The Face of The News

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "The Face of The News"

Transcription

1 The Face of The News Voce of the Student Body OBSERVATIO. QqsT (SEE PAGE THREE) Vol. XXV No. 22 UNDERGRADUATE NEWSPAPER OF CITY COLUCE 389 Tuesday, May 19, 1959 A Taueh of J.B.... Through specal arrangements wth ANTA and the Board of Vsual Instructon, tckets are avalable to students only for "Touch of the Poet" May 26 and "J.B.," June 11. All tckets are better seats whch are gven at a dscount of 70c. Any nterested student may sec Mrs. Lombard! n 152 Fnley. SG Results Invaldated; Offcals Charge Fraud Student Government electon were nvaldated last nght because of alleged ballot stuffng-. Student Government Executve Councl, actng on an Electons Agency report that l-$> legal votes had been cast, unanmously declared the electon nvald. The Electons Agency report ndcated that: a number of blank ballots wth^e bursar's stub attached were ' found cm campus; te students were seen votng twce; an organzed group attempted to elect a canddate on ^rte-n votes by llegal means. Student Government Presdent Renee Roth sad, "I do not know f we wll be able to hold the electons ths term." Charles Gopen, a member of the Electons Agency sad that he doubted f they could handle the electons. "It would be unfar to sk our people to work twenty.ours ths close to fnals," he sad. It would be dffcult to fnd ther students to run the booths >ecause students at the College re ether partal or they don't ve a damn," concluded Gopen. If the electons are not held ths Berm Gopen expects them to be eld ether durng regstraton eek or mmedately after school tarts. Ira Glcksten, a presdental candate, has requested that hs name removed from the ballot. "One farce a term Ik qute enough for le," Glcksten sad. Barry Kahn, another presdenal asprant, sad, "It s dffcult tate Rejects Austn Appeal Warren B. Austn's appeal to e State Educaton Commssoner as rejected last week. j the Unted States wll receve the James E. Allen, Jr., Comms- \ frst Carnege Teachng Fellowshps n the College's summer ses»ner, sad that there was no j dence that the Board of Hgher! son startng ths June. ducaton (BHE) had not acted : The Carnege Fellows wll be apponted n the departments of operly n the Austn case. Dr. Austn, a former Assstant j Economcs, Englsh, Government, ofessor of Englsh at the Col- J Psychology. Speech, and Socology. :e. was ousted on December 16. t 7 by the BHE because he j : sf;]y dened that he ever was a rnber of the Communst Party. a result of hs testmony, Dr. ' ustn was charged wth "mscon- t." Barry Kahn Electon Fasco as a student to be forced to campagn twce. I don't feel that the electon fasco was the fault of Alpha Ph Omega or Student Government, but rather the fault 4>f some rresponsble students." Mddlebrook Fee Report: Temporary Lsts Proposed; "Senstve" Clubs Must Fle The Specal Hearng Commttee on Membershp lsts n an eght-pont report released last Monday recommended that relgous, poltcal and socal-acton clubs not be requred to fle permanent membershp lsts. Under the plan these three classes^* of clubs desgnated as "senstve" organzatons by the Commttee "shall not be requred to fle membershp nformaton beyond that requred for charterng purposes." 'The Commttee, headed by Dean Samuel Mddlebrook (Lberal Arts and Scence) explans that "the faculty advsor (who shall be acceptable to the Presdent or hs desgnee) shall submt cards ndcatng 'charter membershp' to a duly desgnated faculty member of the Department of - Student Lfe, who shall be charged wth complete.responsblty for safekeepng "Klesfe cards. The flteultjr advsor shall also ndcate by number the total membershp of hs group." The report further states that "at the end of each semester those cards whch have not been wthdrawn by the students concerned shall be destroyed by the faculty member of the Department of Student lfe." "Non-senstve" clubs "shall submt full membershp nformaton" to the Department of Student lfe under the plan. These membershp cards "whch ^re not wthdrawn by tm ndvdual students concerned may be preserved n the fles of the Department of Student Lfe at ts dscreton." Whle membershp cards of students n "non-senstve" groups are to be put nto ther personnel folders, cards of students n "senstve" clubs are to be kept outsde. Dean Mddlebrook sad these Dean Samuel Mddlebrook Submts Report cards are to be "put asde n a safe place." Ths s the Commttee's understandng, he explaned. The group, whch was apponted by Presdent Buell Gallagher n February to consder the lst-free problem, further suggests that the dsposton of fees be returned to smmmm!!!lll!l! 'llll College Gets $50,000 Gft Fnanced by a $50,000 grant from the Carnege Corporaton of New York, a fve-year expermental program at the College to tran graduate students as college teachers wll start next month. About twenty graduate students from leadng unverstes around Pre*. BueH G. Gallagher A number of these novce teachers are graduates of the College. IsuTftn rrogram. ther separate dscplnes. Accordng to Presdent Bxxf-Y G. *A summer sesson lke ours s Gallagher, the program should deal for such an experment bocause "focus the attenton of brght t s almost, wholly an under young people upon the art of j graduate program. Therefore t teachng as well" as the mastery of atords the type of teachng stuaton the Fellows wll encounter n ther post-doctoral jobs," he contnued. The program s under the supervson o^ Dean Samuel Mddlebrook, (Lberal Arts and Scences), who ntated a more modest teacher experment last term. "Ther performance was so satsfactory," sad Dean Mddlebrook, "that t encouraged us to go ahead wth our plans to expand the program to nclude other depatments of the College. These novce teachers." he contnued, "brought freshness, exctement, and tremendous ndustry to ther classrooms." The Carnege Fellows wll teach one cla^s dunng summer sesson. [ the varous Student Faculty Fe» Commssons. At present, "senstve" organzatons do not have to submt lsts, and are not elgble for student fees. The Commttee contends that because so few students partcpate n extra-currcular actvtes, the lsts ssue has not merted fve years of debate. The report ndcated that out of 150 organzatons lsted as beng on campus durng the last year and one half, only one poltcal club and one socal acton club now^ functon. ^*We seem, to be quarrelng," contnued the report, "not only about how few students can dance on such a pnhead of poltcal actvty, but also whether all ther names are down on an offcal record somewhere." Accordng to the report, Danel F. Brophy (Dean of Students) and Dean James S. Peace (Student Lfe) do not wsh lsts to be n ther possesson at all. They vastly prefer a system of cards whch could be dropped nto the student's personnel fle, the report stated. The Commttee sad that responsblty would not evaporate under th6 regstraton plan, because offcers and twelve charter members of "senstve" clubs must submt cards for the term. "At the same tme, the wanderers, the expermenters, the uncommtted, the floaters' f you wll, can satsfy ther legtmate curosty." "Senstve" groups would have to refle each term under the operaton of the requrement that the (Contnued on Page 2) SMents Accepted To Lock and Kef Fve student leaders have been accepted as members of Lock and Key. the senor leadershp honor socety at the College. The new members ;;re Melcent Berman. Robert Bsnoff. Lou Nashelsky. Al Snadowsky and Ken Werden. The canddates were judged on ther leadershp experence and on a wrtten report, sbmtted by each applcant, on the leadershp potental of varous.student organzatons on campus. They wll also attend semnars led j by Dean Mddlebrook. and dscus* The successful canddates were teachng problems wth vstng j offcally nducted at a dnner on professors. Frday.

2 Page Two = AN OP REVIEW^ Sem-Annual Concert By Joan Cenadella = - The College's Musc Department presented the frst of two performances of ts sem-annual concert, Saturday nght under Professor Frtz Jahoda's drecton n the Aronow Aud- j torum. The program ncluded Beethoven's Fdelo Overture j Op. 72b, Bach's Voln Concerto No. 1 n A Mnor and the j Mssa In Tempore Bell of Haydn n C Major. j Y\ th the Fdelo Overture t became qute apparent that the! orchestra s much the best heard n the past few sennsters. Ths >e- lecton was played wth vrlty and sprt. The sound uf the orchotra ' -wa* mpressve partcularlv the woodwnds. The vared sonortes of j! Ihe orchestra came across so beautfully that one wshed t had a less. subordnated role n the balance of the progcram., In the Bach Concerto for Voln (Alan Pklar '5'.M, Mr. Sklar ac- \ qutted hmself masterfully, although n the frst, movement hs play- ng was sumewhat self-effacng. Hs sensblty seemed more that of a ; chamber muscan than a solost, whose sound must ojt through the texture of the orchestra. In the second movement, however, hs -playng' ganed n ntensty, and he found hs place apart from the orchestra. Hs sound was full j and rch, never percng or harsh, and hs ntonaton was unusually j secure. He seemed guded n the slow movement by a preconceved dea of how t should sound and was self-possessed enough to fulfll t. The last movement was played wth wonderful masculne energy and vrtuosty. The enthusastc recepton of the audence was well deserved by Sklar, and by the orchestra whch was senstvely balanced aganst hm. The last number on the program was the Haydn Mass (In Tme of War) for solo quartet (Sylva Mlls '59, soprano; Clarce Crawford, Evenng Sesson, alto; Const ant ne Cassolas '56, tenor; Arthur T. Anderson '54 Bass-Bartone) orchestra, and chorus. The mass tself s a lovely work, mmedately accessble to the lstener, beng less polyphonc than masses usually are. One of the most beautful moments n the Mass was the contrastng Adago n the "Glora" where the orchestra delcately accompaned the bass, Arthur Andersen, and the solo cello (played by Prof. Der) whch flled the hall wth great warmth of sound. All of the solosts were excellent. Constantne Cassolas has a fne balance between hs hgh techncal profcency and power of expresson. The same may be sad of Mss Crawford, although her technque j was somewhat ahead of her expressveness. Wth Sylva Mlls t was! qute the reverse. Whatever her techncal flaws may be her voce s! beautfully expressve. It s sheer sensual beauty. j The chorus sang, on the whole, wth a grand sprt. The voce? had a rch and well-ntegrated qualty. But, left a lttle to be desred n dcton and n dynamc contrasts. On the whole, though, t had convcton, and often, beauty, and authortatvely demanded pt>?cc '. at the end.! Of the three major sonortes (solosts, chorus and orchestra) the! orchestra was perhaps the weakest. I do not mean n an overall sense, for they played very well, but there were a few glarng rough spots. These dd not, fortunately, mar the total mpresson. I have not mentoned, n all these words, Professor Frtz Jahoda. However, mpled n all I have sad s an apprecatcn of hs frmlv gudng h:::d and muscal vson. 11 onn * <- forvcrn, [ hor-c. for n pers'-.ral r ;.:U. ;"? ' :. > c ;'-'^<v. T>' }.- cortrrr yn.- the <a.,>/',*. >? srvr-arvndl conrrr'* n.fhch I hart partc)>at<-r< <; '/,,- ('V./,V,, <-. Thr^ lave hrcn a^ona j ;.«-»:,;** tv-^r^p Gv/ Jrcpl:/ p;ca>u /v:?.*,- < j-pf-yrr:rr^ :'.,; ;,;,' ;>? ^rho.!. I o?>..;r / s^rz/' >. ;".>. > Ihr eovctr'* rr:!»; /< /?.] Camp Counselor Openngs- For Faculty, Students and Graduates THE ASSOCIATION OF PRIVATE CAMPS... comprsng 250 outstandng Boys. Grls. Brother-Sster and Co-Ed Camps, located thrcughout the New England, Mddle A^antc States and Canada,.... INVITES YOUR INQUIRIES concernng summer employment as Counsellors. Instructors or Admnstrators.... POSITIONS n chldren's camps, all area of actvtes, are avalable. Wrte, or Call n Person ASSOCIATION OF PRIVATE CAMPS, Dept. C 55 WEST 42»d STREFT Room 621 NEW YORK 36, N. Y. OBSERVATION POST Tuesday, May 19, 195 Classfed Ads ROOMS 3 loom apartment for summer. Wash- IKton He^hls- cheap. Call WA 7-745S or John Aurner, c,o Campus. HOth Hd H'way, seeks >rr!. :t vozy rooms.,0. Call Tuesday evenngs St.* FOR SALE 'al Stud.-baker Convertble. Hydromatt JO.! tre--, $100. HenneU CL 2-'.»7«r. CONCRATI LATI ON S Oont'ra'^latons Los :n! ob S : -. l.mner '< ] KT(. "W.K.t', \\,<..".-ad the jll'.e b:-.»vv doro JoM'.y. Dfferent! Exctng! Spend A Summer Day On Long Island Sound Aboard A Fast 22* Cabn Cruser Water Skng Swmmng Aqua-Lung Dvng Sghtseeng for nformaton and reservatons Refreshments and Equpment Provded At No Extra Cost. ALL INCLUSIVE RATES: $12 per day (men) $10 per day (women) Call: HI PROFESSOR OR ASST PROFESSOR OR TEACHER n the felds of Economcs, Busness Admnstraton, Bankng and Fnance, or related felds, desrable... to serve as Fnancal Representatve or Consultant. Hghly rewardng full tme summer poston and second ncome. Lve sales leads. Complete tranng. Sales resstance at mnmum, snce these hgh earnng Income Real Estate Securtes have cash payments averagng over 6% plus equty growth and tax benefts. Mnmum sale $500. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT.! -=> MR. MILLER WOrth <NYC) or wrte: Box OP 1000, 125 W. 4] St., NYC CYNTHIA GOODING The Shanty Boys n a folk-sonp prcjrram Frdav. May 22nd. 8:30 PM 2 West 64 th Street Contrbuton :?2 u^reservf*} 54 reserved Beneft: Encampment for Ctzenshp Lsts (Contnued from Page 1) membershp cards be destroyed at the end of each semester. j The General Faculty wll meet on Thursday n Room 200 Snopard > \ \t 3 PM to consder the report. j I The Lsts Commttee was com- '' posed of Lean Mddlebrook and Professors Henry Vlard (Char- I nan. Economcs); Herbert Taub, Charman, Electrcal Engneerng) Vndrew Coppola (Law), Charles Cberhardt (Testng and Gudance) nd Wllam Frankel (Charman, Speech). Prof. Frankel dd not sgn he report. He "wll present hs >wn vews separately," the report stated. blerc Mrth Mercury, the College's humor magazne, gu-es on sale tomorrow featurng artcles publczed as "funny.*' Stores by Julo D^Iatorre, Barry GTOM- and IJerne Lefko^t are ncluded. The magazne, supported entrely by cash contrbuton: goes for a quarter. Last semester Mercury o^played a "Lfe" formal Thn term t goes back to ts conventonal style. On Campus wth # MaxShukan [By the Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys! "and, "Barefoot Boy wt Cheek.") THE MANY LOVES. OF THORWALD DOCKSTADER When Thorwkl Dockstuder sophomore, epcure, and sportsman frst took up smokng, he dd not smply choose the frst brand of cgarettes that came to hand. He dd what any sophomore, epcure, and sportsman would do: he sampled several brands and then pcked the mldest, tftslest, pleasngest of al Phlp Morrs, of corrs! Smlarly, when Thorwald took up grls, le dd not smply select the frst one who came along. He sampled. Frst he took out an Englsh lterature major named Elzabeth Barrett Grsht, a wsp of a grl wth lumnous eyes and a soul that shmmered wth a pale, unearthly beauty. Trppngly, trppngly, she walked wth Thorwald upon the beach and sat wth hm behnd a wndward dune and lstened to a sea shell and sghed sweetly and took out a lttle gold pencl and a lttle morocco notebook and wrote a lttle poem: j / wll le upon he shore, I wu be a dreamer. I wu feel the sea once more Poundng on my femur. ThorwakTs second date was wth a physcal educaton major named Peaches Gtendower, a broth of a grl wth a ready smle and a sze 18 neck. She took Thorwald down to the cnder trade where they jogged around 50 tmes to open the pores. Then they played four games of squash, sx sets of tenns, 36 holes of golf, nne nnngs of one old cat, sx chukkers of lacrosse, and a mle ancl a quarter of leap frog. Then they went ten rounds wth eghtounce gloves and then they had heapng bowls of bran and whey and exchanged a manly handshake and went home to ther respectve whrlpool baths. l^kludckwk ftupjwee 'Ju&vf Thorwald's fnal date was wth a golden-hared, creamj^browed, green-eyed, red-lpped, full-calved grl named Tots Sgafoos. Tots was not majorng n anythng. As she often sad, ''Gee whllkers, what's college for anyhow to fll your head full of cky old facts, or to dscover the shnng essence that s YOU?" Tots started the evenng wth Thorwald at a luxurous restaurant where she consumed her own weght n Cornsh rock hen. From there they went to a de luxe move palace where Tots had popcorn wth butter. Then she had a bag of chocolate covered rasns also wth butter. Then they went to a costly ballroom and cha-cha'd tll dawn, tppng the band every eght bars. Then they went to a Chnese restaurant where Tots, unable to decpher the large and bafflng menu, found a smple way out of her dlemma: she ordered one of everythng. Then Thorwald took her to the women's dorm, boosted her n the wndow, and went downtown to wat for the employment offce to open. Whle watng, Thorwald thought over all cf hs grls and came to a sensble decson. 'T thnk," he sad to hmself, "that I wll stck wth Phlp Morrs. I am not rch enough for grls."». * Angbodf s rch enough for Phlp Morrs am for Phlp Morrt'* brother cjmrette, flter-tp Marlboro, the cgarette wth better "mekn't". The flavor's fne, the flter flters, the prce t rght. *

3 uesday, May 19, 1959 OBSERVATION POST Page Three The Face of The News MORTY HORWITZ: "Go Uptown, young man," wa3 the call sounded to Morty Horwts at the ejd of hs junor year at the Baruch School. So he dd. Morty, who came to the "Harlem Annex" to "get an educacaton" found an eacaton n poltcs. He learned xtot to fool around when t came to labels and nnuendoes. He learned the workngs of those who were not n the vory tower. The story goes that he entertaned a moton to dsband a p new poltcal group that was supposed to be the care-all for the College's apathetc and dsntegratng Student Councl. So, lke all good boy scouts, he goes out nto the forest to buld another fre. Ths tme he calls t the Party of Lberal Students. GEORGE BARRON: When the College hred a lacrosse coach a score and nne years ago, they brought n a full-blooded Indan to play a cold-blooded Indan game. Leon Mller,known affectonately as "Chef," was that coach. For the past few seasons, hs stckmen haven't been dong excessvely well. Wth expectatons for a wnnng season rdng hgh, the Chef suffered an nsuln shock and was hosptalzed. Hs replacement, a former Al-Amercan lacrosse player at the College, was George Barron. The bg man drew the plaudts of the crtcs and took over where the Chef had left off. The end-of-season tally saw the stckmen wth an mpressve record. MELLIE BERxMAN: The Party of Lberal Students was organzed to be a party of students who were lberal. But thngs certanly went awry when they nomnated Melle Berman for Student Government Presdent. It seems that somebody told and poor Melle was out n the cold. You see, she never sat on Student Councl and there's a rule somewhere that states that she should have. Detals, detals, detals. They tred to get around ths obstructon by passng legslaton through SG that ddn't want to get passed. So Melle found herself wth a nomnatng petton, flled wth sgnatures and no one to accept t. SENATOR MACNEIL MIT CHELL: Indeed t s true that unless our worthy State Senator ntroduced the State Ad to Educaton Bll, we would reman an urban college. The passng of MacNel Mtchell's bll for 2.7 mllon dollars n State Ad opens a whole new world to Ctytes. Now we can apprecate the goodness of the Board of Hgher Educaton when t comes to allocatng mones to the College. Naturally, the state ad wll come n handy as long as the cty does not decrease the sze of ts support of the Muncpal Colleges. However, Mr. Mtchell sad that he hopes for a four mllon dollar state allotment n the next full fscal year. NELS GRUMER: He stated hs belef planly "there s no Communst threat at the College." He stood by hs statement n acceptng the charmanshp of the Democratc Forum and Unon, one of the two poltcal partes to make ts wdely heralded entrance on the College scene. An outspoken champon of Student Government, revtalzaton, Grumer s currently opposng Jerry Swartz for SG Vce- Presdent. Grumer was also an effectve agent n combattng menbershp lsts as he led Hllel n the struggle aganst the elmnaton of fee funds to relgous organzatons. FIDEL CASTRO: He "accept- Jjed wth pleasure" an nvtaton y to speak at the College. The Govsj ernment and Law Socety suc-.ceeded n gong through admn- Ijstrattoe red tape. Securty men. ^IPBI agents and Fdel's Consulate ] general had all gven ther stamp A m appr^ta! te the pro-^m-ed ap- M pearanee of the Prme Mnster. I Everyone seeaed anxosa te have.c Stro appear except Casjtro hmself. Castro's "r*? tn- j erary" prevented hs aaaea ranee. I Cast re's cancellaton.v*.s not been the frst, as studeflfc* who have wated fer Carmme De- Sapto. Adam CIaytar» &\>*el. XHve Beck, Jack Kerojuc and Dztj GBetple, kaew. Tke Gty College studeat s gettng an nfjerertf coatplex. DIZZY GILLESPIE: Beatncks and cool cats alke all flocked to the Brd Parker Memoral Jazz Concert to hear the blues of Dzzy Gllespe. But the only blues they heard was an announcement to the effect that the man who sad he'd "walk over hot coals" to appear at the memoral trbute, was fazed by a snowstorm and would not appear. Once agan the expectant throngs had to be turned away wthout catchng a glmpse of ther glorous Gllespe. In ther great dsappontment the students stomped off nto the wlderness of Fnley Center. They can stll be found n the basement cafe sppng barley water or the fashonable snack bar drnkng melted malteds or playng go-fsh n the gamblng establshment of the contract brdge krange, watng for anetfeer opporumty to hear Gl* RENEE ROTH: Among the controversal ssues that arose durng Renee Roth's presdency was the General Facutly fees and membershp lsts rulng whch she declared llegal. Mss Roth submtted her two-dollar student actvtes fee "nnder protest" and threatened to take the fees queston nto coart. Only then was acton taken and Presdent Gallagher apponted a specal commttee te bear all sdes and report to hm. To exert pressere for state ad. Mss Roth sent a wrtten plea to Governor Rockefeller. She has urged procedares whereby due process would be adhered to at all tme n suspensons. However, Mss Roth s openly peesmstk as to the future of SG. "Student Government does mnch less for the ndvdnal student than ts name mples," she dtclarcd at the SG Awards Dnner on Wednesday. CARMINE G. De SAPIO: Tammany Hall comes to Cty College. Cancellaton. Tammany Hall comes to Cty College. Cancellaton. Tammany Hall comes to Cty College. Confrmaton. The loyal lavender was gong to hear the crafty Carmne. He showed up n Townsend Harrs and talked about somethng that seemed to be sour grapes. Anyhow, he dd gve qute a neat appearance. What wth son glasses and tbree-wtten sut. Hs talked abont the Metropoltan press and how t "manufactured" stores about the Democratc conventon. He also sad that a poltcan who tres to create the mpresson that be s the vctm of persecuton s unft to hold a responsble offce. H*w almnt that! JULIO DELATORRE: Ths man made news on the sports pages of Observaton Post and on the hardwood bench of the College's rather poor basketball team. It seemed apparent at mdseason that the cagers weren't dong too well. Jule Delatorre, who rode the bench more than the Lone Ranger rode Slver, made a few remarks about the team that seemed to str a few comments around the contemporary College scene. H^s deas centered about Coach Nat HoJman's lack of ablty when t came to hanulng the ballplayers. Julo sad that Ho'.maa "sn't coachng." Nonetheless, Julo wll return next season as the only regular who wll be there the whole seasom as Gny Mareot and Marty Grovemen wll be January grada.

4 Page Four OBSERVATION POST Tuesday, May 19, 1959 Bo. Head Dawson Retres After A Quarter Century By RENEE COHEN Professor James A. Dawson (Charman, Bology), whose knowledge has played the part of voluntary host to the parastc curosty of students durng the past half century, s a-etrng ths term. ^ Frt>f. Dawson began to teach n 19C7, and except for a two year perod, has been nstructng ever snce. He has been at the College Snce For the past ffteen years, he Jms served as Charman of the Bology Department. Sttng n a large char behnd a desk pled hgh wth sundry fles, folders and pamphlets, Prof. Dawson was tryng anxously to recall the past ffty years last (Fjrlday. Ths.was, accordng to the bologst, a good warm-up, snce the Caduceus Socety was jhcr.orng hm at a farewell dnner that nght. Prof. Dawson has been the Socety's faculty advsor snce "It has been very pleasant," he sad. "Yes, very pleasant ndeed. 3 enjoyed teachng and can't rthnk of any professon I would [prefer. You should lke to teach young people... a very gratfyng experence." Although Prof. Dawson does not clam Dr. Jonas Salk as one M hs pupls, many of today's smccessful doctors and research S-eentsts were at one tme seated before hm, nervously scrbblng down notes and dagrams as he lectured. "I'll see them all toxght," he sad. Before Prof. Dawson came to the College, he was at one tme or another afflated wth Yale Unversty, Goucher College, Delhcuse College n Nova Scota, and Harvard Unversty. He attended Delhouse College as an under- Srrcduate. la answer to the usual request that he rate the students at the College, Prof. Dawson emphasssd tfcat "the average student here s just as good as those at any of thr other schools I've taught at." Many of hs students wll readly admt that Prof. Dawson was more than a teacher, and as faculty advsor to the Bologcal Revew, he s also cted as havng done more than s expected. Ths term's Revew was dedcated to Prof. Dawson. The dedcaton reads: Had Prof. Dawson lmted hs assstance to that of a faculty advsor, as hs ttle denotes, that Prof. James A. Dawson 'Vohmtary Host' would have been ample effort to earn for hm the respect and affecton of hs. staff. But he has been much more than that to us. It has been hs unfalng and unstntng encouragements that has made t possble for us to succeed for so many years. The Revew s n ts twenty-frst year of publcaton. Upon retrng. Prof. Dawson, whose specaltes are parstology and nvertebrate zoology, ntends to "work lke the dckens!" _ come nto exams "lke a lon It's easy...just use AftNES 1 MOtC COLLEGE OUTUNES for qvtdc, therovgh revew ofyovr eovftat Avalable erf all bookstores and / BARNES & NOBLE, Inc., es RMt AIMWI \9*** r Hmw Ytfc VH. Y. Letters SICK Dear Edtor: Cty College's athletc teams are sck! Wth the excepton of the soccer team, all the other teams have had losng records for the past few years. A prme example s the varsty baseball team, whch has fnshed last, or next to last n the Metropoltan League, the past two years. Last year the wrestlng team had a record of three wns aganst fve losses. The varsty basketball team of had one of the worst records of any varsty basketball team n the College's hstory. The above stuaton has not occurred overnght. It has arsen from a number of facts that when added together present a problem of concern to students, alumn, and faculty as well. Frst, as a past member of the varsty baseball, and Baruch basketball teams, I can honestly say that the nterest of the student body n sports s practcally nl. I have played n games aganst such colleges as Wagner and Hofstra where there wasn't even one Cty College student n the stands. It feels very depressng when you are tryng your hardest and there s no one to cheer you on. I felt as f I were playng n a neghborhood schoolyard and not for a college wth an enrollment of twenty thousand. Second, there are nadequate facltes. The soccer, baseball, lacrosse and track teams all use the same feld Lewsohn Stadum. Ths results n poor practce schedules and a great deal of confuson regardng the use of the feld. Thrd, the student body on the whole has lttle desre to try out for the college's teams. At the start of a season there are but a handful of students who come out for a team. The poor turnouts reduce the amount of materal wth whch the coach can work and hence lessen the chances of wnnng. Probably the reason why so few students turn out for the varous teams s that the glory and fame of the C.C.N.Y. Basketball Team of and other wonderteams s gone, and n ts place are teams whch have losng records. In a perod of nne years, crowds of 18,000 at Madson Square Garden have dwndled to crowds of one hundred and n many cases, much smaller numbers. Then too, the fnancal poston of the student may force hm to work after school and thus not permt hm to partcpate n school athletcs. The present regstraton system s stll another tem addng to the sad stuaton. From my own experence I have had to take a few classes late n the afternoon, for the earler classes had been closed out. These late classes have-caused me to mss a number of practce sessons and games. Ths s the stuaton; but what can be done about t? What, s needed s an ncrease n nterest by the students, faculty and Board of Hgher Educaton. The student nterest can be strred up through ncreased nterest n sports by the college's newspapers. The nterest of the student body can be f urther awakened by ncreased membershp n the 45 Club, the college's cheer- ng organzaton, whch s presently at ts lowest ebb. Pressure by the college admnstraton on the (Contnned on Page 5) aw Thrty' By Stan Shepko The senor term s supposed to be one of the easest relaxaton perod at the end of a long trek, but I have foun t to be my most tryng term. I had antcpated the academt work nvolved n my fnal semester at Cty, and consequent ly gven up an edtorshp to devote tme to my studes. I wa too busy to do much wrtng ths term, I had even contem plated not wrtng a "Thrty" or farewell"column, but I fn. that to soothe my conscence, I must express what a fet about recents events n OP. Charges of Pnk, Red and Crmson have been rchochetng through out the College and especally wthn the OP offce. The mpresso has been created that many members of OP are at least card-carryn members of the Communst Party. I was workng n the Chem la last week when one of my frends came up to me and asked, "Tellm< Stan, s t really true that OP s nfltrated by Commes?" It s qute dsheartenng that the Edtor-n-Chef of OP has levele charges of communsm aganst several persons of next term's Manag ng Board of OP. What was hs evdence? Personal dslke of th students mvolved, the accused are members of the Democratc Foru and Unon, they are members of the Venna Youth Festval Clul they supported the Youth March for Integrated Schools. Are any, o all of these reasons for labelng these people wtk'k "Scarlet R"? It bad enough that our Congressmen have thrown ethcs tnd deals t the wnd. Must we, the college students who flatter ourselves wt the though of beng dealsts, also shut off all deals and other loft thought and resort to the blank accusatons, and the seerng brandnj of our fellow students who dare voce what they beleve. Admttedly the Venna Youth Festval s Communst sponsore these people do not deny ths. But The New York Tmes has carre stores favorng the attendance of well prepared Amercan youth at th FestvaL Does ths make the Red dye bleach off onto The Tmes? Many among us, ncludng the present Edtor-n-Chef of OP cr for justce n the case of Prof. Warren Austen, aganst whom at leas a crcumstantal case of gult has been shown. Meanwhle,, we pars doxcally cry "Red" aganst our fellow students, charges that ma eventually prove to be true, but for whch at present no more evdenc has been made avalable than there s to ncrmnate anyone readn ths column. We lve n a socety where thoughts of murder and rape can I condoned. But one must never be forgven f the charge be that othe thnk he mght be a communst. Each person has the rght to be tre by hs peers, not branded by them. But t s psychologcally mot mpressve to accuse wthout reservaton than to queston. Havng worked on the paper wth the members elect of ne term's Managng Board, the furthest I would go s to say th several of them are overzealous n ther lberalsm and that'they-ax bendng over backward n an effort to be lberal and to suppo underdog causes; by no means do I beleve them to be Reds. If peop are gong to make accusatons let them back up ther statements < else keep quet. However, next team's OP wll carry other problems asde fro: ths. OP has been steadly becomng a poltcal organ. It s no, long* a journalstc venture, but rather a poltcal pamphlet as was w nessed by ths term's Student Government endorsements. The Ma agng Board elect has shown that ts frst oblgaton was to DF and that the paper came second. These are the people who wll be run nng next term's OP. I only hope that they do not take t upon themselves to run a pol tcal rag and to justfy the fobles as well as the mertorous acts c DFU. Fnally, the edt board of next semester wll consst of or person. Everyone else wll be under ths persons sway at least th s the concluson one could draw from the actons of ths term, whe they voted as a Woe We can only wat, and hope for the best. In the last one hunderd words or so, let me say my last goodb; to the OP staff, to the coaches who helped me cover the sports bea to the fellows of Tan Epslon Ph, to the Caduceas Socety and Pn fessors Dawson, Johnson and especally te Prof. Farquhar, my advsor as a pre-med student; te Dr. Samuel Wlen, my mentor and gmd n undergraduate chemcal research. Goodbye Cty, (at last I can use the expresson "Cty" n a story you havent gven me the educaton I had hoped to receve but I can complan that I ddn't get my money's worth. I have many grpe to settle wth past teachers and varous admnstrators both studer and faculty but they wll fade away wth age, but I doubt that the leas few weeks ever wll. Oh, I almost forgot! No thrty column s complete wthout an ** count of the ordeal of the many sleepless mghts; ths s one of the* Wll my professors please realze that I am wrtng ths graph at 4:2 ths mornng and that f I am asleep n class please de not take t a personal nsult, and please do net wake me ap; especally whle am sleepng en the bottom of the peel Mr. Befcrmam. I shall dose ths column as I close most days. Goodnght, Carol deal Tuesdc o T comnu Carnej the co son f< sure tl drect be the gratf; Fellow E memb wth, ts ref vnce anothc mjses. these T $uperf well a able to enoug T wth more S: &re to Festv the fe role. B are a thems etc. T forma thep; charge are h ballot-.. IT pett< "alleg ed to know no on enoug A called an n ton o jokers C tous t versu kmng ng t( dsap ; A team comp, 'I runn Dega "J of the (

5 Tuesday, May 19, 1959 OBSERVATION POST Page Fva BERNU2 LEFKOWITZ Edtor-n-CWef Carnege Grant Ths summer the College wll be the scene for a hghly commendable program of teacher tranng. Supported by the Carnege Corporaton of New York, graduates from all over the country wll enter the College and begn a tranng sesson for college teachng ^postons. We applaud the Corporaton for ts grant and we are sure that ts purpose wll be fulflled. Ths step n the rght drectons towards tranng teachers wll ndeed prove to be the begnnng of a very successful undertakng. It s also gratfyng to knew that a number of the recpents of the Fellowshps are from the College. Fnal Thoughts Every term a wrap up edt s wrtten. Every term the membershp lsts ssue s wrapped up, dsposed of, done away wth. Ths year the Mddlebrook commttee has released ts report on membershp lsts. Even a perfunctory readng of the report should convnce anyone that the lsts controversy wll be around for another fve years. The recommendatons are all compromses. Club members must h^nd n membershp cards but these can be destroyed on request. To take the Mddlebrook Commttee to task would be Superfluous. In formulatng the report, the Commttee was well aware of the fact that a plan s useless unless acceptable to thaceneral Faculty (GF). Ths report s just full of enough compromses and equvocal stands to get by the GF. Those of us who are not beng graduated look forward wth pleasure to wrappng up the lsts controversy for many more terms. Speakng of pleasure, many students from the College &re tookftg' forward to a summer ft Venna at the Youth' Festval. We have opposed, and stll do, any partcpaton n the fete by students at the College, n an offcal or unoffcal role. But f they do go, we hope they wll remember that they, are attendng a Commlunst organzed affar and conduct themselves accordngly no flag dppng, trps to Red Chna, etc. The Youth Festval has served one useful purpose: the formaton of the Democratc Foruna and Unon (DFU) and the Party of Lberal Students (PLS). There were blunders, charges, and counter charges but t seems as f the partes are here to stay, f they can survve the off-agan, on-agan, ballot-stuffng Student Government electons. Frst, there was the usual three day extenson of tke petton deadlne, then a weeks delay of electons because of "alleged" lack of students. Now some students have attempted to wn a seat on Student Councl by ballot stuffng. We know that ths was *a joke, although rresponsble, because no one n hs rght mnd would want a seat on SC badly enough to cheat for t. And theren les the pont of Renee Roth's speech. She called for real power for SG. Untl that tme SG must reman an neffectual body unable to command the respect or attenton of the student body," she sad. Barrng a few practcal jokers, that s. On the subject of jokes, let us not forget that momentous battle; South Campus Cafetera manager Joseph Ravol versus a major porton of the student body. Only the dance lounge crew ddn't get n ths fght -they were too>asy tryng to fnd ther jukebox whch had a mysterous way of dsappearng. Although the ''hpsters 9 lost somethng the lacrosse team under Coach Baron, subbng for the alng Chef Mller, compled ts fnest record n years. Another fne team s the track squad. Aded by the fne runnng of Stan Dawkns, George "Second" Best and Josue Degado the harrers were undefeated. Now, tffter the lsts battle. Festval battle and the fght of the dance lounge, comes the bggests of them au exams. Good luck, and have a nce summer. Edtor's Corner I've felt that some explanaton should be offered for my ntemperate remarks publshed n Thursday's campus. In response to Presdent Gallagher's ndefnte and ambguous statements, nonetheless vald, concernng Student Councl and Observaton Post, I felt oblged to tender certan remarks on my own. The remarks were made wth convcton and candor. It should be explaned, however, that the correct word was: "communstc" and ths adjectve t should be further noted referred to a very few members of ths paper. The adjectve, should be emphaszed was at best a personal, poltcal, value judgment. It was not n any sense based on documentary materal, poltcal afflatons, or prevous background. It would not, n any case be based on such an ^ nsdous foundaton. It s hot py place to comment on poltcal afflatons. But I feel oblgated to comment on smlarty of tactcs.' Ths I consdered "communstc" especally when you consder the.actons of ths mnorty n respect to relevancy of ssues: poltcal partes, the Venna Youth Festval, Marv Markman's travels, etc. I have spoken out now at the end of the semester because I felt t would do least damage to the newspaper at ths pont. Most dstressng to me-ths term has been the lack of nterest n OP's welfare on the part of a frenetc mnorty of the staff. It -was unmportant to name names because ths would only cause undue personal njury and because agan, mne was only a personal evaluaton. ' But I had to lash out aganst what I felt was a calculated attempt to slence an (mportant opposng voce. Indscreton s less a sn, I feel, than slence. LcfkowHz Letters (Contnued from Page 4) Board of Hgher Educaton, for addtonal funds for new facltes wll undoubtedly help the stuaton. And a change should be made n the present regstraton system, to enable a member of any college team to regster frst and thus have a program that wll not conflct wth hs athletc schedule. I hope that by readng ths sentment of one athletcs mnded student some people wll be awakened and thnk of what they can do to help the present stuaton. Rchar ShKchtman Thrty' By Beme Lefkowtz= THE EDUCATION OF BERNIE LEFKOWITZ: I came to the College* four years ago, hackneyed, acneed and fervent. I shall leave n two weeks, a unque pastche. By academc standards I have ordered a thrd-rate educaton. Foe ths I am sorry. But t was entrely my choce and f the gamble hasn't pad off as handsomely as I hoped, well, that must be taken as part of the game too. If college s truly a mcrocosm, then t s wth no lttle fear that I leave the halls of learnng behnd. Because f the world that I wll nhabt for the rest of my lfe s really as sadstc, cruel, self-centered and mmoral as ths "co-currcula" scale model on Convent Avenue, then there was no sense stoppng at Hroshma or procrastnatng at Geneva. THE NEWSPAPERS: Someone once asked why all the neurotcs adhere to the newspapers or assemble n Student Government conference rooms. I would venture that the answer s to extend ther self" flagellaton to others. If, through some specal nsght, one could forecast the ultmate result, I would consder t the heght of fantasy or stupdty to sacrfce conscously a formal college educaton for the hardshps, crudty and early cyncsm born of the drnkwater operaton that s college journalsm or student poltcs. More destructve than -the elmnaton of classroom nstructon d the development of a knd of savage nhlsm, a romantc negatvsm derved from passng judgment on your peers for four years. Despte everythng, t s a rresstable temptaton to try to create somethng useful and mportant out of the shambles. I'm ashamed to confess that I'd leap n agan f I had t to do* over. But I speak just I feel that t was n the am of for myself. a certan small mnorty on the Four years ago, I stopped by Room 327 Fnley because. I. had de sta^f, ths semester, to control the paper or destroy t. cded that the feature materal that ths kd Schwartz '59 was turnng out was decdedly nferor to my former hgh school efforts. My frst story was on an educaton professor named Hubert Park Beck who motored across Asa. I cut my French class the day the story, appeared to phone my mother and tell her that I'd receved a. bylne. For the- better part of the next two years I cut steadly untl I became Sports Edtor of The Campus and started wrtng columns. Durng the wnter of '57 the College's basketball team managed some legerdeman whch, astonshngly enough, placed t n the NCAA champonshps. ~ It s the dffculty of any I travelled out to Emmtsberg, Maryland and watched as thjjs team "democrat" that f he speaks was robbed? I came home, wrote a column, blushed as Professo^ Crop^ blmtly and a*tculately of hs se nterrupted hs economcs class to prase me for t, lost an electon feelngs, he wll be condemned by for sports edtor by one vote, and retred temporarly. the left for McCarthysm and by.for the last year and a half I have suffered through what has the rght for uncertanty. been for me at least, lvng hell. Wth lttle opposton as n the past Sandra Rosenblum wu be Edtor-n-Chef of Observaton Post next semester for her thrd term. I'm glad I'm beng graduated now; X doubt whether could survve her supervson another term. After wrtng sports for almost three years, the frghtenng obsesson wth poltcal manpulaton that s the theme of ths newspaper s an awfully heavy burden. I can never forget the nght when the staff, assgned to help prepare one of the bggest and most mportant ssues of the term, dsappeared from the offce for three and a half hours to vew the prvate showng of a Moscow Youth Festval flm narrated by a copy edtor. I fear future undergraduate journalsts wll have a rough tme oa ths paper, wadmg ther way through the ples of poltcal lterature, flyers, and unfnshed stencls floodng the offce. But, I should add, I hope all the furor I have rased wll not be used to throttle poltcal freedom or the two-newspaper system at the College. Don't worry kds, I shall say no more. THE WOMEN: Humbly, I must admt that a few women have nfluenced me greatly. Myra was one grl who made lfe bearable, who-flled me wth pure, unbounded joy when I could fnd lttle but dscontent and personal revulson. I am jealous of Frank, but happy that Myra made the rght choce. In my sophomore year I met a long-legged grl wth whom I was most nnplatonc Whle t lasted t was very nce. There was also a grl on The Campus who s safely sheltered n Logan, West Vrgna now, and who always seemed the most perfectly good grl I have ever met. THE TEACHERS: Despte my ndfference, the brllantly realstc approach of two teachers who^ taught courses n lfe, Plotkn (Psych) and Rosenberg (government), have contrbuted much to my educatkm. THE WORLD OF THE NEW YORKER: The year I worked for the New Yorker magazne played a great part n changng my outlook. I realzed after all that lfe was not completely nasty and that the mfeemg heaesty of college journalsm dd net have to extend te the oetsde world. From the New Yorker I ganed a bt of confdence, shed a lttle of the "lost" ge»erato* thnkng that has been 90 domnant on the thrd floor of the Faley Student Center, and formed a new mpresson of what the workng pressman was lke. So now I leave, hopng that IVe made a lttle dent. The best T can wsh OP s nner dgnty and prde. Unfortunately some of the new-old garde stll regard t as the perennal bed changer of The Campes. I came hackneyed, acneed and fervent. And now I leave better onnplexened, a bt mere ergwal, and slghtly less enthusastc. ( sfceeld eomptam, bat I woe't.

6 m^^^^mmm,. m^m^mmm :zw. :. :.'.#. Page Sx OBSERVATION POST Tuesday, May Bshop Impressed: Prof. Msses Class; Students Pck Sub By BARBARA SCHNEIDER Professor Hllman M. Bshop (Govt) returned to hs Consttutonal Law class after a one day absence, two weeks ago to dscover that hs servces were no longer needed. In fact, hs asprng pre-law students were unfazed durng the absence of the professor. They merely apponted someone to take Jus place. In an orderly parlamentary ashkm they desgnated a charwan. f Someone yelled "let Hrsh do t" and wth that, Arthur Hrsh, a -oaoderator of the Government and Law Socety and founder of the jj-aw Honor Socety, was unan-.3ecusly accepted as charman. Prof. Bshop was quoted by a tst^eut, as jokngly sayng "What do you need me for?" upon ds-.coverng that the class was* conducted n hs absence. Under the stmulatng leadershp fd actng professor Hrsh, the stu- 4deats, who "lke.to get up and act Jke lawyers," eogaged n a terrfc legal' battle. Heated classroom controversy ;«ro3e n a dscusson concernng the Talke vs. Connectcut decson, nvolvng the "due process" clause.01 the 14th amendment and double Jeopardy. The state had appealed for a.second tral n a frst degree mur- ;de* case. The consttutonal quesjfccn yvolvad, whch promoted such a heaed debate, s whether a dedfendentt can be tred more than apace for a crme commtted. The students of Government 13 evaluate t as "the best undergrad-..t&ze law course n the country.".the course emphaszes the conflct between majontv rule and mnorty rghts as t develops n leadng Supreme Court decsons. The would-be lawyers gve ther man attenton to the more recent decsons concernng freedom of speech and freedom of relgon as well' as socal legshton and regulaton of busness. Prof. Hllman Bshop "Unque" A Government 13 student who prefers to reman unnamed belves that "Professor Bshop s a "unque and nsprng teacher," and that the students, by conductng the class n hs absence have gven a dramatc ndcaton of ther recognton of hm as a great nstructor. "All too often we at the College see professors rewarded for wrtng books or lecturng at other colleges, but there are no rewards for beng a good teacher," he' concluded. AUTO INSURANCE Lowest Rates Avalable MONTHLY PAYMENTS (Under Bank Supervson) CALL MR. HARTENSTEIN LU Manors» For the frst tme an Honors Convocaton wll gve offcal recognton to students at the College who have receved outstandng academc awards. The ceremony wll be held tomorrow at 2:30 PM n Aronow Audtorum, "Ten to one he forgot the Camels!* ' ).. ''?".':;:.J'37.vj!»'*.vVvW*. OP Pcks Edtors Sandra Helfensten, an upper junor, was elected edtor-n-chef of Obserratlon Poet last Thursday. Peter L. Stenberg, an upper sophomore was elected managng edtor. Stenberg was copy edtor ths term. The staff also elected Bubbles Chwat to the offce of busness manager. Ed Marston was elected news edtor; Steve Solomon wll be sports edtor whle the next.#jm^-;--.a'', v*''-"«v features edtor s Renee Cohen. Barbara Schneder was named assstant news edtor whle Gracg Fscher and Isaac Sultan wera elected copy edtors. The stafg named Arte Alexander, Gracd Fscher and <Mss Schneder to votng postons on the edtoraj board. Dean James S. Peace branded "unconsttutonal" mmedate control by the new Managng Board. If he dd, the odds are he'll be hotfootng t rght back for Amerca's most popular cgarette. Nothng else gves you the rch tobacco flavor and easygong mldness of Camel's costly blend. It stands to reason: the best tobacco makes the best smoke. Instead of fads and fancy stuff. Have a real cgarettehave a CAMEL j f!l j v R.J. Reynolds Tob. Co.,Waton-S»Iem.N.<l ^WtflMt MM 0 MHMUHM H»«H»MM»MM»M M* MM»» *»» * M thh thmmmmm Tuesday Tra (Co standng olared, " coach ge of Dawl same te; would ll to my t the othe ths yea been con; ng the Among ccaeh ma and Ike ponts, a ted two The K: Shllng-, r.td plac and n th He was man, wt 5 ponts, for Que< xnd Free I :-: : S Spot Cash f FOR Dscarded Books (yes/ even books dscontnued at your college) \ W* pay top prces for books n current demand, ftrng them m NOW befor* &** deprecates ther value. Lj l HMMM+M»MtM»mMMMHIMMMHtMMMM»M BARNES & NOBLE, INC. 105 FIFTH AVE. at lh ST. NEW YORK 3, H. Y. '"" ""HHmMHHHHM

7 f ' S<f Tuesday, May 19, OBSERVATION POST Page Seven Track. (Contnued from Page 8) standng teams we've had," he dedared, "It gn't every day that a :oach gets runners of the calber of Dawkns and Taylor on the same team," he prased "and 1 would lke to pay a specal trbute to my two co-captans and to all the other men who are leavng ths year, because they have all been conscentous performers durng ther stays at the College." Among the senors to whom the ccaeh made reference are Degado, and Ike Clark, who scored sx ponts, and Denns Con-, who talled two ponts aganst Queens. The Knghts were led by George Shllng-, who won the two-mle run vnd placed second n the mle run and n the hgh jump, for 11 ponts. He was followed by Bob Tmmerraan, wth 8, and Stan Ford, wth 5 ponts. Postng 4 ponts apece for Queens were Shelly Leganor nd Fred Saam. " Stan Dawkns, outstandng Beaver track star, was recently named as recpent of the Ben Wallach Memoral award as the outstandng athlete at the College for the past year. Dawkns, hgh scorer for the harrers ths season, wll be graduatng n June. Employment Pcture Brghter As Industral Pace Quckens By Stan Grossel An open letter to ths year's graduates, by Secretary at Labor James P. Mtchell, nspred a story n yesterday's New York Tmes whch^ began: "Job prospects for 1959 graduates are consderably better than a year ago..." ^ Hgh marks and graduate de-s^ «grees were noted as becomng ncreasng more mportant wth re technques n ndustry s probably burgeonng use of data-p eeessng spect to earnngs and opportuntes. Math majors. The trer;d toward a strong factor n the demand for The College's Placement Drector, Mr. Earnest Schnaebele's frst graduate school seen:.-, ths term comment was that the job stuaton was "a bt better" overall. Employment opportuntes could be Tau Epslon Ph fraternty ran ts undefeated streak to seven last Thursday as t captured the Uptown Softball ttle n the ntramurals. roughly estmated as up about By defeatng the Indepen ffteen per cent over last year. dent League and House Plan Ths fgure s generally consstent wth the tone of The Tmes artcle. champs the TEP-TOPS earned the Although a large part of the rght to face the Baruc^h School Placemest Offce's actvtes are ttleholders on May 28. connected wth engneerng students, the Drector noted several nterestng trends wth regard to Lberal Arts and Scence majors. The Placement Offce has notced n the last few years that the number of acceptances n ndustry for Chemstry majors has dropped sgnfcantly. Mr. Schnaebele attrbutes ths to a sharply rsng number of graduates contnung ther academc Mfrork, under the nducement of ncreasngly more attractve scholarshps and fellowshps. Mathematcs and Physcs majors are n consderable demand. The Earnest Schnaebele Placetnent Drector also to have begun nfluercng the job acceptances of Math and physcs graduates. &&; YEGGHEAD JUNE CASUEBEHRY. LONG BEACH STATE COuT fng/k/,; INDIAN BAR ^ O * * * Tht CCNf Htl*'* En g.sh:thm^ v ^ > Englsh: WEIRDLY SHAPED ASH TRAY MAKERS - Start talkng our language we've got hundreds of checks just tchng to go! We're payng $25 ea$p for the Thnklsh v^ords judged b^t! Thnklsh s easy: t*s a new word from two words lke those on ths page. Send yours to Lucky Strke, Box:67A, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Enclose name, address, college smd class. Thnklsh translaton: In modem crcles, the plan round ash tray s consdered square no butts about t. Today's ash trays resemble anythng from a Mng vase to a coach and four the only word for them s deceptode! T& the dscrmnatng smoker (anyone who enjoys e the Honest taste of a Lucky Strke)^ we offer ths fashon note: 25-lb; ash trays are very bg ths year. Get the genune artcle Get the honest taste pf a LUCKY STRIKE Englsh: SUAVE PORTER BOXING.FW*. Englsh: PM*R*>* More companes expressng an nterest n Lberal Arts graduates vsted campus ths term, than ever before n the past. Even com. pancs most known for ther employment of (techncal personnel such as IBM and Cornng Glass Works ntervewed Lberal Axs people for postons ths semester. More QppoFtunty } Accordng to Mr. Schnaebele^ there s a wdenng scope n the ' employment opportuntes for graduates wthout techncal tranng. Too often though, he feels, a job n the busness world s at best a second or thrd choce for many Arts students. Ths atttude a condton he descrbes as not beng "job-orented" wll probably come through to an ntervewer, who may then reject the applcant as a poor rsk. Industry, Mr. Schnaebele emphaszes, s nterested n graduates who are themselves sncerely nterested n a busness opportunty. < j Lberal Arts graduates must not expect to be hred on the bass that they are hstory or socology majors, but rather on the qualtes they have obtaned from ther fouryear stay here n such areas as maturty. In engneerng, job opportuntes, are substantally better, but ths must be sad wth a cauton. Condtons vary wth the major. Electrcal Engneers ar* Ir greatest demand, to an extent that can be characterzed as demand outrunnng supply. ElectrorJcs men have the greatest opportunty for employment. MMMM^HM RICItMtO COLUHS. WIU.»A» ft *«A- r. c* Product cf Jt* J******** Jevteec-Kxmy>a*y-- ^.SV 9M TMClCOt^t J&ux** s omr msddu mme MUBsebul (Contnaed from Page 8) The season closed wth the announcement that Tm Sullvan, who batted.415 n Xeagxe play, was chosen as the team's MOST. Valuable Player. Other leadng htters were Bobby Demas (.341) and Ken Rosenblum (.286).

8 Page ght OBSERVATION POST By Vrral Belttog Wth the resoundng "allegaroos" of better than 100 alumn cheerng them on, the College's fre up unt of lacrossemen defeated a stubborn Kamlton College squad, 11-9, Saturday at Lewsohn. The vctory brought the Lavender record to and mathematcally clnched frst place for the College over Lehgh n the "Roy Taylor" lacrosse dvson. Ths gave the stckmen ther greatest season snce 1955 when they last had a wnnng record. Halftme Lead At halftme, wth the Beavers leadng the Contnentals, 8-4, coach George Barron took just one ftrnute to fre up the team. Standng n sweat shrt and sweat pants, the former lacrosse <all-*nerca, notceably affected, sad that the "whole season belongs to Wlle (Rodrguez) and Dave (Elas). There are thrty mnutes left to the season, and f you drop dead, do t on the feld." Ths request was all that the Beavers needed to hold the Hamlton Contnentals at bay n the ' second half, and preserve the sought for wn. The College was never headed after the frst twelve mnutes of the game when t took a 3-2 lead. The Barronmen were led by the three- goal scorng of Charley Tuesday, May 19, 195 J«rl h A < Lost Weekend for Beaver Foes; Lavender Rolls Yates and Fred Schwettman. base due to an error by Ron Wess. Stckmen Take Frst In fact, just before the end of Beavers Np Hofstra He scampered to second on a bad the second perod, goale Dave Undefeated Harrers - Upset Ha m (ton f Elas entered the scorng column In Fnal Came, 3-2 throw by Lensky and thef wth Vanqush Knghts, Far 5th Wn ^ wth a rare assst as hs hustlng two out stole thrd and home. To Escape Cellar tactc of carryng the ball up the 71-60, In Fnale The Beavers went to work n mddle of the feld all the way the bottom of the second. Bll Catterson walked and scored on Ken By Joe Lown completely upset Hamlton. Yates flpped n the goal for the Lavender. Averagng fve ponts per raft Rosenblum's long sngle to left the equvalent of a frst pla< John Whelan beat out an nfeld fnsh, the College's track tea ht advancng Rosenblum to thrd conchded ts undefeated seasc The never-say-de atttude of the Contnentals pulled them to wthn two goals of the Beavers n the Stckmen Batter Foe fnal perod before tme ran out on them. They were led by the excellent stckhandlng and scornng antcs of captan Earl Rckerson, who rammed fve goals past goale Elas. In tallyng two goals, captan Wlle Rodrguez fnshed the season wth twenty-three, one of the hghest Beaver totals n the past few seasons. By Steve Solomon The College's baseball team closed ts season Saturday n the same way t opened wth an mpressve vctory over Hofstra, 3-2. The wn enabled the Beavers to escape the cellar n the Metropoltan Conference for the frst tme n four years. Oddly enough, the key play of the game was the same one that had been so dsasterous aganst NYU only a few days before. In the top of the fourth wth the score 2-2, Hofstra loaded the bases wth one out on a walk to Hal Burf endt and sngles by Bob Necc and Harry Rosenthal. The next batter, Bll Sharkey, ht back to ptcher Luby Mlynar who decded to try for the double play. He whpped the ball to catcher Bll Ncholas ^for the force at home and the latter flpped to Magnan for the out at frst. The twn kllng was completed n lghtnng-lke fashon and the boys went off the feld wth a "now-that-wasn't-to-hard" expresson on ther faces. Hofstra jumped off to ah early lead n the openng frame. Bll Stetson walked, advanced to second on a throwng error by catcher Jay Lensky and scored on Burfendt's two out sngle. In the second nnng Hofstra added ther second unearned run of the game. Les Capone, got on Luby Mlynar Three-ht Ball where be scored on a Isacrfce fly by Magnan. The College went ahead to st&y n the sxth when Tm Sullvan walked, went ;o thrd on Rosenblum's sngle and scored on Magnan's'ht. Luby Mlynar, who releved Jerry Zutler n the thrd, ptched three-ht ball n hs seven nnng stnt. Zutler had to be removed (Contnued on Page 7) bu Thnk for Yourself? ^ y/* 1. When you feel that certan fads are foolsh do you talk aganst them? 2. Do gadgets such as new cgarette lghters often ntrgue you so you want to take them apart? 3. Do you thnk that poltcal canddates should wrte ther own speeches nstead of usng a "ghost wrter"? Gven the choce, would you prefer^ hayng an apartment of your own to lvng at home wth your parents? YES D-D NO LJ $* VEs YESPI ] NO NO YEsQ NO D Saturday downng Queens, Co-captan Stan Dawkns on< agan led all scorers, ths tme wt 20 ponts. In each of the Lavender's fon vctores ths season, he has caj tured at least four frst place Aganst Queens, Dawkns took X\ 220 yard dash, the 120 yard hg hurdles, and the 220 yard low hu des. He also took the broad jum wth a leap of twenty-one ^feet.. Josue Degado and Ralph Taj lor had two wns and one secon each, totalng 26 ponts betwee them. Degado won the 100 ya dash and the one mle run, whl Co-captan Taylor won the m< dle-dsance races; the 440 ya run n 0:52.5 and the 880 n 2:0 The rest of the Beaver scorr was dvded among sx men, su] portng Coach Harry degrol'amo contenton that a 4-0 record acheved only through a team e ort. "Whle we've had many ou standng performers such as Dav kns, Taylor, Degado, and Geor Best, the season was a success b cause every one on the squad WJ an ntegral part -of the tea] throughout," sad Dr. degrolam "Ths s one of the most ou (Contnued on Page 7) / THESE QUESTIONS IS ) I CAN TELL YOU A LOT V ABOUT YOURSELF or j 5. Do you prefer a salesman who s anxous to make a quck sale to one who wll patently answer all your questons about the product? 6. When arrvng late for a party, are you nclned to jon a group of elope frends rather than attemptng to strke up new acquantances? 7. If you met somebody wth a heard, would you tend to consder hm "offbeat" and treat hm wth reserve? 8. Are you normally reluctant to go on a ''blnd date"? YES Q NO ves n No n V6s{~] NO a ve8 n NO a 9. Do you base your choce of a cgarette on what people tell you rather than dong your own thnkng? VESQ HOQ ManWhoTh \ You'll notce that men and women who thnk for themselves usually smoke VICEROY. Ther reason? TheyVe made a thnkng choce. They know what they want n a flter cgarette. They know that VICEROY gves t to them! A thnkng man's flter and a smokng man's taste! *// you htm answered "YES" to three out of thefrstfour questons and "NO"tofour od of thefastjve... yen realty thnk for yourself! 959. Brown & WlltMnma Tobsero Corp. =. V I C E R O V H A S A THINKING MAN'S FILTER...A SMOKING MAN'S TASTE 1

Philip Goes. Lesson at a Glance. Go! Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 3

Philip Goes. Lesson at a Glance. Go! Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 3 Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll name the Ethopan as the man who Phlp taught about Jesus. The chldren wll practce sharng the Bble wth each other. The chldren wll state that God wants

More information

We Go to Church. Lesson at a Glance. Worshiping God. Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 3

We Go to Church. Lesson at a Glance. Worshiping God. Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 3 Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll state a characterstc of a dscple. The chldren wll sng and pray together. The chldren wll state how they can be lke dscples, e.g., share, pray, read the

More information

Twenty-Third Publications

Twenty-Third Publications Introducton Advent s a tme to wat for Jesus and to prepare for hs comng at Chrstmas. People all over the world wat and watch n dfferent ways for Jesus comng. You wll learn about some of them n ths book.

More information

The Great Chain of Being

The Great Chain of Being The Great Chan of Beng AUTHOR: Susan Barry Frankln Hgh School, Frankln, WI Introducton In ths lesson, students wll use prmary and secondary sources to develop a better understandng of the contnuty and

More information

I Am Special. Lesson at a Glance. God Made Me. Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 1

I Am Special. Lesson at a Glance. God Made Me. Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 1 Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll state that God created the frst man and woman, Adam and Eve. The chldren wll dentfy dfferent parts of the human body. The chldren wll thank God for ther

More information

Brothers and Sisters

Brothers and Sisters Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll state that God makes famles. The chldren wll demonstrate ways to be helpers at home. The chldren wll thank God for ther famles. Bble Story Text Geness

More information

Hannah Talks to God. Lesson Plan

Hannah Talks to God. Lesson Plan Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll understand that prayng s how we talk to God. The chldren wll learn that Hannah prayed for a baby and God answered her prayers. The chldren wll pray.

More information

c The dogs did what they were told so that their masters did not hit them.

c The dogs did what they were told so that their masters did not hit them. The Call of the Wld Jack London The story step by step 1 Lsten to Chapter 1 (from Judge Mller s place... to...he never forgot t. ). Lst the parts of the body that you hear. The frst one s an example. Check

More information

.tl",- ' --;'.~~ TOWARD OUR COMMON G OF CORRECT FAITH \ '.~-, ":~~~ A Response to Recent Allegation~':,: :~;..:;~~~ ::f4

.tl,- ' --;'.~~ TOWARD OUR COMMON G OF CORRECT FAITH \ '.~-, :~~~ A Response to Recent Allegation~':,: :~;..:;~~~ ::f4 ~ ' I c l! 'I I tl"- ' --;'~~ " :" ~- --t"' ~ : r tcj"'" :: " ~~' "! j ":;;c' :;;t ~ ; r TOWARD OUR COMMON G OF CORRECT FAITH " ' : ; \!';[~J" 1 "1t~:::::~ f" ; j I ; : '~;: t A Response to Recent Allegaton~'::

More information

Josiah Loves God s Word

Josiah Loves God s Word Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll dentfy the Bble as God s word. The chldren wll dentfy Josah and specfc events surroundng the Bble s dscovery n the temple. The chldren wll vew the Bble

More information

Friends of Rochester Cathedral Annual Report

Friends of Rochester Cathedral Annual Report Ths publcaton was dgtsed by Rochester Cathedral Research Guld Homepage: www.rochestercathedralresearchguld.org Adran s Wall Frends of Rochester Cathedral Annual Report 20-202 G. Keevll Abstract: Test pts

More information

And God is able to make all grace abound to you...

And God is able to make all grace abound to you... And God s able to make all grace abound to you... And God s able to make all grace abound to you, so that havng all suffcency n all thngs at all tmes, you may abound n every good work. Thnk of t. God hmself

More information

v. Theresa Keeping Defendant

v. Theresa Keeping Defendant UNTED STATES DSTRCT COURT for the Central Dstrct of Calforna Chuck Foster Plantff v. Theresa Keepng Defendant Cvl Acton No. SACV14-0004-AG-DFMx; consoldated wth SACV14-0012-AG-DFMx PRODUCTON OF DOCUMENTS

More information

Processional. a writer s cottage. Alexandria, Virginia, 2017

Processional. a writer s cottage. Alexandria, Virginia, 2017 Introducton to the 2017 edton Processonal a wrter s cottage Alexandra, Vrgna, 2017 A plaque hangs above my desk: Tell Your Story. Those words serve as a daly nvtaton to a sprtual practce. Tellng a story

More information

This Child Has Been Sent by God

This Child Has Been Sent by God Consensus Volume 20 ssue 2 n Prase of Valant Women Artcle 10 11-1-1994 Ths Chld Has Been Sent by God Bonne J. Scharf Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://scholars.wlu.ca/consensus Recommended Ctaton

More information

I I. I w I T H A L I s T 0 F M E M B E R s. I. i fi Natural Histor~ Societ~ ~ i ~ti~ f. ~ ofthe ~ f~ Pubiished by the Society. 11.

I I. I w I T H A L I s T 0 F M E M B E R s. I. i fi Natural Histor~ Societ~ ~ i ~ti~ f. ~ ofthe ~ f~ Pubiished by the Society. 11. If)?S ~ 2 67 f=---=--~----~ f! CONSTITUTION AND BY-LAWS j ~ ofthe ~ f Natural Hstor~ Socet~ ~ ~ of the ~ ~ Uf\verst':J of lllf\os, lf I w I T H A L I s T 0 F M E M B E R s. I ~t~ f I I f~ Pubshed by the

More information

UNSTOPPABLE THEN and NOW A LIFE WELL LIVED Acts 20:17-38

UNSTOPPABLE THEN and NOW A LIFE WELL LIVED Acts 20:17-38 UNSTOPPABLE THEN and NOW A LIFE WELL LIVED Acts 20:17-38 Can anyone tell me what the theme of our summer seres on Acts s? That s rght UNSTOPPABLE. In the power of the Holy Sprt, the Good News of Jesus

More information

i» M < 1 I I MERIT SYSTEMS PROTECTION CHICAGO REGIONAL OFFICE

i» M < 1 I I MERIT SYSTEMS PROTECTION CHICAGO REGIONAL OFFICE » M < 1 I I ~W ' TT UNITED STTES OF MERIC TCOM HERING MERIT SYSTEMS PROTECTION BORD CHICGO REGIONL OFFICE IN THE MTTER OF: LEROY J. PLETTEN vs. UNITED STTES OF THE RMY DEPRTMENT Transcrpt of the" Deposton

More information

I i. to read them to you and as you u~derstznd them and read along Kewark Avenue, J. C. ti. J. I 38- Inv. James P.

I i. to read them to you and as you u~derstznd them and read along Kewark Avenue, J. C. ti. J. I 38- Inv. James P. AND PLACE OF Dstectve Charles F. llvas, Dsde County Publc Safety, kpartment, Homcde Sectoq obert Hlavac, nv. James P. Farrell, ~udsoh County Prosecutor% Offce 59 5 Kewark Avenue, J. C. t. J. Lor1 12, 1973,

More information

The Ensign. Zarahemla Branch SEPTEMBER Prepare Ye, Prepare Ye

The Ensign. Zarahemla Branch SEPTEMBER Prepare Ye, Prepare Ye The Ensgn Zarahemla Branch SEPTEMBER 2015 Prepare Ye, Prepare Ye by Hgh Prest Brad Gault Prepare ye, prepare ye, O nhabtants of the earth, for the judgment of our God s come: behold, and lo, the Brdegroom

More information

air will make their nests in it.

air will make their nests in it. 355 "THE FOURTH DIMENSION AND ITS USES BY MAN" By Charles Fllmore Unty Tranng School July 31, 1933 Lesgon l "How Sprtually to Qucken Man' 8 Supermnd Facultes and Use,"Them In Character Buldng" ' The am

More information

Evaluation of geometrical characteristics of Korean pagodas

Evaluation of geometrical characteristics of Korean pagodas Evaluaton of geometrcal characterstcs of Korean pagodas *Fahmeh Yavartanoo 1) and Thomas Kang 2) 1), 2) Department of Archtecture and Archtectural Engneerng, Seoul Natonal Unversty, Seoul 08826, Korea

More information

The Isser and Rae Price Library of Judaica 30th Anniversary Rededication. March 6, 2011 University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries.

The Isser and Rae Price Library of Judaica 30th Anniversary Rededication. March 6, 2011 University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries. The Isser and Rae Prce Lbrary of Judaca 30th Annversary Rededcaton March 6, 2011 Unversty of Florda George A. Smathers Lbrares Thrty Years of The Isser and Rae Prce Lbrary of Judaca Unversty of Florda

More information

989 James Robert Todd

989 James Robert Todd xv. 989 James Robert Todd Bographcal Sumnnary (1324) Todd was born on December 10, 1919, n Groesbeck, Tex. (2165) He held a varety of occupatons. He worked approxmately 2 years at Sue's Used Car Lot n

More information

DMITRI IGLITZIN October 22, 2018

DMITRI IGLITZIN October 22, 2018 DMITRI IGLITZIN Igltzn@workerlaw.com Orgnal va emal to: pdc@pdc.wa.gov and peter.lavallee@pdc.wa.gov Peter Lavallee Executve Drector Washngton State Publc Dsclosure Commsson PO Box 40908 Olympa, WA 98504-0908

More information

Methods for Measuring and Compensating Ball Screw Error on Multi-mode Industrial CT Scanning Platform

Methods for Measuring and Compensating Ball Screw Error on Multi-mode Industrial CT Scanning Platform 5th Internatonal Conference on Measurement, Instrumentaton and Automaton (ICMIA 06) Methods for Measurng and Compensatng Ball Screw Error on Mult-mode Industral CT Scannng Platform Yuje Zhang, a, Shangfeng

More information

Vision and. Focus Areas. Catholic Schools Youth Ministry Australia CATHOLIC LEADERS FORMATION NETWORK YOUTH MINISTERS INTERNATIONAL JUNIOR AND YOUTH

Vision and. Focus Areas. Catholic Schools Youth Ministry Australia CATHOLIC LEADERS FORMATION NETWORK YOUTH MINISTERS INTERNATIONAL JUNIOR AND YOUTH Catholc Schools Youth Mnstry Australa Vson and Focus Areas JUNIOR AND YOUTH MINISTRY YOUTH MINISTERS INTERNATIONAL CATHOLIC LEADERS FORMATION NETWORK STUDENT POST SCHOOL YOUTH MINISTERS TEACHER AND CHURCH

More information

5 BY MR. ROSENBLATT: Your Honor. the State would. BY MR. SERMOS: Yes, sir. We'll agree to that. We will release him, too, Your

5 BY MR. ROSENBLATT: Your Honor. the State would. BY MR. SERMOS: Yes, sir. We'll agree to that. We will release him, too, Your Drect Examnaton - Manley 465 1 BY MR. HARPER: Your Honor, we would ask that 2 Deputy Frank be fnally released from our subpoena. 3 BY THE COURT: He '11 be released from hs 4 subpoena. 5 BY MR. ROSENBLATT:

More information

Design Review Board. John Ellsworth, Environmental Planner on behalf of Verizon Wireless, First Presbyterian Church

Design Review Board. John Ellsworth, Environmental Planner on behalf of Verizon Wireless, First Presbyterian Church I t 1 s Desgn Revew Board F February 6, 2018 Those present were: s I $ James H. McMullan, Vce Charman Carolyn D. Presche, Member C. Sherrll Dayton, Member Robert D. Caruso, Member Bruce A.T. Sska, Member

More information

Copyr ight Copyright Tridonic GmbH & Co KG All rights reserved. Manufactur er

Copyr ight Copyright Tridonic GmbH & Co KG All rights reserved. Manufactur er luxcontrol DALI XC Copyr ght Copyrght Trdonc GmbH & Co KG All rghts reserved. Manufactur er Trdonc GmbH & Co KG Färbergasse 15 6851 Dornbrn Austra Tel. +43-(0)5572-395-0 Fax +43-(0)5572-20176 www.trdonc.com

More information

an imprint of Prometheus Books Amherst, NY

an imprint of Prometheus Books Amherst, NY an mprnt of Prometheus Books Amherst, NY Publshed 2012 by Pyr, an mprnt of Prometheus Books A Gule of Dragons. Copyrght 2012 James Enge. All rghts reserved. No part of ths publcaton may be reproduced,

More information

A DIGEST OF CHAPTER 14

A DIGEST OF CHAPTER 14 STUDES N JOSHUA- JUDGES-RUTH A DGEST OF CHAPTER 14 Vv. 1-5 The plan for dvdng the land. God told Joshua to dvde the land by lot (v. 2). Ths plan had already been selected durng the days of Moses (Numbers

More information

\ rf/7 EVANS, W. A..43HRD INTERVIEW 5043,

\ rf/7 EVANS, W. A..43HRD INTERVIEW 5043, \ rf/7 EVANS, W. A..43HRD INTERVIEW 5043, 373 FOR\* 374 Indat- T \';"..c >fjl. - TTlRD INTERVIEW 5043. Feld porker's Ths report wad'? on (ta^" February 1, I.)3 7. *V' ~" * "" "" "" 1.. Name JL!^-?!!! 1^^

More information

Wye flerhnratt Publlhed '09! b! the students ( the North Engneerng. Carolna State College of Agrculture was!" Member North Carolna Collegate Press Ass

Wye flerhnratt Publlhed '09! b! the students ( the North Engneerng. Carolna State College of Agrculture was! Member North Carolna Collegate Press Ass .1",_r s r Gratutes 'Vol. V, No. 12 Publshed Weekly by the Students of N. 0. State College of Agrculture Engneerng J) ṗ STATE COLLEGE STATON, RALEGH, N. C., DECEMBER 5,1924 Sngle Copes 10 Cents - ~. r...

More information

Tech. VOL. X. BOSTON, APRIL 9, NO. 13.

Tech. VOL. X. BOSTON, APRIL 9, NO. 13. Tech. VOL. X. BOSTON, APRL 9, 1891. NO. 13. Publshed on alternate Thursdays, durng the college year, by the students of the Massachusetts nsttute of Technology. BOARD OF EDTORS. FREDERCK HOPPN HOWLAND,

More information

SALEM-WITCH-L Archives

SALEM-WITCH-L Archives 1 of 5 2009 09 19 01:16 Welcome to RootsWeb.com Sgn n DISCOVER MORE > Home Searches Famly Trees Malng Lsts Message Boards Web Stes Passwords Help Archver > SALEM WITCH > 1999 08 > 0933867296 SALEM-WITCH-L

More information

PRACTICAL CHRISTIANITY

PRACTICAL CHRISTIANITY --_._-,---_._----_. ~ ""t-"~',:, "." ~ '!" ',- r f',,~ ~ w' r:! u ' ~',!::,1. B ~~ ~,: PRACTCAL CHRSTANTY OTHER BOOKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR EL AND SYBL JONES: Ther Lfe and Work. ZDO., 300 pages ( r889) A

More information

Section-A (Reading) Bhagat Singh

Section-A (Reading) Bhagat Singh SAMPLE PAPER TERM I SESSION- 2017-18 ENGLISH CLASS- VII Tme allowed: 3 hrs Maxmum Marks: 80 Ths paper s dvded nto three sectons: Secton A (Readng) - 20 marks Secton B (Wrtng - 20 marks Grammar) - 10 marks

More information

History of the Pequot War

History of the Pequot War I!n 1636 there was unrest and suspcon between the Englsh Colonsts n New England and the Natve Amercan People who had lved there snce tme beyond memory. Each group was worred about the ntentons of the other.!

More information

Winged Lion THE. 4th Annual Book Sale. Women s Guild Fundraiser. St. Mark the Evangelist Catholic Church. October 11th, 12th and 13th 9 a.m. 7 p.m.

Winged Lion THE. 4th Annual Book Sale. Women s Guild Fundraiser. St. Mark the Evangelist Catholic Church. October 11th, 12th and 13th 9 a.m. 7 p.m. OUR MISSION STATEMENT TO SPREAD THE GOOD NEWS OF JESUS CHRIST TO ALL GOD S PEOPLE BY WORD AND ACTION. 02 WEEKLY SPANISH MASS AT ST. MARKS STARTING OCT 5TH 03 SEVEN SECRETS OF SUCCESSFUL STEWARDS 05 HIGH

More information

OF FREE "/ILL BAPTISTS. FIFTY- FIFTH ANNUAL MINUTES

OF FREE /ILL BAPTISTS. FIFTY- FIFTH ANNUAL MINUTES -------- FRST ARZONA DSTRCT ASSOCATON OF FREE "/LL BAPTSTS FFTY- FFTH ANNUAL MNUTES 2006-2007 - - - FRST ARZONA - - DSTRCT ASSOCATON OF FREE WLL BAPTSTS FFTY- FFTH ANNUAL TES 2006-2007 \ - - : : -! - -

More information

ETERNALLY INDEBTED TO YOUR HEAVENLY FATHER (Mosiah 1-3) by Ted L. Gibbons

ETERNALLY INDEBTED TO YOUR HEAVENLY FATHER (Mosiah 1-3) by Ted L. Gibbons ETERNALLY INDEBTED TO YOUR HEAVENLY FATHER (Mosah 1-3) by Ted L. Gbbons QUOTE OF THE WEEK: The Book of Mormon contans the fullness of the everlastng Gospel--the record of the ancent Nephtes, translated

More information

When Os Good By T. B. Maston A retired professor of Chrisuan Ethics

When Os Good By T. B. Maston A retired professor of Chrisuan Ethics Second class postage pad at Planfeld, N. J. 07061 510 Watchung Ave. Box 868 Planfeld, N. J. 07061 When C@mprr@mose Os Good By T. B. Maston A retred professor of Chrsuan Ethcs There may come a tme, for

More information

Notice of Copyright. Citing Resources from the Western History Collections

Notice of Copyright. Citing Resources from the Western History Collections Notce of Copyrght Publshed and unpublshed materals may be protected by Copyrght Law (Ttle 17, U.S. Code). Any copes of publshed and unpublshed materals provded by the Western Hstory Collectons are for

More information

The Sabbath Reeorder. A Special Emphasis Issue of

The Sabbath Reeorder. A Special Emphasis Issue of '- The Sabbath Recorder 510 Watchung Ave., Box 868 Planfeld, N. J. 07061 Second class postage pad at Planfeld, N. J. 07061 "WHERE THERE S NO VSON THE PEOPLE PERSH" N. THE fnterest OF SEVENTH DAT BAPTST

More information

GENERAL CONFERENCE AUGUST 1979

GENERAL CONFERENCE AUGUST 1979 CONFERENCE PUBLCTY Frst of Seres GENERAL CONFERENCE AUGUST 1979 510 Watchung Ave. Box 868 Planfeld N.J. 07061 (lssn 0036-214X) Second class postage pad at Planfeld N.J. 07061 THE SABBATH SEVENTH DAY BAPTST

More information

OCTOBER 2, Mrfit.ar:hv, london.

OCTOBER 2, Mrfit.ar:hv, london. o Retanng \ Through Walkng n the Lght." The text s 1 John 1: 5-10. The. Assocaton Camp Commttee has been requested to meet mmedately after dsmssal of "the.afternoon servce. Mrs. Delmer E. Van Horn, Correspondng

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves 11-29-1945 The Wellesley News (11-29-1945) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostory.wellesley.edu/news

More information

MINUTES. Seventy Seventh Annual Session. Arkansas State Association. Free Will Baptists. At The. Free Will Baptist Youth Camp

MINUTES. Seventy Seventh Annual Session. Arkansas State Association. Free Will Baptists. At The. Free Will Baptist Youth Camp ...., [.., :,... MNUTES Of The Seventy Seventh Annual Sesson Of The Arkansas State Assocaton t,,,,,,. j,. of Free Wll Baptsts At The Free Wll Baptst Youth Camp - On Beaver Lake-Conway, Arkansas August

More information

By High Priest Brad Gault

By High Priest Brad Gault The Ensgn Zarahemla Branch NOVEMBER 2015 By Hgh Prest Brad Gault Lsten to the voce of Jesus Chrst, your Redeemer, the great I AM, whose arm of mercy hath atoned for your sns, who wll gather hs people even

More information

God s Masterwork, Volume Five God with Us A Survey of Matthew Acts An Important Interlude Matthew to Revelation

God s Masterwork, Volume Five God with Us A Survey of Matthew Acts An Important Interlude Matthew to Revelation Volume Fve God wth Us A Survey of Matthew Acts An Important Interlude Matthew to Revelaton The Heart of the Matter We now begn the second phase of our safar through Scrpture. Havng concluded our study

More information

i = ! i t BOOK OF MORMON J i Is It "The Stick of Ephraim" j i Referred to in the Thirty-seventh Chapter of i BY ELDER JOSEPH LUFF

i = ! i t BOOK OF MORMON J i Is It The Stick of Ephraim j i Referred to in the Thirty-seventh Chapter of i BY ELDER JOSEPH LUFF +~-llll_.lltl-t--1!11-h-1111-fl-ltl!-lll-h-k~--1111-hu-uh--tt-~-~~-m--1111-l!-llll-l+ ~ : THE ~ f! t BOOK OF MORMON J s t "The Stck of Ephram" j Referred to n the Thrty-seventh Chapter of EzekeL, Verses

More information

Bee Gee News December 13, 1933

Bee Gee News December 13, 1933 Bowlng Green State Unversty ScholarWorks@BGSU BGSU Student Newspaper Unversty Publcatons 12-13-1933 Bee Gee News December 13, 1933 Bowlng Green State Unversty Follow ths and addtonal works at: https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news

More information

ALL-OUT PLEA TO CONGRESS URGED ON FIRE AND POLICE SOCIAL SECURITY BILL

ALL-OUT PLEA TO CONGRESS URGED ON FIRE AND POLICE SOCIAL SECURITY BILL C w t f ' S-e/WAA. L E l L D E t 'Amerca** Large»t Weekly for Publc Employee* Vol. XV No. 50 Tueaday, August 20. 1957 Prce Ten Cent Vllage H P 0 V''. '- CAPlOl. ^VALON ALBANV 1 N Y COttP ng ge 16 ALL-OUT

More information

A dorm evaluation which will be conducted in all girls dorms Feb. 25 could result in some drastic rule changes, according to Sara Smith, speaker of

A dorm evaluation which will be conducted in all girls dorms Feb. 25 could result in some drastic rule changes, according to Sara Smith, speaker of Mddle Tennessee State Unversty SIDELINES Vol. 43 No. 38 Murfreesboro, Tennessee 37130 Thursdoy, Feb. 19, 1970 House, Senate To Vew Jane Kerr, Knoxvlle junor, smles as she gves a pnt of blood durng the

More information

(The Journal Champion Volume 1, Issue 16)

(The Journal Champion Volume 1, Issue 16) Lberty Unversty DgtalCommons@Lberty Unversty 978 -- 980 Lberty Unversty School Newspaper Fall 2-8-978 2-08-978 (The Journal Champon Volume, ssue 6) Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://dgtalcommons.lberty.edu/paper_78_80

More information

Rotunda - Vol 8, No 26 - April 26, 1928

Rotunda - Vol 8, No 26 - April 26, 1928 Longwood Unversty Dgtal Commons @ Longwood Unversty Rotunda Lbrary, Specal Collectons, and Archves Sprng 4-26-1928 Rotunda - Vol 8, No 26 - Aprl 26, 1928 Longwood Unversty Follow ths and addtonal works

More information

~"""P"""""--U ---L r- - ar --- *- I-cu -- I-- ' a u-,

~P--U ---L r- - ar --- *- I-cu -- I-- ' a u-, ~"""P"""""--U ---L r- - ar --- *- -cu -- -- ' a --- - -u-, 11 ~~ LC L ~~-qll~~-~ ~~ DU~~ ~~ a~~- ~ - Entered at the Post-Offce, Boston, Mass., as Second.Class Matter. - -. - 1 *1 lfrost &" AAMS, - cxfltr

More information

The U.A.C. Alumni Quarterly, Vol. 5 No. 3, March 1929

The U.A.C. Alumni Quarterly, Vol. 5 No. 3, March 1929 Utah State Unversty DgtalCommons@USU Utah State Magazne Utah State Unversty Specal Collectons and Archves 3-1929 The U.A.C. Alumn Quarterly, Vol. 5 No. 3, March 1929 Utah State Unversty Follow ths and

More information

Kenyon Collegian - October 1, 1981

Kenyon Collegian - October 1, 1981 Dgtal Kenyon: Research, Scholarshp, and Creatve Exchange The Kenyon Collegan Archves 0--98 Kenyon Collegan - October, 98 Follow ths and addtonal works at: https://dgtal.kenyon.edu/collegan Recommended

More information

nf rteamnte excesses GA faces gay mixer issue Impersonator cons frats Campus Panel invited to air unrest findings

nf rteamnte excesses GA faces gay mixer issue Impersonator cons frats Campus Panel invited to air unrest findings --- ~-e~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Cousn Bruce for "Contnuous News Servce Snce 1881." MacGregor Freshman Councl Presdent [ By ee Gguere The General Assembly's specal commttee on the gay mxer, whle stressng the hghly

More information

Kenyon Collegian - October 13, 1956

Kenyon Collegian - October 13, 1956 Dgtal Kenyon: Research, Scholarshp, and Creatve Exchange The Kenyon Collegan Archves 0-3-956 Kenyon Collegan - October 3, 956 Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://dgtal.kenyon.edu/collegan Recommended

More information

CALL UPON GOD HIGH PRIEST DEAN FALCONER

CALL UPON GOD HIGH PRIEST DEAN FALCONER The Ensgn Zarahemla Branch APRIL 2016 CALL UPON GOD HIGH PRIEST DEAN FALCONER SEVERAL YEARS AGO WHEN I WAS WORKING FOR THE MARRIOTT CORPORATION, I WAS SENT FOR NINE MONTHS TO BAYLOR MEDICAL CENTER IN DALLAS,

More information

The Bee Gee News Commencement Number June 9, 1920

The Bee Gee News Commencement Number June 9, 1920 Bowlng Green State Unversty ScholarWorks@BGSU BGSU Student ewspaper Unversty Publcatons 6-9-920 The Bee Gee ews Commencement umber June 9, 920 Bowlng Green State Unversty Follow ths and addtonal works

More information

Bee Gee News October 11, 1933

Bee Gee News October 11, 1933 Bowlng Green State Unversty ScholarWorks@BGSU BG News (Student Newspaper) Unversty Publcatons 10-11-1933 Bee Gee News October 11, 1933 Bowlng Green State Unversty Follow ths and addtonal works at: https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news

More information

Andy Shay Jack Starr Matt Gaudet Ben Reeves Yale Bulldogs

Andy Shay Jack Starr Matt Gaudet Ben Reeves Yale Bulldogs 2018 NCAA Men s Lacrosse Championship Monday, May 28 2018 Boston, Massachusetts Andy Shay Jack Starr Matt Gaudet Ben Reeves Yale Bulldogs Yale - 13, Duke - 11 THE MODERATOR: We have Yale head coach Andy

More information

Roosevelt^ McGovern to Address Public Employees on Democratic^ Republican Approaches to Problems of Civil Service

Roosevelt^ McGovern to Address Public Employees on Democratic^ Republican Approaches to Problems of Civil Service tj n Amercans Largest Weekly for Publc Employees Vol. XV I No. Tesflav, October 12, 19.4 Prce Ten Cenls e Queres See Page 2 Roosevelt^ McGovern to Address Publc Employees on Democratc^ Republcan Approaches

More information

The Utah State Quarterly, Vol. 6 No. 2, November 1929

The Utah State Quarterly, Vol. 6 No. 2, November 1929 Utah State Unversty DgtalCommons@USU Utah State Magazne Utah State Unversty Specal Collectons and Archves 11-1929 The Utah State Quarterly, Vol. 6 No. 2, November 1929 Utah State Unversty Follow ths and

More information

(The Liberty Champion, Volume 7, Issue 8)

(The Liberty Champion, Volume 7, Issue 8) Lberty Unversty DgtalCommons@Lberty Unversty 1989 -- 1990 Lberty Unversty School Newspaper 10-25-1989 10-25-89 (The Lberty Champon, Volume 7, ssue 8) Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://dgtalcommons.lberty.edu/paper_89_90

More information

Extension of the Upper Extremity with Shoulder Movements

Extension of the Upper Extremity with Shoulder Movements Internatonal Journal of Mechancal Engneerng and Robotcs Research Vol. 4, No. 3, July 5 Extenson of the Upper Extremty wth Shoulder Movements Nobuak Nakazawa and oshkazu Matsu Dvson of Mechancal Scence

More information

VOL. II, No. 3 FEBRUARY, Vancouver's First City Fathers Courtesy D.C. Publiclty :Cuteau OFFICIAL PUBLICATION AF F I L I ATE D W I T H C. U N. A.

VOL. II, No. 3 FEBRUARY, Vancouver's First City Fathers Courtesy D.C. Publiclty :Cuteau OFFICIAL PUBLICATION AF F I L I ATE D W I T H C. U N. A. B.C.! VOL., No. 3 * FEBRUARY, 1943 Vancouver's Frst Cty Fathers Courtesy D.C. Publclty :Cuteau OFFCAL PUBLCATON OF THE 13.C. CV~UT U~()~ L~A.f3U~ AF F L ATE D W T H C. U N. A. Eye Effcency and the War

More information

part three Teaching and Preaching

part three Teaching and Preaching Re part three Practces for Teachng and Preachng TONY CAMPOLO 10 Preparng the Sol Layng the Groundwork for Sprtually Dynamc Speakng In the presence of God and of Chrst Jesus I gve you ths charge: Preach

More information

A Network Analysis of Hermeneutic Documents Based on Bible Citations

A Network Analysis of Hermeneutic Documents Based on Bible Citations A Network Analyss of Hermeneutc Documents Based on Bble Ctatons Hajme Mura (H_MURAI@valdes.ttech.ac.jp) Department of Value and Decson Scence, Tokyo Insttute of Technology -1-1, Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo

More information

Cedars, March 6, 1986

Cedars, March 6, 1986 Cedarvlle Unversty DgtalCommons@Cedarvlle Cedars 3-6-1986 Cedars, March 6, 1986 Cedarvlle College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://dgtalcommons.cedarvlle.edu/cedars Part of the Journalsm Studes

More information

The. Tech. VOL. IX. EBOSTON, APRIL 17, NO. 14.

The. Tech. VOL. IX. EBOSTON, APRIL 17, NO. 14. The Tech. VOL. X. EBOSTON, APRL 17, 1890. NO. 14. H E EG3H. Publshed on alternate Thursdays, durng the school year, by the students of the Massachusetts nsttute of Technology. BOARD OF EDTORS. HERBERT

More information

LET S CONTINUE TO PLANT SEEDS High Priest Dean Falconer

LET S CONTINUE TO PLANT SEEDS High Priest Dean Falconer The Ensgn Zarahemla Branch OCTOBER 2015 LET S CONTINUE TO PLANT SEEDS Hgh Prest Dean Falconer We have all heard of mracles. But do you want to see a real mracle take place now? If so, take a seed the sze

More information

Maurice Bessinger Interview

Maurice Bessinger Interview Interview number A-0264 in the Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007) at The Southern Historical Collection, The Louis Round Wilson Special Collections Library, UNC-Chapel Hill. Maurice Bessinger

More information

Improvements of Indoor Fingerprint Location Algorithm based on RSS

Improvements of Indoor Fingerprint Location Algorithm based on RSS Internatonal Journal of Scence Vol.4 No.1 017 ISSN: 1813-4890 Improvements of Indoor Fngerprnt Locaton Algorthm based on RSS Quyue Zhu a, Qang Yu b, Q Lu c and Kun Sh d School of Computer and Software

More information

services at Ritenour. "Several stu- comments about treatment; however, when asked to elaborate, the y

services at Ritenour. Several stu- comments about treatment; however, when asked to elaborate, the y S from the assocated press» K News Roundup: From the State, H Naton b World for Rtenour Patents 8 r \ The World Vetnam Ground War Casualty Statstcs Rse SAGON Casualty statstcs from battle acton s year

More information

JULY 23 GETTING CLOSER -TIME'S A WASTIN'

JULY 23 GETTING CLOSER -TIME'S A WASTIN' TH VOLUME XVII HUMBER 5 THE NINTH INFANTRY DIVISION ASSOCIATION $4.00 per year. (Ths $4 per year subscrpton also pays one year's dues.) Sngle copy, 35c. Columbus, Oho - 286 Zmpfer St., Columbus, Oho -

More information

Union Council Hayatabad-1, Peshawar Visual Profile PHASE 3 MOSQUE PHASE 3 SPORTS COMPLEX TATARA BILAL K-1 PARK BAGH E NARAAN ST 7 J-1 MOSQUE

Union Council Hayatabad-1, Peshawar Visual Profile PHASE 3 MOSQUE PHASE 3 SPORTS COMPLEX TATARA BILAL K-1 PARK BAGH E NARAAN ST 7 J-1 MOSQUE February 201 - Volume: 2, Issue 2 I THIS BULLETI Englsh ews Urdu ews Artcles Profle Peshawar Unon Councl Peshawar Vsual Profle Maps Poltcal Drectory 2-9 10-16 17-18 19-25 26-28 29-37 PML- doesn t see LG

More information

Courses Inactived Since Prior to 1992 and Courses Pending Deletion

Courses Inactived Since Prior to 1992 and Courses Pending Deletion Courses nactved Snce Pror to 1992 and Courses Pendng Deleton Dv Course Number and Ttle nactvaton Date 311 CAAS 400 / MHM 457. The Muscs of Afrcan Amercans. 311 CAAS 420 / Anthro. 347. Race and Ethncty.

More information

c1ti~'ll. Sch00L. The Sarcophagus Featuring Better Burials and Sanitation DECEMBER. j9j6 -Q--- Qt~ri6tmu6 ~rtttiu!lli

c1ti~'ll. Sch00L. The Sarcophagus Featuring Better Burials and Sanitation DECEMBER. j9j6 -Q--- Qt~ri6tmu6 ~rtttiu!lli ttl-._..._. '-a-.-.a-u- _U-U-.-. -..-.a- _.. '.- a.-a....--._ The Sarcophagus Featurng Better Burals and Santaton C9tle Qt~r6tmu6 ~rtttu!ll \ The new and old methods of bural. We Advertse to Educate To

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves 11-21-1929 The Wellesley News (11-21-1929) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostory.wellesley.edu/news

More information

(The Journal Champion Volume 1, Issue 21)

(The Journal Champion Volume 1, Issue 21) Lberty Unversty DgtalCommons@Lberty Unversty 1978 -- 1980 Lberty Unversty School Newspaper Sprng 2-23-1979 02-23-1979 (The Journal Champon Volume 1, ssue 21) Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://dgtalcommons.lberty.edu/paper_78_80

More information

SEVENTH DAY BAPTIST MINISTERS' CONFERENCE. The Annual. Indian Trails Camp, Milton, Wis. MAY 15-18, 1950

SEVENTH DAY BAPTIST MINISTERS' CONFERENCE. The Annual. Indian Trails Camp, Milton, Wis. MAY 15-18, 1950 The Annual SEVENTH DAY BAPTST MNSTERS' CONFERENCE MAY 15-18, 1950 ndan Trals Camp, Mlton, Ws. THE CONFERENCE LECfURES 7:30-8:30; Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday evenngs World War n the Soul: A New Theology

More information

DUKE UNIVERSITY CHAPEL

DUKE UNIVERSITY CHAPEL DUKE UNIVERSITY CHAPEL William H. Willimon, Dean of the Chapel and Professor of Christian Ministry Defining Justice With Jesus September 19, 1999 Matthew 20:1-16 My colleague, Alasdair Macintyre got it

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve Wellesley News Archves 3-14-1929 Wellesley News (03-14-1929) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostory.wellesley.edu/news

More information

Layton at Lakeshore! See pages 7, 8

Layton at Lakeshore! See pages 7, 8 Lakeshore Edton VOL. 4, N0.4 NUMBER COLLEGE OF APPLED ARTS AND TECHNOLOGY TUESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1983 Layton at Lakeshore! See pages 7, 8 ahhhmnnhmnhmhnflh^ xnsxoe nmhmhnmhhhh Ash Gamal s once agan n the

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves 5-31-1928 The Wellesley News (05-31-1928) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostorywellesleyedu/news

More information

Israel Journal of Entomology ISRAEL JOURNAL OF ENTOMOLOGY. Vol , Printed in Israel ISSN

Israel Journal of Entomology ISRAEL JOURNAL OF ENTOMOLOGY. Vol , Printed in Israel ISSN Edtor s message A new speces of Raglus Stål (Heteroptera: Rhyparochromdae) from Israel A. Nr 1 The Dctyophardae (Homoptera: Ccadna: Fulgorodea) of Israel A.F. Emeljanov, T. Stern, and A. Fredberg 7 The

More information

M HONOLULU. of the ;outh l'aelfle. officer of the

M HONOLULU. of the ;outh l'aelfle. officer of the rr... v jm jl.j - t VOL. XXXL NO. 67 HONOLULU, H. L: FRDAY, AUGUST 2, 896. SEM-WEEKL- WHOLE NO. 787. SEn-WEEKL- Y. SSUED TUESDAYS AND FRDAYS W. B. FARRNQTON, EDTOR. 8TJBSCBPTTOX RATES? Per month-...-..

More information

.., - FIFTY-FIRST ANNUAL SESSION OF FREE WILL BAPTIST NE' HARMONY CHURCH. Houston County, Ala., Oct. 8, 1936 OFFICERS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE

.., - FIFTY-FIRST ANNUAL SESSION OF FREE WILL BAPTIST NE' HARMONY CHURCH. Houston County, Ala., Oct. 8, 1936 OFFICERS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE ,,-_,----- --- --- -- - -- ---- ---- -,-------~ - ------~--~, - : ) MNUTES Of The FFTY-FRST ANNUAL SESSON Of The- State Lne Assocaton, l 1 OF FREE WLL BAPTST Held Wth, NE HARMONY CHURCH Houston County,

More information

StenoTran BETWEENIENTRE: RICHARD WARMAN. andlet ELDON WARMAN BEFOREIDEVANT: L'AGENTE DU GREFFE

StenoTran BETWEENIENTRE: RICHARD WARMAN. andlet ELDON WARMAN BEFOREIDEVANT: L'AGENTE DU GREFFE CANADAN TRBUNAL CANADEN HUMANRGHTS DES DROTS TRBUNAL DE LA PERSONNE CANADA BETWEENENTRE: Complanant RCHARD WARMAN Plagnant, andlet CANADAN HUMAN RGHTS COMMSSON Comnnsson Commsson! Respondent andlet ELDON

More information

SECOND CONVOCATION AT HUNTINGTON HALL Pres. Jordan of Leland Stanford to Speak on "The Blood of the Nation." TWO O'CLOCK TODAY.

SECOND CONVOCATION AT HUNTINGTON HALL Pres. Jordan of Leland Stanford to Speak on The Blood of the Nation. TWO O'CLOCK TODAY. - ;. ': : r1 TE0Ct-H VO,. XXX. NO. 43 BOSTON, MASS., FRDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1910 PRCE TWO CENTS MADERO SAYS HE S PRESDENT OF MEXCO COURSES N FRESHMAN MLTARY SCENCE ARE N FULL SWNG Toneon Reported Captured

More information

Kenyon Collegian - October 18, 1984

Kenyon Collegian - October 18, 1984 Dgtal Kenyon: Research, Scholarshp, and Creatve Exchange The Kenyon Collegan Archves 08984 Kenyon Collegan October 8, 984 Follow ths and addtonal works at: https://dgtal.kenyon.edu/collegan Recommended

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves 10-5-1911 The Wellesley News (10-05-1911) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostory.wellesley.edu/news

More information

IS-GIVEN HONOR HIGH HONORS AT ESTABLISH BOARD C.ONDUCTING HUNT PRESS MEETINfl Petition Will--s;-Presented to

IS-GIVEN HONOR HIGH HONORS AT ESTABLISH BOARD C.ONDUCTING HUNT PRESS MEETINfl Petition Will--s;-Presented to ance asses has a Baver Wnfeld, l be tred wth the permanent ~E" am~ N" " f.- :\. Dont ;Fo~get! Tomorrow s Js![otJters Day Y 9U Kn!)w Vol. XV. No. 29 Pu~lshed Weekly by the Students of. Wake Forest College

More information

New -Concept In Constitution

New -Concept In Constitution A DORSTYs ROBBNS WN HE STONY BROOK # SOUNDNGS LT. CONTEST Ad L one Eutors t ot go J A c bounangs are pleased to announce the wnners' of tfe frst Annual Lterary Contest. George Dorsty, '69, was the recpent

More information