with t w e n t y .
G r e e n b e r g , w i t h t h i r t e e n i n t!
s e c o n d half, led City w i t h t w e n t
—
4
—
—
Varsity
Scoring
Ptay«r
ER
Y UGKRUEMEVNDBCEaRi G
I JK
KKX
b
m i i • • • *• ^**-m.*
rxe»»T
! ST
E V E GOLD
EN
I1 D O N S I D A T
^*- J-
^ >
G. .
15
15
15
P t * . A<
2 1 6 14
165 11
143-
' A " strong run by Lenny > n « .
^ ^
7 1 U..I.U.
*
I
7 1 ! Brooklyn
« »
t h e B e a v e r s ' a n c h o r m a n , in t « e | f.iri^ijrt
1.
•& -» \ D i i d g e p o r t 2- „
A
L
E
X
B
L
A
t
r
.
.
.
— 1.»«#5 — t r r
|
Rider
n
f
-yi
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B
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A
I
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5 J j Hunter
O X
_ m i l e p o r t i o n of t h e m e d l e y frave t h e
i'6
J
O
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N
N
Y
W
Y
L
E
S
15 l~^9
C.C.N.Y.
~
—S—a i V c a h i v
0
*t e a m t h i r d p l a c e . C . C . N . Y , had befetr Ad«lpl»>
t RAY CAMISA
TS50
J j A Y HERSHKOWTTZ . . .
14
r u n n i n g f o u r t h "behThd F a i H e i g h , j -v
the season and gave the LavT h e o t h e r -Beaver t r a c k m e n w e r e e n d e r t h e i r f o u r t R v i c t o r y i n
t w o . H e i s t h e l e a d i n g Bea%
J i m O ' B r i a n , I r a R u d i c k , a n d M a r - t h e l a s t five s t a r t s .
s c o r e r , a v e r a g i n g o v e r fourth
p o i n t s p e r g a m e . W y l e s h a d fifte
cel Sierra.
C. C. N . Y.; raised" i t s o v e r a l l ]
I S t e v e Golden hit fourteen and I >
I n t h e t w o - m i l e r e l a y , t h e B e a v - r e c o r d t o 8 - 7 . In t h e T r i - S t a t e
e r s led g o i n g i n t o t h e l a s t lap, but L e a g u e t h e t e a m h a s a 5-3 m a r k ,
i Sadat collected ten.
J o h n Z e i t l e r , a n I o n a s p e e d s t e r , w h i c h b e t t e r s l a s t y e a r ' s 4-5 f i n i s h .
T h e s t a l w a r t C i t y C o l l e g e fa
Sieve Golden
p u l l e d a h e a d of Zane to g i v e his
T h e g a m e w a s rough, and marred j
Polansky- returned the s t a r t e r s m a d e plenty, of noise led b y t
t e a m five p o i n t s . B a r u e h i a n J o h n b v f r e q u e n t f o u l s a n d a n e a r f r e e - j t h e e n t i r e first h a l f , b u . C i t y led 1 ^
; j ™ ^
, , n l s h o t b T cheerleaders and accompanied
36-2S a t intermissionJ 0 t h e c o u rt t , naTnMdl a f oo u
l shot by 1 cheerleaders and ac
B o u r n e h a d b u i l t u p a fifteen y a r d o y i « ^ u ^ » < - «——— —
C
i
t
y
did
n
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e
b
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w
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in
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l e a d in h i s q u a r t e r m i l e a n d H i l l f o r - a l l a l m o s t r e s u l t e d - A t o t a l o f
V * ^ J
*****
M W
A ^ r - v v . - .
.G
r
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W hh ii tt ee "hhaannddkkeerrechhiieevveca w e r e w a v
a n d C a s e y h a d k e p t , t h e t e a m i n f o r t y - n i n e f o u l s w e r e c a l l e d , t w e n - first
period, and W y l e s w a s the
A a r o n t a l l i e d s e v e n t e e n p o i n t s f r e q u e n t l y a t Y e s h i v a C o a c h Kt
ty-five a g a i n s t Y e s h i v a . In addi- only c o n s i s t e n t shooter.
front.
ina l f tMI
o p
a c e a l l S a r a c h e k , w h o o f t e n s c r e a m s v.o o t i n g on both sides
in- tt h
n ee ss ee cc oo n
nd
a h
naix
JJS«^: « U • •^<»xa».u^»v «>~w ^-^w^.
T h e first e v e n t , t h e s p r i n t r e l a y , t i oans , i ntchoen ssi h
i W i t h f o u r m i n u t e s g o n e in t h e
w a s i n c o n s isstteenntt.
s c o r e r s w i t h trwenty-five. J a c o b s o n , | b e r a t e s h i s p l a y e r s .
wrent t o F J 3 . U . i n 1:15.4. C i t y
T h e M i g h t y M i t e s j u m p e d t o a n J ^ c o n d h a l f . C i t y led b y o n l y 4 1 f o l l o w e d .with 1:15.6 and I o n a w
- _aRs M r l.v 1. 1. - 5c lie a di o^«
n f**»«io u r cro^nnsseeccuuttiivv e i w35,
. „gMuf tc h. .o_o k s h o t s b y S t e v e G o l d e n
t hhii rr d
in
1
:
1
6
.
2
.
F
o
u
r
m
e
n
r
a
n
" d B a y r u r i m ii*xted_Jhe Jte*?d in 1 : 1 6 . 2 . F o u r m e n r a n 117766 J ^ ^ L ^ ^ ^ • « — J " ^ ^
an
.
XBi
y a r d s each. T h e B e a ^ ^ n r i e r s 7 ] ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
W y l e s helped S e r s o n a l 7 - 6 spurt. Greenberg be- j
/••
m
w e r e R u d i c k , J a c h i n a a , L a r r y Milr | " < > w ^ »
" ^ b u t W | t h feiggt { g a p t o p i l e u p p o i n t s , a n d n i U i C»e |
1*
x'SStJ^f
'MIMMJ.
t h e tea^ri Tedrtia-teiT* «\T*&"Masters1.
•
- ••.
- ——The trackmen continue a c t i o i j ^ n f e s ~
^ ^
- 64-47. '
I
» t 11 A a i - F r i d a y b y p a r t i c i p a t i n g
A
t
t
h
i
s
p
o
i
n
t
C
o
a
c
h
D
a
v
e
P
o
l
a
n
,
A jump shot by W y l e s fallowed
; n ihe Municipal College Chamb y a* b a s k e t by J e r r y G r e e n b e r g s k y p u t in t h e s u b s t i t u t e s , b u t |
p ii oo n
n ss h
h ii p
p ss aa tt _ Q
Q «u ee ee nn ss C
p
i oo ll il ee gg ee . T
x nh^e " , " t h T n c a v c K a l e a d t h e y n e v e r Y e s h i v a w a s n o t t h r o u g h y e t . W i t h j
B e a v e r s a r e f a v o r e d to r e p e a t l a s t j ^ e * ^ ^ s h i v &
the g a m e g e t t i n g rougher. Art j
s t a y e d
close
1C
season's triumph.
" M
.
A a r o n started to score f r o m t h e ;
I field a n d t h e f o u l l i n e a n d Y e s h i v a j
cut the m a r g i n to 69-62.
j
Wrestlers.
Staughten.
m rrr*n
City
College Versus LIU:
asketbatt
Attraction
Nimrods
Finish
Fifth
Bv Joe Rosenberg*
Fifteen years ag^>
a 'basketball game between the
powerhouses * of Lkmg^ tsfeiBEr UaSver&ity and ^ity Xkillege ]
would have packed Madison Square Garden. Since then both j
teams
have dropped out of t h e ^ • .,.!., , . . ^ . ^ ^
T e » I l R > I U I T V ^M^^rr
H t-i
i-
,
Frank Palka and Fred Grospin
1 paced t h e B e a v e r m a r k s m e n to^a |
fifth
p l a c e finish m t h e XJnited •
S t a t e s Coast Guard Invitational
T o u r n a m e n t S a t u r d a y a t N e w L o n - j j g a ^ B R A C E A B L E Y < H J ^ A C i t y w r e s t l e r g r a p p l e s l i r a mate
The
now 1boast
don, Connecticut. First place w a s , e a r f j € E k t h j s
—
- «Beavers
™
— * -a 5-3-1
* - * - * reco
copped by T h e CitadeL
1
-j^r- Ken FrermaiL- :
P a l k a fired_a_290 a n d G r o s p i n *
The C. C. N. Y. wrestling team extended its winn
2 $ 9 . O t h e r B e a v ^ ^ s t a r s "were J e r r y
streak t o three 4>y defeating l a raster College, 35-3, Saturtrtial
<
Uretzky, 281, and Bernie Abramat
Ooethate
Gym.
The
Beaver*s
record
is
now
5-3-1.
son, 278.
^«^-^*-ita fourth •ictory b y U g B ^ r " .
- I n "a d u a l m e e t , t h e L a v e n d e r , - ^ » , w -9r~.
^ . i ^ ^ ^
KM*R9 -TTnited / S t a t e s 1 a n d A l F e i n . A l l w o n b y pirn
J i l 1 4 0 5 t r o u n c e d u n d e f e a t e d (St. u p s e t t i a e a . t « « g : ; T J n r t e d , S t a t e s t h e i r o p p o n e n t s .
i
/ I M S T T I J PjHie
flg99> ^Meichant Marine Academy s q u a d r
- R i ^ r ^ thff booty-"W*Tf><M»»-s^ ie
22-8, P e b r u a r y T 2 a t Krags. Point.
a i l t h e B e a v e r s w e r e g o i n g ai
r a n g e t o m a i n t a i n a t i e w i t h S t . i T h i s v i c t o r y w a s topped b y t h e t h e f a s t e s t pinning: t i n e altho.
J o h n ' s f o r test p l a c e i n t h e M e t r o - | p e r f o r m a n c e o f t h e B e a v e r s ' G e o r g e n o b o d y w a s a**e t o top- Fxanki
politan Conference. City is n o w Frankle, w h o pinned his opponent
1 1 - e i n l e a g u e c o m p e t i t i o n ai>d^18-s i n fifty-eight s e c o n d s . T h i s w a s t h e
B y beating Hunter and L
overall. ^ 0 « t e t a a d a « p e r f o r m p ^ ^J f a s t e s t t i m e a City wrestler had
RieO D o s Actios.
M . M . A ^ C r t y wajs J t t s m w d a>hc
w e r e turned in b y G r o s P ^ Z l W ' pinned .his opponent this season.
t i u m JBtiO p e r c e n t a g e .
In the matches
Saturday—at
Coach B o y Rubin alternates the Palka, 284, a n d J e r r y U r e t e a r ,
C C . M . Y^ has^^sne m a t c h
Bernie Abramson, 278, a n d . C
_C.. . N
—. Y ^ the
Beavers Jed
v ..
other three starters. His front court ^ 1
m a i n i n g agajmfft a t o u g h . N e w ^
n^
.,W
^ ^^
0o*rt for
victozy
w i l l p r o b a b l y i n c l u d e M i k a ^ C o u c h F r e d B o f t s e i t , 2 7 8 a l s o J d d e d n» t h e | «M
h ee ss ee aa ss oo n
n .. 1T h e m a t m e n s p a r k e d U n i v e r s i t y s q u a d S a t u r d a y a t G
oo ff tt h
4 6 - S ) , J a c k K a m i n e r ( 6 - 1 ) , and irrea « 9 » ^ ,
victory.
by Co-captain Harvey Taylor won
S^in Kerman (6-4), each
=^---one—event.
M.
^ ^
^ ^ a a r l m p o T t a n t o n e . J ^ ^ ^ t ^ o t Oti»er
^ r
B e a r e r w u i n e r s w e r e Aj Tl M
( »« t B G p ^ ^ w F € h i a ^ n o n s ^ B p s
« .
• • • ' . .
r
John's Friday, March i t on t n e ^ e u - | ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
^ ^
M a W
c h j t 3 e n > . 2.
A n a d d e d attractiohT"*ill b e t h e
a s a ^ s range.—
XCoatinued
**&>ig time" picture, but Satur- j
day's game at 8 in Winjrate!
Hall (Uptown Center) should j
attract a large crowd, since I
both teams are battling for a
-first division, finish in the TriS t a t e League.
•4
-&-, _-*._
L . I . U . h a s c o m p i l e d a 4-3 l e a g u e
m a r k 'whereas t h e B e a v e r s are 6-3 j
i n l o o p playw
'
T h e Blackbirds are a disappointm e n t t h i s s e a s o n a s evidenced b y
their
6-14 overall
record.
The
t e a m ' s m a i n d r a w b a c k is in t h e
shootirigr d e p a r t m e n t . H i g h s c o r e r
Charley B e l l m a n , is averaging only
t e n p o i n t s p e r g a m e . O t h e r deficits
include a lack of experience and
p o o r TefeotmdmgN
,
A b r i g h t s p o t i n t h e Blackbirds*
'. r e c o r d IX^BTfigfimt
over * r s t place
F«irfteM„Jj^._
.
_^
T h e s t a r t i n g t e a m l i s t s no player
o v e r 6 - 4 . Bico D o s A n j o a ( 5 - 1 1 ) i s
^ h e only" returntesr s t a r t e r f r o m
.last season's team. He was mtn^d
t o tiie a l l - l ^ s t e r j i J r . C o l l e g e t e a m
t w o y&aan a t ? *
W
uit
w i t h g e l n V i s n , a fr-9 a o p n o -
1
m
jjmore.
K—
* z . - ^ . ^ ^ , -•—
•i r*WT ' • nri -