Brooklyn Law School - Chancellor Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY)

 - Class of 1933

Page 1 of 172

 

Brooklyn Law School - Chancellor Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1933 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 172 of the 1933 volume:

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W .. i V I ' f V 'X .-:wg-My f iii AY Mfr X 5,54 ,L- ,S ,. ,, W, , . . 175.2 ,,, 5514? L'f ,.5ff . M 4- . . X ...,, - f A f LIMS BRCCKLY LAW S CH 00 L, STL WRE C IVER ITV BROOKLY BWYORK -', u fy-453-430 QQ, ,ww A , 1' XX gmyiq 4 ,- X N O ! - w ,, .- '.,Qi:f. QQ 4L,il1X,, ' fl,ff' . pri if -14 , X, . X 55 A A My X, X C x S, ff f f X Q v , xz ,X 0 , x 4. ,, ff I X 1 fu, ,,. .X ..E!A.,,, L f,.y ,- X ,f X ..,.-,ns 4- .- L41-pf Q-ff. ,. 5 ,f -17 :Q 1' :,4'X'f,,,:.QX.-Qs,-.iz,tx XQXM XQM .- -WRX! Q f,.x,f-,4-rx-ffXy .X -M ---'W . M, A ,. P-,g,,,X. Q,-M . H4 -.Q yy, - ., .. X1 W-,.b.v., ,gm , L, - fw Q , E if ., . , .,., . . X ., X v- , , Q 44 -1-M, NM., .,.,,,. Q W-.4 ,.,,.,..4,q:f,,a,as mx. ,, X mme ,X- .ff Q, A, f y.3f9X , f,g1,,,mX:,,0,,X,.faQ QW. Z,....,, , - V --,XM V Q , . . VX- bww- Hi 'JZXZ 542 'll :ss 7 6 VIEWS 49 FACULTY 49 SENIORS T HI Pe. p1i5hCC And n' of the O 49 JUNIORS 49 FRESHMEN 49 GRADUATE SCHOOL 6? PRACTICE COURT 49 ACTIVITIES 49 COLLEGE CLUBS 49 ERATERNITIES 499. SORORITIES our gr! this an such oi Fc tion rel Contact of our charact And it Le begiimi ing a 0 an unef maintai We thinkin' fare, au lending meet ag Gu 0 EDITORIAL I HIS volume represents our last appearance as a physical unit. Hence it is perhaps appropriate to retrospect for a moment. What have we accom plished in the last three years? Learned a little law and made a few friends. And now we are to disband. But is that all? Have we reached the parting nb, 0 Ill 4 4 of the ways-that inevitable parting which we have come to associate with our graduations from successive schools' and colleges? Is this farewell? Is this another meaningless step in the general direction of the future?-It is such only in retrospect. 4 For this is Commencement--in the real sense of the word. This gradua- tion represents no breach in pleasant relationships, no cessation of intellectual contacts. It is merely the signification of our concerted debut into the world of our choice-the legal world. But to what extent we are to retain our characteristics as an entity in this new world depends solely upon ourselves. And it is of this that we must think. y Let us face the facts. We are not entering a receptive world, we are not beginning from scratch with those who have come before us, we are not receiv- ing a cordial invitation from our harried older colleagues. We are entering an unequal struggle and will be required to shift for ourselves. . junless. . .we maintain our group solidarity. .- We are speaking of group solidarity in a restricted sense. To us it implies thinking as members of a homogeneous group striving for the common wel- fare, acting harmoniously for the common interest, and, wherever necessary, lending a helping hand. With these principles in mind I know that we shall meet again soon. Until that time- Good-bye and good luck, counsellor. j IsRAEL M. BELFER, Editor L 9 if ' DR. EDWIN WELLING CADY THE B- TI fit th4 ' tio att fc QP an im pr Al St: A QP la' an at W pl m ad Tl af pa th In W2 tO da St: BROOKLYN LAW SCHOOL ST. LAWRENCE UNIVERSITY I .g..y!4.g. In order that the Brooklyn Law School may be of assistance to its graduates, the following is oEered as a summary of the steps to be taken from the time of the completion of the law school course until admission to the Bar of the State of New York. Keep for reference until your admission. THE BAR EXAMINATION . The application for this examination should consist of: Q15 an affidavit stating age, place of birth, citizenship and residence in New York State for not less than six months immediately preceding the date of examination, Q25 a. certified copy of the credentials upon which the law school registra- tion was based, either a law student qualifying certificate or a college degree, Q31 a certificate of attendance from law school g Q41 two specimens of applicants handwriting, Q51 a fee of .1525 fcheck need not be certifiedj. Attention is called to the necessity for the proper execution of the applicant's affidavits. The venue must be that of the place where the acknowledgment is taken, and the jurat must be properly executed by the notary public. Any change in the jurat must be initialed by the notary public. The application and all papers filed in support thereof must be presented in the proper form for flat filing. Applications for the Bar Examination must be received by the Board of Law Examiners, 120 State Street, Albany, New York, twenty days before the date set for the examination. A certified copy of a certificate of commencement of clerkship need not be sent with the Bar application unless the applicant is applying for examination on four years of law study, combining law school attendance and law office clerkship. Certified copies of law student qualifying certincates and certificates of commencement of clerkship are obtained from the Clerk of the Court of Appeals at Albany, New York, for a fee' of 6151 each. When the application to take the Bar Examination has been approved, a card giving the time and place of the examination is sent toi the applicants residence. This card must be presented for ad- mission to the examination room. The examination in substantive law is given on the first dayg adjective law is given the second day. The names of the successful applicants are published in the leading newspapers, and, in addition, applicants are advised by mail of the results of the examination. Those who fail, in whole or in part, may review their papers at Albany, N. Y., within a period of four weeks from the date of the announcement of the Bar Examination results. In applying for a re-examination, no further fee need be paid, nor .are additional proofs of hand- writing required. To entitle an applicant to a re-examination, a notice of intention should be sent' to the Clerk of the State Board of5Law Examiners, 120 State Street, Albany, N. Y., at least twenty days before the date set for the examination. With the notice, the applicant should file'an afhdavit stating actual residence within this State for six months prior to the examination date, and stating h l'cant is not ineligible under Rule 10 of the Rules of the Court of Appeals Qwhich also that t e app 1 . i t relates to lapse of required time between Bar Examination attemp sj . E ination will not be eligible for re-examina-i Those who fail to pass either all or part of the Bar xam . th mination is for the initial attempt only. Applicants who fail both parts of tion in June, at exa ' . the june examination shall not be eligible for the October examination, but may take part the next M h examination' applicants who fail one part of the June examination may be succeeding arc , Q , , A re examined in that part in October g applicants who fail half or all the October examination may take the March examination. After the third successive failure to pass the Bar Examination, an applicant may not take the next two successive examinations. CLERKSHIP Graduates of colleges or universities approved by the State Department of Education are not required to serve a clerkship before being admitted to the Bar. This waiver of clerkship applies both to those who had been awarded their degrees before admission to law school, and to those whose degrees were conferred during their period of law study, or at any time: prior to the application for admis- sion to the Bar. Non-college graduates shall serve a regular clerkship for at least one year before being eligible for admission to the Bar. The present Rules of the Court of Appeals make no stipulation as to the time of such service, i.e. before or after the Bar Examination. Clerkship may not be accredited if served concurrent with law school attendance. The school year at the Brooklyn Law School oliicially ends. on May 31st. Clerkship time may be counted beginning june lst. . When clerkship is commenced, a certificate of commencement of clerkship should be sent, to the Clerk of the Court of Appeals at Albany, N. Y. This certificate is prepared by the attorney under whose immediate supervision the clerkship is served. The form may be obtained from the set of bar application blanks, from the formfbooks or from legal stationers. Since clerkship time counts only from the date of the filing of the certificate, it isadvisable to obtain a certified copy of the certificate of commencement of clerkship from the Clerk of the Court of Appeals for a fee of 351. This certificate gives the exact date of tiling and may be used in proof of clerkship-time for the Committee on Character and Fitness. No application for the filing of a certificate of commencement of clerkship mme pro mm' will be entertained by the Court of Appeals. Not more than four weeks vacation Qnot the same as one monthj' may be taken within the ear of prescribed clerkship. ' ' Y Ifhflrlf Clifkship be interrupted, it is discretionary with the Committees on Character and Fitness w e er t e time already served can be counted toward clerkship time. N - l - OH C0 lege graduates maj Offer H fourth year of law study fthe graduate coursej in an approved l h 1 - . aw sc oo as the full equivalent of the required year of clerkship, provided the course prescribed for the d t C1 . of timeigfa 11216 egree be successfully completed. This course need not be taken in one year ich na- of ext be nay an red Ose 'ees nis- ble the 'ear ing the der of nts the 31. the be ear ess 'ed ,ed 2211? CHANGE OF RESIDENCE XVHILE AWAITING ADMISSION Although a residence of six months within the state, prior to the date of the Bar Examination, must be established for eligibility to such examination, yet no person may apply for admission to the Bar unless he is a bona fide resident of the department in which his application for admission is made and has been such for six monthsg also, he must still be a resident of that department when sworn in. A change in residence from one department to another, while awaiting admission to the Bar, necessitates a re-commencement of the required six months period. APPEARANCE BEFORE COMMITTEE ON CHARACTER AND FITNESS The Rules of the Courttof Appeals permit an applicant to file ani application for admission to the Bar with the Committee on Character and Fitness forty days before the completion of the period of clerkship, subject to the completion of that clerkship before certification by such committee. The application papers may be obtained from the Secretary of the Committee on Character and Fitness in the department of the applicant's residence, upon presentation of a certificate from the State Board of Law Examiners, and a certified copy of the certincate of commencement of clerkship, in cases where clerkship service is required by rules. After the announcement of the successful Bar Examination candidates, the State Board of Law Examiners recommends to the Committees on Character and Fitness the applicants for admission who reside in their-respective departments. ' tSince the Committees on Character and Fitness of the First and Second Departments serve the metropolitan area where many applicants reside, the procedure for admission in those two departments is given.J C FIRST DEPARTMENT Appellate Division Courthouse: 51 Madison Avenue, New York, N. Y. A . ffor New York and Bronx Countiesj . In this department, all contacts with the candidates for admission to the Bar are made through the New York Law journal. No personal inquiries are received at the ofiice of the committee. After each Bar Examination, the successful candidates for admission are summoned, through'the New York Law journal, to call at the office of the Character Committee, 51 Madison Avenue, New York City, to obtain from the Secretary their requisite papers and instructions for admission. A date for the filing of these papers is subsequently published in the New York Law journal, and the candidates papers must be filed as directed. Each affidavit must have the proper venue and jurat. When the Committee on Character and Fitness has approved these applications, the candidates are recommended to the Appellate Division for admission to the Bar. The candidates are again re- quested, through the medium of the New York Law journal, to appear on a specified date to take the oath of admission to be administered by the Appellate Division of the First Judicial Department. In this department no introduction of the candidate to a member of the Committee on Character .. . , I ' h . ku and Fitness is required. Each candidate must be sponsored by an attorney w o 1S own both to a member of the committee and to the candidate, or by an employer who in turn is sponsored by an attorney known to a member of the committee and also to such employer. A . SECOND DEPARTMENT I Room 916, Ivlunicipal Building, Brooklyn, N. Y. ffor Kings, Queens, Nassau, Suffolk and Richmond Countiesj th C mmittee on Character and Fitness of this department receives from the State Board When e o of Law Examiners the names of the successful Bar Examination candidates, the committee sends ' d th committee and must registration cards to such candidates. They must return the car s to e state thereon if they are exempt from clerkship, or if not, the date of completion of their clerkship. These cards are then classiiied according to the prospective dates of eligibility for admission. Those who are exempt from clerkship or whose clerkships have been served, receive personal notice to appear in groups to receive blanks for- admission and instructions. The necessity for proper venues and jurats in the ailidavits is stressed. . - In this department, each candidate must be introduced personally to a member of the Committee on Character and Fitness by an attorney known to both. Q When the instructions issued' by the Committee on Character and Fitness have been followed, each candidate, when eligiblelfor admission, files his papers in the office of the Committee on Character and Fitness. A copy of the questionnaire which was submitted at the time of registration in law school must be submitted as a part of the applicationf papers. In due course, each candidate is notified by post card of the time and place when he is to appear before one member of the Committee on Character and Fitness to be examined by him. If hisexamina- tion is successful, then he is summoned before the entire Committee on Character and Fitness, and if final approval is granted by this committee, he is told when to appear before the Appellate Divi+ sion to be sworn in. ADMISSION TO THE BAR On the date set for the admission of the candidates whose moral and general fitness has been certid fied by the Committee on Character and Fitness, the candidates present themselves to the Court of the Appellate Division at the time specified. The oath of allegiance to the United States is then taken, the oath of admission to the Bar admin- istered, and the Roll of Attorneys is signed. A formal certificate of admission to the Bar ma ' . ybe obta df h Cl k - sion, the fee for which is 35. me rom t Q er of the Appellate Dm Qs the finall step, an oath, prepared and executed by each candidate, attesting his admission must e sent to t e Clerk of the Court of Appeals. This oath should be accompanied by 21 fee of twenty- five cents An aclcnowled ' ' ' i - gment of its receipt is sent b the Cl k d ' is thus licensed to practice law. Y er , an the newly admitted attorney V .rd Ids lst ip. ice per tee sch ICI ,ZW orc na- md ivi- -rh- of 1111- '1Vl- must mY 'ney U0 I x O Qggfnlgx-E' Wu TO DR. EDWIN WELLING CADY AN ABLE TEACHER, SINCERE FRIEND AND BELOVED CONFIDANT, WE REVERENTLY DEDICATE THIS VOLUME 9. 9 9 RICHARD EDDY SYKES Page Seven WILLIAM PAYSON RICHARDSON My mf the Senior thorough SC juStif1ed full of ygur inte Confident hop for successfu Althoug Class of 193 this message I shall r 'in a measure proud of ye education. I can only dire yours, and yt Let me Aristocrats i1 pared for di: up to the hig in poise, in those in autt 111 Continuing X -Qffzonceflor I MESSAGE ERoM THE DEAN My most cordial congratulations to you, the young men and women of the Senior Class, who for three years have so successfully met the tests of thorough scholarship in the layv. You have proven your ability and you have justified fully the faith the faculty reposed in you. The many manifestations of your interest in, and serious devotion to, the study of law inspire in us a confident hope that you will achieve a fulfillment of your cherished ambitions for successful professional careersg A ' V - T Although I am not-personally acquainted with all the members ofthe Class of 1933, yet my interest in each of you is personal. Therefore, accept this message as an expression of my interest in youhindividually. ' E T I shall ever be watchful of your future progress, for your achievements, ina measure, will reflect the teachings of your Alma Mater. You should be proud of your present accomplishments, for your education has been self- education.. No one can educate you. The faculty of an educational institution can only direct you, it cannot teach you to become great lawyers. The task is yours, and yours only. g Let me urge you, without becoming snobbish, to become aristocrats. Aristocrats in the sense that you, because of your preeminent learning, are pre- pared for distinguished service and for social responsibility. May you measure up to the highest traditions of the law in learning, in personality, in appearance, in poise, in courtesy, and in your responsibility to your fellow attorneys, to those in authority, and to society. If this is your goal, you are fully justified in continuing your preparation for the law. NW. PAYSON RICHARDSON, Dean 'fs-74? 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AX X , . po v 'lt E ig? 1 A O 1'-asf Y'mIz'e fx .z -Q jhe, 1933-4 FACULTY OF LAW SCHOOL CHARLES WILLIAM GERSTENBERG LEON GRANT GODLEY JOHN HOWARD EASTERDAY Vice Demi THOMAS POLLOCK PETERS A EDWIN WELLING CADY WILLIAM VALENTINE HAOENDORN FRANKLIN FERRIS RUSSELL CA CLARENCE GRC I GEORGE HARG r JORN L Cfzaliceffof Q- lx 'Y 'gun FACULTY OF LAW SCHOOL CLARENCE GROVER BACHRACH ,A A ,, , 0- ,f I-fi, L Af' f ' VH w 5 a J x 'Pg -v'5 , N 'J . Q Q: U, ' 4 , ,L I f f 4, W ,I J ff. 2 I Lf N193 wif -I .4-my ,, ,ffgj 4 .E fgfifkgyed . 2 U , ' ..,f1 . 2:5 . KW fake' , 'wzetfffg-.2? TW- .-I - ' f . ',,45 .2.. , fm ' 1 ,f 1 -' 1.--Mwfffffwf Rafe' A ff ff 4,. !. .,' I I-1 , af. A, ff ff fe 'Q!,lffff f ,f f el'-f ' i. .fweififv f f ' 1 GEORGE HAROLD FOLWELL N . ' V? -1 - , -1. ,Q ML1 V, 5: -, QS- my .2 A .- . KX a x ' WN4 va R 1 X Aw ,, ., R A R RX , Q X AA LA L R R R X? Lx VSV it 55 R A 1 ww 'RR L N gg N RX - R 'W RQ As x Rf, M A :AO M, X A ff 5 Q sf, .lv 4' .- yu V 5.,1f . 14 'sf I 1 ,O - ,,,.,.-Alf' QW ,AV e X Q x A i R Q A Q W E Q3 ' 1 ' 'f' A . ,QL . . a R- A I . ,, H, ky -1 QA vig, ,-'tfkfkigp-,QA f A A 'il :Av A lf. Mk,-e:A,w - , ,M :'f:.f-max A A. fwgsfw A5542-mf'- A -':. Ri, . A-X . ww-H - w 19,1 .L ,RSX L'S5:15Xf'f.w3f A A ' gffm-yr'-,w:fAs Lu- , AXA ApL.'.Lq:x--M X f R . ROY FIELDING WRIGLEY DONALD FARRINGTON SEALY ALLEN BROWN FLOUTON JAMES LAWRENCE MURPHY MARKLEY FMNKHAM M 4.1 'nr WW I , Page Thirteen X FACULTY OF LAW SCHOO Qhe 7933 J , JOHN JAMES BENNETT, JR. A., Mg, Q It M I ,, .L ' ' 'wa I F 1. X-W5 4, s!2 ' 1 ' Af -. ,, M mm A f ,f , W3 f f 4 B y gin 4 ff , ...KM ,U Aggqzmf vw f 7 . . A fx W A V 9 My 1 Q Em - --Re E- , 'jwm,1w , . A .PJ ,V Tig' ' ,'v '-iffm. A . 4'fj,ff,j5s135i'Qg,+ ' . . - . W ,.,l,.g,f0-:A 91737. Z f A 1 IQ wf5:gg,g,, ffwgwwq .W 50535. X ? ZA W W , 4 f A 9' C MR XA' if? wb ' S, X555 4 J' gk , 2 Q A YV ff5',?,AS 7 ,W k ag WA, 1 I., 1 fx 7 in V ,UN-, , fig, A f, A v 7 nju, z 'iv Yi M 'f 4 K '45 ws 253415, f 44 'Mg 0 fb ,017 ,y I VM 1 1152 Q , Pdgu Fon rfeezy ABRAHAM ROTWEIN f f'.'Yi-WN' xv in Java . .4 ,-fg.fff,'-, -r HMM x,.W,gA,.W . vw, 7 f y yf, ., .f,,. . R fv -Qf2fbZz4,1'2,:'ff ' If , -ff ' -' .EJ N 'A 1 - v.zf4Fnfw . . f ' M .' .Hz-rr?--Q.-'N: : 1 2 233-'rar-I-vi' 1 W-'QQ f - EDWARD ADOLPH VOSSELER EDWARD GERARD O,NEILL RICHARD JosE PH MALONEY . Q19 JOHN CLARK KNOX ,- O XX f Qfqw X, X X ,WW .. ww .X MN,-N .- ,Nw-by X. .N,,.A..m' -,fvww - f 1'-,fp ,f X5 X X Q . ,, 'XV.C1 09 ff X3 , Q 7 E 0 J J 'A 1 XXX X X X. X X X W XX My X X Q A, ,X . 5 -HX X N ,AX ,. . f ff fy, 1 M X X W .f Q A f , XX, X? .X X X X If X f X ,QV X! X X XX Q, XXX l 'Aff X XX,f'Xf,fx , X Q . f ' X NI f ff 'X X X5 ff' ' A ff Q X: C? I' MALONEY N -' .f M1 V CNOX I X -MX X , , ,,,.. 1-1, .. X w 'Ig , ' wmwXf1.X. , . X, Nx,.X. . . . , , .A , , X, f . 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I ,V . , ,J I- U' :ff X lwwaX'fw.,sX'.fxf.4a ff' -'avi-21iUW,XNz6T: Y:-X' W, D XXV f ,I 5:1 '- WX GQMIVZ EXXQEXX .A Mew W www .XM-,fr X . -' X ff 0 -A m f' QSSWZX ,, ff X A ., Y U f . , l, .X 44 !qgVf' Q - AXE , w e . Qs XXV, ,...,,.. . .,, gg, MA ww E -Af - X X SW' '.VfX,,fx?'A.AXVp'.' 'X T1 :WNW 'X- : ' X GTZ? ' W 1 rf! 'NYT N . 77 L'3f,o. f V, K an sa, ,4 y. ,..,,, W., f Mr . . ,,,.,g. 4,5 .lfsX?,.,,sqz'g1g-rvfg-5-f-fX,,., 'XXM5 , 4, ..,f,xX. M, ri .. , 2 'KVJ N, J,W,,,,,,...g,7.,,,, + Xgyzf. vOQ5,,..,W,,,. Mm m Ib '1.f,1Xf1L'-0 U' 'ff ', ' .:7 X,1' f , 4'5 f ' . :-,, v'f ',:aXiii?7-X 5 Alas L ff X, XX I. Off' xx 'aff 53.277 rv., -V S' Z,.,. , awww . frm qw, , Q9 W VAQ f QQ 4 XJ f QMX AMN f mf X. ,ZX XX A X A X4 f wr X M fiff f5 NWQ9X 'QFMWWK 'QWS KWXN yo WSQ4 Ax ff m f MWWV EAXXKXXUS JS fgwgim ff-MAG? ' 'xgffx X W- f J f , Eg, 'X-' f ffm iiiv pw fy fX?74W2 !wZfA x ' f X ffm? ,. , . ., V. ,. ,, f . ,. -,X 4 X A , AQ .MX X .. W- Q Aw' ,f,.,..fi X. ,,f -wSy,f?ffXXM- --.3,,.X.14:X Qs, , X as 4, X256-H? M. .n , X fi-.Q 'Xf f X' K :X v--- X-mf? : ' f sw.: . f QS , X VI W S KT e T... LL ,fee ee fe Y -Q. xx X S ENTRANCE RICHARDSON HALL 5 .5 it :fm it f ,, it T 1 ,a so t 4 THE PANELS RACING the entrance to RICHARDSON HALL are several beautiful and appropriate panels by the distinguished artist, Miss Hazel Clere. They are symbolic of several codes of Law and picture, in allegorical fashion, the famous historical and legendary figures who have been responsible for the formation and development of our present-day system of jurisprudence. Among these symbolizations arez- . THE CODE OF HAMMURAE1-The earliest vvtttten law. THE MOSAIC LAW-A cotzttlhatlotfz to legal development Page Sixteen thtottghottt the wotltl. .ag xv zzagif, 1 s THE GREEK LAW-A step m the eat-ly alevelopmevt of the ' law. THE MAGNA CHARTA-Englanavs guarantee of the fury System anti tltte process of law. THE ROMAN LAW-Both Papmtatt ami jastmian. These have hatl the most ptfofotmel tnflttettce of all laws ana' cotles. FRENCH LAW-A anion hetween the lawof cttstom aml the philosophy of the Ftench Revolution. THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES-The 161-st lzheral and democratic constitution. l l 1 -i-1i af, E164 Z af . Z 1 t 4 fe 2 7 Vw sf B3 .utiful and ere. They lshion, the ,le for the Je. Among If ue My fe J ae 'yt M. AQ Cfzafzceflof' I Page Sevenie n I ,ff K fl XXV' , jj I 193 3 I 4 LOBBY RICHARDSON HALL P ge E gl: J V , , .I ffm 'f f W 634 H 543 W0 v - 5 5 1 Fw! W W , 'J NX R. Xi gi 'U Vllfzsg NA.4 Lv CW b Q Q 5 j C WTR jfa c, 19334. ,,... N O ,EAST WING OF LIBRARY PgT13 I auo-fffuafnl a3zfd --Nxt, Q x , X N 1 N xg - ' , ggfiiil XQ J iii M XXV. K Xwl Xkxxfgifgi. X 1 -X55 WM 2 2 4 Z 5 2 1 1 a?vd l aa.cq1-.fyzzan C! , 'L W iw p if QW 27 V Wfx 5 W 74 W an I We I E ix 372 1 Evhu. 34,2 Q1 x ' . 5 H,-, ,yy 7' sw. 3 L 55 mf f 1. e, , ff' 1 ' zl , iff ,I W ff? Q7 f' iw? V, s any-Mfuanzl .agvd Q A xg r , X: 553, MUS R155 ggigg Y x X Q Y + -F Sf' s. 3, S 3 YP' 719 L O 'H i X xw Mfrs gg in- Qhe, 7933- E ...-- Q- W. QS f f ff 7 L Z O J WOMEN'S LOUNGE P--fi! 7'f1'L Ilj -jfx uanaf-ffyuafnl a5'vd 6:5 zz , in JAG., 1933 nd, I, O P-zgu 7 zz mtg elgbt pf. Q Zz 2 Z LZ M W w 4 ,Z 4 L ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF f , W I I f 1 I s I s ' I L 'Cf7dI4ZCQ!!OI' ff. I 54 SO EANOR L. CDV' ' REGISTRAR 4 41 v -57 Q50 'HOLLAND x QLJY2 FRg3j,x 55C3'To'n-xa RA f 4 CARA F. swENsoN SECRETARY M.MPQ U RS ,wfh ffffy ,WZ I 'XV I 9319? g 5-X O IWW ' ff fWCMff,f' ' , , , g9',,!f,yf.,yf wwf , ,J ,, My!- ff! f X Page Twenty-niff? fans I I O Page Thirty I THE CHANCELLOR STAFF 4 Q N ISRAEL M. BELEER Editor-in-Chief MAURICE S. BOGART ADDISON B. CLOHOSEY Affociale Edizor B71-fiffgff Manager I ASSOCIATE BOARD , EUGENE S. LEVY IRVING KRAMER ' IRVING M. REIMAN Q MILTON G. GERSHENSON N. KENNETH GROSS ' Aclivitiey Fmternilief HOWARD GLIXMAN J. JOEL LEVY Dafa Feature! STAFF KERMIT BALLIN MAX FEFFERMAN MORRIS DIAMOND ESTHER GOLDMAN MARTIN FRIEDMAN FRIEDA MILLER HILLIARD SCHULBERG I x - Cfzanceflol' THE CI-IANCELLOR ISRAEL M. BELFER '33 Edilor ADDISON B. CLOHOSEY '33 MAURICE S. BOGART '34 Bmineff Mnnczge1' Axxociale Editof' 1-f f' If 0 Page Tbifiy-one Q av A o 0 S6l!Zl5 2162 multi comilimfii ' 4 -,Y H f 5 1, G ,,,4 . 4,,f , , 1,V,,,,,, , ,W ',,, , fy' , fkfff, .,,,-, W 1 .4 Muay- , : 1 if f f f' , 'Zh 7 2 W, ff f ,f ,. f,,f.f ,.f , , f, ,Ny-M 1 5? , i., ' ., 'X' 3' ' ,5'73?l55f?,'x j ,q.,,w, , . ,,,, 'Wd '. 4 . f 5 'ff ,il wr , fa, 4 f iff' , ,Wy ,, '77 Q' ,fir ,, ., , fm 0, QM ,Z 9 4 f , M f ,, ,A ,, 4 , 2 ' 7,53 ilfv, . f wf. J ', , 3 ,. ,QM Xf it ,fxn f f I 1 3-' J ff! Q y fi Z Q 5 ii, x, 5' I f if 2,34 X X Q A M , 9 X fl flu 5 X. J Zig' 3 N' K xx X 1, ,f 1 , , ,, 0 y 5 .X f , , ,, ,X , 7 ,f ,Q Z Q if 3 J f ,Q WL, i aw , My X I I x ,ls- ZK E 1 W XX 57 i 1 y fl 5 i X f , ' ff Q g X f f , , ft A ,X ' 3 I X f 27 ff! 1 E S fi f ' MQ I f ,ns Z f f,,, ' .. ' ,f 1' 'KVI , ' f ia, f gE Qi' L . ff, V, , I , ,,,. , , ., , J 29, . ,ff 1 W, 25, 3 , XA ,'-7? ' ., 2 Z i Z f f j. f Yi, Q6 M 'ifffj fi f 9 3 .'. 5 4.1, ' 7 fl ff f V ' , ,- W- 2 ,. 5 mu: , ' K-WY -fff -,fi ' fi, Aypflaf W U ff f Q I NA, , X f A I 4 Advf.-ya., f , , ff 1 ' 24- Z. 'X f Z 1 M, ,'4f 5 . '52-Nr if. If f'! Z I 6 7 f X ' f X' if Z f 2, f f , A 4 ff 314 4 f , aa f 'X' Q7 f ' f ff 14 f f 0 f 4 f,o 8,2 afwf if ja fy? F, Qy ff X fix gg A Z 2 ,f , ff f ef, f ff Sf f AO ' Z ' 2 , ,' 7. , 25 , ,S ff. A .A M is www, 1, V, 2, V 1 - M, -fax x,, Mm g fl f ,X fi x w x E 1 K f G: ijfza. 1933 J J AHERBACH, HELEN ABRAHAM, W. HOWARD Brooklyn, N. Y. New York City l Hunter College Seth Low College ADLER, RUBIN R. ALLEN, JR., HOWARD N. Brooklyn, N. Y. Pauling, N. Y. C. C. N. Y. St. JOl1n,s College ALLEN, MARY LOU B. ALPER, S. ALLAN West Brighton, S. I. Bronx, N- Y- Barnard College, B.A. Forflllllm U- l'.1.Q4' llllvirfny-fo,'1r -, Cfzemcelfof' Ziff WW 2' 1, A M! if M. 4 ff 2 LAN ', Y. IU. 00 W E '- ,fag Af ANDEYVELT, SAMUEL ANDROVETTE, MURRAY B 00kl3'Y1, N- Y- Touenville, S. l. Brooklyn College Manhattan, B.A. APPELSON, RAY L. Brooklyn, N. Y. B,klyn Pharmacy, Ph.G. ARONOWITZ, MEYER ARovsKY, NORMAN N. Brooklyn, N. Y. New York City St. .l0hn's College Fordham U- ARMITAGE, NAOMI Brooklyn, N. Y. U. of Minnesota .x w ,,I,, 'X ue! Xxx N Page Tfoirly-jive .N 1 H I . . ,.,g,,',- . W .X .. E ,MWK ,, . 52455 1. f . SYZWSW, v -mga AXELROD, GLADYS R. BARNETT, EDWARD I' Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn: N- Y' Hunter College, BA. Long Island U' BARTFIELD, JACOB BASS, HARRY New York City Brooklyn, N. Y. C. C. N. Y. Lehigh U. S F ,,, , if 1 ,fl , . BATKIN, SOLOMON BELFER, ISRAEL M. New York City Brooklyn, N. Y. Fordham U. C. C. N. Y., B.A. Hiya '1'f'f:','A',-.mfg- Chancellor Q I I ' X A 0 BENDERSON, JACOB BENENSON, WILLIAM B1f17f1l0, N- Y- New York City U. of Buffalo Rutgers U. vYL l BEIIEANO, LEoN PHILIP BERZIN, JULIUS E. New York City Brooklyn, N. Y. New York U. Long Island U. I 55 ? . lg 3, limi ,1- if' ww ' BLASI PETER BLUMENFELD M. H. Mt. Vernon N. Y. New York City ' Columbia U. St. John's College l I gf I We 1 2 4 9 9 M. 3 . Y 3.A. Page Tlairly-Ieven Q ke. 7933 I ,,. Q 5 I Boms, BENJAMIN BORIS, SAMUEL C. Brooklyn, N. Y. Rich. Hill, L. I. Fordham U. St. John,s College I I 'h 'Is liigz l H111-I, .rf BIIAFE, DANIEL Bronx, N. Y. C. C. N. Y., B. BRAFF, ISIDORE I. I Brooklyn, N. Y. C. C. N. Y., B.S.S. I P BRANIJT, BERNARD BREITBART, ABRAHAM BUSCH Brooklyn, N. Y. New Rochelle, N. Y. Brooklg' 5yl'H1'11Se U. C. C. N. Y., B.A. C. C N P I I f I V E H Cfzencelfof X f fa if W fl! ,ff ff xW f 1 i ' 1 fy! ff f' I - if Z QM, 4. fgf , Mx Y AM Y. LA. 0 BRENNAN, EUGENE BRODY, Im-ING Bfooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. Georgetown U., B.A. New York U., B.S. BROWN, SAMUEL BRUNJES, HERBERT Brooklyn, N, Y, Brooklyn, N. Y. C. C. N. Y., B.S. Fordham U- BUSCH, BENJAMIN CALLERY, JOHN R. Brooklyn, N. Y. Weehawken, N. I- C. C. N. Y. U. S. Military Academy Page Tlaifly-nifze G, ffm, 2933 Eiblgil ' ' '- Nik .b CAMAC, ISIDOHE CANAVACIOL, F- P- Bronx, N. Y. C. C. N. Y. New York City Fordham U. PJ-Qc Fnflj ll CARLINSKY, RICHARD CASSEN, MANUEL Brooklyn, N. Y. Bronx, N. Y. Seth Low College C. C. N. Y. CATALANO, G. THOMAS CAVANACH, Enwfmn F Brooklyn, N. Y. Bayswater, L. I. Columbia U. Georgetown U., B.A. l N 214 an -.. COHEN Chancellor 1- M22 5 .Lk 'VMC i CLAYMAN, ISAAC CLOHOSEY, AnmsoN B. Bronx, N. Y. East Orange. N. 1. Tufts College, BS. Seton Hull, BA. COHEN, HAROLD W. COHEN9 ISADORE Port Richmond, S. I. Brooklyn, N. Y. C. C. N. Y. C. C. N. Y. COHEN, JOSEPH H. COHEN, LILLIAN R. Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. Columbia U., B.A. U. of Michigan, BA. Page Forty-one .S 1' 'X NEQ -A Q fm, 793 3 f 4 Ki -E . . COHEN, lvl.-'KXYVELL T. COHEN, MORRIS IL' New York City New York CIW St. John! Colle-gc' Long Island U- ' .M W' COKER, JAMES MCC. Brooklyn, N. Y. Holy Cross, B.A. DALEY, RAYMOND Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Cathedral College P I' 1:3 Q ...XL If ti' DARLING, CLYDE E. IJAVIDSON, SAMUEL POT! Jefferson, L. I. Brooklyn, N. Y. Columbia U., B.A. St. J0lll'l,S College DUCHON Astoria Fordham 3 Cfzafzceffor -L Y Y Y Y ' I' .nn-1 - .ry l 0 DEMAY, ANTHONY J. DIAMOND, SOLOMON BT'00klyll, N. Y. Brgnx, N. Y, Columbia U., B.A. Long Island U. DIENER, HENRY H. Brooklyn, N. Y. C. C. N. Y., B.A. DUCHON, VLADIMIR DUNN, THOMAS Astoria, L. I. Elmhurst, L. I. Fordham, B.A. Niagara College DOHERTY, PAUL New York City Wesleyan, B.S. Page F or! y-three Qin 1933 1 I 'E I 1 - 11 1 ' 4 L . -V --S., 0 fa In , , vu .wi l E,IsTERn.n',JoHN H.,Jll. EDELSBERG, HERNIAN Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. Rulge-rs College C. C. N. Y., B.S.S. Q . N, , ,, + , fc., ,, f, I ' ' .f 3 ' N'-. tw . EICKS, CLIQMENT EISILNBERG, MARW'IN S. Forest, Hills, L. I. I Brooklyn, N. Y. C0l'I11'll U- Columbia U. P.:g 1' Fm 1.3 -175,-, ,f .4-. .9-wpxq ? f, f if 'W f , I 5 ahh., 5 an . ll ' P5 'I ELLIOTT, RICHARD J. ELLMAN, DAvIn B 00lfl3'll, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. Columlliu U. U, of Virginia lg- FANELLI, New Fordham' Chancellor ELTERMAN, PHILIP EPSTEIN, ARNOLD S. Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N, Y, Columbia U. C, C, N, Y EPSTEIN, LAWRENCE Brooklyn, N. Y. C. C. N. Y. FANELLI, ALFRED F. FEIGENBAUM, JOSEPH New Rochelle, N. Y. Bronx, N. Y. F0rdhani'U. C. C. N. Y., B.A. EPSTEIN, ROY M. Bronx, N. Y. New York U. 0 Page Forty-jive ,Next he 1933 , Ch I O P120 171115 rn FEINMAN, ROBERT FEIT, GERALD I- Brooklyn, N. Y- C. C. N. Y. 'fb Brooklyn, N. Y. St. J0lm,s College FELD, I. FRANKLIN FELDMAN, Momus Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. C. C. N. Y. St. J0hn's College F1c0W1Tz ISAAC FIORI JOSEPH P Brogklyn N Y Passaic N I C C N Y BA NewY01LU BCS MAN Ookl 0 llmbla , s ' FRIED , ' ' , r yn-a . . . ., . . -9 ' ' ' C I ' l Chancellor X 1 - 1:-i-'1 ' FISCHER, ABRAHAM FISK, NATHAN Brooklyn, N. Y. Bronx, N, Y. Columbia U. New York U. . ,W R 1 E 1 W . N FITZGERALD, GERALD H. Brooklyn, N. Y. h U. of Illinois, B.A. Y? ' P, FRIEDMAN, MARTIN N. FRIEDMAN, MAX C. J. Brooklyn, N. Y. Bronx, N. Y. CS' Columbia U. New York U. FRIEDMAN, ISIDORE L. New York City C. C. N. Y. L!! Q 0 1 an y 0 Page F or! y-feven M Q N 31 1 N Q 12f NSN ,gm 1 0 ,,. FRIEDIVIAN, MORRIS GEGEN, WILLIAM C' Brooklyn, N. CLC. N. Y. Y. New York City Fordham U. Page Fof'fy-figbf GELLER, DANIEL M. GERBER, MAX Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. Cornell U., B.A. C.C.N.Y., B.S.S. GERSHENSON, M. G. GETELDIAN, L- M- Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N- Y' QCNY,BSS. CUNY he, 193-L I ,,. Zh! 'Zigi' f if x, Q' .- W,-aff . SM' GLIXMA BTookl3 C. C.N 1 Cfzanceffof bg., f- W rf x A J If Tiff if fl if A lie' ' ff, 1122 ' Z? L. N. Z.N.Y. ff 7,7 45 V f E15 M, 2? A A W 1.2 M GIBBS, HOWARD 1. CLASS, BENJAMIN BV07137, N- Y- New York City Rutgers College Colby College, B.A. O GLASSER, DAVID Bronx, N. Y. Fordham U. GLICKMAN, MADELEINE Brooklyn, N. Y. U. of North Carolina GLIXMAN, HOWARD GLUCK, MURRAY W. Brooklyn, N. Y. Bronx, N. Y. C. C. N. Y., B.A. Columbia U. Page Forty-nine ,nl X jim, 1933 Q O Page Fifty GOLDBERG, NOAH GOLDBERG, SAUL M. Brooklyn, N. Y. Bfvnx, N- Y- New York U. ll midi: . Fordham U. GOLDRLATT, MAX J. GOLDKNOPF, MORRIS M. Bronx, N. Y. New York City Syracuse U. Fordham U. COLDMAN, ABRAHAM Bronx, N. Y. Columbia U. GOLDMAN, SOLOMON New York Cily U. Of Alabama if-r GRA Far wlum Q Ckafzceffof' ff? 2 W 1 X ff X I ZZ fc! fi 5 1 , , 1 ! X f x n-f f 52 f ff ION fity 1118. fi , 4, fv' L A A lx X xi , K ' , :,- fif 117, u If iii' , L 1 GOLDSCHMIDT, Dfxvm GOLDSTRIN, CHARLES H4U'ff07'd, Conn. Brooklyn, N. Y. Connecticut State C, C, N, Y, mf, -WN. y GOLDSTEIN, MORRIS GRANOWSKY, BERNARD Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. y Columbia U. St. Francis Xavier, B.S. I!! GRAYBAR, IRVING N, GREENBERG, JOSEPH N. F ar Rockaway, L. I. Brooklyn, N. Y. Columbia U. Long Island U. Page Fifly-one .E jim, 1933 ,f W xs ' e., .X xx xx gx O Cao:-ss, N. KENNETH GROTTOLA, RAPHAEL V. S011 Cale. N. Y. Astoria, L- I- Long Island U. FOITHIBIU U- I 1 GRUSIQIN, ROBERT GUIDONE, EDGAR BVOOMYII, N- Y- New York City C- C- N- Y-, B-S. Columbia U. 'li 4+ GKTMAN, HARRIS HALl'ERN, PHILIP J. lirookfyll. N. Y. Brooklyn. IV.. New Y New Xork U. U, of Wfxgt Virgmm Uyracus l'f...' I-fm.: Chancellor - f W! W f ff' Wx Wx W x I ff Wx 1 My X 'g nm? L ' gMf.:f 'TQQVVW f f, ,f 5Z.'f57W fa WWW WWW? 'W f PJ- ,Y- inia HARRIS, LEWIS A. HMS PAUL Brooklyn, N, Y, Bronx, N, Y, New York U. St. John's Collvgc 5' -' O I Q w HAZELWOOD, R. P. HEIBERGER, WM. W. Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. Princeton U. U. of Alabama HELLER, DELLA S. HENIS, HELEN New York City Bronx, N. Y. Syracuse U., B.A. New York U. Page Fifty-llyfee jhg 1933 Q , O P.:.IQ I I'-.L-flf -, . , 1' fx? ' . , I. ... -7 Hmm, .Lxcon A. HERTZ, Monms M. Elmhurst, L. I. Bronx, N. Y. New York U., B.C.S. Long Island U. HIRSCH, MARTIN HITZIG, LOUIS R. Bronx, N. Y. Astoria, L, I, New York U-, B.S. U. of Michigan, BA. +- I+- 1 5 H0FIfI:n, PHILIP Brooklyn, N. Y, C. C. N. Y. ISQUITH, SOLOMON S. Brooklyn, N. Y. U. S. Naval Avaclcmy JOSEPH U- 0fP ii 4.41 . ,f My ,,. X X S. Y. Y Cfmficelfoz' 5 WN ' ' - U.. V ,,l,q y , flllf, Vxlf , flglfdi, , JABLON, CHARLES W. JACOBS, MILTON Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. C. C. N. Y., New York U, O JAFFE, MARTIN A. Ellenville, N. Y. Brown U. JENKINS, JAMES Port Washington, L. I. U. of Virginia, B.A. JOSEPH, SAMUEL JUDGE, DENNISON Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. U. of Pennsylvania F0I'dh1UTl U- x N -I' X Page Fifty-five 'YS fx G jyhe, -1933 i ,,. Y I 5 1,, 6 6 .1-my wo , if 1. I . F I I f 1 . , f Q . Ix.xI,I'I's, MARTIN IXABINER: MANUEL Broolflyn, N. Y. Bronx, N. Y. N1-Iv York U. C. C. N. Y., B.A. 1-1-I1f: t Y l ILIIIIQILII, JULIUS KELLMAN, LEROY Corona. L. I. Brooklyn, N. Y. St. J0llI1,S College C. C. N. Y. if u+f 1 .- 1 KILNNILY, WILLIAZNI J. KIES, SAV Scrmzlon. Pu. Bronx. N. Y- St. Tlmxnus, B.A. C- C- N' Y' 1 Z i IQORTE, E Brooklyn ca itu 13:1 L iii 1. Chancellor D l. . '1 ' fwx Jo- KIMMEI-, MORRIS C. IQLIBANOW, Dum Brooklyn, N. Y. New Rochelle, IV. Y. Ohio State U. C. C, N- Y. .4-' wig IQONRAD, MURRAY KOPPEL, CHESTER H. Bronx, N. Y. New York City C.C.N.Y., B.S.S. New York U. zz? IQORTE, EDWARD H. KRAMER, IRv1Nc 'gf' Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. uAbitur,', Germany N.Y.U., B.C.S., BS. in Ed. Y. .Page Fiflg'-.fevefz 'Qt- I ,S -1 jfze, 1933 l ,,- ..-'- is! s vyss Y XX X s ! X Inf. 1f.1,ff,..- f 1' 'fb' t I 1 Kmrs, LIARTIN A. KRIEGER, MICHAEL Bronx. N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. C. C. N. Y. Seth Low College Knowrrz, ISRAEL M. KURZMAN, Lows A7010 York City Brooklyn, N, Y, C.C.N.Y., B.S. Pace Institute, C.P.A. I f 11+ Ilulmznr, Louis LANGDON, JUHN LEX New York City Bronx. N. Y. INE C. C. N. Y. Columbia U. Sl. Johnas Chancellor I LASKIN, BENJAMIN LAURO, MICHAEL F. Bf00kly11,N- Y. ozone Park, L. 1. New York U. Yale, PlI.B. LEDWVITH, THOMAS F. LEVY, JACQUES M. Brooklyn, N. Y. New York City Fordham, BS. C. C. N. Y., C.P.A. 4 1 EW? 5'5' 'T w'A M 'N' ful! H ' wg 2 9 F 4-A... A.-Nexi 1. FQ . Sag QA.: 3 4 -A ' ' J. '- .. , . QHN LEVINE, PAUL LEVINGER, LOUIS M. Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. a U SI. J0l1n's College C. C. N. Y. 5 Page Fifty-nine r G ---JQILQ, 1933- ... O IYJII J., LEVY, IHA L. LEVY, JACOB R. Brooklyn. N. Y. Bf00k1y ,N- Y- C.C.N.Y., BA. C.C.N-Y-, BSS- Lrzwls, Clmnws Brooklyn. N. Y. U. Military Academy fir .4-if LINDNER, MEH'ER Port Richmond, S. I. C. C. N. Y. . ' rv-x gfv lr, . Www-- 4,,,,... ' l,oxuaTz, Mrnnm' S. LOWY, ARTIWR F' Hrfmlflyn. N. Y. Bl'00k13 '- N' Y' Brooklyn Collvgc NPV York U' I r BIAYER Bl Onx, N C- C. N. L ff I X X fxff M ' f ,f7f 4 Zffwf ,, V ,R F. Y. kU. Chancellor LUBIN, MAX S. MALONEX', ANDREW P. Bronx, N. Y. New York City New York U. Catholic U., B.A. 6 , MANUEL, NATHAN MARKOWITZa N- M- Brooklyn, N. Y. Bronx, N- Y- C. C. N. Y. Columbia U. f M.AYER, GERALD MAZEL, ALEXANDER Bronx, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. C. C. N. Y. U. of So. Calif., B.S. Page Sixty-one .gg Q ffm., -Z 93 3 .fr 1 L 1+- .. I A wir. 4, nlvS fa I 6 P-1.21 Sim-m NIEIERFELD, OSCAR New York City Columbia U. ,- , if A+ NIENDUKE, JOSEPH Brooklyn, N. Y. New York U. MCCARTHY, HERBERT R. MCCULLOUGH, ROBERT Forest Hills, L. I. New York City Fordham U. Fordham U. Miwmf, MCDONALD, JoHN B. Rockville Center, L. I. Holy Cross, B.A. MCHUGH, JOHN E. Jamaica, L. l- U. of Virginia, B.A. eff'- MICHLIN, D Bfonx, N E C- C- N. Y - Cfzcxnceffof A V MEAD, GEORGE W-, JR. MERMELSTEIN, ESTELLE Brooklyn, N. Y. Astoria, L. 1. U.S. Naval Academy New York U, MEYER, Louis Brooklyn, N. Y. C. C. N. Y. MICHLIN, NATHAN P. MILES, SIDNEY Bronx, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. C. C. N. Y. New York U. MICHAELS, GEORGE M. New York City Cornell U., B.A. Page Sixty-three G jim. 1933 ,L INIILLER, Oscfm R. MOLOMOT, SAMUEL H. Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N- Y- I.ehigh U., BA. C- C- N- Y- MOIIOENSTEIN, PHILIP MORRIS, ROBERT New York City New York City Long Island U. C. C. N. Y. MOsc.x'I'O, LOUIS MOSES, WILLIABI L- Brooklyn, N. Y. Bronx, N- Y- Columbia U. C- C- N- Yr BA' In.,-, , NAT Brooklyn New Y l LLIAM x, N. Y- Y., BA- Cfzancellor ,, M 'p .- A . , 0 MOZIAN, GERARD H. MURPHY, EDWARD New York City Syracuse, N. Y. Fordham U. Niagara U. MURPHY, JOHN J. NACHMANN, EDWIN Brooklyn, New York Richmond Hill., L. I. St. John's College St. John's College NATHANSON, Ismom: I. NELSON, HYMAN Brooklyn, N. Y. Bronx, N. Y. New York U., B.C.S. C. C. N. Y., B.A. Page Sixty-five 5 I s ffxzo? ff E HQ, X X s X 'r L f'?. 4? ,rv S- I 6 E I ? qw f .49 K . ... Agvfffw., NEUSTADTER, EMANUEL NEWMAN, JOSEPH N. Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. Yeshiva College Long Island U- ne. 1933 7 1 ,-+,g:..- Je 1 Pkwy-1' 4 fs -:Q H- -if ww-N 4 fa.:--zz: 1 5 -' X fi ' Er .. :E S x o .- f. wk. . rv ' E. f . ' 0 . . 7iwfZ 3'aH 'f 'f 1.2 .1 .. , fy ,' ,. I fy :U S .11 13. .3 . .:f fg,.f .-3.1 wr.: ff wx 'ww 4:2 ,. , f f , . 2 -ff 1 fm-, , -. V... .. . . . ... V . f Mtv My f Y .12 ' . 1-4.1. 4 W. . H 5 2 'fy f -. .5 f' 4. - f.,....5.- '- , Vw 5651 ...A , , A ' 'G- ,INWW3 43,5 ' 2 TTT? Y ' , ,J f, , - ,., M .www fx . ., .mf 1 1. 5.-. , 1 4 , .1 -M EM f .40 4. ,..,. 4... 4,1 , , 4, 'C f. ' . 'C W, ,Q-f , .' , Q gy Q A jrw yfygg My 'fa fa 45 X f. W. . ...Q .aw'W. ,cwfv,,fQ..d 1.5, Wy qv. K C mf, 25. O X mov' . 5 fgwy . ff W . . Q .V o+w,,4,. .0 -no My I fy... .,,....,.M 2, , , V fw . ,vmwme Aiwa, Q-.Q Eff, . ff-1 ,..f W. . l,..,..,.-Cv, 156 W.: ,lf-.W ww' on .I ,Q fm, 14. .4 f ,.- ff, H., W. :A -q,..,f..,.:,:i, H, X. X ,A ff.. 3, . . ,Q .. W -. .js'::' 'C ff, ?' :ii:..f?.. V af f- Y ORINOFF, ABRAHAM New York City C. C. N. Y., B.s.s. NITZBURC, JACK M. Bronx, N. Y. C. C. N. Y. PADULA, STEPHEN PALEY, J. MM 7 Kew Gardens, L. I. Bronx, A- Y PJIQL' Sf?-.'f1-r,',1 Fordham U. C. C. N.Y L Chancellor L J. MAX C, N. Y- Z. N. Y- Y ,B PARK, FERD- VAN S-I JR. PARTNOW, PHILIP Brooklyn, N. Y. 3,-Ooklyn, N. Y. Wesleyan U., B.A. C. C. N. Y., RA. PEDDY, SIDNEY M. PEARLMAN, ARTHUR Brooklyn, N. Y. Bronx, N. Y. Columbia U. C. C. N. Y. PEARLMAN, IRWIN PHILLIPS, AUSTIN S. Brooklyn, N. Y. Richmond Hill, L. I . C. C. N. Y., BS. Y Harvard U., B.A. 6 Page Sixty-seven ,..,. - jim. 1933 - ,.. 6 PonEnEsm', LEON POPISHQ SAMUEL Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. Columlria U. C- C- N- Y- POTOZKY, ELSIE E. PRESSMAN, JAMES Hrzlcotlville, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. Columbia U. PRINCE, JEROME PROOSLIN, CHARLOTTE R 7 . , Amo York City Bronx, N. Y- Newy C. C. N. Y., B.s.s. Hunter coll.-sf Wk Fordham U P-iff' 5-:xi 1 -rf L 1 1 Gy V! TE Y. ge -Chancellof RATNER, IRVINC REIMAN, IRVINC M. Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y St. .lohnls College Columbia U. RIEDER, ABRAHAM M. Brooklyn, N. Y. New York U., B.S. RIORDAN, CHARLES P. J. RUBIN, ALEX New York City Brooklyn, N. Y. Fordham U. C. C. N. Y. RING, LEONARD S. Brooklyn, N. Y. Long Island U. 0 Page Sixty-nine ,: jfld, 1933- ff 'xml , Y, Zia x sh 6 P.i41,c 51 I L 'if Rn-mx, Invlxc ROBINSON, SAMUEL J. Now Brighton, S. I. Brooklyn, N- Y- Nvw York U. Yale U., B.A. ROCKMORE, SANIUEL Brooklyn, N. Y. Columbia U. Ross, Momus Bronx, N. Y. St. Johxfs College 5 Rosrzx, Tmzonomz D. ROSENBERG, ABRAH.'l3l-I Brooklyn. N. Y. Brooklyn, N Y- Long lslancl U. C0lUmbiu U' SANTILLO Q Ut. Johnis i ff f W f f X ff 1 f fff ff ., E','UfIE 579 jr 2251, ' of 'ff MJ L Y. o U. -Cfzangeflor L K ROSENSTEIN, DAVID IROTWVEIN, NOAH Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. St. .l0hn's College St. .lohn's College ROVER, SAMUEL W. SALTZMAN, JOSEPH E. New York City New York Cily C. C. N. Y., BS. New York U. SANTILLO, HARRY R. SALZMAN9 MEYER Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N- Y' St. .l0hn's College C- C- N- Y' Page Sevenly-one .1 - Q Zim, 1933 f Z gi' 'EEA .., O lfru Sf: fu: Scrmnr, Louis SCHIFFMACHER, C. E. Brooklyn, N. Y. Bflldwill, L- 1- fZ.C.N.Y., B.S.S. Trinity C0llffgC Sci-1Nr:LLr:n, WM. H. Elmhurst, L. I. Columbian U. SCHWARTZ, HAROLD M. Brooklyn, N. Y. Lehigh U., B.A. f I f. .+, Sczllwmxz, Hr:nMAN G. SCOTT, JOHN J- Brmxx. N. Y. New Rochelle, N. Y- Fordlmln U. Dartmouth Collcgc SHAPIR0 Brooklyn, C- C- N. Y Chancellor i ' 'i 1 'W - r . 'J 5: S 8 . W0 ,, 5' f' ,. ,c ,, ,... , , .. I. if 2 ff ' 1 W fri, V ffl! ' ' f4.in'f?'? n-ai . k .ff. -.M . - A A V . ' - if T M. .1 4. V ' Q fi v. J flif fw 4 1 ff X 'K fi 1 T N1'v'f. x 2' ', f W U v on my .,Q,2,w I Q--,wif 4 MQW I V:if1C5' nga f V ,,.,,,y,,f, , ff If WMJQMA i SEERY, JAMES K. SEFRANKA, Louis A. Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N, Y, Fordham U-, B.A. ohio stare U., B.s..x. SELVERSTONE, A. W. SENS, JOSEPHINE, M. Brooklyn, N. Y. Mount Vernon, N. Y. New York U. Mt. St. Vincent ! 1 If 0 f - 7 5 .,. , , X ,L 1 W f.. Z .': 1 52 1 1 1 J. SHAPIRO, SAMUEL SHEA, ARTHUR J. 5 . Brooklyn, N. Y. New York City C C. c. N. Y. Fordham U. N N Page Sevefzly-three l l E W he 1933 .. XX Iaf. xx xixx 4 I,-1.11 Sc fc 'H' SIECEL, JACK - -Z7 SIECEL, MARTIN Brooklyn, N. Y. Great Neck, N. Y. Long Islaml U., B.S. Williams College, B.A. 'U' SKOLNIK, NATHAN SOMMER, H. CAL New York City Brooklyn, N. Y. C. C. N. Y. Long Island U. l SQUIRE, EVELYN 0. STAROBIN, SAMUEL Ossining, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. Columbia U., 13.5. Syrawsff U- l '-' ' s York C. C. Y New , Cfzanceflor I ,,,-. ..-. .- ...- . ...... STERN, Ismoma M. STONE, JOHN E. -Iamaicll, N- Y- Brooklyn, N. Y. New York U. C. C- N. Y. STORCK, EDWARD J. New Rochelle, N. Y. New York U. 1 r STROLL, MILTON Brooklyn, N. Y. C. C. N. Y., BA. 1 1 V E E . SUAREZ, JAMES SWANSON, FRANK R. New York Ciry Brooklyn, N. Y. C- C- N- Y. New York U., B.C.s. Page Seventy 'Z Q0 . s Swm:Nr:x', Lows SYLVI-LSTER, HARRY S- SI. Gvorge, S. I. New York City Holy ffr0sS, B.A. N. Y. U., B-S-a C'E- YX -,,,. 4 'y xX+ - l'..'n Mn' XX 451 T,xxNr:Nn.wM, IRWIN Now York Cilj' C. C. N. Y. FU THORNER, LEONARD Brooklyn, N. Y. New York U., BS. ke, 7933 'K1..':.nbh l'M.xxsKY, Ann.uIAM L. Brooklyn. N. Y, X4-w York U. ,M Yurron, HEnman'r Brooklyn, N. Y- FOITHIQIIII U. LVEINSTEIN, rollx, N. Y St' JOWS 1.011 333 WN. ERT f0Ra HERB Oklyn, N. Y- porflham U' -Cfzancellof' 2 ! 4 ,Q it 1 4 5 'if 3 fi WALDHETTER, GEORGE WEINER, BIORIIIS W. Brooklyn, N. Y. Bronx, N, Y, C- C- N- Y- New York U. WEINFELD, JACOB I. Brooklyn, N. Y. Columbia U. WEINSTEIN, LoU1s WEINSTOCK, JULIUS Bronx, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. St. J0hn's College C.C.N.Y., B.A. WEINSTEIN, HYMAN H. Brooklyn, N. Y. C. C. N. Y., B.S.S. Page 5'e1fenly-Jeven Q 1 ke., 1933 fa - 'f O WEINSTOCK, LEON WEISS, RUTH L- Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N- Y- C. c. N. Y., B.s.s. Long Island U- WEISSER, MAX WEISSTEIN, ALFRED Bronx, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. C. C. N. Y. I fm' . WHALEN, WILLIAM D. Wmmzn, KURT YAVOROF 'W' New York City Woodhfzvlzll, L- I- L0ch Sh Ty' ISID .' 9 . Brown U., Ph.B. Columbld U' ,N New YO k gake, 1 A r -, B,5l P.:,Qr Sf: L71-I'-1'L irq!-.' 1 Chancellor N .1. ,f A gn 2,7 ,. 3:3 51142, f f,x , f Wg 1 N f1k!Z ll! f , 4 N Wi f V 4,1-V W I, 55.32 rf, E- of ' MQ f rw ii' X ' '- EF fi 92, ' 1 . ' 4 .em L. 1. mbia U- I V Q l --1-u 5 fm 4- .. WILLER, SAMUEL R. I 12 f ix . WILLNER, A. J. Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. New York U. WOHL, JOSEPH WOOL, ALBERT E. Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N- Y- Long Island U. Lehigh U- YAVOROFSKY, ISIDORE ZARETZKI, LEON ZWECHERQ SAMUEL W' Loch Sheldrake, N. Y. Yonkers, N. Y. Bronx, N. Y- New York U., B.s. Lehigh U. New York U- New York U. f. Page Seventy-nine U Q 4 J! Q 0 0 Prior tempoafe, potiovf jmfe i u . W 0 1 L I 1 Q, 5 1' 5 . A f 1 f , fi 1 ff f ' l A f ff flf , ,V ,Aff 2 , fin, 4'LQ'1.xz, , J - -' 5- x f ii . 1 ,rx ,ff 4 .H 'fy .vfpif uf 47 iwmigf ' , I ,9- fa, ,-L-f - 'feb Xf'ff, Q 1 Yi I i 1 J 51 'S ' J. 4 Q--T ' S 2 , S 'I V. ,L , V is Q . wx f 'QR4 igug -1 I 3 ',f' 'iff Fig, xi N. ', , I1 L .' 1' - He, , - -- 1 , a ' . A ' 'M , ,.af'g' iHr -1 - aff 5 jf 3 . E., I f ? av , 1 i ' fi' if ' X 1' Q A'A ' xp -I EMM 1 if., , :ly ' ' , 2 .. v 1. A g I 'W , X A 4 '4 ,L ' ' V '- f 1 xii! f , 1 ' 'f 1 X 4 4 1 'f .. 1 f f . . 1, , Pu '. ', ,' ' f ' g ' f' ,w ' ' 1 . , I 4 f ' M - 4 ' 1 - -4 , . '4f?4 ' , 2 x W 'Z 5, f , ' I -:- . . f f' -,fu V, ' LLM.- v :vi 1 ' 1L., g!L g,jKIf,5!Ix 7. , ,, 1 - 5 'Q 1 '4 I? Q ffl 7 X 1 , .. W., 4 -. f v .: 414.-emo, -ff V ' 1 r 4 4 9 f , ,S S S wjae. 1933! ,S 'Ek THE JUNIOR CLASS ATE in September of 1931 about three hundred would-be lawyers entered S 6 1'-fm' l5f.cf1fp-ff, fl the imposing lobby of the Brooklyn Law School. They received an in- spiring talk from the Dean, were given a little dose of reality by the vice-dean and were immediately precipitated into the midst of their legal studies full of many strange notions which were soon to be dissipated. However, naive as these newcomers were, they displayed unusual political skill when their first class elections were thrust upon them. Petty politicians oiled their guns, fusion tickets appeared g party platforms were spouted, cam- paigns were carefully mapped out. When it was all over Alfred A. Chaison, Vincent W. Gillen, and Meletios Kavakos found themselves presidents of the first year classes. William Polan, George L. Weisbard, and Leo Margolin re- ceived the vice-presidencies. And as usual the ladies made a clean sweep of the secretarial positions, Freida Miller, Esther Goldman, and Rose Goldner carrying off the honors. What little money there was to be guarded was placed in the trustworthy hands of Bertram X. Miller and james M. Glimm. With the vitality of youth the new officers immediately entered into con- ference with the avowed intention of arranging for a sensational get-together. They decided on a dinner-dance without a dissenting opinion fthe only time it ever happenedj. Their originally elaborate plans having been destroyed by an untimely raid upon the place of their choice, they contented themselves with a very respectable chicken dinner and dance at the Paramount Grill. Diversions gave way to examinations which were a still unexplored terror to the novitiates. After much cramming and grinding the exams were met. The freshmen learned, despite minor casualties, that nobody was ever killed by an examination. Spring came on soon, and the minds of the scholars began to Waf1dCf afield. Gaps in the number of seats occupied daily and nightly increased. lt was rather a dreary period in point of view of class activities. But, with the coming of May a change was wrought. Students began to appear in the classrooms with expressions of concentration on their faces. One 11CCdH't Wonder WhY'fhC EXHITIS Were again coming round. They arrived and the Sflidents went to meet them more calmly than before. It is reported that few failed to turn them back. The first year of the class of 1931 came to an end. 'Ihe scholars had a taste of the law and to most it was pleasant. 'l ness o arrivei were I with tl seemef 6-8 cla 7-9 ses Sc Smoker Men's trial gi' literally Ex far fetc enemy z the clas Th happens this gro- 9 Q Vers filtered eived an in. le ViCe,dean dies full of tal political politicians 'UlI6ClQ Cam- L Chaison, ents of the argolin re- 'eep of the er carrying .ced in the into con- :-together. lonly time troyed by flves with ed terror 'ere met. er killed Wander icreased. ut, Wlfli r in thi? needn'f gncl lille hat feW an end- Cfzonceffor The following September the '54 class reconvened. The self-conscious ness of the students had practically disappeared. Time for class elections again arrived. More organization was to he noticed this time. Few cimdidiites were running. Complete tickets were ready. Dissatisfuction seemed evident with the old officers. A revolution was brewing. After the smoke cleared it seemed to he Vice-Presidents year, for the underdogs of the IO-I2 and 6-8 class had attained the honor of masters of ceremonies. Al Clmison of the 7-9 session alone withstood the storm. Soon the gregarious tendencies of the several groups came to the fore. Smokers were the thing of the hour, since the school had acquired tt new Men's Lounge. The parties were good though the beer was near, A mock trial given by the 7-9 session was thought to be a knock-out figuratively and literally. Examinations again came and the minds of the students were turned from far fetched day dreaming to concrete matters. Having once more met the enemy and turned it back, the students began to prepare for the junior Prom, the classic of the year. This came and went with the usual jubilations. The students decided to take it easy and nothing further of importance happened within the class of '3-4. And so another year will soon pass and this group will be one step nearer its goal. If V 0 Page Eigblg-zhree 49 mof-.f1q3gg ,A 1-4 fwvwrrqvwviwgs' SFSSEFEEEEQQQQESQQQQS F9111 :mm:mmmmmmmmmmEmm?Tm?U9 rn 'U v-s ornmmp.m'-1'-1':.:fbrvmwDD 2 '5-'+ '0'QSI' . - H H,-H5::22.mZ5EQ-D5-ggmarmi-I A PTI!! - 5' 'n, I 1 QAM ' l ' ,X ,i f V a f fa, f f' f 4 ca ,,,,,, if W '4 fn 933 Cfzafzceffor Abrams, Emanuel Akst, Paul Algus, Harold Julius Appelton, John Russell Atlas, Morris Louis Bassuk, Irving Berger, Theodore Bernardo, Carmelo Daniel Blatt, Leo Bogart, Maurice Stanley Bridges, Charles Edward Callaghan, Horace Fulbright Cohen, Caryl Ernest Colton, Leslie McKinley Corsiglia, Paul Joseph Danzig, Daniel Mathew Darling, Tracy Brush Delaney, Joseph Leary Delaney, Arthur James DeMaria, Vincent Francis Diamond, Emanuel Di-Lalla, Frank Drummond, John Gerald Engelhart, Louis Epstein, Eugene Julius Estis, Nathan Farber, Jacob Feinberg, Reuben David Ferranti, Antoinette Finkel, Samuel Finn, George Herman Fisch, William George Flaum, Chester Jacoby Geisler, Milton James Geller, Harold M. Gitenstein, Aaron Lawrence Graham, Richard Arthur, Jr. Greenberger, Maurice Howard Hall, Louis Harrison, Jr. Hall, Louise Standifer Hantman ack Henry , I Hardiman, Francis Xavier Joseph Heller, Alfred Charles Horowitz, George Itteilag, Louis Anthony Jacobson, Nathan Kavakos, Meletios Kay, Peter Keenan, James Joseph Kelby, Robert Hendre Klaw, Milton Siner Klotz, Arthur Aaron Korb, Samuel Krause, Elliott Lester Kroll, Cyril Lflpp, Louis Daniel Levy, Abraham Louis Levy, Arthur Levy, J. Joel Lewis, Charles Lieberman, William Lifschitz, Hyman Lifschitz, Morris Lipschitz, Macy Murray Lucia, Alfred Mangiaracina, Bernard SECOND YEAR IO- l 2 l Hof' Lao JAY MARGOLIN, P!'c?A'flfL'llf EMANUEL DIAMOND . . Vire-ljrerirlwfr FANNIE SEIGARTEL , , , ge,-,.,,,,,,,,,, NOBART SCHAPIRO . Margolin, Leo Jay Meckenberg, Arthur Montgomery Merkin, Herman hforganelli, Roland Murray, John Bartholomew McGoldrick, Warren Peter McKelvey, Francis James O'Connor, Francis Daniel Payne, Charles Sidney Pearlman, Sidney Irwin Perconti, Carmelo Salvatore Pinkowitz, Sam S. Poey, Cortlandt Port, Selig Postel, Herman Reiter, Edward Burton Richmond, Martin Rinaldi, Charles Joseph Rosenberg, Abraham Bernard Rosenblatt, Joseph Rothman, Sylvia Steinberg Russack, Benjamin Safir, Harold Saxstien, Julius Leo Schapiro, Nobart r Scheffler, Martin David Schierloh, Herman Henry, Jr. Schlessel, Sydney Bernard . Treiz,rfn'er Schwartz, Albert Alvin Schwartz, Sylvan Seigartel, Fannie Shapiro, Leo Shapiro, Seymour Julius Silowitz, Irving Silverman, Alter Simons, George Singer, Albert Smith, Edward Smolensky, Benjamin Smyth, Joseph Percy, Jr. Snedeker, Leonard Dunbar Solomon, Alfred James Solomon, Milton James Stanger, Joseph Harold Stark, Ralph Jay Stern, Wynne Isidore Swirsky, Max D. Turetzky, Reuben Wagner, Leon Maurice Weiss, Max Wendt, John Russell Werb, Joseph Wigor, Ruth Taub Witzling, Morton Zisfein, Samuel Irwin lr. J' 0 Page Eigbly-hue L Of: fb xzf-.f1qS!g I , Qifffffff jf! M f X 'Q ff fi 47 N I ,-,, ,X 2,41 k f K f .,f EDUJTUU mmmnncwrwfwvfn O an cuooo'H'U'f1F?2F?-S'S'9EJ?QQ9r9fiTE?5'34'5 53 -E Fl 3.6 93 -rw-n::mocumcnmmcumm0QQQ-.m fu fm ae an PM-M -Mm - M5 O --- 'x , l Ni ii' Q.gyy,,,rf, Wg o f Y f Q , 27 Z, ., a 2 ff W Ze, I -0 f QV get My Cfzexnceffof I-I IS- W I Ahearn, Henry Michael Aisley, Mark Melville Aksel, Edward Archer, Theodore Bagon, jack Erwin Bander, Milton Edward Barkin, Ida Bennett, Daniel Arthur Bersson, Bernard Blottner, Abraham Boothe, Garland Cecil Bornstein, David Brook, Philip Burns, Joseph Harrison Cahill, William joseph Capps, Leighton Davis Caroselli, Ernest Cherkasky, Julius Chester, Frank Edmond Chipkin, Louis Cohen, Albert Cohen, Lawrence Crowley, Joseph Patrick Cymrot, Alexander Earle DeSapio, Carmine Gerard Deutsch, jacob Diggs, Ruby Helene Epstein, Emanuel Epstein, Sarah Falkenheim, Henry Fefferman, Max Feuerstein, Samuel Friedman, Seth Levy Furman, Manuel Futter, Oliver Eaton Gadofsky, Charles Gentile, john Gerberg, Ezra Gillen, Vincent William Glassman, Bernard Glazer, Joseph jacob Glimm, james Moen Goldberg, Aaron Goldman, Arnold Goldman, Esther Betty Goldner, Rose Gottfried, Herman Elliott Gottschalk, Sydney Robert Grahame, james Herbert Greenstein, Milton Grieb, Lester Frederick Grinsberg, David Hacker, Samuel Hafner, George Herbert Heath, Morris Lamprey Herrick, Seymour Higgins, James Edward Hoffnung, Arthur HOQHH, Howard Thomas Horowitz, Carl Howard, Sumner Joseph Indursky, Reuben Johnson, George Clarence Kahn, Alexander Kahn, Arthur Katzman, Isador SECOND YEAR 6-s GEORGE LEE WEISBARD, P1-aridefzf HYMAN LEO Kowar . . . Vit-e-Pi-emlwzz ESTHER BETTY GOLDMAN . . . Seri-array HAROLD NATHANIEL KRAMER . . Trmim-er Kesselman, Irving Klugherz, Richard K. Kottler, Joseph S. Kowal, Hyman Leo Kramer, Harold Nathaniel Laurie, Joseph Anthony Lebovici, Herbert Leiman, Marcel Jacob Levitt, Victor David, jr. Levy, Milton Herbert Lewis, jesse Lindner, Sidney Lippman, Leo Gaynor Marcus, Solomon Mayer, Frank Orazio Mogilensky, David Moshkow, Leon Nadel, Bernard Newman, Alfred North, Monroe Daniel O'Brien, Thomas Francis, Olian, Harold Peitzer, Bernard Polatchek, Joseph Postel, Joseph Rabinor, George Bernard Robinson, Carl Randolph Rogers, Irving Rosen, joseph Q Rosenberg, Bertram Lester Rosenholz, Mordecai Lewis Rosman, Harry Russack, Leonard Ernest Schaps, Harry Milton Schindler, Sam Schwamm, Robert Leonard Schwartz, Julius Schwartz, William Seidenfrau, Morris Shapiro, Isidore Silverstein, Herbert Norman Smith, Ebenezer Strauss, Emanuel Swenson, Bernard Robert Tirpak, George Albert Unterberg, David Usoskin, Sidney Wagner, Joseph George Wagner, Wfaldo Urban Weingarten, Harold Charles Weisbard, George Lee XX7eisman, David Raphael Weiss, Walter William White, Walter jay Vfidder, Herbert Herman Wfigor, Albert L. Wildebush, Joseph Frederick Wishnevitz, Benjamin 1' 'Qin ifilfffxlttff I , 1 ' ' 0 Page Eigblg-Jefen U fb v- r-f bl sf .af f x iii Q S I 10594 X Q 4 , I f t fig 6 4? f Q fr we Wie .fag ,WZ ' z-ff I Cheinceflor 17 Alper, Irwin Isidor Ashcroft, Henry Emanuel Belogrodsky, Julius Bender, Gilbert Howard Benderly, Nadav Ami Bergner, Isidore Berman, Joseph Alton Blumenthal, Sidney Bodin, Jay Leon Boyarin, Bernard Bragman, Benjamin Braunstein, Bernard Irving Braverman, Leo Jay Briean, LeRoy Spangler Brier, Albert Jacob Buchalter, Samuel Gerson Chaison, Alfred Allen Charlebois, Theodore Walker Cherofsky, Jack Claire, J. Henry Cohen, Harriet Cohen, Louis Colin, Seymour Lester Davidson, Joshua Maurice Deitz, Bernard David DeMeo, Albert Victor Dresher, Henry Epstein, Benjamin S. Feld, Harry Feldman, Solomon Filardi, Peter Fodor, Elizabeth Susan Friedman, Joseph Friedman, William Frishberg, Samuel Galfunt, Max Harold Goldman, Milton David Goldstein, Fabius Harold Goldstein, Louis Gootzeit, Isidore Grossman, Samuel Jack Guma, Florrie William Halpern, Irene Erika Hanson, Herbert Ferre Harris, Jeannette Harriet Hendrickson, Edgar Wallace Herman, Harry Hurwitz, Ralph Donald .lflC0bson, Norman Jaffe, Louis Kfllilan, Ralph Roy KQPIHH, Samuel Herman lander, Charles SECOND YEAR 7-9 ALFRED ALLEN CHAISON, Premfem WILLIAM POLAN . FRIEDA MILLER . DANIEL STEIN . Lechner, Abraham M. Leef, Isidore Levy, Eugene Samuel Liner, Leon Lockwood, Bert Berkley London, Morris Abraham Lossef, Benjamin MacDonald, William Charles Miller, Bertram Miller, Frances Helen Miller, Frieda Miller, William Henry Millham, Newton Mlotok, Nathan Molisani, Edward Howard Myman, Israel Newman, Sidney Milton Polan, William Rabovsky, Jacob Jerome Raskas, Samuel Harry Reinberg, Sigmund Reitz, Ralph Martin Richardson, David A. Rosenberg, Burton Rosenthal, Morris Sand, Bernard . Vice-Pmridezzl . . Serrefarj . . Tl'6Ll,fllI'L'l' Schacht, Eleanor Shapiro, Eugene Stern Sherman, Murray Siegel, Sam Silverman, Emanuel Skalka, Celia Smith, Hyman Harry Sohn, Jesse Southworth, Walter Turner Speer, David Leon Stein, Daniel Sturim, Samuel Teichberg, Adele Tolmage, Sidney Tyson, Thornton Kenneth Wagner, Ira Waldman, Jack Weber, Daniel Aaron Weiner, Morris Weinstein, Morris Moe Wiener, Irving Alfred Wilson, Arthur Alfred, Jr. Yoachim, Bernard Yochelson, Maurice Young, Jack Zieff, Bernard 0 Page Eighty-nine 1 'N X l O Page Ninefy FIRST YEAR CLASS T is the aim of every new group of students to realize upon any and every opportunity afforded it through extra-curricular association. There is an unwritten law which compels members of a class or session to join forces toward the attainment of intimate and personal relationships. A The first concrete evidence of this human desire among the yearlings of the class of 1955 appeared in the enthusiasm with which they planned and attended a series of smokers, dances and dinners. The 7-9 session of the first year led all the other groups in the number of its social activities. This unit sponsored a very successful informal dance at the Hotel St. George, attracting a large turnout of both students and guests. Subsequently, a Smoker was held by this same group at which an exem- plary spirit of good fellowship prevailed amidst pre-Rooseveltian pretzels and beer. Encouraged by the successful outcome of the previous affair, it soon held another one of a similar nature, one of the highlights being a parody on the Trial of Sadie Thompsonf' All these affairs were attended by mem- bers of the faculty. With a final spurt at the advent of real beer, this very active class retreated to a Broadway rendezvous where it imbibed to its permanent satisfaction. , The 6-8 session besides many affairs of a type similar to those conducted by the other sessions boasted to its special credit a very entertaining Beefsteak Dinner at the famous Peter's Tavern. It was well attended and remained a bright spot in the minds of all who participated. They assure the members of all other sessions that when they stage another reunion it will be a dinner. The 4-6 group, under some eclectic principle, perhaps, decided not to have any affairs of its own but were well represented at the finest affairs of the other two groups. It may be said generally that the first year students adapted themselves readily to the congenial environment of the school, becoming integral parts of the various fraternities, publications and college clubs. In fetfO5PeCf the Class Of 1935 can say with pride that it has established an enviable record both for activity and cooperation. Y and Ever, V J0iH forces yearlings of 01211111661 and the number rrmal dance and guests 5 an exem- retzels and air, it soon g a parody :I by mem- , this very Jed to its conducted Beefsteak emained 21 members 3 dinner. rf to have the other emselves Parts Of ablished fig vi! L J fir I f Q r , f f o o f f Y 9 r, Nr V ' ,A , ,, i NNY X: Q, XX 2 gif z ,V ,I u-X 1, lx' I s 1 f'+ I if W' EE x X 5 ii , l, W, -V , 1 V nl! ' I . ,W 'Tl!i V I X ,rvr yr A ...J F I Q, L is ' ' 1, r, Y K-N' Q' rg ' fs 'P-, is r- r r I-.gng-jQ-f' ',L,V ,iVm,f'1,.r -I Q V r - be N-Fir' J e X e rise if bfki LY . X - V ' Ni'iW,m Li li N 1. F r 5,bi,E'l:Zv 5 q, , ,X f' 'ef 1 7. xe- PRES!-IME v-r1'-nf-rs'-n'-rx'-rx 7:H:m:r::1::1:mCI1GW H,Hoo--Q QQZZSSQSSSSESSEQQQZTMEQQ:-:.'r:,-saga E'a':f11i-w Cfzancellof - e Alterman, Joseph Ayon, Moshe Bazinsky, JCfOlCl Bernstein, Abraham Bierman, Sydney David Botswick, Arnold Boukstein, Maurice Brody, Jeanette Canepa, Elena Theresa Coppinger, Thomas Richard Daly, Jack Delves, John Ainsworth, Jr. Dinstman, Joseph Dreyer, Vivian Oviatt Einhorn, Joseph Entes, Isidore Espach, Melvin Jacob Feinschreiber, Selven Finn, Genevieve Edwina Forbes, Anthony Henry Forman, Samuel Frank, David Jefferson Friedberg, Joseph Friedman, Minerva Beatrice Grossmann, Daniel Jacob Haber, Max Harms, Feodor Andreas Herbst, Franklin Higgins, Leo Raymond Hirsch, Isidor Herman Hirsch, Sigmund Horowitz, Benjamin Ingber, Albert Kanzer, Sanford Katz, Jacob Katz, Sidney Kessler, Abel Kessler, Floyd Julius Klatzkow, George Bernard Krauthiemer, Albert Samuel Leibert, Albert J. Levine, Lawrence Lieberman, Benjamin Link, Eleanor Anne Link, Samuel Loberfeld, Sidney Sheldon I-Oguen, William Howard Lubell, Abraham Arthur McKee, Donald Cone MeYers, Myron Max Niman, William Arthur Oremland, Bernard PaPif1, Sadie Justine FIRST YEAR io-12 ' 7 f r g JACOB KATZ, Preridenl FLORENCE RITA PICKER . . Vice-Preridenf SALVATORE CIACCIO . , T,-51511,-e,l Pell, David Leon Pensak, Milton Joseph Picker, Florence Rita Plotzker, Abraham Pollak, Sidney Poritz, Alfred Grant Rabinowitz, Louis Reiner, Jerome Adolph Richman, Charles Rind, Jack Paul Rosner, Sol Rubin, Morris Rubin, Raymond Rubin, Solomon Rupprecht, Wilfred Salimena, Henry Reginald Sands, Joseph Thomas Satler, Mildred Q Segal, Marvin Seid, David Shafer, Bernard Wolfe Silverstein, Benjamin Smith, Philip Spiegel, David Sragow, Stanley Jerome Strauss, Philip Sussman, Fruma Warren, Robert Weintraub, Benjamin Weisner, Sidney Weiss, Edward Weiss, Kalman Weiss, Solomon Zalman Werner, Sidney Edwin XWeslan, Anthony Joseph Winkler, Morton Norm ftfl 171 411' tiff ' ln , 1, pf 5 L Page Ninety'-lbree ur- CD sw F Chancellor I I A C' L' ' JA: I FIRST YEAR 4-6 lVlARTIN JAY MAYERS, Premienr 0 LoUIs RABINOWITZ . . . Vice-Premleffz IRENE SUBKOW RADEST . . . Serremry HENRY IRWIN PERSKIN . . Trefzmrer Ashley, Merwin Franklin Berman, Elihu Boettcher, Richard Charles Canter, Edythe Arline Cassell, Marvin Cohen, Benjamin Eiesenberg, Daniel Gallin, Samuel Gordon, Elias Groner, Harry Leon Halperin, Sarah Leah jachens, Walter Williain Q Katz, Abraham Kranis, Jack Bernard Langbaum, Theodore Levy, Melvin Liekerman, Charles Lifset, Milton David Lobl, Albert Nathan Mandell, Martin Muranyi Mayers, Martin jay Moore, Mary Frances Moskowitz, Samuel Moskowitz, Seymour O'Malley, john Michael Oppenheim, Meyer Pearce, Saul Perskin, Henry Irwin Radest, Irene Subkow Reid, Willizlrn James Schapiro, Ernest Shapiro, Albert Sorkin, Harry Isadore Umbenhauer, Milton Samuel Ungar, Sidney Joseph Weiss, jacob David Page Nifzeiy-ive I-.C1az4gN 98:15 X! F1'l!'rlP!'l!-r4P-r4P-1-4I-u-lh-v-lfRlRlNefNfKfQAs4nL4A-Js1aLaL1Jn1ALain.1n ,.,, Q Chancellor' Almon, Louis joseph Alpert, Benjamin Appelman, Samuel Aronson, Seymour Parker Avrach, David Balbach, George julius Ballin, Kermit David Baruch, Samuel XX'illiam Becker, David Becker, Theodore Beren, Leonard Wfoodrow Black, james Luther Blank, Israel Blodgett, Charles Lenox Bologna, Anthony Francis Butler, Bernard XXfilliam Carter, Howard Clare Chemkalis, Leon George Clark, Stanley Irving Clarke, Aloysius joseph Conroy, john Irving Coopersmith, Arthur Maurice Davis, Hyman Herbert Degen, john Herbert Degenshein, Edward David Diamond, Morris Donigan, Thomas Francis Drucker, Harry Meyer Effrat, Bessie Mildred Ellis, Abraham Ellison, Samuel Morten Fass, Solomon Fell, Frederick Victor Finegan, james Emmet, jr. Flower, Leslie james Gersten, Irving Melvin Gluck, Frederick Sidney Goldberg, Maurice Goldberg, Oscar Golditch, Leonard Emmanuel Golomb, Harry Grady, Claude Henry Green, john Gross, Robert Lloyd Hancock, Edward Anthony Hollins, Lewis Samuel Kalish, Theodore Kaplan, Arthur Kiefjfer, Fred William Kohn, Sidney Simon Krantz, john Robert Kropf, Sidney FIRST YEAR 6-8 's Ffa' 0 EDWARD ANrHoNY Haxcgock, Pl'L'.ffl!L'l1f NIAN u12L Mo1-ooFskY .... V mf-IN-mflwz! Esrrarrrs Riamrziz ALBERT L13viN . Lackey, Kathryn j. Leclar, Paula Lesser, Louis Lawrence Levin, Albert Levine, Benjamin Oscar Levine, Isidore Levine, Milton Edwin Liebrecht, Edward Francis, London, Edwin Loveman, joseph Heller Mackey, Willialm Thomas Malamud, Israel Maron, Benjamin Meagher, Philip joseph Moldofsky, Manuel Nelson, Abraham Nerenberg, joseph Otis, Leo Perlman, George Rausen, David Reed, Barron Peck Reiner, Estelle Robbins, Harold jess Rogull, joseph Malcolm Rosen, Oscar Rubel, Ira Herbert Rubin, Barnet Ruggiero, Michael Ruthig, Clifford Francis . Sez'i'elf:ry . . . Tl'4'f1511rer Salzer, Solomon Santel, George john Schneider, Benjamin Schoenfeld, Martin Schulberg, Hilliard Shapiro, Abraham Siedner, Walter Edward Singer, Bernard Maurice Sparer, Aaron Leo Sprung, Gerald Stein, Arthur Harold Steinberg, Henry Talinoff, George joseph Tallman, Arthur Lyons Tellier, Roland joseph Tolces, Francis Todd Tonkin, joseph Tonkonogy, Andrew Edison Treulich, Eric james Liclofi, INIorris lfrbont Abraham Alex. Richard Van XX'ynen, Quinton Charles Wechsler, Sidney XVeinlood, Abraham NX'eiss, Solomon X C'hite, Ruth Elizabeth XX'olin, Morris Zack, jacob Bernard Zefi, Isidore Page Ninefj-rezferz 93295, 1qSga-ffzazqN , ff ', , x nf f1,gff2dfg 13241 f ,ff ' --17 H , f,g, , lf Q.. ,ff 1 f . ggggaggggggmrggaszfgggsM559QQQQQQQQQQQQQHQ1QQQQQQQQQQWWQWQWwww, ff 933 S . Q z, VQ, ',' Cfzancelfof Abramson, Harold Seymour Amkraut, Harry Joseph Ander, Harry Arnold, Albert Edward, Jr. Axelrod, Jennie Gertrude Backal, Paul Birnbaum, Abraham Blau, Martin Blum, Milton Robert Bottjer, Conrad Henry Brown, Arthur Herman Bryant, Ashbrook Parker Buff, Joseph Burstein, Sidney Cohen, Daniel Cohen, Leon Cohen, Leonard Harry Connolly, Joseph Thomas Cook, David Aaron Crawford, Franklin Robert Dunlop, Bernard William Fishkin, William Ben-Zion Fleischman, Isidore Fleischman, Isidore Edward Freifeld, Robert Furman, Aaron Julius Gallantz, George G. Gibbia, Joseph Vincent Giles, Charles Metcalf Glass, Benjamin Glickman, Harold J. Gold, Hyman Goldin, Samuel Goldman, Harold Goldstein, Alfred Frank Greenberg, Harold Greenblatt, Sanford Greenheld, Max Michael Gutter, Robert Harkavy, Bernard Harris, Emanuel Herman, Solomon Hoenig, Lester Hollander, Harry Horowitz, Milton Isaacson, Jack Seymour Itzkowitz, George Joel Jarvis, Sydney Kalb, Harry Kaminetsky, Louis William Kaplan, Roland Karp, Leo Kastel, Alexander Elihu Keen, Robert Arthur Kern, Paul Emery Klein, Aaron Edward Kornbluth, Arthur Kramer, William Jules Kraw, Henry Krouse, Elliott Lavinsky, Samuel Leibowitz, Abraham Levey, Lester Levinson, William Bernard Levy, Martin Lipman, Harold FIRST YEAR 7-9 ff Q' if ISIDORE JULES ROSEN, Preridenz PAUL SEYMOUR MAUER . . . Vice-Preridefzz JENNIE GERTRUDE AXELROD . . . Secretary ELLIOTT KRoUsE Marcus, Alexander Mauer, Paul Seymour May, George Lionel Nack, Saul Harold Nieporent, Andrew Odesky, Robert Oringer, Louis O'Rourke, Joseph Timothy Permisohn, Max Persell, Lillian Alice Persell, Robert Alexander Petzold, Howard George Relin, Jonas Perce Rosen, Isidore Jules Rosen, Jack Rosen, Leopold Rosenblatt, Herbert Freeman Rosenblum, Hyman Roseushield, Louis Rothouse, Charles Sass, Arthur Schachner, Arthur Robert Schein, Abraham Schrank, Herbert Schwartz, Bertram Schwartz, Herman Seligman, Thomas Sezzen, Samuel Sidney . . Trearurer Q Shapiro, David Herman Siegel, Abraham Silverberg, Samuel Saul Sinn, Philip Edward Remy Sitomer, Walter Sklar, Sidney Sklarofsky, David Spiegel, Sidney Stecker, Paul Stein, Sidney William Steinberg, Irving Steinhauer, Sidney Stern, Julius Stettner, Maxwell Stewart, Leo Joseph Stiglitz, Lillian Stobbe, John Albert Swerdlick, Solomon Taus, Maurice Richard Teichmann, Charles Frederick Tucker, Joseph Turetsky, Julius Venit, Harry Vogelsohn, Nelson Weinstein, Milton Weiss, Murray Wolfe, Edward E. Zelman, Irving 4 Page Ninety-nine 0 Debei me Enix lifizmz 1 ' Q VN 42 ,i W V , M 'x I X n 3 ', , 'N X I r 'W Q X K X . N- MXV, VE Xwx vw. I - ' , 1 1 , R4 . f-. N, 1 , . I , ' f i 2 2' f V , 9, S 1 ' , A e V 1 f 7. , f W f 5 . ,Q , 3 x 51' , ,A J g , 4 , L3 2 5 ' 2 f 1 ' ff 1 A yxxyfxwy I f Y I!! ,V 0 iff' Z5 I ' 5 11, f f 5, jj 'gf , V, Al , ' f f ,,, W W7. W fl I Q -I, ,I 0 X I ,xii f ff A f Q ' V , ffff f ' , 22 f ,A . 1 e ggi 3 '21 , VMS. ' ,f V 'A f ' ' . . ' I f 5 V ' if 'V' f I TE GRADU3 CHC iw. . I V .5-:fy , N-5 7 A ,, I NVQ ,, .fyfw xx xr by , V W. 1 I'-1 f ' 'Amf1 'f-Q.. A 'k ff17Q jf fvx 'R 1 1 1 X fi f , - Aff Q X,-Ufffp , ,f, f fjffkfiif- 'V jf' .412 1 Q47 5F?FEU?F22T'fg1mQv:Hzvzzwm Mliflig ff' -Cfzancelfof THE GRADUATE SCHOOL Q THOMAS CLIFFORD McKAY WOODBURY . Preridefz: JACK JOSEPH GANTWERK . . Vice-Prefidenz HAROLD BASS ..... . Secretary NATHAN BRODSKY SILVERSTEIN . . Treamrer Q 'CANDIDATES FOR DEGREE OF MASTER OF LAWS Benjamin David Abraham Joseph Arcoleo Milton Barrack Harold Bass Jacob Benzion Bogen Julius Brody Benjamin Chaves Howard James Churchill Edward Circus Lewis Francis X. Cotignola William Edward Docter James Edwin Doherty, Jr. Roy Lee Ellis Bernhardt Falick Joseph William Freifeld Jack Freund Jack Joseph Gantwerk Vincent John Gilbert Celia Goldstein Louis Goodgold Pedro Mangahas Nathaniel M. Gottesmann David George Mendelsohn Max Greenblatt Rudolf Henry Bernhard Heinsohnw Nora Helman Samuel Jaffe Meyer Jezer James Randolph Jones Emanuel Klein Alexander Kroll David Langer Henry Jepson Latham Frank Leif Julius Leif Max Herman Leitner Abraham Levine Benjamin Levitt Helen Hazel Lillie Patrick Joseph Mahoney Jan Mendelsohn illiam Pearl Morris Pincus David Matthew Potts Charles Anthony Regulbuto Harry Reichman Isador Stanley Rosenthal Louis Scher Bertha Schoolnik Samuel Morris Siederman Nathan Brodsky Silverstein Otis Hamilton Smith David Spiegel Theodore Digby Stein George Francis Taylor Harold Alonzo Thompson Harvey Wfeinsaft Thomas Clifford McK. Woodbury Page One Hzmdved Three f V! L ' X 1 ,. v ar X5 ,lit- TECJL Q Vrgf Fsgg' V ,-, rx . . Y .X, Q Vsxq r . X an .-1 CANDIDATES FOR DEGREE OF JURIS DOCTOR ' Q Page One Hundred Four Julius Caesar Delpino Max Friedman Isidore Fischman Abraham Halperin Robert joseph Fluskey Frank Thomas Jennings, Jr. james Norbert McTighe I ,fy 2 ,,,, . .ff VVN 77 W ' . - V 4 p g, ff, iv 4 , f, ' ,wif-'f WNV 1541 mf ' ,f+ 'V - . ., ,4,,.,yf4 ,, K, , ,,,,,,,,,, f,, A , , , :Af h m ,if W7 V- , I I ' 'Q' f Xf,Jf' fX,ff'f 'Z7Q fi fl ' V ,Y N 4 '. ff' -' ' , 'f f . , , f ,,,,, , A , . - fm, fff,,,,,c-f, f f fv , , Of, f A f-' 'f-' fwffw 'iff ,. -, ff wwf- N f -J , Z, , -::.l,,ff 5 f , 4 yu. . .1 !.ZZ?3y31, H , I 24, . A , ff 9 , . ' . Q , 'lf' 7 ff 4ff f7f f I - .' ,.,f ' A ff ' . ' ' - T' -wQ167fh3W:L,, ff' V A T iff' wwf ff 1, . - .,wwrff,:,,',w fr ff , V, B -W ' ' f f ,f .fs . ' f,f7 9i5 ff4'z2Ci:fi0'2fffy ,g f'?,f.f ,- I ff 'ffffqwfiw ,1 ' I I ' . f f my 11 ff . , . ,- 34, 47 ic Wig! Q, ' Zi 'f :lf 1+-Jffff-f,' f ,W U ' 1. ,-4-, 'G fff wwtv , ' ' nf :fi '14'Q:w ,QQU4 ,OV 1 0144, jig! , , .,f, , , ,,J kf2fWc 4. '.1.,?. -fi' 'Z Q 'Jil--' ' fwggfa - cf - W , , , lf, If 4. X ,V 525 2 ,Q V K , in ,fn P 'f- 1,2 Iva .-gf',.:4---tj ,' ,:Li1, 1 f Q Q . ' 'uf L ., 4. my , ,. Aff ,M ,,, ,,f,, , . , , ,,, WM fm. www., - 11 qw - , ,- -,I Y ' -1' W: 'ff ,f . . f- ff, , - '- . . , A f 1-iv, .' 'f .' . , , !,,,..f., 43,47 -A 4 W, W gigawyfya Vx I , UH , ,,k,?,, y ,!,,?,, 9 X 1- , V1 .. ' , f ' M ' if A fp pw, ' K , W X ' , .. ,,f f, , f Nz' ,My f ,wgpff , ff M-wyw. V ,1 , 4, , ' . ' .- wid, ,-f. .- a ,:- A, MQW. ,,.,g2z,ff,4 1 1 ' w ,. 4. 7 V, , , A g 1 1 f ' vw ' Q PRA TICE CC RT .g W-jjyfaea 79334 PRACTICE COURT sion of Dr. Edwin Welling Cady, founder and director NDER the supervi f the Brookl n Law School Practice Court, fifty aggressively conducted 0 Y and interesting trials were litigated in the Trial and Motion Parts of the 1933 calendar of the Practice Court. The statements of fact used as a basis of preparation embraced every field of law. There were cases involving Surrogate's Practice, Criminal Law, Sales, Contracts, Carriers, Corporations, Agency, Real Property, Guaranty, Domestic Relations, Insurance, Partnership, Bailments and Trusts, affording to the par- ticipants an unexcelled opportunity to actually become familiar with an un- usually detailed and complete knowledge of the interrelations of substantive and adjective law in the subject-matter under consideration. During the con- duct of the trials, the spectators saw presented before them realistic enactments of situations that arise in everyday practice of the law. There were missing husbands, broken legs, stolen furs, absconding part- ners, murderous gangsters, negligent drivers, defrauding managers, sleeping watchmen, conniving relatives, missing wills, wily detectives, stony corporations, expert doctors, heartless bigamists, reckless motormen, bereaved wives, schem- ing directors and kleptomaniacal spouses, there were witnesses who were shy, who were sly, who suffered from amnesia, who were biased, who were voluble, who were confiding, who were lugubrious, who had extraordinary memories. The locales included cemeteries, streetcorner accidents, deathbed scenes, garages, railroad cars, hotels, restaurants, grade-crossings, police stations, stables, apartments, offices, steamships, penthouses and basements. There were falls in backyards, off trolleycars, defalcations, kidnapping, blackmail- ings, poisonings, the finding of lost property, the losing of stolen property, ghostly visitations, murders, assaults, abuses of confidence, fabrications in testi- mony, crossing accidents, nurses, basketball players, automobile accidents, widows, policemen, co-respondents, robberies, insurance policies, testimony was given by experts on handwriting, medicine, typewriting, ballistics, furs, horses, jewels, stocks, speeds, ages, colors, sizes, shapes, appearances and disap- pearances. D Trials are conducted under the strict rules of pleading and practice, pre- sided over by prominent judges and attorneys, and the court-room procedure is that of the Supreme Court. The attorneys, who are senior students, meet their clients after an enactment of the facts has taken place, it is their duty Pzge One Hmzdaed Six D Q Cl director C0HCiucted f the every field ILHW, Sales, , Domestic to the Par. 3.11 un. substantive ig the con- enactments icling part- s, sleeping irporations, Kes, schem- J were shy, ire voluble, 1'1'1CI1'1OI1CS. bed scenes, fe stations, its. Thefe blackmail- f1 PIOPCUTYQ pns in testi- accidents timODY Was M57 horsCS, and CUSHP' tZiCfiC5a Pre' PfOCCdllfe ler1tS, meet their dufi f if? fri N rf' rs' ffcr J' ,s,,,W,m,,,-mu at If I ' Y-H -,f,.... , 1' 4 . 'ff' fr 'i ' 4' . .A ,' xc. , ' ii! y ' l I ply ' g L s ' l it s l i 3 1 f l l 1 l l Q l 4 '.i ,1 , V . si,'. 3 Page One Hundred Seven ,,, to ha. 1933 15 ,L ee --if V I f f X 4 SCENE AT PRACTICE COURT to prepare the case completely for trial, omitting none of the steps which they, as practicing attorneys, would have to go through. Complete papers are drawn up in detailed legal fashion. In a representative case, there were pre- pared and served the following papers: summons, complaint, answer, notice of motion including affidavits, answering affidavits, order, amended answer, reply, notice of trial, note of issue and plaintiffs and defendants trial memoranda of law. To insure the correctness of the procedure followed, the attorneys are guided by graduate proctors, who supervise the work of each attorney through the formal steps. The testimony of witnesses is carefully gone over, and after both sides have had individual conferences with Doctor Cady to insure a con- sistent and triable case, the case is marked ready , placed on the calendar, which is under the direction of the chief clerk, Miss Schumer, and her assistants, and subsequently tried. In this fashion, the students participating in the activities of the Practice Court are given a valuable preliminary opportunity to become familiar with practice and procedure, the preparation of a case, and trial conduct. Since the court is conducted precisely as the Supreme Court, this training has proven of inestimable value to graduating students. As has been the custom in the past, students from other colleges sat as Page One Hzuzdred Eight jt in B. HEL DoU Jaco ISRA1 PETE MUR' WILL PAUL SOLO. Ismoi MAXY MORE JAMES: SAMU SOLO1 HERM CLEM GERAII I. FRA How 533 S i ff J' 'A yy, 1 eps which papers are were pre- , notice of wer, reply, Ioranda of orneys are zy through , and after ure a con- I calendar, assistants, ,C Practice iiliar With ICt. Since 1aS Pfoven ges sat as Chancellor -I - - A Aria jurors in the Practice Court, over One hundred constituting the 1933 panel. The i institutions represented were Adelphi, Hunter College, Long Island University Brooklyn College, City College, and Seth Low College. 7 l PRACTICE COURT-1932-1933 s ' A ' LI T ' cl 1 ession Sai: Cris-es 116112, E in Dzgsgid Io-I2 . . I1 10 - 1 4-6 .. .. 14 13 - 1 ' 6-8 . . . . 26 21 1 4 0 8-10 . . 17 6 3 3 68 50 4 14 Q COUNSEL IN PRACTICE COURT-1932-35 HELEN ABERBACH DOUGLAS AMANN JACOB BARTFIELD ISRAEL BELFER PETER BLASI MURRAY BLUMENEELD WILLIAM CAMPBELL PAUL CARR SOLOMON CHERNIACK ISIDORE COHEN MAXWELL T. COHEN MORRIS L. COHEN JAMES COKER SAMUEL DAVIDSON SOLOMON DIAMOND HERMAN EDELSBERG CLEMENT C. EICKS GERALD S. FEIT I. FRANKLIN FELD IRVING FIGOWITZ GERALD FITZGERALD ISIDORE FRIEDMAN O MILTON G. GERSHENS HOWARD J. GIBBS MURRAY GLUCK MAX GOLDBLATT IVIORRIS GOLDSTEIN ROBERT GRUSKIN MORRIS HERTZ N PHILIP HOEEER SOLOMON ISQUITH MILTON JACOBS MARTIN A. JAFFE MARVIN KALFUS DAVID KLIBANOW HARRY KOBILEWSKY CHESTER KOPPEL LOUIS LEVINGER JOHN MCDONALD ALEXANDER LOWENSTEIN OSCAR MEIERFELD LOUIS MEYER NATHAN MICHLIN OSCAR MILLER ROBERT MORRIS LOUIS MOSCATO WILLIAM L. MOSES HARRY NEWMAN JOSEPH NEWMAN LEON PALEVSKY PHILIP PARTNOW IRWIN PEARLMAN LEON POBERSKY ELSIE POTOSKY JEROME PRINCE GILBERT RABINOWITZ ISIDORE RATNER IRVING REIMAN ABRAHAM RIEDER IRVINO RIFKIN LEONARD S. RING SAMUEL ROCKMORE NOAH ROTWEIN ALEX RUBIN LOUIS SCHARF CHARLES E. SCHIFFMACHER WILLIAM SCHNELLER HAROLD SCHWARTZ HERMAN G. SCHWARZ JOHN SCOTT ARTHUR SEI.VERSTONE ARTHUR SHEA NATHAN SKOLNIK HYMAN SOMMER JOSEPH SPANO SAMUEL STAROBIN MILTON STROLL IRWIN TANNENBAUM LEONARD THORNER STANFORD WAITE MORRIS WEINER JULIUS WEINSTOCI4 LEON WEINSTOCK RUTH LEAH WEISS ALFRED WEISSTEIN KURT WIDDER ALBERT E. WOOL LEON ZARETZKI Page One Hundred Nine '21 PRACTICE CUURT STAFF DR. LDWIN W. CADYI Dir-cclor LUCIE SCI-lUMl'R Sccrelary PROCTORS I JUDAH BRAUNSTEIN, LL.B. '29, LL-M- '30 JOSEPH ECKHAUS, LL.B. '30 STANLEY MYRON MAGED, LL.B., cum laucle, '30 ARTHUR L. MILLIOAN, LL.B. '32 ABRAHAM APAT, LL.B. '28, LL.M. '31 LOUIS SOHMER, LL.B. '31, LL.M. '32 IRVING HOFFMAN, LL.B '32 MILTON JACOBSON, LL.B. '32 L. GLUCK, LL.B. 32 MOSES SHAPIRO, LL.B. '32 ,31 MAX EHRLICH, LL.B. '29, LL.M. '30 y MARTIN J. FORGANG, LL.B. '29, LI..M. 30 JESSE S. SUNSHINE, LL.B., .fumma cum laucle '31 FELIX P. HERBERT ROBERT M. GROGAN, LL.B. '31 DAVID L. ALFRED S. JULIEN, LL.B. curn laucle PLATT V. KETCHAM, LL.B. '32 RENE LOEB, LL.B. '32 LOUIS A. MARCHISIO, LL.B. '32 ABRAHAM OLIAN, LL.B. '32 MURRAY NATHAN, LL.B. '32 ISIDORE H. WACHTEL, LL.B. '32 SIMON KLEIN, LL.B. '32 BERTISCH, LL.B. '32 FERSTER, LL.B. cum laucle '32 CLERKS IRVING KRAMER SOLOMON DIAMOND THOMAS V. DUNN EDWARD J. STORCK HAROLD W. COHEN MILTON G. GERSHENSON WILLIAM CAMPBELL BERNARD BRANDT ISAAC FIGOWITZ . .... Conznziffioner of Jurorf IRVING M. REIMAN . . Affiflanl Conziniffioner of jurorf JUDGES WHO SAT IN THE PRACTICE COURT, 1932-1933 HON. JAMES C. CROPSEY .... Juflice of the Suloreuze Court HON. METER STEINBRINK .... fuflice of the Supreme Court HON. ALBERT CONWAY .... jufzfice of che Supreme Courl HON. CHARLES J. MCDERMOTT, LL.D. . Ex-juclge of the County Court FRED L. GROSS, Esq. . . Preficlent of the Brooklyn Bar Affocialion HON. MURRAY HEARN .... Jufzfice of the Municipal Court EDWARD CONNELLY, Esq. . . Counfel for the Chafe National Bank HAROLD R. MEDINA, Esq. . Affociafe Profeffor, Columbia Law School JOSEPH G. FENSTER, Esq. . . . Counfel for Sir Huherl Wilkirzj ABRAHAM BENEDICT, Esq. . . Trial Counfel for Jenkf ancl Rogerf ARTHUR JOSEPH, Esq., LL.B. ...... Brooklyn Law School CHARLES L. GOLDMAN, Esq., LL.B. . . Brooklyn Law School JN-IIIORRISSFRIED, Esq., LL.B. . . . . Brooklyn Law School S ARRY AND, ESC1-a LL-B. . . . . Brooklyn Law School AMUEL G. COLER Es . LL.B Brooklyn Law School PODELL . - , ESC1- WILLIAM DIRE REED, Esq. HERMAN S. BACHRACH, Esq , q, . . , AARON S' CUTLER, ESCI-, LLB- ..... Brooklyn Law School i W 9 0 ORGANIZATIGNS -- cu jjka 1933! wx ga. Q 7 V A ll' ,X . X, N K5 X XX O STUDENT CGUNCIL OFFICERS BERNARD BPLANDT, '33, 4-6, Pffefidenzf GEO. L. WEISBARD, '34, 6-8, Vice-Prefident ISIDORE J. ROSEN, '35, 7-9, Secretary JEROME PRINCE, '33, 6-8, T1'66ZJ'Zl1'61' Q MEMBERS ' NATHAN SKOLNIK, '33, 10-12 ALFRED A. CHA1SON, '34, 7-9 SAMUEL JOSEPHS, '33, 8-10 JULIUS KATZ, '35, 10-12 LEO MARCOLIN, '34, 10-12 MARTIN MAX'ERS, '35, 4-6 Page One Hundred Twelve JAMES HANCOCK, '35, 6-8 1 dc its it Q bo1 div a 1 has acti anc exp A1f1 dem Jero reco, 111131 a co1 duCU who of se the 8 Chais fo the Were ' C 01' the COUHC the es: 1H0nio gf C211 1 P Q , ,Chancellor B rg r T9 STUDENT CGUNCIL HEN the presses printing these Yearbooks have been silenced, the Student Council will yet continue. The unhonored and unsung group, designated most fittingly as the Student Council, shall not have completed its appointed tasks. Consisting of the presidents of the various morning and evening sessions, it has emerged from a metamorphosis of experience as a truly representative body, reflective of student opinion-a body capable of conforming the in- dividuality of the student to the necessities of adminstrative regulation. From a lethargic assembly of either indifferent or absentee presidents, the Council has been transformed by an awakened desire for a fuller and richer social activity into a smoothly functioning and potent body. Under the kindly guid- ance of Vice-Dean Basterday, it has no small measure achieved its purposes. This year's Council has been fortunate in possessing four re-elected and experienced members, Jerome Prince, Bernard Brandt, Nathan Skolnik, and Alfred A. Chaison, The elections initiated into office Bernard Brandt, presi- dent, George L. Weisbard, vice-president, Isidore J. Rosen, secretary, and Jerome Prince, treasurer. Coping with the numerous demands from the individual classes for official recognition of social functions, the Council designated a representative com- mittee vvhich encouraged a more satisfactory participation in them by preventing a conflict of dates. Smokers were held in the Men's Lounge, dances were con- ducted in metropolitan hotels, dinners were cheerfully consumed by students who learned to understand that their classmates were more than mere occupants of seats. Warm and permanent friendships have been cemented. In this democratic spirit did the Council prepare for the junior Prom, the gala affair of the social calendar. A committee consisting of Alfred A. Chaison, Leo Margolin, and George L. Weisbard, prepared an affair to appeal to the students en masse. The results, of which more is written elsewhere, were 'highly gratifying. Graduating students, keenly aware of the sentimental value of a chronicle of their law school days, petitioned the Student Council for a yearbook. The Council acted. It chose a capable editor, an experienced staff. Time was of the essence, yet quality must not be sacrificed. The Council worked as a har- monious unit toward the publication of this most significant r6COrCl, and It fakes great pleasure in commending it for your approval. 0' Z f f f 6 Page One Hundred Tlnifleen G fees 1933 xg' Ek TO THE GRADUATING CLASS OF 1933 By LOUIS CHARLES WILLS Preyidenl, Alumni Affociulion. the Q N behalf of the Alumni Association, I am pleased to convey hearty con- 6 gratulations to the Graduating Class of 1933. By virtue of your graduation, you automatically become a member of the Alumni Association which comprises a membership of more than seven thou- sand Alumni. Your success in your chosen profession will depend, in a large measure, upon your friendships and acquaintances, and you can make no more important beginning than to resolve now to keep those already formed. It is only natural that the course of life will draw you in different direc- tions, and you will meet with various degrees of success. Cicero has well said, Friendship is the only thing in the World concern- ing the usefulness of which all mankind are agreedf, Your interest in the Alumni Association will afford a convenient ground for keeping your present friendships alive and will readily open the door to many others. The Annual Dinner brings out representative graduates since the forma- tion of the Law School and is an occasion which becomes increasingly im- portant with the years. The Alumni Association extends to each of you an invitation to take an active interest in promoting the objects of the Association and best wishes for success in all your undertakings. Page One Hundred Fourteen the T and and 1 comp Th are in 5 Divisi has bc nearty con. uber of the seven thou. ge measure, e important erent direc- ld concern- ent ground he door to the forma- rsingly im' to take 210 wishes f0f 'Qui Cfzan ellor ,au PHILONGMIC COUNCIL HE Philonomic Council is an honorary legal Society which was founded in Brooklyn Law School in 1925. The Council was established for the purpose of exemplifying the highest type of legal scholarship and ideals. The name Philonomic is derived from the Greek words philo and nomos and signifies lovers of the law . The honor of membership is conferred annually upon those members of the senior and post-graduate classes who are recommended by the faculty to be of good character and to have achieved distinction in their law studies. Such students are required to have completed their entire law course at Brooklyn Law School. The Council holds its annual meeting during commencement week. New members are initiated and officers are elected at that time. . Since its inception, Justice William B. Carswell, 1908, Justice of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, Second Judicial Department, has been honorary chancellor. OFFICERS MEYER BERNSTEIN . . . . . . Clmmellor ELEANOR L. CURNOW . . . . Maurer of Rollr SAMUEL SCHENBERG . EDWARD LODGE CURRAN SAMUEL DIMSHITZ HUGO PAUL DREHER HERBERT FERSTER HENRY FOLGER EVELYN FRANK AUGUST CHARLES PROBE, . K ee per of the Exchequer MEMBERS-1 932 HARRY KATZ HARRY AARON KORNFELD PATRICK JOSEPH MAHONEY HARRY JOSEPH MGDERMOTT SOLOMON PORTNOW JULIUS SIEGEL JR, DANIEL SPIEGEL 65 Af' I 4 Page One Hundred Fifleen 3' UQ W Q 3 fb pa1punH uaaixzg ,I Lf - , 1 - ,-ff - -1 W X I fm ,w v ,M ,-1, fffa ,V t xl 1 , X T25 DE-'Q 353021 P10 Chancellor if 1 as - ? X 1-1 M Wfgl THE JUNIOR PROM N March 19 at the Ritzflarlton, the junior ,Class held its annual prom, And While superlativesy ordinarily are and have been used with reference 0 to proms, superl'atives'talfE75OI1 2 HCW meaning, in this case. The splendor of the ballroom, -the brilliance of the costumes, the beauty of the women, made a fairy book pictulqe--Q , - , Eff Of course, aa crowd turned out for this colorful event which pro- vides one of the richest pages in the tradition of the school. And the under- graduates were augmented by a representative scattering of professors among whom were noted Professors Flouton, Frankham, Rotwein, Sealy and Sugar- man. Miss Curnovv, more lovable than ever, graced the affair as an emissary of the administrative staff. To top this scintillating array of school favorites, Dean Richardson him- self appeared at the affair for the first time in many years. And- to this day the junior class boasts the signal distinction which was conferred upon it by the Dean's presence. As to the dancing itself, what more could be required than a velvety Hoof, an excellent orchestra, and a beautiful partner. How can it all be summed up? Well, a very young junior was heard whispering into the ear of his partner a couplet from Keats: t ' ' 1 Was it a vision, or a waking dream? Fled is that music:-do I wake or s1eep?', Page One H nndred Seventeen C: Ibex me Q7 kc, 1933 Mi , I N O ,..........1.....-.---.Y , Ehr fduatinian Ernnklgn Emu Svrhnnl St. iflamrmre llniuvraitg Published monthly during the school year by the Publications Department of the Brooklyn Law School, St. Lawrence University, at 375 Pearl Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. The subscription rate is 31.00 a year by mail. Maurice S. Bogart Editor Eugene S. Levy Kermit D. Ballin Associate Editor Managing Editor BOARD OE EDITORS joseph L. Delaney . ........ . . . Newr Editor Irving Brody . . ....... . Periodical: Editor Harold M. Geller . ...... - Dffifiwf Edlmf NEWS BOARD LeRoy Briean joseph Glazer David Mogilensky Arthur J. Delanay John Green Manuel Moldofsky Jack Daly Sanford Greenblatt Frank D. O'Connor Morris Diamond lack Isaacson Harold Olian Lawrence Epstein I. joel Levy Jerome Prince Andrew E. Tonkonogy S t, Brooklyn. Office of THE JUSTINIAN: Publications Room, Richardson Hall, 375 Pearl U66 Telephone: CUmberland 6-2200. Page One Hztfzdred Eighteen 44 COUJ KINC 2,- THE l BROOK ,,',.,.. YO1 IAN, aga claim of The come in 2 produced publicatio On I source of the law sc recorded If of reforms of every PL fo progress lfHp0rtar1ce, well, Magis Harold R' I liSq,, Louis The Sta considered P aCtual Obstacles W Each abili in for l55ll6 g Wand in their 51 IQ33 mf the Brooklyn lL 1 iii-ii . Newt Editor riadimlr Edtwf Pecifionf Editor ,-,,,- I IZ,-,,. -t, Brook1Yf1- , ff-,,, Cfzencelfof ,, , . L ' I 4- COURT OF CONSCIENCE: 45 KINGS COUNTY THE JUSTINIAN, Plczjfztijjf, against BROOKLYN LAW SCHOOL, Defefzdafzl PLAINTIFF,S SUMMATION Your Honor, this is a suit in equity brought on behalf of the plaintiff, T HE JUSTIN- IAN, against the students and graduates of the Brooklyn Law School to determine the claim of the plaintiff to the increased and continued, support of the defendants. The facts are simple, yet they speak with the eloquence of merit. We do not come in a spirit of self defense, nor yet of self praise. This court has heard the evidence produced on both sides pertaining to THE JUSTINIAN, past, present and future, The publication shall stand or fall on its worth, and we pray only for just and equitable relief. On December 2, 1931, THE JUSTINIAN first appeared: its purpose-to serve as a source of interest and a medium for coordinating and supplementing the activities of the law school and its alumni. During its subsequent two years of existence, it has recorded legal news, broad in its scope, activities diversified in interest and the progress of reforms momentous in character. It has carried the messages of eminent representatives of every phase of our judicial system, and has endeavored to lend its constructive support to progress in the legal field. The roster of its contributors is imposing in its variety and importance. To illustrate, there are: Justice Edward Lazansky, justice William B. Cars- well, Magistrate Jonah Goldstein, I. Maurice Wormser, Esq., jay Leo Rothschild, Esq., Harold R. Medina, Esq., john A. Eubank, Esq., Thomas S. Rice, Esq., Aaron S. Cutler, ESq., Louis B. Roudin, Esq. The staff of THE JUSTINIAN has been both efficient and industrious. Pursuing well considered plans, unity was probably brought about as much through necessity as through actual choice, for to accomplish its ends, it was essential to preserve unanimity of front. Obstacles were encountered, attacked and, by the exercise of untiring labor, overcome. Each issue meant new difficulties and new solutions, competency and incompetency, ability and inability, dross and mother lode-all these and their attendant problems came in for their share of scrutiny and uprooting-but always the work went on. Page One Hundfed Nineteen 'MR O 4: gig' J Qfd.. Z' The most gratifying accomplishment of the publication may be said to be the ulti- mate acquisition of a clearer insight and understanding into the underlying purposes and h ff h h t ntialities for benehcent influence that a publication such as t e sta as en- t e po e d cl to create has in the world of law. There has been ample opportunityf fgf eavore ex erimentation and investigation of the ground, so that we may safely say that there P has been evolved a sufficient amount of basic experience and preparedness to cope with the problems of the future. The plaintiff necessarily concedes that it still has far to go to attain perfection, d also concedes the presence of good faith on the part of the defendants. But the an laintiff comes into this court with clean hands, and asserts that its future existence P requires the support and cooperation of defendants. No injustice can be or will be' done by receiving our plea. We are not engaged in this venture for personal profit and emolument, but are rather so charged with public interest as to invoke the cloak of judicial protection. If we are correct in our contention that the defendants can and should look to THE JUSTINIAN, just as their predecessors of antiquity looked to their justinian, it must follow inevitably that the defendant students and graduates of Brooklyn Law School be perpetually commanded to lend renewed and added support to the plaintiff. Public Opinion, J., per cnmzm,-The ably argued contention of plaintiff has led this court unanimously to favor their plea. It is hereby ordered that defendant perpetually desist from neglecting plaintiff, and that they keep in touch with their Alma Mater through its columns. Q All concur. Page One Hundred Twenty ,.. BR PUBLI Smascm Jicoa AROXSOX JOHN FERDINAND jf-,Nh .l- Sco-I7 N IRWIN ALPER PETER F, BLLSI--fi: BERNARD Smurr GBSPLHNI CAR ' 'CHA JOSHEQOHEN EPH COHEX X 933 to be the ulti- g Purposes and e staff has en- JPP0ItuI1ityf for . say that there SS fo Cope with tain perfection, Clants. But the future existence . be or will be' Sonal profit and ce the cloak of should look to ustinian, it must I Law School be iff. plaintiff has led Iclant perpetually leir Alma Mater All concur. Sl Cf1o11c.e!!O! pkft, I BROOKLYN LAW REVIEW PUBLISHED BY THE STUDENTS OF THE BROOKLYN LAW SCHOOL TWICE DURING THE ACADEMIC YEAR SUBSCRIPTION PRICE 31.25 PER ANNUM . . 70 CENTS PER NUMBER EDITORIAL STAFF MILTON E. CANTER, Edizof ALUMNI BOARD JACOB ARONSON WILLIAM B. CARSWELL AARON S. CUTLER JOHN J. BENNETT, JR. JOHN J. CURTIN GEORGE V. MCLAUGHLIN STUDENT BOARD JEROME PRINCE, Student Editor-in-Chief , JOHN J. SCOTT, N ozey Edizm- JOHN E. STONE, Decifiom Edifor l FERDINAND VAN S. PARR, JR., Book Review Edizw- HELEN HENIS, Seffemfy IRWIN ALPER DOUGLAS M. AMANN PETER F. BLASI BERNARD B. BRANDT SAMUEL G. BUCHALTER CARYL E. COHEN JOSEPH H. COHEN JAMES M. COKER ALEXANDER E. CYMROT JOHN H. EASTERDAY, JR. HERMAN EDELSBERG MAX FEFFERMAN MILTON G. GERSHENSON ROBERT GRUSKIN NATHAN JACOBSON SAMUEL JOSEPH MELETIOS KAVAKOS WILLIAM L. MOSES ABRAHAM M. RIEDER BERTRAM L. ROSENBERG RALPH J. STARK Page On e H undred Twenly-one 4: Q ff- ,Q g S jim, 7933 Q 7,1-1.1-g ll l ? 141 , 'Sk WHT? EQ I f--N N XRS I 4 v LAW REVIEW BY the time this appears in print the third issue of the Brooklyn Law Review will have been distributed. It will bring the second year of the Review to a close. The rise to recognition of the Review can only be characterized as meteoric. It has taken its place with the celebrated conservative law reviews, and has created a new position for itself by reason of the readability and lucidity of its features. Comments by leaders in every branch of the law amply bear out this claim. The New York Law journal, the official newspaper of the First and Second Departments, reprinted extensively from the first issue soon after its inaugural appearance, and since then has regularly included items from the Review in its editorial column. Starting without organization or precedent to guide it, an exclusively under- graduate group prepared and issued the Brooklyn Law Review. Of necessity, the first board was arbitrarily chosen, but since then, membership has been obtained only by choice from scholarship listings made by a faculty committee on publications. In large measure, the painstaking and thorough preparation of material by the Student Board, under the direction of the editors, has accounted for the success of the Review, but this has been augmented by the excellence of the leading articles contributed by leaders of the New York bar. judging from its reception during its brief existence, the Brooklyn Law Review is destined to create an entirely new standard for law reviews and will take its place as a leader in its field. b Page One Hl!i2d7'6d Twenty-Iwo The C Model Hades The leg What ti Legal 61 The roar NKC OOO THE CLA GEN TLEMEI PROPAGAN 0 UR HAND 1933 Ayn Law Review 7 of the Review zed as meteoric, iviews, and has C1 iueidiry of its Ply bear out this if the First and e soon after its items from the clusively under- . Of necessity, rship has been iulty committee ion of material accounted for e excellence of if. Brooklyn Law rviews and will Cfzcsfzceflof I ' sa f' T RES IPSA LQQUITUR .The overcrowded road to the law can lead only to the nether regions ,LSIQOLNIIQ ,fM0dern legal practices will receive their just reward. . .in Purgatory, -PRINCE Hades tolls the knell of the Bar. -BELFER. The legal profession is going to the devil. -BRANDT. What the devil createsg the lawyer aggravatesf'-EASTERDAY. 6 Legal fiction is but another word for the devills logicf,-HEN15, The road to hell is paved with legal inventions. -CLOHOSEY. Ei WESTERN UNION NKC OOO 44 HADES ON THE STYX THE CLASS OF 19315 BROOKLYN LAW SCHOOL BROOKLYN N Y GENTLEMEN STOP REFRAIN FROM SPREADING FALSE PROPAGANDA STOP YOU ARE GIVING US A BAD NAME DOWN HERE STOP WE HAVE CLOSED THE QUOTA ON LAWYERS ALREADY STOP GO TO ST PETER STOP WE ARE HAVING OUR HANDS FULL WITH THE PRESENT CROP OF LAWYERS STOP MEPHI S TOPHELES Page One H zmdred Twenly-three 'Q , X 4s if o ' ' Animzzy hominif eff animal .fcrdbii Q ' 4 ,gg-1' Emggg C w 1 I-:Y 4 24: -'-- -f ',.'-j'P1,.,A .,,. 3373, . - - - r 1, Zfflf 7 'rf'-V-1 La z . ' 7 , ,7 fin , 5. ...M I' ,ff f ,'f'2!, , , 354 ' :4ffq,'., , ' Q , , d f X 4 f . Z 1 M14 fmfl f, f 1 , uf ff ,fm .,,. V . 0. .... V 1, zf V, l f , - Q5 'm,.f.4ff.v 0,5 ,fp ,f .1,f,f:, f,:f fmfw-.-V 1,72 , ,Q ,, 1,-ff swf My 4 5zZgw4,'wgmgggy,Q , ,ff My ' Wg'.,ff,g,g4ffvQ,, ,.L.,,.,1:. ,,., z . ,aff W., ,J !,,f4,f4,f,4 . .. ,3 V gwco W4 hy!! C!?1v,f.:Z,g,fy,f,,,1 ' ' fC'f',f 9,4371 ff 2ff,'C:'.,t 'Pfi f :25f:vW L ' M' w ,w g,4u,w1 , 'ff If if7'4'2,Wa+ 1243'- ,. ,W 'M Q f L , L , L --L ,K www ,fJf, Jw 4 . 1 ,QWA1 yy? -3' f' 1 A ,,f . fgynfwfgff X, mfgiffn , H, ,-' Q.. A my ,xy -,Q iwaiffff fm-4 f,ffy,6h,gWw'Z'dfW' ,MAL .f, , V , ,- , ff -9, 456 f, 4, f, . W - 1 , 4 7'3 I ? ' 1 1.-M ' f X 5, f. ' ' 1, ...,, .L f A 2 416415 Cwifif f vyfafwvffafn Qx?95w? ffmf-f,,i4:f?f4f ,af L f, ' Q f ,f ,V VH ,u ,, ' ,L .L .,g,,, ,QU , L,-,,ff,, ,I ei, H Q. , , ' 3 ,, ,Q ., , ' gy .,.. ' J 'L .. . . f 1- 32' ff ,f ff 1. ,z 4, 1 i Mill'-21: :::i'2:.fm..:51..91z::f':af::.--X-'mf1,-1+-2.11.-:wi:vb-Q:,-F f' V fill '7 ', iff f . , M ' ' A L' - f cg aff' wg.-'.',-,'f ,f,g,' '1- 'f ,jf, q1f' , IZ 1. -f 4f',q,4'.fy'.v,j,'3 ,- ff f 3' f 1 C-.,f:,.-Av-:TZ v'. , 1 , f.,:-31 A ' ff. 'p ,ff f ff - --- f 'ew ,Q .M QW L 2.c,- --f- - . , f - if fqifgfff ,g.fj,.g34:11,'g4fj ,Jg ' ,Q , af, 3, - COLL GLU EGL BS zuzH aug 9224 9127 Z7 xg!-ffxuarnl -'Chg S Cfzancelfoz ALEX RUBIN . . PROF. JOHN E. X. FINN . OFFICERS Pfefzdefzl SANFORD GREENBLATT . , . V566-Pfmdem IRWIN OLIN . . . , 565,-e,,,,.9,,T,.em,re, . Hefzomry Member 93 3 I . I C C' gif:- CITY COLLEGE CLUB 'e Q Theo. Becker Israel M. Belfer Nathan Benderly Bernard Boyarin George Cohen William B. Fishkin Sanford Greenblatt Bernard Harkavay jack Isaacson Max Klein Louis Krasner, Jr. ABRAHAM OLIAN. . . Louis A. Schwartz Samuel Schwartz IRWIN OLIN .... Louis Krasner, jr. Sanford Greenblatt FACULTY ADVISOR Prof. Robert R. Sugarman Q MEMBERS Q Samuel Molomot Abraham Olian Irwin Olin Jerome Prince David Rausen Alex Rubin Edward S. Schubitz Louis A. Schwartz Samuel Schwartz Edward M. Silverstein Leon Weinstock SCHOLARSHIP COMMITTEE Q . C lmirmfzn Max Klein Bernard Boyarin MEMBERSHIP COMMITTEE Q . C lmirman . . . . Samuel Schwartz RECIPIENTS OF SCHOLARSHIPS David Rausen Page One Hundred Twenzy-feven eg, !04u .5 aa.. lilxi 'c --'i-1iQ'RxxT Y Y l ,If iw' K I s FORDHAM CLUB Q OFFICERS HERBERT R. MCCARTHY ..... . . . Prefzdent LOUIS A. SWEENEY . . . . . . Vice-Prefzdenl ADD1soN B. CLOHOSEY . . . T1 eazfzzref VLADIMIR A. DUcHoN . . . . . Sewezmy Page One Hundred Twenly-eight Q FACULTY ADVISOR Prof. james L. Murphy 1 Q MEMBERS Androvette, Murray Batkin, Solomon Bologna, Anthony Brennan, Eugene T. Brunjes, Herbert Caroselli, Ernest Delany, Arthur Dunn, Thomas Vincent Fitz-Gerald, Gerald H. Gegen, William C. Gibbs, Howard J. Gillen, Vincent Greco, Louis Grottola, Raphael judge, Dennison E. Kenney, William Ledwith, Thomas F. Maloney, Andrew P Moscato, Louis Mozian, Gerard Riordan, Charles P. I Seery, James K. Shea, Arthur 5, Whalen, William HUNTER COLLEGE CLUB Q oEE1eERs FREIDA J. MILLER . .... . Prmdem ADELE TEICHBERG . . FACULTY ADVISOR Eleanor L. Curnow Q C MEMBERS Helen Aberbach Gladys R. Axelrod Jennie G. Axelrod Ida Barkin Minerva B. Friedman Esther B. Goldman Rose Goldner Irene E. Halpern Paula Lecler Ereida Miller Sadie Papin Charlotte Prooslin Mildred Satler Celia Skalka Eruma Sussman Adele Teichberg Prefidefzl Ruth E. White -Prefidezzl TVEQIZIVEI' Serretary 5'ec1'eZary Page One Hundred Twenty-:gina H LEHIGH CLUB Q OFFICERS YIMAURICE S. BOGART ..... . . P1-widen! ANDREW E. TONKONOGY . . Vive-P1'2fiff-9111 J. JOEL LEVY .... . 36C1'6Mf'y LESLIE M. COLTON . . . . T1'edf1H'61' Q ADVISOR Page One Hznzdred Tbirzy David A. Richardson MEMBERS Harry Bass Oscar R. Miller Charles L. Blodgett Harold M. Schwartz Maurice S. Bogart Irving Silowitz Leslie M. Colton Andrew E. Tonkonogy J. joel Levy jacob D. Weiss Leon Zaretzki Alexander Wool Prefidezzl e-Prefidezzl Serrelary Treafzzrer K LONG ISLAND UNIVERSITY CLUB Q OFFICERS ALFRED LUCIA . .... . . Prefidenf LEO MARCO!-IN - - . Vice-President ADVISOR David A. Richardson MEMBERS Morris Atlas Morris M. Hertz Morris L. Cohen Abel Kessler joshua Davidson Charles Lewis Solomon Diamond joseph Nf Newman Frank DiLalla Martin Richman Harold Goldman Abraham B. Rosenberg Robert L. Gross Martin Schoenfeld N. Kenneth Gross Sylvan Schwartz Jack Siegal Page One Hundred Thirty-0126 y I NEW' YORK UNIVERSITY CLUB Q OFFICERS IRVING KRAMER . .... . . P1efm'ef1l SIDNEY NEWMAN . . . Vzce P1 erzdezet DAVID SEID . . . . . Serffeimy Tieafzzfei Page One Hundred Thirty-two Q FACULTY ADVISOR Prof. Abraham Rotwein Kermit D. Ballin Daniel Cohen Harold Geller Samuel Goldin Sidney Jarvis Chester Koppel Irving Kramer Eugene S. Levy Q MEMBERS Lester Levy Samuel Link Harry Newman Sidney Newman Max Permisohn David Seid Leonard Thorner Irving Weiner Isadore Yavorofsky Prefidezzl -Prefidezzl Treafzzref UNION COLLEGE CLUB Q OFFICERS DR. EDWIN W. CADY ..... . .Hoizomry Pfpfjgigmf RALPHISTARK . . l .- c Prmdem CoRTLANDT POEY . . . , . , Vj,e,p,.em5em HERMAN SCHIERLOH, JR. .... . Secieiczry-T1'e4z5zz1'er FACULTY ADVISOR Dr. Edwin W. Cady HON ORARY MEMBERS Dean William Payson Richardson james E. Finegan Hon. William Allen justin O. Reynolds I-Ion. Robert P. Patterson William J. Smith Charles N. Clowe Hiram C. Todd Q MEMBERS Charles C. Alonge Cortlandt Poey Milton E. Canter Barron Reed james E. Finegan, jr. Edward B. Reiter Richard A. Graham, jr. Herman H. Schierloh, jr. Sanford Kanzer Ralph J. Stark Milton D. Lifset Albert F. Valada Sflaolarfhip for 1932 awarded to .Milton D. Liffei. page One Hundred Tbirzy-three i K ff' 4 lift QNX l exgjg BAR, BAR, BLACKSTONE Despite all his planning He found himself cramming, It seemed he would never get through The Bar was at hand, , His eyes full of sand, 1 O Page One Hundred Tbiriy-four And at least eight more courses to do. I dread to relate, He met a sad fate, Falling fast into slumber's snug arms. With mind benumbed He quickly succumbed With nary the slightest of qualms. He pitched and tossed, The pillow got lost, His sheets crept up 'round his neck. His head perspiredg The devil conspired To leave him almost a wreck. His pyjams twisted And covers insisted In slipping down to the floor. At six thousand sheep He started to sleep As a knock came on the door. He turned on his side, His eyes opened wide His feet turned as cold as icicles. A horrible rumbling And in came tumbling A brace of Torts on bicycles. They headed a long Diabolical throng And paraded right into the room. Singing trouble Is only a bubblel' Theyid come to chase his gloom. I itll-1 i 4 4 E I 1 w O f 4 33 Chef?-ceffofg First in file With lecherous smile Came his Corporations lecture notes, Then Trusts and Pleading With mandamus leading Pranced merrily in on billy goats. Lawrence and Fox In long black frocks Had come to bid him fond adieu. Both habeas corpus And gifts causa mortis Were very pleased to be there, too. They danced around,- They pounded the ground,- They thumbed their noses at the lad asleep, They somersaulted,- They gaily cavorted,- They gathered together ten men deep. All at once Vfith nonchalance And manner hardly becoming the word They filled their lungs Stuck out their tongues And gave their host a boorish bird . 'Which awakened him Ever so well As a crack on the chin Or the sound of a bell. His eyes stuck together As after a fling, Confined by a tether He was caught in the spring, His tongue was a blotter Thrown to the waste, His head was hotter Than soldering paste. He was late for the Bar As most of us are And decided to wait 'til October, If he failed it then He could take it again- And so his worries were over. -J. JOEL LEVY y I L 0 Page One H undred TfJiflJ llVe 'E 3 A A N . 0 , 1 H 1 I ill' lf lrffflfnmu A 'Q I 'M W WM V1 'J I , vw .: n kgi111!F4WN3 VX, lm 0 Q , . ' A '.:w:mi'zv , . . 1, 6 . gpg, ' , F Q'-i ' 9 z Vw L gh J L X X w X . 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X5Wm.f'f' X 'X X w fwsxv ' - ,afslwwefa Sf., - .Q WS ,I w -f-NNx'x9f-.QSX- iwfgxf-, r-w . X- 2.5 .-M52 M fxfwrblwr wg ' u M ' qfxkwfx- ,g,,3Wf Xxwwsgx ,f y.m.14.5q:,f,-, -N -wg, X 55:11 -,T ,eps fs Km5X'-Qfybafbs-rxfc x..ws QmfN-'NS : fqfwem igfw'TEQxvf,'5:gLfXf-iyflamgxa 1 W, ,X :- pff..,M.4 A K 1 4 ,. ., , lx- 5S.1x,xQ,5y5h gms ,N X ... 1 .ffg.wQE.Q', xf f . . w fwx Q 1 Wglfgi ,X ' XX i . - . X S ,f V A A .4 Na. w:,,.M-bww! Ww.:,,'-Sf. : Q, ,xg fffwwx Y, Wa gg' xifmx-,wyf X, Sw ' - -. Q, X X .- , V 4, 1 Q f .:-1 'Xxx 4SQNQ4Swwz,xwf M fs . -W '14 .1 W 'ff Kbwifxggw swxwgvmww .1-ww f 'fx if has gy m. an W- v m Qmikfbfisx ' EMF 1, .f x P V .M wg- 1- a,545.v.Mw:m- . mv fe' ., . X f' fa- VJ:p , , .Sf-:f1S'.s P- if 'wk-Q, 3' Wwyqivny '4.Qf'.fw , 1 L f A xw Q :4,,5.Q:.m. . . , f . . .,.-.:-1 4.,w,. ,,sx.mzuX1,.,,, M ? , M inf,-'.g ,M fg 41:21 4Q.f?9.,wwf,Q--fmw.. ,-3 X...m95f ' ', . . . , . ,, Ny. -49 .. w ww 'Mfr FR TER I TIE EW S Jn l lg? shy xx HKS ff' -: ,,, J has I 93 3 s5 9x A -- - - FRATERNITY ROW IN IRETROSPECT KEENER interest has been displayed among the various Greek letter societies this year, than in many preceding years. Notwithstanding the depression, inflation, bank closings and the like, the majority of the fraternities have flourished and increased in size. Although some groups quite active in 4 former years did not function at all, most of them displayed remarkable activity. There is a strong temptation every now and then, for fraternities to place greater stress on the quantity, rather than the quality and calibre of their initiates. This year it may be truthfully stated that character was the chief trait sought for-and obtained. Z Phi Delta Phi led by Ferdinand V.. S. Parr, Jr., inducted some fifteen men into its membership rolls. The results of the Moot Court, an innovation in fraternity circles, were most gratifying. At the same time these trials afforded an educational divertissement, heretofore unused in the Inn. The outstanding function of the year was the Founder's Day Banquet which was held at Keene's Chop House in April. Among those present, were Supreme Court justice MacCrate and Mayor Walter Otto of New Rochelle. The Iota Theta Law fraternity under the leadership of Milton I. Wein- traub, its Praetor, and aided by Milton I. Gershenson, and Irving Reiman, succeeded in establishing a fine record of performance. The feature of the year's activities was the Stag Banquet which marked the 20th anniversary of the founding of the Iota Theta Law Fraternity. The Iota Chapter of Phi Kappa Delta under the guidance of N. Kenneth Gross, its Reximus, retained its high standing in fraternal circles. Realizing the necessity for a practical knowledge of medicine in successful legal practice, the educational committee sponsored a series of cultural smokers at which time, the Doctors Joseph Freedman, jacob Rabinovitch and George I. Swetlow, were heard on topics of current medico-legal interest. A dinner dance at the Hotel Woodstock in New York City commemorated Page One Hundred Thirty-eight f the ffiflfl lea by 12 ties for f The N, Allen in New I 0fFOI'f.lll1 doubled 1 achievemi atWlliCl1 With of Kappa genial am for the inc held there. Despi Alpha com of becomin 1 1 U5 Greek letter .fithstanding the 5 the fraternities L quite active in arkable activity, ernities to Plare calibre of their r was the chief wme fifteen men n innovation in 2 trials afforded The outstanding lheld at Keene's e Court justice filton I. Wein- frving Reiman, feature of the anniversary of of N- Kenneth les. Realizing legal Practice, at which time, Swetlow, Were jomfflfmofated Cfzancef-fcygg H 3 Q F -s ff rl , ly the tenth anniversary of the establishment of Alpha Gamma. The fraternity led by jack S. Grossman gained momentum with time, and completed its activi- ties for the year with the induction of six pledgees at a gala banquet, The Alexander Hamilton Senate of Delta Theta Phi headed by Howard N, Allen, Jr., concluded its activities with a dinner-dance at the Hotel Biltmore in New York City in collaboration with the Fuller Senate of Delta Theta Phi of Fordham University Law School. The group boasts a roster that has almost I doubled in size since the beginning of the semester. Outstanding among its 0 achievements in the past year, was the establishment of monthly forums at which lectures were given by members of the Brooklyn Law School Faculty. With the acquisition of new quarters at 58 Court Street, Lambda Chapter of Kappa Phi Sigma, has made rapid strides in the past few months. The genial atmosphere of the spacious rooms was, in a large measure, responsible for the increase in membership, and for the apparent fuller enjoyment of affairs held there. I I Despite a dull start partially attributable to a lack of members, Iota Sigma Alpha completed its seasonal activities in fine fettle. The group gives promise of becoming a potent factor in Fraternity Row during 1933-34. Page 0-ne Hundred Tlfifly-nine T' ' sf'-' ix I . A . R .G 471 p. 1 ,X xi, f 3 X , . i X ' 1 J A 4 iw l r M PHI DELTA PHI EVARTS INN Ertablirbed 1904 OFFICERS FERDINAND V. S. PARR .... .... M agirzer MORRIS L. HEATH .... .... H irzprian GEORGE C. JOHNSON ..... .... R ecorder JOHN J. MURPHY .... ..... T name HERBERT R. MCCARTHY .... ,.... C Zerfa Louis V. Moscaro .... .... G ladmzor FRATER IN FACULTATE William V. Hagendorn IN POST GRADUATE Julius Delpino Lyman Garber W. Gerard Dermod Platt Ketcham Douglas M. Amann John R. Appleton Anthony F. Bologna Garland C. Boothe Herbert J. Brunjes john R. Callery William T. Campbell, jr. Ernest Caroselli Edward F. Cavanaugh, jr. Addison B. Clohosey Francis X. Colligan john I. Conroy Arthur J. Delaney joseph L. Delaney Anthony II. DeMay Paul E. Doherty Page One Hzuzdred Forly Y George L. Weed IN PRAESENTI Vladimir A. Duehon Thomas V. Dunne john H. Easterday, Jr. Richard Elliot J. james E. Finnegan, Jr. Gerald H. Fitzgerald William C. Gegen Claude H. Grady Edward A. Hancock R. Preston Hazlewood Morris L. Heath Edgar W. Hendrickson Feodor A. Harms George C. Johnson Dennison E. judge Meletios Kavakos Thomas F. Ledwith Edward F. Liebrecht Herbert R. McCarthy john T. McDermott Warren P. McGoldrick john E. McHugh, jr. George W. Mills Edward R. Murphy john J. Murphy Louis Moscato Ferdinand V. S. Parr David A. Richardson john jay Scott Charles F. Teichman T. Kenneth Tyson Charles P. Underwood Kurt W'idder X. I MH-.ESS ff'- Lro W 4 '. limos G' 0 g t Jffif 'Iwi' Hari -Icsip Rfg' T Mar Iszgr Mart: M41 4 3 in . . . . .Hirlorian . . . . . .Tribune . . . . .Gladiator ebrecht fcCarthY lermott 1 fcGoldrick lugha Jr' Iills lurpl1Y why 0 5, Parr hgrdson If aichmafl AYSOH adfrfwood 1, , .. .1 . 1..,f s rg t 1 1 1 VA! 1 1 ,lv 1 ,N -. A . ,, 1 -. l 1 1 , . 1 ,fax iw, X , X1 1gN,1j,!Q by lm fi .fi K5:,Jl, I W, .,i,.,. , .,. X I ci'-'f:f'E' IOTA THETA LAW FRATERNITY ALPHA CHAPTER Eriablifheci 1912 OFFICERS ' MILTON I. WEINTRAUB ..... 1. .Pmetor Primm HENRY A. ROBINSON ....... Czzriociian Primm LEO RAUCHER ........... Vzfe Pmezor Przmm ISAAC Froowrrz. ........ Canadian Sepymiuf MILTON G. GERSHENSON .... Pmezor Secundm JOSEPH H. BURNS ................. S ' - I ffl I IRVING M. REIMAN ......... . ...... Lzbwzmzn P 07 Q FRATRES IN FACULTATE Edwin Welling Cady I Abraham Rotwein William Payson Richardson Charles R. Frankhamtk joseph H. Burns Julius Cherkasky joseph H. Cohen Harold W. Cohen Joshua M. Davidson Roy N. Epstein Max Eefferman Isaac Figowitz Martin R. Friedman Max G. Friedman gf dereared IN PRAESENTI Milton G. Gershenson Saul Goldberg Max Goldblatt Sol Herman Martin A. Jaffe Samuel Korb Ira I.. Levy Macy M. Lipschitz Murray S. Lokietz Leo J. Margolin Max J. Paley Sidney M. Peddy Irving M. Reiman Dr. Wynne I. Stern Edward J. Storck George J. Talianoff Robert Turetzky David Unterberg George Waldhetter George L. Weisbard Samuel R. Willer Page One Hundred Forty-0126 ' 'wwflli Q, ii fl. E x.'j'f' iv. vs . F' ' 'V ng I 'A -vs. 550' l E TT gxx1f.,'5lx I 'N Xi- . I - .-, DELTA THETA PHI ALEXANDER HAMILTON SENATE Efzezbliflaeel 1904 I Q OFFICERS HOWARD N. ALLEN, IR.. . . ...... Dem RICHARD A. GRAHAM, IR.. .Clerk of Exchequer STANFORD H. WAITE ............. Vice-Deen ANTHONY FORBES ........... ,Clerk of Rally W. HAROLD SCHNELLER ............ Tribune LOUIS A. SEFRANKA ......... Maurer of Rzzual CHARLES BLODGETT ......... ........ B ezilifjf Q FRATRES IN FACULTATE Richard J. Maloney Leon G. Godley Henry Ward Beer I Q IN POST GRADUATE Roy Lee Ellis Frederick Mercer Robert J. Fluskey David M. Potts Howard N. Allen, Merwin Ashley James L. Black Peter F. Blasi joseph Boettcher Charles Blodgett Bernard W. Butl Page One Hznzdrerl Forzy-two Cl' Harold Thompson Q IN PRAESENTI Franklin Crawford john Delves Melvin Espach Leslie Flowers Anthony Forbes Richard A. Graham, jr. Donald McKee David Paolucci Carl R. Robinson W. Harold Schneller Louis A. Sefranka Bernard Swenson Stanford H. Waite Robert Warren N. KH LOUIS I lNII.'RHN DAvm l AERA!!! N . M, . N 1 , JR.. .Clerk of Exchequer , . . . . .....Cl61'f ofllollf 9 . . , , . . . .Mailer of Rlllldl y Ward Beer P-iljluffl U Rnbinson xfnlfl Sfllneller K, Scffzlflka 5 S'--fvf1S F' 4 H, Waite I K,1Q',1ffCfl PHI KAPPA DELTA IOTA CHAPTER Eflabliffoed 1 927 OFFICERS N. KENNETH GRoss . . . LoUIsB.CH1PK1N . . . , MURRAY W. GLUCK . . DAVID KLIBANOW . ABRAHAM OLIAN . . . Reximm - - - . Vice-Reximzzf . Keeper of EXL'f76qZl6i' . Keeper of Archiver . Maffei' of Ritual GRAND COUNCIL DELEGATES N. Kenneth Gross jack Miller Abraham Quan IN POST GRADUATE Edward Circus Theodore Stein IN PRAESENTI Louis B. Chipkin Henry H. Diener Murray W. Gluck N. Kenneth Gross Irving Kesselman David Klibanow Harold Olian Bernard M. Singer Morris Udoff Ralph Weinstein Page One Hundred Forty-three R S WK 4 N 4 1 g, ,T ,Y .MY-f ----Y f ri 'i ' ' ' W sh J i 'Oh Sm kj' fling , -if-,---f,-1-'z:'f 'fer A i I g ig it H f--H ---- 4---- H 7 YI . X ALPHA. GAMMA GAMMA CHAPTER ' Eflablifbed 1928 OFFICERS IACK S. GROSSMAN ....... . . '. Clomzrellof NADAV AMI BENDERLY . . . . Vice-CfMf1f6U0f WILLIAM SCHWARTZ . . . Tfeflfffffff' ARNOLD S. EPSTEIN . - - - Sfflbf SAMUEL PoP1sH . . . . PWM? Q GRAND COUNCIL DELEGATES Martin A. Kraus jack S. Grossman Q IN POST GRADUATE Herbert A. Schechter IN PRAESENTI Paul Backal Wm. W.AHeiberger Samuel Popish Naclav Ami Benclerly Harry Herman William Schwartz Arnold S. Epstein Martin A. Kraus Walter Seidner Jack S. Grossman Oscar Meierfeld Herbert H. Widder Irving Yavorofsky Page One Hundred Forly-fam' iazzeellor fmzcellor 'feafzzrer Scribe Prelaie z der KAPPA PHI SIGMA LAMBDA CHAPTER Ehablirbed 1925 Q . OEEICERS JOSEPH N. NEWMAN . .... , Rgxj,,,,,f 1 ABRAHAM M. RIEDER . , Vjfg-Rgxgm,,, i HARRY N. NEWMAN . . . Sw-ibe LEONARD S. RING . .H , Cfygnfellgr IN PRAESENTI Julius Berzin joseph N. Newman Morris L. Cohen Abraham M. Rieder Solomon J. Diamond i Leonard S. Ring Morris M. Hertz Martin Schoenfeld Harry N. Newman jack Siegel Page One Hundred Forty-five 1 .fa z 0 Page Orze'H1mdred Forly-fix SECOND ROW-MANCE Spring is here, of care I'm free. I shed a tear, to have to be In class by six. V Lecture's dull, I cannot follow. My heart is full, my mind is hollow. What 'a fix! I squirm about, like a gnome. Would I could shout, Let's go home. But it's Unix . My eyes wander, 'round the room, As I ponder, in my gloom. Why not flirt ? ,There's the answer, to my prayer, Think I ll chance her, in despair. Try a skirt . I smile at one, she smiles back. It's lots of fun, if you've the knack. Thus starts the dirt! We keep it up, till after class, Will you sup, I ask the lass? She will, by gad! But then my chum, Tries to detain me, Says You're a bum, And you shame me. s The cad! Now tell me .... Is it taboo To be so crass, To wish to woo A pretty lass. A damsel who Would surely pass, And easy, too, Outside the class? J. joEL LEVY may y , N QQ? fam ,V 1 11- V ' , N A .1 Nl,Q,gf 5,-,.4f,Q4gf,Q,wVf,, X-gfwnx L, 4 in 1 'Ni 1 3 'G RITIE 0 A - JI i THE PAN HELLENIC COUNCIL gg gi H- H gg -iljkmd, A ,-- 4 HE Pan Hellenic Council of Brooklyn Law School is celebrating its fifth anniversary this year. The Council was formed to regulate inter-sorority activities in the school, to create and maintain a feeling of good will among the sororities, and to provide for uniform rushing and bidding of new members by the sororities. However, it is not limited in its scope merely to governing inter-sorority activities, the Council is continually aiming to be the co-ordinating factor for all the women in attendance at the Law School. The members of the Pan Hellenic Council are the six recognized sororities in Brook- lyn Law School. Iota Alpha Pi, Omega Phi, Phi Delta Delta, Pi Alpha Tau, Tau Alpha Pi, and Tau Upsilon Delta. The constitution by which the Council is governed embodies all the rules and regulations which the sororities are to follow in rushing, bidding, and pledging of new members. A president and a secretary-treasurer serve as the officers of the Council and are elected annually from the six member sororities in alphabetical rotation. Miss Eleanor L. Curnow, Dean of Women, is the Council's advisor. The Council holds bi-monthly meetings, each sorority being represented by two of its members. In addition, the privilege of attending its meeting is extended to women students of the Law School who are not members of a sorority. Matters of general in- terest to the sororities, and the women of the Law School are discussed and acted upon. Formal recognition in Student Council was accorded Pan Hellenic during the year 1932. Fannie Seigartel, Tau Alpha Pi, is the representative for the current year. The Pan Hellenic Council, in its endeavor to co-ordinate the activities of the women's organizations in the school, holdsa tea at the opening of each school year. All women students are invited to attend, the purpose being to welcome the incoming first year students and to acquaint them with the school and its organizations. The plans of the Council for the coming year are determined at this time, and the officers of Council are installed. At this tea there is also awarded the Pan Hellenic Council Scholarship Cup, it is given to the sorority which attained the highest scholastic average in the pre- ceding school year. Tau Upsilon Delta has achieved the unusual record of winning the cup for four successive years. Page One Hundred Forly-eigbt Rosr Fam. I s,,Q0i35 FX as aah aI,,,ivmry x-ities in the school and to provide for However, it is not Juncil is continually at the Law School' sororities in Brook. ha Tau, Tau Alpha governed embodies ihing, bidding, and ie Council and are ion. Miss Eleanor ,esented by two of xtended to women ters of general in- d and acted upon. ic during the y621f current year- activities of the school year. All the incomiflg fifaf is. The Plans of ulicers Of Council uncil Sfholafship thg PIC' of winniflli 'ijflgff in ,md s . , ' PAN HELLENIC COUNCIL l Fi: i I . lil I1 ill if ll I l 1 l l OFFICERS 1932-1933 l ROSE GOODSON ..... ....... P resident ........... Tau Upsilon Delta FRIEDA MILLER ........ Sec1'emry-T1'ea.rz11'er ........... Iota Alpha Pi REPRESENTATIVES Iota Alpha Pi Gladys R. Axelrod Frieda Miller Omega Phi E. Sydelle Dickman Genevieve Finn Pi Alpha Tau Belle S. Finkelstein Adele Teichberg Tm Alpha Pi Fannie Seigartel Rose L. Weiss Phi Della Della Mary B. M. Moloney Mary Moran Tam U psilon Delta Rose Goodson Celia Skalka Page One Hundred Forly-nine l Vi r. Rb 4, Q arrrixbrx fX. ff X I I l 3? Lf x .fx xx, Rx KUQA . Nh X W x ,X .r ' R, l lXiig1s?Qll'v , . f ' l 1 3 l I I l i l 1 l l l l Y i I x IOTA ALPHA PI GAMMA CHAPTER Ermblirfaed 1922 Q OFFICERS EDYTHE MORRIS ...,.. ........ P reridenz ' FRIEDA J. MILLER ..... Serfelafy IRENE E. HALPERN .... Vice-Pmidenz RAY ISAACSON ..... Tfeafwff Gladys R. Axelrod Elsie Bandes Ida Barkin Gertrude Brown Gertrude Cohen Judith Friedman Sophie Garfunkel Madeleine Glickman Ruth G. Goldberg Esther B. Goldman Irene E. Halpern Edith Leon Hendon Ray Lee Isaacson Vee Kanner Q I IN PRAESENTI Sadie Birnhak Koeppel Nettie Lazar Lily Ageloff Lupka Helen G. Lusterman Pauline Malter Anna Brenner Mankes Isabelle Marks Francis Miller Frieda J. Miller Shirley Duboff Montefel Edythe Morris Mildred R. Roberts Thelma Fleisher Rosoff Beatrice Rubin Daisy C. Schapiro Lucie Schumer Minnie R. Schwartz Bertha Asher Schantz Hannah Shapiro Bertha Robinson Shulman Hannah S. Siegel Marion S. Siner Hannah Spanglet Florence F. Staft Theresa Theilheimer Kanter Ruth T. Wigor Beatrice R. Willett Page One Hzuzdred Fifty. . . . . . .Secrelafy , . . . .Trefzfzzrff im lfliffz clmantZ ll H ShUlman cl 4-f rr I ,imcr Kfmte r PI ALPHA TAU DELTA CHAPTER Eflablisbed 1923 Q OFFICERS BELLE S. FINKELSTEIN ..... . . Prefidem ESTRE M- BCGNER - - . Vice-Prefidefzl FANNIE M. GALUTEN . . . . Treamref CLEO GOLDSTEIN . . . . . Secremry Q IN POST GRADUATE Cleo Goldstein IN PRAESENTI Estre M. Bogner Lillian E. Lipschitz Harriet H. Ellenbogen Adele C. Michaels Belle S. Finkelstein Estelle Mermelstein Fannie M. Galuten Charlotte V. Prooslin Ray Katz Adele Teichberg Page One Hundred Fifzy-One l x X TAU ALPHA PI ZETA CHAPTER Eirmblirbed 1927 , 5? OFFICERS ROSE LEINWAND . .... . . Cloancellor FANNIE SEIGARTEL . . . Vice Clmncellof MILDRED SATLER . . . .A . Secfefmy BLANCHE R. LIFTOFF . . . . T1 eezfm er Page One Hundred Fifly-zwo Q IN PRAESENTI Rose D. Babchin Minnie Berkowitz Miriam C. Feinberg Bertha S. Gessenofi' Lorna B. Golden Hazel Greenspan Florence Greenwald Belle Kaufman Lillian Keilsohn 'Ros Belle A. Korones Rose Leinwand Rose Levine Janet H. Lewin Blanche R. Liftoff Leah M. Ornstein Sylvia Rothman Mildred Satler Fannie Seigartel e L. Weiss OMEGA PHI DELTA CHAPTER Eyiabliybed 1923 OFFICERS RUTH T. LIROFF . . .... . . Prefidem FLORA YET-OWITZ - - . Vire-Preficlezzl E. SYDELLE DICKMAN . . . Sec:-emi-y RUTH SPREIREGEN . . . Treamrer IN PRAESENTI Jeannette Brimberg Genevieve Finn Sophie Cinao Ruth T. Lirolf Gertrude Cutler Augusta R. Opalek Vivian O. Dreyer Florence Simowitz Margaret M. Edelstein Ruth Spreiregen Flora Yelowitz I l TM Page One H zmdred Fifly-llaree - - - fjkea Z93F3Q f' ,SX O TAU UPSILON DELTA DELTA CHAPTER Eflabliybed 1929 Q OFFICERS ROSE GooDsoN . .... . . Prefidenz CELIA SKALKA . . Vice-Prefidenz PEARL HONIG . . . . Sefreiary ANNE V. TENNEN . . . . T1'ecz.rz11'er IN PRAESENTI Tillie Gecluldig Anne Siegel Rich Rose Goodson Nora Helman Robinson Pearl Honig Sylvia Rohn Eva Kritzer Pearl Schor Anne V. Mornick Minnie Schneiderman Sarah Rosenthal Pruzan Celia Skalka Anne V. Tennen Page One Hzmdred Fifty-four Chancellor ae- 1, O I if 2513? J V , In . Xi .xy XJ. 1 N , W W J Page One Hmzdred Fifzy-.fix Chancellor 0' Jfnr Qulh Ylang Spun APPRECIATION HE Editors of THE CHANCELLOR take this opportunity to express their most sincere appre- ciation for the valuable co-operation of HARRY HAYWARD of the F. Weidnef' Printing G Piiblifhing C0.,' PETER S. GURWIT and Mlss LILLIAN DAY of fahn and Ollier Engraving C0.,' MRS. PAULINE LACQUES and SAM FREEDMAN of the Artlvui' Sfndiofg and Mlss IRENE V. MAGUIRE of Pm!! lnstitnteg without Whose kind efforts this book would not have been achieved. if- 4 X . V Q I V j . f N Ms ' . ' W5- w W x 1 i x I , I I , ' r i I i . l X , i , ,K y ,ix N I , ' a 112 Y wil ,, 5 I ii -All i ji lgl ' Ill' W lvkjr LH -vim HU ww M pimi WN, W I, pr W au! 5 ' v Q 1 I u N M W I fm H v. 'y Q ,,f


Suggestions in the Brooklyn Law School - Chancellor Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) collection:

Brooklyn Law School - Chancellor Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Brooklyn Law School - Chancellor Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 99

1933, pg 99

Brooklyn Law School - Chancellor Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 142

1933, pg 142

Brooklyn Law School - Chancellor Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 151

1933, pg 151

Brooklyn Law School - Chancellor Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 57

1933, pg 57

Brooklyn Law School - Chancellor Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 36

1933, pg 36


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