Agner Backs Plan Fer. Tig Selected As Speaker Or Chancellor's Post a T

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Agner Backs Plan Fer. Tig Selected As Speaker Or Chancellor's Post a T ! i ,mi»t^n^Mi,»ini^jl,jun an jiL«w^»t-'-^ff^r<awswi>'gggf><* s> *'eyg r.rt^-*^ ^•-*.'ji£^?*'i;*i w.^-wr^.-^--r •vrs^^-..-^ ^ j-safe- -3(SH» Baruch Schoof of Business and Puttie Administration-—City College of New York >!. XXXV! If—No. 13 Tuesday. April 23. 1957 389 By Subscription Only' • «••*. *-*"**— agner Backs Plan Fer.tig Selected as Speaker • * -ist' • • .-, -v £ or Chancellor's Post Charter Day Ceremonies- ~* •---• **.*,-- Mayor Robert F. Warner Monday "stronglv endorsed " At -Ian to establish an office of Chancellor of the five citv . egress M. Maldwin Fertig will be the principal speaker at the Charter Day ceremonies May. Deputy Mayor John J. Theobald, presently on leave 8 in Pauline Edwards Theater. This year's celebration commemorates the 110 anniversary; >m his post as President of the founding of the City College. Classes will be'suspended from 10:30-11:40 to enable Queens College, will be students to attend the affair, it was announced by Dean Emanuel Saxe. ' e red the $25,000 a year Fertig. a member of the Class of '07, was counsel to Governors Franklin D. Roose- -ition, according to Ch anges Made ————— * velt and Herbert H. Lehman ;i-ces at City Hall. of New York State, assistantr .ie Chancellor will coordinate During Easter corporation counsel of New, business and financial pr<>- York City, New York.State "VS hile students were on vaca­ . res of the five municipal col- Transit Commissioner and a tion during- the Easter recess. ••- and represent the Board of member of the State Assem­ Baruch School workmen made .rter Education and the coi- bly^ - ' - "-r several improvements in the - in dealings with outside While an assemblyman in 1916,. College's physical plant. -r-cies, including: city, state and Fertig introduced a bill to permit; . v; •: al officials. New rust colored flooring: was the expansion of City College '<• installed in Lounge B on the •:-. Joseph B. Cavaliaro. chair- from a liberal arts and sciences ninth floor. curriculum to include curricula of the BHE, has requested for schools of business, educa- ^ '.000 to set up the new office On the fifteenth floor, new- tion and technology. This-JbalJ - -'--^ establish a permanent staff. student chairs were placed in all also provided for the enrollment .- Mayor has expressed hope classrooms. The old chairs in of non-matriculating' students'it ' !-"'".V" • the Board of Estimate will irood condition have been used to replace worn-out furniture in the College. - ,T T .;\i the request at its regular Emanuel Saxe M. Maldwin Fertig ting Thursday. other classrooms throughout the After the passage of the bill, "J ""T building. New grey instructors' the College established a Division idea of a Chancellor or- ne desks have been installed in some of Vocational Subjects and Civil 1 . ated in 1951 in a report made classrooms. Council Petitions Due Administration and named Pro- ...^ Dr. George D. Strayer, a re- In accordance witK space sur­ - - > fessor Frederick B. Robinson as .-'•.. -d professor of -education of its director. "l a-her's College, Columbia Uni- vey plans, the Education Library, - llli, ha& been, officially closed. This Division became^jthe nn-» |'iai **tty and EWHS "fir Yavuer, Tomorrow at 5 in 921 cleUS Of the ^f^c^X ^~Bncrni^« ^ ""TTT :omey~ and a former commrs- In -its piace— wiil be the Sehe©+ Students .who are running Tor 13t u3ent_G.oancfl or_ Class and Public Administration, the r.er of investigations of New of Education office, moved from Council positions must return their petitions to 921 no present Baruch School. Professor '-: City, after a survey of the 1113. Books from the library can later than tomorrow at 5. • Campaigning is to be held from the building and all meeting Robinson became the fifth presi­ ••'- educational system. The be found on the second floor: general circulation books are in April 29 to May 6 at 4 p.m. A places of organizations recognized dent of CCNY in 1927. ^!t was endorsed in 1953 by candidate's meeting "is scheduled 209: required reading texts and by the Inter-Club Board. Other bills introduced by Fer- r Mayor!s Committee on Man- for Thursday at 12:30 in 825. Alt reserve section books are in 206; Candidates are permitted to tig were the closing of a street nent Survey. candidates must attend this meet­ have signs which most be in their that crossed tho Lewisofch ^: present, I>r. Cavaliaro periodicals and general reference ing. possession at all times. No board dium property; creating the '•--d "the five college presidents books are in 207. According to election rufes, chalking is permitted. All signs evening and extension courses aft as an administrative council Both sixth floor medical offices campaigning is defined as "any shall be subject to the approval the School of Business. He alse> " the purpose of providing: distribution of campaign material - XT-. have been thoroughly cleaned and of Student Life. Candidates are backed a bill providing-fer equal. -dination among the colleges. or any method of furthering one's repainted; Dean Emanuel Saxe's allowed to distribute tags. salaries for male and female in­ he said, "it is impossible campaign, except for verbal con­ Only candidates for Student structors and promoted the- idea- them with their exceedingly office ."underwent 3 painting from versation." Campaigning outside Council executive positions will of the minimum wage law. •- ^?3| • •••>- burdens as the heads of» a harsh green to a light Nile the School area is considered il­ be permitted to ha-ng campaign (Continued on Page 2) green color. legal. The School area includes Fertig is presently a member '"--i^M- literature sheets-, no larger than _ _ •_ -~-r -- • -«u>» 2 8 2 x 11 inches; SC executive of the executive committee of *:x^ ' ~~- r candidates and NSA delegates American Jewish Congress, ay 2 at College. shall be allowed to have one paster on the ninth floor. Young Men's Hebrew Association _ and the Urban League. minar B rookLyrij>€ollege us By Warren Dingott from the first assembly" district; Daniel J. Riesner, author of the • armine DeSapio, secretary of publication- "Practical "Politics" Three td.Ltors from reaper ' -'e of the State of New York, and who is President of the Na­ be one of the principal guest Editor-in-Chief Anatole Levkoff and Associate Edifcowa^^^sdfe tional Republican Club; and Mac- : kers at a Political Science Phyllis DeSena-and Ronald Meyers of - the ' Brooklyn. Hrfr^ lm3r Neil Mitchell. Republican state .nar. sponsored by the Gov- lege newspaper Kingsman, will face the Faculty-Stnd^ttlL senator from the twentieth Sen­ ; ent Department. Committee on Publications : ~ ~ni* atorial District in Manhattan. e Seminar, which will be May 8 to review their sus­ text and advise the students _<m. Senator Mitchell. is chairman of Thursday, May 2, will begin pension from the paper. its contents. _- the Joint Legislative Committee The suspension was made April • "- o'clock with a luncheon at "The board can then accept or on Housing and Multiple Dwell­ 11 by Dean of Students Thomas George Washington Hotel, reject the advisor's advice,,, but* ings, a group composed of mem­ Coulton when the editors refused siudents and faculty mem- ."if in the advisor's judgment, the. bers of both parties, -which has to show their faculty adviser an are invited. Panel discus- editorial deals •with a controvers­ been responsible for landmark, ^j^djtprial involving "critical think­ -• to begin at 2, are sched- ial issue, his judgment is ftn*L^-_^; legislation designed to improve ing at the college." - for the Faculty-Council room Carmine DeSapio The paper must then m-h ffrmhTe; conditions in safety, comfort and According to FSCP regula­ -»e ninth floor and 1220. editorials, one for and one witz, - attorney general of the health in multiple dwellings. tions, the editorial board of the -'trSapio is also Democratic Na- against the controversial topic: - State of New York; Thomas J. The price of .the luncheon is newspaper must hold "pre-pub­ al Committeeman- from New Curran, chairman of the Repub­ $3.50 per person. - Those inter­ lication conferences .with the Dean Coulton in a ; k State and Democratic Lead- -^ES lican County Committee of New ested in attending the luncheon faculty advisor in which the edi­ to the Kingsman said, "We ^f New York County. Other York County; City Court Judge "should contact Dr. Lorraine Col- tor is required to submit the copy want to be in a position to ann^^: ;tical leaders invited are John Emilio Nunez and Surrogate ville and Dr. Daniel Parker of of all editorials and letters to the and counsel" and "no arkman, (D.-Ala.), who was Court Justice Joseph 'A. Cox. the Government Department or editor, "which are proposed to run advisor can advise on ***~- •**•*•»•*-***- > Democratic-contender for the Also invited are: William "Pas- Robert Wolfe in the City College -in the next issue, to the faculty bility of running an editorial law­ ^-Presidency of the United saimantei state assemblyman store after one o'clock. advisor so that he - ran see the less he first «u*«>«t tH<»>, jMJriwja^"t-^fc ^tes-jn-XtHg; Louis J 1>fko-- ->• iaQSSsaK- %&%r*~J.*: ••i ------ '-•'• '-^JSJSKSi!''!? £$g»^a!$BA0i9g$ < THE TICKER i)u April 23>,-l951 ~''^!A' "7> Page 2 „ Tuesday, April 23^ THE TICKER Page 3 er's Ofscoarrt Duetts ^ Bernard M. Baruch Nov/ o^ School of Business and 'Public ms Mosesson Award To the Editor of THE TICKER Student Discount Tickets, en­ The City College of New York Au<frey Weiner, editor-in-chief of Lexicon '57, has AibGui Teams In your issue of March 26, a ere A.
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