::: rnmm^ im .^i^^^jmat. ,„•£.-
Sfwtari- r. FaeftHy
Baruch School of Business and Public Administration—City College of New York t XXXVI—No. 15 luesday. May 15. 1956 By Subscription Only allagher Hoffman to Address Students Today; o Discuss Former ECA Head Fourth Speaker ntegration By Arthur L. Goldberg In 'Distinguished Lecturer.Series ^'Democracy and Racial ;iste" is the subject of Paul G. Hoffman will speak today on "Freedom: The Dj-namic.of Free Enterprise" at 11 in 4N. Hoffman #ill be resident Buell G. Gal- the fourth speaker in the Bernard M. Baruch Distinguished Lecturer Series. Acting Dean Louis Mayers will preside. gher's speech before the /•.. Hoffman, administrator of Economic Cooperation Admistration from 1948-50, is at present chairman of the board aruch School chapter of the of Studebaker-Packard Corporation. ' ' itional Association for the He was born April 26, 1891 in Chicago and has five sons and two daughters. He attended La Grange High School dvancement of Colored Peo- and the University of'Chicago. - '__•-_. ;e, Thursday at 12:30 in the A beginner in the automobile acuity Council Room. business as a porter for a Chi Herbert Wright, national cago distributor' of Mtos^ ~iSf- uth secretary of the NAACP, Isaacs-Wins Top SC Office; joined the Studebaker Corpora* •M speak -after Dr. Celiagher. tion in 1911. . "~~ The purpose of this meeting The prominent Republican to "acquaint the student body Ellis Referendum Defeated the director of the Automobile the Baruch School with the Manufacturers Association from With a total of 8S4 ballots cast in Tuesday V School-wide e4ectie»s, Harvey Isaacs - rogress made in thV' South," 1933 to 1948. He was the^pxeaS- r.ce the Supreme Court's his- defe^t^dDave Golipsky and Ida Raucher for the presidency of Student Council. Isaacs dent of the Auto Safety Founda ic school ^ segregation deci- polled 28o>Qjtes against Golipsky's 263 and Miss Raucher's 262. Sheldon Brand was chosen tion from 1937 to 1941, president on, ^apbT^some 6T the problems vice-president with ^12 votes over Brit Liprorrs 302 arrcrPaul Douglas" 194. countered. The referendum, popularly termed the Ellis Amendment, was soundly defeated. and chairman from 1942 to 1948. - The decision nullified the ''sep- The amendment calling for He was also president and di ate but equal" doctrine, estab- the removal of the Inter- rector of the Ford Foundation -hed. sixty years ago in Plessy from 1951-53, and the chairman Club Board chairman's vote of Hoffman Specialty Company. Ferguson. The Plessy doc- on Council went down 550- :ne permitted state segrega- 264 and that part asking the •Marketing Used Car*." "Seven >n laws provided that there removal of the ICB chairman Roads to Safety." and "Peace ere equal facilities for .both Can Be Won'' are among the from Council's executive various books that he has writr u-es -wherever they were se?- committee was defeated ten. ?ated. 579-226. The I>istjng-ui.-hed Lecturer In the late 1930's the attack Continuing the unusually close Series w».s initiated by former rainst the "separate but equal" contests, Sigi Laster was elected. Dean Thomas I— Norton. tr!neT especially as applied to recording secretary . over SyU •V >-^" 1 rf. ll.l ucation, -was intensTfied. The Traum with 3S1 to 375 votes. Sarnoff. chairman of the board :preme Court did not at once respectively. Mel Weiss was of the Radio Corporation a£< row out the Plessy doctrine. named treasurer, receiving the America and Thomas L. Watson i:t it slowly nndermined it. It largest margin accorded to any Jr., who was named chairmen oked at each case carefully, contested executive candidate. of International Business r.d demanded actual equalization He garnered 308 votes to Joel Sheldon Brand Harvev Isaacs chines last week. facilities, not just token tries. Isaacson's 2t>3 and Richard Unlike past semesters, The next step came in 1950 Burg*s 226. tickets will be distributed f©E_~ hen the Court, ruled that a Herman Berger, unopposed Board Elects Jacobson the lecture. A number of eleseee*-- egro be admitted to the Texa> for corresponding secretary, re have been invited to attend and aw School because separate ceived 679 "yes" votes to 97 they will fill the orchestra floor- cilities were unequal. against. Ruth Cohen was named To Top Exec Position Balcony seats will be made avail In 1954 the Supreme Court National Student Association able to the student body on n ok the final step when, in delegate with a yes-no count of Donald B. Jacobson, a lower .senior, was elected chair first-come-first-served basis. Stu own vs. Board of Education. 719 to 75. man of the Inter-Club Board Wednesday. Other officers dents attending the lecture will declared segregation in the All candidates for Athletic chosen were Robert Becker, vice-chairman; Georgene De not be excused, from their (Continued on Page 3) Luca. secretary and'"Bernard Medoff, treasurer. .blic schools unconstitutional. — , classes unless these classes have — ' The meeting took a turn of been invited. T events when Becker, who had When_Baruch initiated the first been previously nominated for ew S€aff Named: of a series of three, lectures, the chairmanship. was imme which he gave in May 1954, he diately nominated for the*1 second said, "I am hoping to draw from. - high office upon Jacobson's elec my crucible of experiences so ivartler Elected Ticker Editor- tion. that the students may benefit been appearing regularly for the sition of sports editor. The new chairman, who has Richard Kwartler, an upper from my activities in the fields past four terms. Two members of the copy staff been active in extra-curricular nior majoring in advertising: of politics, business, finance, eeo*- Along with Kwartler, the As were named to the managing activities since his transfer us been elected editor-in-chief nomics. making war - making. sociation elected Arnold Tew. an board for next " term: Helen from the Uptown Center, was THE TICKER for the Fall peace." Schulman. an upper freshman, formerly vice-chairman of -the '56 semester by the Ticker As- upper sophomore, to the posi was named features editor and Board after serving two semes <>ciation. He will succeed Wal- tion of business manager. Tew will succeed Bob Beckem who Stewart Kampelmacher, an up ters as TICKER representative. ice S. Nathan. He was recently chosen "Prince" held the position for a year. per freshman, was named as »m«a» •* — Kwartler has been on THE Baruchians HjJT Staff Selections / sistant sports editor. of Pi Alpha Tau sorority. ICKER ' longer than anyone • Bob Becker is well-kipown for New Directive ow on the staff. He started Ruth Cohen, Jerome Greenberg and Nathan his endeavors in Alpha Phi The administration ruled yea- ith the sports staff as a re- an upper soph will occupy the position of edi Omega, as business manager of terday that no students WiH- be orter and held that position for omore and pres tors emeretii. Lou Marin will THE TICKER, and as a mem permitted to register early next hree terms. Next, he became ent copy editor, continue in the position of copy was . named to editor. ber of Sigma Alpha, under semester. This ruling -will hay ' *sistant sports editor and was .11J. -*!»«• Named to the copy staff were: graduate service sorority. its greatest effect on student ports editor last year. the position of Sheldon Engelberg, Arthur L. Secretary -Georgene De Luca members of the registration In .the Fall semester, Kwart- ' news editor. Goldberg, Morton Horwitz, Bob succeeds Doreen Spiegel. Miss committee many of whwn tarre— r served as features editor Ralph Sobovin- Nadel. Lou Pohoryles, Phyllis De Luca is an active member of now indicated that unless a raise nd is at present serving as news" sky, an upper Zlotogura, Charles Shestack and the Newman Club and has in wages is forthcoming they ditor. He is the author of junior, will con- (Continued on Page 2) will resign their positions. wartler's Korner which has Kwartler tinue in the po Warren Dingott. ; '-i. ir.-il- "i,J,?*^^^WB^«P 'tUHt'i • >.'t.ji»>OH-i» •.^^--*jfv»j-»*:-»**«W4>JM5!v-^'^ ,-^iH .TaMB..-*7» •*» 5S •**-'. T szmz: •-•-•ijt-^ggy,*.'' T^'--- ttZL^LL —.. --..' .-;'t;*>^i-""
• t^- uesday% May^tS. 1956 ~3* THE TICKER Page Z >%ge2 THt Tl€*gft Tu#sday-^#t5r!9 > Isaacs Wins Denis Nominate ICB Elects.. . XContiw^d f*mm jP«*e 1* _., -«f beliota, ^6$ elected a Novel Exhibitions Display OCoolitaeir from Page' IT for the necessary functions Asociation offices -were /uncon eemplete slate of candidates, served as co-chairman of the the club through the organi tested. The yes-ho count was as only two
•^>!r"W""""»"
„.-,•- ^,2.^:-r.;.-. '.k: ; i•?, if >
/"-^i-^fp. ••>:•. asrasstssr.^f^KE' ^^:^ii& ^ISiSfSP "V" 5W?5?S»-f.^: :•-'>?•>>*<»&&.<**&* .••^•^kisW^tK.-^.-' *-»T .a?i. .._4Vft»»^i»'.v»j*« . ;iiij»jr ----- •"'_•.-/SKf*^'-
x'; THE TICKER Tuesday. May 15, 19J -< Page 6 "***', e$6^W&i5ii*Z56 THE TICKER w _SC Sanctions e 7 Men XZ&llsct -*y- Directory -Plan Scum, Eight Runs Down, Students Confident of Victory Despite
'.):• Evelyn Parker, co-chairman of Wins 1MB Championship 7 for Chjarity the Student Council Student Di »•> &?>• With rumen leading: away from first and second base Losing Five Straight Meets to Faculty rectory Committee, has an nrt his team two runs behind, Arnie Tobias of Saxe '59' U nounced that a student Directory elted^a home^ruft over the center-field feneV to win the HniiS^ 4- r^ from Page 8) the faculty to a 72-56 victory plaved it well- Thev- o^ft^rf Haired Wolfe, of the Hygiene over the students in last sem- from the contest ^suc^h identify««rf»ed- -^" will definitely be published next tra-Mural Board Softball ent ^ ... ester's encouater; . For the first \np »ntiK—as • th< semester. runs in the The. students, who are con- — '— ~:—Included—in the Dwectwy -will" Tobiawn sfro providem Hund a^Frant '57k, 10-9Mer.- inning, Klei nsecond prove, di nhimsel the twf asn time in many years, the faculty trick, where one of the stantly running out of excuses ...sa«sr be such'" information as the •veil ending to a game that formidable at the bat as facing played a serions hat! game, and would place a basketball be it. With two out and a man on for losing, are depending upon neath his jersey and throw it names, addresses, phone numbers, ; w Saxe fell behinoS-'by «i^ht their youth and the faculty's base via an error, he belted a toward^ the_b*JsJcet at an oppor -classes and fields of specializa ns in the first inning only to age. which happens to be creep- tion of the students at the Bar- me back and win it in the fifth* fast .ball* delivered by Marv tune moment; the two-platoon Rosenthal over the center field Htjr~ trp on them whether they systerr, where one faculty team- ueh School- In addition to this i final frame. The game took want to admit it or not, to break information, there will appear •u-e Thursday at the East fence to make the score 8-5. would replace another faculty Don Jacobson & PAT their streak of losses. Accord team during play, (with one' tbe names of the SC representa ver Drive softball fields at In the fourth, the freshmen ing to Sobovinsky, high scorer team forgetting to leave" the tives and executives and names crept closer with two more runs. Donald B. Jacobson, a lo •-, Street. of last year's game with 24 court while the new team came of the various class presidents. Then Dick Nausch slammed a Wendy Chernack senior majoring in accounta: Arnie Konopny started for points, "youth must eventually homer 'for Hunt in the top of in); the circus trick, where one At registration, in 521, each overpower the forces of age. J of the shorter teachers would Wendy Chernack, an 18-year- was elected Prince of Pi Ah -<• neophytes and -was wiH. He the fifth to strike what appear am quite confident that the game get on the shoulders of a sturd student -will fill out a form stat 1 'au sorority. He was officially . ided eight walks, one hit, and ed to be the clincher. old freshman majoring in retail will end with the score in oar ier one and proceed to dunk the ing whether or not he wishes to ducted at a mother-daughter c- ing, was chosen as this year's team made one error while However, in their final turn at favor. I sincerely hope that the bail into the basket; and. the have his address and phone num bat, Saxe rallied. Klein and 4 -=*. Sweetheart of Phi Alpha. She ner last week. Jacobson, whc :• was in there. Ted-Klein came facultv team will not sustain multi-bail tactic* where, n\. Wm* Konopny drew passes after one ber placed in the Directory. The chairman-elect of the Inter-( : to quell the uprising. any injuries. After all. boys will felt on the part at the facistty will appear at the fraternity's -"-was away. That set the stage chairmen of the Directory Com be boys. I am sure that the that one ball wasn't enough to national convention this summer, Board, -will be invited to Down efght runs, the Saxe for Tobias who stepped into a teachers will not take it out on saturate the desires of such ex mittee are urging students to sorority functions and will h< .iin steadily chopped away at ***ES*».T CHECK: Dr. T. F. Jnajajp^eceive* $217 where, along with tbe other fast ball and drove it bye-bye the students after they lose." pert ballplayers. allow their addresses and phone access to the new sorority -hout r- Hunt lead. They- scoredf two over the center-field fence. Klot, Roberts and Jacobs led Haryey Isaacs '57, president Lower '58. They will be awarded chapter sweethearts, a national Whether the instructors will numbers to be pnbJished in or elect .^of _ -Student ...Council, was a scroll. "sweetheartf* will be chosen. :£fe was chosen from a field jgyert -hark—to their winner in last week's Ugly Man The .winners were chosen ac- der-that the students-have a com- -The other four finalists being three nneijftff. Toe etb*-* *-j tactics of prior jnears. or piny on Campus contest, sponsored by cording.to the amount of money pieie directory at. their dis considered were Janet - Sfreine, Harvey Isaacs and _Lon Marin. tt serious, will resolve itself yMpha J5hi Omega -The proceeds, they eottected, M five cents a~ posal. The Directory wfll hejsold Arlene Gelfand, Iris Hecbt and Pi Alpha T*u is the k>r SPEClAt DEUVERY! LUCKY DROODtl only when the game is played. __* toiaL;e£.£2l?# were donated to vote. next semester at 25c a copy. Elizabeth De Laro. sorority at the Baruch Schoc Klot. the ageless wonder, is ex the ^He^^t Fund, to be used to $vS£^JS£^.;^3*ggfe3gi^ pected to once again take up his ward lighting the nation's top chores -inderneath the offensive— Drivs with care . killer—r&earl disease. WHArS basket, waiting for his team Bflt <5rieeer ^and Bob—Perez, THIS? mates to clear the boards on chairman of the UMOC drive, For solution, see defero*-: and throw, the halt the— announced" that Isaacs will be paragraph below. length of the court to him for awarded ~fjh JJjthr Man Key and an easy lay-ap. His Marqoes Hayne- stjMe of dribbling has two tickets bo the_ Broadway won him the affection of the - musical, "Damn Yankees." crowd at every game. Winner of the Ugly Group Con test was the Class Council of ,,r ^ PHI EFSILON PI Congratulates Mel Weiss Fit voniTE. . on being elected SC Treasurer of CHy College Students .- - — ,.yiYy»- '-' -v ; ' •' ' •' Nat'I VrlrMJia PkklaCAtian cmn 9m» *One-Fifly" 2-door Sedan— •t 04*01» on &*M vorfc. AuJst efi- edan—ane ojib Jfitky new ChevroieUt ralati*n w*MM*a*T. FoB or part tiaMk. NATHANS s:?m DrmtnitritW Profit tZ to *? kr. >l hr. rm*r»s»to«e wkilo UwraiaC , -"—^t. Afytf in person DELICATESSEN PnhKsh«rs Verifloo S*rric* C«. .r* S BMkmaa St.. New York CHr . ' "* • ^NT^ RESTAURANT HOT AUTO INSURANC! . i, MODERATE PRICES UP TO 15%~ D4SCOONT I with heart-warmirig prices! LUCKIES RING THE BELL with college students all AMY CAJt AND MOVE* •- till-12 P.M. o-ge-^the country! The reason: Luckiee taste bet MONTHLY PAYMCNTS I MATCACX rem. Call Mr. Hart I The "One-Fifty" and IWKCOH ter. That's because they're made of fine tobacco ttW EAST &*d ST., J*. Y. You won't find us playing favor And look at the model choice Gregory Sdunitz TR 2-2051 . J "Two-Ten" Series bring ites. You £et tiie same lively, power* you've got. Twenty m all, mnfaritng U. of Wiiaconsin —mild, naturally good-tasting tobacco that's you Chevrolet's sassy in "Two-Ten" and ^One-Fifty" four hardtops—two of them "Two- TOASTED to taste better. Now check that models that you do in Bel Airs. Up Tens." Six ^station wagose—three Oroodle above: Lucky-smoking midget in tele SAXE 57 to 225 h&. I The same performance, »9 for the Very-Best In i styling and record-break "Two-Tens" and one "One-Fifty phone booth. He may be short on stature, but Congratulates too—the wide-awake kind that So even ing road action at prices he's mighty long on smoking enjoyment. Next Stan Rosenkrantx —FOOD— rates Ghevy the peppiest, easiest Chevrolets y&a have pfeaty of — ATMOSPHERE — you'll warm up to fast! handling car on the road! choice. time, ask for Luckies yourself. You'll say it's on his engagement the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked? to —PRICES— DROODLES, Copyright 1953 by Roger Price Marilyn Sherry
it's Joe WtNNMO MSaOTAS SEEN ROM BAlCONt Richard Hidani VARSITY Indiana State Teachers Stenographers Typists COLLEGE SMOKERS % Students SWEET PREFER t,UCKIES! Bel Air Sport Sedan—here18 your buy for the most luxury and distinction in Chevrolet's field! Teachers Luckies lead all other brands, SHOP regular or king size, among you have had previous AIR CONDITIONING-TEMPERATURES J4ADE TO OBOE*-AT jfEW LOW COST. LET US DEMONSTRATE. I* 36.075 college st uden toques- ^commercial experience we Downtown City's tioned coast to coast. The r+iave a summer jot? for yooT^ number-one reason; L. Favorite Eating Place * Flexible programs can he WOU ENTERING taste better. I arranged to strft your cort- ) SHAVINO-CKCAM TUBE X venience. 160 EAST 23rd STREET Lorenzo Zola Roger Atuxtod U. of Colorado Yale X BEACON TEMPORARY See Your Chevrolet Dealer I OFFICE SERVICE «* TM€ HEW LOOK•» » J 33 West 42nd Street UCKIES TASTE BETTER - Cleaner, freshen Smoother! t LO 5-0350- c/ni '«!-• ik, *3!S§Sr IIIIWIIJ,! i.-*-^ z^ti^^^'y''^^'f~ •' "s^* -tsZ*.i^iSVr^ ' ^mk ..•-^'ss £&' *-. •.* '..• yi.^.-g-.H. "..„• wmEfmm^ r ; »*>-;• aSfS-vg? KSaC-' ^; *^^t5'' .* ?&&% , i!>;^- »'-»aJs«^ m --** ' - rtV/~ . • r ~.v'. ^38? Thir ty Page 8 Tuesday. May 15. 1956 By Ralph Sobovinsky, Once upon a tube, a long time ago, in the land oi ac 0 r Philosophical Sayings, there lived a prince who was th< wisest of all twon Hw p«»npl<». InvoH him and r*\ir*A tJ Beavers Can Snarl £ f ^ ; his every whim and wish. He was young, dark and handf Beaten, y-o some and was the most learned of sages. People cairn The City College lacrosse from the world over for the sole purpose of asking him] Met League Rraee team traveled .up to play Drexel for advice and never left his marble castle without satis™ A futile and fruitless baseball season may yet be .sal College, Saturday, and came faction. vaged this week-end by the City College 'nine. But if things home after being issued a 9-6 For instance, a man from Hardship Island beckone were to go according to precedent, such as last Saturday's setback. unto the prince for advice to a very perplexing problem loss to Manhattan,. 6-0, there doesn't appear to be much The Beavers kept pace with "Oh, Great Prince, Roaster of my people, king of my hope. the Philadelphians throughout heart, most learned of the wise," he began. "My wife ha> Thursday and Saturday, Coach the first' half as each team tal run away with another man, leaving my children mothei LaPlace's charges will take on lied three goals. Drexel finally less. Fire has demolished my home. Thieves hav#.rpbber leagrue-leading' New York Uni took command of the game in my cattle. Plague has taken from me my parents. Tel versity in home and away games, me o' wise one; teil me why this has happened V respectively. A victory for the the third quarter when it scored Beavers in any one of these con four goals while blanking City. The. prince leaned back in his throne. He brought hi tests can really snarl up the Met The Beavers have lost their clenched fist to his forehead and stared straight in fronl of him. Af ier several moments of contemplation, he League standings and bring a last four matches and are 2-5 on degree of salvation from a dis his hand on the man's shoulder, leaned forward in hi mal campaign to the Beaver the season. seat and said, "That's the way the ball bounces." camp. Merrit Nesin and Les Wiger The man looked up, a smile broke out on his facej St. John's, which led the each scored two goals for the Tears glistened in his eyes. "Thank vou. o' great princ* league practically" all year, is Beavers white- RonJ Bose aisd thank you sir. You are the most learned of all men. Te; currently in second place with Harvey l*apidus each chipped in me one more thing your honor, what will become of m? & 8-3 record while NYU is 6-2. with one. " " now-?** _ . --.7 ._ - •--- If City, which has lost five of The Beaver stickmen will play "Things will never be the same," answered the prince its last 6 games, can defeat the their last game of the season, "Yes," argued the man, "But what I mean to ask yen Saturday," against t>afsyette at is, things tikerthis never hapjaeneojEJme before. I've nevei 3Met Ms&cMgjwMe Lewisohn Stadium. City defeat come across a situation of this sort." W L W L Coach LaPlace ed the Panthers last year, 12-4. "YojtL JiycjMMi. J*arnJ* saidthe_princs^_ 6 2 Brooklyn 4 7 "Please sir, one more thing/' pleaded the man. "I be^ St. John's 8 3 CCNY 3 6 lieve that I'd like to kill the man who took from me m: Manhattan 5 3 Wagner 3 8 Youth Versus Age: wife although I know that I will be punished for it." 4 4 Hofstra ' "Don't cut off your nose to spite your face." , The man, relieved of his problems, saluted and left Violets in one of the games, the Students to Oppose Faculty murmuring praises to the prince. Violets will be tied up in the Then, one da» a college student walked in. He utterec loss column with St. John's. The In Gage Battle, Thursday the appropriate salutations and said, Violets will also have to prove It seems a bit ironic that the* faculty should play the "Sir, I have a problem, but I'm wondering whether oi themselves tomorrow when they students a game of basketball a few short days before they not I should ask you for advice. I wonder if" you hav< take on third placed Manhattan, must perform the tedious task of marking final exams. But enough knowledge to understand that which bothers me. which has a 5-3 mark. that's the way it's _sched_ Saturday, at Babe Ruth Field. uled, and the disposition of insky " of TICKER; Richard anger. Nobody had heretofore questioned his advice oi the Beavers were unable to the teacher at grade time Nausch, Marty Lipset and Sam j udgment. Schiff of the Intramural Board; score any runs off the hurling may depend upon the out- jjojpe of this semi-annual and Stu Rosenthal of the Inter- "Who are you, contemptible one?" asked the prince! of Manhattan's Bob McCoy, who frolic. Club Board. "Please sir, do not "take offense," said the student. **I air* struck out 12, walked three and The Faculty-Student basket The perennial participants of a college student. I go to school to seek the ways of life allowed six hits.. Stew Weiss ball game, set to tap off at the faculty team, who will for My schooling will teach me how to make my way in th< •was the starting and losing 12: lo, Thursday, in the sixth the first time this year take world, how to be nice to people, how to adapt myself t< pitcher for City giving up three floor Hansen Hall "gym, accord- their sneakers and basketball different climates and situations, how to think freely ant ing to manager Ralph Sobovin- -shorts out of the mothballs, are without fear, how to achieve the most out of my existence] runs in seven frames. He was sky, promises to be one of the "Blood" Klot, the fancy-legged how to understand other people's problems and feel syi pinch-hit for in the seventh and best games in the long illus dribbler of the bookstore, pathy towards them, how to accept and disregard hehef* Ronny Check came in to finish, trious history of the event. "Roarin' " Ranhand, and **Smiley" without prompting from anyone." allowing the Jaspers to "score The students, a care-free lot, Roberts, of the BA Department; "Is that what they teach you in school these days.' their last three runs. will try to break a five-game "Clem-o-dent" Thompson, of Student Life; "Set-Shot" Ja asked the prince. "My, how times have changed." In m: City will play one game be losing streak by employing such School standouts as Steve Mann cobs, of the Economics Depart days, contemptible, one, theytaug hi .students^ trow to mak< fore it encounters NYU. To and Dave Golipsky of Student ment; and, "Punchy" Sirutis, a buck. They'd teach them ^ufejects with which they coulc day, the Beavers meet Hofstra insure themselves of making money. You* are the future Council; Richard Kwartler, Jer '*Speedy"" Henderson, and "Fair- of our civilization, the backbone of our society, the prince: on the latter's home field. ry Greenberg and Ralph Sobov- (Continued on Page 7) of tomorrow." "But sir, that is exactly why I am skeptical abou^ Tennis Team Finishes With 6-1 Record asking you for advice. I do not seek the monetary reward: With the match against Adelphi College rained out Saturday, the City College in life. I don't want cut and dry answers to my question.' tennis team concluded its season with one of its finest records ever. Winning six straight I am not interested in getting what I can regardless o\ until Wednesday, the netmen by a bad twist of fate, lost a heartbreaker to Fordham what it might cost me or others. When I ask a question, University, 5-4. want an answer that will quench my desires on a spirit u a Guy Ferrara, number two feated Al Cummings, 6-2, and set a Fordham duo. In a tight level. I want a philosophy of life, of thinking, of doim man for the Beavers, was un 8-6. This gave the Rams a 4-2 and thrilling match, the Beaver things without having to ask anybody whether I have done able to compete in the singles lead going into the doubles com twosome finally succumbed, 2-6^ right. I know that you will not think ill of me because competition. He injured a leg petition. 6-4, S-6. have this outlook." ligament the Sunday before the Jong and Drimmer rallied in Drimmer, the graduating "Don't count your chickens before they hatch," sai contest. With the number two the doubles to defeat Bob Cole senior who ^ performed in the the prince. "I am the authority on knowledge and life. Ni spot open, each man moved up man and Cummings, 9-7 and 6-2 number three spot, was the high one has dared question my advice and you dare ask me u one ^fn order - to fill the gap. and Dick Woodley and Ferrara, scorer for the Beavers this sea I'm qualified. I am here because the people believe in m< Ultimately, each man com who limited himself to the nets,- son with 11 points. He was fol because they know that what I haveHto tell them is sounc peted against an opponent in a outscored Ed Gubitose and Mc lowed by Woodley with nine --!*-.— r-f K and logical and free from falsehoods^ Bttt, ^fisrten^to^we higher class bracket. Donald, 10-8 and 6-2, to tie the points. my son. I have never- spoken to anyone what I am going t< The only Beavers to win in score at 4-4. Ferrara, who was undefeated tell you now. Work, strive, and. become famous. If -peepl^ the singles competition were The final/^and deciding match in singles competition, barring a want sympathy, give them sympathy. If they .are right Allan Jong, who turned back saw Walt Ritter and Harvey forfeited game against St. tell them they are right. If you feel that they are wroni Tom McDonald, 6-8, 6-1, and Ro'thstein gamely playing over John's, was elected - captain of tell them they are right. And when nobody remains to dim 6-3; and Mel Drimmer, who de their heads in an attempt to up the '57 City College tennis team. over, you wiH then he a prince and a wise man."