Liss ... Purim Gone: Issue Next ... ommrntatnr Scrapped Official Under graduate Newspaper of Yeshiva College

NEW YORK �232 NO. 6 VOL. LXXIX WEDNESDAY, APRIL 24, 19--74 ------YESHIVA UNIVERSITY, ------YCSC Elections Held; Senate Argues On Schac·ter Keynotes YVi BibleRequirem-ent, Eisenberg In _As Head A Business Min-or Holocaust Observanc·e By HOWARD WIEDER · . IBy HOWARD WIEDER With approximately 69% of all students voting, Larry By HENRY ZUPNICK In an emotionally charged speech marked by a sharp Eisenberg amassed a landslide victory to become the next At the Senate meeting of attack on United States Secretary of State Henry Kissin­ President of the Yeshiva College- Student Council. Mr. April 19 Senator Weinstein pre­ ger, Rabbi Herschel 'Schacter, a prominent leader of the e t e · s nted to he S nate a plan w Eisenberg; currently Junior Class e American Je ish community, Mr. Eisenberg waged an ,aggres- for revising the .Bibl .program, "kiddush Ha'Shem in a senseless, President, defeated Glenn Hirsch, e e spoke at the Holocaust Memorip.l e siv door-to-door campaign. w WYUR E� cutive Secretary and which had be n devised by · a e rootless, Godless orld?" Amidst e Day Observanc on Thursday, . e - The campaign itself was de- committe consisting of Dean audible cries and sobs in the Junior Class S cretary-Treas e t t April 18 at Lamport Aud1torium. urer, by a 332 (62%) - 203 void of any,"burning" issues and Bacon, stud n sena ors and audience, he continued, "Silence unm by the hurling of e Rabbi Schacter was the first 3 vote in the YCSC Execu- arred members of the Bible D part­ riluy best e�press our grief, but ( 8% ) e Jewish Army Chaplain to enter e tive Board elections held on m nt. dar we be silent? ... No, we March 28. The plan is similar to the .one will not forget. No, we will not e e te t e t e e The reason for the ·,overwhelm­ pr s n d by a group of s ud n be sil nt wher ver in the world e w e w ing majority vote may have been senators at the last me ting but Je ish lif is at stake, herever provides· for two more terms of in the world Jewish status and attributable to the campaign e style of Mr. Eisenberg, a YP mandatory on -credit courses in honor is threatened. No, no, a . student ,majo,ring in Pre,med. In addition to the ten credits to thousand no's ! We must not only e be taken in the first six terms. remember who they were, but an effort fo meet ach student, e However, th plan gives the (Contimted on Page 4, Col. 1) student the option of taking Buying Kosher Meats these 2 last courses p-n, or for no credit. (The only require­ Harry Fischel School And Especially 'Glatt' ment being that he pass these e Announces New Plans Costly In N. Y.C. Area cours s.)· Keating Questions Values For Summer Session · City housewives making their pre�Passover meat In the discussion that follow- By ROBERT KANTOWITZ purchases encountered prices av- Paul Millman e "L h' La • ed, Prof. Keating qu stioned the Paul Millman The Harry Fischel School for eraging ten per cent higher than aug mg rry ' . value of -a eourse where no Hi her e sh - Rabbi Herschel Schacter . g J wi Studncerns· ; ; ; -: I ··lie- · m ent' .in ::".YC ' be'; abolished nd p ry e e - · a ressi�n oh his memo ; He re- · cial r sources- of Y shiva Uni­ fluctu-ation� . · i_n prices. we.re r�- . ..li eve t�t- running -. for officeJn- , ·. t a W!'.>1'.iJd-:more'appropr iately '. calls ••,running versit during the regu ar year, t e e e h t.it · froin . baIT-acks· to · .. y l · pot' ed from th diff r nt areas. volves niore-than ,plaste�ri'g w,alls · · bert-Belkm-. that • th .-· :he s'iiw many l r e ·ne.s 'o .'boil . : understanding through· . an . ex� e a g · p f -· . isn poor. · Ac�raing to ·. th ,- lak -of us)' :·'. , -. - . ·• ,· :·,:-. _: ,> -·: · • .' ·,·• -:.•Pre.sident,•'wiU--give:- his ,approval. . · ·. · .. . • . . . -· .. · · . -change - of ·ideas with·recognized . · . . 1 t · b s l . : · est stafi_stic.s , co� pile. . _ : _ .: �r.; �-l!!�e�ber,g ::aav��t_ed\�·� ;•:i 13ji"�n;-:; ,a.i,lnio�pce11'· . �pat · by_· a _. ,-�l� c -�b _: .\a e\:� :s · ·, , . F_urthenrior ; _ .C stud n _ 35:7, QO e.ws, v r ua wen y . ati ut e r ; s · � .. � - 1 t U�. � ! .. ,�r()v.in� :3:11� ex�n�in�-?� ��·.· · J.i':'�!)im<>�\vo e t a ulty a - �:= e e e J �_' ��· F e ew , c � . that I w U nev r f ef. ,as l n wh�_ :ar int rested in · th B�/ r cent f o k s o a oE1 _ i org o g pe_ . o � Y 1 _ : .t t l , cll-� ���gryun.s:ott �pre\lllO�•�r,-: •· prov,� 'fS����hment o b s1- · e w w. 1 0 e , � u -as G,a gives m a m emory."· : · . MA •pro�am in ·Je ish �tudies- _Je ISh.-I,>OPUlatio!), have n� In s · B e .. m1tiated and · -·m.a,iageus and publicized. These facts along with senior Associate Editor hec:utlve ldltor t'o1iuses on a few of the outstanding lenders at Yeshiva. Those class apathy account for the fact that so JOSHUA SCHWARTZ ALL.AN KAPI.AN inflicted \\ith this malady re1;1ard these notables as_ indispensable few of _the senior students participated in C:011trlbuting Editor Se11lor Editor to the University's existence. It is felt tha-t Yeshiva can function the election. Because . of the lack of par­ JEFFREY WANDEL HOWARD SCHRANZ as the unique eJt'tity that it was meant to be only under the tutelage · ticipation, the election has been in a state Feature Editor Protects Editor o.f these great men. Thus, gloomy apprehensions of "Who ean of limbo for about . a month and at this STEVE REISBAUM STEVEN MANl)ELSBERG, reph1ee • . ." and "What will happen when • • ." abound setting a late . date there has been no i-esult -an- Sports Editor News Editor 1mll of despair on Americaa's oldest a11d largest. nounced. MARK 'SRULOWllZ MARK BR�\,OW The fear is, of .course, -based on .r�allty - in the course of THE COMM'ENT.l'ATOR urges the ad­ Mal!e•up Editor eopy Editor . human events leadershiip ,has ·to pass on no matter how revered ministration to more widely publicize this ASHER MANSDO�F and great the leaders. However, despite tbis human pl;'edicament, election, to set . definite. hours . for . voting, Research · Editor history has shown that the test .of men ,have ibeen · survived and appoint responsible .perjlonnel to .ad­ ,grea minister the ballot. It also urges the senior Technical· Board ,by the institutions they created. It. js precisely this historically proven fact that does not arouse · faith at Yeshiva. class to take a more·· active part -in this. AVI BITTON, SH�L,DON PAl.�ON ,matter. Such an . election is bnportant . for ,· A11l1tant to the Editor-In-Chief By1IHH MJ"lllr My purpose Is, in no · way, to· mln,linize .the linportallce · of the · the . choice .will represent not only . the contribution that these dignitaries have made to Yeshiva and ihe PAUL Ml LLMAN . · ELI SEIDMAN senior class . but all people· directly .. involved Photography . E;dltor l■raell Bdlb!r American Jewish (,'OffllllUDlty. I look upon YU as a maJnsta.y of with Yeshiva College. Orthodox Jewry 1md have the deepest admiration· for lb. founders· RICHARD ADLER, LEONARD FRIEDMAN, . scholars and lenders. ARTIE STRENGER, ROBERT JETTER. . ; ..t;Ji,;ulatlon . Edltl!f'■ ,what concerns me, however,· ls the sense of Impending doom about any sort of turnover at Yeshiva,. This attitude is disturbing Without· Election LEWIS WEINRelCH Typing Editor on two counts. On the one hand, it seems to suggest that Yeshiva has been a failure. One measure of success for any institution or Looking back upon the schoolyear soon Stclff movement is its ability to perpetuate itself. It may take men of drawing to an end, . one cannot help but Newa: ISRAEL WAHRMAN, HOWARD WII!;DJl'JR, PAVllJ incomparable insight to found these instituUons and movements, notice the achievements of Yeshiva College BLASS, RaphJel Aharon, Benjam.ln A,r)1esfeld, Av�ry H. l',jin• but their job is incomplete if they have not also created the per­ Student Council. Among others, four people horn, La1Ty ·Feder, Robert Kantowlt:i:, Ephraim Kanarfogel, deserve special recognition for their out­ Nel�on Korcl1ak, Barry List, Larry Russak, Charles Spangle!, sonalities to maintain their ideals and commitments. In order to Judry Suhar, Marvin Weinberg. Feature DAVID GLEICHER, have a long lasting impact that spans several generations, an standing programs - Lenny Fuld and AI.L� SCHWARTZ, JEFF STRASHUN, Philip Kazlow, G!U'Y institution must be self-perpetuating and not contingent upon the Mark Speiser for excellent-selection of films Llpsteln, Barry Saltzman, Arttiur Scharft William Stqck. guidance of rare and unique ·individuals. Its successors need not they showed as co-chairmen of the audio­ Copy: S1'EWAR1' KESSLER, DAVID RECHTMAN, Larry visual committee, Marc Hanfling for doing Mosco,:ltz, Rick Eisenberg, Harry Zupnlck, Robert Berkoiv. be of the same caliber as its founders - but there must be room Reaearch : Jay Dobkin. Sports: LARRY EISENBERG, for successors. Thus, if the Torah . U'madah ideal is truly, con­ a yeoman's job in organizing the Shabba­ YANKEE POLEYEFF, Norman Amsel, Gnry Balsam, ;fay tingent upon the efforts of a select few, Yeshiva University and tons, and Glenn Hirsch for his innovative R.lchman, Arty Stark, Rick Zcckel. Typing: Nathan Schwel�er, all it stands for is, in essence, a failure management of WYUR. THE COMMEN• Louis Weinrich. Motograplty:· Jon Schneck, E. Ehrlich. '. TATOR takes note of this effective func­ Bu1lne11: Stuart Bernstein, Noam Rlefman·. Israeli Correspon­ Secomlly this pessimistic sentiment stands in the way of tioning of Council and can only conclude dent: Yaakov Sprung, Makeup: Stan Frohllnger, P.aul Lerer, 11rngrcss and growth. Rather than facing the challenges of tomor­ that organizations can function despite stu­ Stanley Goldschmlclt. row the Yeshlva ocmmunlty can only ponder the glories of yester­ dent apathy. In contrast, however, we also year. Those infllcte1l with the aforementioned malady only foresee take note of the stagnation of the Student Yeshiva's imminent declbte. They do not trust the University to Councils of the Jewish Studies Divisions 1micee11 through succeeding generations. They lack the sense of ·and hope the next year's councils will aban­ Clean Election conl'ldence anti reliance Jn the Institution to meet the ch11lle11ges don all lackadaisical attitudes and live up 01· a volatile American community, to the student's expectations. One. of the interesting sidelights of any Apparently, the " 'Who Can Replace' Syndrome" is both stag­ Yeshiva College -Student Council election is nating and self�destructive. It plants a seed of doubt in the Uni­ the manner in which each candidate chooses Yersity's ability to withstand both internal and external change. to portray himself. Unfortunately, some 'of Is it valid? Is our institution replete with yes-men who can ac­ Personal Elective this yeai-'s candidates chose to do so by comodate but not lead? Or, is this pessimism and mistrust a Yorn Hashoah, Yorn Haatzmaut and printing an exorbitant number of posters mere outgrowth of an unswerving admiration and respect? If so, Solidarity Day, April 28, should all mesh which they conveniently plastered all over can we preserve this respect and yet face. the future · with con­ in our minds to form a source of redeqica­ the campus. The result was a mass litter• fidence? Perhaps, the greatest respect we can extend to our tion for ourselves as Jews. Y.om Hashoah · ing of our school. revered leaders is the trust that they have created a· viable is to be invoked as a call of rededication to THE COMMENTATOR feels that in tne institution and guardian of an idea that will extend beyond our our past, our martyrs, and our traditions future candidates should restrict their. cam­ lifetimes. . * and ideals for which they surrendered their paign fliers and posters to limited areas of lives. YornHaatzmaut is, to a great e�tent, ·the school set aside for this specific pur­ During my tenure its Edit.or of THE COMMENTATOR, I a day of dedication to our future, to the pose. First of all this will result in a cleaner re11catedly Ilea� com11lal11ts about our r�lative exeluslvity. Many regeneration of our: people ·and our land, looking campus - one not subject to "cam­ students u1111eared to resent our "closed.-- system" · )n whl�h · only and :to, the final and complete redemption. paign litter.'' Second · of all, . by restricting Governing B01trd members Cito c�ntrlbut� _editorials ·or columns to' And Solidarity-Day should witness our ded­ campaign fliers, less · affluent candidates the 1m11cr. ication to the present, · the plight· of · our need not be put at a disadvantage in run­ When, in response to these complaints, we decided to open .Soviet brothers, the urgent need to act now. ning campaigns and are thus not forced to the paper to all those outspoken critics, I experienced that dis­ The attendance at the Yorn Hashoah lay out huge sums of money just to stay heartening ,·ealization that too many of us find it' easier to complain program last Thursday was dismal. Let us within the race. Finally, since at the pres­ than to act on our complaints. I expected to be flooded with articles hope that Yorn Haatzmaut and Solidarity ent time an acute paper shortage exists, by especially from the studen -body. Instead, it took cajoJing and a Day are more successful in bringing with limiting campaign fliers to restricted areas t l few expressive, but verbose, contril;>utors to fil up the four op-ed them a sincere and active dedication to our we would be doing our small share in help­ pages of this edition. Perhaps writing for THE COMMENTATOR responsibilities and ultimate goals as Jews. ing eliminate paper wastes. is left to a select few because tney are the only ones who do not Jet their words speak louder than ·actions. ''Indians'' Newest Dramatics Smash By MA:RI{ BliESLOW -atone for the deaths which each worst (looking for bodies) it NEWS ·IN BRIEF I did not guess the murderer. caused and had not been pun­ did not do too much. RABBI OVADIA YOSEF, Sephardic Chief Ral)bi of lsrael, - will I guessed Blore (Jeff Neiman) ished by society. They die one­ The butler and the cook lecture to Yeshiva University students on Israeli Independence and it was Wargrave (Lenny by-one according •to an old rhyme (Stewie Kessler and · Phil Billet)' Day, Thursday, April 25, Rabbi Yosef will deliver a Talmudic dis­ Balanson). This is very bad for about ten little Indians and the looked and acted like a butle1• course at 10:30 A.·M. in Silver Hall. P1·ior to the lecture he will a play that would like a favor­ play focuses on thei1· psycho­ and a cook though not too SUS• meet with facuity of .the Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Sem­ able review. It could be fatal logical reactions. piciously. Robert Zciger's min-• inary and the Sephardic Studies Progi-am, i_f the acting was "just fair." Nelson Korchak, (Van Clay­ -ister (Brent) did not quite con• According to Rabbi M. Mitchell Serels, .associate director of the The play itself is set on a thorne), looking like an ad in vey -the image of a letter-of-tlte◄ Sephardic Studies Program, which is sponsoring the event, Rabbi remote island to which the ten the Sunday Times, gave an un­ law - man - except - when • I .. Yosef's lecture will be his first public "11hlur" outside Israel. The characters have been invited/ steady characterization to a do-it whom everyone should dis­ Chief Rabbi's visit to the United States also marks the first time hired. The island is then cut stable . character who remains like but that might be tho he has left Israel since he was brought there as a child of three off by a storm and the charac­ alive at the end of the play. script's fault. Marston and Pr, t1rom Iraq fifty years ago, Before his election as Chief Rabbi in ters find out the real reason At its best (the finale with Lom­ Armstrong were well done bY, 1972, Rabbi Yosef was Chief Rabbi of 'l'el Aviv-Yaffo. for their having come - to bard) it was superb, but at its (Continued on Page 9, Ool,· 4>; Wednesda.y, April 24, 1.9'14 THE COMMENTATOR PAGE THREE . Jewish Gays Form A '"Voice Of ye s,hiva" Celebtates- Sixth Birthday , l .And WYUR .Plans ·Fo.r Bigger, Better Future l·q · O f .. · U By ALLAN SCHWARTZ joyed in the past. Since its birth studies works closely with the Un ue T ype S.h·. .One Sunday a.t 4:45 p.m., ap- · in 1968, WYUR achieved ad- school's administration and draws By DAVID GLEICHER proximately fifty Y.U. and Stern vances that other extracurricular up plans for WYUR's future. ·Time: Purim night, 1974. Place: mid , students gathered in Furst Hal� · activities have taken twice the Being directly responsible for the where a Purim party complete with costumes and gaiety, Room 440, and sang Happy time to achieve. In 1971 the music rec·ently pumped into the UJ in progress.. A woman comes to the door, hOping to find Bir.thday as a cake was cut up. ·broadcasting studio moved out cafeteria during supper hours, a good P1wim celebration. She is Glenn sees a day whe.n WYUR met by a man d1·essed as a Chas­ :his p,arents started · nudging · him will be a radio station reaching .sidic rebbe. to get mar-ried; "I went out with all parts of N.Y.C. Representing "Chassid" : Miss, this party is · plenty of gjrls, but they simply WYUR he jg working on an inter­ being sponsored by the Gay Sy- exerted no -physical ·att11aotion to collegiate delegation to help 1wgogue. me." For the next few years, Jon place various college broadcast- -Woman: So, what's in a name? "wasted a lot of money" on psy- . fog systems on a · co-operative Gay Synagogue, Y01mg Israel - chiatric help, ho,ping to · get : AM or FM band that would not that particula1·. cured: Then in 1971, he read •a I'm . ll help them all increase their audi­ "Chassid": Miss, I don't think article -in the Sund,ay . Times . ence potential. · you understand. The Gay Syna­ Magiazine by Merle Miller in Although that day is still 'f ar gogue -oong1·egation compos­ which Miller wrote that he was i8 ct · 01Way, Glenn i1, currently fight­ ed of Jewish hom,(18exuals. "coming .o�t of the closet" ·and · ing for the establishment of a 0 . Woman (shocked) : Jewish ho- openly admitting his homosexu- · Mass Communication major in . mosexuals! How disguiting! · aU.ty, One of the letters to the YU that would help train stu­ r . That's perve ted! ed.itor ,about Millets .story re- · dents, in the professional art of The .above scene isn't fiction feNed to a Homosexual . Counsel- . . public communications, He would - ,it really happened, The Gay ing Center. Influenced by Mjl- . also like a recording booth in­ · Synagogue isn't just ,a "goof" ,ad · lers openness; Joh . called, them, : . stalled .in the studio through in the Times or Vil1age Voice - and through the Center niet oth- Paul Millman which WYUR could record spe­ er homosexual :a,t get-togetlhers it really exists. "Disgusting"? s · ·In case you were won'dering what goes on in that studio . . cial shows to be played at latec "Perverted" ? Maybe so But for and meetings. _ . What these students had. in com- of its dingy room in Riets Hall air times. He feels this equip­ goad or for bad, every Friday By that time, Doestein was no mon was that all worked for the and into the current studio lo-• ment could also be rented- out night ,almost 100 Jewish homo­ longer the frum yeshiva bocher recip°ient of the birthday wishes. cated in the Student Union to ·groups wanting to make demo sexuals get together in the so­ of his younger days, "It's ·impos- On the cake was inscribed "Hap- Building. Today WYUR is six or record tapes. �ial hall of 1an Episcopalian . sible to be· an open :homosexual py Birthday WYUR.' years old and still growing, However, no matter how: church in the Chelse,a section of and an or.thodox Jew .at the ' EV€ryone in Yeshiva knows Glenn Hirsch, the station's cheerful .the future may sound, Manhattan to elebrate Shabbat . .c (Continued on Page 9, Col. 4) of .the success WYUR has en- general manager, aside from his the present is laden_ with bur­ in their own unique way. dens. Like everything else now­ No LiS}) The Morg Sh�et a-days, WYUR is struggling to .T-he unoffidal ;1eader of the keep its financial head above Gay Synagogue (and the Chas­ water. While a Yeshiva publica­ sid of the scene above) is Jon tion obtains $9,600 as their slice · Doestein {not his re,al name). of the student council pie, Like most !homosexuals, :he does On Hearing.. :.Goo sesleps portion is a comparative · WYUR's not -lisp, or appe•ar "foggotty" in crumb of $1,400. This shoe string · any way in his outward ,appear­ budget prevents the station from ance, Jon has ,a background very carrying out many of its plans different than most gays. He to serve the college community. was brought up .in a very reli­ ------�---.------.By Daniel WYUR is also suffering from gious home and attended yeshi­ One Sunday morning some­ baum's Religion · Commentary her of acne blemishes the An­ an administrational cold should­ vot such as Toooh V,odaath and time last -December, while driv­ and the concluding portions of drews sisters had in 1941. er. In the current catalogue in­ · pressured to ing upstate, I was desperately tjlat ]11.orning's mass. I happened The reaction of that radio host Lakewood; Never dex, the Kol, a Yeshiva publica­ date or seegirls, Jon didn't begin · trying to escape the ,third broad­ to settle upon. a ;talk show and bothered.me quite a bit. Because tion that has not see print once ,to think _he had a problem until cast of Rabbi Marc Tannen- was greatly relieved to hear an the more I thought about it the this year, is written in bold intelligent sounding_ yoice get _on better the man's question seemed · italicized print, while WYUR, the station's line. · The man pro- : to be The fact is that the Uriited .the 68 hour a week radio sta­ .ceeded .to apologize -great State� maintains to t}Jis day JTCSC Elections . Held; · at . tion, did not even receive a . length for the . nature, of his total restrictions on trade ,vith . footnote, Eisenberg In As Head . forthio.ming question which he Cuba long after any political or This administrative apathy, · Tepeatec:Uy claimed . to be asking . moral justification for it have though, is not shared by the (Conti1med from Pnge 1, Col. 2) (57%) vo,tes to his opponent's in ·good . f!lith. Finally, after a · grown absurdly obsolete with · student body. Robert (Bob) Sim­ Some of his other proposals in­ 162 (39%) votes, with 16 (4%) _good deal of hemming· and haw- the disappearance years ago of ,o ther write-in vote being cast. kovic the station's Progrnm Di­ cluded: improvingcommunic:ation s ing, he g<;>t to his question. Why, Cuba's Che Guevara-type insui:g­ recto� believes that he knows Abstentions - which are never between YCSC and the Senate; he asked, was the media con- ency programs. And I would like why : "We give th student body: jncluded in tabulatio11s of the e lobbying for business ,and ·ac­ stantly referring to the Arab . to remind the reader of a United the variety of shows and disc outcomes of YCSC races accord­ counting courses in the curricu­ · oil embargo as blackmail? After Nations resolution passed over­ jockey styles they want." Bob, ing to the · Council Constitution lum; greater coordination with all, Arab soldiers were dying for whelmingly years ago that im­ a three year WYUR veteran, re­ · Stern in •arranging theater part­ - were unusually high in the what they believed in even if posed crushing trade 'sanctions members the student apathy to­ race, totalling 141, . ies and other social activities, what they believed in was wrong. on Rhodesia designed to bring wards the station when he first and the development of Cafe Ye­ Loser Wins What should Sadat say to the the apartheid ·government there joined. He feels it was the re­ shiva into a -permanent institu­ Similar to the contest £or mothers of Egypt's soldiers? to its knees. sult of the never changing, one tion, Throughout the campaign, YCSC Vice-President,· ·the oom­ That we're not trying to win I now continue with a lot of style shows WYtUR used to pro­ Mr. Eisenberg stressed that paign for YCSC Secretary�Treas- · this war as hard as we might misgivings knowiug I am tread­ duce. "Now there is something these were "realistic" and "prag­ urer was also low-keyed. Arthur for fear of inconveniencing rriil- ing on dangerous ground. I trust (Continued on Page 4, Col. 1). matic" programs. Strenger, a YP student major­ lions of Americans, perhaps fore- the re�er to a1,proach · this with Glenn Hirsch, also a Pre-med ing in Pre-med, defeated Stanley ing some to take a subway? a fa,ir mlml and to pay close at- · in YP, waged an intensive pub­ Kurtz, an- •Economics major at- · If Israel had the gas would. she tention to what I am and nm JAC Aids Jewish licity campaign in his unsuccess- · tending EMC, Mr. Strenger, who service Russia as usual? Then not saying. ful drive. The Junior Class Sec­ was Freshman Class President, �hy call it · blackmail. Let's·face I ani in no way minimizing Poor And Elderly retary.-Treasure� pointed .to his was unsuccessful in Jiis bid .:last the truth. Th_e boycott :is simply the plight of Soviet Jewry, nor wcirk in •achieving night-time year to become. Sophomore Class good strategy, a legitimate trump our obligation to do. anything we Prepare Passover parking privileges at University President. Mr. Strenger, who · card the Arabs ·would b_e crazy can to save them. That is why By BARRY SALTZMA!N parking Jots for YC students and currently eo,.chairs YCSC's Tea- · to overlook. . I love Senator Jackson and his · · For -many Jews, Pesach is pur­ his sedulous · efforts to improve cher-Course Ev.alu,ation Commit­ :The question itself _must_ have amendments 1to the U.S.-Russia gatory. It is a time to embrace WYUR; Mr, Hirsch promised to tee; must certainly regard ·the it diffi- t111ken thJrty sec�nds ,and that's trade bills. But I find . friends and family, to proudly fight for 'day-time .privileges for 299 (64%) - •.169', (36% ) vote as . . · · · · to understand the real dif- all go�. ivho cult enjoy a rich meal, ·to look back students in the parking lots and a great comeback yictory. the caller T�e:. �ost ference between his tactics and on past progress and ,to praise tc-' unprove the athletic faC!ilities The ,d,ays of hectic cainpl\ign­ Sflemed· 80- ;_J)lealy��thed and . those the Arabs employ with G-d. But if your family :has at"YU. ing over, the nights. of · t0$sed · oify . ·ingra,tlat� . in,lnutes ago, their boycott. Grante.d,. of course, moved away, if you are crippled . Though 'David Gross garnered sleep now a memory, the candi­ was now totally transrom1ed, In the cause of Soviet Jewry is or aged or poverty stricken ... win· . .o.n. impressive number of votes 'dates - or lose - seemed a .voice · cnwkllng . with . self- · painfully right whiie the Arab. There are such Jews in NYC, for a write-in candidate, Jack · relieved that the annU.al contests . righteous contempt . he abruptly cause is hol'l'iblY. wrong. But Jews trapped by disease, or cir­ Schachriow easily managed to were .now over. · Mr. Eisenberg's lnfomted his':caller that, we'I all, that is to evade the real issue. cumstance, or just plain age, fo1· stawe off the ch,allenge in his well-wishers gathered 1nto his heard-,quJte .enough of this•. sort · For when we -rail against ,the, whom Pesach becomes a heart­ succer.sful. bid to become YCSC room. in the Rubin Dormitory of! talk and dl(l. not want -to embargo we do not · rail against .rending trauma. Aged, poor and Vice-President. Mr. Schachnow, till the early hours of ·the morn­ hear any · more. He had' made the merit of the Arab cause. We perhaps worst of all, neglected, Junior C"lass Vice-P,resident who ing, toasting the President-Elect his point and now would he rail -against the means used to. -they deba,te within themsel\'es attends YP ,and majors in Eco­ with Carmel Sangria and Kedem . just hang. up .. The question, 311- Jmplement thatcause, What all whether to suffer silently an­ nomics, was the innovator and. Champagne. parently,. . was. not to be digni- those cartoons of leering, droopy­ other hollow Pesach or else swal­ organiier of the student lounge Messieurs Eisenberg, Schach­ fied with an answer. The show moustached Arabs greedily rub­ low their pride and request the located in -Fu�t 024. In bis race now, and Strenger will assume immediately reverbld: • back t;o bing their hands are trying to, assistance which connotes char­ against Mr. Gross, ,a Y.P student office in mid-May along with the the Jack of fadr Puerto Rican convey or what Mr. Kissinger ity, majoring in Speech and Drama, individual YCSC class officers, to r�presentation in, the City Water is saying when he mutters about The Jcwjsh Action Committea Mr. Schachnow received 233 be elected earlier that month, Works Dev.t, and the total num- (Continued on Page "I, Col. 1) (Continu� on Page 9, Col. O; PAGE .FOUR TI-IE COMMENTATOR Wednesday, April 24/ 1974 Kissinger Is Ripped By Sehaeter Price Of l( osher Meat p �!"���!�:!�.!�� Keeps On Spiraling Up we must remember who we are.�•��� .are forbidden to hand Hitler ,a conscionable, unforgivable act of ,:'! 1) ! 1, Col. · !!�!1 nued from Page (Conti est pric�s for kosher rib steak Who are we? Why was I spared? posthumous victory, If Buchen- Jewish treason perpetrated by throughout the city were listed Why did we survive and they wald to minimize the American Jewish Secretary politan New York Coordinating is religious Jn the Concourse, while Far didn't?" Dachau of State is enough'to remind us Council on Jewish Poverty, said faith, if is to be used Rockaway reported the highest "This inflationary spiral is niost Rabbi Schacter emphasized for men to shrink ,away from ithat Hitler didn't lose the W�." . prices in that category, /that -this was :his very thought Judaism, Hitler will have scored He furthermore la�led Kissin- . adversely affecting that segment when he was confronted by the another diabolical achievement. ger ,among ·those who would of our population that can least The Metropolitan New York sight of hundreds of Jewish bod- And do not think for one mo- "trample the sanctities of Jew- tolerate these · increments • • , Coordinating Council on Jewish ies. He declared, "These are all ment that that -is not a re.al ish self-respect." the elderly who· are retired on Poverty represents more than s flesh of our flesh, blood of our ithreat." "The only way to deny Hitler fixed and limited -incomes. Keep- three score national and gras blood. These are our brothers. Treason By Kissinger this last ultimate ,triumph," Rab- ing kosher is a way of life for roots leader ship organfaations But we were not really spared. In view of the widespread as- bi Schacter concluded, " is for we these indiv-iduals th at must be -providing a communal response We were spared to insure that similation by Jews throughout Jews to strengthen our faith in perpetuated." to Jewish poverty in New York Hitler did not win the war . , , the world, he sadly observed that God, in Torah, ,in Israel, ,and in A regional breakdown of the City. In December, 1972, the How -is it possible both to re- Hitler may ,have very well ourselves. The magni.tude of the member the horrors of the Holo- achieved his "final solution." evil compels us to increasingly caust •as we must :and yet to Rabbi Scihacter then delivered ,a proclaim our faith and determi­ live dynamic Jewish lives today? blistering attack on Secretary of nation in the moment of our . greatest sor-row." alum­ Rabbi Schacter, a YU . WYWR Celebrates Six Years; nus · and currently the rabbi ,at rthe Mosholu Jewish Center 1n . the Bronx, was •the former :Ileiad Expecting A Future Expansion of the Conference of Presidents (Conti.nued from Page 3, Col. 5) they are both very busy, and of Major American Jewish Or­ · for everyone." A serious but the listener gets insulted when ganizations and the American good show is produced by Aryeh ;the request is denied. Sometimes Jewish Conference on Soviet Weil (Monday 11:30-1:00) . 'The a D.J. may reach a point where Jewry. In 1956, rthe U. S. State F'reddy Farkel-Y.ictor Schwartz bothersome or prankish type Department appointed him ,as a show (Wednesday 9:00-10:30) is calls might lead him to embar­ special religious advisor to the also serious but spiced with a rass someone over the air. This Hungarian Jewish ['efugees. little humor. The Phil Billet-Ed­ is a bad reflection on the sta­ Along with other rabbis, he vis­ die Tolchin (Sunday 11.30-1:00) tion, ited the Soviet Union for the The major problem, however, and Jeff sti,ashun-Norm Fers­ purposes of a · study of living Paul Millman tenberg (Wednesday 10:30-12.00) is WYUR's faulty equipment. conditions of Jews jn ,the U.S.­ shows have consistent but good Only with the help of Chief En­ S.R. and in the Communist-con­ area reveals that Coordinating Council received a ,natural feuding between the co­ gineer David Friedman has trolled satellite nations. the lowest current prices for grant from the New York City · disc jockeys. There is also the WYUR saved over $3,000 in re­ With ,approximately 250 peo­ glatt kosher chicken were to be Human Resources Administra­ "Rapper Al'• show (Thursday pairs. The equipment breaks ple in ,attendance, the memorial found in the Boro Park section tion. This grant was renewed 8:30-10:30) in which Alla!l down in a leap frog fashion­ began with opening remarks by of Brooklyn, while the prices Jn with a thirty per cent increase when something is fixed · some­ Schwartz follows a Cousin Brucie Michael J. Bloom, Chairman of the Grand Concourse area of the in December, 1973, for 1973-74. format. thing else becomes inoperable, Bronx rose sharply to become the the program .and outgoing Presi­ In addition, · the Coordinating The D.J.'s have also increased only to be replaced by some­ dent of the JSS Student Council. highest in the city. Glatt kosher Council has been awarded a· student interest with their stu­ thing else when that's fixed. Bob Cantor Mitchell Weiss, a senior chopped meat, however, was dent participation policy. Rapper believes that the patience of the ,a,t YC, later led the ,assembled lowest in the Concourse and grant from the Federal Office of WYUR staff and listeners is the Al has a different question each in .the chanting of Psalm 83 . highest in Far Rockaway, Economic Opportunity and re­ week where the audience has major factor that helps overcome which beseeches God to end . ihis For kosher meats, chicken ceives an annual subvention all two hours of his show to call this situatiQn. silence ,and avenge the death of was cheapest 'in Rugby-East up with the answer and win a YU's radio station is different from the Jewish Philanthropies Flatbush and most e�pensive -in free record. Norman Gold ·in many ways from when it first of Greater New York. CORRECTION Washington l:Ieights -Inwood. (Thursday 12-1:30) also quizzes started. Now .Jewish and rock THE COMM•ENTATOR Chopped meat prices ranged his listeners and evokes audience music is coupled with classical would like to correct the fol­ participation. Efraim Goldstein's (,Irv Wiesen every other Thurs­ from a low in Queens to a high r------� lowing error . which appeared (Wed. 12-1:30) latin accent day 7-8:30) and, under the lead­ in Coney Island, where prices' in our March 28 issue. The READ$ (with the fella's of course) and ership of Lenny Fuld (WYUR rose more than thirt per cent Alumni Airings colwnn (And y · the girls of Stern College (Sun­ News Director) students know of All Israel Knew • . . ) was since the last survey. FASTER day and Tuesday 7-10:00) add special events ln advance, and So· written by Doniel Kr;amer, S weeu paranteed eoane much needed color to the sta­ are about to receive a WYUR Lowest prices for �osher not Rabbi Bernstein. DOUBLE or TRIPLE your 1peed tion's program. All disc jockies news letter (rumor has it with clmck were reported from the Undentand more, retain more accept requests and dedications. a centerfold). Concourse, while the highest · Nalion■lly known profeuor At first Bob was wary about This year, WYUR expanded his people. A moving c.andle-lit Cl■111 fonnin1 now · prices were found in Washington giving -freshmen disc jockey posi­ .the old nightly 7:00-1:00 time singing of "Ani Ma'amin" con- Heights-Inwood. By far the low- READINGSKIW 864-5112 tions, but, the success of the slots to 7 :00-3 :00 plus morning eluded the memorial observance. Arthur Herzfeld (Thursday and 9:00 p.m.-9:00 a.m. Saturday The Knesset, the Israeli Parli­ 10:30-12:00) and the Artie Stark­ night shows. Future expansion ament, in 1959 e&ta.blished the Elliot Henslovitz (Mon. 1:00-3:00 is also planned. twenty-seventh day of the month and Wed. 1:30-3:00) shows have The WYUR governing board of Nisan on ·the Jewish calenda-r proven his gamble a success. is partly responsible for this as ian .annual international re­ Bob, known to his friends and rapid growth. However the real membrance .rn memory of the · as·socia:tes as Siroky, is in charge credit goes to its entire . staff, six -million Jews killed by the of. the stations D.J.'s and engi­ dedicated and ready to do .any­ Nazis and the uprising of the This neers, and must coordinate the thing to improve the "Voice of Warsaw Ghetto during World ,time · slots for the station's Yeshiva !" War U. ·summer shows. In his -position, ·he knows . Go on 1;1n archaeological dig in ancient the station's· problems. One ·of . Beersheba. Or dig up a few extra credits at one · Bob's problems is when a listen­ . ·ISRAEL n of the many Israeli Universities. Or dig the earth er calls and requests a selection Burials and American Diainterme ta (and plant some seeds) on our Kibbutz pro­ not homologous with the type ,-n r n c , r grams. or choose from one .of our many, varied of show being played at that is privileged to announceIt , , R that RIVERSIDE is the only projects. time (for example, asking for licensed funerl:11 director in the U.S. able to effect· . Our exciting programs include open- American Jewish music during Transfer to Israel within 24 hours ended tickets, so you ci;tndo your own sightsee- an IsraeU show), .the D.J. or en­ RIVERSIDE also is available as the Ing at no extra cost, and even stop over in gineer, if they have the time, Sole agent for Sanhadrea· Cemetery Europe and dig !hat scene too. search for the song ai:id play It. More often than not, though, Har Hazeitim Har Hamenuchot And all Cemeteries in Israel RIVERSIDE only can offerthis service: Cou11selors, male & female Enroute to Israel within . 24 hours IMsfo11 hea�s. Music (ruach), e Strict adherence to Halacha and Minhagim. ■et11re & pl·on,erh1g, folk dance, • Arrangements made during lifetime with no obligation. photograplly, archery, • Chapel secured in any community. generals; n,erlet1ced. Also kitchen Ir ,, 1h1te11ance help. sraeFor further Information contact: College work•shafy available, MEMORIALRIVERS CHAPEL, INC, • FUNERALID DIRECTORSE ISRAEL PRPGRAM- CENTER - AZYF Ortfiodox coed; v.-.·lte 'o r call. MANHATTAN: 76th Street al Amsterdam Avenue • EN 2-6600 51 5 Park Avenue, N.Y.C. BROOKLYN: ·ocean Parkway at Prospect Park • UL 4•2000 CAMP HATIK·YAH BRONX: Grand Concourse at 179th Street • LU 3,6300 (212) 751-6070 WESTCHESTER: 21 West Broad Street, Ml. Ve rnon • (914) M0-4-6800 575 BEDFORD AVE, FAR ROCKAWAY: 1250 Central Aven·ue • FA 7,7100 lro'okly11, N. Y, 11211 Chapels In Miami and Miami Beac_h • JE 1•1151 ,· (212) 387-6695 Solomon Shoulson • Andrew Fier Wednesday, April 24, 1974 THE COMMENTATOR PAGE FIVJI.

:lh e Co mmenlalor �o rum

•**************** ** * **** *************-lr1l* * * * ** *******************tt*'ii************-lr1l******i't***********'*********************** Thoughts Between .Classes Holy Exegeticus Catalogicus Sy MANFRED WEIDHORN ica is now f-inding out - that By MOSHE SOKOLOW Designed to deepen ethical and On the l!C Community : THE he is one of the mo.st unprin­ Masquerade As the YC Bible curriculum philosophical insight and val­ · . COMMENTATOR frequently cipled, devious men in American goes before the Senate for pos­ ues, they also afford valuable prints student criticism of ad­ political history. By HAROI.ID TEICHMAN sible revision, I think it might supplementary training in re­ ministration and faculty; the But wa,it; let us undertake a Having been at YU for 3 years be appropriate to address sev­ search meth,ods and -independ0 · , :time has come for some reverse little mental exercise or ex­ I have come ,to know though . eral comments towards the gen­ ent work." . criticism. Two things about stu­ periment. Let us suppose that eral state of Jewish studies at Clearly we must begin . not love the ubiquitous apathy with · dents annoy me somewhat. (1) he really .is innocent and· that editorials that ,appear in THE Yeshivia. As both a student and the words "in addition." Anyone .· One of their common complaints all his assertations are truthful. COMM,ENTATOR, Hamevaser, "practitioner" of that discipline, with a minimal knowledge of . is that the school does not offer The resulting picture simply and Tempo. If that's not enough I hope 1111y . remarks will con­ Rabbinic hermeneutics (may we · a large variety of courses. Yet shatters .the mind. Here is a more apathy a la Stern's Observ­ tribute towards .a positive and presume such an acquaintance when .such courses are offered, leader who, directly or through er is . dished out and imported constructive re-assessment of the for the author of . the catalogue? l . no one registers. I have devoted his underlings, misplaces· import­ hi:!re. The ironioal thing .howewr current of "Jewish" affairs . knows that "all additions are . n . many hours to help establish 3 ant documents (like a deed) ; de­ is that these editorials ,are in ,Towards this end I have de­ arplifications" (Eth-Im· ,,e Gam­ . fends interdepartmental courses, and I in court the right to with­ fact· ·cop-outs themselves. · Rather cided to treat the subject by lm Rihuyhit), Consequently we have ideas for several more, but hold certain tapes only _to dis- than giving some insight on textual-exegetical means. The have our first conclusion: The . I am not going to follow up where shortcomings of these pro­ text which I have · chosen to catalcgue paragraph in question these ·ideas because I fear from jects are, which dori't attr;act re: J2wish studies is an amplifi­ recent · experience that niy work suttfoieint response, these:ediwr­ cation of the g::oals and values of will be .. in vain. So, students, ials level a comfi'ioti denominatoi' the college as set out i.n para­ either put up �·i.e., register � charge at everyone whO doesn't grai;!1t, 1 and 2 ( Catalog, op. cit I. . or shut up. (2) Student pushi­ respond. Sometimes these· edi:: Th.at i;; te, say it is not jn juxta­ . ness with- reference to grades torials srem to be · . written in •position· - implying contrast to is an old lament at YC, but it collaboration with the project show unlikeli·ness or differences . seems to-be getting out of hand. · leaders who ai-e possibly trying (Webster's Unabrld�gees that will make her clumsy -"No, not really," responded Romans, the · Crusaders, the later, name lY, h tt fa o Clar k · T1'b - in many universities have turned gait fashionable. Her veneer · of Dr. Plato, a Professor of Philoso- o o Nazis, and their like. bitts, w h d hea h ed t e c mm1'tt ee to non-rational, anarchical means grace is not epitomized so well phy at a small but promising O Jewish law which pri es the on A g · mg and Ge ria· t ·rics f th e to attain their non-negotiable t,y her platfonn shoes ,as by college ,in· Upper Manhattan. z ° , freedom and dlgn ty of the In- um · ted ' s ta tes D t t epar men f demands. A careful use -of 1an- her Boston accent which she -"Well, things have been get- J divldual would absolutely con- Health, Education, and Welfare, gt\age, ,and especially of the clas­ picked up from her ballet in- . ting financially tight at ' the o o demn any effort t.o deprive a when he c omments_: "Psycho- sical languages, teaches one the structor who is a Radcliffe grad­ University and, y u kn w, there's o o man of his social contacts, his logical traits which are • m re importance of rules. In ,an age uate, and a lth ugh she will nev­ this thing about employing o o . prestige, an his se nse of use- subject to social c nditi ning, a inundat er play in the Manhattan Con­ younger teachers; in other words, d . which h s been ed with fulness. Because he has reached such as learning efficiency, ve11bal servatory, she oan pronounce the Professor Plato, since you've books written :in a splendidly a certain chronological age, i s a ability, comprehension, accumu- obscure jargon created b y schol- word with more finesse than her reached the age of sixty-five, 1 o man who has devoted years t.o lat'on of exper· .ie nee and ·1' nf r- ars who should have been sub s1- · cello instructor, an aging Eng­ we're asking you to retire." Of ma ion, and ca a ity r making o tire? the study a discipline to com.. t • p c fo dized so as not to feel ,the com- iish music profess r. -"Re. What! Even with · 1 pletely cease from rendering a ,1' udgements· • ""'P"""" ~� r to hold up pulsion to publish, the stud Y my teaching duties, I've still well valued service'? into the later years and, ·of language teaches us the im- managed to write works on . in some Perhaps the University's Trus- . · instant-es, actually to in- . port-ance of sayi' ng exactly what rhetoric 1og1c, · met ap h · ys1cs, and crease in strength."2 tees, Administration and THE we mean and of meaning what Holy the uni�erse. I'm about to start .,,,.T The w ,a .c,n .1.fi ir perspectives • are sup- . e In n when on a thorough study of society, COMM '""'TOR'S Governing say. era classes , o (Continued on Page 8, Col. 1) (Continued on �age 8, Col. ) laws, the state. I'm really ex- B ard which supported the Ad- 1 Masquerade cited about it; I'm in my prime! ministration's policy in the Re­ Retire, indeed! guer case, want to effectuate the (Oonti1med from Page 5, Col. 3) _i'Listen it's not the 'publish theme of Jean Giradoux's epi­ A- Sense O'f Purpose self.) Furthermore wh)' can 't sh' issue here, but at age gram, "Death· is the next step __ or peri (Continued from Page 5, Col. 5) these self-righteous leaders un- you must retire. That's policy . · after the pension· - it's ll¢r� · 65 . responsibility derstand that many of these or- There's nothing you nor I c an petual retirement without pay." can · only be · fulfilled· by expansion and growth of our o · a em c hor ganizations have either go�s r do .. about it,'• and as though Since a man ·has reached age 65, · � J . izons and -not by,contractfon. and -llntftation. o Wh at's o means which are inconsistent anticipating a request, Mr. A let's -send him t a nursing home, · · · more, the adoption of a formal statement of ·purp se o o could with other pe ple'.s ethics; for quickly continued; "And if I measure him f r a shroud, and · ,prove •helpfu� in another sphere ,as well � that of students' p instance J.DL and Anti-Slunaad make an exception for you, I'll start · building · the coffin: The ersonal direction and- motivation. organizations which disrupt, de- have to do it for everybody." point, however, is that though 1 would hope that my statement and any that may ac tually be · struct, and thus defame for the -"Now," Professor Plato be - the enactors and proponents of adopted in the fUture would convey to th e p rospective student that o o o esh purpose f some higher .g al, I'd gan in a calm )one, "Who ,is the mandat ry retirement rule Y iva College does not exist for its own purposes but rather _in o . . . an like torefe r those leaders to the better equipped to teach, a man are n t malicious,• . heartless auxiliary role to the Jewish studies. schools. A radical position'? I t nk not. Encyclopedia of Phiilosophy un- who has many years of accumu- b easts, but on the contrary - ·,· • hi . o o . . der the heading f "Hell" ,and - lated . kn wledge and· experience well-intentioned -people, their ac- �or there is basically. only one academically valid reason for . ch . subheading "paths to . >." An� or . . :•• . tion is s imply· ;in· total 'discord oosmg . to. attend Yeshiva College. and ' that jg t'h e sincere desire o o · wit the fib o o u sue Je other thing these editorials do -"D n't waste y ur breath. h _ ers of m rality· an_ d :t p r wish studies· on a college ·:level; It is the �nfortunate jg · studenL o chastise others ,for putting too · Save the· Socratic method for ethics. wh was. never otient�.in tlLis direction as . well ' as the . . . . one w:ho loses i . much emphasis on grades; I--won- the classroom, � not here.. sorry. . Yet with the''•advent. of the · · his orientation· due . to disappointi�g ·experiences in ·SUC- • . ; his·· Je\Vis�, der . if 'that's the secret of .You�ll be getting your, check: in Irtdusirial . Rev�i'uti�k ; aiii the > studies,! '..\Y'ihir suffer ,Il16st frorn ':the· frustrcatioh :and . dis- puts th · he · ap i cess which , em on t ,the mail.": technologi��fboom:•:f .the twen- .' � ���l}t'_'1.f�:'.:�'@ng : ¥.Gi stpdetits. · :·, •·: ·: :. :.::.:0- : ·.: . · , Dean's ·list so often. -Though the bove : is tieth. century . haracteriz . it 1 . . a incident . --: c ed . . _A Wr ten 'guideline . coull'heli> , students de,/e)op ; an·' appro1;r1ate To besmirch fellow students is : by ever-increasing ·at de obviously fictional, one wonders demands · for • titu . t.owai-d _ 1,heir · educational investtiient · of · 1ou·r · -years. · It not worthy of a decent organi- w . o octo ari s ed, efficiency .would t ho th gen an Plato � , and produc- · hen be the _respon�Jblllty of·· the Jewish studies' schools ta zation. Rabid sloganeering. is no� would have been •treated at . a tivity -,- morality. and. ethics are mai!).tain that attitude . by 1,rovl!ling the stti1lent ·with· profitable .a part of literate articles and college, like Yesl&lva, w hen he forgotten in the shuffle. The returns on his lnvestinent. · · • ·· · · · · · · · · · · · · real- . . some. of the editors should· . reached the ,age Of sixty-five-- ne�-- to eliminate a ;m,an �atory - . In 1-ighLo · re f the abov�. and t!he many, m,a�y other possible . iize that, believe it or not, every- the � of -mnndab,ry retirement·• ttrement .age a t six t five ls , example · . indeed . t. · s of its usefulness, developing a written �tatement of one is engaged in some- at l'O (or sixty-eight by special stlll, nevertheless, beneficial and purpooe Yeshiva College for ··seems iike a �orthwJtile undertaking. thing important whether or not permission of the Unlveri,ity's desirable. .. A panel representing , orializers say so. I a cross section of the Yeshiva academic com­ apathy edit President). Yet this academic For an •Insight int.o the· assets munity ,and r esponsiv t e .to all -concerned groups and individuals have taken he time out ·to speak year has provided e�ampl� of added years, read the com- should be appo fo o inted to tackle ,the problem. And maybe, just maybe, r th se who are ,preoccupied which obviate · any need tA» by. ments of Cicero, the noted o- . such R . ,an undertaking. will help Yes hiv,a College find sense of with other essential responsibili- p otheslze. Last January, Dr. man statesman and philosopher purpose a o again. . . ties. Unfortunately I h ad t Moshe Reguer; Associate Profes- of the first century B.O,E., · ChUck is a past Research Editol' of THE COMMENT ATOR write this column to do so. s of Jewish Studies, retired, and .p1·esently studying engineer Hal'Ol-d is economics majo1· or where in De senectute he states: ing . at Oolumbia University.. Also a ata and this June, Dr, J oseph Dun- "Are there no old men's . veteran of ·tlte YO Senate, Mr. Bernstein and attends YP. em- is on a leave,of-absence ner, Senior Professor a nd Chair. ployments which are carrle� on (pl'ofessional option) this yea,•. .Wedoesday, April i4, 1974 THE COMMENTATOR PAGE SEVEN · On Hearing Goose Steps Parking Around Yeshiva . (Continued /rain Page 3, Col. 4) the media, he might seriously validity. of Bnai Brith's concur­ (Conti11,ued from Page 5, Col. 4) · 12 :00 and 1:00, if one doubie ask himself, so heavily controlled rent condemnation of somebody · blackmail is that regardless of . parks before 10:45 or after 2:15 by pro-Israe opinion that any­ between eleven and two, it pays · · whether the Arabs are right or l like Father Berrigan who truly he runs a good chance of re .. one even voicing a doubt is to must be exposed loudly for the to make-up a few pieces of oak wrong they have no right to · ceiving a summons. be treated iµ11nediately like . a dangerous anti-Semite he is. · tag wj th the relevant informa­ . impose 1their wiU upon us m fulminating anti-Semite. What tion which one can just sit in It goes without saying that · this way. But is it that simple? A few months ago the 11ros- shallow tactics like those ex- . . the window. Such a practice, one is sure to receive a summons · ,J am sure . that to the average pect of a cold, immobile America hibited on that radio show ac- besides being the "menchlich" if he parks so .that his car is · Arab, misguided as he is, the complish •ls to convince the neu- looking at us Jews as outlets for . thing to do prevents the person sticking into a crosswalk, in a. continued occupatio f Sinai by n o tral listener that we really . have its frustration loomed ominously that is pa rked-in from becom­ driveway; in a bus stop, too Isr!\el or the miserable refugee . · · something to hide · behind clouds in our_ mim:s. Reports soon began ing angry and calling the sta­ • close to a fire hydrant, or in : problem is' at least as burning to stream in of bum11er stickers . of self-righteous J10St1tring and tion house which usually results the . Te achers Parking area, · · ...� 1,roclaimlng .... that a moral · issue as Soviet Jewry bluster, stridently in all the double parked cars Never double park on We dnes- America neecl's oil, not Jews and : is to Henry· ·Jackson. An d I am being ticketed. It is also not a . days or any legal holiday or · even that Americans should burn certain • that odd-even days at For Bnai Brith to publicly de- good idea to double park a car whenever alternate parking is · Soviet · bakeries would be a far · cry the ·recent T.V . production Jews not oil. I, try as I mi'ght, owned by a non-Jew {e.g. when . not in effect. The · best streets · greater hardship than at Amer­ of Merchan of Venice a a sign never once spotted any' such · · t · you look in the window St. on which to double · park . are failure I found parti­ . ican · · gas · stations. One · might of resurgent anti-Semitism . in sticker, a Christopher stares back _at you) 186th and 187th Streets between America is somewhat irresponsi- . cularly frustrating sinc · make a valid argument against e a.JI my as they are generally not Audubon and Overlook Terrace . friends ' the Arabs forcing a :totally un­ ble. The charge received wide- • .claimei to have. seen familiar with the YU buildings and on the entire length of . . involved country such as Japan spread publicity. -As was obvious . them or at least to kno.w sqme­ and are more likely to summon . Overlook Terrac:e. While the , one who saw them. It was com- · into adopting a proaArab posi­ to anyone who has studied the a policeman. police · generally do not bother . . play, however,. the production had forting to read later that a num_­ tion. But ·· I hardly think such · . Upon arriving at YU in the cars that are double parked on been saddled with every possible . ber of . journalists were _also hav­ · an argument is as sound when · 185th Street and Amsterdam : applied to the · United States. . device imaginable . to portray · Ing problems sighting the �tick­ Ave., · these cars are the first . . ers . .It y�u have spotted the mys­ · Can I Teally expect an Egyptian Shylock sympathetically, Unfor- · to receive tickets should they · '.ito regard the :U.S . as. ari itmo­ tunately, to the average viewer · .teriously bumper �ecorations, . . decide. to "raid'' the • area. cent third party anymore than I the play leaves ·a distinctly anti- fine� I must remain of the .01,m.­ · can expect an· Israeli to view Jewish impression no matter how • ion, however, that the stickers ·n, is also generally a good · Russia as such? In any case I · one colors · it. The real question · were � pananoric delusion or the idea not to double. park cars · believe the issue here in'volves · is whether the play can be shown U.S. Jewish commuulty, under­ on Audubon Ave. as you will . · rather complex considerations. · at all. But now we've invoked standable p�rhaps but paranoia park in a car of someone · the grim spectre of censorship, nevertheless, that lives in the area. If pos­ Now I am not writing th.is, something the Jewish community · I imagine that certain Ameri­ sible one . should ·double park forbit, to champion any Arab should fear more than anyone the first car next tu the corner, cans might have been a bit put · cause. Nor am I suggesting at . else. Had Bnai Brith_ actually 011 off by our rather hysterical con­ a fire hydrant or driveway . all that we cease in any way succeeded in raising enough of a as this permits the --car .,to- get: viction that anti-Semitism was . to support legislation like that public ruckus to have the pro­ out without even calling the sprouting up on bumpers all over ot Senator Jackson. If it · is a duction cancelled, or censored if the country, I know that similar -0wner. Don't double park in Jewish · life that's at stalrn it you. will, would it not have such a manner where you block , matters little to me how we go raised questions in an uninform­ delusions of persecution on the . the street or make it difficult about saving it. But since we · ed America's mind as to what part of black groups lend me an for a car or truck to get t.hrough • are au in the desperate busi­ right .a minority has to dictate impression of · irreponsible self­ the stre,et. I would also like ness saving Jewish lives I of that a play as respectable and pity and indulgence. They often to call upon the out of town think we should realize that seemingly innocuous as one writ­ students, who feel that they . ·seem to be trying to create un­ perhaps, in the long run, we ten by · the venerated William Paul Millman don't have to pay the tickets · may seriously hurt our position Shakespeare and produced for deserved feelings of doubt and 11:00 o'clock double-1,ark. that they receive, to follow these by not facing issues in as forth­ centuries not be aired on nation­ guilt within us to be exploited rules as well so that they do right and honest a manner as wide T.V. Bnai Brith might have later on. morning one should cruise around not precipitate a situation which possible and instead resorting to chosen to strongly question for about five minutes and at­ high-blown rhetoric. Could not · ABC's judgment in thinking that Are we, "then, by persisting tempt to find a legal spot and some non-Jew listening to. that 'their prodtictioh of the play in our overreactive vigilance run­ . then expect to be blocked-in for The Editor - in - Chief and · radio program very well have might escape anti�Semitic cari­ ning :the grave risk of dulling the the day. One who expects to Governing Boar!l of THE . · COMMENTATOR extend their left with a ,itrongly negative at­ caturing instead of declaring it sensitivities of an American pub­ leave before three P.M. or can't . titude to what he justifiably symptomatic of American anti­ firid a legal spot should park on condolences to Alan Rosen­ lic tired of hearing us cry w.olf · believed w as a flagrantly'· biased, semitism. To put forth such ex- . the "wrong" side of the street blatt '75 on the recent loss . insulting, and chea.p evasion of . aggerated accusations· only or, even worse, beginning to re­ as double parking at this time of his father. May he be com- · · a perfectly honest question. Is serves to obscure the urgent sent up for it will almost always result in a forted among the· mourners of ticket. Leaving a "Do not double Zion and Jerusalem. park leaving early" sign in the window when one has no inten­ will result in everyone getting . To· Steer Rather Than Drift tion of leaving early is plain tickets. r selfishness. About 10:45, not be­ (Contimted f om Pa,ge 5, Col. 2) unusual, perhaps even uncom- . Studies Society is lending · im­ fore, ·if one has parked on the Remember: Double park only . . ical careers and the response rortable, . position or being mere • petus to our efforts. We ·believe wrong side, he should double between 10:45 and 2:15 and leave was electrifying.Students, geared by-products Jn the plurallstlc . that our program is . a challeng­ park his- car (making sure that your name etc. in the window, : to massive study programs, tal­ melting pot, The process, how- · ing onP, addressed to our needs, he is exactly parallel and rela­ and it is very unlikely that you: , mudically trained to· pay careful ever, has produced something . a worthy competitor to the sec­ tively close -to one caT) and leave will get more than two tickets . attention to text and to apply uniquely worth-whiie to us. More ular program in the tug-of�war his name etc. in the window. (and probably none) during the . incisive •reaaoning to study, glad­ and more of our brightest .young • for th�� generation's energie�. Between 2:00 and 2 :15 the car year. These are common sense . dened the professional and grad­ . people are turning . inwards to We believe that more and · more should be reparked on the rules but through them I have . uate schools which admitted . ask "When shall L do for my students are aware of this and "wrong" side again. While the avoided receiving even one sum­ . the� as Vesh.iva graduates. . own"'? and are . seriously plan- that more and more will ask -meter-maids or policeman gen­ mons during my nine years at ,Viewed objectively, with the nlng to embark on careers- of : "When. shall I do for my own." erally come around between Yeshiva. . academician's detac)lment, we . service the Babbinat4:, Jew- · You, -perhaps? · have a scenario of. striking sue­ . . cess. But :the silver Hning did Exegeticus Catalogicus . not overwhelm the cloud. For, 5, 5) : while other• vineyards were tend­ (Contiimed frorri Page Col. -be -totally inconsistent with the catalogue's own statement -in re­ ; ed . by our best t;alents,· our own demic hours per week and, con­ : fields withered. Very few of our sequently, at least 30 academic gard to Jewish studies or b)' . best minds g�ve mind _to . the hours in a 16 week ·· semester that the gra,tting of only 1 cred­ it for a Bible course ,presumes : Jewish community, ,.its needs and , (p. 41), it stands to .reason tpat that the 30 class hours are ac- : its ;tomorrows . .The Jewis!l �chool; if the · 11atio· of 2 preparation · . c p i · : in particular; both . .y . only 15 prepara­ tioil h9urs (for a _tptal of 45 : ternoon· : W6S ' fore� to accept . sumed by . the catalogue to be .· . . . . academic hours, or 1 credit) ...:.... . teacher�· arid°-le�ders who . arrived ;the standard for all u·ndergrad­ . · at :their careers by a negativistic uate lecture recitation courses - a presumption which would process of -rejection and elim­ ·be maintained, then the ·ao class again arbitrarily discriminate ination and drifted with ,their .hours of a Bible course will gen­ ,against the Bible course, this charges . rather · than led them. erate 60 preparation hours for a time however in an even more Jewish education fell into almost detrimental fashion by positing, total of 90 academic hours per it · total disarray, almost completely semester which warrants 2 cred- as were, that a Bible class requires only 50% of the prep. ·· unresponsive to. . the challenges. · . its. Pnul Millman aration time of another course. And · ,thus it would have con- • To ,look at a Bible course in Denn JacobRabinowitz In a sequel to this article I tinued ·were it not for the "eth­ ny a other fashion would be pre­ hope to deal with ,the "seifa" nic explosion."· suming either: Je,vish pride - ·reUgious and lsh e1luc11ti1m, Jewish c�mmunity Given the students we can, of . the text re: "intensive ,analy­ natural - · has always been one sen•ice, nn1l t-hti like. and we will, change the face of a) that it is inherently differ­ sis of classic texts in the He­ of the bulwarks of• Jewish sur­ Erna Michael College has tomorrow's Jewish America and, ent from any other undergradu­ brew and Aramaic originals." vival, But in our time it is made·, and is continuing to ·make, since 'there are more Jews in ,ate lecture-recitation course in Mr. Solcolow is mt a.lmmi1ts of dimmed by the self-assertive energetic efforts to steer .rather America than- anywhere else on terms of its credit per semester Yeshivci and · presently teaches than drift. And the student-con­ earth, the face of. tomorrow's allotment a presumption Bible and Jewish Histo1·y a.t YO glow generated by other groups . and we find ourselves in the ceived and sponsored Jewish Jewry. which we have demonstrated to ancl Elt{C, PAGE EIGHT THE COMMENTATOR �ednesday, April 24, 197� A Social Security For Education Apologia Pro Vita .· Nostfq /Continued from Page 6, Col. 4) amidst the judicial proceedings must, nevertheless, be cognizant (Oontin-ued from Page 6, Ool. 5) · ported . by contemporary em­ related to Watergate. At age 68, of the fll(lt that . senility is a .Petronius), Eugene O'Neill'$ pirical studies. P. Meredith Bel- Mayor Abraham ·Beame of New physiological fact.or and not a have become '!-groups (,therapy ,play Mom·nlng Becomes Electra., movies ' bin, an industrial and research York has been entrusted. with chronological factor; there are groups), a sort of ntind-blowing, and the Fellini's Satyrl• consultant in Cambridge, En­ What has -been called "the sec­ people who are infirm of mind especially for exhibitiofiists, and con and A Funny · Thing Happen­ gland, cites studies by Ehringer, ond toughest job in the country." and body at age 35 and men and when professors, in their dread ed on the Way to the Forwn'l Clement, and othel:'s which clear­ And one of the key contenders women with mental alertness of student power, · have f:allen FinaHy, there is an old Greek: ly indicate that only those with in 1976 for "the toughest job in and physical stamina at age 75, into a catatonit aphas,ta, the proverb, "All rivers can be initially low intelligence suffer the country will be Governor A way to weed out · those who linguist prt>c1ain'ls that there js crossed hy. those who go td the greatest decline with age, Nelson Rockefeller, who will then -cannot meet the demands·of the no substitute for clear under­ their sources." Surely we at Ye� In a 1969 · study, Clement, for be sixty-eight, awesome task of educating the standing of words and 'ideas. shiva who know the v:alidity of youth must be establlshed, difl­ What I have said thus fiar this in our study of the Jewisll �xample, compared certain abili­ Regard, furthermore, the age­ regarding any chronological age ,applies to the study of all · 1an­ tradition should realize that it ties as · memory, intellectual ef­ at-death of the following great ficiency, reaction time, and conslderaions, gtiages. Why· Greek and Latin is no less true of the other. men, all of them active in their One proposal certainly to be in particular? One answer that tradition that forms the basi� strength of grip between teach­ last years : Among philosophers ers and workers. According · to deliberated upon :is .that ad­ we may give.to users of the En­ of Western civilization, namei� . and beletrists - Martin Buber- va nced by Dr. Rober.t N. Butler, glish language is . that approxi­ that of Greece and Rome. We Belbin, Clement concluded that 81, Robert Frost-89, Carl Sand­ ", . , teachers achieved superior a member of the National Coun­ mately half• of' the :words in our . Orthodox Jews who . are accus◄ burg-89, George Santayana-89, cil on ·the ·Aging arid_ research language,· · and especiaHy the tamed to the charge that we an, or highly superior scores on all Sophocles-90, Albert Schweitzer · - psychiatrist and gerontologist: e.t .more sophisticated words, are of clinging to that which the over� tests. The decline with age in 90, George Bernard Shaw-94, and :the perfol:mance of teachers was the Washington School of :Psy­ . Latin origin,, and . about 15% . whelming majority of Jews iit Bertrand Russell-98; of men of chology. Dr. Butler suggests, more are from Greek. (We may America have disregarded, should less on all tests except that of medicine and physiology - Louis "Probably physicians, lawyers, add ·that there are between two not be det�rred· by the fact that: reaction time (where there was •Pasteur-73, Wilhelm Roentgen- . judges, teachers, and career e,c� and .. three thous.and words of the classics have been abandonetl high variability among teach­ 78, Sigmund Freud-83, Joseph 'ecutives m government should Greek origin and about five hun­ by the great majority of higll ers) ,":I Lister-85, and Anthony von­ be required to undel'ta}{e con­ dred . words of. �tin origin in schools and by many colleges as -Ohalies · Taylor, Professor of Leeuwenhoek-91; of scientists , · tinuing education .and _ undergo th(!·.T almudic . corpus, which, in well. It is precisely today that bychology at iPenn&yl\lalllo. and mathematicians - Albert · . . · . periodic relicensing , · examina- : this respect, clearly reflects ·the -the· .classics are ,needed more State. Unlvetsity; state11: "Von Einstein-76, Galileo Galilel-78, 5 · tion." Graeco,Roman milieu in' which than -ever before -to give us per◄ and Isaac Newton-SO; of great Another alternative is • dis­ it was composed.) A knowledge spective in - our modern prob� The F.di-tor - in - Chief and · cornposers - Giuseppe Verdi-88, cussed in Fll(lulty Tenure: A R.e­ of even ia limited number of Lat­ !ems. The jssue of . th responsi:. Governing · Board of Tim: Igor Stravinsky-89, Jean Sibelius- · e port and _Recommendations by in and Greek ,.roots will enable · bility .. of power faced by .post:. COMMENTATOR extend con­ 91, and at age 80, Karl Boehm's the Conuuf891.0ll on Academic the student to 'know many thou­ Vietnam America today is closet, dolences to Shalom Carmi '71, baton is stili actively waving Tenure in Higher Edtl(!atlon>The sands of derivatives · or to under­ to that confronted by fourth-, instructor in Bible in YC, on at the Metropolitan Opera House stand better the true meaning . century Athen tMn to that the loss of his father. May he :in N.Y'. Among great artists � s The Edi-tor - in - Chief and (the significance of the word be comforted among -the Auguste R0dhi-71, Donatello-SC), met .by any other nation , in hU-i Governing Board of THE "etymol�gy") of those . words · mourners of Zion and Jeru­ Matisse - 85, Michelangelo - 89, man history. 'l'heri too - rea(l COMMENTATOR share the that he does know. We are often Plato, Isocrates; and Deniosthe:. salem. Grandma Moses-101, and at age . grief and shock of the Yeshiva measured ,by the vocabularies . 85, Marc Chagall has yet to rest ses - Athens, sud'denly a super. community on the untimely that we possess; those who have !Meting and Weniger (1959) have his paintbrush, and hang up his · power after a great war, experio11 death of Rabbi Norman Novo­ studied the classics ipso facto :qgest.ed that the age of per­ smock. These cordon bleus have · enced . a coHilipse of traditional seller of the Alumni Office. irrtprove _their vocabulary, Theo­ _yaslve dOWllWard change ls no proven their prowess no.t only moral v,alues, so that "sophistr1i 4 , May his . family be comforted retically one could do the same oo.rUer than 15 years. He notes, in their early years, but in their tasted • good as philosophYj among the mourners of Zion by simply studying Greek and �owever, that the measurements late years, as well. In a way, · should," and young people were. and Jerusalem. Latin roots; but few of us have vary depending on the person they have refused to succumb , , · attracted by ethical relativism� the patience to study .roots in a and the bodlly runction Involved. to the third statement of Dis­ · Commission observes, "Many in­ vacuum. The Editor - in - Chief and This obilervation tends to sup-.. raeli's dictum, "Youth is a stitutions set .the retirement age Secondly, classical literature is Governing . Board of THE port a key argument in favor of blunder, Manhood a struggle, Old · at seventy; some eve11. later . .. simply beautiful. Rabbi Jonathan COMMENTATOR extend . a �llminatlilg a mandatory retire­ Age a regret." ,· some institutions have ·used a late ment age, that is: that menal in the Talmud Yerusha-Imi ac­ mazeJ.tov to its Senior Edi­ retirement age, or .the: . absence powers, . like physical abilities, But just like a faculty totally knowledges that Greek 1s the tor Al Kaplan on his engage�­ of e mandatory age, as a pow-· · ,� ·,· fl�urlsh, when they are consis� composed of young Instructors 6 language best suited for poetry. "" ment .to Rochelle Rubinstein: ... erful recruiting devise.'.' .. entty exercised. ls hannful because of Its insuf­ What reader· ha:s norlleen moved Steps which ,ajm at recog­ These findings are exempli­ ficient experience, a st.a.ff com­ by the poignant parting of -Hec­ skepticism, and nihilism. , TheY, nizing and preserving scholar­ fied by many notables in society pletely comprised 6f elderly tor and Andromache in the Iliad, had no time to learn, only tQ . . ship ·and achievement, must · be ' who refuse to be pushed into a members ls dangerous because by Hesiod's- proclamation that act. The historian Fieriry Steeie · enacted. And no ,amount of �ocking chair. At age seventy, of an obv,lous threat to conti­ to achieve excellence one must Commager .has said. that if ,Lyn,; · plaques, gold watches, or .testi­ . ,Judge John Sirica, for example, nuity. A reorganization of regu­ sweat, by the irony of· an Oedi­ don Johnson had read Thucy� monial dinners can compensate lations regarding the faculty pus an( earlier· version of Presi­ dides' account of the. Sicilian ex.. I_ias become a celebrated figure for injustices done not only dent Nixon) -searching · for the pedition things. might have gon� against the individual educator, culprit when all fingers point at differently in Vietnam. There toq but •against students and the him, by the reduction to a,bsurd­ the two great super-powers were Thoughts Between Classes coonmunity-at.large· who are the Uy · of Soerates' ·· thmk-tank in competing . for the allegiance oii main v,ictims of the monstrous At'istophanes' ,Clouds, by Socra­ the uncommitted and less-deve.. (Contittued from Page 5, Col. 2) · Jaw of mandatory retirement. of for the Vice-presidency and . sup­ tes' ringing insistence that the veioped nations the "Third YC's Board of Trustees and Ad­ World'' which they · were trying novice would avoid; fill'S tax rec­ p�ed to be surrounded by a uncriticized life is -not worth m:inistrationcan make the "Torah. to manipulate. <>rds filled with petty or ques­ staff he neither knew nor con­ 1hring, by Catullus' moving elegy U'Madah" motto -take :real si,g­ W\}y not read these works in tionable deductions; behaves {n trolled. What football coach or for his brother, by Virgil's shn­ . · nificanc� with t,he adoptiQn of translation? It was Jerome - who <;Urious ways in . various crucial business executive who did as system ple but •powerful sunt ·lacrlmae ,a which truly - rewards said "Non · versiones, sed ever­ :QIBtters, like the milk fund, ITT, awful a job as · Nixon has in rerum ( "there are tears in , · knowledge, devotion, and PX­ siones," "not versions but perver­ Howard Hughes funds; acts so running the country would not Ilfe"), by the pla'yful charm of have been out on his behi.nd in petlence by perpetuating it. Ovid's version of that repository sions." The Italians have . a say- erratically as to seem guilty 1 '.l'he baltlo WOl'kl of Cicero, Modttn of a cover-up and then of a a matter of weeks? · Library, 1961, cited In Aging In To• of the dream world of -the 1ng, "traduttore traditore," "a day's SOelety, Clark Tibltets ai\d WIima. cover-up of a cover-UI>i insists How could someone deceived Greeks known as · myth, by Taci­ translator Is ,a traitor.' It was Donahue, eds. Englewood cnrts, N. .t. : B that he will or will not do some­ by small fry like I>ean, Halde­ Prentice-Hall, 1960), pp, 85•87, tus' . . epignammatic · solltuc'llnem lalik who said that reading a: .thing and within days acts con• man, Agnew, Mitchell and the 2 "Aging," Clement S Mlhano111ch and fll.ciunt, pacem appellant ("They translation was like kissing · a rest be empowered by th� citi­ Joaeph- B,· Schuyler, Ourrent Social make a wilderness; they call it gltl through a veil. But surely, trary. to his words; contradicU Probimis .:ltllwaUkee: . Bruce PUb, CV., himself about when John Dean's zenry to deal with' sly, wor.ld 19511), p." 449. peace"), by. Juvenal's use- of we· who know the difference be­ 3 "R.etltement strategy In an Evolving remarks depi'iVed him of his men like Brezhnev, Chou, Porn­ sledgehammers to cr,ack nuts in tween Tehllllm in the original Society," �tll'l!lllent, France8 Cat11, ed. •and tnanslations of· the Psalms moral innocence - or Is it· ig­ pidou, Faisal? (New York: Bffta,V lotal PIJl>llcatloiia, his · · bitter satires? Is 1t any norance? · This ,is truly goverrunent by 1972) , p�. 180•8t, wonder that the classics have need not be reminded ,of what , ' "DeVelOl)lllental Concept!0nl! IUld thl the translator of Ben Sira tells the Marx Brothers or by Mutt Retlrietllent Procees," Catp, p, 111, supplied· the inspiration for such And what ignorance! Has ·ever this · us in his preface, namel that and Jeff. Give man - be 5 ".\ Ufe Orel& Perspectl11e1 l'Ulillc Poll• modern · works as James Joyce's y a leader, himself guiltless, been he indeed atch•booby or, more eleti fOI' Later Life," . Carp, p, 167. novel U'lyoes, T. s. Eliot's poem what was originally spoken in so surrounded - in his Vice 6 . cammtgsslon on Acadentlc Tenure In likely, arch-criminal - his yo-yo Hlglter lildUcllllol'I (lian Francleco: Joa­ The Waat,eJand (note, in partic- one language does not have the President, Cabinet omcers, pres­ sey-Base, 19113),. p. · and send him packing. Si,· . ular; . its apograph taken from same force when rendered in idential advisers, men in the •another tongue. We know the highest offices of the land - · difference between the ipslssima with apparent perjurers and law­ Challenge To The 1.A.P. Conscience verba of . the sages and a Son- breakers? Some men have sug- . cino translation, As Euclid re­ Page 6, . gested (e.g., Gore Vidal jn The · (Oonii,iued from OoZ. 3) for e.inanclpation from oppressive · she was eight; will be irireparably minded ,Ptolemy, there is no 'Best Man)that . a president needs her. husband. her bOdy· when ·he sexual roles, ,and many men who undermined:· $he will ' be furious royal road to · geQtnetry. If we 'no arcane knowledge other th an . wants it, bear hhn children, nd a ,are wary of courtesan roles find with .herself for ever wanting to truly want · to know ourselves, .· one thing, how to · judge char- · ·.sometimes even . wash·Jus socks her boring and -resent her, More outdo Shirley Brandeis and Jn , a in accordance with the motto acter; then he can hire •the right in return for the status .,and and more she will find that the fit' of anger bequeath · her ward­ inscribed at · Delphi, we must . .men. to handle the -complex de- pleasures ·that he has · given her. roles she has evolved because robe to the Jewish Museum with study. thoroughly • not only the . , tails. of government while re- Since its inception, the wom­ of her upbringing and cornpetl-. · the request that her Oscar de Hebrew language, literature, and serving to himself ,the basic en's libel'ation movement• has had . tive social _situation are accept� Larenta's be displayed right next history, but also those of the policy, decisions. By that stand­ a . profound effect on the way . ,able to fewer people; the bastion to . Justice · Bra�deis' gav,el, �d Greeks and · Romans, . who, to­ ard alone, Nixon deserves to be people Uve, and the time is not of her raison d'etre which was the rest of the wardrobe be gether with the Jews, :laid. the . cashiered, McGovern was re­ far away when the J.A ..P. will , . foundation for Western civiliza­ . jeusly, my · inter­ minyan to clarify the non legi­ pretation isn't halachic, rather, timate character of homosexual­ my interpretation according to ity in the eyes of Judaism." "Indians" Chalk Up Success (Continued from Pctge 2, Col. 5) gave to Wargrave's a strengtll two fine actors Jack Newman of character that built perfectly and Leo Frischman: I enjoyed to .the final confession in whicll Mark Schwartz and thought.that he learned that Van Claythorne . he might have come out of hid­ was a mistake and still had t«. There's no easy way for Charlie Nelson to become Nelson. ing a bit sooner than he did. kill him because "that's the way; n,. Mavin Stern is at his worst it had to be." Bravo. But there ls a way to make it somewhat easier, Antonio. Or the National Naval Medical Center in good and he was far from his Our way, The Armed Forces Health Professions Bethesda, Maryland, recognized worldwide for its The play had some weak spots, Scholarship Program. It won't soften the demands work in Medical Research. worst. Though Philip Lombard for example, Wargrave, in low: of your. professors, or those you make upon yourself . And if you've read this far, you may be interested · comes out a distant -second to key telling Van Claythorne not -but it.may free you from·those financial problems in the details. Jus.t send in the coupon and we'll a , which, understandably, can put a crimp In your supply them. ··Rand ll J. Mccreadie it was not to wor-ry and just sit down even concentration. ------Marv's fault. Randall was by though he is going to kill him If you qualify, our scholarship program will cover , d Forces Scholmhlps ------, the costs of' your medical education. More, you'll I �;,�i Z.CN-44 I nature a more lovable type, a I Universal City, Toxa•, 78148 I drew a large laugh in what was receive a good monthly allowance all through your mere rogue whereas Lombard v ... · • · · 1 I desire lnlormallon for the followlna program: Army I supposed to be a ery serious schooling. Navy D Air Force D □ . 1 Medlcal/Osteopathfc □ Dental □ ruthless killer, and every­ But what happens after you graduate? Velerlnary• O Podiatry D Other. (please specify) I was a scene. However, the magnificence I v · · Then, as a health care officer in the military I body lo es a rogue, don't they? of the set (built by the boys · branch of" your choice you enter a professional Name;______,-,---,-______I (please prlnl) Blore (Jeff Neiman). was my from scratch) and he direction environment that is challenging, stimulating and Soc. Sec, #· ______;...... ;,_ I v t satisfying, I fa orite. Anyone who could make of Mr. Beukas were worth the Address, ______I v . An environment which keeps you in contact with _ I me belie e that he is hungry, price of admission Getting peo,, practically all medical specialties. Which gives you Clly•______a . the time.to observe and learn before you decide on _.:,___ _ I will e t, drink and be merry ple to match their roles, e.� Stat"--- I v yqur specialty. Which may present the opportunity ,------Ilp ___ _ I while e eryone around him is Armstrong, Blore, Brent, Rogers, to train In that specialty. And to practice it. Enrolled a '--,---- - ____ I being bumped off and he's doing You may also .find some of the most advanced -'-,-(sc�h oo�ll or transforming a person to a To iiraduate In, _ I · medical achievements happening right where you __,==---,,.,-,,----- the bumping and still mainti!,in work. like at the · Brooke·Army Medical Center in (month) (year) (degroe) I role, Lenny Balanson, is a knock Dale of blrtm---.,--.,.,,----.,----- I believability as a character is v San Antonio, Texas, long noted for its Burn Treat­ (month) (day) (year) that few directors ha e. ment Center. Or the home of Flight Medicine, the I doing his job in my book as famed Aerospace Medical Division, also In San · •veterinary not available In Navy Program. �I an actor. The evening was well spent ------Rounding out the cast, and (my date enjoyed the show) ancl ARMED FOIICES HEALTH CARE v D�DICATEO TO MEDICINE ANO THE PEOPLE WHO PRACTICE IT gi ing the performance of his I would certainly recommend the life was Lenny Balanson. He next play sight unseen. Wednesday, April 24, 1. 974 PAGE TEN THE COMMENTATOR ------··-· . -····------tFaber, Bertram,And Wil�ig,flplne Losing Ruch.elsman And Vo.g'Jll Their Mighty Hite ·careers ls Going To Hu rt. '74 .Ellmen ··on (Continued from Col. : .(:Gontin:ued from Page 12, Col. 2) .No. Give it to. them easy in then stressed the real irnpor.tanc� Page 12, 5) threw himself into it like a u u man possessed; He never reached caring;'• Faber paused dramatic­ their secular st dies. He further . of rooters. "The fans are not for wo ld l�se a very important · · the plateau of his previous sea. -ally, shaking his head, "it hard­ commented, "What we really us. The fans are for our op- match; but expecting a man to . - · son, but even with missing four -Jy makes you want to play." need, instead of ball-handling ponents. Because if the other go out and pin his opponent at u matches and invaluable training - Blushingly, one of the treach­ guards, is a six-foot seven-incher team sees two h ndred people will is tantamount to sending time his p sence was felt : �rous who had ,turned to other who can pull the boards con- cheering in the stands, they may a rookie baseball player out to re -throughout the season; for along : ·forms of diversion, I began to sistently." ' just start believing that this hit a homer. Well, Simeon Vogal -with Vogal, Manny kept an i�- .worry ·(figuvatively speaking, of Davjd Wilzlg really is a team". provided the heroics that evening · ex erienced sq uad beset with !the course)- about the sleepless While it may be true that Gaping Hole and p_inned his man, giving p · tensions that a younger team .nights. to come, over what I was the team must have a king- The departure ·of the three Yeshiva the win. That's clutch. will face from falling'apart lea4� ., ·-part of. Josh Bertram soon pro­ sized pivot man, it can neither seniors cagers may pose the If anyone on this year's wres·tl- · u serious ing them to a strong 8-7 ·finisI,. . ,· vided; the-needed- solace. Bertram, .do witho.ut a certain backco rt Mighty Mites with some •ing team was the cohesive factor, · u A R chelsman practice was . • ,or "Shoei• as • :he is known, is a man. David Wilzig, the team's difficulties. Tho gh Faber and it had to be him; With Manny u u something to watch, twenty min­ t" direct contradiction of -Faber in resident all-purpos.e guard and · Shoe will only be leaving benches Ruchelsman out m ch of the utes of all out torture and ..• .atature1. style, and especially in . the school's only bona fide su- to chill, Wilzig leaves a gaping • season with mononucleosis, the . in u u · thirty minutes of some of the ; : ·point -of view. "Heck, if'I weren't perstar, strikes rather a con- hole the YU scoring attack. yo nger -wrestlers looked p to · greatest schmoozing of a time , -,a .play.er, l probably wouldn't templative figure for an athlete Not only will the team . have a ·Simeon as the senior member · U . Concerning compensating for the . f 'va ed -led by . . . who do you think:? ,; -show .up .-to .the games, either. of his prominence. hard time o the rsity and ·he respond ·impressions · about his career, loss of Wilzig's munificent shoot- to •his new -found "seasoned · He was THE CAPTAIN. ·,:. ..Afwr all; no one wants to . see .,_.::�,. loser;"· the elongated, easy- Wilzig is a moderate baritone ing arm, but the other starters -veteran" role · just as you'd ex- Simeon Vogal and · Manny · u _gojng center-by-trade · revealed, to the tenor of Shoe and the bass will be under a great deal of . pect him to. .Perfectly. ·No one R chelsman represented Yeshiva t ,with :a welcome candor. of Faber, shying away from com- pressure, pressure which . had worked harder at prac ice, · in a way that most people can menting on team, players, or been placed on Wilzig when op- . o f identify with. They did not sit -Feeding 1the same passes to sweated . m re or su fered as coaches. "Certainly I'm not hap- ponents keyed on him. Much, if · around,. grub all_ day and con,­ � -Shoe, that I had sent Faber's much . . . :.py with the team's record, • but ri :al.I, of the slack could be fo captain, Manny · sider themselves g�d little ·� --way; I took down · the following ot Except r the 0 sfied with my own in- taken up -·with the acquisition -R ; Coming off his Yeshiva boys, but in 'their pwn ,.rebounds: I definitely would I am .sati uchelsman . dividual play. When I started fl'om Brooklyn Co.Hege of former great junior year record, every- ways did _what :they considere.d · do it over -again," said Shoe with . · as a freshman, four years Yeshiva League M.V. .P., Peter . anny to be noth- to be their best, out where they •.: :emphasis. "The work? I'm useVt!'l'y·)· but that1s because . I . two im me, knowing that Whether·the Mighty Mites can ,the �udent'.s liaison between to get them Too pad Yesbiv.a f, :don't set a limit on myself. At . por.tant to. s . · . -I could do. well against non- win without their .virtuouso ,their wishes and·. the seclude_d didn't llPP.reciate them. �: �ny• rate, it will be my experi- . · Jewish ballplayers." "I don't,'.' he · guard of this year and .whether . office Qn the- first,floor of Furst TUE, DOWNS: The second .an­ 1· :ence.s- wi:th the•team that I'll re­ · . i . f:urther remarked, "think that !they can win with the upcom- all, :then, the.· added: bur4en of nual Yeshiva College Intramural ; , 'member -when I think back on H . . all my teammates agr�d with ing stars- of next year is ques- being captain . of a . team pre- Wrestling Tournament was to be · -my college- days." · b.ut I thought it is rela- u <:. me on. this, . tionable, but moreover it dominately staffed with sopho- held. S nday Apr.ii, 21st :at 1 P.M. Harder t,o Lose p tial. ca se it · u u was necessary to keep in to ·tively inconsequen Be u more and junior matmen, and in the 1\-J:ain Building Gym •.• Risking the s perrighteo s, u ·· · •' · shape in the off season as welt" will take the Man's cooperaton with this immense task, sue- . b t.had to. be cancelled . , . with / -Shoe played down the losing as­ The Knickerbocker League's to, as David Wilzig put it, make cumbing to a weakening disease. any hick the Ellmen will be �e t,, .. . :pect of losing. "I'm even proud­ top scorer last season Wilzig the Mighty Mites seem iike a A lesser man might have · first team in Yeshiva College .. , v , . . . , er to ha e been on· the team also performed the highly touted team, and it will take the ad- shirked the added burden unto history to have a Junior Var- . . �: ·when. people·· scoff · about the . the 1,000 point t v . · feat of topping ministration's cooperation to his associates, letting them carry sity, ten ati ely scheduled to . -iosses because it is harder to · career mark. ·However, he did really make them a good one. part of the load, but Manny. take the mats in 1975. ·Jearn how to lose than it is rt:o . express some disappointment at ._ ,:.,. · 'learn how to ·win." Shoe, who hav,ing been selected. to .the . not �s considering a future in · the first' squad of the all-star team; Rabbinate for himself, ,took a uThey told me that I was· a vir­ ·: constructive stab at his prospec- tual shoesin and it was rough . 'tive fellow spiritual leaders. the -second u . to find myself on · · '"Nowadays · Rabbis m st learn team. I attributed it to anti­ '10 communicate with kids on semitism. That's no persecution ,; 'their own level and a simple complex on my part either, · be­ .t 'way of doing that is by being cause there is some of that able to converse with them about around the league. During an ··, sports. :Also, sports as physical away game at Cathedral, spec­ ·activity must be recognized as tators hollered anti-semitic jeers a vital part of Jewish life." at us." He added with a sly grin, Shoe has his own designs in "those are the teams that we'd ,· mind about .how :to build a suc- ·really love to swamp." cessful · ballclub. "I don't think -Wilzig showed some tolerance : We could· win with M-.J.H.S:L. for our fans. "A lot of people ,: stars -alone. We have to get a that stay home do so because _ bold of a few ballplayers from of the travelling. Even our home .:: \>Ublic· schools who have experi- games are not at home." He ence · with that type of com- t .Becominga>physieianlsatremendous. '" pe ition and are not afraid to ;::::======. . . ie.t knocked around on the APA:RTM:ENT TO Sl:JBLET J.Oll. . . u m FO. ,lt TUE. SUMMER· sa tiS• fact.. . @ r.t'.' W hen L -aske.d. hi (JUNE TO SEPTEMBER> whether he thought it would .In )N�•hlngton Height■, One . block :a.,,. ...s. .Pll- '·l'i5�•t to giv.e>SUCh players .a from •'A•· -Train, 10 min,. -tram· vu. :- satisfactimi �ealt: ·.:in . their. Hebrew studies1 ;Three l'.lll>ma, . Rent reaaonable,. �au ,- M ·replied ,with :the . obvious� 781�2.130 ;.after 7 -P,M•. ,ny night,. �utWhetheryou 1" s_t ill jn.J:=:: �I �hootwith thc theAir:Forcedoesnot.Hcfindshisofficecstablishcd · ..,_------� r!g�rs of �cc to fiveyears ,ofgraduatcimedkiah,du:; :·1or-him:�Sujlj,lieundequ ipment readilyavailable. callo!':slllt,to, be:fa ce_C;I, o� ,are:.8'rc�y.,a,pracnicing- ,He,hasmany,o pt_ions.available-to himwhen treating . : . . . n ·. · phJSICJan, u's. our ,QP._IDIOn .that the, .-\ir.F'�GC.':ffl · peti�1,,For c:xaniplc,h�c:anco suh wiJhAir,Forc:o 'T JO:Y · t.t •,o 'I> olfcr. ·bc11h, P,rofcuwnal,,and-·.�nonal -san1facmon · apec1ahsts.'Hc-also;has ,refmal·-to olher-Air•Foicc • · i n · · · i i DAIRY . RESTAIUIANl hardto duplicate i ,civili11n,lif�. . . . fac lities via,acro�dic;al.cyac:u;u �n. L,as1.,Jiut.not · .. . -�n- overstatement?-Not 1f1you:-cons1dcnhe. lc11s�, arc !h� �a.ti11f.11ctionuhat_ comc wi11i:hav ing .. \.,lift. ·.DtatfllS * IIAL�D8 . . . i �• .VARl£TV· · �F. _FlllH· w, D.ELJCIQU&. 8ANDWU)HH specifics. . . · ...... : the.,oppouunuyfo r.n:g1darJollo�.-ups,and.a m ssed ,,.,.. ,111Tma · · ·* CAKl;.8. & 0lt81ERT8. . Takc. t_hc ._pr�lcm qf.a�adua.t�.m_cdic .at�uli•· appointmcn�.r�tcIha� i sprac1i�ally nil. . ., ;· . · A .....�TAll�S ·•·HOT a COLD- DRINKS l!TC, IIQn. �t'5 a P.CnQd,1>._(Yo,urllfc,thc.�1r.forcc1:�ma�c . . �hc�cr:you,a�ealrcady -11:physician,._or sQOntG . . . . · n , . 25'9 ;IIM'UEROAM· · ·A.YI� �ons1dcr��ly c11s1er.w1thcontforta blc-�al,1cy,11Rd,hv-- beCQme._o e,-you mil!ltfind,it.e1nrcincly)nt�eSJing: 1qa,_co11dmo�s. ._ , , . : · . · ; . •. . . . !O findou t what the Air Force.has !9 o�ct,W¢'.�i•* • �tei-.lnrltdllll■t of"Y.. lllva ·.U.■lv•nlty · . . . be.arcal.cy�nerl Creature comforts as1d.c,, �h�.j\�r.,,F.or�c-,offcrs , 11 CIC!Uld Jf;you',ILma1hri.lhecou­ pll!1)fcssiof!?l.advantagc�- ees;si�u�ceMng,ttaini,M rpon,!'e' d:b_e:haP.PY�o send you�ctail�:ctinformation:·\ 11tyour own_specialty,_yQu.d.be 1il.conJac.t.wuh , ..... , . ... . , ...... , . ,. ._. · . · i n · · · · p�ysi� im.si ,all:or:thc.:m�li;a!,s�c;�a.ltics. You(II .,.��--:------��"!"'".,,..C ( f1¥1ct1on, m an.envu�ont•wl11ch-1s 1'!tcllectually ¥1 :t�::,3P"nunl11t1 · · . C·. .M>f4 n ·c1-- • • •· stpnulatm�and p�ofcss1o allychallc'!gmg. . �, P,to1�,1u1ti1• . . , Not all phys1c1an� p11raue.post res1�ency fellow- � PlcJ_scscndme info.�al!O":onihc ,\ir,F,'o;cc l!hysiciariP.,o,;:,f ' · s'11ps,.lhu.Jf.YO'!.arc .mtcrcstcd,-!h�:A1� -F�cefOft• ·;, gram. I undemand therm no obligation, . · , , · ·RE&.U.LAR PARES n • · ducts themboth m-housc and atc1v1ha msUIIUIOII$, •·I . . . Sex.\M);_(Fl_', ,. The physician already in practice 'can lookfo r- ll Name 'trim, r.in,> I · in · , ' lS ·R.A.E:.l - f:1U RO:P E ward-to�other . .\h gs . .lf,.you-wanMritining-in the � Address · 1 i n 1 f·. r.egt1lar· :l«lt•uled ·ofrlines p[jlcticcof the mcd ci_ne of the (u.t_urc, .YP.U:ll_fi d;it ! · in:the Air I:orcc. For cxample,.therc's cmplJ11sis.on ;I c11,____ �---�------f, 1(oup-mcd1cine-and:p�vcnt ive medicine, and the. : sia, ip----l'hone . , • i .SUCCESS. TIA ¥EL gipwi11g spcc i1l1Y. .of l'lamily_physic:ian," Whatever ;, ii! , · I ·SERYIC.E • yqur interest; therearc few specialties which.arc not ! Spj:, Sec. Date ofBlnh_,..___ : i I . · CHAiM JERUCHEM :-l,Y .t,.,.l l1tmnU:> bclingpracticed _ n today's·Ai� Force, · ;_ · ·· ,· i i n ff. e alth-. · Car e.a 1 I•t S be St. • · ,51r,EAS.T4Znd .SIRHr, N.Y.C. (off Madison Ave.l The physic an,starting,.h s,practiccin.civilia 'I 1· Ii� has.10.lakc.in.�.ac:caunt.thcc�st.of: scuing,up •n, D�y.time l212l .U7■0.580, _ · 'L Air'For ce. · . office. The phys1c1an commcnc1�g_1'1s ,pr11ct1cc. . m . ______J' : Ev.-s:a_n d. S111dcays l212,) , 865■937,8 Wednesday, April·24, 1974 THE COMMENTATOR PAGE !\.!t1N :C·o-Captains Depart· From -Tauberm·en (Continued from Page 12, Col. 3) · through ,a disappointing se,ason. mously agree that the excite­ Many · times, opposing foil fenc­ ment and satisfaction gained ers were . of . far highe r quality from the competition was worth t'han our swordsmen. But· even every setback. in the more evenly matched C()n·. tests, the foil squad was some­ Leadersbi1• .times the sole reason why the Paul Millman Outgoing captains Will Green­ YU dorms did not · hear the (I, to r,) Schulman, Schnmz,Gre enberg-, Dachman, Korel_lbUt, Peters. berg of t'he epee · squad and strains of "High Above the Har­ Freddie Schulman of the foil lem River" .more often. Schul­ But the bright side of the foil -the foil swordsmen. The. sabre­ 1973--74 Taubermen ,to the teg­ unit both had an additional man ,admittedly was . better in fencers was provided by Avi men are all returning next year, ional championship. Schulman's quality deserving of mention - his Juni or season · than he was Dachman, who came out of no­ while the 1974-75 epee squad foil percentage will never have ,they have put back into the this year, although there was no where to becomethe best by far may ol�om foto one of the gone below ,750 and Dachman younger members of the te.ani fencer who worked harder at at. his sword. Dachman was the ·best in the cQllege's l)iatory. All will never have tasted defeat. what they- iearned when they · his game than Freddy. Howard irnost . intelligent fencer ,as well of . this augurs well for the com, �t such phenomena are common themselv,!;!S were on tlte way Schram: wali .also . one of the as the one with the best .re- . !ng year, i81ld this year's gradu­ in a college in whieh sports ,are. ... fle;ices. He a� proved to be an . ·ates were as· big ,a part of this· e , a up. This bas. been done by every most aeriQus-minded · fellows on still most fon'1.etarily • and . which might b� • con11tdered a greater reward 'than .done .with auy mallcious lnt.ent, 'but an offensive remark. every - Student Flgllts All Year - even . deaerved · recognitiori. In interviews with Bill White,·. N.:Y. once In a while can serve t.o awaken iJeople and force them to take R,5,T.$. . · 1180 He111psteacl Tpke, Yan�ee announcer, and Jµilph. Houk, then Yankee manager, • { was action. Uniondale, L,I,. .N.Y. 11551 told that·· orgarH� college ·a:thletics is of .little importance as far Working with all of the coaches and other member& of the . (516) 416-2510 as '. building conditioned : athletes. 'Any · person that wants to. be fit athletic department was a great pleasure. I always recetved co­ . . . \ · · can just as easUy ,w9rk •C?U.t by himself. operation which is rare at Yeshiva. I would also · like to thank my Or,ranlr;t!d Val'!Jlty program,, oontln'16d,. �. Houk, serve baBICPlly hard-working sports staff who were .such a great help. They de­ : \qnly t;o· bulllJ, n,ien, : ');'be ,con,petltlon teileh-,s them to · be mentally serve almost as much recognition as the athletes, for t-hey had tough . as · well .u . p),y.tcaJJy,: 11nd· there is no better way to teach to sit .through all the events which at times . could require quite a . men (lOOJ)(lraiOJ)!.:ap,4 bow ;to ··live 'wjth 'one another, tban to have bit of ·endurance, It.has been great deal of fun and a marvelous . · a them 'work together In teain ·fashion. experience, but after two years it is now time :to step down f.- D. · ·1a J It is . this type of overa.ll maturity w�ich is displayed by all 1and move off the Sidelines. .MCAT�DAT-GRE IIRRE�A ·unique 5 week archatDIDB II•: ·, 111111,r co111blni111. I · di1 . .iilh. field_ trips and credit ear11inJ ·LSAJ�ATGSB· A few years before ·you were born • • • Israel was born. colle&e courses at TelAviv· um; lt1raelhaG a llfetlineof experiences to share with you, and -varsity. · ·.ocir· ·We can help you share them with a series of tours.spe­ cifically designed for college age travelers. 'I , . . · All• -NATL. BOS.\· Like our 8 WEEK KIBBUTZ WORK/TOUR PROGRAM . . . , INCLUSIVE. · Plus·$25 Regls\ratlo•. i\:Fqe • Preparation for testsrequired for where you'll work on a kibbutz as a temporary worker, .,,RATE INCLUDES:· ·� admi■ion to graduateand profes­ comea· tour In Israel, and meet your Israeli counterparts. sionaltchools · • Round trip jet via � Or our ONE MONTH ISRAEL TOUR which Is a com� • Ccmplete room & Board • She andtwelve session courses to: .. • Tuition Fee$ • Small groups prehensive sightseeing tour designed to immerse you in • Lectures •vo1uminou1material for home study' Israel's highlights and culture. Our ISRAEL/EUROPE • Field Trips · · prepared by expertsin eachfield. TOUR, combining 3 weeks of touring Israel, with.an op­ .• Archaeological dig at • Lesson schedule can be tailored to oung Tel Aphek (dating· back to tional Grand Tour that includes four European .countries the 4th Century B.C.) meet individual needs. Lessons .can be spread over a period of or a two-week stay in Athens and Istanbul• Open lo college and graduate students (18-23 yrs.) several mon•lhs to a year, or for We also 'ifVe tours of England, France, Italy, Holland, out of town students, a period and Switzerland. And special high school tours that com­ 2 SCHEDULED DEPARTURES of one week rave Depart N.Y. June 16; retumJuly 21 bine Israel with Spain and Portugal or Amsierdam and Depart N.Y. July 10; return Aug. 14 SpecialCompac1 Courses duri"9. London. For complete details and application Weekends- lnterselsions form, call or write today! For lnformallon on any of our youth, high school or Summ• Sassicins lsraet Ask about our other escorted college tours call or write: Hlstadrut Tours, 630 Third quality student tours to STANLEY H. KAPLAN Avenue, N.Y. 10017,(212) 697-6822, Israel and Israel/Europe. EDUCATIONAL CENTER LT.,, EASTOURS 1115 f•t 1ith S1,.. ,e,oo11Jrn, N.Y . 1140 Ave. ofthe Americas (212) 338.:..5300 ;t,:_ Histadru-.--� New York, N.Y. 10036 (516) 538-4555 I we know l&NHII-· ours OAVS, EVENINGS, WEEKENDS u- 630 Third.Avenue, New York 10017 (212) 697-6822 Phone (212) 764-0303 Branches in Majar Cities in U.S.A • . :ru T11 1on11S.•oal 111illl "'' Na1ion111lillRrp111alio·' . . . - . Col;._: 4}.°i. startled expression, he expl1:1iried: budge an inch, But the fans not: fPonth(ited on Pa-ge 10, 1) "Look, what hl:lve I put 1nto it . Col. .:"': ' .. · :--. ; ··.who•s···· Soph8:·:�·\J�n.1§r�·- ':Tie.·. 6-6 .· ·._··: , . Y:E!f!hiel .E�$tein �73 -·•to ,, Bonnie ·. . : . .s·ie gnian.. ,, ...... ,·. .-·�-,. .. i : . •. Iii n,ck�,tfiayoffi Tilt0 r · . . . . . : · . ·Jef.-..f:. . ,G• ·.oldste . in·'·· '75 fo·.-• :Fe1:n By MICHAEL GEi.nti ;•:.: . ,;··.:iih ;t�f '"1hat point. A.riy . .sportsc .. ._ · -· ·. . · , La11d�sberg · .. · · �rit!!r · will. tell you, that's ano�;.- : . .. , , , In the s�co�d. �a�e' of :the•: . .. >ira :Hollander ,;74 to ·suzie M.. . 'no. ·first round of.. .the: .YU . Cup in> i .. · •.· ·· Wake-Ui1 Time .· ;f�e(: . _ ,.;_ : : ..· . tramural hockey'."playoffs, "fh:i!"d�- . Reuven Stein '!71 to Shoshana Yudie Gopin put his magic to Mark Welner · . fending champs, the junior:s, Schneider · · work immediately as he beat Trying to kick through the reif tape, came from behind to tie · the Avi Weiss '74 to Efoya. ·s ubar Po!eyeff two times in a row, sophs, 6-6. The junior squad, de­ stration are Mr. Harvey Sober, club uses are. completing the hat trick, and · in . the physical Nechemia Ben . Zeev '71 to pleted by the -loss of both goal­ . Instructor YC Karate (and JSS sphere, . they are . cutting the lead to 3. Theri fol­ · designed to , :Sharon Pearl tenders, started Richie Hagler, _ Hebrew language), first level Married: lowing his tradition, Mark Bres­ harmonize . the· student's mind of refereeing fame, .in the nets. . Grand Master -T'ai Ch'ee Ch'wan . ,to• Chani low· woke up in the middle of and and body with the Oneness Jerry· Zahtz '74 _ · The sophomores' Jerry" Paster­ Yesyco Karate, -Mr. Andrew the tqird period, just in time to of G-d and His creation. Schmidman nak opened the scoring early, Hirsch (YC '71 ), Mr. Michael An­ tally twice, making the score 1 with a low drive that beat Hag­ 71), Mr. ary Schul­ 6-5. Down by a goal with a min­ dron (YC G ler. Moments later, Yudie on man (YC '71), Mr. Lewis Aaron his third semi-breakaway of the ute to gn in regulation time, the Non-Profit Org. juniors pulled their goaltender, and Mr. Jeffrey Glanz. They will evening, backhanded the puck be aided by Mr. Sid Rosman U.S. POSTAGE the in f_avor of the extra man. Sec­ .ipast Yank(;)e Poleyeff on · (YC '73-AECOM) and Mr. Asher · Paid:· short side to knot the game at .ands later, Robert Listernick rolled a backhand shot toward Leeder (YC '74-Smicha Pro­ New York, N.Y. 1-1. r the net which did a hop-skip gram), and the club's anking Permit No. 4638 For the remainder of the -first and jump followed by another Yeshiva College brown belts. , . IJ)eriod and the entire second pe­ roll which put it over the goal This year's candidate fpr the riod it was all sophs. They bom­ line, tying the game at six. coveted black belt is Mr. Joel ·barded Hagler for five more tal­ And so, it was overttme, with Comet, formerly of Ramaz but lies jn what was a must game a new goaltender for the juniors, now of the YU Association. for them, as they trailed the Robert Listernick. The extra Wea1ion Fighting juniors 1-0 in a best of three stanza proved to be an exciting Demonstrations of beautiful series. In that flurry, Bruce We­ one, as basketball players in the form movements of both Karate nig use his muscle to get a d gym were screaming for ,a goal. and Kung Fu along with weap- · pair of goals, and Jerry Paster­ Both teams played cautious hoc­ ons fighting (nun-chuk, bow, nak scored his second tally of key, and the full twenty minutes tun-fa and sicle) coupled with the game to give the sophs a 5-1 went without a goal, leaving the breaking techniques ( of boards 1ead after two periods. game in a tie. Heartbreak! It and stone) will highlight t.he Something went wrong though, has to be played •all over again! demonstration. :as the sophs went 'into a defen­ So, the series remains 1-0 jun­ The YU club has grown to sive shell instead of continuing iors, with the freshmen waiting 250 members during the past the steady game they had played in the wings. five years. This term alone the