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i Col- pla^ Pages 2,3 ice ir s««ch wS^rSES^SS" 2f *r"W«w»te Freedom" nd 01 rf. XL—No. 17 _ ™ OT ""•» »•«" Pubfae Administration—City College of Tuesday. May 20. ? 958 : COIN 389 By Subscription On*y * tis -Ident Procedure n Jii ' and in Fall TWin BHE Approves Jk an n thi »ve For JVetv School iSite 35. , ' " By Bruce Marfcens /- ^ Sp«-ial to THE TICKER I be MOl***MtS?mi*L£ A $500,000 appropriation for acquiring a hew Baruch School site was passed by the- bas Board of Hisrher Education last nig-ht. Final approval of the request must be made by the Board of Estimate. . * . ParJ An estimated $5,900,000 is needed to complete arquisition and construction of a ne"tv Baruch School. Therefore, additional requests must be included in the College budget in the Schj future. The proposal is to "retain and alter existing buildings and to acquire the Mabel Dean = xwcoBacon Vocationavocational Hig-IHighi •tin/ -f- , r*\ f I XT PI j- ,^ School site at 22 Stree* !, ai n.^ to Lexi ton i. .<#•'<*'<•**>••*. uten Defends lea Party; i jlf Ayenue;^ tb< # r approximategether with a^ n 75x10adjacen0 t feet-site_. th< Also to construct on this ..si$"e„. PlayCaused Magazine Ban a new building" to provide ''Tea Party," the play responsible for the ban on needed expansion for the Promethean, the Uptown literary' mag-azine, was defended Bernard 31. Baruch School of [OTd-IDENT: Xe xt term these photo-ident ClTrd*. mat have to be by its' author, Fred Tuten, Wednesday at the Promethean Business and Public Admini* ~ied on the person of every Baruchian while in the building-. Workshop. str»tion." By Dom Cucinotta "Tea Party" is supposed to show the life led by mem­ Also approved by the BHB Baruch School students will probably be -required to bers of. the "Beat Genera- .. ". ~_... were a request for $639.PJ>0 for standard"* fenaETDttatiow of thi- Ty phlQto-identification cards next term. Clement Thomp- tion." Tuten explained that «mi*ll|i [ill I^Nflilillli lilWiity^itl , yMl^»~w.* * n, Assistant to the Dean of Student Life, said that only Baruch School building- and as irtain details have to be worked out. he held no admiration for n additional S90.000 for the change "It is our hope," said Thompson, "'that a photo-idem if i- these peopie. "I attempted to of wiring from DC to AC. as the ion system will be in ei- show the vapid, horrible way Ruth Cohen Perelson. editor initial cost was underestimated. zt . . . in the fall. of their life. If I failed," de­ emerita of THE TICKER, has The Board also re-elected Gus- Campirs in 195r*. an id«• n.t ification tave G. Rosenberg- as its chair­ ^•'Should _tbfi__si*^t!em go into been named the "Outstanding system was ru.*rdv-4- to provide clared Tuten. "I failed be­ man for a two-year term. He feet, it 'would be advisable for Business Education Student at^ greater security measures than, cause I do not have the tech­ succeeded the late Joseph Carral*- ~_ its to report -a day before 0 e e -^as were then exisrent. At that time, nical knowledge or the ma­ City C H gT "" °>" the Snead laro in September. stratum so as not to hold up it was decided the Baruch School turity to bring- ft over." Manufacturing Company and In addition to approving mone- ristaraftioxx," did not need the photo cards be- United Business Educators As­ tary'"requests by the municipal 'he first step m the seating v The work has been called a sociation. cau se there was no situation-^ colleges.- the BHE approved sev­ of an identifieaition i.vstem piece of "sensationalism;" '•"this com-pajrabie to the one nosed by eral curriculum changes request"* in 1955, when .Student Coun- was denied by the author. Pro­ the Finney Ger^Ur. ed by the colleges. passcd a resolution asking: forr fessor Edward Mack of the Eng­ cards. The'plan was left idle However, due to incre;isin»f lish Department felt that it was; .several semesters, mainly pe:ty thievery it was, decided" ia^t -'static" but that a story by year zha-l the Baj'uch School tuse e able to provide Approval of his- action mnrerningTh^^ arbit^iJ^U^' ly 80 students and faculty mem­ the Associated Collegiate student^ with ample identifk-a- of the four stndenreditorT^^i^ -Mansion, [rem bers. .-we neglected to say that tion. and be able :o quickly as­ The four editors of the Up own • tiouaHy TH£ TICKER certain whether or not tho>K* who literairy magazine were suspend- «l as a legislative body of the the higrhest point total "\ra•;k -the bails.*' are r?a]iy stur ed May 7 for puhfehm? material Goitegre, is respoasSble for anV ^gtr noted that the- In other business, CounoH de­ at of a maximum 2000 points identification cards may be used Applications are available in feated a proposed charter amend- on Id earn an Ail-American . for the purpose of offering iden­ 921 for those who wLnh to proc­ juenit—io—linaj^ cJmn 'vLy drives~^ltr" iward. Last term, a-total of tification for check-cashing. tor History and Economics 270 points out of 3450 was the school to only intra-sehooi Faculty members may also finals next week. chanties and educational chart- •ceded for an All-American. L, participate in the plan on a ties. ; itr,-":< • voluntary basis. At present, five charity drives * ^""r^ maX ** ru"--wM*t no restrwstion as bo the type c# Final Exams Schedule ch»rity. The proponents of thaa propKwal argned .that non,ednca- *taon«J chairiies do not need tne 8:00 A.M. 10:30 A.M. 1 :Q0 P.M. 3:30 P.M. 3:15-5:40 P.M. t support of colleges, while "edu­ Monday Advt. 120 cational charities do. •5S* ! Health Educ. Govt. 1 ! Econ. 20, 101 lay 2« j 71, 81 Psy>rh, 1, 51 Tfaose i©aiasit-th». proposal .i - _ . r-33EF 1 aaid that to limit charity drivesr Acct. 221, 230 Math. 150. 151 - r . 0^ Math. 152 <>nJy tso educBDtiotteJ purposes isv fcy 27 Ret. 130 ^ , „ , y Acct. 262 Real Est. 19Q ; . m effect, a re^tiricJLkxn of free­ dom, of choice.' - fcdneflday Law 103 j Acct. 260. 271.272 j £con 12?^ ' i ~" Law.'101, 102, 104 _2& • Mkty 110 \ Kngl. 1 Irwin Tetter ***—Su'l-hvaafr—ehalinjacn—of—th&—- '•'-'•'•" • NOTE "not sxritabJeT to *bear the City NSA Committee, announced tiat ^^ Chem. lb, 2b Acctx . 210, 21 Ir.* '„nn 1M Acct. 245 < . - - ^ < • Jtcon. 102 The final examinations in Co^gge "name. •W^MW for automate deic __ lay 29 ! Phys. 1 gates to bhe vlrv**** Ntiitinrnml X courses—other than—those Vltliou^ii the four were 1 rem- Acet 1( fetejLa^ore^wrm W held -in stated Hay -••HSi,.-i: . 2 j x^cct. 203, 2<<205 | ~ ™> gi 2r 15 a l f 103 the final class hours . . .. ^ -* P^opon- tmm. mus* b« n-errod hZ «« : : ^^ffS^^j^ ^''^iffi ^ ;: < v •-•'- -r^... l-Cy, r.\ :9^" ; ?t^ 'iv ••:•'.•.•->., --... ^^"..'."^v. —, .- •• — -i - • —• -r-V'ftrVi-irfjKgiFy^--

Page 2 THE TICKET

f. Iftay 20. 1958 THE TICKER Page 3 By Ann Sigmund '•«'*'• Lewisohn Stadium, the sum- dium^ summer concerts be.cran and _' Taer edition of Carnegie Hall, .:^3; 3 thousands flocked to listen to ^win ceTebratfe tne fortieth anni­ "music under the stars." versary—of ito—concerts—a«d—iG- . pianist, wiir star at •"million New Workers and their Tho other notable patron art- hisfory. The Ballet Russe ji&„ first concert, Minnie Guggen- the Staid ium. Louis "Satchrao" visitors will listen to music from Monte Carlo; with Alicio Alons* heimer, has become as well known Aims ,rcng will ;give anorther of **?-• jtrnstein to Bach. as guest ballerina, provided the- as the singers and instrumental has orowd-pleasing Jazz Jam­ — The opening concert, under the audience with an additional last­ virutosi that have appeared with m borees. The last two Jaoaborees ing memory. In 1956, Marion baton of Arnold Volpe, included the Stadium Symphony Orches­ have drawn huge crowds to Anderson, the Negro contralto, Elgar's "Pomp and Circum- tra. Lewisohn. ••'••» ^JX-*^'^ •••-If' '• offered a program of operatic Now 75, she runs the Stadium • Performances by violinists *:•••; arias and Negro spirituals. She- Concerts single-handed, volun­ i , Zino Francescatti, performed to -a capacity crowd. • and Joseph Fuchs; pianists tarily putting in 16 hours of work Stravinsky, Bj-ahavs, Beuefe, I I' a day. She determines the artistic "1 Eugene List, Moura Lympany Schumjym and Schubert are just and Ruith Slenezynska; and sing'- ; policies and programming, nego­ a few of the composers -whose ..•:." -i&.l ers Lucia Albanese, Elaine Mal- works have been . performed -m--- tiates contracts with- performers J*^ bin, Jan Peerce, Roberta Peters . the past^ and will be performed fand labor unions, runs city-wide and Richard Tuclfcer wiil be in­ in future Lewisohn Stadium con" ticket sales drives, sets up ad­ cluded in this season's offerings. cez-ts. vertising and promotional bud­ The Stadium is continually in The concerts begin at' 8zSO- gets, and campaigns for contribu­ search for better novelties to pre­ every night and are scheduled ^ 1 tions to underwrite the annual sent at its summer festivals. Pre­ for every night except Friday and deficit of $100,000. viously, an organ concert, concert Sunday evenings. In case of rain, • Her informal, chatty speeches jwas- featured. George Thalben- the concerts are rescheduled for to Stadium audiences are one of ball of London's Temple Church Friday nights. Tickets are 50c on the summer mtrsie season!s main and Claire Coci, organist for the the stone tiers where young lov-" Xew York Philharmonic,, were attractions. Greeting each cap­ v ers indulge in "Necking New York City. seek release from their cares in jrenius in the city of his birth. was used. At this event, there Amonj: the distinguished au»- - were_ .nior^^thaii 2QQ- ence" were Adolph Lewisohn, U rworsc •weather break^»nd - ^rf viewers througb the medium music student may _be r -.— Atlhui. G0di»y." a, addresses "O«A1h. WA *!.,,tWt. £ZZ»«. '!.••»., J^TJ. . -Z^VZ^Z^* ^u%m\r€vpmmx\g nightl s Z'S J"!" ""?» ""• "" ohn Stadiuui in 1S27 where he of television and was the recipient seated in the audience for the na donor of the Stadium, and Mrs. have become autobiographicaautobiographicall bass is a «sMfish!"" One nignniehtSJinBt Minni.e r..n»d out, abc UuwjU tOTTOT- fe» mumSFs exactly as • aH *wdio had ever performed "Rhapsody in Blue" found folio-wing each note in the n fuse the elements by switching predicted. a Stadium concert to of an Emmy award for the out­ tional convention of the Ameri­ Charles S. Guggenheimer known dissertations. She has told her- summoned a titled Stadium honor and Piano Concerto. From then score. Others may just be trying; to a Monday opening. The other enigma is ^te a dollar or-more. Min- standing mujjicai program of the can Guild of Organists. to all as "Minnie," the chairman self to "shut up" in public and guest out from the "wings by call- en. he was represented at the to find relief from the heat, but ^t on radio and television 1957 season, a dissertation en­ Another special attraction, a in* "here Prince, here Prince!" Rain interrupted the 1950 sea­ Minnie's biggest probJerrj Stadium as composer, piano solo­ nevertheless, they are listening- of the concerts. .has provided many boners which slogan **Money for Min- titled "Bernstein on Bach." She may ask 15,000 people a son's "Rodgers and Hammenstem Stadium's annual deficit ist, and conductor. program of "Folk Music-of Vari­ » Lewisohn. a man of great am­ have become legend among the |usic" became a city-wide to the best in the classics. question in the audience and de­ More than 50 soloists win be The Russo-British pianist Ben- ous Countries," featuring- songs Night" during Cher first musical from $60,000 to $190,000 : Lawrence Gilman once wrote bition and enthusiasm, wanted to Claremont Heights music public. mand that they answer "one by featured for this season. Sopranos no Moiseiwitsch will play Rach­ group, and thousands left then- necessary amount to under* of Stephen Foster, was given last see the Stadium busy from morn­ Speaking at last season's open­ one." mages to work out a Hilde Gueden and Elizabeth maninoff's 2nd Piano Concerto and that "For years the Stadium Con­ seats. Minnie said to them, "Now must be raised each, year Schwarzkopf and pianists Guio­ year during^ the #39th season of ing to night, Sundays and holi­ ing about the co-operation of a balance in Stadium con- Pagranini Rhapsody at an all- certs- have provided the means Faced with the possibility of mar Novaes and Benno Moisei- the outdoor symphonic concerts. - come back, everyone- of you. -Pnr vance of the^seaaonu Mnni: ^tweenjthe serious classics Rachmaninoff program, Monday, of bringing- together in great days. Besides the CCNY students City College official, Minnie said, eviction "fronr iier Part Avenue' witsch. who have never per­ absolutely* positive that it's going ages to raise her epauata more popular music of July 7. The event commemorates Soprano Vivian Delia Chiesa and using it for instruction, he wished "I really dont know what I*d do formed at popular prices in the numbers lovers of music. For an «- "*wC» Jt.\ to clear op in a few mznutes." f>orary show composers. the 15th anniversary of the com­ tenor-guilarist Richard " Dyer- supposed to be torn down, she civKN«unded iadrrideals , will make their almost negligible price, they can' to have the stadium at the dis­ without him." The- audience snick­ a keen interest, uj gifted poser's death and will, be pre­ told a capacity Stadium crowd, and amax- Stadium debuts. posal of all New Yorkers. Lewi­ ered and she then explained, "Of CContiaaed oa next pas [artists and njany have sented under the baton of Thomas "Now listen, you people have just sohn believed that "while it is course, I don't know what I'd do the road to fame through Hilde Gueden will be- the star Scherman. gat, to find me a place to Irvel!* _ the City College StadiumT'it is with him either." at the Sta- of the annua! Viennese Night The- noted German opera and Her frankness has captured the throagh her private aid. under the baton of Josef Krips, concert soprano - Elisabeth also going to be the Stadium of When announcing Ezio Pinza's delight of all audiences. After Jr Schwarzkopf will sing aria* of the City of New York.-' Anderson 'was a winner Saturday, July 2G. The distin- name as the following week's 40 years of coaching, Minnie Wagner and Richard Strauss un­ Concert talent con- jruished Brazilian pianist Guio­ And in accordance with his artist, she proclaimed that "Next mispronounces the Russian com­ der the baton of Pierre Monteux, ivy igene Ornraady did his mar Novaes will play the Schu­ ambitious ideas, Lewisohn Sta- week we. will present Ezio Pinza, poser's name as "Tchai-KOW- Monday, June 30. Monteux, vet­ iphonic conducting there; sky." She often spoke about :*S?^5^'a>Ks NS&s mann A >finor Piano Concerto eran French conductor, is_a_£avj- "Tchai-KOW-sky's Conserto" in B [lato William Kapell mmie with the orchestra Thursday. June orite of the Claremont Heights New York appearance flat minor, but now uses the or-— t ofi nr\A*>r -_Uv* direction erf A4trx^ — summer audiences and ^nU Hfrpf** Hum at 19. thodox pronunciation of "con- ander Smailens. a City Collegre four concerts during the season. chairto." The audience usually Another highlight of the Sta­ ."ear, Lewisohn Stadium alumnus. Sina.'iens. who is re­ calls out corrections when she dium Concerts will be a Beeth­ its summer season June turning for his .'>0th Stadiu.Ti mispronounces something. After •£.,. +•»• «T :?*> oven Festival of four successive Leonard Bernstein con- season, will a !.-=n direct the an::':a: listening to them, she will repeat ^*- ^% *. JW concerts under the baton of the 36-pieee Stadium her mispronunciation saying that mj r George Gej-shwin Concert. Josef Krips. Erica Morini will be i *>° -'\j& "I never would remember it any­ ^s-'C^aa. the soloist Monday. July 14, play­ way." ing the D Major Concerto. Minnie Guggenheimer has two The "Eroica" symphony and problems when the lunimer'sea- •> w« the *'-Leonore"—Overture No. '\ son rolls around. One, the weath­ will complete the first Beethoven er, is a personal factor in the program. life of New York's outdoor music '<^f* The next night, Claudio Arrau impresaxia. Whon. Mir>wip^ nri»^*ct will be soloist in the "Emperor" in the morning, she telephonesrthe Weather Bureau ' at 15-minuteJ Piano Concerto and the 7th Sym­ intervals. She tries to talk them f» phony and "Coriolanus" Over­ JBUrry BeUfaate. appear*** in ture. TJie third program, to fee Lewis"Satchmo" IIHMIIHMIJI wfll out of adverse, predictions. Once "^1956, performed his popular performed Wednesday evening, repeat his crowd-pieaaing Jazz she exclaimed, "Mr. Christie, you •igfctrhih act of «©& ballads. can't ^o this. You're ruinitigmy ~] is Beethoven's 6th J^pho*?.' JamJborees for Stadium visitors. The 9th Symphony, with its season!" i^f^^ 4VOJP Bennett shared top billing. finale baaed oa- Schiller's ode-"To hear the. greatest of^^ymphonic She consults one of the viola -Many rare moments base been Joy," will climax the Xour-dny music under the open sky. It was players of the orchestra who experienced by Stadium audi- never raore essential than it ia festival Thursday evening- -T»ly "feels it in hiT~fijpn»g" n**™** th? en£*% who have heajiU jntrfowa^rs" ^IH.>.^. - • now that this- enterprise -should L ...... ^:" MM1 mmmamam likelihood "of" rain canceling a 1»^*WBHiMBMhfS!^S!^^&.* T^^B -W.L A. «. ' an3 fteir repertoire for the first be cont|nuejli.ipr.- it-is, one of the Leonard Pierre Moateux, veteran French scheduled performance. She/has IN A WORLB ^WgELF: A ,,^^??*» •«-»• Harry .BeUafon^. ^^ condnictor, will npm the means -by«. which we make clear eondaetac^ «• a favorite of aU> become superstitious on the sub- «*—« •••-» ' '•«•-« ••' ^ *— ^* : cent to. jt.hnvioji»ds-^.uf,Aw^gtean»rthaw leading the Bg-ajaco orchoatra. r -A .-^-i —. • i.--^^-e-». •-

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:-::•: $ Page 4 '" THE TICKER Tuesday, May 20, 195 r. May 20. 1958 THE TfCKER ••:+* •:it -. r tjj- V-^biafcisw-^— -:« and we have come-to coBegre^o' become TOIlSSI-lilliiiSrig^ ?;-/ 3--^ ^'whoie ment"r . - ^fust the other day, an Uptown student, ->•-& J Gluth Overc€*mes Handicap ^Twenty-Five Years of Responsible Freedom* with more insight than I'll ever have, ob­ served that the administrators of the- Col­ to a *ni Public Adn>utistrat*oa lege think in terms of an era long: "past. +r»m*pF> m£**i£~ "* •-• __..... _ . text without c&m*»enf~jrom tfie University of They believe, he said, that the City Coateg^ fexdn Daily Texan) .. *• -- J.-TlJf • *t -«awMgijy m^tm i —»>- T7 Lexington Avenue, New York City student is the socially conscious intellec- Baruchian John E. Gluth, Jr., has experienced many, of the same expectations —tual he unce was, and they act on this , There's a fcaratic sensation that's sweeping .the nation, and obstacles as other students, despite his physical disabiKtyblindness. ....JL-.L Vol. XL—No. 17 Tues,. May 20. 1958 illusion. I don't think I've met ten. intel­ JL relic xxf days long departed. Graduating this June, John chose City College because of its good' reputation. lectual students in three years here. (Again) A type of disease that is known as "chemise" "I could have gone to other schools in-this area which have greater 'snob appeal? And I'm sotnry it ever got started. but I preferred obtaining my training here. Here, where each student is virtually oj£:j It seems odd that some of the better Another term is almost over and another "thirty" column mi The feminine .shape is now covered tby drape. 3a faculty members have the toughest times be-written. "» - scholarship, the element~d1 This is the one for which I've been A -sack that -hang's- straight 'from the shou-Ldea-. 1 getting promoted). I have often wanted to Students will continue to pass and fail subjects, columnists wj ' waiting a long" time to write. It is my last A .sort of dress that is really a mess, — *-~^J ask editorially why this obvious injustice - continue. to write their "thirties" and the world wfll contir. LcHDOr S©Cr©t3rV ^AitCh.©Il th^uVenVlp^eriate the To be •Wjonn by 'those girls who are bolder. college more if this the article for THE TICKER and it is all mine. is occuring, but it Is impossible to #et spinning. A group of students will graduate in a few weeks and In. this last editorial of the semester, the through the maze of standardized answers. new group will eventually appear to take their place. Some studei - Now (gone acre the days when slyly we g-azed, case," he said. editor traditionally whites his "thirty"," Also, I never wanted to jeopardize the pos­ will continue to engag^_jn_^jrtra-curricular .activities, but most *i | And (to og?le the knees was •thought; shockinpr. Calls Job Prospects Good He has found . instructors- a*~ journalese for "the end," in the first person This year the "chemise" will uncover the knees the Baruch School to be, friendly ition of these teachers. - - not. ••'.-.-•»•_.' rather than the anonomous third. And quite a bit more, of the stockings. United States Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell an-i willing to help-when asked. I'm sort of ambivalent about the whole thing. I conld use tl| One of the funniest experiences I have Desigrted for concealTng- instead of ere veal ing said that the employment outlook for June graduates was He says that "if you don't prove And after three years at the School, this space to blast, at a conservative estimate, 90% of the readers had was reading a faculty member's criti­ The curves and the looks we've admired, "generally favorable." to be a burden to them they will" is a real "thirty" because it's also goodbye. last week's column for believing that I would allow anyone to uj cism of articles in THE TICKER of which This new style of sack with the slack in the back However, he qualified his statement by adding that, see you are really here to learn I'm going Uptown for my fitaal year and my space to write such trash. I find it difficult to believe I foist i he disapproved. He made the question one Means %he girdle can soon be retired. s although the jobs'were available, they required hunting. and in return will contribute to : tearing .myself from the place where so such a hoax. Or I could expose the people who tried to mtimidi of democracy versus totalitarianism, \ and, Now men can -be gypped by those women eou^PPed Mitchell made particular ref- • the subject matter."" He" also much of my life has been lived. me this term—and there were five—in regard to things I hi of course,, we represented " the bad W With the means for concealing the torso. erence to accountants, who can However, the recession is a thinks that the curriculum at the written or was going to write for this paper! I could give my vie' The Baruch School has meant much to It clarified what I mean when I write For no matter how fat—she can cover all that look forward to an average start­ "temporary situation" which will Baruch School is adequate and on the function of the college press and show how freedom of l me almost' since the first day I walked about mass education. And she'H 'look just as good—maybe more so. ing salary of $415 per month in be changed by forces already at well rounded. But, he feels that press is in danger at the Baruch School right now. I could ev< through it doors. It has had a profound in­ larger firms, he said. work in the economy. New grad­ more liberal arts courses are a I remember how my best friend today brag about the "First Class rating the paper won last term (. So please -hesitate when you pick up your date fluence on my life and I would be less than He also noted that opportuni­ uates, he emphasized, must not giant step in the right direction. was my worst enemy during our first year .though we weren't All-American) from the Associated Collegia And the girl friend shows up in the sacking. honest in saying that, after often spending ties for salesman are "very allow the "current situation" to Formerly employed by the here. Although he is a successful politician Press^when we received, proportionately the highest point total-., It's a pretty guess, that her body's a mess 60 hours a week here, that I have not grown ~ Or that^something important is lacking. - ,gooii^L Jobs in insurance, banking: change their long term view of country's largest firm of naval despite my, unrelenting opposition, and I oar history. But I won't. I'll save some of this for future -columi 1 attached to it. and the retail trade will be more th* nations economic health. architects a«4 m»rine_ engineers, am an unsuccessful politician and, even and columnists. -— — —' , y > •«s»^^^«^elow those of a few mental capacity is not put to use,* college. How "Ttnany people, either faculty faculty relations" and the like. It's such kid stuff! Who years ago." is actually declining ..." ff The fun we have had at games real mHU». _ T— or students, really respect this institution? John believes "that - when "»-" w»- under the 46 Club bannei wrili always be r We all kid ourselrea by thinking that Although the present presi­ t» e», A MOUNTAIN RESORT VACATION Shop at .. . businessman starts a business he- we are getting a college education while, dent is an incompetent, and we have al­ he can vote "yea" 'or "no" takes a risk. He is wondering the facts show that most of us are here ready seen the decline and fall of the 45 club's appacarioa fjor PRICED FOR YOUNG BUBGETS J. J. O'BHIEH ft SOU why the same reasonhujj? doesn'% for our "union card." How many faculty Club at the School, it was fun in "the good balking on odd or even floor AT CAMP FREEDJHAN apply ~XJO someone willing to work* Mt-i is the kind of triviajity tl members really care a^bout the students? old days." ~l?veiy time I think of Steve (Opposite CCNY) if given a chance to deliver. I once heard two professors talking in the Mann, one of theTbrightest guys t*ve known, large part of tfcpicextra-ci FOB SINGLE I8r28's ONLY I He may not iind employment in. elevator about how they only showed exam­ lead the "nuts and bolts" cheer, I laugh. ricwlar program. But it's not On a rprivat' e lake in the beautiful Berkshires. All sports. r*d- GREETING CARDS FOR ALL OCCASIONS^ the business world;, if. tiiis is so*-. ination papers to students who failed. I entire picture. wg, fr«> dawce ami tenuis lessens. G» t» Tangiewood, svm- he will become a Lighthouse _-•.-„'•-. A can't count the number of teachers who It has been fun and I've had a lot of good —The student who benefits nv msme Hiaatmi CawipHrci. hoe-downs, musicales, dramatics. Serving CCNY Students Since 1864 teacher. In this- position, hte'wiftr- ^i4 times at the Baruch School. The intellectual extra-curricular activit: parties galore in a warm, feel-welcome atmosphere. A have said that they do not give as much non-profit camp at rates you can afford. HURRY JUST try to reintegrate the blind so—- work as they should because their students atmosphere is stifling^ and most of the the one who" realizes, that 50 GUYS AND 50 CALS EACH WEEK! Call or write, Printers, Stationers, Artists 123 East 23rd Street _ cially with their friends and ft work. people are faceless, but my days here will of it is trivia—and te| CAM* FREEDMAN. 1395 Lexington Ave.. N.Y.C. AT 9- Supplies, Drafting Materials New York City ily so they too may become more): be among my most pleasant memories. 056*. (Affil. with Fed. of Jewish Philanthropies). Whatever the reasons,. let's face the himself that this is so—and ? adjusted to their envii facts. This School uses every mass educa­ I have met four Baruch School faculty enjoys participating. tion technique known. Most students do members whom I believe have elements The benefits are many. Aside from self and ego satisfacti not extend their extra-class conversations of greatness in them. I would love to name one acquires friends. with teachers beyond the ten-minute class theme Tiere ahoT thank them for. all they Friends,~it need not be said, are important. One cannot haj intervals, and most teachers are glad not have done for me, but they still have to a good friend, however, unless he "lives" with him day-in, day- to be bothered. work here, and I don't feel like making and takes part in his frustrations and anxieties, his failures their task any more unpleasant. successes, likes and dislikes. This is what .makes a true friend.- I submit that this School, its environ­ had I not met people ;who are .truly friends, on this newspaper xi Spot Cash ment, its curriculum, and most of its fac- What THE TICKER has meant to me in the extra-curricular program, — and there are only a few ulty and students points up something can not ^easily be expressed. I have never preciOUS few, Of them it is JTwioorf qnn^tinnnhlo TPhathar nr profoundly wrong^ If quality ever had any—suffered the illusion that this newspaper these past three years would have been so rewarding. g llS h WaS r th mft|1Y f Y T was sitting in the office Pihlaj with t»u fiieuda ami we w Srgg*Wn ^duec d t o ^"^gg^r-tg-" "^ **"* ° »* **»** ^ T Baruch School. cared what was written. But I have worked lamenting "the good old days" and believe me, they were goad. Th< with people who care and this has given days are gone but they remain in one's memory and cShnot Take last year, when we circulated a me more pleasure than anything I've ever erased. We told ourselves that we were today** Old Guard, but we i petition for the Sharkey-Brown-Isaacs bill. tealU only the Middle Old Guard. The Old Guard is the 3e Di«carded Books The number of people who cringed at the known. To Stew Kampelmacher, my - boss Greenbergs, the Wally Nathans, the Steve Schatts, the Sam Pe.H thought of signing the petition was amaz­ last term, and Richie Gurian, the man who sons and Ruth Cohens, the Richie Kwartiers and the Steve Mar- (yes, even books discontinued ing The effects of that fiasco have not yet really put out THE TICKER this term, I They're all plodding their separate ways now. Some seniors, p> worn off, although I sort of suspected the am sure they know what I feel when I sibly a few juniors,' might recognize the name, but to abn< results beforehand. at your college) say, thank you. To my other editors and everyone else, a name is a name, and it doesn't mean a thii If there is anything more wrong in col- staff members- who—helped with—THE— _These people have left their imprimatenr. and their legacy is -wii us today. lege than seeing students vegetate, I have TICKER this term, best of luck. .... ,? not thodght of it. Even at the very art of There are nh more on-issues at whj fast talking and soft-selling Baruch School You save for the end the few people a basketball game is in progress; there are .no_ more people to students are stumbling, deficient amateurs. who have .made your Life most meaningful. plaLC^Li5 wheefoarrowg' and poshed, down Pauline Edward* Xhea: And this, of att^ things; is what we come And although I wouldn't think of leaving in the midst of a Theatron dress, rehearsal; there are no nv to be de-pantsed; there are none with whom one can play garbaj We pay top prices for books in current here to learn. Culture, which few of us them out, it seems unnecessary to say ever sought, has not subverted the School basketball; there are no more people with whom one" can sing * * • in 'any significant sense. something that I'm sure they know already. night away over one or two beers «t the Rathskellar; andtJaere •< demand. Bring them in NOW before time However inadequate, I^arry, Janet, Ed, certainly none who will cheer at the top of their lungs when t Lack of conviction is the thing most ap­ Owen and Izzie, thanks for the wonderful Beaver basketeers are 28 points behind and three minutes rem- 'i parent in Baruch School students. Yeats, in the final, period: . as I have said so often, summed it up more times we spent together. depreciates their value. They're gone note, all gone. than 50 years ago as he looked forward to And to my mother and -father, thank you the twentieth century: . And I have another year'to go. -' •» for all youl have done and all you have — 30 Th* fog* 7/TY?ZT of. aU conviction, while the worst .. meant to me. Goodbye. Allow me' to take this opportunity to congratulate Mor' Hgrunts, tkitt toiim'o outgeinff oditor-in-vhief—fur an. 'oulslanu ,••*.•.;•:*• Are /till of TXissionate intermity. job. He leaves the paper with~~the full knowledge that^fte has j> Here we are and most of us don't give •l-r formed a high service for this School. St N O JL a damn about anything. Get us a job, no Best wishes and good luck to Richie Gurian, nex} term's ediii matter how we sell our souls in the process and to his staff. Their task is a difficult one and I- am confid' C CNY — A B OVE THE •mm' * • ^^A,- and we will be frap^yn-^gais^what we are iiiininiiii rr in mi ^i ^^i •»• >ff j^tf j t M 11 M M

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=—-• ~Thirgy9 •- '* City Beaten Baruchian By Mel Winer ~ ^Thg ~ShrFrT. n:—- ,. ... -.-; —~Z —^— __ *W W.M »--. -T%w is it, tihe end, the fiirisJi, aawi the last byline to appear in tH a p«rfessaona2 advertising- ifnatern- Two three-run outbursts in the ^^^^^° ^ report issued last week by the Ameri "] TICKER. In journalistic terms, it is know as thirty, and this is my s^S*^***-^ Assocation. Tfie writers of the reporHre ity for women, 'has ^announced its sixth and eighth innings by Brook­ officers for next term. lyn College dropped the City * , _ - By Richie Cohen ^^2*pZ~,- <•- \ - .» When I first realized that someday in the not too distant future College nine into the cellar of They aire: President, Odette "Go out there and do your best," said coach Jofta--La- *3 I would be called upon to write a thirty column, many thoughts cross- the Metropolitan Baseball Leagne, Place when he sent Stu Weiss out on-the mound f?a> #aee^V; Bitiran; Vice President*. §0pdjEa studv the _ m L £& y ^^pd as to what I -wtndd want to say. Now that I am wyrtiing Saturday., the Metropolitan LeagTie's perennial . poweJFJ>owflcr' Miam* ^ Welnirop; Tireaeuirer, Rose Adler; establishing- the station, was it,, I fmdSt hard to express them. The Kingsmen won, 7-2, but only hattan College, May 12. Not a very enviable assi^npaent, v, lg5**i"««Hed.any national not present. FinJcel further stated that he Recording- Searetatry, Beth For*- after they shelled Baruchian Stu especially for a pitcher who, before that day had Wertl W^y^ a-camel's nose in educa- is in (favor of seezrar- "what hap­ There are of coarse, tihe memoaries, amd I have had my share^of : sJieit; Corresponding Secretary, The committee wiM -present a Weiss from the mound with^the two out of 14 contests- dur- ^——- : ' • *?*?- Both history and foJk- pens on ail extrancunricular V•« thein: Thursday ni^hrts in 911B tryioig to think of ideas for stories, Susan Saffran; Publicity Ohair- full report at the next meeting, * sixth inning . barrage. Until that ing his three years on the *"»-*«• sot his second waaa»*s>^ •^^w^-_. **&&** that the camel will basis" .to ascertain the demand L reading proofs Monday mg-kts att the printers, the trip to Maryland : which will be held early next se­ time, Weiss had held the Bfook- City College varsity" the tentdi inning, and limited tfaeV «»*entoaJIy take over. This is the last issue of THE man, Denyce Harfenist; Report­ mes ter; f oar a station. last year- to wateih. the basketball team compete in a tourney, the lynites to six hits, and the Beav­ __ ^ ,. « . -_ Jaspers to one hat the lOirt "jifv f^. ^**^*-said -that highly restricted TICKER to appear this term. er, Laura PockelJ; Historian, Howgaseay., Profftssaai, JMJarsball ".~--"tflttttD of coverisng: a baskeitbaU game from the pre^abox—these are The resufe was a 10-9 wm for ^ ^ ^T~^§^ ... i#Wral grants for scientific re­ Bunni Zuekermen, Professor William Fdnkel, ers led, 2-1. .: s&m The next issue will appear the Berger, member of a committee, Jjmy jacmiwiucfc, perhaps smaii and' insignificant to some, bint to me, search migrht be necessary and ohadrnfan of the Speech Depart­ The BCers he#an the sixth with Stu smarted his pitcJHn^^^K*er_i2i first day of next lermTrhose appointed in 1956 by President jnemwies that will last. _l^S^d be alright if adequately- FOS ment, saud that ;there are two a double to left by Irv Marko- at Thoonas Jefferson Hjgfe^heol. -~~. Bueli G. GaJiagtoer to study the -;*Jf*#uarded against government- who wish to place advertise­ The Freshman Orientation. ways by which the station could There -were times-when the work on TICKER so monopolized my witz whe seeped ~on a single The 5* 10" dhucJoear, W*bf &&&<£• •be esfcaolisihed. same problem, stated that it mainly upon a curve ha3tt» IUBK ^ : . ** **terference. ments for the first issMe may Society has also announced -next thnertSta* I orfiten consid«red quitting the paper; I never did, and for through the nuodle by Jack Fish- would be very difficult for a stu­ big pitch, finished hist i£gh"'~ ---respite this report, general do so now during the sum­ term's officers. They aa?e: Matt "If*'it's to be^j^aaea-cnrricular, that, I am ^lad- I learned more in a year and a haif on TICKER than man. With still no men out, Bob or dent group to organize and oper­ schootl senior year wjtJh.j_-»"',:^P4*> •- ,««ntiiwrtraiw)ng educators seems -Z-evison, president; Myles Merl- the only problem jk finajnciaJ. I had in my entire life. Middleman unloaded a three-bag­ mer, in 9UB. ate an FM stataon. record. It must be noted-tStiKt — -r?fe that Federal aid is needed in;£*» view is" held by both the kens, Treasurer;. Joe Hankin, courses in radio techndques to be Kingsmen their second run of the estiraa&ed the ina£jal cost for the what one's vierwrpointt may be, maturity will mean different things. cream of the Brookly* high, .Rational Education Association Secretary. offered by ithe College, it's an­ inning. other matter," he said. station at $5,000 and the maxi­ To myself, it is the realization of what is true and what is false, a school baseball nines, AiUMaifc' iniu -an* the United tSates Office of After getting Dom Parrelli on . ^ mum ma internee cost at $1,000. ^ definition which itself may^eem ambiguous to many. - Edacation. an attempted.squeeze, Weiss "was of Stu's wans in high schwol^ was" a sparkling one-hit shatt&Rt He ~~^-~ —^J^b, these organizations fee] N\ '~T entered college with a certain set of values, a set of values replaced by Luby Mlynar. Marty 1 "• that the bills they favor would not which presentiy seem to be losing much of their orijrinal identity.-1 Herman, BC hurler, was the first losrt his Jrid for a perfect gfeaneron a scratch hit in frh«> f i&t.br- mnw^r -y 1 Jead- to any interference bv the was, at one time, extremely idealistic: I .find this ideairsm .gradually batter to face Mrynar, and he . Federal government. tua3iing'--kBtx> cynicism. I find myself realizing, and at times, even helped- his own eausejby lifting SUt Weiss of the game. A aeSolaialiip, Uie rftudy'"said. ' 'belie vflftg, III "the possibility of the end of mankind. I seem to be dis- a fly deep enough to left field •Aifihjongh not sma^^WS&ErC""' " "tends to make the recipient . . . ouwaving to my dismay that the world is not as beautrfui as I once so that Middleman could score this Baruchian, who went a rec­ Stu must be considered A .giants" ,. ; a direct ward of the government. througfct it to be. with ease. ord 13 innings, to be the winning killer. He has beaten Mainhaifiban '^ *? - twice, and - once, .. His obligation to Washington The Kingsmen scored again in pitcher. Although Stu started off I've often been jokingly told that since I write sports, I cover for his three Conference wans. overrides his obligations - to his the type of news that shouldn't be in a newspaper. I can now see the eighth when Fishman walked, the game by allowing 7 runs in loca>2 government and even to the The senior, who is r Sbuidying. ,.„^ y, w&y this may be tr»e» Middleman was hit by a pitch and the first five" innings of play, institution which provides his ed- Dick Schneppes singled them both^ accountancy, eaan credit bimself Ooach LaPlace kept^ him in the £ucafion." Sports is-unrealistic; the rules that appJy on the playing- field home after - Parrellh sacrificed with a w-eil-eiajriied vioto^y, and are iroles that do not apply on the playing field of '.ife. Athletes are game. The coach's confidence in j^Tlfeg most evident^jPttPTPp^ ^ them. debit a lost MJefatapxxK- judged aodciji mi l&sekr performance, not on whether their parents ;a •••1 j-jPOOjgerairiga_ JjetSE^en. the- Federol The Beavers scored early in the _, iSaso.'ttas^baS crowti. - -.^.."."^'i -and; state governments are the cotlUB Auui' ItaJy or Russia, or whether they are Jewish or Catholic, second inning, when Baruchian •AffiC or bteck or white, or Democrat or Republican. The performers in land-grant colleges,, established in ROBBERS .<*aM^*«k«B**fcitari^«.,-^M-.I_. Don Weiss, unloadeld a homer to everyday life are judged, not on their record, but by decisions made 1962, by the Morfll Act. often, in feet, that bank.officWa StJlSJ H^TZ?"*' deep right center, which almost Steiner, Ettis to Att^ad Ued hold by prejudice, intolerance, bigotry and even anarchy. This is why I reached the fence 450 feet away. ««M -tips. But sometimes the em***»~ -Till 5^"?* ^ onbnaiy ^ si they thai my irtnnilifim stowly diminishing. Scoring ahead of Weiss was Tim. ! Sullivan, who got on base via an Inter eollegiate Tourney MOM'S to cauae My tonicity cohmm co-nid nx>t be complete without thanking the Beaker Rancor! Why? Smmfe C!7if» ^"^ few who. helped me more than they probably realize they did. It is error. Varsity tennis stars Bernie Steiner and Ronnie- JE: r!) tastes like a mmoZb^^L^L^f^ <*»*<«»••*«* •» ant aeOJBHMry iSbr me to teD how they helped me, but just necessary Weiss protected bis scant.lead were selected to represent City College at ihe NaT"" #MMRHI6y MM XO naturally light, V»*SS£S52£F1^** " loir wnm MO aay tthanfas to Morton Horwitz, Stew Kamplemacher, and until the fourth inning, when Collegiate Invitation Tournament for colleges at fiW RESTAURANT Rioaoni Gnrian. To Ann Sagmund and Andy Meppen, and to my two Fishman went to third on an zoo, Michigan, June 8-12. aomdmaors^ 1 w«»t to wish the besO^f hick. by left fielder Suttrvan and The tournament, in which the top colleges jtrmonc scored moments later on a single _ Chxnese^AToerican Asbd above all to my parents, thanks for everything. over the country will be rep­ tlmjugii the middle by Middle- LUNOFfBON 70c resented, is open to colleges wilL be the first th#^ WHAT 16 A 4MSAOnBM^ rather than universities. It City players will artie&d ttj&ip "- DINNER 95c KTWSN JNSGCTS? WHSAT S A SPAMSM tpTTUJ? tourney. i :3z" •} • On June 2, the Muliiapulllafi!J* [j 119 East 23rd St. Tournament will open -at '"Pta^*^' _ Institute in Brookrynl" Cfe^ wfipf^i J send Bernie Steiner, Jay^axiiinelt ! and Bamtlriau JS3Ke£$1uxu& to *pax--'^T- ~' ARE YOU SURE ; COUNSELORS ticiuate m the- sirfgieg «nj|>a»QhK^' ^ " • YOU D0NT NEE0 A chauAuiuushius. Otoer MaaT^aFggtoi - i m will send players are: p.esF * 4 MAMS DEODORANT? Adelphi, Iona, Brooklyn gory .0 OF MASS. Gnat Spat I t—race. '- ; " ...... LjJ* All SpeciaTrfeV, TsTSE's In its finai match-of; the aea^Sw '" 1 ^TMyn & Queens Res. Only TO MAT 3t WHAT IS A SOVX SECRETARY? son Saturday, the tennie t4«ni^Dal^; .-. | to Fordham Universit3r %-$L* z\_S^f( \\ BROAD CHANNEL T DAY CAMP ALL WEARING APPAREL :rz^ £44 Kings Highway For fhe Very Brooklyn, N. Y. PARTIAL LISTING — F O O -*«!.!>»)•.. Formerly HOW

<- SWEATSHIRTS 2 25 1.12 VO R I T E . . . TUBE'S Qttlr ^rttff! ^y -PRICES— ^ NING OUT! Better gpt DICANS 3L19 ; *» O* CoB^ Stud«rt, your Sticklers in fasti (You 1.58 It's the *i »t • haven't lived if ynn hjBUWMi^" Stickled!) Sticklers «re-^mr T-SHrRTS i r - mmi TttAAI'C rhyming answe»e. ITyytft CAUCHOS^ "(Wh,>7& Cray) " 2.9§ VARSITY words must ^aye-^tibe aftme 1.49 number of ajrU&kfeo. (©orft it - v^ do^drawiBgB j Stfhd otatofcg Mennen Spray Deodorant for Men keeps _ of-enx with your namct, ad- on working all day long—forking to RESTAUKANT flrBiBn. ooUf^e ax^jl class "to BARNES & NOBLE, Inc. Happy-J56e-I-ucky, Box 67A, prevent odor, working to check perspiration. *B*JCTE PRICES Aft- Vernon, N. Y. For this non-stop protection, get Mennen! SINCE 1873 6QC and M.QO 23rdST^STORE \^flM $2>SI For eoch college cartoon situation tvbni&lmdBfod and used! ShovShowr how SmodloSmodley oofs mfhe ervsnorrbrvshoffIs ACfcOSS THE STREET FROM CITY COLLEGE •fcpteh or doscriptioa emd. namo^address and coll>a> to tattaen Company, c/o. **Siii»dl»y ", MoiriBtown, W. J. J FLICHT UP •»**«•.#•,•:»*— .»-

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f €3H:"J!!PM!tW .lJft!^^C£*LT JITBM'^y'r*^. f—-••^—.••—^ ...'. .^ gV J, tMt f^mZmnm**^? iSajafa^ift>*^P>i» .m.jgi^^gmmtzimE-i^m ToM'-tii' •«* H^ITI''~ i.iV» »"*•' fit'- »»a **?&?•$,>.• the College dropped a game to St. Francis by f our points. The Beavers led at halftime and, were it not for the absence of Bob Silver, top Lav­ Soccer ender rebounder, might have very Well upset ... If achievement is to be the criteria by which the Terriers.- * - one measures the importance of a sports story, The rest of the season had little to offer in then undoubtedly the College's winning of the -the ways of thrills unless one considers the -national soccer co-championship deserves to be municipal champion-race one to get excited ranked as the outstanding Beaver sports story about. The Lavender clinched the league crown of the 1957-58 year. by routing Brooklyn for the second time during The winning of the championship wa^r^the the^ season. The team was vastly out classed first such triumph for a Lavender athleti^: squad in its contests against, NYU and St. John's, since 1950, when the basketball team ran off although it did manage to put up a fight before with an undisputed national championship. But going down to defeat. unlike the basketball victory, the soccer cham­ -2\ pionship was one that the Beavers found them­ selves sharing with another school. Oddly Utt enough, the other co-champion was Springfield Baseball College of - Massachusetts, the team which In reviewing the 1958 season for the Col- stopped the Beavers from gaining national rec- lege'snine, one can only comment that it's get­ ognition in 1956. ting to be a habit, but unfortunately, a losing — *- In ~~aTranging a schedule for the 195J7 one.. The Beaver nine once again found - i season, the College, aided by the breakup holding up the rest of the Metropolitan League of" tie-metropolitan conference into two divi­ by finishing in what seems to have became its sions, was able to arrange games with three permanent residency in. the Conference, last schools with a national soccer reputation. The place. schools were Rensellaer Polytechnic Institute, However, this time the tgjaa'vers' occupancA JBrockport State Teachers College and Temple of last place wasn't assupwfuntfl the next U University. Army, the traditional foe, also re­ last game of the season when the Lavendei mained on the Lavender schedule. dropped a 7-2 contest'to Brooklyn College, wh* tlu» ^tagfe..-mas-set -fuErthg '"College's hadn't recordod A^ictory junta il^fiissfe meeting Soccer "team To prove if it was really as good earlier iu the season.—At as many people at the College thought it was. The team was playing three top ranked soccer The 1957-58 basketball story could be divided *£ M^-^<0^- ** schools, two of which had at one time won a ^ national championship. The only question now in two separate parts, one concerned with the was whether the Beavers could beat them. coaching, the other, with the team. Part of this question was answered in the The coaching story did not involve the Qtral- affirmative after the team's first game of the ity of the coaching, but just who^is^ the season when it defeated RPI, 3-0, in a contest coach. The coach for the 1957-58 season was that contained little doubt as to its final out­ Dave Polansky merely because NatHohnan de­ come. In the team's next outing, a league game cided to take - a State Department sponsored against Long Island University, the Beavers tour of <£apan for the^purpose of teaching tied a conference record by scoring nine goals. basketball to the Japanese youngsters. This After a 7-1 rout of Adelphi, the College announcement, jnajie^ny Holman m September, scored one of its biggest victories of the season caused speculatjeti at the College as to whether Holman wqukfeyejr. again .coach a City College five. -^ Upon his return- in February, the original : ^ •>:**>&:>&&££>?& : ;^SgS Mr. Basketball stated that he expects to coach :<•:•» the Beavers during the 1958-59 season.'This ^SKSS^sS:^ _ in tuxxt -led to -a -na^-controversy-4md * few columns of newspaper print as to whether Hoi - man should be allowed to return to the coaching ranks. since the -likeable Dave Polansky had H/xwo a |jh^ jy>K aritK- thfl r^lloflp'g Giro Wftiw. ever, the controversy soon died down, and at &>?*-:>* present It-appears-as if- Holman will coach the Lavender five next year. The season itself did not provide much ex­ citement. The team- did win more games than it lost, taking nine of its 17 contests, but un­ present, the Beavers still have a chance to es­ like its predecessors of .the previous season, the cape the cellar as'they have one contest left tv ^Beavers were unable to score a win over any play; the game, however, is with NYU, and th< major metropolitan foe. The team did succeed Violets are leading the Jeague^Tat^tJBg^moment. in winning the municipal cTiampiorJship for-the The .season got off to an auspicious start, ^when it edge

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