Governor Announces Veto Before Legislature Votes

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1 vam^nft Benai L tomb By TED SCHREXBER -^Mavo Robet F. Wagne is due to speak. at>~ the Youngs Democatic' Club's seminat jinuiada at 33 P.M. T"> p^g* will be held in the Banch auditopum. The topic ofj his talk is entitled "The New Yok City Govenment in Action/' ^ l^_ \ ^tfthe New Yok City officials wih also paticipate in. the pogam. They ae Milton Molleii, - Sty o-odinat«-fo Hoiking and Redevelopment; Lous Louis Henandez, City Collecto; Roge J. Bowne, Commissione. Depatment of Fuchases; Matin Scott, Fie Commissione; Leo *Bo\vn, Commissione, Depatment of Maine.andj Aviation. The Mayo, besides discussing the city administation^-will also comment on the City Univesity's fxee^tuttfobljsatns. Joel Fekbnan '65, Edito-in- Chief, stated, "We uge all stndents to attend the Young Penao^ tftitti- MfftP* ff W!mi i iiiu get ^ppjilanlty-*m tfafulg AM UJ fiing about the poblems of the gtate-^and 4gty gyvetument. Since -«Bscta^km «ill notjbe lhnityd to the City govenment o the fee tuit- ion situation in paticula, the sem- "The Banch School is thus honoxed in having one' of its. -.city k Mayo Robet....-To ' *U*ei>3 will the Mayo's knowledge of New Yok be bought into discassioa, ^w" B^KEN PEEPLES, JR. Sp«oof *» THE TCKER t happened at the Audubon Balloom on- 66th Steet a Boadway. was sitting in the fist ow to the left of the stage. Malcolm enteed fom a side doo on thf* stage and tyft- ean povide pimay nfo- madbn on K othe such vaied topics the leadeship stuggle in Althe~ pospects Jin; oie= + tack betting." but the vaious othe city officials! will be contibuting with thei* pecialized_ knowledge," continued M. Feidman., Student Council Pesident Fed; Schwatz ~65 added, ^Tt is unpotant that all students take, L thei esponsibility as citizens as)' seiously as thei esponsibility- HS.students. One aea in whia students have shown limited inteest and paticipation is~in thei own community's govenment. The visit of these officials affods the 'students an Excellent oppotunity to become infomed about t.h*>^*».affais. n ode to lutui uiul pum K Have a aasn mkminvmi ptbi Mte* Admission to* the^semina ifcilmje ; by ticket only. Tickets can be obtmmni in the-lobby of the Student Cente between 5 and 7 pjn. Monday-though Thusday. Eyewitness Repot Goveno Announces Veto Befoe Legislatue Votes Spfcigd to THE TCKER - ALBANY, Mach The New Yok State^Legislatue passed a bill today that guaantees fee tuition.fo the City Univesity. The vote was 33-4 in the Senate and in the. Assembly. Will SC Election To Be Held By JERRY KAPLAN~ and ROBERT TEXENBAUM es must pesent Busa's and dentification Cads. n the most highly contested election, six candidates ae peeking the feshman class pesidency. The (Continued on Page ) mouth esuscitation; his left han< was jeking spasmodically;, his shit was stained with blood. Five minutes «elapsed befoe a poilbeman 'came totting to the foot ^o^the stage. He_was vey young «e $&d he looked teified. cied out _Fifteen students ae vieing fo eight available positions in tomoow's special elections. The voting booths will be open* outside of the auditoium fi*sfc ff^o Z> Vot- Speaking at a 'pess confeence poceeding the votes. Goveno Nelson Rockefelle said he.will veto the bill. Citv" Univesity students will hold a vigil outside his office to dissuade him fom talcing this - "action. " " Evey Etemocat in the A seo*- bly and Senate voted fo the bill. Willjam Conklin of Booklyn was the only Republican in the Senate who voted fo the mandate. Thee Republican Assemblymen did so. The bill was oiginal* scheduled to come befoe.the Senate on Mach 6. and the Assembly on Mach 5. The eason fo the shift was unexplained. Two Othe Bills Thtc ae two othe bills concening' fee tuition that the legisfctttt must also decide ami vote on. Tney concen fee tuition fo the State Univesity and the City Univesity community colleges. Only the bill, dealing wtth the City Univesity "senio colleges was consideed.by the legislatue today. About City Univesity students including ten fom the Bauch School taveled hee in ode to expess thei views on fee tuition. - Nana gaily- att aaea> a aaby <w these students. M. Abams and Assembly Speake Anthony Tavia both pledged suppot fo fee tuition at that time. " "" Afte the >ally the students talked with assemblymen who wee thought to be against the bill They eceived no pomises of suppot. Asemblyman~Will am F^ Passin- nan le, fom the distict." in which (Continued on Page ) Students Plan AH Day Vigil n New Yok City Univesity students will hold a vigil today outside to him, ^Get an ambulance!" He was wamly geeted with»pplause. The intoductoy staed at me blankly and shook his By HERB MARKS "Afte next tem \ the leetue system at the Bafuch pesence,_ concluded his talk- his face. He was foiginate to get New Yok offices in an at- "spwpce, - head_in the. affimative. People began to gab him and sceam into Goveno-Nelson Rockefelle's ^senst School cannot be expanded and saidt intoduce to you out unhamed. Shotly theeafte, tempt to indtee htm not to due tolimitations of lectue space,' stated Miss Agnes Bothe Ministe Malcolm _X jwv^al tflfws ati-odo in won ing veto the fee tuition mandate Claie Mulligan, Associate and ten,* and want ty you to undestand to listen, lis stipes. They appeaed-to be. veteans, but they acted as if this The bill, which.guaantees fee bm Regista. Malcolm -whispeed something to was thei.fist encounte wi$h violence. could only'feel disdain as the New Yok State Legislatue tuition at- C.U.N.Y., was passed by " "Only two lectue aeas can ~be_ the- speake as he appoached tie folly utilized next tem," she stated, lectun. He placed his notes cae--. looked lnto thei faces. Psychologically,-they wee beyond my Sit-in Planned yesteday. **the auditoium and -4S She' - fully on the wooden slope and "ett^cha *^ -would ^e~,bie4 leaned ove to the micophone each" "~ The vigil wiu stat at -. Beginning, at 3, student govenment "because of the nofeintbm the gym-j "As salaam ahttkum/m Peace* be Tiasinm above." *_- j unto you) he said; wfi_etuned.the, Stetche Aives pesidents at City Univesity colcan Leade ' fo a Fathe Restiction Noted. [geeting with.* f Wa- -al»ik_unt TL UHA M,M* fiftt^ iuulmi..be» i^estl^ult^ed 6ch^atz b^.e-t * stetche was huiedly of the Bauch_.School. wiu_*it^» Futhe estietin - lectue ex- i Salaam" (And unto you peace^also) the cente of the aisle Jiing fom bought onto the stage. Colombia ^ within the goveno's offices. pansion,, Miss ^.. Mulligan.-, claimed,!. fc,. J^ Bullets Shatte Calm was ; a\^n*^a "flotl unde-ht? coat. heav, ^t^east, Pesbyteian Hospital is acoss the v RockpfelTeT le announced his TOsineiacttwu.j the fact that they can be given > Suddenly, a voice shouted, t*«c ~i*t*tbltt±^ a^^fwn^pock-i ^?^^-. /- ~Y - vi - vocs-eeiiei K j-, ^i^n^-w.^oci^ thity.. biiuets. l was vey " l /n > ^ - ^ ^ " ^ S "»»'."»»;" ;^'^"" -^ j-intention befoe the, vote in Albaay <^ optimum student eception. fj ets." inune<^tely tuned aottxd J eiw<t ^" ^T "'"; ^" T*! ^ ^^^ T a S St!y fted and to veto the mandate.the pesi-.... ia [ t was fo aj>poximatey thity ^p><ed on the stetche by his! dents have vowed not "'to leave his Wth ^eetue.aeas- wee -used toiin my chai and saw a manstaad- seconds that smotheed my gii^ closest followes. _ j office until he eteats fom the this lectue maxjniitm, hous available thee would weekly. be sixty j ; ing Malcolm about said seven in a ows quiet T>ehihd voice, "Be me. fiend. Amid shieks of. eo, sobs glanced at his face as he was! position o vetoes the bill Thee ae thity-nine, lectue! calm; cool it, bothes." (Those of despai, cuses of ange and being caied fom the stage. His The goveno has ten days in hous scheduled s *.*_ fo next ^ i tem, L-- j wee u^ his last i«o*- ^xij» s i ^an\"-^flights wods as ecau» flighls ^f of fieuzv. fieuz>, aiose sceaming at the top- of" ny lungs fo a mechanically as though they wee j ^t sign o veto it by that time, i eyes wee half-open mm-open- mallpj hta upj moved movea, i which -h,,.k to»^ act ~~t on ^. the <-u^ T^T if bill.,f he i J does ^ TMsineludes Psychology, a~lectue which is to' be nstituted next ^seenity of the hall- My gil fiend docto. Thee was not attempting to communicate -the- t automaticaly becomes law. A fusillade of bullets shatteed the / one-policeman in sights. >. agony of thoso final momonts. 'We ^yill stay the full ten days,' semeste. keo^at. my Jacket (lo Waa. ~ t would at>l be^baxtifaa^' -H*- standtng = St = tma timev- f"tbtan ^ jga^cohn was "stetched ont^^h^qfght-^o myself then He most M. Schwatz dcla»d, "o as long eease the numbe -of Jectue pouncefcaa he and tied to shield the stage - dying..at least twelve suvive; he cannot expie - as" it takes to convince "M.- Rocke - hous, Miss Mulligan seated how- he close to the floo. saw one ballets had~ enteed his body. His He.died almost immediately upon felle not to execise, his veto scales wee applying mouth-to- aival at, the hospital powe.** ( f eve,.because conflicts would aise.' man dessed in black dashing up

2 * Page Tuesday, Mach, j*as ^^f- J^-a^-'TwKli3toT *T -m;_ ;?fa.xft;-3i±lawm*}^aumasm i ^ THE TCKER Page 3 Oaanixatiou. meet "Thu^Kiay ai unit** otbewis* stsited- Hnman Rights The Baueh School Committee on Human Rights will meet Wednesday at 3 in'43 S.C. ' Advetising" Alpha "Delta Sigma, the national advetising fatenity, will hold its -^ftiskg Thusday. Mach -at' sin 4 -. Advetisgfcg and maketing ~ majos ae invited.. _-_ "", Pofessionals fom J. Walte Thomson, J Ted Bates, and othe agencies -will be pesent. Yooiig Republican Club The Hebet Clak Hoove Young Republican Club will..meet in 84. Liteay Society The Liteay Society, will meet in 86 to discuss selected poems by Tl S. Eliot. fiabjjc Administation Society he"-puoic Administation Society will meet_jn 54.,, Theaton _j Tickets ae- on eseve though Mach f* fo Theaton's pesentation of "The Paja-ma Game'* on Apil 3 and. New membes ae' welcome to Theaton's meeting at 3 in 44. Beta Alpha Psi A geneal business meeting of Beta Alpha" Psi. the honoay ac- «*^-^ - V^^5&* y- ^Sbc' JBJW**.- 3*^*-y >i -?5~ - By MARC BERKS To the^dito, of THE TCKER membes who felt the need to act *Mcft8tttfe», a ^ovel ty. We ^tended A e d ^ t e on the j liice_ ^ ^ Z T Z * Z n Fank Nois, will bej^isse- extension of tie lectue system.;-^j^^ ^ - p ^ ^ ^ ^ - - have mestes selection fo the Both sides pesented thei J no p l t * Ccmocll of'pesidents!>ook-of-the-t*m essay COn- meats- ably and. thooughly.! meeting. Futhemoe, the bingtest. ^ _ ^ ' We ae distessed hy only one Lag in of ^outside, and so^cabed- T h e contest ~ sponsoed by Sigma cxcuence. This debate was a knowledgeable,opinions and data to counting- fatenity. >e neia todav 'at 6 in* 5. All membes aty -«^gnied- to attend^ Committees - The Election Refoms Committee Alpha, the SchooFs hono-sevice foum* fo the opinions of Pofes- influence the decisions of this'counof Student Council will meet in society, was announced last week sos Joan Gadoi (Hist.), Mauice cil wiij_ony seve to hampe the 4 S.C. - v S t e v e n Golub '66, chaiman of Benewitz. <Eco.). xog jcfiakln paticipation of all membes that? Conncak Camaas-^fTai Com- o *anixation's Book-of-the- (Aect.)". and Steven Eagle *65, Edi- These'" c>p3ni6h constitute "hea^ Jailiee_wai meet in-4 S.C Majo^ e m C o * * * ^ _ ty_ BngWioTHE^CKER. on say;' and^ve the membes a poo TJasu stode»i, -who submits to -the extension of the lectue system, fame of efeence to wok fom. Sigma Alpha the best analytical ** e Relieve that the modeato, Who caes what John Smitk^has essay on^mcteagne * oefoe Apil *****asking^ fo only <juestkms ^ to say about an issue which B _ 5 will -he_awaded a -S6 United *om' t o e floo did not at fist po-! being dealt with by' the 'council, States Savings Bond. Second pize Mbit statements of opinion fom if he is not pesent to voice his will be a $5 bond. ; students, facility, and administa-; own opinion? -.'.!e^islatieif~6n tha chate ainent^' meat extending toe tems of senio, class offices will lie consideed. - All students may attend. LD. Cads Students who had thei identifi-. cation "cad pictues taken duing TV. v^.' l. «., ".» - tio JWi- Saca opinionated outbusts Wji W e i^jl' *u'=*-*v." V>«^ The, book, which etails - fo.,., i_ *»_ - ^ h P* that these conditions. J_ ' ^... - vee inclined to make the issues at '.. «_ ' ninety-five cents, is now on sale m " i~t^j i^,... will not be pepetuated by anyone up tfaei^eads at ^he Student Cen- f > at the School bookstoe ton the main +-,.. futue Council of Pesidents te k>bbv nfomation desk m^m^i floo of the Student Cente). t * J ^ ^ S ^ J S S * "ttst ttl S* meetin «s - ^. «incumbent upon wil between S and V T\ * ^ W ^ ««** «n t e to all ^ ^ ^ T t &? o «d! ^ ^ w h. mdividnal to voice hte.^s» YaVMh J* 5 '?!!f n.^udents «^ tenchew-^ ^ j, ^. ^ W e v ^ ^ ^ ^ if ppmon; howeve, he must keep Rabbi sael Scho wsj-speak ^ ^ ^ ^» ^ ^ «e daily, ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ CoHege! m m m d ^. needs f ^ e ^ " g ^ 4 m on ^ T h e ^ k a l a h ^ a t HiDeTs^^ ^ boolcstoe.- ', o m m o i ^ i i ^ ^ ^ < > p ^ ^ i S J e ^ ^ n ^ ^ l s ^ ^ ^ quates, 44 East~4 Steet. * Sigine Alpha hopes and believes, and fads^to pesent, fnfi^e" de-!^. ^^,n * s ' - *#_ ^>^v..w - J..t ^ *.». i v -«'- - t s=*=*-i.. j jotne membes on the Council o. Fee Taitioii '^ H ^ i 7 ^ ^K t^ avcjagc tato fionja nc, ncid. -* ^ - ^ ^ ^ >... _... student will find the book to be - Paot Sflt**** ck; pg *65 i The Fee Tuition Committee will both inteesting and ewading. FanV Cassidy *67 Although the shotcomings menmeet tomoow at 3. in 48 S.C. The oganization is extending an Joseph Rosenbeg *66 *[ oned above wee cystalized at e Lectues invitation to all students to wite ^- ^ - ^eit meeting, we ae cetain that The Educational Affais Com- an essay on the book. Sigma Alpha To the Edito of THE TCKER th * >s^ conditions exist in most o t h e mittee wol meet Thusday at in, hopes that membes of TCKER. n efeence to the Council of oganizations on campus. 43 S.C. to discuss extension of the Lexicon^ Phoenix, and Student Pesidents meeting; we wee ap- Howad Goldstein * 6 iectue~system- Council especially will submit es- palled by the conditions that exist- Chalesv J>efnx ^=66 All students may attend. says.. ed specifically the actions of some (Continued on Page d) CLASS AND STUDENT COUNCL REPS OF \Jf ^#^. STUDENT CENTER CANTEEN Can it handle inceased use if the tenth floo cafeteia is tlosed? Favoed of Cafeteia by Stud eats By MARTN FLANK Faculty, Student Comment On Mass Lectue By LNDA KASE *T doh^t'tnbiklths 'ealistic* to adopt a defeatist attitude" with egad to lectue, expansion, stated Pofesso Joan Gadoi (Sub-chai., Hist.). a ' - **What we ae eally doing- byvadopting this attitude," she noted, "is engaging in a se^fulnlling pophesy that is, we pof esize that we will the lectue system, Howad Yahm have lage lectues because we ^65, pesident of the Baueh caii't ggi ^enough ^a neyj=p g-^-p.school Committee - on Human! tain the small" class and ac commodate all thie pew stu i dents. Then, having made this pophesy, we adopt th^ lage' lectue system by saying -tha it is the 'ealistic' thing to do." '..... \ Gadol's Vie^»- Upheld >-'Concuing with?. Gadol's-ap-, peal to potest expahsio» of -the lectue system, Steven Eagle *6o, j Fattb "Emeitus of THE TCKER, J noted, "Squeaky wheels get the J sxease. f we potest vocifeously j enough, thee mav be a possibility A majoity of students inteviewed by THE TCKER] that funds will be allocated so.s favoed continuation of the tenth f]«x> The cafeteia's fate is now unde consideation bv -5-t-O i some of the gievi faculty committee appointed* - at ances?" ~~ ~- Rights, stated that one of the most geivous dawbacks of the system is that it "tends to alienate the students and intefees with the student-teache elationship so needed fo the total education of the student to be successful." Concuing in this view, Tom Nicas J 63, fome Edito-in-Chief of THE TCKER, stated, " don't believe people come to college just to lean facts. f education is to be of any effective value, then the gowth of the individual is just as necessay as his intellectual gowth. ' believe that classoom enable the student to use all the factos of thought and "These methods (student* and develop easoning powe and the by DeaH Emanuel Sake. j cafeteia to accomodate all students D. Joan G faculty potests) stated Student ability to think." Taking the question of elimin-j desiing to use its facilities. Council Pesident Fed Schwatz, j Citicizes Lectue S^'stem Moe Debates Consideed ation of the cafeteia to the people Cafeteia Needed '. have been effective in secuing ditions. he stated, "the^ lectue who would be most affected by it, " was thee - the 3ay' the cafewee; e j a w.a S closed fo just one dav, w of the United Fedeati ion of Teach- budens the pofesso and- tuns vie\ s to be expessed, anothe aises in salaies fo theyftembes j system takes the wok lcj^d that n ode to allow moe faculty students in the lunchoom asked what they thought its fate^ Rochelle into useful, constuc- debate about the lectue contovesy is being contemplated by "VVexeLbauni ~6i elated, es and have educed the numbe! these hous should be. most of" the people wee of students in the classoom." He' t ' ve time." j Sigma Alpha, noted Chancello Libay Consideed. j standing aound in the othe cafe- also contended^that the lectue Regading the effectiveness of, Chales Deifus '66. "The oganiza=~" Many students ealized the need] teia waiting fo a seat instead'of' system is. being expanded meely small ecitation classes in encou- fo moe libay space. Conve-; going to the Student Cente." The as an "expediency, which might \ aging student-teache contact. D. tion will conside the possibility sion of the cafeteia to a libay is. cafeteia was closed biefly in Jan- have pojaf educational effects." i Walsh would like to" know. "How M ^ holding moe debates if we feel being consideed. * * Hugh ~ * McEveuV-ftiay " " while. _ ceiling. - i - _ epais. wee 'fvthe administation want<i can a teache he with ^that.jwe. can be. of futhe assistance in poviding in fomation o» J W& atted, "%Ve need the^ space fo made." _st«denltsjl'*_ i--4 -^ie«libay; it is too cowded in the Thee is a ealization that, if the _^«lectue systep systen now," _M Refuting the possible values of' both sides of the issue. libay'as it is ight now. planned convesion is adopted byvschwatz declaed, "thee-is-noea -Howeve, a epeated agument the School, many students will son to doubt that they will bow to _ot L Bauchians Ae Named many students was stated-by have to <kse the. neaby estauants. "the same expediency in the futue/*] "LJ-k^P ^Schwatz '6^_ who said, "t "This would cause moe/tongesis good idea to ^enlage the ti«"m m the loc^l eating o'aces. Also. seeing the poblem- as "a*?'. Lectues Called Unavoidable - To 'Who's Who' Listing libay-, bat not at ^fe'expense of- which at the lunch hou ae aleady.budgetay "one. D." Vivian Walsh, i of the caf ete Jn fact, _the cafeteia should also panded fo thee is -not oom to accomodate the student iliat wants to use it at the pesent time.** ~. The majoity of students asked said that they would have to eat oux of School it the cafeteia ~w closed, because thee would not-be enough oom in the eleventh floo'; Small Classes Wee nitiated n Oientation floed" to v capacity^ noted Roy' (Eco.) noted, "The lectue* system! Rothstein -*68. lis unavoidable." Howeve, he add-!' ^ "Thee is '""*" *'- i -- i " ** * * +'»«~ - -=- - CContinned en. Page > ^ Discimination Causes Loss of Talent By RUTH REZNCK, This cwnnty is shutting^off a geat pool of talent stated. D..Lawence Bloomgaten,' Diecto of the idusty- Division of Ameican Jewish Committee.' He spok^afcsale ^e, sponsoed, ' by the ^^ Ti>ficlKH»l CoiumiUtHt By MARLYN SHAPRO A-M «4-t-«~ ^ -«a. J Human - Rights^ **» euwum^ k f L i ^ S S E L ^ - ^ S P * * ^ * * * * - ^ Paxticulaiy those of the m S S ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ \ ^ ^ ^ faithttb conside caees' fcf^?" ne,??p*?!^b! ^3«the management of industy. ~ tion ixito this plans" semeste!s will be made onetta-i by D, BiooSten ".tatsthit,«most majo utilities wee Ms. Laua Faa (Dept. of to change thei image in the~ eyes Stnd^ "Lflfey.- ~ ~~ -Ms. Faa, who heads the oie.ntnf.ion pogam; announcod a. meeting with student leades of last tem's small oientation goups * to discen the value in this method of o i *fptjt, Btiftn ~. * ^ Satall Goops Soceea«ve fa smwmwiap tt»e a»etmg, she noted that some pats of last tem's pogam wee-vey successwee not. Theie is "no doubt," she stated, "that the small goup appoach was vey successful in tems of j^vh?t»g Jthe teshmen.' "lhe small goup pogiain "was pat of an. expeiment to Naetejmjtnejjae heat way to conduct fsh. man oientation, tfnde the expei- '" '- ~ «Page 5) Thiteen Bauchians will appea in this t yea's listing; of < fea ^at the iew[ed. *t is hot necessaify ah evit.**' W^o*s"Who ih Aiheicai UhtvesTties and GoDeges. Unde the ppgpnt teg/»hing WM. The listing is based on academic standing, sevices enwummw^-- ~ deed to the college community, and leadeship qualities. B loomga ten Recommendatioss fo the listings ae made by the faculty membes at. the college. of the county by hiing moe peoplg of miwttfit.j. goup* ' Quoting fom" - Business Weeic niagazine, he stated, "By discimination this county is losing ; geat pool of talent and potential *-- ""'" ' " Concept of Oneness _^ To illustate <me of the discimi ^iseosses Discin>ination nation poblems facing- Jewish peo- «e Jewish;.and fifteen pecent of pie who ae tying fo executive the gaduates at the "Havad positions, the diecto discussed the School of Gaduate Studies ae l Those selected ae Steven Eagle, ed up positions in seach of Jewish fome Edito-in-Chief of THE tainees and wee supised at the TCKER, and a membe of Sigmatack of i them.. ^ Alpha; Alan Ganath, past chancello of Sigma Alpha; Caolyn^ D. Bloomgaten explained this by the fact that Jewish youth is Habib,, past chaiman^ of the* Student Council Activities Committee, looking foa model. f thee ae no Jewish executives in the industy chances fo the.jewish tainee Lay Handelsman, fome nte- and a membe of Student Council; ^Eo each executive status, ae Fatenity Council pesident, and slight. Activities Coodination Boad coodinato; Rhoda Kulandie, past He stated, itht^ upv^to industy to open oppotunities thoughout pesident of Cental House Plan, a copoation- Tt fe up" tb^ industy and the Feshman Oientation So to sell itself to the* individual. An illustation cited by the lectue is the Pennsylvania utility which ecently hied an saeli enginee >but -waived pat-'of ins taining assign-^ ment so. that he cbuld teach Hebew in the community cente. " ciety (F.O.S.), and Madi Gas Co* odinato; TOOL Nicas, fome Edito-in-Chief of THE TCKER, and a-'membe of Student Council; Bay Okoskin, past chancello <st Sigma Alpha; Andew Radding, pesident of the Young Republican "concept of oneness" used by bust- Jewish. nessmen. *Js he one of us; does he ' Situation Changing look like us?" Accoding to studies at Havad,, O. Blwnagaton notod that Comell and U.C.LA, ho we f ex, the among 5 majo mpoatinng o<=tg situation is changing. Because of than one half of one^ pecent of the the democatic.oganization of the executives ae Jewish. n contast, copoation, it cannot set- homoeight pecent of all college gadtt- geniety- as a' standad, D. Bloomstes- ae Jewish; twenty-five pe gaten said. The New Yok Tele- cent of all *Tvy.League**- gaduates phone company has ecently open-. minoities Rise Faste * Club, and past pesident of F.O.S.; D. Bloomgaten noted that in an Richad Sacks, past pesident «# effot to fully integate.industy it the Class of '<55, and Senio Ponl has become possible fo. people Chaiman; Fed Schwatz, pas* fom mnoity gwaps to ise faste j Student Council secetay, tea3- than othes in cetain copoations, i Ue^ vice pesident, and cuently The second poblem that indus- } pie&ijt;ilt;i Sumii" 3yslei t ' tiiimw ty has, besides selling a paticu la company, is selling the community of that company. D. Bloom- Society, and Photogaphy Edito pesident of the Lampot Leades jgaiten noted thai many Jewish»f Lexicon; Howad Welnet, past gadoatoa fom city aeas (spoci pesident of Cental House Plan, fically Xew Yok City) would not and - Teasue of F.O-S.; Howad like to wok in Omaha, Nebaska, Yahm... fome Lampot Leades fo example, even if the job is ageeable, because the Jewish com- j pesident and now pesident of the munity thee is so small. ' Human Rights Commit toe. ST «**-

3 Th iqxiestioas that -wee* asked, of thos«constuct anew building- and feel miming fo class council position*'»e- WJhAt^jafew do,.jkpu J»ye *? jou that they will completely ignoe Class Council H you ae elected? the poblems of this building-. My. Do yon think a. Class Council should be concened with mattes of its own main plan is to ty to fom_a, committee, consisting; of the othe. >-»«K o mattes that affect the entie School* -. - lhe questions tna'i wee asked oi those thee" ctas'swesidents, to instxe^the - unning fo Student Council ae students of my class that thei. Why do "you want to Jfc>e elected to Student Council?. Should Council concen itself -with mattes dealing w?th the co-cuicula activities, o wjth matte such as. cuiculum, lectues, etc. " & & Hav Bmdk ) t is my belief that thee should, be a two paty, political facilities will not be neglected. ) think that my class should be,^ concened * with' mattes ' that affect both -tiie School as * whole "and oaf uuityio.ua ciasft. want to.make the feshman class an integal pat-of the Senool- Steve *einghton. Vice-pesident nta-mual system at Bauch. hope to use Boad the pesidency as a spingboad to - Bothe--Alpha Phi Omega bing- about this two paty system. would also like to see moe s 3. Membe--Lexicdn,, staff ^ 4-Co-chainnan School Blood Bask feshmen put.on Student Council 7 - in. popotion to the pecentage of! 5- Co-chaiman Used Book Exstudents. chage. 'elected, Would make it my busi- * Bay Habeman uess to ^ mvolved in as nlany. Membe High council School student activities a s possible as the lead- - High school epesentative-! ing epesentative of the Class of '68-.. ' THE TCKER Tuesday, Mach, 6$ we ae going to -be hee fo fou yeas, t would also like iq^ceate a feshman social function. ) think we should be concened with mattes affecting "pu class ha elation to the School. What mean-is- how the -actions of the SehooL.aid' administation affect ou class. am elected by the feshman class and...! ow«my- fist loyalty to them. ) would be concened with 6 - Asst. chaiman Sping Chaity Dive both, because the feshman class is the lagest body. As the lagest T) n the past it.has been policy ~~ Douglas Ledeman "body, we haveto do something fo l that- the, pesident of the owe j. Senio epesentative high a School Aishich -is to be ous fo classes have had little to say ip school, the next fou yeas. ; policy as to School activities. fff ;. Teasue Easten Queens Young Democats 3. Pogam Assistant--high school i- ' '",4. Membe junio band 5. Asst. Repesentative hi?h ) Since being in the School, senio class ) f elected, would like to j thee has been no.successful exincopoate ^some jnew ideas, the j ta-cuicula activities except the ; 6..Repesentative high school G.O. school G.O. --of 7. Membe Public Speaking Club 'fis«"^em«_ a~sfe'lipt6-tlse^fef--j boattde. if elected,-t-\v-oxito-iike--ft man class, the second being.a. dance \ s^t a s TOany extacuicula acheld somewhee else-away fom! tivities as possibfe^ to get away the Oak x>imge. j fool ft^ concept of a "thought )' ftnyjfl life- who~ ttis fn thy factoy/ "dlass pesidency. should" only Be concened with the class he ep esents. "f was pimaily concened.with the School-as a whole,, what -would -be doing in a class Mac, "Mendle. Bothe-^-Alpha Epsilon Phi ) have examined Student Council's budget and find it full election? "What would be doing- of flaws. n fact, half of the monies i3 l'uhiing fo Student Council, not! ae mi^-appo^iatpd o nnhs4>d. Af= Class Council. Let's be ealistic. am only esponsible to my -class not-the entie School. Jackie Heman. Vice-^opidcft^-high school sophomoe class. Recoding secetay, high 3. High school G.O. epesentative 4. Council delegate t"~fouse Plan Association» _J _ JTiie_f^shinan._cJasj5._ Ls_ the youngest class in the School an<t. Membe high school student be the sophomoe class and_ knit council (two tetois) foth. Theefoe we must be con- ' goup so as to enable us to eaaege 3. Pesident high school ' house cened with poblems affecting the! socially- instead" of being ^lwidutl plan (two tems) whole SchooL j into foty-six- little units, j, w^ g a ~ Membe House Council also like to aange, with the othe Beth PantetL. v. J tem) i ^ = tnna cottdcihy wnw inte cl^seafi. Membe high school pesident's ttvities. ) The fist' thing will do if G.O. council (thee temsl -j- elected to office is to find out what. Secetay and teasue high is^expeeted of mel. gyuld-.uk.e Co school boostes know my pd^ves; since last tem Oganize high school sooity none, was execised- i. would like activities. " XT ~~glai to oganize difteient functions like dances, ski tips, etc also feel that ^something shonld be done about the maie-oiented oientation peiod. What mean is that don't feet the feshman ae intoduced to the social activities of the school popely. ) would only concen myself with cfass poblems. think that we should leave the School's poblems to Student. Council. Shaeane Shapio. JR^pesevative high school G.O. ) You can't have one wftiwwt" the othe. n ode to help myd*^ will be impoving the School and,' when-f-~solve a poblem that.«<**-_ ^exns the ^claoojj as a - wj^o^t?nm_ be solving a poblem fo Hiy class. Pesident higfc school" class (thee tems) _ f^ Repesentative - high scliooi G.O. ( tem) ) have always been active in School politics. Jn high school was a cepesentatiye fo the G^. and class pesident fo thee tems, and afte college would like to epesent my county in the diplomatic cops..». Pesident high school class / j T Toelteve that Student 5 *"] cil o. Teasue high school class * i should concen itself with' anything ) Since, the lowe feshman that the students come in contact.lass consists of appoximately [with duing thei fou yeas *t fotv-six students; would like to! Bauch. This should include eating tv to pomote moe unity between facilities. eceational facilities. ) My plan fo the lowe fesh- Membe high school govenment \^- man class is to pomote moe Xini- j ty within the- elasg. - woutd-4ike- - _^ ---^-~-- - ;-; Ti'~~~ io pnan gevcial clasj -ftwictiohs audi Z KepeseT^tv--ntgb_^ehgoi_»iu, j pomote moe class spiit which dent^council i -would futhe thei education, and f elected will fight to main the School itself- - us and the uppe feshman class. ) feel that we should be concened with both. Nobody else will woy about us so we should think Richad Waksman ). think my.~*class should be i concened with both. Since the feshman class is a new pat sf the epesentative of the Class> of.< Schooly j ^^j, m y m a m COTl. 68,. will stive to make this cen. g to ^ ^ ^ ^^^^d teia in the main building. ). believe that Class Cotmcil should concen itself- with the School as a -whole, because the. decision concening the cafeteia and the poblems.aising fom jf he contovesy ove the lectue system ae petinent to the entie student body. Bonnie Weiss instuctos, couse epesentation, and co-cuicula activities. He*ny Pace ) feel that can help my fello-v students i" thy Class of'^ in mattes that* ae impotant to them. "" ) The emphasis should be on cniculum.because that is tfee aoost jmfiidmi PW* <K ftt~«! «y^t\t We should also put "some attenl on the co-cuiculum because tm toin and peseve the student cafe- Hs stfll a necessay,pat of tse educational system- Richad Waksman. Membe.high school govem- ment. ^^e^xesentative high school money wok fo the class. with the school. * student council ) n the past, the uppe classes ) Thee ae cetain objectives have taken advantage of th'ejowe. - Jack Magdel T wmill like to attain if classes. My mininan gost is to! Pesident high school class elected. feel can best" benefit each equality with the uppe, 'Repesentative high- school' the student body and achieve my classes. -To each this end we will G.O. objectives by seving on. Student. Repesentative^ high school actively paticipate in all School i ) do not have any diet i plans G O Council. p activities,, and at the same time atfo the feshman class. RuU will!. Asst. to Pogamming Head ; ' ) feel Student Council should tempt to geneate'a highe degee. d e v o t e myseif to fomulating and high school i concen itself with both cuiculum of paticipation fom the fesh obseving any poblems that aise.. man class. 3. Coodinato high school so- j and co-cuicujum, and not neglect will ty to make class council an eithe of U«e two. feel it isitm- [>at of^ student gbvefi- ; 4; Katty Schafenbeg. {effective feel.my main job is Xo potect my j. Fome high school. student sen-! nient. f "classmates. lee -ae plans to ato - "5 The~Feshman class will soot k DO YOU WANT TO PAY SHEETS AND STATONARY N THU STtiOENT CENTER LOBBY tbuclp YOU M Tfcm =^= filollv ' ^WHWH Rm 4 SC Tzl5i < Thtis; lectue system as well as to decide-the fate of the cafeteia» i ARE YOU N? DO TOUl ANT TO B6 W Get The Focts * You don't hove to be o -Fi* Schwatz to be inlomed^lod jwt fom ^ftogo Fogb^yoat- L Fesbman S.C. R^ft\ So you can be p pojt of yop Tituisnt THEATRON Wishes to C - 4ts>f-^?wity Advtyo PROF. UpU;S..'UV - F«U Pof esso t^,.. x fsfltch?, f 65 ^aaac^r Page 5 Atiew Memi ~ BvThe Soeech Depafmen The late^t addition to the faculty of the Bauch. Schoo Speech Depatment is' M Hay Scott, a native of Oklahoma City, who has ecently aived in the Empie State. Depat ment Chaii Louis Levy \ Eleven yeas of eseach into the- famous Lizzie Boden mude case by a pofesso at the Gity College will culminate iil-a' p^efonance.of_ a new Ameican opea entitled "Lizzie Rnlpn >, at-nfiw"\ovs ityf ~^-^,; -'- " announced thefsppoi^tm^nt *. Vs^age^ealeyohxtibu was taking Theate Caee Cited place off stage. f on Mach 5. st <>y, he continued to gathe mateial about the case, and gadually Education has not been the new Koean Expeience The opea's scenaio was witinstucto's only caee inteest, _Pxesident Sigmon Rhee was being ; ten by ^-ofesso Richad Plant ^h«the, -bluepint fo an opea began fo, as the saying goes, "the thea- -deposed- and.the sounds of exslodte has called." Acting aid" ling- ing bombs; wee audible fom the '\(Gemanic and Slavic Languages, to take shape in his mind. i^ D. Plant consides the development quite natual, fo as a young Uptown). a consume much of M. Scotfs stage. M^Scott was quickly ^vafuihteest and many of his vacatioiis «ted gfcgettte vntn ih f ui nf^fte; jsack S S45. befoe.. cnming to j ste in his hatng" FSuikfttt. Gemany, he became-~an opea the College; D. "PTaht was bsws-t have been spent in summe stock thespians, to a local^aipot only _ love. acloss- the Unifed States tn '*ma it liteed-with debis fom. jng -in a libay ^ " n g ^ ^ g g M g ^ ^ ; ^»t*<> who teated hou and came upon a vesion of many singes fom the local opea Upon his gaduation fom the light and heavy atilley the Massachusetts mudes". Univesity iif Oklahoma, he toued The entie.toupe was foced to ; house, fist toolc'nti to a pefbmwith the U.S.O. '-- in the Pacific _. - _ and. "emain in Koea an exta week befoe the State Depatment could Pofesso Louis Levy the.boden family," he explains. age of seven. _ " couldn't stop eading about! ance' of "Hansel and Getel" at the spent much of his time in Koea, When^ asked about his past ex giv^ acuianoi» fo the safety of Speech Depatment Chaiman " ove-stayed my lunch time, got "J, was eally impessed,'*, says peiences as an acto, M. Scott tne depating plane. M.. Scott eceived both his BFA «to an agument with the boss and D. Plant. "The Wold of music, -immediately' ecalled a 6 inci-' At pesent, M. Scott has W> (57) and MFA ^^^ MQO (6) ^«.o-*»* degees was fed." fantastic settings and make-believe "dent in Koea. The U.S.O. had been definite"futue plans but he is con-. at the Univesity of Oklahoma, Fascinated by the dzzie Boden has held its fascination * fo me staging vaious plays tto ejatetain sideing etuning to the theate. ' eve since. ou toops, and he was asked to The combination of pofessionalism Afte Adolf Hitle's ise to pow pefom in "Geoge Washington Slept-Hae." As_M. -.Scott potayed the geat evolutionist on and instuction that he has bought to the Bauch School is. he feels. "the iiieal teaching situa^on." 'Rights'. Goup Expands The Tutoial Pogam Seeking to expand and impove the tutoial pogam, an extensive poject, to enlist voluntees has begun. - The Bauch St-hooi Committee on Human Right-si. sponso of the p>gam. will have^tteatue available concening xutoing at a booth.in ttif Pai LATing».- J ftf-~ff'p- Cfente - "Estabish.ed~\to help elementay and' junio high -pupils in the East Halem aea impove, thei skills in eading and mathematics, the- tutoial pogam "has poved a suees,** stated fome Human Rights Committee Pesident Joel Feldman '6o. Ttftos ae povided. with flash, cads to.help thei pupils impove tbei eading atu^tnath -s^clte.' Student Council Abolishes S.C.A.C.'s Dinne, j A motion to diseotitne ^the Tna-n of the t J Student Council Activities Committee ^Dinne and to de-! lete the $7O appix>piated. fo it \v.as passed by Student Council afc=4^; Thusday meeti ing bv the vote of -8-. Jan Chason *<>7. Coespomling Secetay, who ^uppote<i the <iinntij, notoi thai, ius pupose "was ecognition ol the effots of the clut»s' pesjtlenls m woking i>»ixhe c!ul> pojj-j);." A debate nose when Richad f*«in "n askt^l thit the chanty dive fo C.O.F.O.' which will consist of sending; books to undepivileged N'egoes doir-n SAuth. K* deleteil fom cliaities.' e. D. Plant left Gemany fo Switzeland to finish his studies - j and ecxnye<lbis Ph.D m liteiatuc. j^l^ Xuvita i^e- then- -ottnt to the United States woka depatment stoe. f?» a announced new ules fo the conw whee he" held seveal job mittee which wee pomptly i«- * >n depatment ecuiee ojanization, and as a fee eepteti by Council. lance wite. Afte completing a novel. The Dagon in the Foest, -^ -i>i. Plant became a lectue at the 'Citv College in 47. thu l list ox accepts ] By thi^ time the details of the book fo a. Lizzie Boden opea be- came cystallized. "Unlike some wites, neve doubted Lizzie's M. tioin contendtml that "(.'.- gnilt," he assets. F.O. is a politi'-aj action jxnap and n 54, thouth mutual fiends. Jane Fich "tjt. S.C.A.C Chaistated tliat "the dinnewouid- by "the stu<lent bod v.'' He added ', of-^nw«ic- at Columbia tlni- theefoe "should not be suppoted D. Plant met* Jack^ Beeson, a poboo-ttmo -a KCMM* mii^k^tttitfi; ht htt h^ h p " n>n ;tt xiq ^n ootecon oisjeccj to the" vtsity attq-» eompoac. held befoe the d inne which Human Rights Club l>ein g gi\en anitimato chaity. ]y completed "BTs nst opeatic Pofesso Beeson, who had ec ould have the pupose ot ailowmg, f'c)i' a h the club pesidents to plan pogams fo the coming tem.** n a tie vote, Count-il defeated ; wok.- about his idea and the com-! ; M. Goin's- motion -^-3 with the, pose ageed to do the music. Todua- Chaiman abstaining. y ^ i gethe they began woking on the n speaking against the iie. Met ivatz T5*S; i ice-piesuieiit. - s-t - M A i * iu ' opga in <~>«y snap time. efute*! Miss Fich' ^eniat^ byi n anothe v -ouncil a/tion, te "J^ A ^... ;. body tx^y a ageed s T ^ to to accept accept the the executive;. executive;. Wok Wok was was inteupted inteupted in.. 5 saying that "holding a semina' boad decision to abolish sevice' when D. Plant was hospitalized just befoe the dinne would not; awads to Student Council mem-j fo a slipped disc At this;.. point, be feasible because due 'to human! hes.! Kenwad E^jpslee, a- lyicist who oity * Membe high school leade's - «club.. ) would ike;tomake the f esh- Voluntees need devote only two natue many people - would - pob-"^ "hous pe week to the pogam, eithe on Tuesdays o.thusdays Gail afinke!. ab)y aive late and the semina The Campus'Affais Committee fom.3 to 5, o on Satudays fom Chaiman of Tutoial Committee would in eality -last only twentyminutes instead of the two hous! & e possibility of getting student will hold committee meetings on 3 to. The tutoing takes place gam fa exceeds the tame he must TTT the East Halem Potestant planned. Spaking /acilities. ^_ put into it," noted Gail Gafinkel Paish, located at 5th Steet and T '67, cuent Human Rights Committee tutoial chaiman. " uge those. ity Dive ^ Committee Repot ^_ pe-f _,. ted to se\e on THE TCKER As- Council also consideed the Cha-', Richad Beidbat *66 was elec Second Avettue. 'The ewad that a paticipant who have the time to voluntee thei j sensed by Ronald Novita '65, Chai-' sociation» anay deive fom the tutoial po- be\ic*n>.,f Seen Changing Thei Taditional Roles ^~' By CAKKUL CAGLE ~ ; ; ^ ColleKij»te Pess Sevlct The cises facing; the univesities of today the'loss of the student's identity, the tend towad_ altiyesities, the concentation on faculty eseach have tended to obscue a less damatic but deeply sig--f" ; - { / ^?> nuahftati'f with M. Beeson ealie, was called in to complete the lyics- "M. "Elmslee -was able to add touches of tue Ameicana," D Plant explains. "He shapened my chaactes and made the opea moe Ameican.'* /. Leading Education Specialists Faults in Teaches Taining Plans. -, By CoH»«*ct* ' Pess.»-.»~^... -., ^. ATLANTC CTTY--A leading specialist in teache education claimed that education couses ae "not elevant to the poblems faced by the teache in the classoom" at a meeu ing of the Ameican Association of School Administatos. Don Davies, exectttive secetay $>? z.... nificant issue which has slowly. The student's ole was that of of the National Commission on t ion can't be helped by impoving^fo impoving this situation, oo - been^-^ developing - --ove- the an activi 4 Teache KdWation and Pofess the television set^ wishing fo yd \ many colleges ^nd univesities yeas. " ^ fand he was expected to cdncen- sional Standads of tfie Nat5bnal n?oe gateful son, ctitseiatog/thav^^ -development is the confu- tate on Jeaning the - taditions. "Eduoatipn Association, chaged motives of the fathe, o beating cation as "a legitimate and fontfo thei /lack of, ank esponsibility of highe edu- sion ot duties between students and iakiig cae of the technical details? that, as a esolt of this ielevance, the l^ttoopians ' -the" Tnti vwsity ~ paticulaly in the and the naow, specialized knowledge needed to secue employment! tional_theoy" and feels a "lasting-- M. Davies saw education stu-j the young- teache ejects "educa- technical pogess cation." An inceasing emphasis on libeal ats. eseach and specialization esults The duties of the student in se-was a pesonal matte. j and dajnaging hostility towad the dents as pat of tb6 geneation of, in an "ophan status" fo education couses. ^-eumg a"n education to» fottwaiqy n aeas«cbea, be univesity education couses in which the} college atpde»ts/^ho- acutely feel o^elooked,^ but thee has been a was faithul to its elemental pu mateial was coveed.' the "bigness d impesonality" of j M. Tiavfes uged that evey!- ~ n>ve?mt in xitat^s expected jof^te" pose saym. as an island am&\; ll^sddltton to being unelated to the unives a feeling thnt ia^ lege -which pepaes teaches and nhivesity and in what is expected the hustle-bustle of society whee the eal classoom situation, education couses ae chaacteized cation/with the. institution and its, * to alien ion and lack of identifl-f is "willing to make a full and adeof the student.. the knowledge and wisdom of cen^ 'cuate fastitutional committment to the job of teache education" ^A^JUuy^^it3^s_j=o±e_D^ed-Jto_ifi-Ja tnies cnnld»ndtte T*i.g qf.t^p-v*-, bv a "kind of psendc~scho^ahip puposes. M. Davies emaked. "We find should completely abandon its pogam. " "?i ' ^ ;- educate the student in the taditions and cultue of the civilized -wold. The -univesity was then a of civilization and thought of the -guadian of the civilljlktloa!a heii-t-* technical Joli-getthig knowledge as ** ' *"-.' --*!.! _ TTT.«" _. _ ' i i. age; t stove to instill in the student ' a pecious sense of histoy aid a. knowledge of the geat woks of man. too, ealized.the impotance of gaining an insight into the heitage being of seconday impotance. The oles ae now being evesed Look at the univesity of today. (Continued on Page ) ouselves in the position of ich Ameican who^, sends a tiful new colo telei^i son in.the 'eace *Jops in a emote Ethiopian" village whee thee is no eje^nci^^and ho television station Such a situa- le 'angy young man in TtEe <4 student lectue class on 'n- toduction to Education' o 'Pin-j eiptos of Teaffhing* may well stay; ssatlsfled The education pogam of any C«""P»«should bctiie jesponsibflity auid angy whew he]^ the entie, faculty. not just education pofessos. The faculty must coopeatively - eexamihe -its (Continued on- Page ~j begins to teach,".he declaed. il. Davies indicated that the univesity beas the esponsibility" ^) *c z ^ " -

4 _^ _ L ^^«S THE" TCKEfc Vol. LH No. 4 Tuesday, Mach, 65 David" GoWbeg '«7- Managii Eanaging Edito 5*" Whihfif News Edito Bob Famighetti '67 Associate Edito Steve. Sche '67 Spots Edito Fank Cassidy *«7 Asst.. Spots Edito Steven Eagle '65 Tom Nkas '65 Editos Emeiti Joel Feldman '65 Edito-in-Ghifcf -BHMacaolay '65 Paal ScMossbeg '65 Co-BusSne-ss Manages Les Mille '65 Bay Silbeman '68 Asst. Business Manages ving Becke '68 Paalette Gossman '65 Advetising Manages JoeJTinai *66. Mak Fiedman '68 Pete Sandick *68 Collections Manages Copy Staff Mailyn Shapio and Richad Vespa. Repotes" Mac Beke, ^Slac Eeman, sabel Cunningham, Bay Epstein, Steve GlOsbiaxwi, Son Gegen, Matt Hoween, John Montelione, Ruth^Reznick,- Paul Rogoff, Howad-RoslX&eg, and Alan Weinet. Candidates Jasto Aenas. Ralph Zitom. Matin Flank, Jey Fank, Linda Kase, Hebe Maks, Ronald Schoenbeg, Ted Scheibe, Joel Staussne, and Andy Weine. he ovewhelming nia^ojdty of\the faculty is suppoting an educational system that is infeio, it will esult in infeio students. A -teache is supposed to teach. f he has time fo eseaeh, fine, but his fist esponsibility is to educate. This can be done best by not-having lectues. The student body has aleady lifted its voice against the. lectue, it is now time fo the faculty to_do so also. JTo Wtestw* *& the Without ~~ _By UfcA PTTTELMAN The stage-is dimly lit. Thee men ente. All ae dessed in tenchcoats and black hats. They coldly nod geetings at each othe, w then sit dawn at~a'lage poke table. Sespicieasly looking aound, accepting the lectoi system without any consideations fo the student. They ae allowing the student body to be tuned into BM cads. Thee.is no questioning the fact th^t ecitation peiods ae supeio to lectaies, but lectues ae being used moe aid moe. " $ " ' We feefthat ou teaches have a espon- all thee simultaneouslyjembve thei coats and hats. One is dessed in a militay unifom, -while the othe two ae dessed in business us down. Too few teaches have aised thei suits. They all_ ake out big- cigas and light them. voice against this dehumanization of the Johnson Listen Aleksei, ~didn*t mean to upset you with those little students^... bombing yam^g, hope you'e am* Angy with" me. We ealize that it is easy fo a teache Kosygin Of coase not* Lyndon. t's just that, well, ifs just that they to^consid^ J&is^jwst a job, and, theefoe. made me look so silly. You cetainly pulled a supise move. ^^J?ifiifnpT~n o/hif^f^, ^Qjko ^^Hi^g l/wh-raf i^efcnson- Ha, ha guess it must have come a» quite a smyiaa. we feel, that? the educating of the nation's Kosygin Ha, ha, ha. t sue did, ha, ha. youth is moe than a job. t is pobably the (Both Kosygin and Johnson beg^n to laugh loudly\ most impotant tiling anyone can "do, and "Mao Tse-tang Wha *s so funny Whxte Dog mpeialist! they ae letting us down. Johnson Aleksei. will.you please tell Mao to stop calling me names. He's always doing it., Kosygin Oh, tell him youself, Lyndon. Wheneve talk to him he calls me names too. - C&wneiM XVe feel that^ the best way^ fo Council - The fee tuition bill passed both houses to each most of the student body is though, of the New Yok State Legislatue yesteday. We should not, howeve, make the mis held with the goal of binging the clubs on L the club pogam* Last sping a dinne was. take of thinking that, the fight is ove. campus close togethe, and close to CounciL The bjjq istall has to. Joe, signed into* law. by Wc fool that this wag a geat.success. J^Yeno^Sffison Rockefelle. City Univesity- The S.C.A.C. diiunff povidwl an infoiiuaf students ae holding a. \igil at the Goveno's New Yok office to pesuade him to do atmosphee in which the pesidents and futue pesidents of all the clubs could meet so. He announced befoe the legislative vote _ that he would T?eto the hih. He, liaiitjeen a each othe, and possibly talk about club pogams. Evey peson who was connected-with long timefoe-,of fee tuition; he must be-eon- -vinced not to veto this bill. f he cannot be last, yea's dinne felt that impovements convinced by tne meits of fee tuition, we could -be made and that -the idea was sou mustvshow him that it is the.politicallv ex- t should be continued. - pedient thing to do.- CouhciL howeve, at its Thusday meet We ui-ge all students of this and othe fng voted not to appopiate $5 fo the schoots of ^the City' Univesity to join in today's vigil.. fo this tem. dinne. By doing this, it killed the dinne s We, the people who benefit fom fee tuition, must be the ones to "apply this pogtical pessue. t -~ --Gotmcil-"destoyed a^pagam/that benefits the student body. The epesentatives,-s^^l^;sf-^n d S ^^h< f Y3 'J ^ witing campaign. All the students of this Q^ the studentbody havfe not fullmled thei College should wite a lette "to the goveno telling him -that we want this fee tuition bill passed. We can also infom ou paents of the meits of a fee education, and ask them to wite. Although M. Rockefelle btated he would veto the bill wem^ehteto wait the full ten days befoe, making.a decision on the bill so that he can take cognizance of these lettes in his action. "^ Student Council, m ode to make tnet" 7 task of witing to Coveno tockefelte easie,.-wid have_a booth in the Student Cente whee lettes^can be f Eaned. Council will take eae of mailing- the lettes. We hope that all of the student bedyt will take advantage of this booth Since the bill will be sent to the govet uoi - at the end of this week, o only to-f. week. we hope; that you wite you lette as soon as possible. The booth will be open between the hous t>f and all this week«_ The futue of fee tuition is up to yoii. This-isthe best oppotunity that weiiaveiad to secue^tee~highe educatton hi New Yok Citjt; iefs not allow it to pass us by. swe have all heaed much about the extention of the lectue system. We have lis- "tcned to all the, in i^miento fo and "agimefc- ^An analysis- of the -debate held two weeks ago. appeas ontpage l.j. Thejone thing that has not been, men- esponsibility. We must ask ouselves what Council will do with this $5; Looking ove the budget and pogams of Council we^must come to the. conclusion -that it will not be spent Student fjouncu nas dessoyed *t wothwhile pogam Without putting anything is its plaee. We think that titoc student he "awae of this ijpe^k»ns3fe--acti<mi the vote on the matte is published in THU TTCJEEJB^ me tiope -that the students t?dce; notice on how thei epesentatives voted, and then ac^ accodingly^ c me on ^ e spot. ll have to^jay something vey- nasty about yon now.» Thwt*g -ffftt, At * 3f **^- T - n^k. * T»wmiii». - yo». * -ottv make a few-move ii«le aids, all^ight? Kosygin How little, Lyndon? TPefl, -toy aailitay hoys saidf ^ey wwoifctt- tail «*oe-. -than <^3M*Q people at the most and that's stetching it a> bit, Aleksei. &&JM& and* if*~a. Last teim TEB ^ KER^csked*tat depatment chaimen schedule ^soine etectives late in the aftenoon. Because oost elec-j^joh tives ^ejgw offeged in~the nfn-ting, -stndents must make choices of some ove othes, and cannot take-both... -^ Only one teache, Pofesso Joan Gadol.(Sub-chai., Hist.), has followed 'this couse ~& action- iihe has inio5«h^hk^ toy 6 class, scheduled at in the aftenoon, lias moe students in it than eve^^fofe; TTiift l^a^g ng fa think that it would be wise fo othe heads to follow the lead of Pofesso ol We hope next elective ^sonses^po^- - iegm to' sec- add^sw io xthe jfohm,,pf < ifehe f<walty- in-.ttjo '. - matte. We feel that the-faculty-is passively gammed Jn the- aftenoons. Last week we talked about the esponsibility of Student Council to the students. Once again it has not lived up to this esppnsibility. Johnson But you know don't ecognize him..and, f/ don't iecogitj»~ him, cetainly can't talk to him. - Kosygin "But he's sitting ight nftct to you. How can you not ecognize him? Johnson Well, it's ou official policy that's why. * ' ~ Kosygin Ah. yes. fogot that ycu officially didn*t- ecognize him. (Tuning to Mao)- Mao, stop calling Lyndon names, will yon.? Mao Oh. okay, but tell Mm to stop langhing-^e's always langning at" me. ( ~Kdsygm"~Bu 'why don't "you ted" nim; Mao? ~ Mao WelL if he wont talk to me, then wont talk to him (unde hi* beath) ^the Capitalist Wa Monge. Kosygin Now come-on, Mao,, if you'd stop calling him names he might ~~ even ecognize* yoo- Johnson Ha. KesygH*- Now tet's ty and foget about it boys okay? and lohnoon- W«U, okay. ig4> C y ff i»; NWw grtfcing back to those bombings, Lyndbnv you eally put.* *D. J... 's^eaaxes Kosygin,5-^and-that's a steal " 3^ and thafs as low a* FU go. it's a deal. Well, uh, okay it's a deal Mao Listen fellas, you neve let'me in* on the bidding. Why cant. have anyfixn?- - "- Because you'e-always calling me names. f youm just" stop nc niiwo, mayhff TO it^ymi TO ^WT thy -fkfffifl' y - ->- - Mao All ignt tiien, stop calling yon'names if yon let ne in on the.,., MdJEwB-.. "\_ ".* "v. * -.- Johnson That seems fai enough, Mao, but still can't ecognize you '.. Vl eally look ; oolish if.ecognize you.. M*"- XK^n., T ^^ n^o^tamit-.that. &***» we'd both look petty simy if we ecognize ea^b othe.. i <angbing>. Yeah -then you'd have no one left tit call names* at, ha, ha, ha, hat. -, -, i.,,-,i Johason (Jaughtng elso.) ha,-ha, except you, ha, ha, ha. Kosygia <as he «to»»s lav*-hing) Vou ealize, London, that yoa'u have - io let ase-go-nkt ihhe next, cisis. And X have t^^iave- at tkf «"»»* ^iy«yii\t.<yf >»ombin^pa., ^- ^ - -_- -' -=- CCoatinaed on Page-7> By BOB FAMGHETTt The entie contovesy egading the expansion of the lectue system evolves aound two basic questions^ Ae budgetay consideations of pimay impotance in detemining how students should be taught? Can anything be done to change the amount of money budg ^. ByJAN»CH -, i Student Council Activities Committee Ch»im*n What is the Student Coum.il Activities CojMaitteeJ Oiginally established unde the name Activities Coodination Boad, the pupose of S.C.A.C- is tohove gene*at *supevision ove the student co-cuicula activities, and to have such powes and functions as the Student Council' shall designate. (_ The majo duties of S.C.A.C. include, ganting publicity ights fo eted to acquie faculty? bulletin boads and boadchaikings in the main building and Student i t is this Acquisition of faculty -Cente; handling applications of oom equests fo special events and+which is ' at the heat of the leepemanent meeting ooms fo the clubs; unning the Student-Faculty tue contovesy^-at pesent, the Teas, the fist one to be Mach in the Oak Lounge; and sponsoing aveage numbe of classoom hoas- the Coffee and Music Hou, which-is-beld Tuesday i- in the Oak j pe_ instucto at most Ameican age- " -^_ -..._ [colleges s nine. At the City CoK ' ""FistOn ou pogam is-the coection of publicity ales-and egula-! lege, it is close to fifteen. With txms. How many times have you seen' a sflksceen dated fom last yea such dispopotionate wok loads, on the bulletin boads^the ule that the S.C-A.C- executive boad has qualified faculty, who ae demand^ set down is that all' silkscpeen*-must be emoved by 4 p.nv-on the day "ing inceasingly moe tame fo e- following the event. Any.-cfeb which denies these oles will be subject j seach, will not come to the City.to action by the is.ca.c- executive boad, compised of Phyllis Mil- j College.. ' '*- -^-le, Functioning Coodinato; Steve Sandes, Secetay; Michael i j n Addition, thee ae othe dif- G"»i»y, Publicity Coodinato Howie Klein, Busa; and Anj?i Raynieu j fi cu Ui\s. At the Bauch School, the special assistant. ~. -^L^T. liba y^is elatively-small, thee. Pjogammed fo the.end of May o ealy June is the S.Q.A.C. din-fis pactically no. office space fo ne and.semina fo club pesidents and advises. Awads at pesent- ] f acu lty -and thee ae no seceed to tbe^outstanding clubs and studeints of the School. A sui, -t»ston! "taies fo faculty. nstuctos will has been made to offe an awad 'to the club publishing the best news- j no^ accept these inconveniences if pape. This "will be bought unde the consideation of the S.C.A.C y they' can have ii pivate office, a boad.. *.. pivate secetay, and a lage libay to daw fom (with moe The pupose of the semina,.which will pecede the dinne is to j plan a calenda of events fo xh following tem, so that majo po- i UHWL te.a*e it} at ^anothe college. gains of two clubs will not conflict, andi the Depatment of S>tu<h-m Money s Needed Life will be7"abxe to p!an_jpogaihs aound the club pogams and i., The answe to all these poblems is money. f the instuctional coopeation with-^them. Bauch Bulletin, the club newspape, has etuned afte a tem's i staff cuuld be geatly expanded absence. t is" being published" by Boostes and will contain stoies con- (entailing a sizable addition to the cening all club functions. One club a week will, be spotlighted. This j amount -of money sevice -will infom the student body about the club pogam fo each week and what is planned fo the fotee. All aticles ae to be bought- "to 4 S.C The ctob newspape comes out Thusdays, in the same ack whee THE TCKER is found. (Continned fom Page 6),ey chuwi,; wbal about ML. cjii'i ill vu tln uejlt cisis - ybt^jghave ta wait-you tun, Mao. A^te all, you'e still ^."petty newabtind hee. ^ Mao But thafs What you've been telling me eve 'since Koea. When ae yoa gonna give me anothe chance?. Kosygin \Vell, soon vey soon. want to lmow now ^ight now! t,' Kosygin How about waiting fo two moe cises' f Mao One moe and it's a deal. Kosygin One cxisis and two spy aests. / Mao One cisis, and one ideological dispute. Koa>giu Okay, it's a deal Mao Yippeei Kosygin (vey-annoyed) Oh, stop acting like a child! Johnson Yeah, you'e always acting like. a'.kid, Mao. i (vey indignant) Why you, yon, you CnfnniaTisf Colonialist! Why- yon know 'm*only fighting fo Democacy keep telling you -Vm just out fo some good old fashioned Ameican Democacy!.. ' Kosygin Oh c'mon, Lyndon, you always stat yelling about that, T.ast News Analysis salaies), then a nine hou wok load would be feasible. SiuuaTy, hiing secetaies, ceating office space, and expanding the libay also equie- significant -expenditues. This bings to light the elevance Mauice Benewitz Favos Lectue System [ ay 8, Pofesso Mauice Benewitz(Sub-chai, Eco.) maintained that "within the ealities tha*^ exists it cannot. T voulu nvl UlOiC tstikkt ent, contols be placed on book boowing by tansient faculty, so that books would be. moe easily accessible to.cuently employed The v^i' <»»-c" ^*»» ff ****** fvi^-«> and simila poposals by advocates of the lectue system is that "you cant fight city hati." "Within the ealities that exist as they see them, the only way to educe faculty wok loads is to institute an, inceased numbe bf<lage lectues. so that one class of 3 athe than ten classes of thity ae taught a couse, theeby eliminating nine hous. Bv.t not all the poblems ae geminated. nadequacies in office space, secetaial staffs, and libay facilities will still exist. n addition, thee ae some instuctos who efuse to teach unde the lectue system. Educational Value.Questionable Even aside fom these consideations (which ae by no means in- But what ae the ealities that i Ck nc._ impotant jfact to consignlnc&nt), the question "s a leeside is that high school teaches. ^ ^ s v s t e m educationally sound?~ obtained-s eduction in class slz*- <fannot ^ - ^^^ and a wage incease though po- ; test* to the Boad of Education.] Many of the advocates of lee- Could not instuctos at the City tue expansion base thei agu- College stage simila potest*?; ments on the pemise^that lectues Could not the College obtain a; ae unavoidable and fomulate of the second o^ion-c^ lbe_<^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^"^tional lege-obtain moe money than it U unde the Economic.- Oppotunity Aomidiiosj to >afaeii«hiio tlnu pisai pesently eceiving Act "which would enable it to hie **«" n the debate, Thusday. Febu- students to seve as faculty sec (Continuod on Page ) Felix Fankfute Wy -MATT-lf A-VET. PHLLPS '3 Vcpn'nMd fom the "City College Alumnus' emembe ^elix Fankfute at" the college. He was a yea ahead of me. He had come fom «i* native Vienna at the age of twelve. Thee neve seemed a tace of an accent, and his speech had a limpid quality an4 an engaging timbe that chamed his listenes. M ; to The affluent undegaduates ode to and fom the college. Most walked to save the five-cent cafae, except in "extemely stomy weathe. Many ^vill emembe ont such days, as they ode uptown, passing one of Fankf utei^s classmates walking unde the elevated oad fo a bit of shelte. He afte* wad became a noted wite- and an English pofesso in an* impotant college.. ~ We wee membes of the Clioiiia*- Society, one of'the College's two "and ~ Lexington -Avenue. The num leatimg ' liteay societies. The annual debate between' Clionia and be of students Was 774. His classmates included descendants of ealy Ph enooosni ia aoused a keen ess. settles, as well as epesentatives <f ivaly that quite of the, othe aces that make up emotions oused by ou pesentday Wold Seies. The ule was ou mixed society ish, Gemans, Russians, Poles, talians, Hunga- univesal that onls* senios wee ians. Austians, Rumanians; Cathto be debates. But even-the uni=^ olics, Potestants, Jews, and, doubt- Well, 'm soy, but he stated name-calling. vesality of egujation did not ap- less nonbelieves. The examination Mao Xott stated fist this time. to admittance, to the college was. pl^to Fankfute, lnougii -he was" Listen, lefs just foget abou >i^. \".only -a membe. o"f the junio class most sevee. The cuiculum was z Okay, let's get on with ou top level talks^ Now 've got the we choae h±m to epesent Clionia. a demanding; one, the discipline n Fankfute's time, C»CJi.Y. light on Vietnam- ight?. How nandeomelv he instilled on hash. The saying was that any- was a small college, and in bis lov gosygni Yes, hot emembe, have to theaten.you-a bft. Jtody who was _g*du*tea fon "beach of tadition! tf- couse.. fo the college, M. Justice Fantefute must often have been mind- Mao And me too. "*~ ' - City College was entitled tbthis CKonia-woh, and wc ah feft that i Wefl, that seems fai enough. But dent taget who won diploma. The college^was -fee. And he bought as the- tiumph. woto ed of Webste's' pleading #o hjff Vietnam»-the last Faehesi ssane. thee 4s little doubt that most of him about that many yeas late. alma mate in the Datmouth Getlege case, callins. upon the geat tosygia igudgingly) All feht. the students would have had no TT tell about that in a moment. i And piumise you. ll stop-as soon-as scae that Ho Chi college' education had thee been shall neve foget his stunning Chief Justice to save' Datmouth Minh into taking some of my money. _ -. petowance. Helooteoso *oyish f ^ f h a "*Shee4s-^i small college,.hat tbeo ^ f ^ ^ T ^ f ^ S l tz TbnT have to do it ast, o else TT have to -etaliate o something. htsneat»ess-w^s^adnghe^poke?*«^ Benad M. Bauch of the - ae those who love-he." -\^ JtAytaa^z You wont do that, would von? class of 88 has said, "f thee such spnsp. fw>nf>t no have head it said that when z Well, might have to--but only fo the pope Psychological wee no C.O.N.Y"., neve. would opposition could have' any significance. Justice ^Fankfute would come effect^. ^. ihav«an. education beyond the public scnoolsi'* with a cetain "bouhciness?*'that nbo the coutoom, -it 'would "ha That seems fai enough. He «was neve fulsome in his Well, guess that takes eae of this week's-top level talks. geetings. But he impessed you The ftnance_j5talu3_of Fankfuchvsan3ates was -epnaething to say he walked jnst that-way in bein^ so, it will not'be sacilegious '^azltszae. acee) i«f stget out of 'hee befoe anyone susses usw ~ T ~\ -with his sinceity, and his gaiety (The-thee-men- stand.ju^and put thei tenchcoats and bats on )_ was a delight. Thee was a ae like this; the paents of about ten his college days. He seemed tp be Jnst Temeti*b*T boys> -we- Anei ieans stand fo feedom, equality And democacy! * wam affection. pecent did faily well The est as Chough he. 'wee too impatient spakle about him. He inspied; pecent wee well-to-do, twenty going fowad with a slight leap, Yes, but emembe we Russians stand fo feedom, equality, C.C.K.Y. locally known as City j wee poo actually poo the to get thee to tust himself to and the.woking class! College-7-is now an awe-inspimg t family income baely sufficient- to mee walking. Well, he did, get s^and don*t foget, we Chinese stand fo feedom and equality (. just~efuse to ' use the wod--make ends meets, all the boys in thee. And the affection-and'.pide and against ah Capitalist, mpeialist W ""complex'*) goup of buildings on the family ^oking afte college ' of his feuow alumni of ^CJ.^J.Y. Wefl^ if thafs the way yon feel then "we Ameicans ae St. Nicholas Heights, in the oppe hous and on Satuday and Sunday. have been with hbn thou^iout the^»fgmnmf *3J Cntmmiiat, Fascigt,. un^ameian- Wa MowgnM-ot eaches of New Yok City. to help meet the famfly needs, yeas. - They.have lhieu F awfeu, but Oh yeah! "-^ '~ ^ oste numbes O4JW. n Fankfute's student days the entie te consisted, geneally of an apple, the exalted post of Justice of the Yjim»hiinn al Lhw follegc food coun- not Mix pi feed, at his elevation to- tt. T]P >t^; Hey, what ahnnt mf^ iet me, he agamgt Bnmaone?. ~*n*f~ wnjt hftm^in ja tinv Gothic a- petzel and a cup of cogee. Few Supeme Con^ of t±te Pinted (The-thee men exit as they continue to shout at each othe.) stuctue at Twcniy^thid SteetTconld affod much moe. States. \

5 Contovesy is the essence of academic feedom.- Feedom^ iou "think othewise'' and to say so, feedom, to disagee, and to defend- that disageement -without let o hindeance, feedom to inquie and to question^'.feedom to act and -take the consequences these ae among the inescapable.equiements of academic life as we know it- -A goup of pofessos at the- Bekeley campus of the Univesity of Califonia.has submitted an amicus bief befoe Judge Cittenden in behalf of nealy 3. pesons, both students and aon-students whose ti^.nends^jusjgg these wods " -- «-^. ' ~"~ ~~~""..7~ "'The vey activity of edu^ationt fo stijident and teache alike, is the fee execise of open minds. - Wheneve- in pusuit -of knowledge speech is a ^guaded, and.-.-minds ae sealed,- the ^educational -._ dialogue _'.deteioates into.-monojiogue, aguable - hypotheses haden into do^.a,--and7-the_ will t& stimulate active inquiy yields to.the, demand fo passive acceptance." " (p."6) * Without using 'the tems, this statement distinguishes "between eistic and heuistic contovesy.. ' The Concise Oxfod Dictionay 'defines, "eistic" (noun) as~iii&»- ague aiming at victoy* athe- than tuth." Eistic contovesy uses data not as mateial to be^examjned but as selected weapons of disputation.. To the eistic, pesons cease to be individuals' clothed in dignity, they becooe objects of pesonal attack antf chaacte assasination, because, fajhng to win an agument, the eistic ague makes- the opponent hi? taget. n shot, as the Bekeley pofessos have-put it in thei defense of academic feedom and of the aested students, "the educational dialogue deteioates into monologue, aguable hypotfteses-hampn into <T^^a/amtlie^\vii to stimulate cedit' s.»<d defeat the theat to academic life by the late Senato Joseph McCathy, j because we knew that the univesity is an anvil which has won out many a hamme. 'Th«' idea and the pactice of acadenie feedom, and the deffc«-se of these against attack fom, without and /jbefi»ya>om within have demonstated' that academic.^wedwn»5 not ieiev-ant it is mipotahtly "elevant; -3Sd.She then and women who have defended it down ^ftjjfeftgfa.t*e decades have ightfully won ecognition as the tue,defei. ies of the seach fo'tuth.' '* ' ' * & «Jassic -notion of academic, feedom has been j -seme ^ewisioh in ecent - decades a -pocess haf been geatly, acceleated with the onset of the ijh85?5? i?' e,ivfl ights movement -of the last ten yeas.?< b* s Lj>&*> motion of academic feedom calls upon men to -^lewae; oni of the ivoy towe,.to foesake the_pose of ^^ja^saly detachment, and to engage in the heat and bu- ** '^stife....the - pesent student geneation Knows nothing^ of - Wold lha, of the Coolidge boom and the Hoove bust, of the Geat "Depession and its gnawing teos and it- -secuity and its geat gains in social efom. This geneation j-nisseotthe Nazi-Fascist movement and the second Wold Wa. To 'them. McCathyism is meely something that happened. They spang diectly, with no inhibiting ijstoy, into a moment when geat moal issues cied fo esolution and gave them oppotunity to/take skies. "Hie. issue of feedom fo the Nego in "Ameica and fo the coloed aces of the entie globe suddenly ap uses the weapon of civil disobedience aises poblems no univesity can deal with adequately." (New Yok Times Magazine,, Eeb. 4, 65) The eistic action is the ultimately destuctive^ foce h Academe, ft leaves no, heuistic possibility- t. academic feedom in the same manne as license.betays libety. * As one eads the chonology of Bekeley -fom\mid- ^Septembe to, jnid^januay, the cumulative evidence indicates, that this same eistic mentality also guided-those. who, made adnunlsteative decisions. Without, advance coo-. feence; a take-it-o-leave-it uling was laid down, chang-~ ing the gound ules fo political activity outside $ative. Gate. The absent Pesident ^e > ietuningfftom"^uope. attempted to mediate the situation by 'offeing- the font jsteps of SpouTEall as a- substitute "fo the aea which had" been abitaily -withdawn by administative fiat the day befoe. n the successive decisions in ensuing ^v^kfi, yach "adminifitatj^ilx^n'tnfm-n-pnt tttvk a fim an** unalteable stand, only to be succeeded by anothe fim and unalteable stand when the ealie one - poved to- be.infim and alteable in the face of student mass powe. Attd -what about the.faculty? Glaze, one of.th faculty membes who, fom the fist, attempted to mediate the conflict, and who late was to become a casualty of the mounting confontation, to be condemned as a "fink" and a "stooge of Pesident Ke,'/ taces in detail the path which caied the - faculty fom" thei fist_ aulty and-timid peaed on thei hoizon like the ising sun of a day that heuistic effots staight into ~a fim "and final eisticwangle. As he puts it, following the debate in the Senate neve was. What diffeence that they wee. Johnny-come- atelys in a stuggle which many of thei eldes had of the Univesity at Bekeley. ** men who'"had been caied fo decades? Was it thei fault they wee, bon fiends fo yeas but had taken opposite sides (in the late?.. " Senate debate) appoached each othe with hesitation, -and felt- -it necessay to eaffim.thei fiendship. s4 -active inquy~tjyields to the~demand fo" passive acceptance." Aimina at victoy athe than tuth, eistic con ^3eepTy~fca~d-thei emotions -become mvolved,^ Shades of" Leaned Hand! The schola's dispassionate detachment tovesy destoys academic feedom. had been eplaced by the, flaming swod of. passion - Heuistic -contovesy, on the othe hand, efes to -not in the outside wold as' Leaned Hand had feaed, "methods of agumentation that assume o postulate what ^inted hee ae excepts fom Pesident. fcuz ight in the heat of Acadenie. " emains to be povet-q that lead a peson to find out One* of the moe thoughtful analyses, made in fo himself." Whee the\eistic aims at victoy, the heuistic is tentative..heuistic agument ests on. mutual addess to the Amei- man of the histoy depatment at Bekeley. He iden~ Buell G. Gallaghe's etospect, was given by Pofesso Heny May, chai- x-esptecj. of the contending paties, neve subsutuxes pesonal idicule and" vulgaities fo fank statement of and pessue stemming fom the that ^s«tt»i*i^» of ***M two niajo issuea. One is the ineyiiahie qfeaios WiftMMW <*»P» examined tuth, is indiffeeit to the wlnjiihg^b^tosing of Uliivesi3P Pofessos =will at the same time be geat; the second is the ise of new foms oi the agument, if only tuth is ^seved.' A ogance cha- given- Thusday, Fe^ political action which aouse deep emotions and whose aeteizes the eistic, while huinilitynonaiss the heuistic iunay 8, on the ecent'cisis'at the Uni- >. legal status is in doubt.". - - " ' As Huxley would have us sit down befoe tuth as a little- child, so would the "heuistic ague follow tuth -] vesity^of Califonia's To the two issues identified by Pofesso 4ay, wheeve it lend3. Whee the eistic atiikea a pose, takes a -position, and aogantly defends-it against ^all comes, Bekeley campus. would add a thid, with the suggestion that it, may wellpove to be the 'basic. issue of ou time on. many" a the heuistic examines hypotheses, listens.attentively to campus can heuistic.-contovesy successfully contain opposing views, and/ is quite undistubed if^fche esults ofth«> discussion bing him to a changed position. Heuistie^-- the' destuctive^foces of the" eistic 7" nsulted, aliehatea stipped of * dignity and espect, -eancontovesy s the vey essence~pf aca3teinicfeedomt muste the couage and self discipline to demonstate that.the distinction between the eistic and the heuistic cthey felt a TOoai compulsion to use thei summe he is- indeed Homo sapienes? Povoked beyond enduance, has always been befoe us. f that distinction is kept niontbtsvin active -wok thoughout the South,and Noth. can he still endue -without eciminating? Can' >*lmi»»{«_ clealy in mind, academic feedom *may be bette defended. 'RetunJneNto the seenity of the campus, they wee est- tatos, faculty and students nilike a l thoa, togotha- less unde t^e^contast. f they had been men enough to win the battles fo academic feedom within the campus? t should be noted, howeve," that the conception of aca- > stand up to a.police dog o a sheiff's electic cattle ppd7 O will the eistic pessues of the time educe the "demic f^edom itself is undegoing a fundamental change..^ if thee, of thei numbe had become matys and lay beneath -a. Mississippi eathen dam, how could they etun campus to a butal stuggle..fo powe? The/elassjical Ameican notion of academic feedom* both as - Let me, in closing,, suggest some of the mistakes -to- iu> s>i/ill and as to its_ pope sphee, was" to the cloisteed ound of studies and examinations? nbeiieve we ougbt not to make. " well stated by M." Justice Leaned* Hand in his Spiit volvement, hot detachment, became thei ideal not sloganeeing. Thjey_ Jaad^ head the pesidents, of^ thei. Colleges sident. with any segment of Academe. f, -at R^ioUy,. We oug^t'not to assume -that ail -wisdom is e- of Libety ~. T you may not cay a swodt- beneath~a schol- a's gown, o lead; flaming causes fom a cloiste - i. a schola who ties to combine these pats sells his bithight, fa *. w ^ v»f -po±tage_ when the "final count is made it will be found that the impaiment of his powes, fa outweighs any possible contibution to -the- causes he has es poused-.^if he is fit to seve in his calling at all,, it is because he has leaned not to seve any * othe, fo his singleness of mind quickly evapo ates in tihe^-^jjjlps^j^ _ ibis epeat, is^ho.elacoicnl joncep^h-ox-the spiit of academic feedom and of its pope limitataons - f^t' *"> <J«i P ste quickly say that this only, goes to pove that academic feedom is* ^pttely^^ acyademte." The hotioh that'. ^ca^en^^ feedom, lias been J??^evant because it- has-con- J^jed its.relevance to, the _cajinnais needs only to hel-examined to be ejejcted ^-'^ v...' '_' T^^-goy-^Xogsi^^oa Campus. ^ ^ Adanl_Siuith was, able* to. w*ite 'his evohitkmay.^eakh of Nations and his ealie Theoy of the-moal i^^5* n t s ' - yhjcjq th^othe^v^ume ests; only becaose academic Xeedoaa ^ot^eted^ his labos~ James WattT was fee to de\ise the steam engine and launch.the whole in-.duatital eyojutio^ only; because his labos wee sa- ^nnded by the potecting; wahs, of ffc.,vi&ibnfa «f g ^ g y. And hecause^jcal Max was denied '*h# a»w.. he sought ini.bonn, he had to eteat to a ^ecaions, ute^rjclngc J?*s Kapital iinde. the ^iusty dome of zitish ^iuseum^ ATQT** f^ently, we - (the pesent speake mclytaed^ say that "feedom.is indivisible.'* Vey well, then, acadeinic feedom, civil ights, and civil libeties ae a single cpntinaum. pixie as he was ^o his day. Leaned Hand does not speak to thia genea- tio«u Adlai Stevenson, does. And what does Stevenson say? He^eengatauiates college students fo getting aested in massive civil disobedience. ^. - Academe Had Become the Foest of Teo * what has happened? Eh a wod, tins, eistic contoistic Oh both sides of-the contovesy, administatos eed in making abitay changes -in de'facto ules; if faculty membes eed in that they knew the student mind bette that did f /»«Tnpn gngti'a nw/i gtafa PnK^ f"iint f hnd t nn destand non-violence _ which bit an office by -the-^hand and bodily ejected him fo the building so, also did student judgment e in aogating to itself thvpeo- -gatives of. the dictato.. We cannot pemit alien pessues and pocesses, to enlae»adomii> fi»i>fhm Ttt> *nt i ^^ adial Right a.igti^us^xauase acngatfd to Thftmaelves bassinuxpaied a. alpgan, VExtasemisnl TinTpusxnT- ot uae^^ the igh^ousness of the cause^hbe<5onaing aogahtiy self- is~no vice**. As Lipset and Seabuy~TThe Repote, Jan, ighteous. ^Students happily indulged in the hoaiy col- 88, 65) emak, "Deikeley has shuwu liuu anyone caa deanbeating. And since, the ^eistic menfty demands a focus fo its hated, they publicly cai- What-is needed, instead.of fanaticism in any fom, play this game cauu-ed "The Mind of Clak Ke," and then deisively is a whole-soujed dedication, of mind and. enegies to deba ted ing^ubhc,as jbo whethe he had a mind. They "wee ti»e 'pusuit^of^wn^ ^tixough the contmuing^ dialogue, m, in iiu^uboc^-^tadat things4fce' oito compomise. The thne mtifuw! it«pect^ ^e need loyalty to an evtjvlj^iaeal, with fo,action^hj^x?one; They no; longe. espectfully e-, qneated they demanded^ And when deigiamdfl wee not met, they used the weu-ieaj^jteehniques of civil disobedience tojbing the academic pocess to a ginding halt. "We shall see who-uns tiu8^navegsaty4 gl -sfaonl*e<t tne, staadentt leade, Maio -Savio. Thus did the. defense of basic ights become.a naked atnggie;. o> powe.^xhe^ bennastie had given ippy po.the eygtic, Tjy, jtfftfff f»f ft flipme had h/», come<-the, foest of ^teo ^^^i^-.wbieh^.the maaudes ^wajyned at will As Abe-Raskin <CCNY ^) comments ^f-to suiue 4his--i5^-a^5cmTl>esc^ioh^ said that no altenative- woth * followmg "homises ' an easie path -- hot nbw, ahd neve. 'We n^s^at^^east maka tfa^ otfoti Wo owe thig maefa te^ali tti«fej^feaubrs of futue Ktnd^nts stntt toykoy «H,-.'.^*T*ff' ^^""^ TO-C3Tdents* who, unless we now make the effo^ wul neve have the chance to /*tead the pleasant walks of "Aca- -deme." ,- --, _- - ^-i^^^^- u.._, FSM- eadiness to^expeunent, to change, to go-w, to^discad, to inno\mte, to listen as well as to speaie, and above all. to hold each the. othe in - full espect as -pesons clothed in dignity and wothy of affection. - News Analysis Educaticn Tuition (Continaed fom ffage > (Continued fnojpage 5) (Continued fom Page > (Continued fom Page 7) Jts class schedules ae cammed i hopefuls ae Hay Binde, Bay j teache education pogam, "find-' the School is located, was inte- n the ecent debate. Pofesso full of couses whee students lean! Habeman, Jackie Heman, Stewn j ^ ^ys"t^fpune he «PPea«d befo&j-benewitz implied that the entie how to administe a pesonnel po-! Le.ghton, Mak Mendle, and Kathy t wood, eliminate ovelapping* and the Political Science lectue, Fi- ; pblem was fo him a budgetay gam, o how to gow hybid con.! Schafenbe'g. (duplication, aid educe education" day. (. one to which lectues povided the ^ h*w to undestand the Russians, Class Council Sests J couse equiements if these ae [. He pedicted passage of the. m o s t expedient solution, when, in o how to pogam» compute. But «. f! ^! ^! ~ ^TcA*x«of exce^siye.". -! mandat^ at that tame, but»id he ^ ^ ^ Pofesso JoanWoV.. its students ae not bei^g taught. \. J ^ ^ '? J ^ ^ j M. Davids "sug«e S ted that "ex- expecte^ the g o ^ o to veto he sta temen t "you would not adop^ bill afte its appoval by the, (lectues) if you could haye^the g.*^^ * b '" ihv XuucUnTft " Ul t Class Council seats. Doug Leade- ccoaivc" cou^ ^ / " f ^ ^ S e n a t e disciplines. twenty-five pe cent of the total nine hou pogam without it," he ma n^laxtk Maodel, Bethe Pantell, Heein lies the evesal of func-i ^'Z^T^uTJ^l'' R ^ L " WJTJ«' undegaduate pogam. ^R* ^ Phinaed eplied. " wouldn't dive a Chevotions. t is how up to the student! ^ " ha^ W^Llum^ nt S i He uged also that all teaches,' The Fee Tuition Committee of Met if could have a Rolls Royce." to ead tho geat books, to become nai +!~ " ^ j K»*h ^i^m^ntay and seconday, be Student Council has stated that [ Pofesso Joan Gadol (Sub-chai., candidates. acquainted with the ats, and to in- a thee is a possibility that a mass] Hist.) suggested, howeve, that Seeking two available Student! '^qui^ed to study in depth steep himself in the caltue of athe than just ally will be called in Albany in moe than expediency should be Council foa the Class of ' e d l ^ ^ ^ f ^ ^ i iwesten clviit»ation. * "._. jww tp \j>*pf* legislatosja>_ vote.. consideed" f She felt that the qaxestansition against M. Rockefelle! tion w Ae budgetay COnaidfia- fcs, Hay Pucjev-aHtfc The tmtvesty has abogated, its i>t - *.««j fn ode to iibow i taditional esjkmsibnity of actuig. between the' a^fcdem^ taining of Booth s Qp^edT tions of_ pime impotance m detemining the method of teaching ^Ls guadian of the best of oucul- ' the stodent! teiaie and tlie fully The -committee will have a booth tue, a«si has become.a taining! Student Council postponed to-; ctualined teache^ M. Uavies po-'in the Student Cente open" thisj. students?" was a significant one. gound fo technicians, administatos, ang expets of~al types. uled fo last Wednesday, fo one [ cludlhl A educed-teaching load and, in ode to get students j.to wite C lectue expansion as an educational moow's election, oiginally scheov- ] posed an mteaahtp pogam, m- week between the hoas of T and J She ^agued fo ^consideation of The» «*flt»v» ^ni >y»i*w»«wwb week so the candidates would havjg^ substantial supevision. lettes to the goveno. poblem. ae concened with the fundamen- -«n -oppotunity to pesent thei "We should.begin to see teache The committee hope? that the Will students develop as well tals, withess-st. John's College of platfom to thei_classmates in a education as seven o eight yeas] stj^ntv^ody" win suppot fee tui- intellectually in a lectue system? Mayland and New Mexico. But special assembly Thusday. of systematically planned pepaa-; t- on by w i t i n e pesonally, and by Will they feel depesonalized and, too many schopts ae ovely con- Tn* postponement ^lso allowed tion and induction beginning with; havin^ thei paents wite also, if so, what effect will this have cemed with technicalities and ti- TH& TCKET to pint the candi- the fist yea of college and ending! nowd^chaimaitsteven Sandell'ST.'' u^on t h e m?? -.via. A j dates' qualifications', along with afte the fist thee yeas of e-;... j Simila to Bekeley the- statements concening thei plat- sponsible Vpaid teaching," he as-! n addition, the City Univesity! ^ thg heat of the Bekeley T-he fundamental shift in. "* ~ ' 'Coodinating Committee.»ayi e v o, t w a s student duty of the student and the'duty foms <See - Pa * e 4) se ted. discontent with ~xsf the" univesity TS^ distubmg. Special Ai>sentbiy Held _ ischeduie- a^silent;_ Jgg, ou^df_ j the ina^s lectue system and fl feeling of depesonali^ajfeisfnt' The psy \ + Goveno Rockefelle's New Yok Univesities^l&ve been haphazadly adding classes and depatments fist of its kind eve held, at the chological impact on a student of The election assembly was the office to pesuade him to sign the ; w-hich ae of fleeting inteest to Bauch School. An audience of apsomeone and which undoubtedly poximately fifty students attended mental poject, some students met bill into law. becoming a seat numbe has been (Continued fom Page 3) The fate of the othe two fee discounted by the advocates of lectuition bills is not consideed good.. tue expansion. Recent events pefom some function. The student the' event. f in semina-like discussion goups at is left to flounde, picking -up, in ~.T-T._Z~~J " ' ~" " " ~ athe than in the * auditoium. a piecemeal fashionythe.nipetant» ^ '.Peviously all feshntenl attended "knowledge of ou cultue. -the auditoium lectues. Unless the univesity ealizes, its Thee wee fifteen small goups. duty as one- of the most impotant ^ ~. ~ - ach containing ten to fifteen stu- s^is^sife institutions - in ou society a duty {Continued fom Page ) j dentsl The leades of* the goups dentanding>tepectual discipline \. j.. ^ M ^ ^ n B - l l C H a! consisted of uppe classmen^ mem- ' c then someday thee maybe no common cuft»f> o fimm^i PUJpoae^i Re Debate on the lectue system m g and! Testing, the Depatment.of, bes of the Depatment of Counsel-. _ «-*nte. aetnt- o-tm" "o ci^ - Student XileT^ anst ^Be^Xaculty.T the^"oote of^the past'ae especially.!»"*be leanng shout* be xhe pe-! dealy tf^ Faa commented; - ^ needed -. in - a society gowing society- moe i son w h o ae s e t t m e the. example t-h- e entie oientation pogam - - ootless and anxious evey day. n-! fo thei s*w**ntst Why is it then w o u l d be on a small goup basis tospeetwm f& hmgf ovedue. ' that the facnifey -~of the- Ba«eh^; Unt of ^mtti' funnpo Coatinafd School, when- faced vtfth the pob- j T h i s semeste's oientation plans ^m.. #,...«lem of poo teaching-conditions sn^,^ as yet incomplete, bat Ms. V.P atl^'^>t*i ^ j this institution, chooses to sacifice Faa stated that it would hedone on the~small goup basis. She some pat of the students' education instead of potesting the noted' that the small numbe of enconditions,that exist and. tying tof t^,^ -feshmen facilitated the use (Contmnedf.oi ^Page 4) ^^libay wifl^hejbjndteed JiyJoaanx of the poblems that exist today in the pesent libay^hehy ~Wi&& eick '68 said, "Unless the faculty etun -books that they boow, the poposed libay will not be -an- asset but a detiment to th«student body.i' * Malin Goldbeg '67 summed up the poblems "concening the convesion^ by, stating, "f would go to the.othe cafeteia, *o to the Student Cente if the th floo cafeteia -was too* cowded." - JgBgP^g ^? m? _. ;.. -= of this method,._-_ Abe Rozman '66 < n..ef eeiace to the final examination in last tem's lage "oientaf tion goup, Ms. Faa noted that i^hiitetfiitl...' vi^^^li!!?c it helped feshmen to cystalize thei thinking about the couse, ^ and also aided in evaluating the Elective cads ae due today. couse's impact. Please fill them out caefully. Next tem's couses depend on wi***"*" them. Foms may be picked up. fom the Regista's Office (5). Join TCKER gs^^^s^^*?^j"is^3^^^^sk?sss«?^^^s && ^m&wm& 8&^$&i3&Mi& i Bekeley seem to indicate, how- ; eve, that this-impact "is Ta fom ' unimpotant. Poffesso Gadol sug- { gested that pehaps we should ty fo the "Rolls Royce." without hamful stimulants NoDoz^ikeeps you mentally makes you feel dowsy while alet wi h the same satfe e- studying, woking o diving, feshe found in coffee. Yet do as millions, do... pek up NoDoz is faste, handie, moe wi t h sa f e, ef fee t i v e N o Poz eliable. Absolutely not habit- Keep Alet Tablets.- - foming. Next time monotony Anothe fine poduct of Gov Lataatates. - - ^i«l*»ig-ia.»'»'> ' wm *m'mz? jz?% W'MtMt^l^t^^l^ll^ll^^^^l^M^g.^^^. -^^- Lt.^-^- ^^^V>^ 3 h^s»^tt.^.n^m»»»ttt^ttmnlifmiimiimai» AL Roge (the Hat). Jey P., Howie, Elliot (the Bead), Hy, Shelly, But, May G. (fvwcheles), Havey G. (S.), MeJ> Richie H. Jay (What?!, Jey L, Bay K.. Havey K. (Ulta Shap), Byon (He's a myth), Maty, Bill (HWF), Joel L, Joe (Vey Shap), Phil M. ("let me tell you..."), Richie hc, Paul (" don't emembe"), Ken, Lay, Bay O^jH-enny (alias Ben Goldman), Stu, Phil R., Fank (he's clean), Mav S., van., Havey W. Joel Z, P.C., C.K. DNNER- S CRATON-ATLANTK ^QT L ^dway^at 3/ th St. {EAST l«?qm) 7O to 8^ ^fics ^^^i^m,...^l...,....,.,,,,... t.,^^v^^unmimlmuiuimmm\mmm;;.i.. ^>^»^

6 f c^ Pago ue TCKER Tuesday. Mach, 63 Switzeland Th* ntankfkxtal TmvjA JEtmhiiAinmat will locate job oppotunities in Euope fo anyon* who Efc«s ib» id of i low cos~4in fo Enon*. Jobs po *v>hdblo- it oil fwfij; Euope. ffoofoj-ah skbom «oiid g lo SooTaTilop*^ Tf HfTono,«tso, Vodux. iiocjit»ut«m (Switzeland) fo complete, do-i*- yousef pbjpwettg~^fclcti includes tfce kejl.t getting a job H«Euope, ffcollogoct Bjoop «jov seleelibit eveilabte. TwOiwcipot, aioiney sevmoj tip* «M eondasive infomation making tie* to Euope (cecfttdiog tanspotation) possibjofo loss than $. T^wxAiy, Mnh? f o5 THE TOCBL -^ Dave P^tahsky by Alan Wiene - ~ Most people know t>ave Polansky as the City Collegej basketball c6ach. Few people^ know that he holds the CCNY j ecod in tack fo the-half-! mfle. And some Bauch al-j uani pobably emembe Po- Tani-.ky as? thei basketball Tf^eftto, but vey few people! kiiow of >ave Bolansky'sj geatest achievement he has) the best won-loss lacbsset xecpd in ^he county! ~ T -About. thee yejas ago; when. lacosse oach Leon "Chief" Mille, became ill, Polansky took ove as bead of the team. Unde his diection "the vasity won two. meets, and. the J.V. won two., binging Polan "sky*«pecentage as lacosse mento to.oo. Afte this ^ookie showing he,.'etied fom, lacosse with this -unblemished ecod., Bauch By ves ing Page Beaten same yea. * * college pesented Th^J8au.ch basketball team lost its fouth game of the him with the a*wd as the out- season, bowing to the Bauc Evening Session Both standing vasity athlete, in be- teams displayed potent offenses, but shswed. little on defense. half of the elans of 3. The gank* j was piayed Fida;yT^^t>aafy T. The wa came, and Polansky Afte the fist eight minutes the*>answeed his call to sevice by Bauch five-led 7-5-but then the. * on ' and Danny Hymowitz led the joining the Ai Cop= ; Afte the Evening Session tallied thiteen! Bauch team with eigtheen points wa, he came Downtown to coach staight _ points to take a 8-7; a P lec «- [thenbauclf evening - session basket-t ^ g e TeTGoldwate. playing hisp John Pukis and Val Clak, each ^^> team fo five yeas. Then thet finest game of the yea! led -ts^fjpg ; tw^y-fou points; led the -basketball scandat appeaed "andt^^ ^^^ck which gave them Evc '"»g «^gjff?.. left - - its sca.on the - -college - as - a geneal - de-emphasis - on spots fol le^in the fist half. Bat six points* * " T a 4-37 lead with thity seconds] - AROCH OAY Andeson 8 lowed. The following "yea, eage in those emaining seconds gave coach- Nat_Holman became ill, and the evening team a 43-4 half time ', «J- Hymowitz 8 Polansky was called Uptown to lead. «is Maine... _ J 4 8 *f coach the hoopstes. - j*_,both teams taded baskets fo Siegel 3 Ulste... (Continued fom Page ) j Lay Siegel and Geoge Ande-, son joined Hyniowitz in scoing; double -figues with "3 and H;;;,! i «!!*iii;...-t;j --'V'-^^ Smoiev Dave took ove the vasity post most ^ of the second half and with Dave. Polansky.fo two yeas. n i6 Polansky Just unde five minutes to play had the -job to himself. Since becommlig coach of the hoopstes; apiece. Then the Evening Session, the scoe was tied.at seventy-five Although Polansky's fist-, love is basketball,.he had a woking his teams nave compiled a 87^86 dominating«the boads, scoed six knowledge of tack. He won his ecod, including, an invitation.to" staight points and - wee neve lette in 4 by unning the half the National Collegiate Athletic headed as they won thei fouth -Gaduated fom City in i4~j3 -f. mile-in-}i8, good-enough to shat-- Association ia n gw <v»eiwgi his doctoate fonju te the. City College mak, and to College My vision contest in a" ow. Tounament in 57. New Yok Univesity and etuned}.emain a ecod to this day. He» Richie Goldwate Geoge Andeto C.C.N.Y.' to coach the Lavende] also took- the Metopolitan A.A.U.. Polansky is maied and. the tack team- He also seved as ass is- j half-mile title in 4 and the fajthe, of two boys-. He esides in -tanltleaculty managefot AthTeTicT!~National Junio A. A;U. -title in the v-l Yok. Ju.nt two weeks afte ejoining the City College basketball team. a Smoiev, the 6- senio (Continued fom Page ) Holman.- i scoe on only two"* of six Goldwate..... L.. 8 Oisanhou** Webe... _. Potnoy O yous. nj s attempts ove the season. Nat Holman is the kind of pe- j, Zuckeman finished with thiteen points espectively. Leading Ulste "ho ledmhe Beaves in ebound- sot! who should be emulated. points. Conn wee Paul Buvtkins with 7.' '"P **** season^ was named to RiflenWi.. John Kelly with 5." Geoge Putt-j»he weekly at ficac team. L n «l neaq " S " an,c ^ " w ' ^ ; Playing in Has final game^.^ (Continued fom Page ) man with 4 and. Ken Navaez! a gained this hono in ecog- j about >e% en ve^s - J^'^^ j Beave. a-smoiev led the s T?eaves ' a t w o way.tie with Columbia Unii»ith*"l^^ai^^' l tflie.", '-plttyc4f ouly - ']'-.nltlnn - -of- JTt^; ",.^. i. ^ ^-ie**^^.!^, ( -j- / T,- ^. v^- ^ ^J Q^ ^,"i- uu,u;.,e>;uajs. lie ps>.j >j *\ H* Jul. Lilt WgStCfft DTCTsuu the Z*l\ last A^'-T nine!vi!^s\5~l7 Z/J minutes of the game fothancl* ag-ainfit L.TJ.V ATbie guy» do» * >* ^<» t«> piay ha-.- fin- atl-amunt! game ending up' i kethall today. Nobody, not Cousy, j e Metopoii n was 4-4 font^o^- the f loo -and" Gant, He with ten points. nteicoliegiate Riffle^Leaguei > the foul, line it ** i to s " t Shaman o any of them, could-j points;-his i«we.st outptf Commenting * on the nimoda... i of the yea. \ even come cose close o t"o snooung shooting.me. like; Also playing in his last Cityi. pefomance, coach Noah Ball said The Bauchians came up with J.Nat. His two hand set shot was game was Julie Levine. Julie- dis- [ - T he team ose-to" the occasion thid victoy of the '^^t^jsiss^^'-^- ''.^iiss"-^.^' unstopable." - - played his usual fine ability to han- j fo this match, and hung.in thee paign (iefeafing the Patt - As a esult, Nat Holman ^oon \ die the ball Hf al 4 so played a «n-j The sc. e aat> c -i uae, but beiag man, The- Businessmen led ^ ^^ -w* O". became-a living legend to nie. To; pising game unde the boads colmost of the way in a pooly played] \Cpntinued fom Page ) " millions of othes he epesents; lecting some key ebounds. He fin- close only counts in hoseshoes. feei confident that the team can contest by, both teams.. Bob Mai- boads.lon many occasions Hofsta eveything which m'akes^ basketball ished with six points. ^ knock off Columbia Fiday, and ne and Geoge Andeson led the pvas ^ble^ to"get a' second shot and 'the geas game it "is. The ability of.; Hi&h scoe o Hatfod was [ take^ the division "title scoes with Q a^td ^ points, es-j sometimes a thid o fouth-befoe the little guy J - ovecome geat» Ga y p a latlino wi^v pectively. - j Cit>- got the_ ball. baies and to upset the big ami ^ ^ A l s o scoi in doublefig. with "New" Yok Univesity as the j ^ Cojnienting upon the game poweful. ".! ues fo.the Hawks wee Pioow- thid contestant, Halftlmef ' Bauch 4 Ulste Caaun. 35 ^^^fi'.iiiiffi^iii'^'j'^ THE TCKER will not accept 4 - UeboWtz Danzige AAatlette Kaplan Wyche shots. Puvis ; Zuckeman's feat is.even moe sig- Gohom (Continued font Page ) iticant when you conside that Pio- tied u> patten ay play afte; k o w s k i h a s c o n v e t d ove 5 5 % of. CloV BAROCM 36 EVENNG K> '... _ '"" - _.._ FG FT T u Z* t n * S A s - -7 K- ne f the g eate;st pofes- ski and Rich Daigneault with six-j,*; ptjiyea eve, aj, teen amf twelve/ ppmts, espectthat think we outplayed^them."t sta on the '.'Oiginal "Celtics'*,! ively. * Leading scoe fo City was Mike aqfj a A Revelation a membe of the basketball; 6 Peal with nineteen points. The jjall f Fame. Nat Holman, "M. This successful season was the 4 ESSEN, G.B. (CPS) Thee coach said, "Nisenson Js a geat Ra8lfptl>i,-n» jv on^ of the gteae^t ftnat one fo the fojlowing Beaves T T3~ Bitish students have ceated a playe. Howeve,^ Mike was the iigues that-the game has known j ^^_ C J^^\3^^^^S^\l^\. mastepiece- ofo A" stan<!-out pefome in the game. When Holman etied in 5,; Le\-tne, At Menken, Dave Mille,' mistake_ l 7 He an, shot, played defense Nis-. afte thity-six yeae as the Beave a smoiev, and Ken Tell. -to CTY HARTFORD who ae^ students at Notheast ~s t all stated^ when the^ thees enson only shot." " ; pilot, his ecod was an eye-pop-j. Peal, pla>nng his finest game* ping 5-88 and no team o coach G f Gi~ ' F Essex Technical College,-leaned of the yea. Also had- a good night i has eve matched his <"eat of 5. i 6 3 TO ~SS fom the ioo. te ftit e*gnt ol six-. -w-»»u t -o-o- that the Colcheste At SocWy L - - m& i Taking an undemanned and inexpeienced City Co'lege team, he Peal teen shots, five of the eight coming* 5 ;kwosf was going to stage an exhibit off'] Ei'mann - i i - in the second half. 7 moden-at.. \ tiumphed ove national powes; ipa'dino 8 FT T Smoiev Also playing good games fo City ' -»- 4-4 Pillion 4 \. As a- joke, the students col- 3.teams like Badley, Kentucky and 7 Caanisa - wee a Smoiev and Bay Eise- Pio'tki - 6! lected scap metal fom a wok- j ; Oegon State, and accomplished the 4 4 Levine -3 6-Cooda mahn. They, both played stong unde the^ boaq"s. Bay" gabbed 4 Massey - - ; fom a junkyad, and welded the 3 ^yo ' j shop and old auto exhaust pipes j only gand slam in basketball histoyjjxl winning both the. NJ.L o Kissman 6,? twelve. oibouisis, wtote tea had ten. scap togethe jn^a design they V and N.C.A.A. tounaments in thesame season... -»» J i _ Each scoed twelve points ^4 56 ealled "Monstosity." Then, dis- guised as delivey men, they i ~ 4 t Seoing in double figues fo 3 afte 3 on th«wednesday peceding the issue fp which insetion is desied., Hofsta wee Mike Tilley and Mike Pollack, scoing seventeen and" eleven points espectively. CoTniso 3-3 Levine - Cissntan ' -4 Sdbweid -4 MTTle -&Q^ 7.Smith -O 5 iconklin '"Weo<* (Ml -f- Vall'ce -! The spiit wlilch moved this team is pat' of that saite'ijsfltt ishsft is embodied_ in GHy Oottege - andt A ton NatJ Holman tadition. Last week Mike «*"tif"r«tet-ggiiie,"-, tiw' J BBfei f» ' fc^ Bay " feel as if have neve been «wsy" ~" -- The tuth is that he hasn't. His spiit.'..and his image "will emain a- pat of the City College ta,ji> 3 J6-T 76; ththii.^!!-ifiai.liiiai!jikffll?imj!ihttuul!doij«ilu Final Zvckemoi Peal Comiio BOD Kisman -._ a Dave At Sana Ken Dave Bob Eisemonn Smoiev Sciweid Menken Geene Tell WftHnnf. Mille Adle PhH jstufx ' ^ 4 6 ' - _ 4'! bought the cated "mastepiece".' Avo. i to the show ; **We put ^Monstosity' all by it-;.! self ight in the cente of the ' * galley," explained Heathe Gain, ^ 8.6 j diecto of the show. "Fom the \ 5.3 i moment we opened the doo, ] 4^35' 'Monstosity* was the sta^attac-"'') 6. \.tio^i. Hundeds of at loves and J,.33; expets have seen it fhd apn^fj 3. about it.". ' She said one woman viewed...6 'Monstosity' as "the expjce«sion \ FT & j 43 en^svod chaos the tabes wee, *ov cicles men tap themselves in.".»>' O 85 T w 5 * 4 4 -

7 ** jtwiiiiiteiiiibi mmmwiismffittifc < feliiiiiam Benad M. Bauca School of Business* PubSc Umaistatm u '-4 Hatfod U Of Beaves ; ". n the" closing seconds of 3>lajv the Cjty hoopstes edged Hatfod Univesity, 58=56-,-+! thxis gaining thei fist win-j ndag- i season since the -- ^campaign, when they egis-! tied a -8^ ecod. The Bea- ves finished with a -8' ecod.. With fifty-five seconds emaining and the Beaves having fozen] the ball fo two minutes, Ed Kwash fouled- a Smolev and a con- ^ veted two foul'shots to give City}.-- - Mike Peal J Bob Kissman a lead. ^ j the"foul was Hatfod's seventh of! kowski, who scoed on six out of Fouteen seconds late, Kwash; the half, City was in a one-and! etght shots* in the fist half, Alan fouled Mike Peal who also con-j one situation. Mike conveted botihi -bottled him up allowing him to veted the two shots that put the ( shots fo fou poinds in one play. K (Continued on Page^llJ -._ game on ice fo City. j The play took City fom a 5-5j City was out ebounded 4-6' deficit to a 54-5 advantage. Com-) nndi*>uftohot fom the floo 6-ii ing off tiw beweh to put in a fine >aged to win. Playing i game "was Dob Kiaaman-Bob supeb defense, the Beaves committed only fou pesonal fouls "seven ebounds, played an excellent scoed fouteen points and gabbed all game. defensive gime. When Hatfod's Leading scoe fo City was men^love towad the basket, Kiss- - Mike Peal with fifteen points. n man would come ~off his man to the second half, Mike jaade an un- guad them and stop the Hawks usual" fou-point play. He took a fom shooting. jump shot, which he made and was Alan ZucKeman.also pfayed a fouled,. The efeee uled, that he. fine defensive game. Assigned in Was fouled afte the shot. Since the second half to guad Stan Pio- c.~-^ ^^ Flying Dutchmen Stop et bailes Led by Steve Nisenson's 35 points, - he Hofsta basketball team withstood epeated Beave, allies and beat City game ahdtwas neve headed. Lead- _College^ 8-76, in a Ti-State League encounte Thusday ing by seven as the second Tialf nightlinjthe-uutchman^s uym, Nisenson scoed epeatedly on half, Mike - Pollack conveted a Ta v jump shots fom aound the key-as,. up t _,give. his -teammates - sought to. set him nev^ lost. up. n the fist half he scoed twenty points as Hofsta took a 3-3 lead. '. -^ XUity was outmanned on the back- (Continned on Page ) Although City outscoed Hofsta,fomj \the floo, hitting thity M Basketball shots to the Dutchmen's twenty seven, they wee-outscoed fom tee foul line 6-6. The Beaves Wee called fo eighteen pesonal. _'"" -fouls ii _the. sp*»»tid half alone, a vey lage total. ;l)umg the sec&nd half/ Cltyf fou leading.scoes fouled out. T^e fist to go was Al Zuckemai n Pluck Peacocks \ tewbohn Sfeak Extended Bj MATT HORWEfiN ' ~ Fiday- night the City College ifle team won thei eighth staight league victoy by edging St. etes. The final scoe was C.CJtf.Y. -4, St. Petes 45. The victoy; was the. -eigthty-foiiftfe staight at heme fo-the Beaves Once again the high scoe was > ' ;.... <.._._.^_. ;.,, -- Buce Gitlin, with a 8. n" the) home ange to its best advantage. ua>t.t TiKii woelc^ Bcuce.. has e- This victoy puts the Beaves in gisteed his two- highest scoes of (Conthwed on Page )-- the yea. - JLlso pacing the Beaves "wee Captain Jey Uetzky 85, Matt Cadillo 83, Jim. Yolihsky * 8, and Matt Hoween8L High scoe fo the Peacocks was Stan Wicke.With ot The outcome of the match -was in doubt until the last shot, but the nimods wee able to use thei n Defeat Ulste Squae The-^Recotsd ^at 4^4 By BOB MARNER. - The.BauehJBasketball team bought its ecod up to the 56 mak fo the fist time this season as it won its second staight game> Fiday. Febuay 6. defeating Ulste Community^ J56-65JTieL Bauch "five" played, its best game of the season and led at one - time by as^' *~ -/ many as thity points. Danny Hymowitz scoed a season's high fo a Bauch playe, & points, getting of them in the; fist_ half when. the game was close. Bauch led at halftime by seven points The Bauch team took the lead in the fist few minutes of- the began, the Bauch - "five" an ove the boys fom Ulste. Using a a lead they ( fa^t beak they opened up-a- thity point lead befoe" Geoge Wolfe took out his states.. CContmued on Page ll) Retun of Nat By FRANK A8SH»»~~^.TnbVJb&vj'ne. cocaptain ofi the City College basketball team, took a thity-^ ^ «««,*- L.! foot shot juop which swished' with 33 left in the game. Al-j neat]v though the net. A s e c- -though he dew-the assignmei^ pfjg^ late^-the bune soj_^ ^dtng Nisenson dumg «nsj mdicating "the" "end "of ^e~ half, he fouled him only once. The ^ ^ ^ T h e finaj M e othe fouls wee eithe of. the play- gj Citv 7 " '' " '"" '"""' e contol vaiety o they Wee,. XT * -c» ^,o ^ ^ ^ committed while Zuck fought foi N *t Holman stady and obust T ^ t o i Nisenson" Al did -not! n tft^ vvmg^te Ciym stands Du-j Slow^^ Butchmen'shigh sco f m g *** «ame he fa cone of ' ^ie_ gym, ^ apat sat m fom the' ' to con,get. a.shot.fom the tne cown yet vey much belong? n the fist twelve minutes ing to it. plav the scoe w^g *i 3 fi-mn Hmnf and the lead changed, hands twice. As the fome C.C.N'.Y. basketball mento slowly- descended - Finally with 88 left in the fist fo Cyan, a 5- spakplug, who with 67 lbs. Jack Mcaeay^R^N. pin-, li^is^jdeadly shooting and.ball hand ned Umas Naeis City..."'""' '«' Ting h.ad. _jnst un JEhe off lil lbs. Cal ^emon K^L decis- -" Z=f thft cout, looked up at Pof. Hol- ioned Ken ATT>T n+y 3 man and said "This is the biggest Unl. lbs. Jack Stein City dew CCoutinned on Rage ) with At Oopollo R. N. his.seat in the-fouth, ow^- lie was >y -Bob. Geenwood,.the Biedeman.'Sfiif The Mike Shaffe Memoial Awad, which is pesented to the outstanding feshman basketball playe at the end of each season, has been given-to Chickie ^ew- man. Besides aveaging ove ten P-pg- Chickie-was the best defensive pfajff Newman's play, Domescbick said, "While Chickie may not be the best playe on the "team, he has temendbu potential Ti» the fntoe he may be the. to help the vasity the Undefeated - By ANDY WENER A game City College westling team lost to a tough Rut-" ges team, 3> Satuday, at the Newak of tulgei& gym. The Beaves finished the season-with^ a -disappointing 3-6- ecod, while Rutges ended up with an 8-4 ecod. City gapple Paul Biedeman» * H continued to oll ove all ouposition binging Ms ecod to 6-. t was also announced. that Ron ionships next week. ; ~- ' His latest win was a' quick pinning Taylo and Biedeman wee chosen of his Rtftges opponent in z mm- " as eaptains fo next yeas* matmen utes 4 seconds. CCNY Coach Joe team. By the looks of this yea Sapoa has high hopes" fo Biedfeshman team. t seems the vaeman in the Metopolitan Champ-. ciiy ^ u ^ gitty impoved next season.., -.. The Beaves will have thei wok cut out* fo them next week in the- Holman METS, but Coach Sapoa has confidence in his team, and lie is sue of obtaining good esults. VARSTY SCORES victoiotig?*hf> coach. 3 lba- anitesta-r.n. deci^imial!. Coach Geenwood ^wanted-^to pesent Jack Cyan, tag Boncos lead Ron Taylo-^ity 3 lbs. John Catlado R.N. pinned ing scoe, and playmake, to Poo Holman "T've got a bny hee Home Cabeo City t has been dying txt meet you,] 37 ^^^ JEajl^L ^^e^aa^~^t J^^ Coach." The thity-five yea old ned Steve Skinne -LS. Geenwood said. 47 lbs. Sandy Styles -R.N. pinned Bob Klaw City The Boncc coa'ch added,. "You have -been Jack's idol fo most of Tiis_ life, you_mean"a geat deal to 57 lbs. Ken Simon City pinned lain." = '"" ~' BgVannaconp RN,.

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